Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 24 April 1895 — Page 2
Lawn Mowers,
-i
Refrigerators/ Hydrant Hose:
Do vou need e:flier'/
We c.-utv the largest
Hid best line of these
a
would he pleased to
I note Vim prices. We
have numerous styles
and all pi'iccs.
U)\
a a
Some people do not know the dif-
ference between a handsome hand-
i.- doing
ork that- is a credit to
our city.
If you don't "see :eu
Strickland, stop in at the laiu-
drv 011 Pennsylvania street ano
we will guarantee that the work
will please you. vTheVrrov."
HERRING BROS., ]en
Sinckirtnd, Sulic.itvr.
^liat Dad
a W a
Miller, who has
plUUlbi'J
shop liiiQk of
Meek-'s blacksmith. -hop, is
ready to figure on 'any job
you may have, and it you
will call 011 him he will
guarantee that his prices
are as low or a little lower
than any other mau in town.
ins™
SUE EVENING ilEmSLlOX/
W. S. MiiN'T
1
iOMKPY, Editor ami Publisher.
subscription Ji.a'es.
jue week. One vear...
Jinterud at l'ostoliiie .-iiii'l
10 cents
CbKvi i.,\xn has- become thoroughly I
disgusted with the rush of exmcmbers of
Congress for any office in which a vacan- I
cy occurs and is especially displeased with
the Indiana contiugenL. Bynnm and
Cooper after the warning they h.ad when
effort was made to 1111 Ministe.i I. P.
Gray's place before he was buried did
not. send in their names until assistant
Comptroller of the Currency Mansur was
buried but Carlisle received word that
they were candidates. Grover however
disgusted with the continuous howl
which the Indiana cxmembers keep up
for pie and will pass Dolman, Bynuni,
Cooper etal by and probably appoint Col.
vierman Stump,of Maryland Ass't. comp-
tvolles. Bynum is certainly playing in
gold paint. It is to represent the
"golden calf," before which Cleveland
commands the people "to bow the knee."
'.To the mule he says "now tuck in your
ears, have some style about you and
whatever you do dout bray." 'leveland
labors hard for his English friends both
to establish free trade and a single gold
standard. Both are disastrous t,o the
host interests of America.
•hard lines, he has been a candidate lor 1 governed in the fiery primo of youth,
a.bout everything iu sight since he was
defeated for Congress.
iie Chicago Iut-ar Ocean is getting
out some line political cartoons. Their
latest i.s High priest Cleveland with a
high pedestal and he is smearing it with
mule labelled Democracy, erected 011 aj that of intemperance. No man with his
lliiw'H Tins!
We oiler One Hundred Dollars Reward
for any case of 'atarrh that cunuot be
'•ured by Hall 'atarrh Cure.
J\ J. heney fc Co., Props., Toledo, O.
We the undersigned have known F. J.
Cheney for the last lo yenrs, and believe
him perfectly honorable in all business
transactions and finaneially able to carry
out any obligation made by their (inn.
West & Truax, wholesale Druggists,
Toledo, O. Waldintr, Kinnan Marvin,
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. O.
Hall's Catarrh are is taken internally
acting directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system. Prioo 7o
cents per bottle. .Sold by all Druggists.
Testimonials free.
stidysklf co\ti ol
YOUNG MEN, BE FAST ONLY TOWARD
GOODNESS.
MiUli-ion C. I'etcrs Kxborfs Youth Not to
Sell Its iSirtb.rigbt—Impurity Is Worse
Than Intemperance Kmlin^ of Jiy-
ro:i and
There is nothing young people neod
to cultivate so much as self control.
Farewell to tlio hopes of a young man
when he flings the reins of pa.-sirn loose
on its neck! What an illustration of the
bondage of sin the.so words whicli Burns
wrote during a long sickness: --.-m:
Fain w»uhl I -ay forgive my foul itTenso, Fain promise never more to y, But- should my Author health a 'ain dispense
A^ain 1 mu-ht desert- fair virtue's way, Again in folly's jatlt might go astray, 5^.5 Again exalt the brute and sink the man Til' 11 how should I fur In avenly im-rey pray
Who act so counter heavenly mere ,- .-plan Who sin so oft lias mourned, yet tu temptation ran"/
What bettor is the testimony of By
ron, who wrote on his tliirtjMhird birth
day:
nnished piece of laundry and a
uoa Hi) finish, but the people of
Greenfield are fast finding out
that: the Troy Steam Lauudvy
Through life •to linn and dirty and thirtv.
dull road
A
have dragged to threi What have these years lett to me .Nothing, except thirty-three.
Still later ho acknowledged what no
man of God ever needs to confers
Though gay companions o'er the b'j\ 1 Dispel awhile the sense of ill Though pleasure till the maddening soul,
The heart, tlie lit art is lonely still.
Count- o'er The joys tlnne hours have seen. Count o'er thy days from angm.-h free, And know whatever thou hast been "J'is something better 110I to bu.
Nay for myself, so dark my fate Through every turn ot life hath been, IVlen and the world so uracil I hat 1 care not- when 1 quit the seen,
Ho laid his master mind like incense
on unhallowed altars, and with his last
breath lie gathered up the strings of his
discordant harp, sat down in the ashes
of his hopes, and before dying, at oS,
sent forth this wail front the gloomy
depths of his soul:
J.Iy days are in the yellow leaf The ll.iwers and fruits of love are Konr .-•• :Tho worm, tlie eanker and the grit-f
Are mine alone.
liuw sad tli'i.-c-vi'i'si-s of Hartley Cole
ridge, written in his Bibio 011 his twen-
ty-iitth birthday:
When I roe, ved this volume small,
7
My years v.'e i' ban Iv st-ventei i, W: 11 i: was -t 1 should be all -r' Viie.ei, 1 alas, la -.'::! l-.av-' be. n, And now lay years ari' \, einy- ive, v-
And every ti-r 1 :opes her lamb ^Aiul e»-v-ry happy ehiM alive ', 3! ay m-vt.-r be what now 1 am.
Ciiarle Lamb made all tho world
laugh at him and then afterward made
all tho w.irl'.l weep at his fate. He who
could outwit--everybody was outwitted
by his own pa-^ions. He thus cries
out to young men: "Too waters have
gone over me. Jj out of the black
depths, could I bo heard, 1 cmld cry out
to all those who have but set afoot in tho
perilous fiood. Could the you: to whom
the ilavor of his thvt wine is delicious j.
as the opining scenes of life or tho en-
tering upon so ne newlv discovered par-
adiso loo'k into my desohitiem and bo
made to understand what a itreary thing
it
is
when a mau shall feel hinisnlf going down a precipice- with open eyes, and
a passive will, to see his destruction
and have no powt to stop it and y.-t fed
it ail the wav emanating fmiu himself, 1
to si all g'idliness ci i]itied out of him and yet not able to irget a time when
it was otherwise to bear about him the
piteous spectacle of his own ruin. Could
hi? see my fevered eye, feverish with tho
last night's drinking and feverishly
looking for tonight's repetition of the
folly could he but feel tho body of tho I
death out of whicli 1 cry, hourly with 1
feebler outcry, to be delivered, it were
enough to make him dash tlie sparkling
beverage to the earth in all tho pride of
its mantling temptation."
Young men, Jiving in America and
the nineteenth century, th" very syn-
onyms for opportunity, will you sell
your birthright: for a few nights of ca-
rousing? Will you in tho beastliness of
lust, in the vortex of pleasure, in the red
gleaming of the wine cup, in the pleas-
ures of riot, in the foul pestilence of
disease, in the madness of the gaming
table, in the painted harlot's vile em-
brace, will you, can yon drown all
there is about you of purity and noble
ness and manliness and become a poor,
degraded, wretched thing? Will you
spend a weary, worthless lifo and see your sun go down at noon? Look at tho
facts. Have done with the riotous living, the hollow amusement bo serious,
sober, steadfast, strong and "sit self
obedient at tho feet of law." If you
must be fast, be fast in the right direc
tion, fast, toward goodness, toward (jod.
Tlu Sin of I mpurity.
The sin of impurity i.s greater than
eyes open can deny that this vico is increasing in our great cities and i.s sap
ping tho physical strength and moral
manhood of tho nation. There i.s noth
ing more unspeakably sad than to see
tho hundreds of young men in this
city, sons of rich and indulgent fathers,
sons spending thousands annually, gal
loping through a course of infernal rev
elry, wallowing in mistiness, enduring
the agonies of a spoiled and shattered lifo and then dying like dogs, for "the
gods aro just and of our pleasant vices
make instruments to plague us." Go
among men of an apparently decent
typo, and you will lie sickened by coarso slang and iilthy jest.
I fortunately do not look or act tho professional preacher, hence often catch
men oil' guard, and I often hear them
boast of tho fair young lives they havo
degraded, and I havo observed that their
contemptible jokes meet with no man
ly protest, but aro followed by roars of
laughter and storms of applause. A
false modesty has too long kept the pulpit silent on this theme.
Young man, my brother, how of your
life today? Is it pure and clean, filled
with tho lovo of God and tho beauty of
holiness, or aro you tampering with
evil, drifting into sin? adison C. I' k.tkus.
•'Excepting its handful of magnificent statesmen and its millitary heroes, says
the
most receut
writer
upon
American, 1
"the people owe more to Dartmouth's physician-teacher than to anv oue m:"i "In every walk of life, among the highest ofliceholders at Washington, iu the homes of the best people in the large cities, among the every-day folks of the country, families in comlortable circum- I stauces, families that 'live from haud to mouth' (and could not, if they wished, afford the services of any but an ordinary physician—everywhere I have met people to whom Paine's celery compound has
been a blessing. The story of the life-work of this giant among men has been often told and is familiar to most readers. The likeness above is probably the best portrait of liini
yet printed. It was the world-famed discovery of Prof. Phelps of an infallible cure for those fearful ills that result from an impaired nervous system and impure blood which has endeared the great doctor to the world, and made his life an era iu the practice of medicine.
Prof. Phelps was born in Connecticut and graduated from the inillitary school at Norwich, Vt. He studied medicine with Prof Nathan Smith of New Haven, Conn., and grduated in medicine at Yale.
His unusual talent soon brought him
0,-
reputation "'and prominent amotm nis professional brethern. hirst lie ua.s elected to the professorship of anatomy and surgery in tlie N ennont university. Next he was appointed lecturer on materia niedica and medical bontany in Dartl--mouth college. Tlie next year he was chosen professor of the chair hen \ucat«d by Prof. Hobby, and occupied the chair, the most important one iu the country, at the time when he lirst lormulated he most remarkable prescription.
In view of the ovewrlielming testnioiiy to the value of Paine's celery compound that has recently appeared from men of national reputation, the picture ot Prot Pielps is partibularly interesting.
Xew York's state treasurer, Hon. Addi
son B. Colvin. Ex-Minister to Austria, John M.
Francis. Miss Jenuess Miller. President Cook of the National teach
ers' association.
Hon. David P. Toomey, the publisher of Donolioe's magazine.
Gen. John A. Halderman of New York
city. Hon. John Carlisle's private secre
t.ary. The popular and talented actress, Marie Tempest the poet author, Albert H. Hardy the mayor of Montreal, brave Ida
DEALER IK
SUPUE$
smtffTmmtcm BRICK
THE GREATEST MODERN PHYSICIAN.
To Whom Thousands of Men and Women and Children Everywhere Owe Their Life and Happiness Today.
.11, is Imputation I I.ts Made Darnioutli College Famous in Kattv Town and \lllage in the Country--d?rof. Edward P. Phelps M. 1)., LL. I).t Who First Gave to PLis Profession ]'nine's Celery Compound, tlie Wonderful Remedy That 'Makes I\opie ell.
mm.
\N
O W A
CJ w)
a
S
1
\^N.\ AvK
y:K',
1
Lewis and 11 host more of prnminent men and woman arc among the thousands of grateful people who ha\e recently sent to the proprietors ot this wonderiul. remedy their expressions of its unequalled value
men and woman who can well atford, and do command the high's* medical ad-
advice in the country. And then aUo from ie there come thousands of forwatd' heartfelt l.-t e.s Paine's celery compound well.
33
ic-«in people" e.- straight ii-Piii how uii them
-)es to show
Their testimony simply what New Englaud's vigorous essayist has so amply said, that Paine's celer\ compound is not a patent medicine it, is not a sarsaparilla it is not a mere tonic it is not an ordinary nervine—-it is as lar beyond them all as the diamond is su
perior to cheap glass. It makes people well. It is the oue true specific recognized and prescribed today by eminent practitioners for diseases arising from a debilitated nervous system. Prof. Phelps gave to his profession a positive cure for sleeplessness, wasting strength, dispepsia, biliousness, liver complaint, neuralgia, rheumatism, all nervous diseases and kidney troubles. For all such complaints Paine's celery compound has succeeded again and again where everything else has failed.
It i.S as harmless as it is good, and if.
Scorcher, 2L lbs., fSo.
Good Agents wanted in every town.
Ill#
was the universal advice of the medical! profession that the compound be placed", where the general public could secure it, anil thousands ot people have every years proven the wisdom ot this advice.
Only a truly great and ellective remedy could continue, as Paine's celery compound has done, to hold its high place in the estimation of the ablest: physicians ami of the thousands of busy men and women whose only means of judgiug is from the actual results fn their own homes or among their friends. Xo reme-e dy was every so highly recommended, because none ever accomplished so much.
To day Paine's celery compound standi without an equal for feeding exhausted nerves and building up the strength of the bo ly. It cures radically and permanently. The nervous prostration and general debility from whicli thousands of women sutler long that it finally gets" to be a second nature with them -alk this sutlermg and despondency can bet very soon rem ved by properly toed ing' the nerves and replacing the unhealthy blood by a fresher, more highly vitalized® fluid, A healthy increase 111 appetite? and a corresponding gam in weight and®
good spirits follow the use ot fame's celery compound. Paine's celery compound is the most* remarkable inecical achievement of this* last half of the nineteenth century.
^ICYCLES.
AKi-
THli
HIGHEST OF ALL HIGH
GRADES.
•••Warrallied Superai, |o my Uieyclc built In Ihej Wiirtil, rce:irillcsn I.r |iiii' liiiili anil guaruntcfj by the 1 tiei 1111 Hii-yelc Co., a Million Dollar cor-* poi at ion. hose lioml i~ as srooil (is invl.t I nf" buy it wheel 111 1 you have seen (lie W A KUbY.--
O 1
I N I A N A I E O
