Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 9 December 1895 — Page 4
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THE COMING SEASON.
«EV- DR. TALMAGE ON THE LESSONS OF WINTER.
A fcmion Appropriate to Cold Weather. SMBptations -of the Long Evenings—The Duties of Old and Young:—An Eloquent
Peroration.
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WASHINGTON, Dec. 8.—Today Dr. Talmage chose as the subject of his sermon "The Opening Winter." Although the cold comes earlier or later, according to the latitude, this sermon is sooner a later as appropriate everywhere as it is in Washington. The text selected will be found in Titus iii, 12, "I have determined there to winter."
Pan! was not independent of the seasons. He sent for his overcoat to Troas on a memorable occasion. And now in the text he is making arrangements for Hie approaching cold weather and makes an appointment with Titus to meet him at Necopolis, saying, "I have determined there to winter. Well, this is the 6th day of December and the second -Sabbath of winter. We have had a few shrill, sharp blasts already, forerunners of whole regiments of storms and tempests. No one here needs to be told that we are in the opening gates of the wintec. This season is not only a test of •one's physical endurance, but in our great cities is a test of moral character. A vast number of people have by one winter of dissipation been destroyed, and forever. Seated in our homes on some stormy night, the winds howling outside, we imagine the shipping helplessly driven on the coast, but any winter night, if our ears were good enotigh, we could hear the crash of a thousand moral shipwrecks. There are many people who carce to the cities on the 1st of September who will be blasted by the lsfc of March. At this season of the year temptations are especially rampant. JSTOW that the long winter evenings have come, there are many who will employ them in high pursuits, in intelligent socialities, in Christian work, in the strengthening and ennobling of moral character, and this winter to many of you will be the brightest and the. best of all your lives, and in anticipation I congrattilalo you. But to others it may not have such effect, and I charge yon, iny beloved, look out where you spend jour winter nights.
Evil Allurements.
In the lirst place, I have to remark that at this season of the year evil allurements are especially busy. There is not very much temptation for a man to plunge in on a hot night amid blazing 'gaslights, and to breathe the fetid air of aij assemblage, but in the cold nights satan gathers a great harvest. At such times the casinos are in full blast. At such time, the grogshops in one night make more than in four or five nights in summer. At such times the playbills of low places of entertainment seem especially attractive, and the acting is especially impressive, and the applause especially bewitching. Many a man who has kept right all the rest of the year -will be capsized now. and though last autumn he came from the country and there was luster in the eye and there •were roses in the cheek and elasticity in ike step, by the time the spring hour iiiscome you will pass him in the street Slid say to your friend: "What's the •aiiirtter with that- man? How differently looks from what he lucked last •September." Slain of one winter's dissipation. At this time of the year there aro
Tiisny entertainments. If weriyiiily employ them, and they are of the right thoy enlarge our socialities, allow Has to make important acquaintance, Jmild us up in our morals, and help us iu a thousand ways. I can scarcely think i! smything better than good neighborhood. But there are those entertainments •from which others will come besoiledin •character. There are those who by the springtime will be broken down in .health, and though at the opening of the season their prospects were bright, at 1he close of the season they will be in the hands of the doctors or sleeping in the cemetery. The certificate of death -will be mado out, and the physician, to save the feelings of the family, will call ibe disease by a Latin name. But the fioctor knows, and everybody else knows, they died of too many levees. Away •with all these wine drinking convivialities. How dare you, the lather of a 'family, tempt the appetites of the young people? Perhaps at the entertainment, •to save the feelings of the minister or stimo other weak temperance man, you l^ave the decanter in a side room, and «uiy a few people are invited thereto jnsrtako, but it is easy enough to know -when you come out, by the glare of your flpye and the stench of your breath, that jtra have been serving the devil.
The Evil of Appetite.
Men sometimes excuse themselves and jssiy aVter late suppers it is necessary to rt&ke some sort of stimulant to aid di-
My plain opinion is that if you
jfaav1?' no mure self control than to stuff yam-self until your digestive organs reJafie llieir office you had better not call y-OTTself a man, but class yourself among 4be beasts that perish. At this season of the year the Young Men's Christian associations of the land send out circulars flaking the pastors to speak a word on •this subject, and so I sound in your ear the words of the Lord God Almighty, ""•"Woe nnto him that putteth the bottle -tohis neighbor's lips." Rejoice that yon have come to the glad winter months ffliat remind you of the times when in your childhood you were shone on by face of father, mother, brothers, sissome of them, alas! no more to
K&eet you with a "Happy New Year" «ar a "Merry Christmas." Bnt again agflw have we seen on New Year's *3ay the sons of some of the best families flSrnnk, and young men have excused gJjemRelves by the fact that the wine ffip has boen offered by the ladies, and ijagzain and again it has been found out that a lady's hand has kindled the young mail's thirst for strong drink, and long mSXer all the attractions of the holiday jHtro passed that same woman crouches jollier rags, and her desolation, and her
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woe under the uplifted hand of the drunken monster to whom she had passed the fascinating cup on New Year's day. If we want to go to ruin, let us go alone and not take others with us. Can we not sacrifice our feelings if need be? When the good ship London went down, the captain was told that he might escape in one of the lifeboats. "No," he replied, "I'll go down with the passengers." All the world applauded his heroism. And can we not sacrifice our tastes and our appetites for the rescue of others? Surely it is not a very great sacrifice. Oh, mix not with the innocent beverage of the holiday the poison of adders! Mix not with the "white sugar of the cup the snow of this awful leprosy! Mar not the clatter of the cutlery of the festal occasion with the clank of a madman's chain.
Pass down the street and look into the pawnbroker's window. Elegant watch, elegant furs, elegant flute, elegant shoes, elegant scarf, elegant books, elegant mementos. You sometimes see people with pleased countenances looking into such a window. When I look into a pawnbroker's window, it seems to me as if I had looked into the window of hell! To whom did that watch belong? To a drunkard. To whom did those furs belong: To a drunkard's wife. To whom did those shoes belong? To a drunkard's child. I take the three brazen balls at the doorway of a pawnbroker's shop and I clank them together, sounding the knell of the drunkard's soul. A pawnbroker's shop is only one of the eddies in the great torrent of municipal drunkenness. "Oh," says some one, "I don't patronize such things. I have destroyed no young man by such influences. I only take ale, and it will take a great amount of ale to intoxicate. Yes, but I tell you there is not a drunkard in America that did not begin with ale. Three X's—I do not know what they mean. Three X's on the brewer's dray, three X's on the door of tlio ginshop. three X's on the side of the bottle. Three X's. I asked a man. He could not tell. I asked another what was the meaning of the three X's. He could not tell me. Then I made up my mind that the three X's were an alle gory, and that they meant 30 heartbreaks, $0 agonies, 30 broken up households, "0 prospects of a drunkard's grave, 30 ways to perdition. Three X's. If I were going to write a story, the first chapter I would call "Three X's" and the last chapter I would call "The Pawnbroker's Shop." Oh, beware of your influence.
Winter Temptations.
The winter season is especially full of temptation, because of the long evenings allowing such full swing for evil indulgences. You can scarcely expect a young man to go into his room and sit there from to 11 o'clock in the evening, reading Motley's "Dutch Republic" or John Foster's essays. It would be a very beautiful thing for him to do, but he will not do it. The most of our young men are busy in offices, in factories, in banking houses, in stores, in shops, and when evening comes they want the fresh air, and they want sightseeing, and they must have it, they will have it, and they ought to havo it. Most of the men hero assembled will have three or four evenings of leisure on the winter nights. After tea the man puts on his hat and coat and he goes out. One form of allurement says, "Come in here." Sajtzui KITS: "It is best for you to go in. You (. „'h rut to be so green. By this time you ov.r.'ht to have seen everything. Ai:-.l temptations shall be mighty in dull timys such as we have had. but which, I believe, are gone, for I hear all ever the hind the prophecy of great prosperity, and the railroad men and the merchants, th-ev all tell me of the days of prosperity they think are coming, and in many departments they have already come, and they are going to como in all departments, but those dull times through which we have passed have destroyed a great many meu. The question of a livelihood is with a vast multitude the great question. There are young men who expected before this to set up their household, but they have been disappointed in the gains they have made. They cannot support themselves, how can they support others? And, to the curse of modern society, the theory is abroad that a man must not marry until he has achieved a fortune, when the twain ought, to start at the foot of the hill and together climb to the top.
That is the old fashioned way, and that will be the new fashioned way if society is ever redeemed. But during the hard times, the dull times, so many men were discouraged, so many men had nothing to do—they could get nothing to do—a pirate bore down on the ship when the sails were down and the vessel was making no headway. People say they want more time to think. The trouble is, too many peoplo have had too much time to think, and if our merchants had not had their minds diverted many of them would long before this have been within the four walls of an insane asylum. These long winter evenings, be careful where you spend them. This winter will decide the temporal and eternal destiny of hundreds of men in this audience.
Attractive Home*.
Then the winter has especial temptations in the fact that many homes are peculiarly unattractive at this season. In the summer months the young man can sit out on the steps, or he can have a bouquet in the vase on the mantel, or, the evenings being so short, soon after gaslight he wants to retire anyhow. But there are many parents who do not understand how to make the long winter evenings attractive to their children. It is amazing to me that so many old people do not understand young people. To hear some of these parents talk you Would think they had never themselves been young and had been born with Ipectacles on. Oh, it is dolorous for young people to sit in the house from 7 to 11 o'clock at night and to hear parants groan about their ailments and the nothingness of this world. The nothingness of this world 1 How dare you talk such blasphemy? It took God six days
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to make this world, and he has allowed it 6,000 years to hang upon his holy beart, and this world has shone on you and blessed you and caressed you for these 50 or 70 years, and yet you dare talk about the nothingness of this world I Why, it is a magnificent world. I do not believe in the whole universe there is a world equal to it, except it be heaven. You cannot expect your children to stay in the house these long winter evenings to hear you denounce this star lighted, sun warmed, shower baptized, flower strewn, angel watched, God inhabited planet.
Oh, make your home bright 1 Bring in the violin or the picture. It does not require a great salary, or a big house, or chased silver, or gorgeous upholstery to make a happy home. All that is wanted is a father's heart, a mother's heart, in sympathy with young folks. I have known a man with $700 salary, and he had no other income, but he had a home so happy and bright that, though the sons have gone out and won large fortunes and the daughters have gone out into splendid spheres and become princesses of society, they can never think of that early home without tears of emotion. It was to them the vestibule of heaven, and all their mansions now and all their palaces now cannot make them forget that early place. Make your homes happy. You go around your house growling about your rheumatism aud acting the lugubrious, and your sons will go into the world and plunge into dissipation. They will have their own rheumatisms after awhile. Do not forestall their misfortunes. You were young once, and you had your bright and joyous times. Now let the young folks have a good time. I stood in front of a house, and I said to the owner of the house, "This is a splendid tree." He said in a whining tone, "Yes, but it will fade. I walked around in his garden and said, "This is a glorious garden you have." "Yes," he said, "but it will perish. Then he said to my little child, whom I was leading along, "Come and kiss me." The child protested and turned away. He said, "Oh, the perversity of human nature!" Who would want to kiss him? I was not surprised to find out that his only son had become a vagabond. Yon may groan people out of decency, but yon can never groan them into it, and I declare in the presence of theso men and women of common sense that it is a most important thing for you to make your homes bright if you want your sons and daughters to turn out well.
The Young and the Old.
Alas, that old people so much misunderstand young folks There was a great Sunday school anniversary, and there were thousands of children present—indeed all the Sunday schools of the town were in the building, and it was very uproarious and full of disturbance, and the presiding officer on the occasion came forward and in a very loud tone shouted, "Silence!" and the more noise the presiding office made, the more noise the children made. Some one else rose on the platform and came forward and with more stentorian voice shouted, "Silence!" and the uproar rose to greater height, and it did seem as if there would be almost a riot and the police have to be called in, when old Dr. Beaman, his hair white as the driven snow, said, "Let me try my hand." So he came forward with a slow step to the front of tho platform, and when the children saw the venerable man and the white hair, they thought they would hush up that instant and hear what the old man had to say. He said: "Boys, I want to make a bargain wish you. If yon will be still now, while I speak, when you get to be as old as I am I will be as still as a mouse." There was not another whisper that afternoon. He was as much a boy as any of them. Oh, in these approaching holidays, let us turn back our natures to what they were years ago and be boys again and girls again and make all our homes happy. God will hold you responsible for tho influence you now exert, and it will be very bright and very pleasant if some winter night, when we are sleeping under the blankets of snow, our children shall ride along in the merry party and hushing a moment into solemnity, look off and say, "There sleep the best father and mother that ever made a happy new year." Arm yourself against these temptations of December, January and February. Temptation will como to you in the form of an angel of light.
I know that the poets represent satan as horned and hoofed. If I were a poet and I were going to picture sat an, I would represent him as a human being, with manners polished to the last peri't ction, hair falling in graceful ringlets, eye a little bloodshot, but floating bewitching languor, hand soft and dnimondod, foot exquisitely shaped, voice mellow as a flute, breath perfumed as though nothing had over touched the lips but balm of a thousand floweis, conversation facile, carefully toned and Frenchy. But I would have the heart incased with the scales of a monster and have it stuffed with all pride and beastliness of desire and hypocrisy aud death, and then I would have it touched with the rod of disenchantment until the eyes became the cold orbs of the adder, and to the lip shoifld come the foam of raging intoxication, and to the foot the spring of the panther, and to the soft hand the change that would make it the clammy hand of the wasted skeleton, and then I would suddenly have the heart break out in unquenchable flames, and the affected lisp of the tongue become the hiss of the worm that never dies. But until disenchanted, ringleted and diamonded and flute voiced and sonversation facile, carefully toned and Frenchy.
Words of Warning.
Oh, what a beautiful thing it is to see a young man standing up amid these temptations of city life incorrupt while hundreds are falling 1 I will tell your history. You will move in respectable circles all your days, and some day a friend of your father will meet you and say: "Good morning! Glad to see you. You st^.i to be prospering. You look like your father for all the world. I
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thought you would turn out well when I used to hold you on my knee. If you ever want any help or any advice, come to me. As long as I remember your father I'll remember you. Good morning." That will be the history of hun dreds of these young men. How do I know it? I know it by the way you start. But here's a young man who takes the opposite route. Voices of sin charm him away. He reads bad books, mingles in bad society. The glow has gone from his cheek, and the sparkle from his eye, and the purity from his soul. Down he goes, little by little. The people who saw him when he came to town while yet hovered over his head the blessing of a pure mother's prayer and there was on his lips the dew of a pure sister's kiss, now as they see him pass cry, "What an awful wreck!" Cheek bruised in grogshop fight. Eye bleared with dissipation. Lip swollen with indulgences. Be careful what you say to him for a trifle he would take your life.
Lower down, lower down until, outcast of God and man, he lies in the asylum, a blotch of loathsomeness and pain. One moment he calls for God and then he calls for rum. He prays, he curses, he laughs as a fiend laughs, then bites his nails into the quick, then puts his hands through the hair hanging around his head like the mane of a wild beast, then shivers until the cot shakes, with unutterable terror, then with his fists fights back the devils, or clutches for serpents that seem to wind around him their awful folds, then asks for water, which is instantly consumed on his cracked lips. Some morning the surgeon going his rounds will find him dead. Do not try to comb out or brush back the matted locks. Straighten out the limbs, wrap him in a sheet, put him in a box, and let two men carry him down to the wagon at the door. With a piec9 of chalk write on top of the box the name of the destroyer and the destroyed. Who is it? It is you, oh, man, if, yielding to the temptations of a dissipated life, you go out and perish. There is a way that seemeth bright and fair and beautiful to a man, but the end thereof is death. Employ these long nights of December, January and February in high pursuits, in intelligentsocialities, in innocent amusements, in Christian work. Do not waste this winter, for soon you will have seen your last snow shower and have gone up into the companionship of him whose raiment is white as snow, whiter than any fuller on earth could whiten it. For all Christian hearts the winter nights of earth wiH end in the Juno morning of heaven. The river of life from under the throne never freezes over. The foliage of life's fair tree is never frostbitten. The festivities, the hilarities, the family greetings of earthly Christmas times will give way to larger reunion and brighter lights and sweeter garlands and mightier joy in tho great holiday of heaven.
A Historian's Privilege.
Mine. Novikoff was at a Suuday party at Holland House in the days of its late mistress, and was seated between Lord Houghton and Mr. Kinglake. The latter observed, in answer to a remark of the Russian lady, that historians were sometimes very badly treated. "What do you mean?" asked Mine. Novikoff, rather puzzled. "Well," continued Kinglake n:nt.ly, as if discussing some grave topic, "just tako my case, for o'ample. As you know, I am supposed to he a historian. Tho other day I got a letter which really touched me it was signed by two people, husband aud wife, and came from one of our colonies. They described their grief. Their only child, it seemed, had been killed in the Crimea. For some incomprehensible reason they were most anxious to have 'their beloved darling' mentioned in my history of the Crimean war. Surprised, but flattered, I replied by return of post—a thing I have not done for many, many years—that I would be happy to do my best for their comfort provided they sent me the necessary particulars. Again a letter written and signed by both mother and father arrived, but with tho following cruel addition 'We have no particulars whatever. He was killed on the spot., like many others, and anything you may kindly invent will bo welcome we leave it entirely to your judgment.' —New Review.
Rents In London and Paris. Some interesting figures concerning house rent in London and Paris have recently been published Le Journal des Debats. It appears that in Paris its population of 2,250,000 pays nearly as much rent as London, with twice the number of inhabitants. The 2,250,000 Parisians have only 83,000 dwellings to hvo in, while tho number of houses tliat the 5,000,000 Londoners occupy is nearly ton times as many. In Paris, wliero the people live in flats, there are on an average over 270. persons residing In each house. In London the average is only seven persons to a house. Yet for much less comfort and space the Parisians have to pay little short of double the rent naid by Londoners. The total annual rent of Paris, says Le Journal, is now 775,000,000 francs, or $155,000,000, while Londoners, who are twice the number of Parisians, only pay $185,000,000 for far more comfortable dwelling accommodation. The average rent paid by Londoners is between $35 and $40, while in Paris it is nearly $70.
An Exciting Life.
Sir J. B. Thurston of Fiji fame has led a highly exciting lifo. He was a storekeeper in the "bush," when he was prevailed upon to take a trading expedition to the south Pacific. The vessel in which he traveled was wrecked in a terrible hurricane, and after some hairbreadth escapes he succeeded, with a few others, in reaching Fiji. A native monarchy existed at the time on the island, and young Thurston was installed as a clerk in the British consulate. After a time the king—Thakombau I by name—appointed him prime minister.
1895 December. 1895
Su. Itfio. Tu. We. Th. Fr. Sa.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
"BIG FOUR"
ROUTK TO
ATLANTA.
Cotton States and International Exposition. Travelers to the South during the fall and the early part of the winter season 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, Co'iumbus, Springfield, Sandusky, Dayton and intermediate points, magnifi cent through trains run daily in.'o Cincinnati. All trains ot the "Big Four" arrive at Central Union Station, Cincinnati, making direct connections with through trains of the Quttn & Crescent route to Atlanta. Through sleeping cars via the Q. & C. route run directly to Chattanooga, thence via Southern rail vay to A tlanta. i\!".ny poiii'soi. rji.storicai b'tevest as TVell as beautiful scenery may bo enjoyed en route. Of t-hesu Chic-kamanga National Park ami.Lookout Mountain at Ch«tti«.uooga are Loremost, and should be visited by everyon-. ou the way ta Atlanta.
For full information as to rates, routes, tn-.e ?f trains, etc., call on or address any •u'Hnt Big Four Route.
D.B.MARTIN,
Geu'l Pass. & Ticket Ajffc.
K. O. .M'CORMICK, Pass. Traffic Mgr. 41t3
BIG FOUR
ROUTE TO
ATLANTA EXPOSITION.
From ^Chicago, Peoria, Indianapolis, Terre Haufe, LaFayette, Benton Harbor, Anderson and intermediate points, the north and north-west, the Big Four •jjoute offers the choice of two great gateways to the south, Ciccinnati and Louisville.
Through daily trains of 'Buffet [Parlor cars, Wagoner Buffet Sleej-iog cars, elegant Dinning cars aud modern coaches.
At "Cincinnati direct connections are made in Central Union Station with through trains with Pullman Sieepir-g cars of the Queen and Cresent Route to Atlanta via Chattanooga and the Southern railway, and with through trains of the Louisyille & Nashville R.y., via Nashville, the N. C. & St. L. Ky. aud Western and Atlantic Ry. to Atlanta.
At Louisville connections are made with the L. & N. Ry. via route indicated. For full information as to rates, routes, time of trains, etc., call on or address any agent Big Four Route. E. O. MCCORMICK, I). B. MARTIN, Passenger Traffic Mgr. G. P. & T. A.
EXCURSIONS SOUTH.
Lower Kates to Atlanta via rennt-j Uania JLiiies. Three forms of excursion tickets to Atlanta account the Cotton States Exposition are for sale via Pennsylvania Lines. One ticket is good returning twenty days from date of sale, another is good for return trip until Jan. 7, lfc'JO, and a third good| returning ten days. Twenty day tickets and those good to return until Jan. 7 may be obtained any time during the exposition.' The teu day tickets will be sold only on Oct. 20, Kov. 5, 15, and 25, and Dec. 5 and 16, at special low rates. The fare is exceptionally cheap. For details apply to nearest ticket agent, of Pennsylvania Lines. d&vyte
The Historic Koute.
The Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway, the model railroad of the Sou'h in equipment, roadway and service is also the greatest in historical interest, more than fifty famous battlefields and five national cemeteries being located on the various lines of this system. This is the preferred route to Atlanta for the Cotton State and International exposition, open from September 18, to December 31,1895, for which very low excursion rates have been made. Through sleeping car service from St. Louis to Atlanta via Evansville, Nashville and Chattanooga. This is the route of the famous "Dixie Flyer" through sleeping car line which runs the year round between Nashville and Jacksonville, Fla. For further information address R. C. Cowardin, Western Passenger Agent, Railway Exchange Building, St. Louis, Missouri, or
W. L. DANLEY, G. P. & T. A., Nashville, Tenn.
Every ~Lady In Town.
would perfer to have a sweet breath, this she can not have if suffering with catarrh. She can be positively cured of this trouble if she will use Century Catarrh Cure,—For sale at CrescenfcPharmacy. -j7.
COTTON STATES EXPOSITION.
Atlanta, Ga. Sept.l8,D«c 31,1885 The schedule printed below is a comprehensive guide to the shortest and quickest route to Atlanta from the North and Northwest, Chicago, Indianapolis, Tf-rve Haute and Evausville,
Palace Day Coaches and Pullman Sleeping Cars are attached to all trains shown in this schedule
Extremelv low rates have been made to Atlanta and return, via the Nashville, Chattanooga aud St- Louis Railway. All trains run solid between Nashville and Atlanta. The train in last column, which leaves Cincinnati at 4:30 P. M., runs solid to Atlanta. This is the route of the famous "Dixie Flyer" through "all the year round" sleeping car line between Nashville, Tenn., and Jacksonville, FJa.
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For further information address Briard F. Hill, Northern Passenger Agent, 328 Marquette Building, Chicago, 111. R. C. Cowardin, Western Passenger Ag^nt, 405 Ry. Exchange Building, St. Louis, Mo. or D. J- MuJlaney, Eastern Passenger A"tnt 59 W. Foutth St., Cincinnati, O.
W. DANLEY, & T. A. Nashville, Tenn.
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$500.00 GCJ^iRAMTHiE. ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS. Will not injure hands or fabric.
No Washboard needed. Can use hard watel same as soft. Full Directions or evc-ry package. At 8-oz. package for 5 cis. or 6for 25 cts,
Sold by retail ^r.-ceri everywhere. (,"When the Hour Hsnd Points to Nine, Have Your Washing on the Line."
Indianapolis DivisiciQo
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A lea. Flag Stop. G.C, S ninl oonr.pct. at Columbus for i,!:,tst)iirgli and tins l.ast. mid at Kiclimond lor Dayton, Xvmu and t-pi in^neld, and Mo.2©for
Trains leave Ca'iibivdiro City at. f7 05 a in. and 12-00 p. n». lor Ilnsliville, Shclbyvillo, Columbus and lntrrmod.uto stations. Arrive Cambridge City +12 3U and iG-351'- m. JOSEl'lI WOOD, K.A.FORD,
General Manager, General Passenger Agent
10-20-95-Xt PiTTsnuROtn, PICNN'A. For time cards, rates of fare, through ticket s, baggage checks and further information regarding the running of trains apply to any Ageut of the Pennaylvania Lines.
The Kocky'Mountnlns.
Along the line of the Northern Paciflo Raflroad abound in large game. Moose, deer, bear, elk, montain lions, etc., can yet be found there. The true sportsman Is willing to go there for them. A little book called "Natural Game Preserves," published by the Northern Pacific Railroad, will be sent upon receipt of four cents in stamps by Charles S. Fee. Gen') Pass. Agent, St. Paul, Minn. 15tf
