Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 12 April 1889 — Page 2

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THE REPUBLICAN.

Published by

W.

S. MONTGOMERY.

GREENFIELD. INDIANA

WIM

is a prospect of quite a revolu­

tion in our American method of vacations. Heretofore there hag been a general rush in summer away from home to public resorts. The advantages gained have been mostly to the landlords. There are now tendencies to reverse this plan, and, instead, to leave the North in the winter for Southern winter homes. This, it is found, can be done very cheaply. Parties have bought tracts in Florida and Southern Georgia, where it is proposed to build cottages on the Park system, where families may spend delightfully four or five of the colder months. There ia common sense in the idea. The Southern people should be the ones to vacate in summer and the Northern in the winter.

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Sugar Trust will see more hard times ahead, as there is a big boom in sugar-beet raising for the purpose oi sugar manufacturing. California declares that so far from a failure in tl-.it-manufacture in this State, there hap been decided success. The crop now under contract is estimated at over 20,000 tons. Claus Spreckels, the sugar king, is at the bottom of the movement. He does not believe in failure, and if any man can see the boom through he is the man. A curious feature of the movement is a well-edited paper, called The Sugar Beet, published in Philadelphia. This is also a Claus Spreckels' affair, who has located in the Quaker City. We have only just entered on the great field of higher agriculture.

STUPENDOUS FRAUDS.

The Government Swindled Out of Hundreds of Thousands «.f lKill «rs.

One of the most extraordinary cases of smuggling and fraud in the Custom House known in this country became public through the Customs authorities in New York, Friday. Allard & Sous, a large Parisian firm dealing in antiques, art furniture, rare tapestries, paintings and bric-a-brac, have a branch establishment at 304 Fifth avenue. For a period extending over at least seven years this house has engaged in the most bare-faced acts of srnugg in jr. For many years the agent of Aliard A Son was a mam named Bloosaire. About three years ago he was superseded by their present agent, Paul Roules. Under Voules's management Blooeaire was steadily degraded until last February he was discharged from the employ of the firm. In revenge for what he claims the injustice practiced against him, some weeks ago Bloosaire called on Special Treasury Agent Simmons and imparted some startling information that led to an immediate and searching investigation of the affairs of the firm. A raid was made on the store and captured a largo quantity of chairs with upholstered seats, that were found stuffed with rich laces, tapestries, silks, bronzes, portieres, curtains and almost everything a person could imagine. Roules the agent then made a full confession. So far as is known the Government has been swindled out of more than a quarter of a million dollars by the firm,as th« unpaid duties range from 30 to 50 per cent, ad valorem. \Vnat the total sum will be when the investigation is complete remains to be seen. The fact that Allard & Sons number among their patrons some of the most select and wealthy families in the United States will probably increase the sum up to $1,000,000. No arrests have been made in the case because all of the Allards are out of reach, being in France. Whether they can be extradited and punished is a question which the Government officers will express no opinion. Their representative, Paul Roules, can be punished, however, and it is only by the clemency of the Treasury Department that he is not behind the bars. The fact that he ha3 practically turned State's evidence, it is supposed, will save him from State's prison. More interesting disclosures in the matter are expected. A MURDERER'S CONFESSION-

Captain Hatfield ^Tells How Three of the McCoys Were Brutally Killed.

Ellison Hatfield, one of the participants in the Hatfield-McCoy feud, who is confined in the Pike County Jail in Kentucky, has* made a confession to State Attorney Lee Ferguson. "I was present," he said, "and participated in the murder of the three McCoy brothers Tolbert, Farley and Randolph. The three brothers were taken from a school house in Logan county, West Virginia, where they had been guarded for a day and a night, and brought over the Tug River, which separates West Virginia and Kentucky. About fifty feet from the river, Carpenter tied them to a pawpaw bush and hung a lantern over their heads* Anse Hatfield then said to them: 'Boys, if you have any peace to make with your Maker, you had better make it.' Tolbert and Randolph began praying, but Farley did not. However, before the boys had time to finish their prayer, John Hatfield shot Farley dead. Anse then gave the order to fire, and shot as he gave the word, killing Tolbert and then emptying the contents of his revolver into the dead body. Alex. Musser fired and killed Randolph McCoy. The others followed suit and all the bodies were riddled with bullets. After the boys were killed Wall Hatfield administered an oath to all of us binding us to take the life of the first who divugled the name of any who were along." Captain Hatfield said that he and Tom Wallace shot Jeff McCoy after he bad escaped from them. The prisoner gave the particulars of the brutal murder of Alifora and Alvin McCoy, in which he took part. Nine of the Hatfield faction on a Sunday night in January, 1888, crossed the river into Kentucky under command of Jim Vance. The surrounded the McCoy homestead,fired the house and killed the girl as she attempted to extinguish the flames. Captain and John Hatfield both claimed that they killed Calvin McCoy, and bragged aboutit.

THE SLAUGHTER.

AS AN OX ABE PEOPLE LED TO THE SLAUGHTER.

Society Leads Thousands to the Deadly Block and Irreligion Makes Them Even a Greater Prey.

Rev. Dr. Talmage preached at 8t, Louis, Mo., last Sunday. Subject: "The Slaughter." Text: Proverbs vii, 22. He said:

We are apt to blame young men for being destroyed, when we ought to blame the influences that destroy them. Society slaughters a great many young men by the behest: "You must keep up appearances whatever your salary may be, you must dress as well as others, you must wine and brandy as many friends, you must smoke as costly cigars, you must give as expensive entertainments, and you must live in as fashionable a boarding house. If you haven't the money, borrow. If you can't borrow, make a false entry, or subtract here and there a bill from a bundle of bank bills you will only have to make the deception a little while in a few months, or in a year or two, you can make all right. Nobody will_ be hurt by it nobody will be the wiser. You \ourselt will not be damaged." By that awful process a hundred thousand men have been slaughtered for time and eternity.

Suppose you borrow. There is nothing wrong about borrowing money. There is hardly a man in the house but has sometimes borrowed money. Vast estates have been built on a borrowed dollar. But there are two kinds of borrowed money. Money borrowed for the purpose of starting or keeping up legitimate enterprise and expense, and money borrowed to get that- which you can do without. The first is right, the other is wrong. If you h°.ve money enough of your own to buy a coat, however plain, and then borrow money for a dandy's outfit, you have taken tne first revolution of the wheel down grade. Borrow money for the necessities, that may be well. Borrow for the luxuries that tips your prospects over in the wrong direction.

The Bible distinctly says the borrower is servant of the lender. It is a bad state of things when you have to go down Bome other street to escape meet" ingsome one whom you owe. If young men knew what is the despotism of being in debt more of them would keep out of it.

The trouble is, my friends, the people do not understand the ethics of going-in debt, and that if you purchase goods with no expectation of paying f©r them, or go into debts which you cannot meet, you steal just so much "money. If I go into a grocer's store, and I buy sugars and coflees and meats, with no capacity to pav for them and no intention of paying for them, I am more dishonest than if I go into the store and, when the grocer's face is turned the other way, I till my pockets with articles of merchandise and carry off a ham. In the one csfee I take the merchant's time, and I take the time of bis messenger to transfer the goods to my house, while in the other case I take none of the time of the. merchant, and I wait upon myself, and I transfer the goods without any trouble to him. In other words, a sneak thief is not so bad as a man who contracts for debts he never expects to pay.

Yet in all our cities there are families that move every May day to get into proximity to other grocers and meat shops and apothecaries. They owe everybody within half a mile of where they'now live, and next May they will move into a distant part of the city, finding a new lot of victims. Meanwhile you, the honest family in the new house, are bothered day by day by the knocking at the door of disappointed bakers, and butchers, and dry goods dealers, and newspaper carriers, and you are asked where your predecessor is. You do not know." It was arranged you should not know. Meanwhile your predecessor has gone to some distant part of the city, and the people who have anything to sell have sent their wagons and stopped there to solicit the "valuable" custom of the new neighbor, and he, the new neighbor, with great complacency and with an air of affluence, orders the finest steaks and the highest priced sugars, and the best of the canned fruits, and, perhaps, all the newspapers. And the debts will keep on accumulating until he gets his goods on the 30th of next April in the furniture cart.

Now, let me say, if there are any such persons in the house, if you have any regard for your own convenience, you had better remove to some greatly distant p? rt of the city. It is too bad that, having had all the trouble of consuming the goods, you should also have the trouble of being dunned! And let me say that if you find that this pictures your own photograph, instead of being in church you ought to be in the Penitentiary! No wonder that so many of our merchants fail in business. They are swindled into bankruptcy by these wandering Arabs, these nomads of city life. They cheat the grocer out of the green apples which make them sick, the physician who attends their distress and the undertaker who fits them out for departure from the neighborhood where they owe everybody when they pay the debt of nature—the only debt they ever do pay!

Now our young men are coming up in this depraved state oi commercial ethics, and I am solicitous about them. I want to warn them against being slaughtered on the sharp edges of debt. You want many things voU have not, my young friends. You shall have them if you have patience and honesty and industry. Certain lines of conduct always lead out to certain successes. There is a law which controls even those things that seem haphazard. I have been told by those who have observed that it is possible to calculate just how many letters will be sent to the Dead Letter Office every year through misdirection that it is possible to calculate just how many letters will be detained for lack of postage stamps through the forgetfulness of the sender, and that it is possible to tell just how many people will fall in the streets by slipping on an orange peel. In other words, there are no accidents. The most insignificant event you ever heard of is the link between two eternities— the eternity of the past and the eternity of the future. Head the right way, young man, and you will come ont at the right goal.

Bring me a young man and tell m« what his physical health is, and what his mental caliber, and what his habits, and I will tell you what will be his

destiny for this world, and his destiny for the world to come, and I will mot make five inaccurate prophecies oat of the five hundred. All this makes me solicitous in regard to young men, and I want to make them nervous in regard to the contraction of unpayable debts.

When a young man willfully and of choice, having the comforts of life, goes into the contraction of unpayable debts he knows not what he goes. The creditors get after the debtor, the pack

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hounds in full cry, and alas! for the reindeer. They jingle his door-bell before he gets up in the morning, and before he goes to bed at night. They meet him as he comes off his front steps. They send him a postal card or a letter, in curtest style, telling him to pay up, Thbj attach his goods. They want cash, or a note at thirty days, or a note on demand. They call him a knave. They say he lies. They want him disciplined at the church. They want him turned out of the bank. They come at him from this side and from that side, and from before and from behind, and irom above and from beneath, and he is insulted and gibbetted and sued and dunned and sworn at until he gets the nervous dyspepsia, gets neuralgia, gets liver complaint, gets heart disease, gets convulsive disorder, gets consump-

Now he is dead, and you say: Of course, they wili let him alone." Oh, no! Now they are watchful to see whether there are any unnecessary expenses at the obsequies, to see whether there is any useless handle on the casket, to see whether there is any surplus

Eearse

la.it on the shroud, to see whether the is costly or cheap, to see whether the flowers sent to the casket have been bought by the family or donated, to see in whose name the deed to the grave is made out. Then they ransack the bereft household, the books, the pictures, the carpets, the chairs, the sofa, the piano, the mattresses, the pillow on which he dies. Cursed be debt! For the sake of your own happiness, for the sake of your good morals, for the sake of your immortal soul, for God's sake, young man, as far as possible, keep out of it.

But I think more young men are slaughtered through irreligion. Take away a young man's religion and you make him the prey of evil. We all know that the Bible is the only perfect system of morals. Now, if you want to destroy the young man's morals take his Bible away. How will you do that? Well, you will caricature his reverence for the Scriptures, you will take all those incidents of the Bible Which can be made mirth of—Jonah'swhale,Samson foxes, Adam's rio—then you will caricature eccentric Christians, or inconsistent Christians, then you will pass off as your own all those haekneved arguments against Christianity which are as old as Tom Paine, as old as Vcfltaire, as old as sin. Now you have captured his Bible, and you have taken his strongest fortress, the way is comparatively clear, and the gates of his soul are set open in invitation to the sins of earth, and the sorrows of death, that they may come in ana drive the stake for their encampment.

A steamer fifteen hundred mixes from shore with broken rudder and lost compass, and hulk leaking fifty gallons the hour, is better oft than a man when you have robbed hicn xt,:- his Bible. Have you ever noticed how despicably mean it is to take away the world's Bible without proposing a substitute? It is meaner thsn^ to come to a sick man and steal his medicine,meaner than to come to a cripple and steal his crutch, meaner than to come to a pauper and steal his crust, meaner than to come to a poor man and burn his house down. It is the worst of all larcenies to steal the Bible, which has been the crutch and the medicine and food and eternal home of so many! What a generous and magnanimous business infidelity has gone into! This splitting up of life boats, and taking away of fire escapes, and extinguishing of light houses.

I come out and say to such people, "Wfeat are you doing all this for?' "Oh," they say, "just for fun." It is such fun to see Christians try to hold on to their Bibles! Many of them have lost loved ones, and have been told that there is a resurrection, and it is such fun to tell them that there will be no resurrection! Many of them have believed that Christ came to carry the burdens and heal the wounds of the world, and it is such fun to tell them they will have to be their own savior! Think of the meanest thing you ever heard of then go down a thousand feet underneath it, and you will find vouself at the top of a stairs a hundred miles long go to the bottom of the stairs ano you will find a ladder a thousand miles long then go to the foot of the ladder and look off a precipice half as far as from here to China and you will find the head-quarters of the meanness that would rob this world of its only comfort of life, its only peace in death and its only hope for* immortality. Slaughter a young man's faith in God, and there, is not much more left to slaughter, jjjf

Now, what has become of the slaughtered? Well, some of them are in their father's or mother's house broken down in health, waiting to die others are in the Hospital others are in Greenwood, or, rather, their oodies are, for their souls have gone on to retribution. Not much prospect for a young man who started life with good health, and good education, and a Christian example set him and opportunity of usefulness, who gathered all his treasures and put them in one box, and then dropped it into the sea. "Now, how is this wholesale slaughter to be stopped? There is not a person in the house but is interested in that question. Young man, arm yourself. The object of my sermon is to put a weapon in each of your hands for your own de fense. Wait not for Young Men's Christian Associations to protect you, or churches to protect you. Appealing to God for help, take care of yourself.

First, have a room somewhere that you can call vour own. Whether it be the back parlor of a boarding house or a room in the fourth story of a cheap lodging I care not. Oniy have that one room your fortress. Let not the disaipator or unclean step over the threshold. If they come up the long flight of stairs and knock at the door meet them face to face, and kindly, yet firmly, refuse them admittance. Have a few family portraits on the wall, if you brought them with you from your country home. Have a Bible on the stand. If you can afford it, and you can play on One, have an instrument of music—harp or flute or cornet or melodeon or violin or piano. Every morning before you leave tha"^ room pray. Every night after yo come home in that room you pra

Make that room your GibiaUar, your Sebastopol, your Mount Zion. Let no bad book or newspaper come into that, room any more than you would allow a cobra to coil on your table.

Take care of yourself. Nobody else will take care of you. Your help will not will not come up two or thrre or four flights of stair.- your help will come through the roof, down from heaven, from that God who in the six thousand years of the world's history never betrayed a young man who tried to be good and a Christian. Let me sajr in regard to our adverse worldy circumstances, in passing, that you are on a level now with those who are finally to succeed. Mark nay words, young man, and think of it thirty years from now. You will find that those who thirty years from now are the millionaires of this country, who are the orators of the country, who are the poets of the country, who are the strong merchants ofjthe country, who are the great philanthropists of the country—mightiest in Church and State—are this morning on a level with you, not an inch above, and you in straitened circumstances now.

Ah! when told you to take care of yourself you misunderstood me if you thought I meant you are to depend upon human resolution, which may be dissolved in the foam of the wine-cup, or may be blown out with the first gust of temptation. Here is the helmet, the sword of Lord God Almighty. Clothe vnnrsalf in that panoply

BOULANGER IS TO BE PROSECUTED. The French Ministry have aBked the Chamber of Deputies to sanction the prosecution of General Boulanger. In making the request, the government submitted a statement to the Chamber in which it reviews the career of General Boulanger since the Commune, and charges him with attempting the destruction of the Republic. It declares that his offense comes under their sections of the penal code dealing with conspiracy and attempt to overthrow the established government. The Chamber agreed to the immediate assembling of the bureaux for the purpose of electing a committee on the prosecution of General Boulanger. A committee was appointed and subsequently presented its report to the Chamber. The committee advised thrf House to authorize the prosecution of Boulanger. The Chamber voted urgency for the discussion of the accusations against General Boulanger, and the. debate proceeded. After speeches by several members, a vote was taken on the question of sanctioning the prosecution of General Boulanger. The result wr« adverse to Boulanger, tbe Chamber deciding, by a vote of 355 to203, in lavur of prosecution. Boulanger is in lk-i :ium.

Boulanger denies that he has been ordered to leave the Belgian territory.

31

the Threshing Machines then in use were almost wholly of the class known as the Endless Apron" style. Then it was that Nichols & Shepard, of Battle Creek, Mich., invented and began to develop an entirely new and novel style of Grain Thresher and Separator, which they very appropriately named the "Vibrator."

It was a revolution in Threshing Machines, and from a small beginning of five machines in 1858 they soon reached a product of 1,000 yearly.

Their Vibrator drove the Endless Apron" machine out of market, and all other makers copied it as closely as they dared. Today all Threshing Machines of any reputation or merit use the principles of the old Vibrator. Nichols & Shepard have continued in the business without change .of name, location, or management and during the past three years have brought out and developed another new Threshing Machine for grain and seeds, as superior to all existing machines as their former was to the'Endless Apron.' They name this new and improved Thresher

VIBRATOR

and predict as great a revolution in the trade, and as complete success over all rivals as they had thirty-one years ago. If you are interested as a Fanner or Thresherman, ivrite for particulars, which they send free. Address

NICHOLS & SHEPARD.

BATTLE CREEK, MICH.

.J5/A WORSt*

181SS1I

BLANKETS

ARE THE STRONGEST. NONE GENUINE WITHOUTTHE 5/A LABEL Mannf'rt by WM. A

YUES

fm.

""if

DR. KLINE'S

GREAT

NERVE RESTORER

3U

& SONS. Phllada.. who

make tho famous Horse Brand Baker Blankets-

DR. KILMER'S

Ono of every five we meet has some form of HeartDiaense, and is in constant danger of Apoplexy, Shock or Sudden Death 1

This Uemedy regulates, relieves, corrects and euros. tarPieiwred at Dr. Kilmer's SUPBH8AKT. Binphamtou, N. Y. fiftfi Lattanoflnqo&rMUwered.

Ooidoto H«uth(Sent Frm).

$5.°° MlbjrBriicgbU.

tit* it

Is a Marvelous Medicine. For all Diseases of the

Brain, Heart & Neryons System.

IT IS THE GREAT

Nerve Tonic and Sedative. Isa Spedfir for all Sc si t1 ve, Irritable,

bellum. 4, Nerrai of the

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Spasmodic Nerve Affeetio11s Fits, EpiIepsy a nil all Nervousness. Tit is remedy acts Directly and Specifically upon ihe Jirain ami Nerve Centres it reslons lost Aetion of the Jirain

Bac*T*~of ti»e br»h. Vitalizes the Nervous «lnal oord and its branches System. It tJ9 IM Infallible •towing the posterior

di*

erne tly for Convulsions*

neoaioDS of tbe brain* and ike ramifications of the Catalepsy ntid Chorea or bt. nerves throughout the body. fittlS* DatlCe. Its effects in £T£ c. "tau«m"orrb^ Fits, Epilepsy, or Fallin,, •r llw nervous system. S, SicldteSS are tvullf Iflaw I-

Spasms be in in

8ta lit ly Stopped, lira III C111-

face. s, Brachial piexii*,

f/cstion and Fu 11 ness or

rsat ppinal^nerrc."c?T, sC Itltshof lilood to 1/lC Head

Reeves of the arm. 9, Those

are UrreSfell at OIKr. filli Hl-

"n,

ntintf of the Head, Tertiffo

SACRA! IMCXIH. 12. IA. M,

and.THzzinessarepi'oiiiptly

Hereof the lower limb*. For Nereous Head ache and Tnsomn ia or Nervous Wal efitln ens, it is a specific. It brings sweet repose a ml refreshment to the tired Jirain. is ^particularly adapted to Nervous and .Delicate Iaidits. Overworked Jiusiness Men, trith a Shattered NervousSystsm,requireit. 1'ersons in Sorrow and Nervous from JaSS of Friends, will find Immediate Jielief. The entire Nervous SystfWlis strengthened, and anew rigor imparted. For Palpitation and Fluttering of the Heart, loss of Memory, Melancholy. Aversionto Society, Con fusion of Ideas, Vnpleasant Dreama,Fa inting Spells, Hysicria. Smothering, Fear and Dread of Comimj Danger. Sense of Self Destruction. lAyhtHe.a'ded ness. Dots or Specks before the .Eyes, Itlotchcd Face, and all Despondent Symjttoms, resulting from Orericork,Excesses and Indiscretions It. Worlts Wonders. It is in fact-THE

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It is prompt, sure and safe in its action, nearly always and as if by magic, arresting all Fits. Epilepsy, Irritable, Excitable, and Unsteady Ne?-roits Affections by first day's use of the medicine.. A trial is conriction. No lh-lieately Organized Nervous System should ever hi: without it. It is not an Opiate! Do's not, contain Narcotic. Poison#,nor does it. disagree with the system. For full particulars s-.iid for Free Treatise to

R. H. KLINE, M. D. 3 031 Arch. Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Price, $1.00 p,nd 32.00

See Druggists,

n« i( 11 [J R1 Stop that Cold, Cough,B i\i t\ IL-IV1 fc iv

and

fekling in the Throat/

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Cures per

PREVENTS L)EC

ur.fidcsith from Consumption. Prepared nt Bit. KiLjniK's

DISPENSARY,

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Binphamton, N. Y.

Li'ttersof inquiry answered. Guide to Health (SentFrco). Scill by Itrti

I.D.&W.

LAILWAY FOR

KANSAS CITY

AND ALL POINTS WEST Lv. Indianapolis, Ind 3.51 p.m. 11.00 p.m. Ar. Decatur, Ills 9.03 4.00 a.m.

St. Louis, Mo 7 45 Springfield, Ills 10.26 65 Jacksonville, Ills 11.86 7.12 Quincy, Ills 10.45 Keokuk, Ia 11.50 Hannibal, Mo 2.00 a.m. 10.40 Ar. Kansas City, Mo 9.20 a.m. 6.30 p.m.

I II TD AIM Has Parlor Coaches to I li INa I nAlll Decatur, and Elegant Reclining Chair Cars, free of extra charge, and Palace Buffet Sleeping Cars Decatur to Kansas City. Time en route between Indianapolis and Kansas City, only 1734 hours.

I

I TDAIU Has a Parlor Reclining I li lilli InAlilChair Car for Keokuk, Ia., passing through Decatur, Springfield, Jacksonville, Chapin, Bluflft, and Clayton, Ills.

To Quincy, Ills., or Hannibal, Mo., without leaving the train. Reclining Chair and Sleeping Car space reserved at I., D. & W. Ticket Office,

Lazarus, H. A. Cherrier, Gcc'l Pa*s. Actini. CitT Tioket Agent.

Jones—"What are you talk ing about!" Smith—"What everybody talks about j, tliey tay that for Bright'* Din «UHC, Kidney, Liver or liluddcr Complaints Uiii remedy has no equal." It e«cii lilglit to tlie Spot EST Prepared nt Dr. Kilmer': Dispensary,Bin trhuniton,N."¥ Letters of inquiry answered Guide to Health Sent FKEE.

MINWIIBE

louisviLiE, HEW

AIBAHYS

ALWAYS GIVES ITS PATRONS

The Full "Worth of1 Their Money by Taking Them Safely and Quickly between

CHICAGO Rr.((A-

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Chicago Lafayette Indianapolis Cincinnati-

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OFOHd

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Louisville

exiogton

PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS ELEGANT PARLOR CARS

ALLTRAINS RUN THROUGH SOLID Tickets Sold and Baggage Checked to Destination.

PTXtet Maps and Time Tables if you want to be more fully Informed—all Ticket Agents at Coupon Stations ho" iem—or address

E. O.MCCORMACK,Gen.Passenger Agt.: Chicago I D. BALDWIN.District Passenger Agt., 26 S. Illinois'St. Indinanpolis.

Ladies Those dull I tired looks and feelings I speak volumes I Thisl Remedy corrects all con ditions, restores vigor! and vitality and brings I back youthful bloom I and beauty. Drugaintn. Prepared nt l)r. Kilmer'spis-

I«|JWU t»w l»l 1% li" mi W*7*"

'w -7 .~

FW\\\ /:f

1

5

I888,

a

PEK8AKY, Bingluunton, N. Y.

C-v i/O Letters of inquiry answomL fl *9 Guide to Health Sent Free). I

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e-Y\ !j S V-.,'

The Dusty Ric'e.

by WM. AYRES

Galva

90

8. Illinois

l3t., under Surgical Institute, Indianapolis.

no.

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The Return Home. "Just look at my dress. It almost spoiled. We had or.'those small sieve dusters. IT-./ 'are no good."

Lap Duster--:

A

Fast

Colors trill

Horse Sheets

Are na'ie up stryajr. 5

Horse Covo'-

A

keep ilea ofi

5/A

Fly Nets, Arctfco Best '-Lj.

Don't spoil your girl's buying a poor, loosely-wovoi: riagc duster. 5^ Lap Duster.J carriage use have the stock

wt

wast-

54

LUH

work put in them to make a class article. The new patterns emb ro ide ry, flowe rs, birds, scene Pv', etc., are well worth seeing. Cue hundred different designs at prices to suit all. For sale by all dealers. ,. ^Copyrighted

& SOXS.] Y||

THE POPDLAI1L3NE

BETV7ESN

Cincinnati, IndiaaapoHs,

LAFAYETTE AND

CfrUCACO.

Vincen

Vujrn

LOWSV

The Entire Trains run Through Without Change. Pullman Sleepers and Elpgfittt RccIining Uliair (Jars oa flight Ti'aii s.

Magnificent Parlor I'nrs on Pay I rains. SPECIAL PULLfifAM SLEEPERS On Night Trains bet.. Indianapolis and Chicago.

Amnion close connection made with all AI bnluAuU lints for the West and Northwest.

AT CINCINNATI

The fact that it connects in the CCTitral Union ii)epo-, in Cincinnati, with the trains of the C.W.&U. U.K. (B. & O.), N. Y. P. & O.

R. R. (Krie), and the C. C.

& LRv (Bee Line), for the East, as well as wilii the trains of the C. N. O. & T. P. Kv (Cincinnati Southern), for the South and Southeast, gives itan advantage over all its competitors, for 110 route from Chicago, Lafayette or Indianapolis can make these connections without compelling passengers to submit to a long and disagreeable omnibus transfer for both passenger and baggage.

Five Trains cacli way, dailycxccpt Sunday, Throe Traims ea.clt war on Sunday, between IndMiJtupolis. and Cincinnati. Through Tickets and Bagwaere Checks to all Principal Points can be obt.uned any

Ticket Office, C. I. St-L.&C. R'y, .Usevia tLis line at all Coupon Ticket Offices tluougnout th« country. J. H. MARTIN, C. S. liaFOLLETTK,

Dist. Pasr.'r Aeent, Western P^s^Aeent, IMMASArOtilS, ISD. lUFATlrlh, law. JOHN EQAN,

Gen'l Pass'r and Ticket Agent, ULMISSATI, O.

'i ft

FREE

(HOC solid GOT.n WATCn $03s.ld for $t«U •watcu

Best SK"| world. fi*ct time.keeper. Warranted. Hoavy (solid Gold Hunting Caaea.

EloKiint nnd miiKniilmnt. Until ladles'and Jtents'aizes with works an.l cntfr-e of equal valne I'HSaSOiS In cuch locality «n rctmro ona FKKK. HOW is IkispeaslbWr Wo answer—we want ono per-

"ii' iirif son In each loonliiv, to keep

ihelr »i»w to tlmse who roll, ft compete line ofoor

It in itnfislble to iMn pr«*t ortor, sending tbe GOLD watcli and Bftinplca free, a* the the samples In any locality, alwu.vB rnetlUs In *1 r.mXTtrVVom to »«00«5 in trade frou, tb. iurniuudlnp country. Thin, the tnout wonderful olTer ever kaown le made IN order that onr uamples may lv placid at onco 5rt,ere tbVv caa be all over Arm rtra. Write at once, and make lure of the chanee. Reader It will be Imrdly an trouble for you to show the wimples to thofo who may call and 5"«r ruwmd vui be most ,«1 actory. A posta r» J1 on which to write usmfltR but 1 r«nt and lifter you J»nn% yoa Tot caiv to «o further, why no harm IK cIoo^Batryoudo •end your address at ouce, you enn sc urc ,?r™# solid gold wetetu* In tlm vmldand onr Un» Uneof tllS I I.V SAMPLES. We pa all exmvi'3, Irc'bM.etO. 4ddrei3U£0. QTlNsON A CO., Jlos 812, FOU.1LAI.D, MAJNB.

DR. ELLIOTT'S

Medicated Food,

A Sure Cure for all Diseases in

HORSES,

Cattle, Sheep and Hogs,

Arising from Impurities of the Blood, and from Functional Derangements.

A DEAD£M0T ON WORMS, ANO A CERTAIN fEVENTKM A HOG CHOLERA.

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