Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 9 January 1891 — Page 4
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more blatant up the night I wish you ull,
olost and best sense, .ias. The event comthe gladdest of the centst'si crudlo was as wonder* cross. Persuade mo of the .id 1 am not surpr.sed ai the The door by which lie entered A6 as tremendous us the door by which iie went out.
I was last winter at the house where Jeans lived while lie waa in Africa. It was in Cairo, ligypt, tho terminus of that terriblo journey which lie took when Joseph and Mary tied with Him •from lvothleiiem to Jiyypt escape the massacre of llerod. All tradition as well as all history points out this house in Cairo as the one in winch these throe fugitives lived whi'e in Africa. The ro.ra is nine steps down from the level of the street. I measured the room and found it twenty feet long and seven fee: and a half high. There avo three shelvings of rock, one of which I think was the cradle of o.ir Lord. aj-There is to window, and ali the light must have eoine from lantern Or candle. The three amve.l here from liethlehem, having eroisod the awful desert.
On the Mediterranean steamer going £rom Athens to Alexandria I met the eminent scholar aud theologian, IV. Landing, who for thirty-live .years has been a resident of Cairo, and he told me that he li id been all over 'he road that the three fugitives took from liethlehem
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Kgypt. lie says that it
Is a desert way, and that the forced Journey of the inraut Christ must have been a torr »vie jonrnoy. Going up frost Kgypi Dr. Lansing mot people from Bethlehem, their tongues .swollen and hanging Oiit from th inttammation of thirst, and although his party had but one goatskin of water left, and thai was important for themselves, he was Bo moved with t3ie spectacle of thirst Lu these poor pilgr.ms that, although it exoilei the indignation of hi- fellowiravelai's, ho gave water to the strangers. Over this dreadful route Joro-ih and Mary started for this land o! Fgypt. No time to mnke much preparation. Herod was after them, and what were these peasants before an irate king? Jtiseph, the husband and father, one night sprang up from hie mattress in great alarm, tho bead* of sweat on his forehead and his whole frame quaking. He had dreamed of the massacre of his wife and babe. They must be olr, that night, r'g.u away. Mary put up a few things hasW IDy, and. Joseph brought to the door the beast of burden and helped hi.s wife and child to mount, Why, those loaves of bread are not enough, those bottles of water will not last for such a long way. lint there is no time to get anything more. Out and away. Uood bye to the dear home ihey expect never again to 6ee. 'l'heir hearts break. It does not need that ours bo a big houete ia order to make us sorry to leave it.
Over the hills and down through tlie deep gorgo they urge their way. liy Hebron, by Ga:a, through hot sand, under a blistering sun, the babe erjs iag. the mother faint, tho ither exhausted. How. slowly the days and weeks pass. Will the weary three ever reach the banks of the Nil. Will ihey ever see Cairo? Will the desert ever end? When at last they cross the line beyond which old llerod has no right to pursue, their joy is unbounded. Free at last! Let them disruou it and rest. Now they resume their way with less anxiety. They will find a place somewhere for sheltea and tho earning of their bread. Here they are at Cairo, Egypt.
Tho wind through the crooked streets which are about ten feet wide, and enter the humbio house where 1 have been to-day. But the terminus of tho journey of these three fugitives was not as humble as their ar'uing point at lietiiU hem. If that journey across the deuert ended in a cellar, it started from a barn. In and around that barn in Bethlehem we tarry today.
Everything humble around tho barn, but everything glorious overhead. Christ's aivent was tn tho hostelry called the house of Chira Ham the ni*ht with diamonded finger pointing down to the place the door of heaven set wide open-to UKKC out from orchestral baton of light dripping the oratories of tho Messiah on lowest doorstep of heaven the minstrels of (*orl discoursing of glory and good will. Soon after the white-headed astro ogers kneel, and from leathern pouch ohink the sheckels." ami from ©pen 8»AO\-» exhale the frankincense and rustle out the bundles of mvrrh The loosened star, the escaped.doxlogv of celejtials. tho chili December night »fluah witli May morn our world a lost, 'star, and another star rushing down tho *ky tbatf night to beckon the iwanderer hom} again, shall yet make fall nations* keep Chrietmas.
Are there no new lessons from tho [story not yet hackneyed by oft repeats .at? Oh, yea. Know, in the lirst
fiot th« raotfnihg' stars sing to «r when the portfolio of the jrIds was opened? A start That means defense, for did not the stars fight in their ctourses gainst Sisera and for the Lord's people? A star! That means brilliant continuance, for are not the righteous to shine as the stars forever and ever?- A star! That means the opening to eternal joy. The day star in tho heart. The morning star of the Redeemer.
The unusual appearance that night may have been a strange conjunction of worlds. As the transit of Venus in in our time was foretold many years ago by astronomers, and astronomers can tell what will be the conjunction
But ii may have been a meteor such as you and I have seen lla.-h to the horizon. I saw a fow yours ago a star shoot and fall with such bril.iancy and precision that if I had been on a hilt is high as that of Bethlehem on which tho shepherds stood, I could have marked within a short cistanc3 the place of the alighting. The University of Iowa nnd the Hritish Museum ha specimens of meteoric sr.ones picked up in the fields, fragments thrown o.T fro'u other worlds, leaving a fiery trail on the sky. So that it is not to me at all improbable, the stellar or tho meteoric appearance on that night of which we speak. 1 only ciro to kno-v that it was bright, that it. was silvery, hut it flashed and swayed and s-wuny an.l halted with oy celestial,as though Jhri.sf, in haste to save our world, had fusho.i down without his coronet, and the angels of God had hurled it after him.
Notice, also, in this scene, that other worlds seemed to lioi.or our Lord and Master. Bright ?tar of the n'ght. wheel on in thy orbit. ••No," said the ar, must come nearer and 1 mast bend and I must watc'i and see what you do with my Jesus." Another world joined our world that night in worship. That star mado a bow of obeisauco. 1 sometimes hear people talk of Christ's dominion as though it were to be. merely tho few thousand miles of the world's circumference hut I believe the millions and tho billions and the quadrillions of worlds are all inhabited—if not by such creatures as wo are, still such creatures as God designed to make, and that ali these worlds are a part of Christ's dominion. Isaac Newton, and Kepler, and Llerschel only went on Columbus's voyage to find t.ese continents of our King's domain. 1 think all worlds were loyal but this. The great organ of the Cuiverso, its pedals and its pipes and its keys, all one great harmony save one in-, jured pedal, save one broken stop— the vox humana of the human ra :e, 1 he disloyal world. Now you know, however grand the instrument may bo, if there bo one key out of order it spoils the harmony. And Christ must mend this key. Ho must restore this broken stop. You know with what bleeding hand, with what pierced side and with what crushed foot He did tho work. But the world shall be attuned, and all worlds shall yet be accordant. Isle of Wight is larger in comparison with the British Empire than our island of a world as compared with Christ's vast domain. If not, why that celestial esoort? If not. why that sentinel with biasing badge above tho caravansary? If not, why that midnight watchman in the balcony of heaven? Astronomy surrendered that night to Christ. This planet for Christ. This solar system for Christ. Worlds ablaze and worlds burnt out.-all worlds for Christ. ]ntensest microscope can not see tho one side of thai domain. Farthest reaching telescope can not lind tlie other side of that domain.
But I will tell you how tho universe is bounded. It Is bounded on the north and south and east and west and above and beneath by God, and that God is Christ, and that Christ is Gpd, and that God ls.our3. Oh, does it not enlarge your ideas of a Savior's domain whoa I toil you that all the worlds are only sparks struck from His anvil? That all the worlds tire only the lieecy flocks following the one Shepherd? That all the islands of light in immensity are one great archipelago belonging to our King?
But this sceno also Impresses me with the fact that the wise men of the East came to Chrjst. They were not fools, they were not imbeciles. The record distinctly says that the wise men came to Christ. We say they were the magi, or they were the alchemists, or they were the astrologists, and we say it with depreciating accentuation. Why. they were the most
place, it wns a sidereal appearance astrologers t« study the stars. that Lei the way. Why not a black Twenty*two hundred and fifty years cloud In tho shape of a hand or finger before Christ was Worn the wise men
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liquids and solids, arid .4n Mliihg iuv~ world's library with ."their .wonderful discoveries. They.were vastly wise men who caine from the East, and •tradition says the threo wisest oame— Ciispar. a young man Balthazar, a man in mid life, and Ichior, an octogenarian. The three wisest men of all the century. They came to the manger.
So'it has alwas been—the wisest men come4to Christ, the brainiest men come to tho manger. Who was the great?st metaphysician th cnuntry has ever produced? Jonathan Edwards the Christian. Who wa* the greatest astronomer of the world? Horschel.
of worlds a thousand years from now, the Christian. Who is the gre^tast so they can calculate backward and even inlidel astronomers have been compelled to testify that about the jvar 1 there was a very unusual appearance ia the heavens. The Chineese record, of course ent'rely independent of iho word of (io:l, gives as a matter of history that ,'ibo.it the year 1 there waa a strange^and unaccountable appearance in the heavens
poet ever produced? John Milton, the Christian. Who was the wisest wriler on law? Blacks one. th® Christ an. Why is it that every college and university in the land has a chapel? They must have a placo for the wife men to worship. Come now, let us understand in ounees imd by inches this who matter. In po9t-mort3ai examination the brain of distinguished men has been oxamined, and I will fin,i the largest, tho heaviest, tiia mightist brain evor produced in America, and I will csk what that brain thought of Christ. Here it is, the brain weighing sixty-thrrie ounces the largest brain ever produced in America. Now let me find what that brain thought of Christ. In tho dying moment thai mvtnsaid: "Lord, I believe, help Thou mine unbelief. Whataver else 1 do, Almighty God, receive mo to Tliyeoll for Christ's sako. This night I shall be in lisrht and joy and bicssednes9." So Daniel Webster came to the manger. The wise men of the east followed the wise men of the west.
Know also in this scene that it was a winter month that God chose for His Son's na'ivity. Had it been the month of May th it is the season of blossoms Had He been born iu the month of Juno—tlint is the season of roses. Hiad He been born in tho month of Ju«ly—t-h?:t is the season of great harvests. Ha He be*n born in the mouth of September—that is the uenson of ripe orchards. Had He been born in the month of October—that is the season of upholstered forests. But He was born in a winter month.
It was in closing December that He was bora to show that this is a Christ for people in sharp blast, for people under clouded eky. for people with frosted hopes, for people with thermometer be'ovv zero. That is the reason He is so often found among the destitute.
You can find Hitn on any night coming OiY the moors. You can *eo llim any night coming through the dark lanes of the city. You can see Him putting his hand under the fainting head in the pauper's cabin. He remembers how the wind whistled nwnnil t.hft CH.rgin Wfrthleb^m. .hat December night, and He is in sympathy with all those who in their poverty hear the shutters clatter on a cold night.
It was thia December Christ that Wa hington and his army worshiped at Valley Forge when withoutbhinkets thev lay down in the December snow. It was "this Christ that the Pilgrim Fatherap oalod to when the Mayflower wharfed at Plymouth Rock, and ii? years that wont by the graves diggea wero more in number than tho houses built. Oh, I tell you, we want :i December Christ, not a Christ for fair weather, but a Christ for dark days cloudcd with sickness, and chilling with dissapointment, and suffocating with bereavement, and terrific with wide open graves. Not a Spring-time Christ, nor a summer Christ, nor a autumnal Christ, but a winter Christ,
Notice also a fact which no one seems to notice, that this Christ has besn among tho sheep, and the cattle, and tho horses, and the camels, in order that He might be alleviating influence to the whole nnimal creation. It means mercy for overdriven, underfed poorly sheltered, galled and maltreated animal creation. Hath the Christ who compared Himself to a dove no care for the cruelitiea of the pigeon shooting? Hath tho Christ who compared Himself to a lamb no care for the sheep that are tied and contorted,
and
with neck over the sharp edge o! the butcher's cart, or the cattle train in hot weather from Omaha to Now York, with no water—1,500 miles ol agony? Hath tho Christ who tax was paid by a fish, the coin taken frsm its mouth, no cave for the tossing tins in the fish market? Hath the Christ who strung with his own bund the nerves of dog and cat no indignation for tho horrors of vivisection? Hath the Christ who said. "Go to the ant," no watchfulness for the transfixed insects? Hath the Christ who said, "Behold tho fowls of the air." liirnseif ever beheld the outrages heaped upon the.brute creation which can not articulate its grief? This Christ came not only to lift the human race out of its trouble, but to lift tho pang and hardshio of the animal creation. In the
splendid and mug iificont men of the glorious millennial time^the child shall century. They were the naturalists
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and a dentists. They knew all that was known. You must remember that astrology was tho mother of astronoiriy. and that alchemy win the mother of chemistry, and becauso children are brighter than the mother you do de.spise-the mother
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lead tho lion and play with the cockit-
trice only because brute and reptile shall have no more wrongs to avenge. TftHlleivrto the condition of tho brute creation Christ was, born in the cattle pen. Tho first bleat of the lamb of not (iod heard amid tho tired flocks of the
Bethlehem shepherds. Tho white
It wait he lifelong business of these horse ol eternal victory stabled in a barn. .. But notice also In thia account tho three Christmas present* that ara
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also shook tne myriu^-v iruiu sacks. (The cattle came and tney snuffed pt it. Tbey did not eat it because it] was bitter. The pungectguni resn of'Abyssinia callod myrrh brougb to the feet of Christ. That means bitterness. Bitter betrayal, bUter per, secution. bitter days of suffering, bit. tor nights of woe. Myrrh, That i? what they put into his cup when He was oying. Myrrh. Tnat is what they put under His head in the wilderness. Alyrrh. That is what they strewed His path with all the way from tho cattle pen in Beth ehem to the mausoleum at Joseph's country seat. Myrrh Well might the wise men shake out the myrrh.
But I notice also from another sack they shako out the frankincense. Clear up to tho rafters of tho barn the air is tilled with perfume, and the hostlers and the camel drivers in tho furthe part of the building inhale it. and it floats out upon tho air until passers-by wonder who in that rough placo eo lid have by accident dropped a box of alabaster.
Frankincense. That ij what they burned in the censer in the ancient temple. Frankincense. That means worship. Frankincense. That is to fill all the homes, an ail the.churches, an all the capitals, and ail the nations, from collar to staia tited e::ve clear up to tho silvery rasters of the starlit
frankincense and the center of heaven iy frankincense—and I svim them before the throne, und then I clash them together in one great hallelujah unto Him to whom the wiso men of the East brought the gold, and tho myrrh and the frankincense. Blessed I PlHTii'i-P
hrt hi« flni".niis nnmn im-pvor? ,^
REMINISCENCE OF LINGOLN.
How an Old Preacher's Prophesy of War Affected Him
pioneer Methodist minister, related the following- r&niiuiscaacQ of Abraham Lincoln. It ha3 never been published, and its accuracy is vouched for by ono or two pioneer Methodist ministers of
v-''0!"ounty.
At a county meeting riou un Springfield, some yetirs before the war, it was known that Rev. Peter Akteea would preach. He w:is noted for the powor itnd prodigious length of his sermons. Ho was the minister who dedicated the old Methodist Church in Lewiston in 1849, and his sermon was ju3t three hours lonsr. A carriage-load Psiints, Oils, Varuisiies, Dj e-StiiuSj of prominent Springfield lawyers went and loofcli 33i i»slies. J?oilet Arout to hear t, he great presuihor. Lincoln I tides. Perfumery, Soaps, Sponges, w:is ono of the party, His theme was ami a varieties of Druggists Sun"The Sin »f Slavery." He portrayed »lrit?s. School Books,Biaiik Books, its horrors in vivid colors. He prophe- and Stationery. We keep a full •sied Uiat God would wash away thii crime of crimes in blood. He predicted the war, and with prophetic accuracy described its terrors. But ho pu! off its date soma years. It was a startling and thrillingsermoa. Few hearers sympathized with the preacher's views. They regarded them as the idlo frothings of a harmless old Abolitionist. As tho lawyers drove home they chatted gayly about the absurd fears of the preacher. They expected to see a railway built to the moon before any civil war would happen in this country. Bu1 Lincoln was silent and thoughtful. At last they rallied him. "What do you think about it, Abe?'* they asked. "Well," ho replied.
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confess thai I
have never before been so deeply impressed by humnn utter nee. I have never thought we should have war over slavery or any othor question. But those utterances to-day seeme to come from far beyond tho peachor. Tlicy came to mo as a real ana awful prophecy. More astonish in than all—aud you may laugh if you will—I seemed to be thrilled, in my very soul with the conviction that I am in some way to have tremendous responsibility in that com inland awful war."
Mr. Lincoln's solemn manner impressed his hearers, as usually he was tho happiest ia any company. It was only a few years until "Father11 Akreu's prophecy and Mr. Lincoln's remarka* ble impresiioa wero fully verified.
A London statistician figures that SO, GO" Americans have liuiue.l in England tUi? summer, tho expanses across av'..rasj!nj more than $103 •uoh, and that upnu tl.s lowest calculation thev have ci.culate:] $31,00.),00.) in Kuropa on railways and at. hotels, without couutiaj tte xaour.y spea! in ourehnses.
Mi*s. Jameu Clurk arrived a few days ajro in Shamokin, I'a., ifrom Ensftaad. She IA likely oue of the oldest' persons who evor cr^gssd the ocean belns bor# in. 1,74*3.
Best grads of Flour per hanu.-_, „. 14 pounds Granulated Sugar, $lw00? 1 Champion Package Coffee per poand, 25c. Standard and Lion package Coffee per pound, 28c. Fine California Prunes, per pound, 20c. Fine CaliforniA Apricct, per pound 25c. 4^ fi Flue Dried Nectarines, per pouud, 25c.
thanksgiving and worship. Let them paiiouu^Tve^ouaii'iM ttogeaoru.. bring all their frankincense—the pS'l]?? I'jrpo Cured in ono minnte Without min chompim bring theirj. and the se.'a- °raafter ^t0i- trmtmoRt. Satisfaction phiin theirs, and the one hundrod and forty and fo:it* thousand theirs, and ail the eternities theirs, and let them
my p&iieiiUreee
Oi'feS EjfCS
or treatment.
positively guaranteed or r.u pay. Pp 'flrprf f'Odark rooms after cataract and UuiUlflOii otherODer.itiou.supoa t'.ocvo. V.'ild Hairs, drooping lids. Krann.ated lids, we 1: and
,/"storingeyes
permanently cared.
'Vr1
cured and & nor nc«o inr-do Ilvo
lito os akin. S at E a ti'lUfl'i tlo-i, Kiong&tod Uvua tinci Larynjjitiiii Jioaied ai homo witii Huecess.l I Tnilitl?
s,olltl'acted
wol3ori-ind
Infifi.med Joints, Club Foot
Cords, Crooked Limbs an 1
ilufc Leg aro permanently and positively cured, A euro
Trcated
ky a new method.
it iUi
0
guaranteed.
bA..iJcS—.las attained tho most wonder-
Jul success in tho t.-eatment of Uieoruief. to which ho doyotea big 8 eci !,l attention. Aftor years of erperionco ho has diticovorod tho most .nfalliblo method of c-ji ing woat nosa in tho back and limSw, »nvo,iiii£ary discharges, iinpotoncy, general do-
Free ICxamination of tho Urine
At a harvest home celebration, held ^-^ln2an oacco of taeu* urmo, which will reccivo a careful oh'jraieut and microscopioai near Lewiston, III., Kev, Dr. llaney, a litflraarkabla perfect 3d in old cssos whoh have boor- mclected or uns^il'fiil'v tr
Drugs and Medicines.
ne of all the latest styles of Wall Paper, whieli we are selling at cost, Aud invite you to inspect them.
IV
2Gtf
SALESMKlf
TrovviInland local, to srll owrcUcicc I Nuin-Ji-V
Jj'.oik.
Hor^c
Win die
VXK,
CO.,
J-, Is. 1.
M.Y. SHAFER D.V.S.
Veterinary Snrgeon and Dentist, Lameness a Specialty. Charges reasonable. Graduate Chicago Veterinary College. OJflco at Ear'y'a drug btore Gveenlield lud.
3F* O XT
MORSE AMO CATTLE POVVDS^a
l»o
or COLIC. B»r*or Luna tr»
if Foutz'a Powder* are used in time. J"ONWB Powder* will cure and prevent
HOSCBOLKJI*.
konu's Powdira will prevent
GAHBS IK FOWLS.
Fonts'* Powders viH Increase' the quantity Of milR Bnd cre*m twenty per ceiic.. «ud aiftlse tba fcaUer ilr£ ud iwect. ...
Fonts'* l*owden wtn enra or prevent utmost &7UT InsKAHK to whicl Hones
WMI
CatUv ut aubject.
Fon rz's l'dmiiu viu uv» fiold eyerywttere. jMVtti S- POtJTZ.
A Loudon statssticiart fi.r*.ivGi that vl.O.K) Ameriwius have ia iiiJ thI.j summer, tho expenses across a-.ern^inK more than §l-M oac h, an.i u])J tho lowuft calcul'-tioa thev have oirjuUitad 521,003,003 in Europo on railways and at hotels, without countinj tho money *peat in purghaaea. ,,
'tmii
'MM
r-
Look out for a fine line of Hofiday Goods,
dies, Nuts, Oranges, Bananas, Etc., which will be sold at Lower Prices than any other house in in the country can sell you.
Now System of Hoctal Treatment and Med'coiiion (Iocs Willi all the old methods ot cutting, slashing, bKruio^ and clamping.
iYeafs All Disseises of tiie Bladder and
*l •'•xf"nination of tho JJrino Hach person applying for rcodical troat'nont- sh'vil
Wo esporimonta or failure. Parties troatod by ni'iil und express,"' but Whoro poosibla" po TO/iBUltDtioa preierred. Curable cases guaranteed.
Will be at the TJrarsd I
,U
WiLLOW BKANCH, IlsTD.
Ci
33i°o Bajpnes"
Cares Files la a Few Painless tetefe ••.
for failure lo ciire. Tho euro ci' Piles fitaruntOi
EYE AND SAB SPECIALIST,
Frivata Diseases. Biood roison, FrnhiJIf Gonorrhoea, Gleet. Sti'ictnro, Kydrocic ,' V'^rio. ceio, Loss of Sexual I'cworaiK! "!l diseases or a. frcnito-u -iuary organs i)ocdiiy and -m-ia.-'nt-eurod. No risks incurred. C'onouivitio.'j /rcirv conlidential. Jlodicino sent from oiwertion to all parts of tho United Stated.
Middle Aged Men, who find their vSor r, »rl ity we.aiEonod by tho traces of oM
At the Old 13ourne Stand on South Bylvanla Street. Having purcha? stock and business of the Goble & Stable, I am prepared to furnish at reasonable rates, and to care and rigs entrusted to my care, a a a
Lowest Living Pridss
^"Patronage of the public resp Jy solicited.
7
J.
M. HAMILTO!
43t3
WANTED IU
Fiisl-sclliiiK sppciii'iios
in Uar.lr KrtilSs.vu%. Siileiidiil outut frii*. 3tin tr :,,ii"l-'" gUiiratiitTd. Your pay wtiklr. UVlM- f-r ?^rru*.
To (lie Pdhlic
I
tlti.'.yciion v.- &
bilitv, norvoiianess, iarsuor, ccnniPirn ov Hdors' palpitation of tho faoari. lot«i cf mc:nor-. ling and timidity, liiseoae.s of thonoi'candian —thoso tcri'i'o disorderu aribinij lVciv 1
:i-f
nolft
iy thit3 of youth and secret pr -f:t:. r'f.t tho raodtxadicnt hopoa and rendering Jicalih/ marriage impossible.
lr.:
and their bodies racictl with raii\ at a, whon they should spend their d-'illniii'! yw I'eace and comfort, uUould consult orvsft.£ind ad tho sympathy and rouci" yea tively require. His cures arc ihorougli Vr.d mn.nont.
Diseacas of vVcm^n.—Y/o shall continue toforo to treat with our best cr:.,,.!'1.-.,v ti?ii siill tho diseasos jioculiar to'worrjc.'i. a'„ions for Ki.stiila,"Iinpt rod C.'errii UiC I, tared I'orineum, and for Krrictaroof tho C» Rl "anal. a condition reMultiug in fiiorid'.v,^ been alike graiifyiai both so ouraelvea ad' pationts.
.. »'ei,!*recrttieE
Manday, Jan»5th. New Livery and
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Ee
btaoie.
1
I desire to say to you that my stoc
Dry Good?, GroV° Boots, Shoes,) ware and I' ral Gas plies,
Ja
rr 3
as complete as it enn bo made,] lis low as any hoii'e in tlw countyi tliaro of your piitronag*!. and willl faetlon in nil tliineayou buy of n[ tlio iiighesiftjiurket juicc forpio
48tf M. A. CATT,
H.L.
Is still in tlie'fielcljv^ tho most eomplettji
DRUGGISTS' 81-
ever in Maxwell, sick, ho'has' allj cures. If your painting see hin Y|
A
J.: H. L' MAXWEIX^l. 17t!
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I
Vv' ".rjf
*t ab.
