Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 23 January 1891 — Page 6
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/WORD OF INVI" THE PEOPLE.
nage preached in York, Sunday, as Jome," Gen. vi., 18 J. ^He said: 3 jnder and all-persuasive ••Come." Six hundred -eight times is it found in v,-3s. It stands at the front
^ue Bible, as in my first text,
V^^vitiog antftdeluvians into the Noah's Ark, and it stands at the other gfate of the Bible, as in my second text, inviting the post-diluvians into the ark of a Savior's mercy. "Come' is only a word of four letters, but it is the queen of words, and •nearly the entire nation of English vocabulary bows to its scepter. It is an ocean into which empty ten thousand rivers of meaning. Other w/rds drive, but this beckons. All moods of feeling hath that word "Come.1'
Sometimes it weeps, and sometimes it laughs. Sometimes it prays, sometimes it tempts and sometimes it de^ stroys. It sounds from the doors of the church and from the seraglios of sin, from the gates of heaven and the gates of hell. It is contluont and ac» crescent of all power. It is the heiress of most of the past and the almoner of most of the future. "Come!" You may pronounce it so that all the heavens will be heard in its cadences, or pronounce it so that all the woes of time and eternity shall reverberate in its one syllable. It is on the lip of saint and proiligate. It is the mightiest of solicitaota either for good or bad. To-day I weigh anchor and haul in the planks, and set sail on that great word, although 1 am sure I will not be able to reach the farther shore. I will let down the fathoming line into this sea and try to measure its depths, and, though 1 tio together all the cables and cordage I have on board, I will not bo able to touch bottom. All the power of the Christian religion is in that word, '-Come." The dictatorial and commandatory in religion is of no avail. The impeiativc mood is not the appropriate mood when we would have people savingly impressed. They may be coaxed, but they can not be driven. Our hearts are like our homes at a. friendly knock the door will be opened, but an attempt to force open our door will land the assailant in prison. Our theological seminaries, which keep young men three years in their curriculum before launching them into the ministry, will do well if In so Bhort a time they can teach the candidates for the holy office how to 6ay with right emphasis and intonation and power that one word,
Come:''1 That man who has such efficiency in Christian work, and that ^omaa who has such power to per*
feuade people to quit tho wrong and begia the right, went through a 6eries of losses, bereavements, persecutions the trHls of twenty or thirty before they could make it a triumph^f grace a very time they uttered the worli, rCome."
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You must remember that in many cases our 'come" has a mightier '•come1' to conquer before it has any effect at all. Just give me the accurate census, the statistics, of how many are down in fraud, in drunkness. in gambling, in impurity or in vice of any sort, and I will give you the accurate census or statistics of how many have been slain by the word "come.11 Come and click wine glasses with me at this ivory bar.* "Come and see what we can win at this gamingtable.'' "C-)me. enter with me this doubtful spoculjitionl" "Come with me and read those infidel tracts on Christianity. "Come with me to a place of bad a nusement." "Come with me in a gay bout through underground New York." If in this city there are 20,000 who are down in moral character, then 20.000 fell under the power of the word "come." I was reading of a wife whose husband had been overthrown by strong drink, and 6he went to the saloon where he was ruined, and she said: "Give ma back my husband." And the bartender, pointing to a maud ling and battered man drowsing in the corner of the bar room, said: "There he is. Jim, wake up here's your wife come for you.-' And the woman said: "Do you call that my husbandt What have you been doing with him? Is that tho manly brow? Is that t^e clear eye? Is that tho noble heart that I married? What vile drug have you given him that you have turned him into a fiend? Take your tiger claws off him. Uncoil those serpoin folds of ovil habit that are crushing him. Give ino back my husband, the one with whom I stood at the altar ten years ago. (rive him back to me." Victim was he, as millions of others have been, of the word ''come!'
Now we want all the world over to harness this word for good as others have harnessed it for evil, and it will draw the live continents and the seas between them yea. it will draw the whole world back to the God from whom it has wandered. It is that wooing and persuasive wora that will lead men to give up their sins. Was skepticism ever brought into love of truth by an ebullition of hot words against infidelity? Was ever the blasphemer stopped in his oaths by denunciation of blasphemy? Was ever a drunkard weaned from his cups by 'the temperance lecturer's mimicry of staggering step or hiccough? Nc. It was: "Come with me to church today and hear our singing "come and let me introduce you to a Christian man whom you will be sure to admire "como with ma into associations that are cheerful and good and 1 inspiring "come with mo into, joy. 'Such as you never before experienced."
With that word whloh has done so
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much for others I Approach you to-day Are you all right with God? ••No," you say, "I think, not I am sometimes alarmed when I think of Him I fear I will not be ready to meet Him in the last day my heart is not right with God." Come, then, and have it made right. Through the Christ who died to save you, come. What is the use in waiting? The longer you wait the further off you are and the deeper you are down. Strike out for heaven, You remember that a few years ago a steamer called the Princess Alice with a crowd of excursionists aboard sank in the Thames, and there was an awful sacrifice of life. A boatmen from the shore put out for the rescue, and he had a big boat, and he got it so full that it would not hold another person, and as he laid hold of the oars to pull for the shore, leaving hundreds helpless and drowning, he cried out, "Oh, that I had a bigger boat!" Thank God I am not thus limited, and that I can promise room for all in this gospel boat. Get in get in! And yet there is room. Room in. the heart of pardoningGod. Room in heaven,
I also apply the word of nay text to those who would like practical comfort. If any ever escape the struggle of life 1 have not found them. They are not certainly among the prosperous clasces. In most cases it wa3 a struggle all the way up till they rerclied the prosperity, and since the.v have reaohed these bights there have been perplexities, anxieties and cris» ises which were almost enough to shatter tho nerves and turn the brain. It would be hard to tell which havo the biggest fight in this world—the prosperities or the adversities, the conspicuities or the obscurities. Just as soon as you have enough success to attract the atteritiou of others the envies and jealousies are let loose from their kennel. The greatest crime that yo-j can commit in the estimation of others is to get on better than they do. They think your addition is their subtraction,
Five hundred persons start for a certain goal of success: one roaches il and tho other 49i are mad. It would take volumes to hold tho story of the wrongs, outrages and defamations thai ha»re como upon you as a result of your success. The warm sun of prosperity brings into life a swampfull of annoying insects. On the other hand the unfortunate classes have their struggles for existence. To achieve a livelihood by one who had nothing to start with, and after awhilo for a family a well, and carry this on until the children are reared and educated and fairly started in the world, and to doth amid all the rivalries of business an• the uncertainty of crops and the fickleness of tariff legislation, with an oc casional labor strike, and heie and there a financial panic thrown in, is a mighty thing to do, and thero are hundreds of thousands of such heroes and heroines who live unsung and die unhonored. What we all need, whether up or down in life or half-way between is tho infinate solace of the Cheistian religion. And so we employ the word "Comei" It will take all eternity to find out the number of business men who have been strengthened by the promises of God, and the people who have been fed by the ravens when other resources gave out, and the men and women who, going into this battle armed only with needle or saw, or ax. or yardstick, or pen, or ty.pe, or shovel or shoe-last, haye gained a victory that made the heavens resound. With all the resources of God promised f01 every exigency, no one need be left in the lurch. 1 like the faith displayed years ago in Drury Lane, London, in an humble home where every particle of food had been given out, and a kindly soul entered with tea and other table supplies and found a kettle on the fire ready for the tea. The benevolent lady said: "How is it that you have the kettle ready for the tea when you had none in the house?" Ana the daughter in the home said: "'Mother would have mo put the kettle on the fire, and when I said what is the use of doing so wheu we havo nothing in the house?' she said 'my child, God will provide thirty years He has already provided for me, through all my pain and helplessness, and He will not leave me to starve at last. He will send us help though we do not yet see how.' We have been waiting all the day for something to eorae, but until* we saw you wo knew not how it was to come." Such things the world may call coins cidences, but I call them Almighty £eliverencos, and. though you do not hear of them, they are occurring every hour of every day and in all parts of Christendom.
Brt the word "Come," applied to thoso who need solace, will amount to nothing unless it be uttered by some one v'ao has experienced that solace. That spreads the responsibility of giving this Gospel call among a great many. Tho.- who have lost property and been consoled by roligion in that trial are the ones to invito those who have failed in business. Thoso who have lost their health and been consoled by religion are the ones to invite those who are in poor health.
Those who have had bereavements and been consoled in those bereavements are the ones to sympathize with those who have lost father or mother, or companion, or child, or friend. What multitudes of us to-day are alive and in good health and buoyant in this journey of life, who would havo been broken down or dead long ago but for the sustaining and cheering help of our holy religion! So we say: "Come!" The well is not dry. The buckets are not empty. Tho supply is not exhausted. There is just as much mercy and condolence and soothing power in God as before the first grave was dug, or the first tear started, or the first heart broken, or the first accident happened, or the first fortuue vanished. Thoso of us who have felt consolatory power of
right to speak out of our own experience, and say
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•Comei'
What dismal work of condolence the world makes when its attempts to condole! The plaster they spread does not stick. The broken bones under their bandage do not knit. A farmer was lost in the snow storm on a prairie of the far West. Night coming on and after he was almost frantic, not knows Ing which way to go, his sleigh struck the rut of another sleigh and he said: "I will follow this rut and it will take me out to safety." He hastened on until he heard the bells of the preceding horses, but, coming up, he found that that man, was also lost and, as is the tendency of those who are thus confused in the forest or on the moors, they are both moving in a circle and (he runner of the one sleigh was following the runner of the other Inst sleigh round and rosnd. At last it occurred to them to look at the north star, which was peering through the night, and by the direction of that star they got home again. Those who follow the advice of this world in time of perplexity are in a fearful round, for it is one bewildered soul following another bewildered 60ul, and only those who have in such time got their eye on the morning star of our Christian laith can find their way out, or be strong enough to lead others with an all-persuasive invitation. "But," says some one, "you Chris« tian people keep telling us to 'come.1 yet you do not tell us how to come i'hat charge shall not be true on this occasion. Come believing! Come reDenting! Come praying! After all that God has been doing for six thousand years, sometimes through patriarchs and sometimes through prophets, and at last through the culmination of ail tragedies on Golgotha, can any one think that God will not welcome your ooming? Will a father at vast outlay construct a mansion for his son, and lay out parks white with statues, and *reen with foliage, and all a-sparkle with fountains, and then not. allow his ion to live in the house, or walk in tho parks? Has lioti bunt this house oi 'iospel mercy and will He then refuse entrance to His children? Will a Government at great expense build :ife-saving stations all along the coast and boats that can hover unhurt like a petrel over the wildest surge,and then when the life-boat has reached the wreck of a ship in tho oftng not allow the drowning to seize the life-line or cake the boat for the shore in safety? Shall God provide at the coast of His only Son's assissination escape for a sinking world, and then turn a deaf jar to the cry that come up from the )reakers?
When Russia was in one of her great wars., the suffering of the soldiers had been long and bitter and they were waiting for the end of the strife. One day a messenger in great excitement ran among the ter.ts of the army shouting: ''Peace! Peace!" The sentinel on iuard *asks:"Whosays 'Peace?'" And the sick soldier turns on his hospital cnattressand asked: ''Who says Peace?" And all up and down the encampment of the Russians went the question ••Who says peace?"' Then the messenger responded: "The Czar says •Peace.'" That was enough. That meant going home. That meant the war was over. No more wounds and no more long marches. So to-day, as one of the Lord's messengers, I move through the great encampments of souls and cry: ''Peace between earth md heaven! Peace between God and :nan! Peace between your repenting oul and a pardoning Lord!" If you ask me: "Who says Peace?" I answer: "Christ our King declares it.'•
My peace I give unto you!" ''Peace of God that passeth all understanding." Everlasting peace!
A Chevalier.
A lady had slipped on the ioe on Woodward avenue anil fallen down. A boy had just opened his mouth to yell when a gentleman shook his fist and stopped him. Then taking the lady's hand he said: "You were very lucky to have such presence of mind, lady. I was afraid you'd be killed." "H»how do you mean?" she asked as she got up. "The runaway, ma'am. When the horse passed me I thought nothing could save you, but you cooly threw yourself to one side and saved your life." ••I—I—didn't—" "I doubt if any man in the world could have done better," he went on.
Just the moment you heard the horse you know what to do. You are not hurt—nat flven frightened. Call a carriage-? £0', good day, ma'am. Your b-tfoand should bo proud of you. No aao^er of your ever getting run over." 11 1—'
Smioasi Miters.
Carbonized sawdust, saturated with certain chemical compounds. »f TO?ently been introduced into Germany is a material for filtering and at the gj me time discoloring liquids. Sawdust treated first with alum, and then with sodium carbonate, becomes impregnated with a precipitated aluminum nydrate which adhores firmly to it. After being well washed with a solution af barium chloride until
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precipi
tate is given, the sodium sulphate simultaneously produced is entirely removed, and then prepared sawdust is ready for use. Colored liquids filtered with it have their color antirel removed by the formation of flakes with tho aluminum hvdrato present in the filtering material. A sawdust similarly saturated with the barium chloride is used filtering qaids, from which it is required to rv move calcium sulphate, and for thremoval of calcium carbonate from a lolution a sawdust tluit has been treat ed with magnesium sulphate and caustic •oda is employed
At the conclave .'1 chiefs of fire% departments, at 1 u-vardsville, the Wednesday, E. W. Karkman, of Polo,
religion have a^was elected president.
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"A iJlGHT IN THE WINDOW.**
The Bxantifal Story on Which the Well Knowu Song Was Founded*
tou!ff)rt'lc Times. Few are probably the persons who
!hav,o
not one time or the other heard jthe Sunday school song. "A Light in ith|e Window." Unless I am mistaken it is founded upon a story told upon 'tie little island of Sylt, but, which |might easily have its exact counters part on almost any sea shore where a mother's heart beats with yearning ,lojve for her sailor son and keeps its loind promise from night to night. [Among the simple fisher folks on the .isjlana lived a woman and her son. He iw'as her only child, the pride of her 'hL-art, as well as the cource of conJtrint dre id, for the boy love the sea as ,his father befor had loved it, and 'nothing gave him so much pleasure as 'tq watch the incoming tide tumble its [curling waves over the sands. No ,s0oner was he strong enongh to wield an oar and steer a boat than he ned Itlie men in their fishing expeditions.
1
The mother with all her fears, and tike fate of a long lines of sailors in her mind, yet would not have had it otherwise, for it would have been deemed dishonor among the hardy cjoasters to have kept the boy at home
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sent him safely at work tor some farmer. Whatever the dan jers, they must be faced for the sake of family pride. Had not the boyVgrandfather been a Can tain when he went away the last time? Had not his father sailed Ais own ship when he went down in a great storm. The child was the la=t of his race, but lie must not dis-% honor it by tame and cowardly safty on shore. So the boy grew up, tall of his age. straight as a mast,, nimble as the fleetest and handiest boat, blueeved, fair-haired, true-hearted, and a real-son of the sea. Tho fishermen taught him the tricks of his craft until he knew how to sail a boat, splice a rope or do many little things which a sailor must know. Whenever a ship was in the offing he was soon aboard, learning the rigging and how work was per* formed upon her. lie v/as a g'reat favorite among tho longshore folk and tho sailors, and when at last his loth year came around and he obtained the consent of his mother to go to sea, he easily found a good ship and Captain. Then there was parting and tears shed by the mother, while he looked forward into the great wide world with all the joyous eagerness of a boy. But with her* last blessing the widowed* mother promised that every night a li«ht should burn in the seaward window of her cottage to light him home-, ward and to show him that she still lived, awaiting his return.
The ship sailed. Six months passed and sailors dropped into the little village and told how she had been spoken and all was well, and the neighbors came to the cottage and told the pleasant news to the waiting mother, who nightly trimmed the candle, lit it, and set in the window to make a bright V^11 up the.sands. Again six months elapsed, and other sailorsarrived fros. far-off lands, but they had no news to tell of the ship. A
Years came and went. The children who had played with the sailor lad had grown to be men and women, and her own head had been silvered with age, her form was bowed, yet no one dared to cut the cables of her hope. Tender words cheered her and tender hands smoothed the way for her as she patiently waited for the home* coming of her fair-haired boy. and every night the glow of her candle streamed out to seaward and told the story of the loving heart waiting at home.
How many years did she watch and wait? I do Hot know. But one day at eventide,there was no gleaming patch of light across the sands. The win dow remained dark, and the accustomed beacon failed the fishor folk, and when they wondered and went to the cottage they found that the mother's soul had gone out to seek the son.
An Expensive Daughter.
Courier-Journal.
A lady in West Fifty-third street al* lows a young lady daughter, of 17, $500 for dress. The family is well-to-do, and no notice is taken of the actual expenses attending the board, the maid service or the laundry bills. Notwithstanding her allowance the young woman is financially strained all the time, the $41.50 received, monthly barely sufficient for her immediate wants in the shape of toilet accessories, amusements, car fare, alms, and reading matter. Last year her extras, donated by her mother, amounted to $700, including an upright piano, a sealskin jaeket and a modest little ring with a diamond In it.
....
A Collection of Martyrs.
Detroit Tribune. A recent canvass was made of the convicts of Joliet prison, and out of over 600 men. sent for almost every crime in the calendar, not a single one would acknowledge that he was guilty of the crime charged. The great majority looked upon themselves as mar» tyrs to the law, and felt that the/ had betp gclsyousljr wronged
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great
storm had
happened and she was overdue. She jrpight yet make port, but—and the people shook their heads and carried no tales to the widow, whose candle bfurned brightly every night and cast long streamers of light out upon the sea. Another year passed, but the sailors going or coming brought* no liews of the ship, and the neighbors whispered apart, and shook their heads whenever they spoke of the widows son, but no one was cruel enough to cut the slender threads which held the anchor of her hope. And thus the light oontinued to glow out toward the sea at every gloaming, and burned steadily through every night.
I-ft
Don't ask me to mend it. Take it back and get a 5/£."
FREE—Get
Ask for
Send THE Word,
Why notbuy your Goods at
J. J. TOWNSBND'S
1
Cheap Cash. Store,
GEM, IISTIDI-A^lsrA. •'$ He can savejyou money by trading with him.
Best grade of Flour per handreel, $2.75. 14 pounds Granulated Sugar, $1.00. Champion Package Coffee per pound, 23c. Standard and Lion package Coffee per pound, 26c. Fine California Prunes, per pound, 20c.
Fine California Apricotf, per pound 25c. Fine Dried Nectarines, per pound, 25c.
Look out for a fine line of Holiday Goods, Can* rf dies, Nuts, Oranges, Bananas, Etc., which will be sold at Lower Prices than any other house, ir in the country can sell you. 11
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Treats All Diseases oi
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skin. iT-.^nn* Sore throat, Enlarged Tonsils, UlcoraMlLliuii tion, KlouKated Uvua and Laryngitis, ircated at homo with success.!
slow and tedious courso. Years nsro
Uiiweei tho acuto and chronic practico in order to rer.rh tho hipho."t deirreo of profc-i-ai"!! ct'licticn. and although enjoy in a larpro general practice I abandoned 1.. for Lii [mrpes-a of
Swollen and Inflamed Joints,Club Foot
•j ''HliiSi Contracted Cords, Crooked Limbs and Yiu'i Log are permanent!}- and positively cured.
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n^rpn Treated by a now method. A euro lltlu Ltii v! guaranteed. tvARN L5—Has attained tho most wonder-?-.:l .Miceos.s in tho treatment of tho cases to which 'no devotes Ins special attention. After years ot CETierionco ho discovered tho most infallible nxoihod of curing weakness in *Jio back and limbs, invo! antary dischar/res, impotouey, general de
from your dealer free, the
5 a Book. It has handsome'pictures and valuable information about horses. Two or three dollars for a 5/a Horse Blanket will make your horse worth more aud eat less to keep warm.
5/A Five Mile 5/A Boss Stable
5/A E|ectrjc
5/A Extra Test
oO other styles a I prices (o suit every' body. If vo'i can't get them irom your cc-uler. "ivrite uc.
5/A
ARE THE STBOHGEST.
NON'S GENUINE WITHOUTTHE 5'A LABEL Minuf'd
oy
Wm.
A Titus
&
SONS.
PhtlinU xvho
the ianio*s Horse Brand Baker Blankets.
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SYMPTrtSt are Intense Itching and nUnsfoac: mustn*
DUES |lTCHiNGPILES.KS.M:®^
Iar It worn
SKIN
lUIAIini.HICKWUriinx
Keratehlimf. II il* to continuft tumor* form iim'
IB hprnmliiir very wore. H\Y Ai^r^ *Y
KB MKNT HiiOpR t.lic lluMitff and bleed!nirw •i Ml.,.'rntio!i. iii«! I" ino*t -n»w«remove* Ihe tuMP.i.'V,,NT„H.vr Issold hy dr„!?Klsl\or miulwJ
Ultra Kwavki'A OiJiTMBST unora oy MWV
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DISEASES
SWATHE'S
*AJ8SOIiUTBIjy CURES. 0I(^W£NT The (liptile application of "SwtTW'a OnmiRirr" withc.it anv internal medlciiio. will ?nre any «B30 or Trttcr, Suit
a»iouni.EiEgworm.Pire«,Itch.ftore*,Plmploii,Kry8inela,*o. i-.._ nKotlnalAInnvatanjUnii livHpiiffiiiito
matter huw otwtin»te or
iuip«vn,ii^oi|ciarlaw
longMftrxUtiK.flrriit
S Mint bT mail
SoiiUiv driiRglstf
for
AO
0W. 8 Bow, $1.25 Mdrrra, njk
jfcyftJS pmtodelnm. Pi. aa »ouj, drucxUtaan^
jiriie.
New System of Rectal Treatment antl Medication do .s with all tlic old methods ot cutting, slashing', bnrn-.:i and clamping.
Cares Files In a Few Painless Treate®.
$1,000 for failure to cure. The euro of Piles guarnt: i-»
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jiiy v:holo attoutioii to liio treatment of chronic diseases, and tho gonGral natiaUy.'* ott ati'Lit3ree:Mvo. (enables them to know that I chose v/isoly.
T.'uptt Cured in 0110 minuto without pain lji jJ:J Uu or after treatment. Satisfaction posilivcly guaranteed or no pay. r'o rrj root No dark rooms after cataract and IsdiuiU'Jli otticr operations upon fco eyo. Yvild hairs, drooping lidn, auu!atod lids, weak i."J.d
Tv.'iiorinjj
eyes permanently cured.
Pr, Koisos and Deafness. Polypus, Ulceration iiul Idscharfces, etc., will receive very mild and eminently successful treatment. in Catarrh, Polypus, Cloft Palate, IJalrlip 11 lj0• Lupus and other diseases, which destroy tho noso, cured and a now noso mado from live
tho n^cot.-jiVy oi
been alike grutifyiu patients.
auvujauuuy in&btuuicw Freo JCxa'-iication of tho Urine Each person applying for tncdiual treatment should send or bring an ounco of thoir urine, which will rocoivo a caroful chemicaljind microscopical iUlO.1.1,
KewBrkaMn perfected in old cases which havo been nsgleetad or uP3iCib il.y ..i oawii No eiporimoiit* or failure. Parties treated by mail and express, but whor® porfhibio portion consultation preferred. Curabio cases guaranteed.
Will be at the Grand Hotel,Greenfield, Ind Monday, Jan.
GOD SLE.SS OUR
HOME.
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mm*
J. II. LA-ISTJE
17tf MAXTOEIX. INDIANA.
M. Y. SHAFER D.V.S.
Veterinary Surgeon and Dentist, Lameness a Specialty. Charges reasonable. Graduate Chicago Veterinary College. Office at Ear'y'e drug store Greenfield Ind.
Children Cry far Pitchsr's Csstoffau
Iflwn Buihy w«n tier OMftflste jdwi a C3x'M, O'KI»aifS far CASIOJUW
nho ohj®5f bo Ooitort^
fjxw tuwl g«wri Owtoirt^ N
O S
HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS
Ro HOKM will die or COLIC. BOT» or Lon«tF»VSK, if Font?.'* Powders are used in time. 'outz's Powdsri will euro end prevent HoeCHOUSA*
Foutz's Powdsra will prevent GAPES
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Casicer and Pile SpecL.^ EYE AND EAR SPECIALIST,
ri
S PAST TEN VEARS.
harmless as wnt.er
In day-i of i:'pid thought and {rcji^ral int"'. Modk'.'il Spool till 3ta. Tho higher class of general practitioner.* tho lioa.liii£ n.rt. but r.oon find thomsalvos so much ouoamb"./-. omriiiS ax'.elt a monopoly of tmio and diversity ot thought, as to compelVnu.,. :rv- r.-hicjh aro not :u immiiuinluar arcr, for tho turuto ones, v/hicu eithor o... da txnd thin constant Uocuand unou their attentions, whilo it renders ihora til, WHJU'VXI in a on to omui^UCIOS, tend-3 to dwarf thoir otxorgioa, destroy their XOI.'II UK\ ai.-» itiov.' iiuorost- ni caiios ihat run
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EKr:r.\~f
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bility, nervousness, languor, confusion of palpitation of tho heart, loss of memory, t:.,-.ii»-ling and timidity, :isoaie of the nosoana --S —thoso terrible disorders arising from tho ,,mry habits of youth and secret prj::u«es, tho most ladie.nt hopes and rendering marriago impossible.
Private Diseases, Blood Poteon, syph! 'is. Gonorrhoea, (ileet, Stricture, Kyriioo'e, Vu. ,:0celo. Loss of Sexual Powernud all dirfeasos '.ho Keni to-urinary orpins gpeodily and py -'nli.f cured. No risks incurred, v-onsnlwitoa fr*oj..i\1 confidential. Medicine se::t free f'Viu ob*f.\ votion to all parts of the United
Middle Aged RSen, who find tli-'j vi :or ind ity weakened by tho traocs oti and. their bodies rac'.ied with ««.? r. when they should spewd thoir ufxmiJur. ia peace ami comfort, should conr.-'i.'i .,'*i At,, onco and find the sympathy and v. '.uvf .i.j itively require. 11 is cures tiro tuai-ousa permanent.
Diseases of Women.—We shall continue as fcc-*-toforo to treat with our 1*1*1 c»:ibtdei:i.:to. 1 skill tho diseases peculiar to ^o^ieri, in:s operations for Fistula, Kr.pturod_t'ervj JTtnri, tured l'erineum, and for t'trictero of t_Lo Ck al Canal, a condition resulting in tftci-iiitr, 2ui •/."/
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both to ourselves and oud
26 th
FI.
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O
Lane
Is still in the lield^with one of the most complete lines of
DRUGGISTS' SUNDRIES
ever in Maxwell. If you are sick, he has all} the leading cures. If your house needs painting see him before hand*
i.
'm
IK
FopiA,"r
Fonts'* Powder* will incrcnse tho quantity of luiUc •nd creum twenty per cent., and mfcke tbs battelffliO •nd sweet. I
Foutz's Powders will cure or prevent almost xf DISEAIS to which Hones and Cattle are subject.' FOOTZ'S POW:CRS
WILL SITE
SATISFACTION
•old ererywiiere. DAVID X.
rovTt.
Proprietor/
SALTIMQUX. MA
QALBSMEII,
WANTED
I lTraralin^ and local, to Ml our ohotce IL Nui'sorv Stock. Fast-selling special! ics liarJ.T FruUs, etc. Sphmtlitl outfit —av Irw. :teailv'em|lorii)eiit guarnntccd. Tour pta*1" w««klj. WfUBtorwraifc sM iF' iiiAtfAXiA KUttsuttf ca^r
W** ****!&iM
9
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