Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 12 November 1891 — Page 7

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BY-BY EGYPT

A Sail Over the Waters Over "Which St. Paul Sailed.

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BMSIIAiI Earthly Scenery—Place of Celo«tt»l Ludtcapei—History Claaal. "i~s oally Recited. ?V

Rev. Dr. Talmage preached at Brooklyn last Sunday. The Doctor took two texts: Acts xxi, 3, "When we had discovered Cyprus we left it on the left hand and Revelations i, 9, "I, John was in the isle that is called Patmos."

Good-by Egypt! Although interesting and instructive beyond any ^/"country in the world, except the

Holy Land, Egypt was to me somewhat depressing. It was a postmortem examination of cities that died 4,00Q years ago. The mummies, or wrapped-up bodies of the dead, were prepared with reference to the resurrection day, the Egyptians departing this life wanting their bodies to be kept in as good a condition sa possible so they would be presentai,, ble when they were called again to occupy them. But if when Pharaoh comes to resurrection he finds his body looking as I saw his mummy in the Museum at Boulac his soul will become an unwilling tenant.

The Sphinx also was to me a stern monstrosity, a statue carved out of rock of red" granite 62 feet high and about 143 feet long, and having the head of a man and the body of a lion. We sat down in the sand of the African desert to study it. With a cold •mile it has looked down upon thousands of years of earth history— Egyptian civilization, Grecian civilization, Roman civilization upon the rise and fall of thrones innumerable the victory and defeat of the armies of centuries. It took 3,000 years to make one wrinkle on its red cheek. It is dreadful in its stolidity. Its eyes have never wept a tear. Its cold ears have not listened to the groans of the Egyptian nation, the burden of which I tried to weigh last Sabbath. Its heart is stone. It cared not for Pliny when he measured it in the first century. It will care nothing for the man who looks into its imperturble countenance, in the last century.

But Egypt will yet come up to the low of life. The Bible promises it. missionaries Jlike my friend, good and great Dr. Lansing, are sounding a resurrection trumpet above those slain empires. There will be some other Joseph at Memphis. There will be some other Moses on the Nile. There will be some other Hvpatia to teach good morals to the degraded. Instead of a destroying angel to slay the first-born of Eg}rpt, the angel of the New Testament will shake everlasting life from his wings over a nation born in day.

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Good-bye, Egypt! This sermon ftnds us on the steamer Minerva in the Grecian archipelago, the islands of the New Testament, and islands Paulinian and Johannian in their reminiscences. What Bradshaw's directory is to travelers in Europe, and what the railroad guide is to travelers in America, the Book of the Acts in the Bible is to voyagers in the Grecian, or, as I shall call it, the Gospel Archipelago. The Bible geography of that region is accurate without a shadow of mistake. We are sailing this morning on the same waters that Paul sailed, but in the opposite direction to that which Paul voyaged. He was sailing southward and we northward. With him it was: Ephesus, Coos, Rhodes, Cyprus. With us it is reversed, and it is: Cyprus. Rhodes, Coos, Ephesus.

There is no book in the world so accurate as the Divine Book. My text says that Paul left Cyprus on the left we, going in the opposite direction, have it on the rigHt. On our ship Minerva were only two or three passengers beside our party, •o we nad plenty of room to walk the deck, and oh, what a night was Christmas night of 1889 in that Grecian Archipelago—islands of light above, islands of beauty beneath! It is a royal family of islands, this Grecian Archipelago the crown of the world's scenery set with sapphire and emerald and topaz and chrys prasus, and ablaze with a glory that seems let down out of celestial landscapes. God evidently made up his mind that just here he would demonstrate the utmost that can be done with islands for the beautification of earthly scenery.

Questions of tariff, questions of silver bill, questions of republic or monarchy, have not so much to do with a nation's temporal welfare as question's of religion. Give Cyprus to Christ, give England to Christ, give America to Christ, give the world to Christ, and He will give them all a prosperity unlimited. Why is Brooklyn one of the qneen cities of the earth? Because it is the queen city of churches. Blindfold me and lead me into any city of the earth so that I cannot see a street or a warehouse or a home, and then lead me into the churches and then remove the bandage from my eyes and I will tell you from what I see inside JL the consecrated walls, having seen nothing outside, what is that city's merchandise, its literature, its -schools, its printing presses, its government, its homes, its arts, its sciences, its prosperity or its depres^Ivsion, and ignorance, and pauperism and outlawry. The altar of God in the church is the high-water mark of ^phe worlds happiness.

Hight came down on land and sea iuid the voyage became to me more jmd moro suggestive and solemn. If are pacing it alone, a ship's deck the darkness and at sea is a weird ibo* and an active Imagination may

...

conjure tip almost any shape he will, and it shall walk the sea or confront him by the smokestack, or meet him under the captain's bridge. But here I was alone on ship's deck in the Gospel archipelago, and do you wonder that the sea was populous with the past, and that down the ratlines Bible memories descended? Our friends had all gone to their berths. "Captain," I said, when will we arrive at the island of Rhodes?" Looking out from under his glazed cap he responded in a sepulchral voice: "About midnight."

This island has had a wonderful history. With 6,000 Knights of_ St. John, it at one time stood out against 200,000 warriors under "Solymon the Magnificent." The city had 3,000 statues and a statue to Apollo called Colossus, which has always since been considered one of the seven wonders of the worlcl. It was twelve years in building and was seventy cubits high, and had a winding stair to the top. It stood fifty-six years, and then was prostrated by an earthquake. After lying in ruins for nine hundred years it was purchased to be converted to other uses, and the metal, weighing 720,000 pounds, was put on 900 camels and carried away.

We were not permitted to go ashore, but the lights all up and down the hills show where the city stands, and nine boats came out to take the freight and to bring three passengers. Yet all the thousands of years of its history are eclipsed by the few hours or days that Paul stopped there. As I stood there on the deck of the Minerva, looking out on the place where the Colossus once stood, I bethought myself of the /act that the world must have a god of some kind.

A few cypresses and inferior olives pump a living out of the earth, and one palm tree spreads its foliage. But the barrenness and gloom, and loneliness of the island made it a prison for the prison banished Evangelist. Domitian could not stand his ministry, and one day, under armed guard, that minister of the gospel stepped from a tossing boat to these dismal rocks, and walked up to the dismal cavern which was to be his home, and the place where should pass before him all the conflicts of coming time and all the raptures of a coming eternity. Is it not remark able that nearly all the great revelations of music and poetry, and religion have been made to men in banishment—Homer and Milton banished in blindness Beethoven banished into deafness Dante writing his Divina Commedia during the nineteen years of banishment from his native land Victor Hugo writing his Les Miserables exiled from home and country on the island of Guernsey, and the brightest visions of the future have been given to those who by sickness or sorrow were exiled from the outer world into rooms of suffering. Only those who have been imprisoned by very hard surroundings have had great revolutions made to them. So Patmos, wild, chill and bleak and terrible, was the best island in all the Archipelago, the best place in all the earth for divine revelations. Before a panorama can be successfully seen the room in which you sit must be darkened and in the presence of John was to pass such a panorama as no man ever saw before or will ever see in this world, Jand hence the gloom of his surroundings was a help rather than a kinderance.

All the surroundings of the place affected St. John's imagery when he speaks of heaven. St. John, hungry from enforced abstinence, or having no food except that at which his appetite revolted, thinks of heaven and as the famished man is apt to dream of bountiful tables covered with luxuries, St. John says of the inhabitants of heaven. "They shall hunger no more." Scarcity of fresh water on Patmos and the hot tongue of St. John's thirst leads him to admire hoaven as he says, "They shall thirst no more."

Again the panorama passes before the cavern of Patmos, and John the exile sees a mounted Christ on a snow-white charger leading forth the cavalry of heaven, the long line of white chargers galloping through the scene, the clattering of hoofs, the clinking of bridle-bits, and the flash of spears,all the earth conuered and all heaven in doxology nd we halt again to rest from the spectacle. Again the panorama passes before the cavern of Patmos, and John the exile sees great thrones lifted, thrones of martyrs, thrones of apostles, thrones of prophets, of patriarchs, and a throne higher than all on which Jesus sits, and ponderous books are opened, their leaves turned over, revealing the names of all that have ever lived, the good and the bad, the renowned and the humble, the mighty and the weak, and at the turn of every leaf the universe is in rapture or fright, and the sea empties its sarcophagus of all the dead of the sunken shipping, and the earth gives way and the heavens vanish. Again we rest a moment from the spectacle. The panorama moves on before the cavern of Patmos, and John the exile beholds a city of gpld, and a river more beautiful than the Hudson or the Rhine rolls through it, and fruit trees bend their burdens on either bank, and all is surrounded by walls in which the upholstery of autumnal forests, and the sunrises and sunsets of all the ages, and the glory of burning worlds seem to be commingled. And the inhabitants never breathe a sigh, or utter a groan, or discuss a difference, or frown a dislike, or weep a tear. The fashion they wear is pure white, and their heads are encircled by garlands, and they who were sick are well, and who were old are yonnA and

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they who were bereft a-e reunite!. And as the last figure of that panorama rolled out sight' I think that John must have fallen back into his cavern, nerveless and exhaust^. Too much was it for naked eye to 1 ok at. Too much was it fyr human strength to experience.

My friends, I would not wonder if you should have a very similar vision after a while. You will be through with this world, its cares and fatigues and struggles, and if you have served the Lord and have done the best you could I should not wonder if your dying bed were a Patmos. It has often been so.

I was reading of a dying boy who» while the family stood around sor rowfully expecting each breath to be the last, cried, "Open the gates! open the gates! Happy! Happy!" John Owen said in his last hour to his attendant, "Oh, Brother Payne, the long-wished for day is come at last!" Rutherford in the closing moment of his life cried out, "I shall shine, I shall see Him as He is, and all the fair company with Him, and shall also have my large share. I have got the victory. Christ is holding forth His arms to embrace me. Now I feel! Now I enjoy! Now I rejoice! I feed on manna, I have angels' food. My eyc3 will see my Redeemer. Glory, glory dwelleth in Immanuel's land." Yes, 10,000 times in the history of the world has the dying bed been made a Patmos.

The time will come when you will be exiled to your last sickness as much as John was exiled to Patmos. You will go into your room not to come out again, for God is going to do something better and grander and happier for you than II*, has ever yet done! There will be such visions let down to your pillow as God gives to no man if he is* ever to return to this tame world. The apparent feeling of uneasiness and restlessness at the time of the Christian's departure, the physicians say, is caused' by no real distress. It is an unconscious and involuntary movement, and I think in many cases it is the vision of heavenly gladness too great for mortal endurance.

It is only heaven breaking in on the departing spirit. You see your work will be done, and the time for your departure will be at hand, and there will be wings over you and wings under you, and your old father and mother gone for j'ears, will descend into the room, and your children, whom you put away for the last sleep years ago, will be at your side, and their kiss will be on your foreheads, and you will see gardens in full bloom, and the swinging open of shining gates, and will hear voices long ago hushed. In many a Christian departure that you have known and I have known, there was in the phraseology of the departing ones something that indicated the reap-

fiearance

of those long deceased,

is no delirium, no delusion, but a supernal fact. Your glorified loved ones will hear that you are about to come and they will say in heaven "May I go down to show that soul the way up? May I be the celestial escort? May I wait for that soul at the edge of the pillow?" And the Lord will say Yes, you may fly down on that mission." And I think all your glorified kindred will come down, and they will be in the room, and although those in health standing round you may hear no voice, and see no arrival from the heavenly world, you will see and hear. Ana the moment the fleshy bond of the soul shall break, the cry will be. "Follow me! Up this way! By this gilded cloud apast these* stars straight for home, straight for glory, straight for God!" As on that day in the Grecian Archigelago, Patmos began to fade out of sight. I walked to the stern of the ship in order that I might keep my eye on the enchantment as long as* I could and the voice that sounded out of heaven to John the exile in the cavern on Patmos seemed sounding in the waters that dashed against the side of our ship. "Behold the tabernacle of God is with men and He will dwell with them and they shall be His people and God himself shall be with them and be their God, and God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes, and there shall be no more death neither sorrow or crying, neither shall there be any more pain, for the former things are passed away."

AJLIi

SORTS.

Mrs. M. H. Hotchkiss, of Lalceville, Ct. has given seventy-five acres of land and $275,000 to found a preparatory school for Yale College.

Associate Justice Stephen J. Field, who has been in poor health for some time, has so far recovered thai he expects to return to the bench this month.

Mrs. George J. Gould, who was Miss Edith Kingdon, is a.careful and economical house-keeper. She is :i good cook, and frequently makes hci children's clothes.

Mr. Spurgeon signed the abstinence pledge in 1866. Unfermentec wine has been used at the commuu ion service at the Metropolitan Tab ernacle for several years.

Miss Mary Snow is superintenden! of schools in Bangor, and it is genetally admitted that she is more com potent to fill the post than any

man

who ever held it. For a bad burn or scald take swee' oil, mix into it pulverized red cbal! and white lead, and with a featlic anoint the wound. Do not scratr the sore while it is healing or it wiii ImiUMr S&i SMM-

IRISH POLITICS-

Priests Worked at the Polls Help the McCarthyites.

Women Also Take Fart, Showering Flow, •rs on William O'Hrieu, and T^ayingr Shawls for Him to

Walk Upou.

Friday was an exciting day in Cork. When the sun shed its first rays over the city ft found the streets already alive with men, women and children who had determined to see as much'as possible of the great battle at the poils before night,which was to decide whether the Parnelllits were to remain a power in Irish politics, whether the McCarthyitcs forces with the priestly champions were to "rale" Ireland, and whether or not there was to be union in the Irish parliamentary forces, for it was claimed if the Parneilites were defeated union was possible before the general election, while if they were victorious union was said to be beyond the bounds oi possibility.

In order to avert possible disorder th polls In the morning were strongly guarded by squads of police, who had come prepared for any emergency. The early morning voters were few in number and did not attract more than ordinary attention. Between 9 and 10 o'clock the polling became brisk, and people generally began to warm up to the occasion. That period of the day here (9 to 10 a. m.) is the workmen's breakfast hour, and consequently 'argo numbers of them took advantage oi hat interval of rest to deposit their ballots. Many priests were stationed aboui the booths mingling with the voters and giving them final instructions or admonitions, or making iinai appeals before they entered the polling booths. The rival members of Parliament of both parties were flitting hither and thither all over the city. The Parneilites and McCarthyites were all engaged in the last skirmishing, hustling for the last voter, putting their finishing touches to the work already done. Both sides, early in the morning, were confident of victory, the McCarthyites being most confident, as an apparently unbiased summing up of the situation gave them a prospective majority of 900. The Irish leaders, throughout the early part of the day, were driving from house to house in iaunting cars cheering flagging voters, encouraging the weak-heart-ed. appealing fervently to those still considered to be on the fence.

Unusual precautions were taken to preserve order. The chief of police had a trong*force of constabulary in reserve for any outbreak that might occur. The military commander of this district had also taken extraordinary precautions to meet an uprising. As the day wore on matters became more lively, and consequently more interestsng. There were several exciting scenes in the northwestern part of the city, where the continual squabbling going on between the priests and tho Parneilites were the main features of attraction.

At the close of the polling Mr. Flavin was credited with victory. The boxes vere escorted from the outlying districts by troops and police. The polling was heavy. Even tho lame and blind were sought out and brought up to the polling places. It has been noticeable that in the many altercations between the priests and the Parneilites tho women in most cases sidet! with the priests Mr. O'Brien received an ovation from the women, whe presented him with flowers and divested themselves of their shawls for bim to walk upon. The supporters of Flavin claim a majority of twelve hundred for him. while the Parneilites believe that they carried the election by a majority

T11E DEMOCRATIC SLATE.

.ie S( ntinel Believes Indiana Is in

It

for First Place.

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and

New York anil Indiana Cleveland Iloids—Hill and I'oiei—(jorinan and Gray, etc. ''•lH

A special tot.be Indianapolis Sen tine' says: "The general opinion among politicians of both parties is that, either New York or Indiana will furnish the Democratic presidential candidate in 380'J. The battle will be fought on the same lines as in 1888. There will be no modification of the tariff reform program o* the Democrats, according to Mills, Morrison and other of the party leaders now in Washington. Ohio they say, is a hide-bound Republican State, dominated by monopolists and gold bugs, and that it is a wonder that Campbell made as good a race as he did with John Sherman, Foster and the influenc« of Wall street against, him, to say nothing of the manufacturers of the country. v» "The tickets most frequently mentioned or 1S93 are these: Cleveland and Gray Ueveland and Boies, Hill and Gray, Hil and Boies, and occasionally Gorman and Boies is heard. The alliteration of Gorman and Gray is pleasing, and thoro are plenty of Democrats who believe that this will hp the ticket. In the event that New York is unable to agree as between Cleveland and Hill it is believed that Governor Gray would stand a first-rate chanco loi first place on the ticket, especially if Harrison is renominated. Russell, of Massachusetts, is, of course, unavailable as a presidential candidate, say the politicians. His youth is against him. They think thai Boies would mako good presidential timber, but believe that if a Western man is to have first place it should go to ex-Gov. Gray, who would be sure to carry Indiana, which, with New York, Nfew Je-sey, Connecticut and the eigh^ votes of Michigan that the Dcp^crats arc suro of, would elect him. An Unanswerable Argument

Mrs. Nocush—"I don't see why you can't be more carsful. You might save a good dua! out of your income if you'd try."

Mr. r.ocish- "Huh! Look at Lighthead. H3 ««.vefl np $2,000 and went to a horse-race yesterday, bet on the

A.***1**Doctor Dental Burfery.

Otilce Corner State end Vain Strasta.

Omn lute ud Hipp* ItNMk

Fries! RessoaaMa.

IBSEVFIELD, CTDIAJU,

^ABY L. BRUNER, M. D.,

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Diseases of womea.

liiMuct, North Peansyhraata St..

aftEEKFIKLD f~~« VXDIAMJL a

DR. WARREN R. KING,

PHTSICIA* AlTD

Ovnci—In Gant's Block, corner Pen* and Mala street*. Residence, Weal Mala itraet all jv 1.-- I.

QRBBNFISLD, IND.

J. H. BIN FORD,

AROBMIT.AT.UV,

.GREENFIELD, IND.

CURRY ft THOMAS,

INSURANCE I LOAN AGENTS!

monuments in. j,v

MARBLE AND GRANITE.

Room 15 Lee C.JXhajer Block. 15t27

TVALTKB0.BRAGS.|

Walter 0. Braw & Co-.

ABSTRACTORS OF TITLE, NOTARIES PUBLIC, LOAN, and INSURANCE AGENTS.

Room 14, L. G. Thtyer Block.

J)OBERT A. GUY, Auctioneer and. Fainter, UAPI.E VALLEY, INDIANA-

Prices reasonable and satisfaction guanntood.

ll-91-tt

GREENFIELD

Capt. P. A. CARD has charge of the city sales of the Creamery. All orders given him will receive prompt attention.

1

A Special Offer.

To give all a chance to test this wonderful Food

—OXIEN—we will send, post-paid, a sample Boi

or 10o. Regular size Box, 33c. GIANT BOX

size 5 S inches,) containing over 119 doses, only

:1.00. DON'T FAIL TO TRY IT. Get the Giant

Jot first, and you mil save time and money.

Address, GEORGE GESSLEB,

17yrl pNsw falsitlM, Ind.

Peoria Division.

Formerly I. B. 4 W. B'y.

^ilSkT LINE BAST AND WEST." Wagner Sleepers and Reclining Chair cars on i!*ht trains. BAt modern day coaches oa all raius. Connecting with solid rostJbUle tnriaa at Bloomlngton and Peoria to and froui Missouri rirsr, Denver and the Pacific coast at Indianapolis, Cininnati, Springfield and Oolumbus to and from th« Eastern and seaboard cities. Trains at Indianapo. is Union Station

DEPART ABMY» (PKOR1A DIVISION) WJWT. \1» 7:45 a. m. 8«25a.m. 11:45 a.m. ll:«!a.m. 5:05 p.m. 8:10 p.m. £-, 11:30p.m. 6:85p.m. -yi S (PKOKIA Division) XAST. 8:40 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 6:50 p. iu. 11:15 p. m. For full information call on or address,

TBAOEMM.

Wrong

horse, and lost every oent of it Now he'a dead—kill«rt himself. I was

there

with him and '.ust all I had, too, but it wasn't enough to bother about."—-New York Weekly., ."£c

1

fEATHSBBONE ,fro™ aaltla—nature's own toughest, a^ stKmjg*

SI.SO. Alt

styles for

•£rem«a &r FEATHERBONEa lAXiH C. M. NILES, Charlottesville, Ind.

Conanmptton Cured.

An old physician, retired from practice, having had placed in his hands by an Eas^ India missionary the formula of a simplt vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent care of consumption, bronchitis, eatarrh, asthma and all throat and lung affections, also a positive and radical enr* for nervous debility and all nervous com plaints, after having tested its wonderful curative powers in thousands of cases, hss felt it his duty to make it known t« bis suffering fellows. Actuated by thiii motive and a desire to relieve human suf fering, I will send free of charge, to all who desire it, this recipe in German. French or English, with full directions foi preparing and using. Sent by mall by ad dressing with stnrov. unminv this paper, W, A. Noyes, 820 Puwws* Block, ,Itorb*» *r, N. Y. Wit

Indianapolis Division*

ennsylvania Lines.

Schedule of Paatenger Trains-CentralTime.

Westward.

21

Knightstown

tho only Line Running ^uHnt&n't Perfected Safety V'estibuled Trains, with Dining Cars, between Cincinnati,

D. C« DRAKE*

leneral Agent, 188 South Illinois St., Indianapolis eutun. or »». Ass't. Pass. Agent, |J Indianapolis.

Ask Your Dealer For

11 AM ,*900 10 3S

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Coltiualiiis lUrbana •fiqtiii \Joviugtoa Bradford Je iGettysburg Greenville fWeavcrs New Madison Wile.vs •New Paris

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toentreville. German town •Cambridge City. Dublin. Strawns Lewisvillu Dunreitli Oxden

IVROZOX.

1„ 132 fl47 151 156 7 204 210 ... 219

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10 34'

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Ciiarloftsville Cleveland Gre/jQfleld Philadelphia Cumberland Irvins?tna IniiinnnpnliN..

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Puiladelpliia Greenfield Cievel +n(l (Jharlot.tsViile... Knightstown Ogden Dunreitli Lewlsville Strawns. Dublin Cambridge City. Germantown Ceotreviile RicllISlOlMl. New I'iiru Wileys New Madison... Weavers Greenville Gettysburg Bradford Je Covington Fiona tJrbana

Joim COKCOSAK.

Columbus

74S

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243

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N«m». 6, and SO connect at Columbus for Pittsburgii and the Kast, and at. Richmond for Dayton, Xeni.i and Springfield, and Jio. 6 for Cincinnati.

Trains leave Cambridge City at. t7-00 a. n.and f3 30 p. m. for Rnshville, Shelbyville, Columbus and mtermwl stations. Arrive

Cambridge Ci.'.yt143i,nate 'l to-50 HJJOSEPH WOODj

E. A FORD,

C-innral Msaagjr, General Passengsr Agent

7-19-9'.-R PlTTSnUKGH, PENJJ'A. For time cards, rales of fare, through ticket*, baggage "heck.? and fu"tii.^ information regardlng tho running of trains apply to aay Agent of the Pennsy Ivania Lines. W. H. SCOTT, AOKXT,

Greenfield, Indiana.

MUltetai 3AKDOBCT uUEWIU

|lWMMii«u4

Tr*injt arrive «tn«l depart fro* la» t«napolu Union Station

MI

follow*

JUEPAKT—No. 10 passenger, T-15 a. bm pausenger, *Ut p. m. N* purnig*?, WW a. Ho. 16 express, p.o. Traiaa aot mark«d ran daily exeepC Mm tag ARKIVB—NO. i—wngw, a. Wfc passenger, *2:56 p. m. No. lj»aiMeflg«.

No. 17 cxprea, |&10 n.

•Dally. fO&Uy exoopt Saturday. Ho. 12, via Tipton, arrive BleomtoRtm

For further teforaaflon ia.itwi to reatei, etc., call on A. H. Hellaia, Ctty

par

Agent,

46

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g. O. PABKJBlt, Traffic O. DALT, AM.. 0«I1

PBM.HaatRM, sad Tkt.

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Eastward.

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P!1002

1130}

W:

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a. u(|nakiag direct connection wi» C. nut facia arriving at

EaosM City

&90

acav

moraine, eonoeetiiif direct a* jfaiMM Cte Dearer, San Vraacinco an4 all pointi West J^ree reclining chair cars between Vipioo

mm

tfiMoari river for all paseongcrs. No8.9,10^ 12 aad 13 cwuuct at Tlptia wtft jaaialiM trains for 8ondtiakj« Blwwtmo Wid all points Kastaad West.

Trains and 17 bavo eleffaat sooUsda* «*«)t stni free to all paarenOeis, mA tow* connection at Fern wUk the VTabaeh fast tntos for Ft. Wayne, Tolsdo, Cbkmm* $m* New York.

Agt.

INDIAN .IPOLM, 1»D.

Tho Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton Railroad

Cbalv Cart on

J' Day Trains and Sleeping Cara on

The

Night Trains

between

Cincinnati, Indianapolis Chicago,

on

St. Louis, Toledo and

Detroit.

Earth.

1

Indi&napolii and Chicago

Chair Car between Cincinnati and

Keokuk.

M. D. WOODFORD, Pr«K!dent & General Mantger. 0. McCOiiltlCK. Gentrsl PastrnjcrA Ticket CINCINNATI, O

HEBRA'S

IWIOUCreak?

TIIIS

preparation, without injury, removes

Freckles, Liver-Moles,

Pimples, Black-Hcads, Smiburn an|rTan. A few applications will rcnMer the most etiibbcrnly rod.ekiu soft., smooth and white.

Viola Cream

is

hot a paint or powder to cover defects, but a remedy to care. It is superior to all other preparat ions, ami is guaranteed to give satisfaction. At drnpgi3ts or mailed for 50 cents. Prepared by Toledo, Ohio. €. JSI1TXER Or €».

J. O. BRANSON,

E

](ew Palestine Druggist

Keep* me of the Ben Line* of

.Drags, Medicines, Paints, Oile Varnishes, Etc., to be found in the county and Prioes as low as the' can be mode. GtVl Hflf A CALL.

A10H