Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 17 March 1892 — Page 3
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J. H. BINFORD,
ATXOINITAT.UW,
GREENFIELD, IND.
A E N
OR NO FEE
A 48-pafe book free. Address W. T. HTZGERALD, Att'y-U-Law, JQC-52 Cor. 8th and F. Sts, W ASHIN GT D.
Drunkenness, or tli® Liquor Habit, Po» tirely Cured by Administering Dr. Haines' Golden Specific.
It Is as a powder, which can In riven in a gla** be r, a cap of coffee or tea or food, without b« kao fledge of the patient. It 1 absolutely hariv. ., and will effect a pet ma neu end speedy cure, whether the patient is a moderati i?iInkeror an alcoholic wreck. It has been givei 1^3thousand* of cases, and in every instance a per ce tcvjre has followed. Itnever Fails. Thesysten once impregnated with the Specific, it becomes ai otter impossibility for the liquor appetite to exist Cure guaranteed. 48 page book of particulars fret*
POLDEN SPECIFIC CO., 185 Race St Cincinnati, Obio.
Indianapolis Division.
ennsulvania Lines.
Schedule of Passenger Trains-Central Time. 1
Eastward.
21 II
"Westward.
AM AM AM
Piqua 7 42 Covington £f 7 55 Bradford Jc g.g 8 08 Gettysburg a Greenville 8 23 Weavers New Madison... Wileys New Pans Richmond, Centreville German town Cambridge City.. Dublin Strawns Lewisville Dunreith Ogden Knightstown Charlottsville Cleveland Greenfield Philadelphia Cumberland Irvington Indianapolis..!
AM pm
Columbus lv.|*2 50*5 40*7 20 f9 00 *2 05 Urbana "f 7 01
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433 449 5 05
11 40
11 53 11 59
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10 37111
615 9 30*10 1 20
6 20
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132
6 30t625 645 S37 6 54 7 09 6 5S
f1 47 1 51 1 56f7 15
9 56
7 05 715 7 21 7 30 f7 33 7 40 752 f7 56 809
204 210
219
(2 22 229 7 46 24ffl '244 2 57 8 13 3 05 320 331
10 34
10 58
816 830 8 42 900 AM
7 551140 AM 13 80 I I 14
AM
12 45 345 9 00
N'N PM PM
AM *4 45
Indianapolis Irvington Cumberland Philadelphia Greenfield.. rVeveiand Charlottsville Knightstown Ogden Dunreith Lewisville Strawns Dublin Cambridge City.. Uermantown Centreville Richmond... j' New Paris Wileys New Madison Weavers... Greenville Gettysburg Bradford .Tc Covington Piqua Urbana t'oluiubna
AM AM PM|PM|PM t8 00 *il 45*3 00*5 30 t4 00
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8 40 8 47
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1227
610
8 59 9 03 91312 50 f920 924
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6 29 513 '5 20
559
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637
5 24 5 38 543 5 52 5 57 6 02 617 6 30 PM
934 9 40 950 956
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6 25
124
700
6 47 7 00 7
10f0l 1016 10 30 .0 35 0 47 10(58 105 llft5 127 1 40 12H0 12 20'§. 12 34j?
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Wos, 6, 8 and 20 connect at Columbus for Pittsburgh and the East, and at Richmond for Dayton, Xenia and Springfield, and No. 1 for Cincinnati.
Trains leave Cambridge City at. +7.00 a. m. and 13-30 P- m. for Rushville, Shelbyville, Columbus and intermediate stations. Arrive Cambridge City j1.45 and +6-50 P- m. JOSEPH WOOD, E. A. FORD,
General Manager, General Passenger Agent,
2-15-92.-R PITTSBURGH, PENN'A. For time cards, rates of fare, through tickets, baggage checks and further information regarding the running of trains apply to any Agent of the Pennsylvania Lines.
W. B. SCOTT, AGKNT, Greenfield, Indiana.
Peoria Division.
Formerly I. B. A W. Tt'j.
SHORT LINE BAST AND WEST. Wsgner Sleepers an* Reelining Chair ews oight trains. Beet inodcra day coaohes ea train*. Connecting with solid votUbnle U»i« at •oomington and Peoria to andfrejn Missouri rirft, Denver and the Pacifie coast at Indianapftlis, Cladnnati, Springfield and Columbus to and Inaa
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Railroai
it tha only Lina Running Pullman't Perfected Safety Vestibular Trains, with Dining Can. between 4,
Mm
'Cincinnati "T'J'J rf
rl&dianapolis
UM
Banters a* a seafeoart eitiea. Trains at Indian
ay
Ua Viiion Station OKPART AVUTI (PEORIA D1Y1S10K) WEST. 1-.45 a. m. 89G a.m.
U:46*.». 11:05 a.*. V:0S p.m. hilQ p. m, ll:S9pm. «:86 p.M. (PKOIUA nrriazon) ZAST. •:40 a. m. 11:90 a. m. 8:50 p.m. 11:15 p. M.
««r fall information oall en or address, D. C. DEAM. General Agent, 138 South Illinois 8t., IndlanitpeHa:
Union Station, or any Aftout en the line. H. M. BRONSON, Ass't. Pass. Agent, jg InAlanapoltoi
Tha inclnnatl, 'Hamiltoa and l»*Zton.
MR. 06.
He "Was a Giant and Had an Iron Bedstead.
I The Infamous King "Doubt" Attacks Many Men on Their Dying Beds—Ber. Dr. Talinage'a Sermon.
Rev. Br. Talmage gave another illustration, Sunday, in his sermon at the Brooklyn Tabernacle of his wonderful power of drawing useful, practical lessons from an obscure text, which, to the ordinary mind, seemed incapable of yielding any spiritual edification. The text was,Deut. Ill* 11. "Only Og, king of Bashan, re" mained of "the remnant of giants behold, his bedstead was a bedstead of iron is it not in Rabbath of the children of Ammon? Nine cubits was the length thereof and four cubits was the breadth of it."
The story of giants is mixed with myth. William the Conqueror was said to have been of overtowering altitude, but, when, in aftertimes, his tomb was opened, his bones indicated that he had been physically of only ordinary size.
Roland, the hero, was said to have been of astounding stature, but when his sepulcher was examined, his armor was found only large enough to fit an ordinary man. Alexander the Great had helmets and shields of enormous size made and left among the people whom he had conquered, so as to give the impression that he was a giant, although he was rather under than over the usual height of a man. But that in other days and lands there were real giants is authentic. One of the guards of the Duke of Brunswick was eight and a half feet high. In a museum in London is the skeleton of Charles Birne, eight feet four inches in stature. The Emperor Maximin was over eight feet high. Plinv tells of a giant nine feet high, and two other giants nine and a half feet. So I am not incredulous when I come to my text and find King Og a giant, and the size of his bedstead, turning the cubits of the text intc feet—the bedstead of lOg, the King, must have been about thirteen and a half feet long. Judging from that, the giant who occupied it was probly about eleven feet in stature, or nearly twice the average human size. There was no need of Rabbinical writers trying to account for the presence of this giant,
King Og, as they did, by saying that he came down from the other side of the flood, being tall enough to wade the waters beside Noah's Ark. or that he rode on the top of the Ark, the passengers inside the Ark daily providing him with food. There was nothing supernatural about him. He was simply a monster in size.
Cyrus and Solomon slept on beds of gold, and Sardanapalus had 150 bedsteads of gold burned up with him, but this bedstead of my text was of iron—everything sacrificed for strength to hold this excessive avoirdupois, this Alp of bone and flesh. No wonder this couch was kept as a curiosity at Rabbath, and people went from far and near to see it, fust as now people go to museums to behold the armor of the ancients.
You say what a fighter this giant, King Og, must have been, No doubt of it. I suppose the size of his sword and breastplate corresponded to the size of his bedstead, and his sti'ide across the battlefield and the full swing of his arm must have been appalling. With an armed host he comes down to drive back the Israelites, who are marching on from Egypt to Canaan. We have no particulars of the battle, but I think the Israelites trembled when they saw this monster of a man moving down to crush them. Alas for the Israelites! Will their troubles never cease? What can men five and a half feet high do against this warrior of eleven feet, and what can short swords do against a sword whose gleam must have been like a flash of lightning?
The battle of Adre opened. Moses and his arn^ met the giant and his army. The Lord of Hosts descended into the fight and the gigantic strides that Og had made when advancing into the battle were surpassed by che gigantic strides with which he retreated. Huzza for triumphant Israel! Sixty fortified cities surrendered to them. A land of indescribable opulence comes into their possession, and all that is left of the giant king is the iron bedstead.
1(Nine
Chair Cart aa
Dsy
Trains and
Sleeping Cui on Night
Trains
betwaea
Cincinnati, Indianapolis Chicago,
St. Louis, Toledo and
Detroit.
Chair Car between Cincinnati and
•"Ml its I
jand {'Chicago. M. D. WOODFORD, President Qeneral Mamgar. .I* 0. MaCORUICK, fisiwral Passenger* Tiakal«|Ml 6SMCXMMAT1,0,
Keokak.
cubits was the length thereof
and four cubits the breadth of it." Why did not the Bible give us the size of the giant instead of the size of the bedstead? Why did it not indicate that the man was eleven feet high instead of telling us that his couch was thirteen and a half feet long? No doubt among other things it was to teach us that you can judge of a man by his surroundings.
Show me a man's associates, show me a man's books, show me a man's home, and I will tell you what he is without your telling me one word about him. You can not only tell a man according to the old adage" by the company he keeps," but by the books be read,s, by the pictures he admirers, by the church he attends, by the places he visits. Moral giants and mord pigmies,intellectual giants and intellectual pigmies, physical giants or physical pigmies, may be judged by their surroundings. That EQclll been thirty years faithful in attentf.uv*": upon churches and pray-er-meetings and Sunday-schools, aid putting hhnfteif among intense religious as$Gftiatious. He may have his imperfections, but he is a very good man. Oicat is his religious stature. That o^ner man has been for thirij year* among influences in-
5
tensely worldly, aad he has shut him self out from all other influence, and his religious stature is that of a dwarf. No man has ever been or can be independent of his surroundings, social, intellectual, moral, religious. The Bible indicates the length of the giant by the length of his bedstead. Let no man say, "I will be good and yet keep evil surroundings. Let no man say, "I will be faithful as a Christian," and yet consort chiefly with worldlings. You are proposing an everlasting impossibility. When a man departs this life you can tell what has been his influence in a community for good by those who mourn for him, and how sincere and long-contioued are the regrets of his taking off.
There may be no pomp or obsequies and no pretense at epitapheology, but you can tell how high he was in consecration, and how high in usefulness by how long is his shadow when he comes to lie down. What is true of individuals is true of cities and nations. Show me the free libraries and schools of a city, and I will tell you the intelligence of its people. Show me its gallery of paintingfland sculpture, and I will tell you the artistic advancement of its citizens. Show me its churches, and I will tell you the moral and religious status of the place. From the fact that Og's bedstead was thirteen and a half feet long, I conclude the giant himself was about eleven feet high. But let no man by this thought be induced to surrender to unfavorable environments. A man can make his own bedstead.
Chantery and Hugh Miller were born stone-masons, but the one became an immortal sculptor and the other a Christian scientist whose name will never die. Turner the painter, in whose name John Ruskin expended the greatest genius of his life, was the son of a barber who advertised "a penny a shave." Dr. Prideaux, one of the greatest scholars of all time, earned his way through college by scouring pots and pans. The late Judge Bradley worked his own way up from a charcoal burner to the bench of the Supreme Court of the United States. ¥es, a a man can decide the size of his own bedside.
Notice furthermore that even giants must rest. Such enermous physical endowments on the part of King Og might suggest the capacity to stride across all fatigue and omit slumber. No. He required an iron bedstead. Giants must rest. Not appreciating that fact, how many of the giants yearly break down. Giants in business, giants in art, giants in eloquence, giants in usefulness. They live not out more than half their days. They try to escape the consequence of over-work by a voyage across the sea or a sail in a summer yacht, or call on physicans for relief from insomnia or restoration of unstrung nerves or the arrest of apoplexies, when all they need is what the giant of my text resorted to—an irom bedstead.
Let no one think because he has great strength of body or mind that he can afford to trifle with his unusual gifts. The commercial world, the literary world, the artistic world, the political world, the religious world, are all the time aquake with the crash of falling giants. King Og. no doubt had a throne, but the Bible never mentions his throne. King Og, no doubt, had a crown, but the Bible never mentions his crown. King Og, no doubt, had a scepter, but the Bible never mentions his scepter. Yet one of the largest verses of the Bible is taken up in describing his bedstead. So God all up and down the Bible honors steep. Adam, with his head on a pillow of Edenic roses, has his slumber blest by a Divine gift of beautiful companionship. Jacob, with his head on a pillow of rock, has his sleep glorified with a ladder filled with descending and ascending angels. Christ, with a pillow made of the folded up coat of a fisherman, honors slumber in the back part of a storm-tossed boat. The only case of accident to sleep mentioned in the Bible was when Entychus fell from a window during a sermon of Paul, who had preached until midnight, but that was not so much a condemnation of sleep so much as a censure of long sermons. More sleep is what the world «vants. Economize in everything but sleep.
Notice, furthermore, that God's people on the way to Canaan need not be surprised if they confront some sort of a giant. Had not the Israelitish host had trouble enough already? No! Red Sea not enough. Water famine not enongh, Opposition by enemies of ordinary stature not enough. They must meet Og, the giant of the iron bedstead. •'Mine cubits was the length thereof and four cubits the breadth of it."
Brethren, I have made up my mind that we will have to fight all the way up to the Promised and. I used to think that after a while I would get into a time where it would be smooth and easy, but the time does not come and it will never come in this world. By the time King Og is used up so that he can not get into his iron bedstead, some o'her giant of opposition looms up to dispute our way. Let us stop looking for an easy time and make it a thirty years' war, or a sixty years' war, or a hundred years' war, if we live so long.
Do you know the name of the biggest giant that you can possibly meet—and you will meet him? He is not eleven fer*t high but one hundred feet high. His bedstead is as long as t'e continent. His name is doubt. His common food is iufidel books and skeptical lectures and minis:2rs who do not know whether the Bible is inspired at all or inspired in spots, and Christians- who are more infidel than Christian. You
J-.-
S^7
r'
will never reach the Promised Land unless you slay that giant. Kill Doubt or Doubt will kill you. How to overcome this giant? Pray for faith, read everything that encourages faith, avoid as you would ship fever and small-pox the people who lack faith.
Another impression from my sermon: The march of the church cart not be impeded by gigantic opposition. That Israelitish host led on by Moses was the church, and when Og,' the giant (him of the iron bedstead), came out against him with another host—a fresh host against one that seemed worn out—things must have looked bad for Israel. No account ig given of the bedstead of Moses excopt that one in which he first slept —the cradle of aquatic vegetation on the Nile, where the wife of Chenephres, the King, found the floating babe, and, having no babe of her own, adopted him. Moses of ordinary size against Og of extraordinary dimensions. Besides that, Og was backed up by sixty fortified cit,ies. Moses was backed up seemingly by nothing but the desert that had worn him and his army into a group of undisciplined and exhausted stragglers. But the Israelites triumphed. If you spell the name of Og backward you turn it into the word "Go," and Og was truned backward and made to go. With Og's downfall all the sixty cities surrendered. Nothing was left of the giant except his iron bedstead, which was kept in a museum at Rabbath to show how tall and stout he once was. So shall the last giant of opposition in the Church's march succumb. Not sixty cities captured, but all the cities.
Not only on one side of Jordan.bu« on both sides of all the rivers. The day is coming. Hear it all ye who are doing something for the conquest of the world for God and the truth, the time will come when, as there was nothing left of Og, the giant, but the iron bedstead kept at Rabbath as a curiosity, there will be nothing left of the giants of iniquity except some thing for the relic hunters to examine. Which of the giants will be the last slain I know not, but there will be a museum somewhere to hold relics of what they once were. A rusted sword will be hung up—the only relic of the giant of war. A demijohn—the only relic of the giant of inebriation. A roulette ball—the only relic of the giant of Hazard. A pictured certificate of watered stock —the only relic of the giant of stock gambling. A broken knife—the only relic of the giant of assassination. A yellow copy of Tom Paine —the only relic of the giant of un belief. And that museum will do for the later ages of the world what the iron bedstead at Rabbath did for the earlier ages.
Dolly (to visitor)—What is a fictitious character, Miss Green? Visitor—One that is made up, dear. Dollv—Are you a fictitious character?
Pious Jake (with long-drawn face) —Are you interested, Miss Cora, in the heathen? Cora (frankly)—Yes, Jake, always, and if I can be of any service to you let me know early some morning.
Little Dick—The school is closed because so many children is sick. Mamma—They will probably be all right again in a week or so. Little Dick (hopefully)—Perhaps the rest of us'U be sick then.
Toffer—Have a cigar, old boy. I'm afraid, though, these are not very good. In fact, they may be worse than those I gave you last. Friend (in a burst of politeness)—Impossible, my dear boy, Impossible!
Spatts (to Miss Bunn)—Mabel, love, I dote upon you wildly. Miss Bunn—That's all right, but don't let pappa know. He's violently opposed to young men's wild dotes. '•You know," said the young man who wanted to elope, ''that love jaughs at locksmiths." "Yes," she answered, "but it doesn't go tnis time. All my jewelry is in the safety deposit vault and papa has the key."
The Eyes and Heaitfc.
Quite recently the influence of the eyes upon the general health has been attracting the attention of specialists, and general practitioners are recognizing the manifold serious effects upon the whole system of faulty eyes, either from born malformations, acquired weakness, or any deviation from the normal standard or disturbance of muscular harmony or balance. Zt is being established bey cod a doubt that many cases of sick headache periodical headaches, a large number of hysterical or otherwise nervous unbalancings, many cases of epilepsy, and other serious functional disorders may be traced to eye disorder as the predisposing cause, needing but some species of over exertion—sight seeing, concentrated attention upon a Bpeaker, intent gazing at music, or close study—to precipitate the onset, and produce an invalid in whom the eye is the last factor to be accused of the mischief.
A Word of Caution.
He ha carried my sachel down to the. depot from the hotel at Birmingham, Ala., says a N. Y. Sun man, and, still carrying it in his hand, he strolled about and got in the way of a ba gg"getruek being pushed by another colored man. The latter came to a stop and indignantly demanded: "Yo1 pusson, d*r, wiat yo' doin'P" "Who's a pusson, sah?" ••Yo'is!1' "Be a leetle keerful, sah! I han't tlun used to bein' dressed in dat sort o' way!" "Shoo! Do yo' know who I isP" "An' do yo' &uow who I isP" "I represents de buggage department ttf dis yere railroad, sah!" "Hu! An' leprwewts cle public t\ hat is rich 'nutf i• hev icT baggage to travel vid, sab! Hr Tftac' vo' go an' make any is^asakc! /o' do darU be a pighty sheerest o' i?Aggtg',in jo' use liepai-tma**/"'
-'r^Y' *'j*,7t
HAMDALLAH, 2037,
Race record 2:23 Full brother to Dal Brino, (Ire of
5ttp
2:22
Da&dy 0 (3) 2:27}£ May Brino 2:29%
1st dam Linda Dam of Dal Brino, sire of 3 in 2:30 list, also dam of Draconius, the sire of Charley H, 2 27.
IRION, 2, 2:10f.
II. A. RUSSELL, Indianapolis,
Chief 2:18%, and
1
ll0JEHSEV
1892.
MIAMA
-MIAMA CHIEF
Palo Alto, Nancy
FORTVILLE
CURST THOMS,
INSURANCE
MONUMENTS IK
MARBLE AND GRANITE.
$ Boom IB LM OvTka|«Block. UM
WAvna O. Bbam. JOMM OeaCMJJi
Walter 0. Braw 4
IOM14, IK 0. Tfcaya* Bleak.
ROBERT A. OWY,
r^T^r
5
DELMBRCH, 2:114 HAMDALLAH. GOLDSMITH MAID, 2=14
(Standard and Registered, 2037)
Racing Record, 2:23.
rMambrina
Hambrino, 820.. Kecord 2:21%, —sire of— Del march Wildbrino Hanidallah Wilkesbnno Ben Hur (4) Olivia (4) Hambrino Belle.. Optimist (3) Magor Ham Christine Hambrino Boy... Fast well Roscwell Alamater (4t Hambrino Pilot.. [Baroness
2d dam Baldy By Baldstockings, the pacer, Dam of Molly Patterson.the Sired by Tom Hal, grandsireof dam of Elsie Good, 2:22, and Brown Hal, 2:12%: Little Brown Blue Bull, Jr.,siieof LottieP July, 2:11^, and Hal Painter, 2:17%: Nettie 2:19, and Lot- 2:09%: g-andsireof Little (iyytie, 2:25. sv, 2:22 Limber Jack, 2:18%. Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh dams Thoroughbred.
O I S I N A Agent.
No. 16886. Record 2:23].
DAY STAR,
BY CHESTNUT STAR, 2:22.
Son of Red Buck: dam Belle, bv Wood, son of Curtis' Hamhletonian "39, sire of six in 2:30 list Belle is also tbe dam of Carrie L, 2:29,' trotting, and lor a Voss, dam of Chestnut .Star, 2:22, is also the 8am of Buck Dickerson, 2:25£.
DAY STAR 2:23y,, is a handsome dark bay. 15% hands high, nicely finished, and a race horse IfVlien he made his reco'rd he paced the last quarter in 31% seconds, and the last half in 1 07.
E S E O N E O E
By Tersey Wilkes 251G. sire of four in the list dam Anna Miller, by Jim Monroe 835, sire of Monro
Grandson of Hambleton 10, will make the season of 1892 at our placo, mile north of Warrington, at 525. the season, with return privileges. We make no insurance against accidents to marcs.
-1= DESCRIPTION =1-
sire
CHIEF is a brown horse 15% hands 1150 pounds, stylish, sound and a ?ast and line trottei
"PEDIGREE1T
is by Squire Talmage, sire of 11 in 2:30 to 2:1P, by Hamhletonian 10 1st dam Jo
Hooker sire of 2 in 2-30 2d dam Thoroughbred 3d dam Iron's Cadmus, si:e of the grandains of Nelsoi end Pocahontas Boy. The
of MIAMA CHIEF is a brother to the horses that
Hanks and hosts of other good ones. MIAMA CHIEF is a line individual aad from family of fast and game race horses. Ue will be trained and raced this year after stud •'.ulics
«—MANUFACTURERS OF AND DKAI.EKS IN
All Repairing, Painting, and Trimming done im the neatest and most substantial manner. All work guaranteed to Rive entire satisfaction at prices that will please you.
7
Hambletonlan 10, sir of the greatflst trot,' ing family in ilu world, with 40 2:6{ perlormers-
Edward Everett 81 sire in 2:30: grand sire of over 50 2:30 trotters.
fMambrino Chief 11. I Sire of Lady Thorne
-j 2:18, and the foundei
Dam of Hambrino, I of the Mambrini record 2:2% (. Chief family.
sons have Hambrino 820 daughters have producfu
Hambrino's produced Gold Medal.. Beaury Mac. Voucher Ha Ha Lucula Barney Horn Bracelet Lottie Babr Mine... Geneva Ecru Hammond... Hilda
2:14 2: 2:21H 2:22)4 2:28 2:28 J4 2:21 2:24 2:27
.2 2$. .2:25 ,2:2!% .2:27% .2:28% ,2:2i4 •2:29)i .2:29}| .2:30
Garnctt Girl 2:27 Simbrino 2:29y. Gean Wilkes 2:26}$ Wertlier (3) 2.29k Onedia (2) Speedawar ....2:24]^ Gothe .'.
2:30 2:26J$ 2:2914
By Alexander's Abdallah 15, Sire of Goldsmith Maid, 2:14 and5 others in 2:30 iist are mOre of his proginy in the2:20list than all the balance of Hambletonian's sons combined.
DESCRIPTION: UAL POINTER, 2:09|.
nAMDALLAEL is a bright bay with black points, 1hands high, with great length, very fine head
HA VlPA^LAIl"has breeding, has speed, has tiuisll, and a level head in fact, lie has promise as a rreat sire HA JI PALI-AH will make the season of 1892 at my stable in GREEK FIELD, IXP„ at 550 the season, rith usaal return privileges. Grass at $2 per month, grasn 52 per week. Mates will be met at cars. All iscapcs and accidents at owner's risk.
Greenfield, Indiana,
7 others in 2:30 2d dam Bruna, by Pilot, Jr., 12. £rana is the dam of Woodford'
MON*ROE is a solid bay, 10 hands, strong bone and elegant finish. These horses will both make the season of 1892 at my breeding barn in Pendleton, Ind., at 535 tilt season with return privilege. Mares from a distance kept at reasonable rates at owner's risk.
JOHN \V. LEVVAKK, Pendleton, Ind.
Ml AM A CHIEF,
1892
got
Yours respectfully,
"WHITE & SON,
24yl
DO
YOU KNOW
LOAN AGENTS.
Co..
ABSTRACTORS OF TITLE, NOTARIES PUBLIC, LOAN, and IN8UKAXCSIAOKOTW
5
Auotlonaw and Palntart •APL1 •AIX1Y, INDIANA.
Prleea reasonable aad Mtlafaetlfca gumatMt.
A-fl-tt
Sunol, .Maml S.
P. & L. COPELAND, Warrington, Ind.
WHITE & SON
WAGONS, BUGGIES," CARRIAGES, ETC.
4'S sS
-I
INDIANA.
1
That the Wisconsin Central and Northern Paetflg run through Pullman Vestibuled Drawing $oom and Tourist Sleepers without ehange be* ween Chicago and Taconia, Wash., and Portland )re.
The train known aa the Faclfio Express laarw .he magnificent new Grand Central .Passenger St* lion, Chicago, every day at 10:45 p. m.
For tickets, bertha in Tourist or Pullman Bleepirs, apply to GEO. THOMPSON, City Passenger and Tieket Ageat. o» 206 Clark M.
F. J. EDDT, Depot-Tloket Agent, Grand Central Paaaenger Station. Chleags,
J. O. BRANSON,
E
]few Palestine DraggisI
Keeps oae of the Best Lines of
Drugs, Medicines Paint3, OSS» Varnishes, Etc., to be found in the county and Prices a* low as they can be made. GIVS HIM A
