Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 24 March 1892 — Page 3

W.

il

-..

VH

rABT L. B3UNEB,

i-l l!-c-i $

ij« iV

AS

vi

jSSftr.}-

fV*

fcv.

ifV^»

DiacasM of "W«m«m.

BatManta, Nor'A PeaaiylTamia •»., •KK£NFIXLS IXBUMJL. lilt

DR. WARREN R. KING,

jpsYsioi Air Aim sroosox.

Gtfictz—la

o'#-

Gant'B Block, earner Tsavt

id M&ia str2«ts RosldtaM, W#tl Mais •Grort, OS^35®?«KIlBS»*, X3HB.

J. H. BINFORD,

ASTOBKXT AT-LAW,

GREENFIELD, IND.

OR NO FEE

PATENT

Address

A 48-page book free. W. T. HTZGERAr.D, Att1y-it-^Law, -«J2-52Cor. SthandF. Sts, W AslIINGf-..n,

Drunkenness, qp the tlyiior Hnhit, I o. tively Cured ly Administering lJr. Haines' fioldeu Specific.

ItiB manufa" 1 as a powlor. which fun In riven in a '•*, 11 cup of cottee or tea 01 i_ iood, without he kill) /Io.Irc of the patient. It 1 absolutely Iran,. '.tnl will effect a penuaiioni pad speedy cure, whether tue patient is moot 1 .it thinkeroran alcoholic wreck. It has been mvoi. ifo thousands of cases, and in every instance aper ce tcure has followed. It never tails. The svstew once impregnated with the Specific, it becomes at otter impossibility for the liquor appetite to exist Cure guaranteed. 48 page book of particulars free ttOfelfsN

SPECIFIC CO., 1S5 Ka#e St..

Cincinnati, Ohio.

Indianapolis Division.

ennsulvania Lines.|

Schedule of Passenger Trains-Central Time. Ti

1

SI AM

Westward.

AM

Columbus h'. Urbana Plqua Covington Bradford Jc Gettysburg Greenville Weavers

AM t9 00* 10 38| 1126 1140 1158 Il59f513ig~

1*2 50,

am

*5 40 7 01 7 42 755 8 08 823

*7 20 Via, Bayton.

O

1212 12123 1232 12t38 1248

4

New Madison ..." Wileys New Paris Biclinaonti.. Centreville Uerinantown Cambridge City.. Dublin aitrawiis Lewisvillo Ounreitli Ugden lvnightstown I'harlottsville Cleveland. Greenfield Philadelphia Cumberland Irvington S n«l lauapulls ar.

528:53 5 49 g2

6 1019 lOjlO 37H1 CO 6 15 9 30*10 45j 1 20 [0*2 .|t="0

6 20lAyr 6 30-+625

1 32] 64513 37 654 709 15

9 56!?X ..Is

705 715 7 21 730 f7 33 7 40 7 52 f7 56 09

... 10 34i 1. 63

7 46

.... 10 58UI

813

7 55=1140(12 45 AM

Eastward.

I ud lanapol is.lv. Irvington Cumberland Philadelphia Greenfield Cleveland Charlottsvillo Knightstowa Ogden Dunreith Lewisville Strsvwns. Dublin Cambridge City.." German town Centreville ar.

9 OOj PM

km 629 637

625

124

toll information eall

700

O ti XV IO ...... 70010 301 2 00 !{§I730| 7 1010 351 2 05 *55 750 17 22 7 32

Hv.

Kichmoiid New Paris Wileys New Madison Weavers Greenville Gettysburg Bradford .To Covington Piqua Urbana Columbus

617 630 PM

1047 10*58«

7401105 5 f7 50 801

llfl5 1127!

f815 832 f844 855 903. 915 ,1002

f81611 40! 830 8 41 854 953 .1130

cc.®

12W 12 20 1234 140 330 PM

600 PM

8151130 PM' PM

AM

Nos. O, 8 and 21) 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 t7.00 a. m. and 13.30 P- i". for Rualiville, Shelbyville, Columbus and intermediate stations. Arrive Cambridge City f1.45 and t6.50 p. m. JOSEPH WOOD, E. A. FORD,

General Manager, General Passengsr Agant,

2-I5-92.-R PITTSBUKGII, 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 Pennsylramia Lines, W. H. SCtftT", Aoimn^

Greenfield,. Indiana.

Peoria Division. Formerly I. B. A W. ft'?.

SHORT LINE BAST AND WEST. Wagner Slespei* aai BMllning Chair «m tight trslat. Boat modern day coaeht# «a tatfsa. Connecting with solid TosUbial* towtaa it •oomlngton and Peoria to and from Missouri nrM. Denver and tbo PaoiAo QOMt at Indianapolis, C» sinnati, Springfield and Columbus to ana from th« Km torn afia soaboud oltlu. Trains at iBiUaap* •la Union Station

BKPAKT ABUTS (fsosia snrinov) w*rr. T:i! a. m. 8n a. a. 11:45 a. at. 11:W a. a» 0:05 p.m. 11:80p.m. fcMfwat (rxOBIA BITUOI) XXST. 9:40 a. m. 11:00 a. a. •:50 p. 11:10 p. m. Wmt

mm

Til.

•Cincinnati, 4iamiltoa and

Dayton Railroad Is the ionly |Lin«

or addross, D. C. DKAKS.

9«naral Agont, 138 South Illinois St., Indianayolia Union Station, or aa A rent on the lino.

~H. M. BR0N80N, iii'L^aw. AmL Isdianapom

•X Otslt Ctfl

Traim aid

Slteping Car* oa Night

Hl3

1

'Running Pullman's Perfected iB&fcty 'Vestibular {Trains,

Sining

ith

Trains

b*tT/«ea

Finest

Cincinnati, Indianapolis Chicago, r'St. Louis,

Toledo and

jij

Car*,

•between •Cincinnati, |Icdianapolls

1

Detroit.

iliChair Car betweea Cincinnati and

rEsrt!i,

Keokmk.

0. WOODFORD, Prtsldont Qonofal Man«gor. ft 'McCOBMICK, fisnsral Pttuii|trl Ttokol«|oA ^CUUTATI,#,

•„,... ,% *T -iv/ •*}.» ^f-""- -p~*-y -*W—*-^-:^|5

AMOS, OF TEK0A-

Seek Him That Maketh the Seven

Stars and Orion.

After All There May Bo Something in Astrology—Dr. Talmuge's Soraion.

Rev. Dr. Talmage preached at Brooklyn last Sunday. Text, Amos v, 8. He said:

A country farmer wi*ote this text —Amos, of Tekoa. He plowed the earth and threshed the grain by a new threshing-machine just invented, as formerly the cattle trod out the grain. He gathered the fruit of the sycamore tree and scarified it with an iron comb just before it was getting ripe, as it was necessary and sustomary in that way to take from It the bitterness. He was the son of a poor shepherd, and stuttered but before the stammering rustic the Philistines, and Syrians, and Phoenicians, and Moabites, and Ammonites, and Edomites and Israelites trembled.

What a life of solitude, all alone with his herds! Poor Amos! And at 12 o'clock at night, hark to the wolf's bark, and the lion's roar, and the bear's growl, and the owl's to-whit-fco-who, and the serpent's hiss, as he unwittingly steps too near while moving through the thickets! So Amos, likie other herdsmen, got the habit of studying the map of the heavens, because it was spread out before him so much of the time. He noticed some stars advancing and Dthers receding. He associated their 3awn and setting with certain sea•ons of the year. He had a poetic nature, and he read night by night, and month by month, and year by pear, the poem of the constellations, divinely rhythmic. But two rosettes 3f stars especially attracted his attention while seated on the ground ar lying on his back under the open scroll of the midnight heavens—the Pleiades, or Seven Stars, and Orion. ""I The former group this rustic prophet associated with the spring, •g 2 as it rises about the 1st of May. The patter he associated with the winter, 'as it comes to the meridian in January. The Pleiades, or Seven Stars, connected with all sweetness and joy Oi'ion, the herald of the tempest.

The ancients were the more apt to study the physiognomy and juxtaposition of the heavenly bodies because 6 5a they thought they had a special influence upon the earth, aud perhaps

Lhey were right. If the moon every few" hours lifts and lets down the tides of the Atlantic ocean, and the slectric storms of the sun, by all scientific admission, affect the earth, 81® why not the stars have proportionate 8 42 3ffeet? 9°0 And there are some things which make me think that it may not have been all superstition which connected

*5301400 the movements and appearance of 416 the heavenly bodies with great moral avents on earth. Did not a meteor run on an evangelistic errand on the

4! 4 447 f500 504 513 '5 20 524

5 25 8 4712 27 ...

471K

610

9 oa 9131250 ^92^ 1 GO

547 559

Srst Christmas night, and designate the rough'cradle of our Lord? Did not the stars iu their courses fight 5 36 'against Sisera? Was it merely coinbidet tal that before the destruction 5 571 af Jerusalem the moon was eclipsed

!for twelve consecutive nights? Did it merely happen so that a new star appeared in constellation Cassiopeia, and then disappeared just before

King Charles IX., of France, who was responsible for the St. Bartholomew jnassacre, died? Was it without significance that in the days of the Roman Emperor Justinian war and famine were preceded by the dimness of the sun, which for nearly a year gave 110 more lignt than the moon, although there were no clouds to obscure it?

Astrology, after all, may have been somethir.g more than a brilliantheathenism. No wonder that Amos of the text, having heard these two anthems of the stars, put down the stout rough staff of the herdsman and took into his brown hand, and cut and knotted fingers the pen of a prophet, and advised the recreant people to return to God, saying: 'Seek Him that maketh the Seven Stars and Orion.'' This command, which Amos gave 785 years B. C., is just as appropriate for us, 1892 A. D.

In the first place, Amos saw, as we must see, that the God who made the Pleiades and Orion must be the God of order. It was not so much a star here and a star thei*e that impressed the inspired herdsman, but seven in one group, and seven in the other group. He saw that night after night and season after season and decade after decade, they had kept step of light, each one in its own place, a sisterhood never clashing and never cpntesting precedence. From the time Ilesied called the Pleiades the 'seven daughters of Atlas," and Virgil wrote in his iEneid of Storm Ofioh" until now, they have observed the order established for their coming and going order written not in manuscript that may be pigeonholed, but with the hand of the Almighty on the dome of the sky, so that all nations may read it. Order. Persistent order. Sublime order. Omnipotent order.

What a sedative to you and me, to whom communities and nations sometimes seem going pell-mell, and world ruled by some fiend at hap hazard, and in all directions maladministration! The God who keeps seven worlds in right circuit for six thousand years can certainly keep all the affairs of individuals and nations and continents in adjustment. We had not better fret much, for the peasant's argument of the text was right. If God can take care of the seven worlds of the Pleiades and the four chief worlds of Orion, He can probably take care of the world we inhabit.

In your oooupailon, your mission

your sphere, do the best you can and then trust to God and if things are all mixed up and disquieting, and your heart sick, get some one to go out with you into the starlight and point out to 3'ou the Pleiades, or, better than that, get into some observatory, and through the telescope see further than Amos with the naked eye could—namely, 200 stars in the Pleiades, and that in what is called the sword of Orion there is a nebula computed to be 2,200,000,000,000 times lai'ger than the sun. Oh, be at peace with the God who made all that and controls all that the wheel of the constellations turnin# in the wheel of galaxies for thousands of years without the breaking of a cog or the slipping of a band or the snap of an axle. For your placidity and comfort through the Lord Jesus Christ I eharge jrou, ''Seek him that maketh the Seven Stars and Orion."

Again, Amos saw, as we must see, that the God who made these two groups of the text was the God of light. Amos saw that God was not satisfied with making oue star, or two or three stars, but he makes seven and having finished that gixmp of worlds, makes another group— group after group. To the Pleiades he adds Orion. It seems that God likes light so well that he keeps on making it. Only one being knows the statistics of solar, stellar, meteoric creations, and that is the Creator himself. And they have all been lovingly christened, each one a name as distinct as the names of your children. "He telleth the number of the stars He calleth them all by their names,"

Again, Amos saw, as we must see. that the God who made these two archipelagoes of stars must be au unchanging God. There had been no change in stellar appearance in this herdsman's lifetime, and his father,a shepherd, reported to him that there had been no change in his lifetime. And these two clusters hang over the celestial arbor now just as they were the first night that they shone on the Edenic bowers, the same as when the Egyptians built the Pyramids from thVtop of which to watch them, the same as when the Chaldeans calculated the eclipse, the same as when Elihu, according to the Book of Job, went out to study the aurora borealis, the same under Prolemaic system and Copernican system the same from Calisthenes to Pythagoras, and from Pythagoras to Herschel. Surely a changeless God must have fashioned the Pleiades and Orion! Oh, what an anodyne amid the ups and downs of life and the flux and reflux of the tides of prosperity to know that we have a changeless God, the same yesterday, to-day aud forever."

Again, Amos saw, as we must see, that the God who made these two beacons of the Oriental night sky must be a God love and kindly warning. The Pleiades rising in midslcy said to all the herdsmen and shepherds and husbandmen: "Come out and enjoy the mild weather, and cultivate j'ourgardens and fields." Orion, coming in winter, warning them to prepare for the tempest.

All the navigations was regulated by these two constellations. The one said to the shipmaster and crew: "Hoist sail for the sea, and gather in inerchandice from other lands." But Orion was the storm signal, and said: "Reef sail, make things snug,

Oh, now I get the best view of God I ever had! There are two kinds of sermons I uever want to preach— the one that presents God so kind, so indigent, so lenient, so imbecile that men may do what they will agaiust Him, and fracture His every law, and put the pry of his impertinence and rebellion under his throne and while they are spitting in his face and stabbing at His heart He takes them up in his arms and kisses their infuriated brow and cheek, saying: "Of such is the kingdom of heaven."

The other lcind of sermon I never want to preach is. the one that represents God as all fire and torture and thunder cloud, and with red-hot pitchfork tossing the human race into paroxysms of infinite agony. The sermon that I am now preaching believes in a God of loving, kindly warning, the God of spring and winter, the God of the Pleiades and Orion.

You must remember that the winter is just as important as the spring. Let one winter pass without frost to kill vegetation and ice to bind the rivers and snow to enrich our fields, and then you will have to enlarge your hospitals anc your cemeteries. "A green Christmas makes a fat grave-yard," was the old proverb. Storms to purify the air. Thermometer at 10 deg. above zero to tone up the system. December aud January just as important as May and June. I tell you we need the storms of life as much as we do the sunshine. There are more men ruined by prosperity than by adversity. If we had our own way in life before this we would have been impersonations of selfishness and worldlinc-ss and disgusting sin, and puffed up until we would have been like Julius Cfesar, who was made by sycophants to believe that he was divine, and the freckles on his face were as the stars of the firmanent.

Oh, what a mercy it is that, in the text and all up and down the Bible, God induces us tto look out toward other worlds! Bible astronomy, in Genesis, in Joshua, in the Psalms, in the prophets, major and minor, in St. John's Apocalypse, practically saying: "Worlds! worlds 1 worlds! Gft ready for them!"' W© have a

or put intoshoi'e, for the huricanes commandant of the squadron and he are getting their wings out." As called the captain. the Pleiades were the sweet evan- "Look here, captain, why have you gels of the spring. Orion was the ff0' rascally lancer in your cornwarning prophet of the winter.

*s&r«^1 T'

nice little world here that wo sticli to, as though losing that we lost all. We are afraid of falling off this little raft of a world. We are at'raic that some meteoric inconoclast will some night smash it, and we want everything to revolve around i.fc. and are disappointed when we find that it revolves around the sun instead ol the sun revolving around it.

What a fuss we make about a little bit of a world, its existeucp only a short time between two spasms, the paroxysm by which it was hurled from chaos into order and the paroxysm of its demolition.

Perhaps yonder twinldinp constellation is the residence of the martyrs that group of twelve luminaries the celestial home of the Apostles. Perhaps that steep of light is the dwelling place of angels cherubic, seraphic, archangelic. A mansion with as many rooms as worlds, and all their windows illuminated for festivity.

Oh, how this widens and lifts and stimulates our expectation! How little it makes the present aud how stupendous it makes the future! How it consoles us about our pious dead, who instead of being boxed up and under the ground have the range of as many rooms as there are worlds, and welcome everywhere, because it is the Father's house in which there are many mansions! Oh, Lord God of the Seven Stars and Orion, how can 1 endure the transport, the cestacy of such a vision. I must obey my text and seek Him. I will seek Him. I seek Him now, for I call to mind that it is not the material universe that is the most valuable, but the spiritual, and that each of us has a scul worth more than all the worlds which the inspired herdsman saw from his booth on the hills of Tekoa.

One locomotive called the Charles Dickens, on the Northwestern road in England, has run one million miles iu nine years without a break-down.

HE HAD PERMUTED.

How Red Tape Is Measured In Military Life. Busy men, accustomed to do business in a brisk common-sense fashion, find official red tape so vexatious that it is no wonder they invent stories to make it ridiculous, says the Youth's Companion. The French have one of these, which is perhaps as good as any. When Napoleon III., was emperor, so the narrative runs, he sat one da,y at Longchamps, sleepily reviewing his ariny. Regiment after regiment passed, but nothing seemed to stir the emperor from his lethargy. At last, however, as a regiment of dragoons rode by he suddenly fixed his attention upon the front rank. "What is tHat lancer doing there among the dragoons?" he asked his chief of staff.

The chiof of staff looked at the lancer, and galloped away to the division commander, while the emperor sank back into his customary impassiveness. "The emperor demands to know why that lancer is among tue dragoons?"

The general looked shocked, and called sharply to the colonel of tho regiment: "Colonel, what have you got that lancer among your men for?"

The colonel was dumbfounded, and appealed to the commandant of the squadron:

What's that lancer doing here?" "I don't know, sir," exclaimed the

pany?" The captain pleaded ignorance. •Til ask the lieutenant," he said.

By this time the inquiries began to be garnished with oaths and abuse. The lieutenant, apparently surprised beyond expression at the presence of the 1 ncer, hurled questions and imprecations all at once at the head of the orderly sergeant "What in the world is that lancer here for?"

Then the orderly sergeant rode up to the incer himself, as if he were about to cut him through to his saddle. "You villian! What are you doing here amonsr the dragoons? The emperor is after you. You'll be shot at the very least." "But, sergeant," the soldier stammered, "you know I've permuted, sir!"

Permuted in the army means transfer, by authority, from one corps to another. "Permuted, eh?" said the sergeant. ••Well, that won't help you now."

The orderly sergeant went to the lieutenant with the report that the man had permuted the lieutenant told the captain, and the captain the commandant of the squadron, and the Commandant of the squadron the colonel, and the colonel the general, and the general the chief of staff came to the emperor. "Sire," ho Began, "the lancer lias permuted." "What lancer?" "The lancer whom your majesty noted among the dragoons." "Oh, yes! He's permuted, eli!" said the emperor, sleepily. "YVoll. he looked like a good man. Lot him have a medal!"

.*•' A Literary furiosity.

The menu of the farewell banquet to the members of the oriental congress at Stockholm ought to take a permanent place in collections of literary curiosities. The initial "sup" or nip of schnapps which always begins a Scandinavian dinner was recorded with a sonar in the Kairs tongue. Tho soup was described in Gctziani and a song in Chinese. Prof. Max Mullcr wrote a song in Sanscrit praising the salmon. The filet de boeuf was mentioned by a verste in Malay and by another in Japanesek Artichaut au baurro was treatin Coptic cateau a la Victoria in hieroglyphics the ices in llimyaritic the cheeses in Bichare. The menu concluded aAording to the Sweedish custom/ with\'•Thanks for dinner irrittea

rT"w v*

—-A*W 4-i^» k/

DELMRRCH, 2:114

II. 1 RUSSELL,

Pi

1892.

•i

BMtMt and

FORTVILLE

CURST ft VH01A9,

BINGE 9 LOIN AGENTS.

MONUMENTS IK

MARBLE AND GRANITE.

Ln

Im IS

Walter 0. Braw 4 Co..

1B8TBACTORS OF TITLE,

H0TARIE8 PUBLIC,

SSI

(Standard aiicl P.egistcred, -037)

:7£ Racing: Record, 2:23.

HflMDILLRH, 2037,1 aaS%2f.=S«

Cbiistine 2:25A

Pace record 2:23 Ilatobrino Boy....2:27S Fiul lirother to Dal Brino, Fastwell 2:28Vi lire of Roscweil 2:'2t'i Dtto W 2:22 Alaiuater (4) 2:2'J'4 Dftndy O (3) 2:27% Hambriuo Pilot...3:29% May lirino. 2:29% (Baronets 2:30 1st dam. Linda

Dam of Dal Urioo, sire of 3 in2:30 list., also dam of Dra«onlas, tbe sire of Charley H,2 27.

2d dam Baldy Dam of Molly Pattorson,tbe dam of Elsie Good, 2:22, and Blue Bull, Jr.. sire of LottieP 2:17^21 Nettie 2:19. and Lottie, 2?25.

Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh dams XliorouglilneU.

•-.•••• Sire of l.sidy Tiiorne. Mambrina 2: IS, and the founder ..... I Dam of Ham'.jrino, I of tho M:un brin« reeo:d i!:21V£. I Chief family.

llnmbrino, S'iO... Record 2:L'i)4, —siro ol— Delmarcli 2:11}4 (. Hambrino's sons have Wildbrioo 2:19% produced Hfuudallah 2:2:5 Gold Medal 2:1-1 ilkesbrino. 2:255 Ben Iiur (4) 2:24 1 Olivia (4) 2:24 llatubrino Belle...2:25V.

IIBON, 2,2:101- DESCRIPTION: I1AL I'OIXTffi. 2:03|.

ITA-MPALLAIi is a bright bay with black points, 15^ hands high, with great Icnsrlh. very line head ind neck, fine shoulder aud short back, the best of legs ivnd leet iii fait, he is one.of tae fii.cst. stallioiM the stale, and Ills blood lines need only to bo studied to convince any good hoisenian tlint he has the lest trottiiig blood on earth in his veins, backed up by the stoutest, thoroughbred unto his seveiil daui.

HAHbALLAil has breeding, has speed, has finish, and a level head iu tact, he ha* promise asa "ffiVSALLAH will make the season of 1892 at my stable in GREENFIELD, IND., at S50 the season, rifl* usaal return privileges. Grass at $2 per month, gra.-n £2 per week. MaiCb will be met at care. All. Bcapcs and accidents at owner's risk.

JOHN T. TIISTD^LIj,

Indianapolis, Ind.

No. 16886. Record

DAY STAR,

BY CHESTNUT STAR, 2:22.

Son ol Red Buck dam Belle, by Wood, son of Curtis' Ilambletonian sire of oix in 2:30 list Hello is also tbe-dam of Carrio L, 2:29, trotting, aud Flora Voss, dam of Chestnut friar, 2:22, i:s also th« 9am cif Buck pickerson, 2:25%.

DAY STAR, 2:23}£, is a handsome dark bay. 10% hands high, nicely tini.shed, and a rare borsa When he made his record he paced the last quarter in 31 -$ seconds, and the last half in 1 07.

JERSEY MONROE.

By Jersey Wilkes 25113. sire of four in the list dam Anna Miller, by Jim Monroe S".". of ^ronrw Chief, 2:18}^,"and 7 others iu 2:30 2d daiu Bruna, by Pilot, Jr., 12. a* ru: a is the dam of Woodford'!

"jE^tSEi'' MONROE is a solid bay, 1G hands, sirong bone and elegant finili. These horses will both make the tea-on of 1802 at my breeding barn in Pendleton, Ind., at. tlx season with return privilege. Mares from a distance kept at reasonable rates at owner's ris*. 87-12 JOHN W.I.JilVAKK, Peiuilwtoii, Inil.

MIAMA CHIEF,

Grandson of Ilarabletoa 10, will make the season of 1892 at our place, mile north of \V::rrin^taa at $25. the season, with return privileges. Wo make no insurance against accidents to

-1= DESCRIPTIOJST

MIAMA CHIEF is a brown horse 15% hands 1150 pounds, stylish, sound and a fast und tine troitea?

^PEDIGREE^

MIAMA CHIEF is by Squire Talmage, sire of 11 in 2:30 to 2:1!, by Ilambletonian III 1st dam Jo* Hooker, sire of 2 in 2-30 2d dam Thoroughbred 3d dam Iron's Cadmus, she of the grniidams of Nelaoi end Pocahontas Boy. The sire of MIAMA CHIEF is a brother to the horses that g-.t Sunol, Maud S Palo Alto, Nancy Hanks and hosts of other good ones. MIAMA '.'HI K!-' is a fine individual a:id front family of last and game race horses. He will be trained and raced this year after stud yluii* s. 1\ & L. COPELAND,

WHITE & SON

LOAN, and INSUKAMCB AQKNTO.

14, Zt 0. Tkay#* Block*

g^OBEKT A. OWT, Auctioneer and Pnintcft YAIXKY, UtmAKA.

PrleM rwuwaaM* amd Mtiafaettea gauwtM*.

j.

'•f.

llnmblctoniun 10, sir* of tbe promo-st trot*

•I Edward Kverett 81..'....'-J inj» family in tlit "i sire 15ill grnnd I world, wiih -10 2:3( sire of over 2:30 pcrfoi iiH-rt-trotters.

Mi'mbrino Cliicf It,

TF.imbrino daneh. tershave produced Garnett Girl 2:27 •Si:nbriuo Gean Wilkes 2:263-: Wert her (3) 2:29J-£ Onedia (2) 2:iS Spoedaway 2:2t}£ ((•the.. 2:2U

Beaury Mae Voucher 2:21^ Ha Ha 2:22}$ Lucilla 2:-8 Barney iloru 2:28^ Bracelet. Lottie Baby Mine... Geneva Ecru Hammond... Hilda

!:21

2:24

..2:2(J% ..2:30 .2:2^ ••2:29*4

By Alexander's Abdullah 1"». Sire ot Goldsmiili Maid, 2:14 and 5 others iu 2:30 list: aio inOruof his pro ?iny in tUe 2:20 list, than all the balance of Ilambletomairs sons combined.

By Baldstoeliings, tbe pacer, Sired by

IobI

Hal, gnindsne of

Brown ilal, 2:12}:.: Little Brown .Inly, 2:11^, and llal I'a.liter, 2:OC'3$: giandpireof Little Gvysv, 2:22 Limber JaeK, 2:18 ^.

Greenfield, Indiana.

Warrington, Ind.

OF AND DEALERS

TS

WAGONS, BUGGIES, CARRIAGES, ETC.

All Bepalring,

Fainting, and Trimming done

most substantial manner. All work guaranty giv« entire satisfaction at prices that will pleas# yon. Yours respectfully, fc

WHITE

la

SOJST,

84yl

DO

YOU

KNOW

e^ltafw Block. 1M

IfAiff» O. BBAM. four Ononii

That the Wisconsin Central and Northern Fuiti lines run through Pullman Ve«tlbuled Drawjnf

800m

and Tourist Sleepers without change .ween Chicago and Tacoma, Wash,, aad Portland )ro.

The train known aa the Paclfio Express learfa bo magnificent new Grand Central Passenger St*« don, Chicago, every day at 10:45 p. as.

For tickets, berths in Tourist or Fnllman SlMp? trs, apply to

•r to

8fll

Agent.

KB

2:23-k

1?.'2

i-

VSiM

A r-

41

th»

Vf-

INDIANA

Geo. K. Thompso*,

City Passenger and Ticket Agent, 205 Clark Mu

Eddy,

F. J.

Depot'Tieket Ajant, atral Paaaamer Stat"

Grand Cant

«tl

Paasanger Station,

Mil

ChlMi* U.

J. O. BRANSON,

Keeps one of the Best Lines af Drags, Medicines, Paints,

Ol!*

Varnishes, Etc., to be found in the county and Frioes as low

as

they can

be made.

GIVE HIM CALlft

1*1*