Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 31 March 1892 — Page 3
yilT BBUHD, M. P„
DU*MH
W*mta.
of
IMUIIN,
FaiiylTuli
Cincinnati! Obio.
H.|
•KKXN7IXL9 DTIUIA tlM
DR. WARREN R. KING,
MRAIOIAJF AND IUBQIOM. Omoi—Im Oant'a Blook, «oni«r ?iu mi Mais strut* Reildecce, Wot lists
ORBEMFIELD, IOT.
J. H. BINFORD,
ATTOmmET AT-UlW,
GREENFIELD, IND.
PATENT
OR NO FEE
A 48-page book free. Address W. T. HTZGERAf.D, Att'y-at-Law, •92-62 Coir. 8th and F.
Sts, W ASHIIs GT0i, D. (.
Drunkenness, or the Liquor Habit, IV. tlvtfly Cored by Administering Dr. Raines' Golden Specific.
Xt is mannfart-—-1 as a powder, which can 1« riven in a glar* b3 -, a cup of coffee or tea or lr lood^without lie kno /ledge of the patient. It absolutely ban.. And will cfl'cot a permanent PAd tptcdy cure, whether the patient is a moderate iiinkeror aft alcoholic wreck. It has been River ifcj thousand* of cases, and in every instance a per ce tctfre has followed. It never Fails. The sy6tcn •nee impregnated with the Specific, it becomesar otter impossibility for the liquor appetite to exist Curt j«u» Antefcd. 48 page book of particulars free. pOlj&OT SPECIFIC CO., 185 Race St.,
Indianapolis lIvision.
ennsulvania Lines.
Schedule of Passenger Trains-Central Time.
21
Westward.
in
Si
AM AM
AM
Columbus Urbana Piqua Covington Bradford Jc Gettysburg Greenville. Weavers New Madison Wileys New Paris Richmond, Centreville German town Cambridge City.. Dublin St awns Lewisville Dunreith Ogden Knights town Charlottsville Cleveland Greenfield Philadelphia Cumberland Irvington Indianapolis
[AM
I'M
'V-*2 50*5 40*7 20IT9 00
"2 05 344 433 449 505 f513 528 '549
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7 01 7 42 755
Via, Bayton.
10 38 1126 1140 1153 1159 1212 12123 1232 12(38 1248
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10 37,111 00
615
620
AM 1-625 637 654 658 7 05 715 7 21 730 7 33 740 7 52 "7 56 809 816 8 30 8 42 900 AM
9 30*10 45
120 132 N 47 151 15C 204 210 219 f222 229 240 244 257
630 645 7 09
956
3
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10 34
5 li
7 46
10 58
813
~8 I* PS
3
3_. 331 345| PM
7 551140 AM AM tt AM *4 45,"
1245 N'N
900 PM
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Eastward.
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AM t8 00 816 830 840 8 4712 27 8 59 9 03 9131250
AM
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PM
PM
*1145 1159
Cumberland Philadelphia Greenfield Cleveland Charlottsville Knightstown Ogden DunTeith Lewisville Strawns. Dublin Cambridge City.. Germantown Centreville Itichmond... New Paris Wileys New Madison Weavers Greenvii .e Gettysburg Bradford Jc Covington Piqua Urbana Columbns
1*3 00
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5 47 5 59
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5 52 5 57 602 617 630
625 6 47 700 710
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Trains leave Cambridge City at
and
+3-30 P-
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(7
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801
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f8 44l
8 30 8 41 854 953
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1130 AM
81511 30 PM'PM
Nos. 6, 8 and 20 connect at Columbus for Pittsburgh and the East, and at Richmond for Dayton, Xenia and Springfield, and Wo. 1 for Cincinnati.
+7.00
FOR
a. m.
Rusliville, Shelbyville, Co
lumbus and intermediate stations. Arrive Cambridge City
FL.45 *MD 16-50 P- M.
JOSEPH WOOD, J5. A. FORD, General Manager, General Passengur Agent, 2-15-92.-33, PlTTSBCKGH, PENN'A.
For time cards, rates of fare, through tickets, basrgace checks and further information regarding the running of trains apply to any Agent of the Pennsylvania Lines.
\t. IT. g(m% AGENT, Greenfield, Indiana.
Peoria Division.
Formerly I. B. A W. Vj.
SHORT LINE BAST AND WEST. Wagner SlMperq and Beellnlng Chafe «*n eirtt trains. BsM modern day coackea «a an trains. Cenneoting with solid veaUhfcle tanas i*oomlnrt©n and jftorfa to and from Missouri iM Denver and theFaolfie ooast at frdiaaapells, Cf*. dnnati, Springfield and OsTumhns to «pd frfta tlM Baston aiid soaSoard olttoa. Xralos at J»diaaa#o UaUttioa Station
SKTABT AWIRA (PEOUA srvxaioir) w«r. 7:45 a. m. *30 a. m. ll 40a.
m. lliMa.*,
r08p. m. Mb p.m. 11:30 p.m.
(PEOKIA omnoir) ZAST. »4Q a. m. 11:90 a. m. •00 p. m. 11:15 p.m.
V»r fall information eall on or address. D. G. DKAX3i Qonoral Agont, 1M Sonth Illinois 8t., Indlaaa^oU*
Union SUtton, or any Ajjjot^on tho^UM. 2B0KS0V, Ass't Pais.
Th« .Cincinnati, Hamilton and
Dartoa Railroad
the enly Line Running Pullman's Perfected Safety Vestlbnled Trains,
twith
'Dining Cara, between Cincinnati, ^Iridianapolla •and Chicago.
A|mL
Indlanapolk
Chair Cars •a
Day
Traini aad
The
Sleeping Cari on Night
Floes} on
Traini
between
Cincinnati, Indianapolis Chicago, 'St. Louia,
Toledo and Detroit.
•,
J:I
Chair Ca»
f1"-'" betweea Cincinnati and
Keokak.
M. D. WOODFORD, President dtneral Mantger. B. 0. MaCORUICK, Qonorai Passenger 4 Tlekot 4gMl fUNCIMNATl, O,
THE GNAT.
"w
Strain at a Gnat and Swallow a Camel.
A Vigorous Onslaught on Formalism and Hypocrisy—Dr. Talmage'e Sermon.1' -.
Dr. Talmage preached at Brooklyn, last Sunday. Text, Matt, xxiii., 24He said:
A proverb is compact wisdom: knowledge in chunks, a library in a sentence, the electricity of many clouds discharged in one bolt, a river put through a mill race. „When Christ quotes the proverb of the text lie means to set forth the ludicrous behavior of those who make a great bluster about small sins aad have no appreciation of great ones. My text shows you the prince of inconsistencies. A man after long observation has formed the suspicion that in a cup of water he is about to driuk there is a grub or grandparent of a gnat. He goes and gets a sieve or strainer. He takes the water and pours it through the seive in the broad light. He says:
,lI
would
rather ao anything almost than drink this water until this larvae be extirpated." This water is brought under inquisition. The experiment is successful. The water rushes through the seive and leaves against the side' of the seive the grub or gnat. Then the man carefully removes the insect and drinks the water in placidity. But going out one day, and hungry, he devours a "ship of the desert, a camel, which the Jews were forbidden to eat. The gastronomer has no compunctions of conscience. He suffers from no. indigestion. He puts the lower jaw und&r the camel's forefoot, and his upper jaw over the hump of the oamel's back, and gives one Swallow, atid the dromedary disaii'peafs forever. He strained out'a gnat, he swallowed a camel.
While Christ's audience were 3ret smiling at the appositeness and wit of His illustration—for smile they did in church, unless they were too stupivd to understand the hyperbole —Christ practically said to them, "That is you." Punctilious about smairthings reckless about affairs of grefft magnitude. No subject ever writhed under a surgeon's knife more bitterly than did the Pharisees under Christ's scalpel of truth.
There are our day a great many camels swallowed, and it is the object of this sermon to sketch a few persons who are extensively engaged in that business.
First, I remark, that all those ministers of the Gospel are photographed in the text who are very scrupulous about the conven ionalities of religion, but.put no particular stress upon matters'Of vast importance. Church services ought to be grand and solemn. There is no room for frivolity in religious convocation. But there are illustrations, and there are hyperboles like that of Christ in the I text that will irradiate with smiles any intelligent auditory. There are men like those blind guides of the text who advocate only those things in religious service which draw the corners of the mouth down, and denounce all those things which have a tendency to draw the corners of the mouth up, and these men will go to installations and presbyteries and to conferences and to associations, their pockets full of fine sieves to strain out the gnats, while in their own churches at home every Sunday there are fifty people sound asleep. They make their churches a great dormitory, and their somniferous sermons are a cradle, and the drawled-out hymns a lullaby, while some wakeful soul in a pew with her fan keeps the flies of* unconscious persons approximate. Now, I say it is worse to sleep .n church than to smile in church, for the latter implies at least attention, while the former implies the indift'ei'ence of the hearers and the st pidity of the speaker.
In old age or from physical infirmity, or from long watching with the sick, drowsiness will sometimes overpower one but when a minister of the Gospel looks off upon an audience and finds healthy and intelligent people struggling with drowsiness, it is time for him to give out the.doxology or pronounce the benediction. The great fault of church service to-day is not too much vivacity, but too much somnolence. The one is an iritating gnat that may be easily strained out the other is a great, sprawling and sleepy-eyed camel of the dry desert. In all our Sabbath-schools in all our Bible classes, in all our pulpits, we need to brighten up our religious message with such Christian-like vivacity as we find in the text:
I take dovm from my library the biographies of ministers and writers of past ages, inspired and uninspired who have don® the most to bring souls to Jesus Christ, and I find that without a single exception they consecrated their wit and their humor to Christ. Elisha used it when he advised the Baalites. George Herbert, Roifert Smith, John Wesley, George Whitfield, Jeremy Taylor, Rowland Hill, Nettleton, George G. Finney' and all of the men of the past who have advanced the Kingdom of God concentrated their wit and their humor to the cause of Qbrist. So it has been in all the ages, and 1 say to these young theological students who cluster in these services Sabbath by Sabbath, sharpen your wits as sharp as scimeters, and then take them into this holy war. It is a very short bridge between a smile and a tear, a suspension bridge from eye to lip, and it is soon crossed over, and a smile is sometimes just as sacred as a tear. There is as muoh religion and I think a littl« more, in a spring morning than in a starless midnignt. fteii# ion works without anykumbr or wit
in it is a banquet with aside of beef and that raw, and no condiments and no desert succeeding.
Again: My subject photographs all those who are abhorrent of small sins, while they are reckless in regard to magnficent thefts. You will find many a merchant who, while he is so careful that he wculd not take a yard of cloth or a spool of cotton from the counter without paying for it, and who, if a bank cashier should make a mistake and send in a roll of bills $5 too much, would dispatch a messenger in hot haste to return the surplus, yet who will go into a stodlr company, in which, after awhile, he gets control of the stock and then waters the stock and makes $100,000 appear like $200,000. He only stole $100,000 by the operation. Many of the men of fortune made their wealth in that way. One of those men, engaged in such unrighteousness, that evening, the evening of the very day when he watered the stock, will find a wharf rat stealing an evening paper from the basement doorway, and will go out and catch the urchin by the collar and twist the collar so tightly the poor fellow cannot say it was thirst for knowledge that led him to the dishonest act, but grip the collar tighter and tighter, saying: "I have been looking for you a long while you stole mp paper four or five times, haven't you? You miserable. wretch!" And then tjie old stock gambler, with a voice they can hear three blocks, will cry out,v '•Police! Police!" That same man, the evening of the day in which he watered Ms stock, will kneel with his family in prayer and thank God for the prosperity of the day, then kiss his children good-night with an air which seems to say: "I hope you will all grow up to be as good as your father." Prisons for sins insectile in size, but palaces for crimes dromedarian. No mercy for sins animalcule in proportion, but great lenieney for a mastodon iniquity.
It is time that we learn in America that sin is not excusable in proportion as it declares large dividends and has outriders in equipage. Many a man is riding to perdition position ahead and lackey behind. To steal a dollar is a gnat to steal many thousands of dollars is a camel.
And men will sit in churches and in reformatory institutions trying bo strain out the small gnats of scoundrelism, while in their elevators and in their store houses they are fattening huge camels which they expect after a while to swallow: Society has to be entirelv reconstructed on this subject. We are to find that a sin is inexcusable in proportion as it is great.
I know in our time the tendency is to charge religious frauds upon good men. They say, Oh, what a class of frauds you have in the Church of God in this day," and when an elder of a church, or a deacon, or a minister of the Gospel, or a Superintendent of a Sabbath-school, turns out a defaulter, what display heads there are in many of the newspapers. Great Primer type. Five-line pica. 'Another Saint Abscounded." Clerical Scoundrelism." Religion at a Discount." "Shame on the Churches, while there area thousand scoundrels outside the church to where there is one inside the church, and the misbehavior of those who never see the inside of a church is so great it is enough to tempt a man to become a Christian to get out of their company.
But in all circles, religious and irreligious, the tendency is to excuse sin in proportion as it is mammoth. Even John Milton in his "Paradise Lost," while he condemns Satan.gives such a grand description of him you have hard work to suppress your admiration. Oh. this straining out of small sins like gnats, and this gulping down great iniquities like camels.
The subject does not give the picture of one or two persons, but is a gallery in which thousands of people may see their likenesses: For instance all those people who, while they would not rob their neighbor of a farthing, appropriate the money and the treasure of the public. A man has a house to sell, and he tells* his customer it is worth $20,000. Next day the assessor comes around and the owner says it is worth $15,000.
The government of the United States took off the tax from personal income, among other reasons because so few people would tell the truth, and many a man with an income of hundreds of dollars a day made statements which seemed to imply he was about to be handed over to the overseer of the poor. Careful to pay their passage from Liverpool to New York, yet smuggling in their Saratoga trunk ten silf dresses from Paris and a half dozen watches from Geneva, Switzerland, telling the Custom house officer on the wharf, "There is nothing in that trunk but wearing apparel," and putting a$j gold piece in his hand to punctuate the state ment.
Described in the text are all those who are particular never to break the law of grammar, and who want all their languarge an elegant specimen of syntax, straining out ail the inaccuracies of speech with a fine sieve of literary criticism, while through their conversation go slander and innuendo and profanity And falsehood larger than a whole caravan of camels, when they might better fracture every law of the language and shock their intellectual taste, and better let every verb seek in vain for its nominative, and every noun for its government, and every preposition lose its way in the sentence, and adjectives and participles and pronouns get into a grand riot worthy of the Fourth Ward election day, than commit amoral inaccuracy. Better swallow 1,000 gnats than a oaspel. persons are- also described in
the text who are very much alarmed about the small faults of others, and have no alarm about their own great transgressions. There are in every community and in every church, watch-dogs who feel called upon to keep their eyes on others and growl. They are full of suspicions. They wonder if that man is not dishonest, if that man is not unclean, if there is not something wrong about the other man. They arc always the first to hear of anything wrong. Vultures are always the first to smell carrion. They arj self appointed detectives.
I lay this down as a rule without any e.tc^ptions, that those people who have the mcst faults the.nselves are most merciless in their watching others. From scalp of head to sole of foot they are full Oi jealousies and hypercriticisms. They spend their lives in hunting for musk-rats and mud turtles instead of hunting for Rocky Mountain eagles, "'ways for something mean ins tee, of or something grand. They lov,.. at their neighbors' imperfections through a microscope, and look at their own imperfections through a telescope upside down. Twenty faults of their own do not hurt them half so much as one fault ol somebody else. Their neighbors' imperfections are like gnats, and they strain them out their own imperfections are like camels, and they swallow them. ,,
But lest any might think they escape the scrutiny of the text, I have to tell you that we all come under the divine sat'ire when we make the questions of time more prominent than the questions of eternity. Come uow, let us all go into the confessional. Are not all tempted to make the question. Where shall I live now? geater than the question, Where shall I live forever? How shall I get more dollars here? greater than the question. How shall I lay up treasures in heaven? The question, How shall I pay my debts to man? greater than the question, How shall I meet my obligations to God? the question, How shall I gain the world? greater than the question, What if I lose my soul? the question, Why did God let sin come into the world? greater than the question, How shall I get it extirpated from my nature? the question, What shall I. do with the twenty or forty or seventy years of my sublunar existence? greater than the question. What shall I do with the millions of cycles of my post-terres-trial existence? Time, how small it is! Eternity, how vast it is! The former more insignificant in comparison with the latter than a gnat is insignificant when compared with a camel. We dodged the text. We said, "That doesn't mean me, and that doesn't mean me," and with a ruinous benevolence we are giving the whole sermon away.
But let us all surrender to the charge. What an ado about things here. What poor preparation for a great eternity. As though a minnow were larger than a behemoth, as though a swallow took wider circuit than an albatross, as though a nettle were taller than a Lebanon cedar, as though a gnat were greater than a camel, as though a minute were longer than a century, as though time were higher, deeper, broader thau eternity. So the text which flashed with lightning of wit as Christ uttered it, is followed by the crashing thunders of awful catastrophe to those who make the questions of time greater than the question of the future, the oncoming, overshadowing future. O Eternity! Eternity! Eternity!
Mexican Iieisure.
St. Louis Globe-Dcmocrat. We live a poetic existence in Mexico. We never get in a hurry. "Manana" (to-morrow) is the rule there. The climate is enervating and the people are delightfully indolent. One universal custom that is particularly charming is the daily siesta. Men aud women of high and low degree indulge in it, and even the City of Mexico, which is rapidly becoming modernized under American influence, is not exempt from it. Go in any Mexican city between Jie hours of 2 and 4 in th6 afternoon and you'll think you are in a deserted village. Everybody is asleep. Even the dogs cease their yelping and the goats their bloating. Banks, stores I and public offices are closed, aud the man who would intrude on the sanctified stillness would feel like a savage.
But after 4 o'clock the aspect of everything is changed. Business is resumed with renewed vigor and activity. Banks are kept open till 7 o'clock, and factories are not closed before 8. From 9 to 11 o'clock we have supper, which is the principal meal of the day. Then it is that the dark-eyed senoritas array themsel
mmmm wmsm
A Mean Man.
St. Louis Republic. "Yes," said the society lady Hi other night at a swell West End a fair, "I have crossed the ocean eleven times."
The smart young man adjusted his monocle and said: "Ah? Born abroad." r,"No, indeed. Why do yoVask?'.' "Because, if you were born in tlii. country and crossed the ocean eleven times you would now be on the other side, dontcher know?"
The lady figured a moment on Mi tips of her pretty lingers, blush f1 violently, and fled.
DELMARCH, 2:111
HAMDALLAH, 2037,
Race record 2:23 Fuft'brother to Dal Brino,
H. A. RUSSELL,
No. 16886.
2:18%,
1892.
MIAMA CHIEF
Palo Alto,
FORTVILLE
res
in all the gorgeousness of the tropics and tune their guitars and mando lins for the evening's love-making. The soft tiukle of their stringed instruments makes the night air all the more sensuous, aud the cabelleros are frantic with delight. We don't go to bed before midnight, and no one ever thinks of break fasting before 9 o'clock. --J
cintaY ft nous,
INSURANCE LOAN
MONXTMENTS IN
MARBLE AND GRANITE.
HAMDALLAH.
(Standard and Registered, 2037)
Racing Record,
Uambrino,
820...
Keeord 2:21V, —sire oi— D«1 march Wildhrino llamdailah WilkesbnnoBen Hur (4) Olivia (4) BambrinoKello.. Optimist (3) Magor Ham Christine Hambrino Boy... Fastwell Roseweil Alamater (41 Hambrino Pilot..
.2:11%
.2:19% .2:23 .2:23 .2:24 .2-: 24 .2:25%
,.2:29% [Baroness
Jandy O (3)...., lay Brino
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.
2d dam Baldy Dam of Molly Patterson,tfce dim of Elsie Good, 2:22, and Bide Bull, Jr., sire of LottieP 2:17% Nettie 2:19, and Lottie, 2:25.
Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh
IRION, 2,2:i0f.
Beaurv Mac.. Voucher 11a Ha Lucilln Barney Horn Bracelet Lottie Baby Mine.... Geneva Ecru Hammond... Hilda
..2:2834
.2:25% .2:27%
.2:28%
2:22
tlbg blood on eartn nis veins, Dacnea up oy me sioiucsi- luuiuuguuicu uuiu umocmu uuui. HAj^jpALLAH has hrefeding, hac speed, lias finish, and a level head in fact, he has promise as
''HAADALLAH will make the season of 1892 at my stable in GKEENEIELI), IND„ at 850 the season, fith usuff return privileges. Grass at $2 per month, gra&n S2 per week. Mai es will be met at cars. A15Iscajics and accidents at owner's risk.
JOHIST T. TINDALL,
Grandson of Hambleton 10, will make the season of 1892 at our place, mile north of Warrington at 925. the season, with return privileges. We make so insurance against accidents to marcs.
DESCRIPTION =1-
MIAMA CHIEF is a brown horse 15% hands 1150pounds, stylish, sound and a fast and fine trotte
^PEDIGREE®
GOLDSMITH MAID, £14
2:23.
Indianapolis, Ind. Greenfield, Indiana,
DAY STAR,
BY CHESTMUX STAR, 2:22.
Son of Bed Buck dam Belle, by Wood, son of Curtis' Ilambletonian 539, sire of six in 2:.70 lfst Belje is also the dam of Carrie L, 2:29, trotting, and Flora Voss, dam of Chestnut Star, 2:22, is also thu Sam of Buck Dickerson, 2:25%.
DAY STAB 2:23%, is a handsome dark bay, lo% hands high, nicely finished, and a racehorse when he made his record be paced the last quarter in 31% seconds, and the last half in 1 07.
JERSEY MONROE.
By Jersey Wilkes 2516, sire of four in the list dam Anna Miller, by Jim Monroe 835, sire of Monro* rnief,
and 7 others in 2:30 Id dam Bruna, by Pilot, Jr., 12. jCrana is the dam of Woodford'l Pilot 2*23?2 JERSEY MONROE is a solid bay, 16 hands, strong bone and elegant finish.
These horses will both make the season of 1892 at my breeding barn in Pendleton, Ind., at 835 tli» teason with return privilege. Mares from a distance kept at reasonable rates at owner's risk. jjj.jj JOHN W.LfcH AKK, Ceadleton, Ind.
MIAMA CHIEF,
is by Squire Talmage, sire of 11 in 2:30 to 2:19, by Hambletonian 10 1st dam Jcx
Hooker sire of 2 in 2-30 2d dam Thoroughbred 3d dam Iron's Cadmus, sire of the grandains of Neisoi end Pocahontas Boy. The sire of MIAMA CHIEF is a brother to the horses that got Sunol, Maud S
Nancy Hanks and hosts of other good ones. MIAMA CHIEF is a fine individual and froo family of last and game race horses. He will be trained and raced this year after stud duties.
WHITE & SON
TL
All Repairing, Painting, and Trimming done i* th« neatest and most «ubstantial manner.
teed t® give entire satisfaction ut
Im IB Lst C.ITfcayor Block. UM
fan Osicilif
Walter 0. Braw & CO..
1B8TBACTORS OF TITLS, VOTARIES PUBLIC, LOAN, AND
INSUBAVeB AOOll
14, It. O. Tfcaytr Bleak.
££OBEKT A. err, Auctioneer and Painter, ICAPIJE TALLIT, INDIANA,
Meta reaaenafcls and satiafaetltn gnaranteefl. R-ll-U
Ilambletonian 30, sin of the greatest trot.. ing family in ibi world, with 40 2:& performers. ,,
Edward Everett SI sire iii in 2:30: grand sire of over 50 2:30 trotters.
Mambrino Chief 11,
Sl
I Sire of Lady Thorne
Mambrina 2:18, and the founder Dam of Hambrino, of the Mambriut rccord 2:21%. I Chief family. a
I Hambriuo's produced Gold Medal..
sons have Hambrino 820 daughters have produced 2:14
Gnrnett Girl 2:27 Sinibrino 2:29V Gean Wilkes 2:26% Wen her (3) 2:29k Onedia (2) 2:iS Spcedaway 2:24% Gothe .". 2:29
2:19% 2:2114 2:22% 2:L'f 2:21
.... 2:24 2:27
2:2GJ$
.2:29% ..2:29k .2:29# ,2:30
2:27 }i
2:30
2:26%
2:29%
By Alexander's Abdallah 15, Sire of Goldsmith Maid, 2:14 and 5 others in 2:30 list arc mOre of his progitiy in the 2:20 list than jtll the balance of llambletoiiian's sons combined.
By Baidstockings, the pacer, a Sired bv Tom Hal, grandsire of Brown hal, 2:12% Little Brown July, 2:11%, and "llal Painter, 2:09%: grandsire of Little Gyysv, 2:22 Limber Jack, 2:18%.
dams Thoroughbred.
DESCRIPTION: HAL POINTER, 2:09f,
IIA^ALLAI^ isabrightbay with black points, 15% hands high, with great length, very fine hea.i
Agent.
Record
2:23|.
1892.
& O E A Warrington, Indf
V""'
":•&
HANV7AGTUREBS OF AND DIALERS IN
WAGONS, BUGGIES CARRIAGES, ETC.
All work
guaran
prices that will pleas®
you.
Yours respectfully,
WHITE & SON,
E4yl
OO
YOU KNOW
INDIANA
5
hat the Wisconsin Cenrral and Northern Paclflo .ir.es run through Pullman Vestlbuled Drawing ., •torn and Tourist Sleepers without change keween Chicago and Taconia, Wash., and Port lane,. •re.
The train known as the Pacific Express leav he magnificent new Grand Central Passenger BUk* ion, Chicago, every day at 10:45 p. m.
For tickets, berths in Tourist jir Pullman BV*9p*~ rs, apply to GEO. K. THOMPSON, City Passenger and Tioket Agent, «r to 206 Clark 8^.
F. J. EDDT, DepeVTioket Agent, Grand Central Passenger StatleB,
42M Chisago. &
J. O. BRANSON,
E
|Eew Palestine Druggisr
Keeps one of the Best Unw ol
Drugs, Medicines, Paints, Ols» Varnishes, Etc., to bo found in the county and Price* as low as they cun be made. GIVE HIM A lOfcf
CAIAv.,
