Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 26 May 1892 — Page 2
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THE REPUBLICAN.
THE
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Worth Living?" is described as having deep-set eyes, rather small and almost weird in their alternations of fire and dulness. His face is distinguished by lines of unhappy thoughtfulness, and is of that peculiar pallor which is sometimes born of illness and sometimes of mental misery.
THE
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Published by S. MONTGOMERY.
w.
GREENFIELD INDIANA
LONDON'S popular preacner, Spurgeon, is down again with the gout. He will never recover until he assumes charge of a small church in America. Then the salary will enforce a permanent cure. Such congregations see to it that the pastor has no extravagance.
A
CURIOUS
and interesting exhibi
tion will be opened in Cologne on June 1, 1890, in which will be displayed an immense collection of arms, instruments, eta, serving to illustrate the art of warfare and bearing in any way on the condition of troops or armies.
man who first made the old-
fashioned split clothes pin, selling now for about twenty cents a bushel, hit the idea so dead right that nothing better has been asked for since. Half a dozen other sorts have been invented, but old "two-legs" still holds his own and is on top.
PEOPLE
1^ Pj'^v--'
who visit both the new and
the old ships in the American navy observe that the new ones are manned as far as possible by Yankee sailors graduated from the naval training ehips, while the foreign seamen, who are still numerous, are sent to. the antiquated vessels.
PHILADELPHIA
proudly boasts that
she leads all the cities in the country in that she has the largest extent of territory that she is the healthiest city that she has more homes, the largest parks, the greatest charities, more miles of streets, etc., etc., etc Ah, but what about her base ball club?
Chicago News insists that one
year with another more people are killed outright by the railroads in the state of Illinois than by all other agencies combined. In a large number of cases the killing is as clearly manslaughter as though each life had been taken by a pistol bullet or a knife.
MR.
man with thq largest foot in
the world is probably Rev. John Farnham, of Charlotte, N. C. He wears a number 35£ shoe, which requires a sole 20 inches long and 7 inches broad. The business of manufacturing his shoes is conducted at Philadelphia, and it constitutes one of the most extensive industries of that city.
THE
&
city of Brooklyn can probably
boast of having the largest bread bakery in the world. Seventy thousand loaves a day it usually turns out, requiring three hundred barrels of flour. Three hundred and fifty persons are employed in the bakery, and for delivering the bread in New York, Brooklyn and adjacent places, over one hundred wagons, constructed for the purpose, are in constant use.
WHO
fc'
Plff®
is responsible for the misuse of
the word "whiskers" in America? The word is to-day almost universally used instead of beard. Whiskers, correctly speaking, are only that portion of a man18 facial hair which is worn on either side of his face, while the rest is shaven clean. A man with full beard cannot be said to wear whiskers. As the very name indicates, the appendages are fragments of a beard.
THE
French War Department has so
perfected the terrible explosive known as melinite that it iy be handled with comparative safety. Iu three years only one accident has occurred yet the fulmination of the powder produces such terrible effects that forts of any kind will be as houses of sand against shells filled with melinite. If France can keep the secret of the .manufacture of melinite she will have a great advantage over her adversaries in the event of war.
The consumption of American canned fruit is continually on the increase among the middle classes of England.
MAKE YOUR BACK STRONG
That weary, all-gone feeling In the back is speedily overcome by tbo
famous HOP PLASTER The sore strained muscles are limbered up and Invigorated. No other plaster has such penetrating, soothing, strengthening properties for every pain, soreness, Inflammation and weakness, no matter where located or how severe—none so sure, prompt and lasting in effect.
All Reliable medicine-dealers sell the HOP PIASTER. Sea onr name on both sides of the genuine article. Hop Plaster Company, Boston.
Mailed for price,Bete. 5 for a dollar.
C(
fob,
FEUGUSON, of Quebec, who
claims to be a heap of a fellow on astronomy, comes out with the announcement that the earth is putting in three extra revolutions round her axis this season, and that's the reason we have had such a variety of weather. Are there no midnight assassins in Quebec?
MALLOCK,
the author of "Is Life
.*
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I take this word for my text because I am so often asked what is its meaning, or whetFier it has any meaning at all. It has an ocean of meaning, from which I shall this morning dip only four or five bucketfuls. I will speak to you, so far as I have time, of the Selah of Poetic significance, the Selah of intermission, the Selah of emphasis, and the Selah of perpetuity.
Are you surprised that I speak of the Selah of poetic significance? Surely the God who sapphireci the heavens and made the earth a rosebud of beauty, with oceans hanging to it like drops of morning dew, would not make a Bible without rhvth, without redolence, without blank verse. God knew that eventually the Bible would be read by a zreat majority of young people, for this world of malaria and casualty an octogenarian is exceptional, and as thirty years is more than the average of human life, if the Bible is to be a successful book it must be adapted to the young. Hence the
rcsody of the Bible—the drama of the pastoral of Ruth, the epic of Judges, the dithyrambic of Habakuk, the threnody of Jeremiah, the lyric of Solomon's Song, the oratorio of the Apocalypse, the idyl, the strophe and antistrophe and the Selah of the Psalmg.
Wherever you find this word Selah it means that you are to rouse up to great stanza, that you are to open your soul to great analogies, that you are to spread the wing of your imagination for great flight. "I answered thee in the secret place of thunder: I proved thee at the waters of M^eribah. Selah.". "The earth and all the inhabitants thereof are dissolved: I bear up the pillars of it. Selah." Who is the King of glory? The Lord of Hosts, He is the King of glory. Selah." "Thou shalt compass me about with songs of deliverance. Selah." ''Though the wateis thereof roar and be troubled, though the mountains shake with the swelling thereof. Selah." "The Lord of Hosts is with us, the God of Jacob is our refuge. Selah. "Thou hast given a banner to them that fear thee, that it may be displayed because of the truth. Selah." "I will hide under the cover of thy wings. Selah." "O God, when thou wentsst forth before thy people, when thou didst march through the wilderness. Selah."
Whenever you find this word it is a signal of warning hung out to tell you to stand off the track while the rushing train goes by with its imperial passengers. Poetic word, charged with sunrise and sunset, and tempest and earthquake, and resurrections and milleniums.
Next I come to speak of the Selah of intermission. Gesenius, Tholuck, Hengstenberg, and other writers agree in saying that this word Selah means a rest in music: what Greeks call a diapsalma, a pause, a solemn march of cantillation. Every musician knows the importance of it. It gives more power to what went before it gives more power to what is to come after.
So God thrusts the Selah into His Bible and into our lives, compelling us to stop and think, stop and consider, stop and admire, stop and pray, stop and repent, stop and be sick, stop and die. It is not the gr*at number of times that we read the Bible through that makes us intelligent in the Scriptures. We mast pause and measure the height, the depth, the length, the breadth, the universe, the eternity of meaning in one verse.
We must pause and ask for more light. We must pause and weep over our sins. We must pause and absorb the strength of one promise. I sometimes hear people boasting about how many times they have read the Bible through, while they seem to know no more about it than a passenger would know about the State of Pennsylvania who should go through it in a St. Louis lightning express train and in & Pullman "sleeper," the two characteristics of the journey, velocity and somnolence. It is not the number of times you go through the Bible, but the number of times the Bible goes through you. Pause, reflect. Selah!
Oh, it is good that the Lord sometimes halts us. David says: "It is good that I have been afflicted. Be-
tfA
I w^s afflicted I went astray, bu4 ,«ow d«ve I kept Thy word." Iti--4 jiust all soon stop. Scintista have improved human longevity, bugt none of them have proposed to mtico terrene life perpetual. But MM &i*pel makes death only a Selah tatween two beauties—between dyittf triumph on the, one side, pf
1" T-•Wi
SELAfl."
A "Word of Meaning, Not a Scriptural Accident.
Yhrongh It Rolls the Rhythm of a Perfect Book—A Wide Significance Given It.
Dr. Talmage preached at Brooklyn last Sunday, taking for his text Psalm lxi, 4: "Selah." He said:
The majority of Bible readers look upon this word of my text as of no importance. They consider it a superfluity, a mere filling in, a meaningless interjection, an undefined echo. Selah! But I have to tell you that it is no scriptural accident. It occurs seventy-four times in the Book of Psalms and three times in the Book of Haba'cuk. You must not charge this perfect book with seventy-four trivialities. Selah! It is an enthroned work. If, according to an old writer, some words are battles, then this word is a Marathon, a Thermopylae, a Sedan, a Waterloo. It is a word decisive, sometimes for poetic beauty, sometimes for solemnity, sometimes for grandeur and again for eternal import. Through it roll the thundering chariots of the omnipotent God.
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the grave and celestrial escort on the other side of the grave. I next speak of the Selah of emphasis. Ewald the German Orientalist and theologian, says that this word means to ascend.
The first need of some of us is to change our emphasis. Look at Wretchedness on a throne* Napoleon while yet Emperor of France sat down dejected, his hands over his face A lad came in with a tray of food, and said, "Eat, it will do you good." The Emperor looked up and said, "You are from the country." Tina lad replied, "Yes." "Your father has a cottage and a few acres of ground?" "Yes." "There is happiness," said the dejected Emperor. Ah! Napoleon never put the emphasis in the right place until he was expiring at St. Helena. On the other hand, look at Satisfaction amid the worst earthly disadvantage. 'I never saw until I was blind, said a Christian man. 'I never knew what contentment was while I had my eyesight, as I know what content is now that I have lost my eyesight. I affirm. though few would credit it,that I would not exchange my present position and circumstances for my circumstances before I lost my eyesight." That man put the emphasis in the right place.
Fifty essays about the sorrows of the poor could not affect me as a little drama of sorrow and suffering I saw one slippery morning in the streets of Philadelphia. Just ahead of me was a lad, wretched in apparel, his limb amputated at the knee from the pallor of the boy's cheek the amputation not long before. He bad a package of broken food under his arm—food he had begged, I suppose, at the doors. As he passed on over the slippery pavement cautiously and carefully, I steadied him until his crutch slipped and he fell. I helped him up as well as I could, gathered up the fragments of the package as well as I could, put them, under one arm and the crutch undef1 the other arm but when I saw the blood run down his pale cheek I was completely overcome. Fifty essays about the suffering of the poor could not touch one like that little drama of accident and suffering.
What we want, ministers and laymen, is to get our sermons and our exhortations and our prayers out of the old rut. I see a great deal in the papers about why people do not come to church. They do not come because they are not interested.
The old hackneyed religious phrases that come moving down through the centuries will never arrest the masses. What we want to-day, you in your sphere and I in my sphere, is to freshen up. People do not want in their sermons the sham flowers bought at the millinery shop, but the japonicas wet with the morning dew nor the heavy bones of extinct megatherium of past ages, but the living reindeer caught last AugusMj^t the edge of Schroon Lake. We want to drive out the drowsy, and the prosaic, and the tedious, and the nundrum, and introduce the brightness and vivacity, and the holy sarcasm, and the sanctified wit. and the epigram power, aud the blood-red earnestness, and the fire of religious zeal, and I do not know of any way of doing it as well as through the dramatic, Attention! Behold! Hark! Selah!
Next, I speak of the Selah of perpetuity. The Targum, which is the Bible iu Chaldee, renders this word of my text "forever." Many writers agree in believing and stating that one meaning of this word is "forever." In this very verse from which I take my text Selah means not only poetic significance, and intermission and emphasis, but it means eternal reverberation—forever! God's government forever, God's goodness forever,the gladness of the righteous forever. Of course, you and I have not surveyor's chain with enough links to measure that domain of meaning. In this world we must build everything on a small scale. A hundred years area great while. A tower 500 feet is a great height. A A journey of 4,000 miles is very long. But eternity! If the archangel has not strength of wing to fly across it, but flutters and drops like-a wounded sea-gull, there is no need of our trying, in the small shallow of human thought, to voyage across it.
A skeptic desiring to show his contempt for the passing years, and t^ show that he could build enduringiy. Had his own spulcher made of thi finest and hardest marble, and then he put on the door the words, "For time and for eternity:" but it so happened that the seed of a tree somehow got into an unseen crevice of the marble. The seed grew and enlarged until it became a tree aud split the marble to pieces. There can be no eternalization of any thing earthly. But forever! Will you and I live as long as tbat? We are apt to think of the grave as thetermin,us. We arc apt to think of the hearse as our last vehicle. We are apt to think of seventy or eighty or ninety years, and then a cessation. Instead of that we find the marble slab of the tomb is only a milestone, marking the first mile, and that the great journey is beyond.
We have only time enough in this world to put on the saucrcfe and to clasp our girdle and to pick up our a W a cradle to grave, and then veopen do or an a whither? The clock strikes the passing away of time, but not tue passing away of eternity M+asweless! Measureless I This &elAi» perpetuity me-Jtw earthly m»q*«ities so insignificant, the 5yi'»i *uice between scepter and needle, betT#*f A foam bra and hat, but* »:en t*r and curbstone, between xwtrater and bare floor, between '~.ttn »nd sackcloth, very trivial. TV.* *elfth of perpetuity makes out f*tting re*4y so important*
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BMMMM, Vwfik PamuylTiala fe,
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ramoLur im imMiox. Oincx—Im Quit's Bloek, •ornar Piu ml Mala iteMta. Reatdcno*, Wul Kill
II IM O.IUyir Hack,
2 rpHE RIPANS TABULES reijulate the stomach, 1 liver and bowels, purify ihe blood, Meplea^ aat to take, safe and alwaysetlectual. ArMtoble remedy for BlUousncsa, Blotches on the Face,
ich-Tft
Liver, Ulcers, and every othor disease that
I ta.
cate.
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WARREN R, KING,
DR.
1X1.
J. H. BINFORD,
IMMR AS-LAW.
GREENFIELD, IND.
GVHKT A H0US,
mm 3 LOIN IGSRSi
ONVMBNTS I*
WRBLE JHD GRiNITE.
Water Brash er symptom re suits bom
impure blood or a failure in the
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8ent
1-2*e.groasgroas 16
THE RIPANS 672. New York.
cents.
Addr P.O.
HOFFMAN'S HARMLESS HEADACHE POWDERS are an honest medieino
for
which only honsst,
straightforward at at mants are made. 6ee that
you ret the renaiae Hoffman's. Insist them. Th Headaches.
on having
They Curo
ivmsr ALL
They are not a Cathartic
4 The Great Northwest.
The States of Montana and Washing ton are very fully described in two folders issued by the Northern Pacific Railroad, entitled "Golden Montana" and "Fruitful Washington." The folders •ontain good county maps of the States aamed, and information in reference to climate, lands, resources, and other subjects of interest to capitalists, business nen or settlers.
Holders of second-class tickets to North Pacific Coast points, via Northern Pa iflc Railroad, are allowed the privilege stopping over at Spokane, Washingon, and points west thereof, for the purose of examining all sections of this nagnificent State before locating. Northtrn Pacific through express trains carry ree colonists sleeping cars from St. Paul vnd Pullman tourist sleepers from Chi•ago (via Wisconsin Central Liae) to VIontana and Pacific Coast Points daily.
California tourists, and travelers to Vfontana and the North Pacific Coast,can mrchase round trip excursion tickets at rates which amount to but little more than the one fare way. Choice of routes allowed on these tickets, which are ood for three or six months, according destinatiou, and permit of stop-overs.
The elegant equipment on the Nortlirn Pacific Railroad the dining car service the through first-class sleeping cars 'rom Chicago (via both Wisconsin Central Line and C. M. & St. P. Ry.,) to Pacific Coast, and the most magnificent scenery of seven Staters, are among the •dvantages and attractions offered to ravelers by this line.
The "Wonderland" book issued by the Northern Pacific Railroad describes the •ountry between the Great Lakes and Pacific Ocean, with maps and illustrar.ions.
For any of the above publications, and ates, maps, time tables, write to any General or Distriofc Passenger Agent, or Chas.
Fee, G. P. & T. A., N. P. R. R., St. .P*nl. Minn. 45tf
-"Vi
IKv?
A rp^"p cv' \i "S iv A 1 1 JrvlN 1 1U1\ I
Fence slats all gone, but wc have more
Lumber, Laths and
than ever before. Also a full line of fresh paint, we guarantee to be first-class at the lowest prices.
BLACK & GORDON-
Also 10 different kinds of shingles to select from. You are sure to find something to suit you.
DO YOU
MARRY?
WANT TO
Or do you vish social letters from gentleman and ladies of culture and means from all over the country? If so, just 6end on ten cents and receive a !opy of the elegant matrimonial journal called ibe Oranije Blossoms, which will afford you more healthful enjoyment than you have had for many »day. Eacli number contains hundreds of letters Iron* young ladies and gentlemen wanting correspondents from those of the opposite sex. The Drange Blossoms has the largest matrimonial bureau in the United States, through which hunIreds are Introduced to each other yearly and pany are the happy marriages thereby formed, the business has grown to be recopnizDd by the eading people of New England as filling a Joiiglelt want in society. One would be surprised to teethe high-toned class of people who do business rith this bureau. It is no "Cheap John' affair »ut one of the leading business concerns of Boston ind is largely patronized by the better element ind by that means the honest, worthy people who ire working at fair wages and are looking for a rue mate somewhere. If there is a man or woman rho has not found his or her affinity heres the tpportunity. Don't wait, as this advertisement ront appear long in this paper unless there are nany responses.
Address: ORANGE BLOSSOMS,
92-13-yr.l
ROBERT SMITH, D. V. 8.
rish to say to my many patrons that I have fu»ly recovered from my accident, and am prepared to
\ttend to all Calls Day or Night lhave a full set of Implements for use in case they are needed in delivery. Also will castrate
Satisfaction Guaranteed
IN EVERY CASE.
I have had oTer thirty years experience in mj irofession, and fully understand every detail. tESIDENCE COR. NORTH AND SCHOOL STS
Calls left at Selman's drugstore or Huston's livry barn promptly attended to.
10tf Greenfield. Ind.
PATENT
A
UOiranr SPECIFIC CO., 18S Race St., Ohtdiiaati, Ohio.
STRAW HATS
For Everyone, 5c to $1.
50 DIFFERENT STYLES.
GIRL'SIHATS, B0TS HATS,
Gentlemen's Fur and Wool Hats
Different Styles! Low Prices! Ladies', Misses' and Children's OXFORD TIES. Large Assortment of PLOW SHOES,
Ii CONGRESS SHOES AT ALL PRICES.
A Stock of SHIRTS to suit and fit both old and young.
Dry Goods, Notions, Groceries,
HARDWARE and QUEENSWARE.
All Goods Sold nt Lowest Prices for CASH,
A. THOMAS,®
Greenville. Weavers
Sf.w
18 Boylston St., Boston Mass.
Dhnreith Lewisville Strawns
ltOBERT SMITH,
OK NO FEE
48-page
book free.
Address .w,
W. T. HTZGEBA&D, Att'y-at-Law, 42-42 Cor. 8th andF. Sts,
WASHINGTON, D.
Drunkenness, or the Liquor Habit, Fos! tively Cured by Administering Dr. Haines' Golden Specific.
It Is mannfact 1 as a powder, which can b« .fl veu in a xlai,r ba a cup of ooffee or tea or ii food, without he kno -Ied*e of the patient. It ii absolutely han.. and will effect a permanent *d speedy cure, whether the patient is a moderaft diiBkeroran alcoholic wreak. It has.been givci ilathousands of eases, and in every instanoe a per cctcifrahaa followed. It never Wis. The systen •nee Impregnated with the Specific. It b$coin9s ai otter impossibility for the liquor aplwtitfe to exist Care guaranteed. 48 page book of particulars free
Willow Branch, Ind.
fAiaat.liAM. J9*M Maonii
Walter 0. Bramr I Co»
1MTBACTORR
OT
TITL1,
VOTAKIM FUBLML nratnura L04JT, aa«
Am
Indianapolis Division.
ennsulvania Lines.
Schedule of Passenger Trains-Central Time.
Westward.
Columbus 1' Urbana Piqua
Madison
Wile.vs New Paris Richmond... Centreville. Germantown Cambridge City.." Dublin otrawns Lewisville Dunreith Ogden k.nightsto\vn Charlottsville Cleveland Greenfield Philadelphia Cumberland Irvington Indianapolis, ar.
3
at the proper time. Calls for castration may be sent by postal carcl, Box 177.
a 111 59 f513
8 23
11212
10 IS" gc-
41
Dublin Cambridge City.." Germantown Centreville ar, lv
DR. HUMPHREYS' SPKCIKICS are
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4
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I—1 JAM
21 AM
11 AM
1
PM *2 05 344 433 449 5 05
AM
*2 50
Covington Bradford Jc Gettysburg
•5 40*7 20 +9 00 Y'a [10 38 Bar-1126 ton
7 01 742 7 55
"C to i§ 1 W
1140
0
11 53
528
S 112123 5T? 1232 S F1238 °J12 48 10 3711 00
5 49
610
6 20 630 645 7 09
AM
6X5
1910!
ir
...
9 30 *10 -45) 1 20
6 30+6 25 637 654 658 705 715 7 21 730 7 33 7 40 7 52 7 56 809
1 32 1 47 151
9 56
156 715 204 210 219 f2 22 2 29 240 244 257 3 3 331,
CO
10 34
10 58
18
g-i
7 46
a
813
816
ss
8 30 8 42 900
7551140
34 S
AM
Eastward.
900 PM
AM
12,'
N N| PM
I AM'.,
"IT"
la
2Q
AM
AM
AM I PM
Indianapolis, lv. Irvington Cumberland Philadelphia Greenfield Cleveland Gharlottfville Knightstown Ogden
PM PM
*4 4518 00*11451 8l6ll«B9 830 8 40 8 4712 27 859 903 913
00*530+4 00
.. .. 418
428f
14 331
525
610 4 47i
!f5 0(W
|504i
'547
f920
12 50
6 291 51*
559
924 934 940 950 956
iod
if5 20
6 37: 5 24
-I
m:
I 5 52
6 25
hofoi
124
7001 557? 16 021 .. 617 17 30 6 30 7 50 PM
6 47 700 710
1016 1030 10 35
Richmond... New Paris......... Wileys New Madison Weavers Greenville Gettysburg Bradford Jc Covington Piqua Urbana lolnmbus ar.
445 4 55
7 221047 3210B8 7401105 llfL5 8011127 "81611 40
HO oK
III
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(7 50
C.
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a
830 8 411 854 9 53 1130 AM
W
3 2
8
44
20
a
8 559 03 915
234 140 330 PM
600
1002
81511 30 PM' PM
PM
Nos. 6, 8 and 20 connect at Columbus for Pittsburgh and the East, and at Richmond for Dayton, Xeniaand Springfield, and No. 1 for Cincinnati.
Trains leave Cambridge City at +7.00 a. m. and+3.30 P- ni. for Rushville, Shelbyville, Columbus and intermediate stations. Arrives Cambridge City +1.45 and +6 50 P- m. JOSEPH WOOD, E. A. FORD,
General Manager, General Passenger. A^ent
2-15-92.-R PITTSBURGH, "PESN'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. H. SCOTT, AGENT,
Greenfield, Indiana.
Th« Cincinnati, Hamiltoa and Dajton RaUroa4 to the •nly Lina Running Pullman*! Perfected Safety Veatibulei Trains, with Dining Can, between Cincinnati, Xndianapolia and Chieag*.
Chair Cart •a
D«7
Train* and
The
These Specifics cure without drugging, purging or reducing tlio system, and are in fact and deed the sovereign remedies of tlie^World.
LIST OF PRINCIPAL NOS. CURBS. 1 Fevere. Congestion, inflammation... 2 Worms, Worm Fever, Worm Colic., a !ryinc Colic, or Teething of Iufnnta 3 IMarrhea, of Children or Adults.... 5 Jt VMinKrry, GlripOig, Bilious Colic.... 1 Ciiniera laorbuB, vomiting f/'oiigos, Cold, Hroiichilis iietxinc
io
*5?-
Sleeping Cart
•1
Night Trains
fines! on Earth.
betweea
Cincinnati, Indianapolis Chicago,
St. Louia, Toledo and
Detroit. Chair Car between Cincinnati and
Keoknk.
M. D. WOODFORD, Pret'dint ft Oaneral Maiugtr. 1.0. MACORMICK, General Passengorft Tiak«t«|Mt CINCINHAT1, O
HUMPHREYS
scientifically and
carefully prepared prescriptions used for manjyears in private practice with success,and forovei* thirty years used by tlie people. Every single Specific is a special curo for the disease named.
tin, .SickHeadache. Vertigo
N a a a he elk
m?-
ipopmio, Bilious (Stomach I
17
Tr
1T yni»j»ress««l or i'ainful Periods. IM Whiten? loo Profuse Periods Cfonii, Cough, Difficult Breathing.... 14 Malt Ulicum, Ery»ipelas. Eruptions. ~ift tt.hensnr*.t»Mn, Rheumatic Pains.... Ill .FJVVDV and A (rue, Chills, Malaria—
riles. Blind or Bleeding CJurn rrh, Infiuenza, Cold In the Head 'i(i Whooplirg Couulii Violent Coughs.
General OrMiily.PhysicalWeakness !£7 lfLidney RPC ity "Nervous Bemlify
Tri
ta rv weakness. Wetting Bed.
A HseawcaofitmHcart,Palpitation 1. fioW by llrur^ielp, or wnt pntUpnlrt "n receipt of pric& Pit rn '.'II ''tf ym' MtMJAi., vX-M pKitea richly bound in clots. i*'1. ltt vn.ui imar. I'"" It' ,r.liys'ii!i u. Ct I IU WIllamHt., HenYwt.
3 E
6
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