Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 2 June 1892 — Page 7

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CHEATING Vh HORSE BLANKETS

Nearly every pattern of Horse Bhnkei is imitated in color and style. In most cases tije imitation looks just as good as the genuine, but it hasrit the ivarp threads, and so lacks strength, and while it sells for only a liltle less than the genuine it isn't worth one-half as much. The fact that

5A

Horse B/ankets

are copied is strong evidence that they are THE STANDARD, and every buyer should see that the

5/A

trade mark is sewed on

the inside of the Blanket.

5/A

Ask for

V'.,

4.

Five Mile Boss Electric Extra Teat Baker

HORSE BLANKETS

ARE THE

STRONGEST.

100 5/A STYLES

at prices to suit everybody. If you can't get them from your dealer, write us. Ask for the 5/A Book. You can get it without charga,

I. AYRES & SONS, Philadelphia:

Prni HILADELPHIA

STOCK FARM.

CLYDESDALE STALLIONS.

ST. ROBIN, 486.

Sired by Hampton, 2850, Vol. 6, he fry Prince George Frederick 644, Vol. 4, »y the renowed Prince of Wales, 673.

ST. ROBIN'S dam was Lettie 364, Pol. 2, all in S. C. S. BST. ROBIN is a very dark bay with me white stocking just above pastern, 16hands high, weighs 1800 pounds, is a torse of fine style and action, with plenty bone and substance. He was foaled Tune 29, 1888.

TERMS—$10. to insure a living colt*

SCOTCHMAN, JR.

SCOTCHMAN, ,TR., is a beautiful dork bav, 16 hands high, weighs 1600 pounds, and wits foaled February 13,1888. He is a horse with good stylq induction and splendid bone anfl muscle. This dorse should be seen to be appreciated.

Darling

154. Scotchman .lr's dam was sired by Schildmeicr's full-blooded Suffolk horse, and out of a Tom Hal and Morgan mare

TERMS—$7.00 for a living colt. The above horses will make the season of 1892 at, my barn, one mile north and one mile east

Philadelphia and 3% miles northwest of Greenfield. Persons parting with a mare bred to these Itallions or betraying them without my consent) forfeits the insurance money, which immediately becomes due. Money due when colt stands anil, locks. Care will be taken to prevent accidents, but I will not be responsible should anv occur.

WILSON T. ALLEN, SR.

15-tf.

DO ¥QU KNOW

"VS

rhat the Wisconsin Central and Korthera P?.olt» Lines run through Pullman Vestlbuled Drawing Room and Tourist Sleepers without change {wjen Chicago and Tacoma, Wash., and Pertlni, Dre.

The train knows a* the Paelflo Expresa learfi ihe magnificent new Grand Central Passenger Sti* Hon, Chicago, every day at 10:45 p. m.

For tickets, berths is Tourist or Pallnan BleeyM, apply to GEO.

rf--

K.

THOMMOK,

City Passengev and Ticket Ag«t, iWC&vkM. F.J. BDDT, DepelTloket Agent, atnu ruMager SktloB,

or to

'Qdrng*, VL

Grand Cent

«3M

NIAGARA FALLS EXCURSION,

THURSDAY, JULY 28,1892. VIA THE

Erie Western Railroad.

"NATURAL GAS ROUTE."

On Thursday, July 23, 1892, the Luke FrisA Western R. R. will ruu their popular annual exeurslon to Clevelaud, Chantauque Lake, Buflfalo and NiagaraTalte at following very low rates, viz:

Ft, Wayne .85 00

Peoria ?7 50 Bloomiugton 7 00 [^Fayette 6 00 B&higM) City 6 00 [adiaMpoUe 6 00 HBtOD.......'*— 3 00

Muncie.„ 5 00 Connereville 5 00 Rushvllle 5 00 New Castle 5 00 Cambridge City 5 00 Fremont 5 00

4 00

Sandusky, 4.00

With corresponding reductions from intefmeIdiate points. In addition to tbe above, the purchasers of these tickets will be given privilege of special excursion aide trips to Lewiston-on-the-Lake, Including a Iteamboat ride on Lake Ontario, for 25 cents. To Sfcronto and return by Lake from Lewistown, |1.00 to Thousand Islands, 85.00. Tickets for the above aide trips can be had when purchasing Niagara fill ticket, or at any time on train.

Besides the above privileges, with that of spending Sunday at the Falls, we will furnifh all those who desire a side trip from Brocton Junction to Chautauqua Lake and return FREEOF CHARGE.

Tickets of admission to places of special interest at or near Niagara Falls, but outside the reservetlon, including toll over the International Bridgt to the Canadian side, elevators to the water,s edgi at Whirlpool Rapids on the Canadian side, will be Offered on train at a reduction from prices charged alter reaching the Falls.

Do not miss this opportunity to spend Sunday •t Kiagara Falls. The excursion train will arrive at Niagara Falls 7 a. m. Friday, July 29,1802, and prill leave the FaHs returning Sunday morning, (July 31»t at 6 o'clook, stopping at Cleveland SunAaf afternoon, giving an opportunity to visit the !mijfMwi«t monument of the late President Gar* many other interesting points.

Wekets vrill be good, however, to return on reg L|,r trafas leafing the Falls Saturday, July 80, foi MfcMiiotdeairtag to remain over. Tioketa wil be^eWdftiturfci n« on all regular trains np

H»clodtoig ttesdsy, August 2, 1893. Seeuw t)w Chair and Sleeping Car Acco» iV^ly- These dealcjN)g can secure ao can wliitte at tbe Falls ^aatfMa oil on any agent L^kt

C. F. DALV,

in£ Iadlan^poUc, Ind

.HOFFMAN'S HARMLESS HEADACHE POWDERS 4 are an honest ueUeiu f»r whioh only honest, straightforward atatements are made. Bee that you mt the reuiae Hoffman's. Insist on having thsm. They Oora *Mi Headaohes.

TBoy era mt a Cathartk.

1

THUNDER.

Gkd's

Agency ot Answering Prayer in Secret Places.

Earthly and Immortal Destinies Decided at the Family Fireside—Rev. Dr. Talmago'n !i»rmon,

Rev. Dr. Talma#fe preached at the Brooklyn Tabernacle, Sunday. Text, Psalm ixxxi.. 7. After a few preliminai'y remarks he said:

Now,"thunder, all up and down the Bible, is the symbol of power. Small wits depreciate the thunder and say, "It is the lightning that strikes." But God evidently thinks the thunder of some importance or he would not make so much of it. That man must be without imagination, and without sensitiveness, and without religion, who can without emotion see the convention of summer clouds called to order by the falling gavel of the thunderbolt. There is nothing in the natural world that so awes and solemnizes me as thunder. The Egyptian plague of hail was accompanied with this full diapason of the heavens. While Samuel and his men were making a burnt offering of a lamb, and the Philistines were about to attack them, it was by terrorizing thunder they were discomfited. Job, who was a combination of the Dantesque and the Miltonic, was solemnized by tbis reverberation of the heavens, and cried: "The thunder of His power, who can understond?" and he challenges the uuiverse by saying: Can'st thou thupder with a voice like Him?" and he throws Rosa Bonheur's "Horse Fair" into the shade by the Bible photograph of a war horse, when he describes his neck as "clothed with thunder." Because ot the power of James and John they were called "the sons of thunder." The law given on the basaltic crags of Mt. Sinai was emphasized with this cloudy ebulition. The skies all around about St. John at Patmos were full of the thunder of war and the thunder of Christly triumph and the thunder of resurrection and the thunder of eternity.

But, when my text says, I answered thee in the secret place of thunder," it suggests there is some mystery about the thunder. To the ancients the cause of this bombarding the earth with loud sound must have been more of a mystery than it is to us. The lightnings, which were to them wild monsters ranging through the skies, in our times nave been domesticated. We harness electricity to vehicles, and we cage it in lamps, and every school boy knows something about the fact that it is the passage of electricity from cloud to cloud that makes the heavenly racket which we call thunder. But, after all that chemistry has taught the world, there are mysteries about this sky resonance, and my text, true in the time of the Psalmist, is true now and always will be true, that there is some secret about the place of thunder.

To one thing known about the thunder, there area hundred things not known. After all the scientific batteries have been doing their work for a thousand years to come and learned men have discoursed to the utmost about atmospheric electricity and magnetic electricity andfrictional electricity and positive electricity and negative electricity, my text will be as suggestive as it is to-day, when it speaks of the secret place of thunder.

Now, right along by a natural law, there is always a spiritual law. As there is a secret place of natural thunder, there is a secret place of moral thunder. In other words, the religious power that you see abroad in the Church and the world has a hiding place and in many cases it is never discovered at all. I will use a similitude. I can give only the dim outlines of a particular case, for many of the remarkable circumstances I have forgotten. Many years ago there was a lai'ge church. It was characterized by strange and unaccountable conversions. There were no great revivals, but individual cases of spiritual arrest and transformation.

A young man sat in one of the front pews. He was a graduate of Yale, brilliant as the North Star and notoriously dissolute. Everybody knew him and liked him tor his geniality, but deplored his moral errantry. To please his parents he was every Sabbath morning in church. One day there was a ringing of the door bell of the pastor of that church, and that young man, whelmed with repentance, implored prayer and advice, and passed into complete reformation of heart and life. All the neighborhood was astonished and asked: Why was this? His father and mother had said nothing to him about his soul's welfare. On another aisle of the same church sat an old miser. He paid his pew rent, but was hard on the poor, and had no interest in any kind of philanthropy. Piles of money! And people said: What a struggle he- will have when he quits this life, to leave his bonds and mortgages. One day he wrote to his minister: "Please to calL immediately. I have a matter of great importance about which I want to see you." When the pastor came in the man could not speak for emotion but after a while he gathered selfcontrol enough to say: "I have lived for this world too long. I want to know if you think I can be saved, and, if so, I wish you would tell me how." Upon his soul the light soon dawned, and the old miser, not only revolutionized in heart but in life, began to scatter benefactions, and toward all the great charities of the day he became a cheerful and bountiful almoner. What was tbe cause of this change? everybody asked and no one waa capable of giving an in­

telligent answer. In another part of the church sat. Sabbath by Sabbath, a beautiful and talented woman, who was a great society leader. She went to church because that was a respectable thing to do, and in the neighborhood where she lived it was hardly respectable not to go. Worldly was she to the last degree, and all her family worldly. She had at her house the finest germans that ever were danced, aud the costliest ravers that ever were given, and, though she attended church, she never liked to hear any story of pathos, and, as to religious emotion of any kind, she thought it positively vulgar. Wines, cards, theaters, rounds of costly gayety were to her the highest satisfaction. One day a neighbor sent in a visiting card, and this lady came

From that time her entire demeanor was changed, and, though she was not called upon to sacrifice any of her amenities of life, she consecrated her beauty, her social position, her family, her all to God and the church and usefulness. Eveiybody said in regard to her: "Have you noticed the change, and what in the world caused it?" and no one could make a satisfactory explanation. In ihe course of two .years, though there was no general awakening in that church, mauy such isolated cases of such unaccountable and unexpected conversions took place. The very people whom no one thought would be affected by such considerations were converted. The pastor and tbe officers of the church were on the lookout for the solution of this religious phenomenon. "Where is it?" they said, "and who is it and what is it?'' At last the discovery was made and all was explained, A poor old Christian woman standing in the vestibule of the church one Sunday morning, trying to get her breath again before "she went upstairs to the gallery, heard the inquiry and told the secret. For years she had been in the habit of concentrating all her prayers for particular persons in the

T^fS W

church. She would «ee some manor dismayed,^if have mad© Chris! some woman preseurt, and, though our confidence, and, as after an Au^ she might not know the persons name, she would pray for that person until he or she :ras oonverted to God. All her prayers were tor that one person—just that t»ne. She waited and waited for communion day to see when the candidates lor membership stood up whether her prayers had been effectual. It turned out that these marvelous instances of conversion were the result of that old woman's prayere as she sat in the gallery Sabbath by Sabbath, bent and wizened and poor and unnoticed.

A little cloud of consecrated humanity hovering in ffee galleries: That was the secret plaoe of the thunder. There is some hidden, unknown, mysterious souroe of almost all the moral and religious power demonstrated. Not one out of a mUlkn—not one out of ten million prayers ever strikes a human ear. On public occasions a minister of religion voices the supplications of an assemblage, but the prayers of all the congregation are in silence. There is not a second in a centuiy when prayers are not ascendiug, but myriads of them are not even as loud as" a whisper, for God hears a thought as plainly as a vocalization. That silence of supplication—hemispheric I except the finest grades o: hand and perpetual—is the secret pface of

thunder. T.iere may be in this building many who were brought to God during that great ingathering, but few of them know that the upper room in my house on Quincy street, where those five old Christian men poured out their soul before God, was the secret place of thunder.

The day will come—God hasten It —when people will find out the velocity, the majesty, the multipotence of prayer. We brag about our limited express trains which put us down 1,000 miles away in twentyfour hours, but here is something by which in a moment we may confront people 5,000 miles away.

We brag about our telephones, bet ,mae Paicn

here is something whicn beats the ^°,w frPwu,^

Oh! ye who are wasting your breath and wasting your brains and wasting your nerves and wasting your lungs wishing for this good and that good for the church and the world, why do you not go into the secret place of thunder. "But," says some one, "that is a beautiful theory, yet it doe3 not work in my case, for I am in a cloud of trouble or in a cloud of persecution or a cloud of sickness or a cloud of poverty or a cloud of bereavement or a cloud of perp'esity." How glad I am that you toid me that. That is exactly the place to which my text refers.

It was from a cloud that God answered Israel—the cloua over the chasm cut through the Red Sea— the cloud that was light the Israelites and darkness to the Egyptians. It was from a cloud, a tiemendous cloud, that God made reply. It was a cloud that was the secret place of thunder. So you can n»t get awo from the consolation of my text by talking that way. Let all the people under a cloud hear it.

telephone in utterance and reply, for formed into tnose any dessynd God says. "Before they call I trill height, hear.'' We brag about the phonograph, in which a man can speak and his words and the tones of his voice can bo kept for ages, and by the turning of a crank the words may come forth upon the ears of another century, but prayer allows us to speak words into the ears of everlasting remembrance, and on the other side of all the eternities they wiil be heard.

UI

answered

l1

L#J? 5S Safe ,- j&L&iMl -V V~ -^V.

thee in the secret place or thunder.' At 9 o'clock Wednesday morning. June 15, next, on the steamer Cltj of New York, I expect to sail foi Liverpool, to be gone until Septem ber. It is in acceptance of. mauy in vitations that I am going on preaching tour. I expect to devot rr\3r time in preaching the Gospel ir England, Ireland, Scotland anc Sweden. I want to see how man} souls 1 can gather for the. kiagdox of God. Those cisuutries have foi manv years beSooged u? ray parish and go to speak £o them and shak hands with tbem. I want so visit more thoroughly than before, tfcost regions from which my ancestor.4 came, Wales and Sect!stud..

But who is sufficient forjthe work sail upon you who hav«

undertakes?

down the stairs in tears.and told the long beer my coadjutors to go intc whole story of how she had not slept the secret plaoe ol the Aloiighty for several nights, and she feared sne eveiT day from DOT? was going to lose her soul, and she wondered if some one would not come around and pray with her.

gust shower when the whole heavens have been an tfnUmbered batter}i cannonading the earth, the fields are more green, and the sunrise is the more radiant, and the waters CIlO the more opaline, so the thunders of the last day wiil make tl.e trees of life appear move emerald, and the sardonyx of the we-ll more crimson, and the apphirc seas Che more shimmering, and the sunrise of eternal gladness the more empurpled. The thundero of dissolving nature will be foi lowed by a celestial psalmody th« sound of which Sk John on Patmos described when he said: "I heard a voice like the voice of might? thus denture." Ante®.

Mending Straw Mat*.

Harper's Bazar. It is convenient to know hdw to repair straw hats, as those ot t'n« children of the household get sadlj battered in brim. One should al wa}rs kreep one old straw hat of eayl of the ordinary colors—bi'aok aad brown and white—to supply maleri alsfor repairing, and to this end it is wise to avoid buying fancy straws, as the plain braids are much more durable and useful. Black thread No. 40 is used for all sewing of straw,

sewed hats, and the domestic milliner may well foilow the trade rule. The straw should be wet or dampened &s it is sewed, as this will pre vent its breaking. When a brim is ragged, rip off the torn braid, and taking a braid that matches, defti weave the ends together, and s©«r around the hat's edge as iaa«y rows as are needed. The brim can be made to turn down by stretching tho up per edge of the braid tightly a3 it is sewed, or made to roll up by holdiug the upper edge of *-hj braid loosely, the mender guiding the i*esults by her taste and judgment as she sews. Torn crowns are replaced in the same way. Braids that do not match can be "utilized wherever tbe trimming will hide the patch, and unfaifhion-

a

1

1

anc

until ixn

work

is done on the otfier siae oi the sea. to have me in vour prayer*. In proportion to the "intensity and con Una ance. and fai!h of the prayers, youra and mine, will be the results. Il you remember me in the devotional circle, that wiil be weil, but what 1 most want is your importuning, your wrestling supplication in tn secret place of tnucaer. God and you alone may iiialc*- me th* mbli 'instrumentality the redemption o! thousands of 60uis. shall preact iu churches, in chattel? anc in the fields. I will make campaign for God and eternity. and I hope to get during this absanct a baptism of power that will mak me of more service to you wben I return than 1 ever yet have been. For, brethren and sisters in Chript. oui opportunity lor usefulness will sooe be gone, and we shall have our facts uplifted to the throws of judgment, before which we must give account. That day there will be no secret place of thunder, for all the thunder:* will be out. Therfs will be the thunder of the tumbling recks. Ther« will be 'the thunder oi the bursting graves. There wilt be the thundei of the descending chariots. Ther will be the thunder oi parting heavens. Boom! Boom! But ail tha din and uproar &»d crash will 2nd us unaffrightec, and will leave us un­

unwniuu-

ma3'"

&e trans-

i'llillHowto Meet Evil ll#purw. Talmage in Ladled dome Journal.

Now, my friends, wh*u we hear evil of any one, let us suspend judgment. Do not let us decido until we have heard the man's defense. Do not run out to meet every heated whelp of malice that ruas with iis head down and its tongue out. The probability is that it is mad. and will only bite those who attempt to entertain it. Let us be lenient with the fallen. You see a sister fall, and you say: "Poor woman! I could never have done that!" Perhaps you could not, because your temptation does not happen to be in that direction but y* &«ve done things in the course of yc ur life th?t these fallen women would never have done, simply becase their temptation is not in that direction. Lo not sat in boasting: "I never c»uld have "done such a thing as tlat!" You don't know what you wouid dc if suffi^ien Lly tempted. You have an :nfin»*3 soul force. If grac« d:iectit, a force for the right if evil inliaences seue upon it, a terrific *rce for ihe wrung. There are passious within 3 out s»ui that have never been unchai%*d. Look out if once :-liey sl*p th«\r cables. __________

He—"Sim#.!steal a ki*9?" She—' ifry, I would not h/e you commit a crtrtp- Vuiv.s «£&U*age is no rebbery—rell, nrs. 1 we ought to nuUage Boston Transcript.

1

*.

DELMRCH, 2:114

Qjecerd... ...2:29 tbrothfr to Dal Brlno,

...2:22 ,...2:27J4 Wiiy* Man :29i£lB*

2d dam Baldy. Dam of Molly Patterson,the dam of Elsie Good, 2:22, and Blue Bull, Jr., sire of LottieP

Nettie 2:19, and Lot­

tie, 2:25.

Third, Foukh, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh

IRION, 2, 2:i0f.

II HAM.

Willie W ilkes.

has

vrhenuct Is known.

DESOR

action, and Knightstown at John Qra_

Book. S4, Imported. Prince Cliftoo will serve man horses will make the season of

faf Harness Shop.

lars, whips, robes, blankets and

gaddlery hardware at the new har­

ness shop on South State street,

opposite court house. Repairing

done neatly and promptly, at low

prices. Call and see me.

H. T. CLARK,

45tf

1

HAMDALLAH.

(Standard and Registered, 2037)

Racing Record,

Hambrino, 820.„ Record 2:21V, —siro of— Delmarch Wildbrino ........ Hamdallah ........ Wilkesbnno. Ben Hur (4) Olivia (4) Hambrino Belle... Optimist (3) Magor Ham Christine ........... Hambrino Boy.... Fastwell RosenreU Alamater (4V Hambrino Pilot, 'oness

HAMDALLAH, 2037,

Correspondence solicited with all parties in need of work. All work guaranteed represented. Office and Works on North Harrison St., near Water Mill.

White & Son,

SHELBYYILLB, XNT,

DESCRIPTION: WILLIK WILKES is a fine black, 16 hands high, weighs 1,200 pounds, fine shaulden ud short baok, the best of legs andieet. His blood lines need only to be studied to convince anyone tl»a1 be

the bast trotting blood on earth in his veins. Willie Wilkes has never been trained, but showi treat trotting action, as he has trotted halves in 1:18. wnv« PEDIGBKE: Wilkes was sired by Tom Rogers, Jr. record, 2:31 the airerf Adelia Wilke^ tiM -Edith Wilkes, 2:30 Willie Wilkes d»m Maud H., 2:»4K= dam of Montgomery, 2:8/,, as'"three ^eaj •Id last year. Hetrill trot in 2:80 or better this year. Maud H., by Blue Bull, .5: sire of 68 from 2 30 .•_ hat ii.oa iAM /. ann* MnmhrifiA .hlftf. 11. Gt.f. I IlITfi QflQl D1

•la last year, ne win inn in wor vciict raw ywr. XJ- &f V, and the dame of5© from 2:80 to 2:0% second cam Mambrino Chief, 11, et..^ Lexington, thoroughbred. Tom Rogers, Jr., bjr old Tom Rogers, record 2:20 old Torn

TE^S?2'WiLiK^iLKM™m make the season of 1S&2 at 820 to Insure a mare in foal. Money dm

The Fine Norman Stallion, PRINCE CLIFTON".

GOLDSMITH MAID, 2=14

2:23.

Hamblctonian 10, sin of the greatest trot ing family in thf world, with 40 2:31 performers.

Edward Everett 81 sire 15 in 2:30: grand sire of over 50 2:30 trotters.

Hambrino's produced Gold Medal.. Beaury Mac.. Voucher fla Ba Lacilla Barney Horn Bracelet Lottie Baby Mine.... Geneva Ecru Hammond Hilda

Mambrino Chief 11, Sire of Lady Thorna 2:18, and the foundei of he a in

Mambrina Dam of Hambrino, record 2:2134-

Chief family.

eons have

Hambrino 820 dangh« ters have produced Garnett Girl 2:27 Simbriuo 2:29^ (Jean Wilkes 2:26l Wert her (3) 2:29j Onedia (2) 2:38 Speedaway 2:24J4. ttothe 2:29

2:14 2:19% 2:2lk 2:2M4 *28k 2:28k SL21

.... 2:24 2:27

.rS*

..2:30

1st dam Linda .......... Dam of Dal Brino, sire of 3 In 3:30 list, also dam of Draoonius, the sire of Charley E, 2 27.

HAMDALLAH is a bright bay with black points, 15% hands high, with great length, very fine head id, netft, fine shoulder and short back, the beBt of legs and feet in fact, he is one of the finest stallions the state, and his blood lines need only to be studied to convince any good horseman that he has the

It trotting blood on earth In his veins, backed up by the stoutest thoroughbred unto his seventh dam, HJA&PALLAH has btaedlng, has speed, has finish, and a level head in fact, he has promise as a treat sirs

HA,tt.DALLAH Will male the season of 1892 at my stable in GREENFIELD, IND,, at S50 the season, ritn usaat return privileges. Grass at $2 per month, grasn S2 per week. Mares will be met at cars. All tacapes And accidents at owner's risk.

By Alexander's Abdallah 15, Sire of Goldsmith Maid, 2:14 and 5 others in 2:30 list are mOre of his proginy in the 2:20 list than

,i.

all tne balance of Hambletonian'a sons combined.

_.... Bv Baldstockings, the pacer. Sired bv Tom Hal, grandsire of Brown Hal, 2:12)4: Little Brown

July, 2:11^, andllal Painter, 2:09%: grandsire of Little Gyysy, 2:22 Limber Jack, 2:18%.

dams Thoroughbred.

DESCRIPTION: HAL POINTER, 2:09|.

JOHN T. TINDALL, Agent. H. A. RUSSELL, Indianapolis, Ind. Greenfield, Indiana.

HAM & PUSEY,

Manufacturers and Dealers in all kinds of

CEMETERY W OR K.

Designs Furnished. Estimates Given.

Work Erected in any Cemetery in the State,

Fine Granite Monuments a Specialty.

was sired br Favorr 1524, American St)id Pook 703 Fr®nA Stud France 4358,3d dam by Herories 226, imported 4th dam by Cttampio*

at $10 to insure a living colt. Mflney due when colt Is aled. Thest in White A Bock's breeding barn, Charlottesville, Ind. Tenom AAMMkn# foWolta 4n*iiranru-

partTng"with a*mare brdfti these horses or betraying thetn ^»Mut our 'e^ts bone/, which immediately becomes di£. Accidents at owner's tlsk. 13-tf WHITK & ROCK

Wagon Manufacturers!

Our wagons aw of superior woskmanghip, material the best, and painting unsurpassed. Call an| amine them. Also dealers in Buggies, Carriages and the "New Spindle" Road Wagon. The best oa .rth. New work and repairing done to order. Bring us your shoeing and repair work. Your atteni Jon is respectfully ealled to our repairing, painting and trimming. Notice tne workmanship, beaulj |nd symmetry of our Vehicles. Prices lower than any other dealers or manufacturers., Kespectiully,

WHITE & SON,

PORTYILLE, UsTDIA-NA..

Buy your harness, bridles, col­

:TRAVEL:

THE

SHOftT LINE

5.i

$

J. B. PUSEY,

ff N

1

tl

htrd dam hj gars by Georgi

T1

CHICAGO,

Milwaukee, St. Taul, Minneapolis^ Duluth, Omalift, Den^Siy San Francisco,

Portland, Seattle, Tacoma,

Los Angeles, Spokane Falls, Helena AKD ALL POINTS IX WEST AND NORTHWEST.

The only line running Solid Pulliunn Perfccte'4 Safety Vestibuled Trains. The only line running Diuing Cars^ehveou Indi« •napoliB and Chicago.

Magnificent Pullman Sleeping and Purlor Canfc For rates, maps, time tables, etc., apply to I. D. BALDWIN, D. P. A.,

No. 26, S. Illinois St., ludiannpofts, Ind}

JAMES BARKER, G. P. A., ChfefMgt.