Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 25 August 1892 — Page 7

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9

DO YOU WANT TO MARRY?

Or do you with social letters from gentleman and htdiet.of culture and means from all over the country? If so, just send on ten cents and receive a »opy of the elegant matrimonial journal called me Orange Blossoms, which will afford you mora tealthful enjoyment than you have had for many I day. Each number contains hundreds of letters kom yonng ladies and gen tlemen wantiDg corresKndents from those of the opposite sex. The ange Blossoms has the largest matrimonial bu- •». Kan in the United Btates, through which hun-

Ireds are introduced to each other yearly and panr are the happy marriages thereby formed. the business has grown to be recognized by the

A eading people of New England as filling a longkit want in society. One would be surprised to lee the high-toned class of people who do business rtth this bureau. It is no "Lheap John affair

1

tut one of the leading business concerns of Boston v.* -1 md Is largely patronized by the better element sfetflad by that means the honest, worthy people who •j'i» ire working at fair wages and are looking for a ki rue mate somewhere. If there is a man or woman rho has not found his or her affinity heres the iSJ ipporlunlty. Don't wait, as this advertisement font appear long in this paper unless there are

Mn7Ad^*ssfS

OBANGE BLOSSOM8, 18 Boylston St., Boston. Mass.

n-iz-jr.i

ROBERT SMITH, D. V. 8.

rish to say to my many patrons that I have fuily recovered from my accident, and am prepared to

\ttend to all Calls Day or Night

thave a full set of Implements for use in case they are needed in delivery. Also will castrate at the proper time. Calls for castration may be sent by postal card, Box 177.

Satisfaction Guaranteed

IN EVEEY CASE.

I have had over thirty years experience In mj cofession, and fully understand every detail. IESIDENCE COB. NORTH AND SCHOOLSTS

Calls left at Selman's drugstore or Huston's liv ry barn promptly attended to.

^ABT Ik BBVra, HJfc,

Dlsaaaaa ef W«m«

BflMsasa, Rtrtk PsaBsylvaala flkt

DR.

en!f Ism* Running Pollinan'a Perfected Safety Vestibule! Trains, with Dining Car% between Cincinnati, Indianapolis end Ckleafe.

Westward.

£f§

Mew

•^-•s

ROBERT SMITH,

10tf Greenfield, Ind.

DWUIAi

nti

WARREN R. KING,

MRUOIAK iin •UMBO*.

Omoi-b Gant'» Sleek, «oim Feaa. ni HalB atreeta. RmMuum, Wdt Mala

•KBBVMBM, ZVB.

J. H. BINFORB,

ARourrr.ATjAW,

GREENFIELD, IND.

The Cincinnati, Hamilton end Dntta Kailroa4

dub

Cart ea Day

giSSSl

Trains and

Sleeping Cars ea Night

The

Trains

between

Finest

Cincinnati, Indianapolis Chicago,

St. Louis, Toledo and

CO

Detroit.

Chair Car between Cincinnati end

Earth.

Keokak.

M. D. WOODFORD, President ft Osneral Manager. Si 0. MeCOtHICK, Osnsral Passenger 4 Tiekst4«eeL «*KCTNKATI. O

21 45 AM AM

*7

Colnmbus lv. (Jrbana Piqua Covington Bradford Jc Gettysburg Greenville Weavers New Madison.... Witeys New Paris Richmond.... Centreville Gerraantown Cambridge City. Dublin Strawns Lewisville Dunreith Ogden Knlghtstown Charlottsville Cleveland Greenfield ..." Philadelphia Cumberland. Irvinston Indianapolis .ar

0&+900

10 27{|1 00 *10 35

7551140 3491015 AM I AM 46 AM I AM *5 001-8 00*1145 816!12D2 301 8 4., 1228

Eastward.

Indlanapolis.lv Irvington Cumberland Philadelphia Greenfield Cleveland Charlottsville Knlghtstown Ogden Dunreith Lewisville Strawns Dublin Cambridge City. Germantown..... Centreville.. Blehmond

14

PMIPMIPM *300*5

(8 591 9 0312C41 9 13-12 50 f9 20 .... 9 24 934 940tf 95C 2 561 10*01

6 501016jf 1 44 7 0510 30 71510 40 '7261051 |f7 3611102

Paris

Wlleys «?ew Madison Weavers Greenville Gettysburg Bradford Je Covington Plqua tTrbana Mlombns ar.

8 0211 321 *"81611 46 8301211 8401

Hoe. 6, 8 and 20 connect at Columbus for Pittsburgh and the East, and at Richmond for Dayton, Xenla and Springfield, and Mo. 1 for Cincinnati.

Trains leave Cambridge City at t7.00 a. m. and t3 30 P- jn for Rusbvllie, Shelbyville, Columbus and intermediate stations. Arrive Cambridge City fl.45and +6.50p. m. JOSEPH WOOD, E. A. FORD,

Qoaral Muager, Gmeral Piawnpo- Igtnl

l-IMA-ft PlTTSBUKOn,

Penn'A.

For time cards, rates of fere, through tlcketsV chocKB ana farther information re*

TALMAGE IN EUROPE.

A. Practical Sermon on the Prodigal Son. *r

Sin Is Dftan and Contemptible Thine at All Times—Tha Promises of Satan Aro Never Kept,

Dr. Talmage continues his European evangelization. He preached every day last week. The sermon Belected for publication is from the text Luke xv, 18, "I will arise and go to my father." He said:

There is nothing like hunger to take the energy out of a man. A hungry man can neither toil with pen nor hand nor foot. There has been an army defeated not so much for lack of ammunition as for lack of bread. It was that fact that took the fire out of this young man of the text. Storm and exposure will wear out any man's life in time, but hunger makes quick work. The most awful cry ever heard on earth is the cry for bread.

A traveler tells us that in Asia Minor there are trees which bear fruit looking very much like the long bean of our time. It is called the carab. Once in a while the people reduced to destitution would eat these carabs, but generally the carabs, the beans spoken of here in the te*t, were thrown only to the swine, and they crunched them with great avidity. But this young man of my text could not get even them without stealing them. So one day amid the swine troughs he begins to soliloquize. He said, "These are no clothes for a rich man's son to wear this is no kind of business for a Jew to be engaged in feeding swine I'll go home I'll go home I will arise and go to my father."

I know there area good many people who try to throw a fascination, a romance, a halo about sin but notwithstanding all that Lord Byron and George Sand have said in regard to it, it is a mean, low contemptible business, and putting food and fodder into the troughs of a herd of iniquities that root and wallow in the soul of man is very poor business for men and women intended to be sons and daughters of the Lord Almighty. And when the young man resolved to go home it was a wise thing for him to do, and the only question is whether we will follow him.

Satan promises large wages if we will follow him, but he clothes his victims with rags and he pinches them with hunger, and when they start out to do better he sets after them all the bloodhounds of hell. Satan comes to us and promises all luxuries, all emoluments if we will serve him. Liar, down with thee to the pit! ''The wages of sin is death." Oh, the young man of the text was wise when he uttered the resolution, "I will arise an,| goto my father."

The resolutif'fl of this text was formed in disgust at his present circumstances. If this young man had been by his employer set to culturing flowers, or training vines over an arbor, or keeping an account of the pork market,or overseeing other laborers, he would not have thought of going home. If he had had his pockets full of money, if he had been able to say, I have a thousand dollars now of my own, what's the use of going back to my father's house Do you think I am going back to apologize to the old man Why, he would put me on the limits ho would not have going oa around the old place such conduct as I have been engaged in. I won't go home There is no reason why I should go home. I have plenty of money, plenty of pleasant surroundings. Why should I go home Ah it was his pauperism it was his beggary. He had to go home.

Some man comes and says to me Why do you talk about the ruined state of the human soul Why don't you speak about the progress of the Nineteenth century, and talk of something more exhilarating It is for this reason—a man never wants the Gospel until he realizes he is in a famine struck state. Suppose I should come to you in your home, and you are in good and robust health, and I should begin to talk about medicines, and about how much better this medicine is than that, and some other medicine than some other medicine, and talk about this physician and that physician. After awhile you would get tired,and you would say, "I don't want to hear about medicines. Why do you talk to me of physicians I never have a doctor.

Suppose I come into your house and find you severely sick, and I know the medicines that will cure you, and I know the physician who is skillful enough to meet your case. You pay: "Bring on all that medicine bring oo that physician. I am terribly sick and I want help." If I came to you aud feel you are all right in body and all right in mind and all right in soul you have need of nothing but suppose I have persuaded you that the leprosy of sin is upon you, the worst of all sickness, oh, then you say, "Bring me that balm of the Gospel bring me that divine medicament bring me Jesus Christ.

But says some one in the audience, "How do you prove that we are in a ruined condition by sin?" Well, 1 can prove it in two ways, and you may have your choice. I can prove it either by the statements of men or by the statement of God. Which shall it be? You ail say, "Let us have the statement of God." Well he says in one place, "The heart is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked." He says in another place, "What is man that he

should' be clean? and he which is

1 I 1 3 1

'y'born of a Woman, that he should be

righteous?" He says in another place, "There is none that doeth good no, not one." He says in another place, "As by one man sin entered into the world, and death sin and so death passed upon men for that all have sinned." "Well," you say, "I am willing to acknowledge that, but why should I take the particular rescue that you propose? This is the reason. "Except a man be born again he cannot see the kingdom of God." This is the reason. "There is one name given under heaven among men whereby they may be saved." Then there are a thousand voices here ready to say, "Well, I am ready to accept this help of the Gospel I would like to have this divine cure how shall I go to work?" Let me say that a mere whim, an undefined longing amounts to nothing. You must have a stout tremendous resolution like this young man of the text when he said, "I will arise and go to my father." "Oh!" saj's some man, "how do I know my father wants me?" How do I know, if I go back, I would be received?" "Oh!" says some man, "you don't know where I have been: you don't know how far I have wandered you wouldn't talk that way to me if you knew all the iniquities I have committed." What is that flutter among the angels of God? It is news, it is news! Christ has fouud the lost.

£5

Again, I notice that this resolution of the young man of the text was founded in sorrow at his misbehavior. It was not mere physical plight, It was grief that he had so maltreated his father. It is a sad thing after a father has done everything for a child to have that child be ungrateful. "A foolish son is the heaviness of his mother." Hiat is the Bible. Well, my friends, have not some of us been cruel prodigals? Have we not maltreated our Father? And such a father! So loving, so kind. If he had been a stranger, if he had for saken us, if he had Tagellated us, if he had pounded us and turned us out of doors on the commons, it would not have beeu so wonderful—our treatment of him but he is a father so loving, so kind, and jret how many of us for our wanderings have never apologized! We apologize for the wrongs dene our fellows, but some of us have perhaps committed ten thousand times ten thousand wrongs against God and never apologized.

I remark still further that this resolution of the text was founded in a spirit of homesickness. I do not know how long this young man, how many months, how many years, he had been away from his father's house, but there is something about the reading of my text that makes me think he was homesick. Some of you know what that feeling is. Far away from home sometimes surrounded by everything bright and pleasant, plenty of friends, you have said, "I would give the world to be home to-night." Well, this young man was homesick for his father's house. I have no doubt when he thought of his father's house he said, "Now, perhaps my father may not be living."

We read nothing in this story— this parable found on everyday life —we read nothing about the mother. It says nothing about going home to her. I think she was dead. I think she had died of a broken heart at his wanderings, or perhaps he had gone into dissipation from the fact he could not remember a loving and sympathetic mother. A man never gets over having lost his mother. Nothing said about her here, but ho is homesich for his father's house. He thought he would just like to go and walk around the oid place. He thought he would just like to go and see if things were as they used to be.

Many a man, after having been off for a long while, has gone home and knocked at the door and a stranger has come. It is the old homestead, but a stranger comes to the door. He finds out father is gone, mother is gone brothers and sisters all gone. I think this young man of the text said to himself, "Perhaps father may be dead." Still hejstarts to find out. He is homesick. Are there any here to-day homesick for God, homesick for heaven?

But I remark the characteristic of this resolution was, it was immediately put into execution. The context says "he arose and came to his father." The trouble in out of ninehundred and ninety-nine times out of a thousand is that our resolutions amount to nothing because we make them for some distant time. If I resolve to become a Christian next year, that amounts to nothing at all. If I resolve at the service to-day to become a Christian, that amounts to nothing at all. If I resolve that after I go home to-day to yield my heart to God, that amounts to nothing at all. The only kind of a resolution that amounts to anything is the resolution that is immediately put into execution.

There is a man who had typhoid fever. He said, "Oh, ifl could ever get over this terrible distress, if this fever should depart, if 1 could be restored to health, I would all the rest of my life serve God." The fever departed. He got well enough to walk around the block. He got well enough to attend to business. He is well to-day—as well as he ever was. Where is the broken vow? There is a mac who said long ago: "If I could live to the year 1892, by that, time I will have my busines matters all arranged, and I will have time to attend to religion, and I will be a good, thorough, consecrated Christian. "The year 1802 has come. January. February, March, April, May, June—fully half ef the }ear gone. Where is your broken vow?

The imperial diamond, owned by prince of Wales, weighs 182 carats and it valued at 17,000,000 franca.

£At

PILLS.

CURE

frilly Headaebo and relieve all tho troubles fncE dent to a bilious state of the system, such ad Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating. Pain in the Side, &c. While their raosfi ^emaxkabto success has been shown in curing

SICK

frofanrflia, yet Carter's Little Liver Pffla are equally valuable in Constipation, curing and preventing this annoying complaint, while they also correct all disorders of the stomach,stimulate tha liver and regulate the bowels. Even if they only

HEAD

JLclwtfceywouldbealmostpricclesstotfcOflewlia Buffer from this distressing complaint but fortunately their goodness does notend here,and thosa Who once try them will find these little pills valu« '*ble In so many ways that they will not ba willing to do without them. But after allslck heal

ACHE

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Carter's Little liver Pills are very small ana very easy to take. One or two pills makea_dose. They are strictly vegetable and do not G^jpe or purge, but by their gentle action pleasoau who itisethem. Zn vials at 25 cents flvofor$L Sola by druggists everywhere! or sent by mail.

CARTER MEDICINE CO., New York SMALL PILL. SHALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE

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Pressrved

DR. KEBRA'S

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Removes Freckles, Pimples, Liver Moles Blackheads, Sunburn and Tan, aud restores the skin to its original freshness, producing a clear and healthy complexion. Superior to all face preparations and perfectly harmless. At all druggists, or mailed for SOets. Send for Circular.

VIOLA SKIN SOAP is Simply incomparable as a skin purifying Soap, unequated for tho toilet,"and without* nval for the nursery.<p></p>PATENTS

A

Absolutely pure and delicately medi­

cated. At druggists, Price 25 Cents. G. C. BITTNER & CO., TOLEDO. O.

Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Patent business conducted for moderate Fees. Our Office is

Opposite

u. S.

Pamphlet,

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and we can secure patent in less lime than those! remote from Washington. Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip-1 tion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured.

"How to Obtain Patents," with

cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries sent free. Address,

C.A.SNOW&CO.I

Opp. Patent Office, Washington,

d. C.

IT RESPECTS THE LAW.

The Lottery Company's Good Faith. Washington Telegram to Globe-Democrat. The New Orleans postmaster, Capt. S. M. Eaton, is a smooth-faced man, honest and shrewd. He is a great friend of Warmoth, but he has backed up the Postmaster-General's efforts vigorously in the fight on the lottery.

The year before the warfare began Mr. Eaton says the Lottery Company bought at the New Orleans office $103,000 worth of stamps and stamped envelopes. For that same year the total revenue of the office was $416,000. So it appears that the Lottery Company contributed within $1,000 of one-fourth of the entire revenue of the office.

By the action of the department in enforcing the anti-lottery law passed by Congress this postal revenue from the Lottery Company became a dead loss. Last year's receipts by the New Orleans office-reached a total of $352,000. The day before Captain Eaton started to this conference the Lottery Company posted in all its branch offices in New Orleans a notice to this effect: "The Supreme Court of the United States having decided the anti-lot-tery postal law to be constitutional, it is hereby ordered and directed that no one in the employ of this company shall mail a letter which in any way refers directly or indirectly to the business of the lottery. It must be understood that this company will aid in the enforcement'of this law." "1 think that this notice is honest and sincere," said Captain Eaton, "and the company means just what it says

Ornnkenntu, *r tli* Liquor Halilt, FoiS tlvcly Cored by Administering Dr. Haines' Golden Specific.

«•,

It Is •mnofapt"-M as a powJsr whloh can 1* {treo in a tfia** to

a cop al eoffbe or tea or ii

food, wifbont lis kao 'led£« of the patient. It it absolutely har». and will olwet a p*maaenl »r,d speedy cure, whether the patient Is a modcratt ddukeror au alcoholic wreck. It h«t been give* ifatbousflsds of cues, and in tnn famines a perset cvm has followed. It n»r«r Falls. The system mm*impregnated with the SMelflp, it bewuM at attar Inp^MMhy ftr the liquor «jp|wttt» la wist CartifuiwaMML ttpefeboakof partlottlanne*

siSLffSE10

0OJ OO, 1M IMS Bt,

Ham &

A 48-psre book free. Address W. T. Klfa&EltAfJ), Att'y-at-Law, -92-52 Cor. 8th andF. Sts, WASHINGTON. D.

AND DENTIST.

GREENFIELD,

Office at Klnder's Livery Stable, residence corner »f Swope and Lincoln streets. All calls promptly attended to day or night. Twenty-Are years experience as a veterinary. 15yl.

M. Y.SHAFFER,

feteiliwra. Graduate

OF

Medicine, Surgery ang Dentistry.

Office at JeftfcB & Son's Bam. Residence, Etisjb Osage Strest.

Q-reenfield, Irtd,

fum O. liiMi

The Great Northwest

The States of Montana and Washing ton are very fully described in two folders issued by the Northern Pacific Bail* road, entitled "Golden Montana" and ''Fruitful Washington." The folders contain good county maps of the States aamed, and information in reference to* slimate, lands, resources, and other subg [ects of interest to capitalists, business men or settlers.

Holders of second class tickets to North Pacific Goast points, via Northern Pa sifio Railroad, are allowed the privilege stopping over at Spokane, Washington, and points west thereof, for the purpose of examining all sections of this magnificent State before locating. Northsrn Pacific through express trains carry free colonists sleeping cars from St. Paul and Pullman tourist sleepers from Chisago (via Wisconsin Central Line) to Montana and Pacific Coast Points daily.

California tourists, and travelers t« Montana and the North Pacific Coast,can purchase round trip excursion tickets at ates which amount to but little more than the one fare way. Choice of routes Is allowed on these tickets, which are good for three or six months, according to destinatidu, and permit of stop-overs.

The elegant equipment on the Northem Pacific Railroad the dining car service the through first-class sleeping cars from Chicago (via both Wisconsin Central Line and C. M. & St. P. Ry.,) to Pacific Coast, and the most magnificent scenery of seven States, are among the advantages and attfactious offered to travelers by this Une.

The "Wonderland" book issued by the Northern Pacific Railroad describes, the country between the Great Lakes and Pacific Ocean, with maps and illustrations.

For any of the above publications, and {rates, maps time tables, write to any General or District Passenger Agent, or Chas. B. Fee, G. P. & T. A., N. P. R. St. laul. Minn

The hair-spring in a watch is a strip of the finest steel about inches long, l-100th inch wide, and, 27-10,000 inch thick. It is coiled up in spiral form and finely tempered. The process of tempering these springs was long held as a secret by the few fortunate ones possessing it, and even uow is not generally known.

Manufacturers and Dealers in all kinds of

E E E W O

Designs Furnished. Estimates Given.

Work Erected in any Cemetery in the State.

Fine Granite Monuments a Specialty.

Correspondence solicited with all parties in need of work. All work guarantee4 represented. Office and Works on North Harrison St., near Water Mill.

White & Son,

SHELBYVILLE, IHSTD,

Wagon Manufacturers!

Onr wagons are of superior woikmanshlp, material the best, and painting unsurpassed. Call aa4 Uami&eHhem. Also dealers la Buggies, Carriages and the "New Spindle" Road Wagon. The beat oa purtk. New work and repairing done to order. Bring us your shoeing and repair work. Your atten* Hon is respectfully sailed to our repairing, painting and trimming. Notice the workmanship, beauty lod symmetry of our vehicles. Prices lower than any other dealers or manufacturers. Keapectiuilyj

WHITE & SON,

POETVILLE, IZSTM A.HST.A..

OR NO FEE

PATENT

Dr. I. W. McGuire.

CHEATING 3" HORSE BLANKETS

I

INDIANA,

Nearly every pattern of 5IaHorsej

Blanket

is imitated in color

hasn't the warp threads,

the

of

Ask for

kWM,

fmOnoMua.

Walter 0. BrawftCo*. &MTSACTOBS O* TITL^ VOTAXIH PUBLIC^

EKSUBA*

bOA*, and EKSt

e«A•:

liL&fUrii

^Wlk

I. B. PUSET,

PUSEY

'i

!|8

vf

7IS

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:4

-\t

-ivf

$ ii

7M

A' :i ,1

&-K

a

$

and

style. In most cases the imitation looks just as good as the genuine but it

iflSSlt'.

and

so lacks strength, and while it sells for only a little less than the genuine it isn't worth

one-half

are copied is strong evidence that they are

and every buyer should see that the

5/a

trade mark is

5/A

inside

'4*

as much.

Va Horse Blankets

The fact that

ii

-t

THE STANDARD,

sewed on

the Blanket.

Five Mile Boss Elcctric Extra Test Baker

MKSC 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 S/A. Book. You can get it without charge.

AYRES & SONS, Philadelphia.,

S rpHE RIPANS TABULES regulate tho stomach, ft

Jl

liver and bowels, purii'y the blood, arc pleaaant to take, safe and always ettoctual. A reliable remedy for Biliousness, Blotches on the ®ace, Briffht1s Disease, Catarrh, Colic, Constipation, Chronic Diarrhcea, Chronic Liver Trouble, Dia- 9 beteo. Disordered Stomach, Dizziness, Dysentery, ThronpndiL. Eczema. Flatulence. Female Com- a

Bead, Scrof-

S ache, Slctn D1&2 StomachjTirod liver. Ulcers, and every oth0

Impure blood or a failure in the proper performa nee of their functions by the stomach, liver ana intestines. Persons given to over-eating are ben-

1

THE

iri

-1?

'1

ComHfres,

plamta, Foul Breatli, lieadacne, iieartDurn, Hives, 0 Jaundice, Kidney Complaints, Liver Troubles, 1/088 of Appetite, Mental Depression, Nausea. Nettle lUah.1 1 Painful Digestton, Pimples, ",~"4 to tne Head, ploiion, Salt

allow ComlUicum, Scald ula,8ick Headeases.Sonr Feeling,Torpid Water Brash er symptom results from

a

2 eflted by taking one tabule after each meal. A 2 continued use of the RipansTabutoB is the snrrat S cure for obstinate constipation. They contain 0 S nothing that can be injurious to the most deli5 cate. 1 eroes

ts,

1-8 groffi »1.25, 1-4 gross 7&c

P. O. Box 672. New Yorlc.

TRAVEL VXATHH

SHOET LINE

Td

CHICAGO,

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«». to arte

D. BALDWIN, D. P. A., 1

No. 26, S. Illinois St, Indianspolb, Ia^

JAMBS BARKER, O. P. A., Chicago*

DO YOU KNOW

City:

4*), TKOMMOV,