Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 1 February 1894 — Page 7

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Exposition:

—i^Uniyerselle,

PARIS, 1559,

The Highest Possible Premium,

JTHE •ONLY GRAND PRIZE

FOR SEWING MACHINES, WAS AWARDED TO

HEELER & UK CO,

AND THE

«*0R6SS ©F THE*

LEQION OF HONOR, WAS CONFERRED UPON

NATHANIEL WHEELER,

The President of the Company. For Sale I Moon & Turk, Greenfield, Ind.

5 DOLLARS

sjt v.

jp?^v)fpr gnss

PER DAY

Easily Made.

20

We want many men, women, boys, and girls to work for us a few hours daily, right in mid around their own homes. The business is riwy, pleasant, strictly honorable, and pnys better tlism any other offered agents. You have a clear li«ld and no competition. Experience and special ability unnecessary. No capital required. We equip you with everything that you need, treat you well, and help you to earn ten times ordinary wnpes. Women do as well us men, and boys and girls make good pay. Air one, nnvwWre, can do the work. All succeed who follow our plain and simple directions. K-irnest work will surely bring you a great deal of monev. Everything is new and in great demand. Write for our pamphlet circular, :ind receive full information. No harm done if you conclude not to go on with the business.

George Stinson&Co.,

Box 488,

PORTLAND, MAINE.

Indianapolis Division.

nes.

Schedule oi Pasier.gsr 1 rains-Centra! Tima

a a AM 5 30:*7 30

Westward.

45 7 3 AM I'M I AM i-S 45, 3 30 10 20 1 42! 8 44 11 07 5 Gi 9 28

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Colnmbus 1 urbanu, Ftqua Covington Bradf ird Jo Gettysburg (jreenvilie.. Weavers fcVw Madison Wiieys New Paris Rich in h1. Centreville. German town Cambridge City.." Dublin Strawns Lewisville Dunreith Kniglitstown Cnarloltsville .... Cleveland Grei ntiivu .." Philadelphia Cumberland Ii'viiist'iu ar

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Meals. Flag Stop.

No*. O, S and 30 connect at Columbus for Pittsburgh and the Kast, and at Richmond for Dayton, Xenia and Springfield, and Ko. I for Cincinnati.

Trains leave Cambridge City at 17.00 a. m. fc-nd t3.30 p. m. for Rushville, Shelbyville, Columbus and intermediate stations. Arrive Camh-idge City |1.45 and 16.45 p. m. JOSEPH WOOD, E. A. J-OKD,

a

Gwural Manager, General Passenger Agent.

11-29-93.-Tt Pittsburgh, Penn'a. For time cards, rates of fare, through tickets, baggage --liecks and further informat-on rec&xlint the running of trains apply to any Agent oi the Pennsylvania Lines.

E S

Dr. Humphreys' Specifics are scientifically and earefuUy prepared Remedies, used for years In private practice and for over thirty years by the people with entire success. Every single Specific

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Suppressed or l'ninful Periods... .25 12—Whites, Too Profuse Periods 25 13—Croup, .Laryngitis, Hoarseness .25 14—Salt Itheum, Erysipelas, ErupUons.. .25 15—Rheumatism, Rheumatic Pains 25 16—Malaria, Chills, Fever and Ague .25 1

A—Catarrh, Influenza, Cold in the Head. .25 20—Whooping Cougli .25 87—Kidney Diseases .25 88—Nervous Debility ....1.00 30—Urinary Weakness, Wetting Bed.. .25 HUMPHREYS' WITCH HAZEL OIL, "The Pile 01ntment."-Trlal Size. 25Cta.

Sold b? ftrngglstB, or sviit poat-|Mld on receipt of prlea.

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"Come, For All Things Are Now Ready."

Ad Eloquent Appeal to the Weak and Erring— Dr. Tiilmugo'* Sermon.

Rev. Dr. Talmage preached at the Brooklyn Tabernacle last Sunday. Subject: ''Festivity." Text: Luke. xiv. 17—"Come, for all things*' are now ready." He said:

There have been grand entertain ments where was a taking off the wine gave out. or the servants were rebellious, or the light failed, but have gone all around about, this subject and looked at the redemption which Christ has provided, and I come here to tell vou it is complete, and 1 swing open the door of the feast, telling you that "all tilings are now ready.'"

In the first, place I have to announce that the Lord Jesus Christ himself is ready. Christ comes in at the very beginning of the feast— aye, he has been waiting 1.8 I years for his guests. He has been stand- if

ing on his mangled feet. Tie has had flis sore hand on His punctured side, or He has been pressing His lacerated temples—waiting, waiting.

It is wonderful that He has not been impatient, and that He has not said, "shut the door and let the laggard stay out," but He has beon waiting. No banqueter ever waited for his guests so patiently as Christ has waited for us. To prove how willing He is to receive us, gather all the drops of blood that channeled His brow, and His back, and His hands and feet, in trying to purchase your redemption, gather all the groans that He uttered in midnight chill, and in mountain hunger, and in desert lonliness, and twist them

Aliasuerds prepared a feast for 180 days, but this feast is for all eternity. Lords and princes were invited ito that.. You and I and all our world are invited to this. Christ is ready. You know that the banqueters of olden time used to wrap themselves in robes preoared for the occasion. So my Lord Jesus hath wrapped himself in all that is beautiful. See how fair he is. His eyos, his brow, his cheek, so radiant that the stars have no gleam and the morning no brilliancy compared with it. His face reflecting all the joys of the redeemed. His hand having the omnipotent surgery with which he opened blind eyes and straightened crooked limbs and hoisted the pillars of heaven and swung the twelve gates which are twelve pearls.

There are not enough cups in heaven to dip up this ocean of beauty. There are not ladders enough to scale this height of love. There are not enough cymbals to clap, or harps to thrum, or trumpets to peal forth the praises of this one altogether fair. Oh, thou flower of eternity, thy breath is the perfume of heaven! Oh, blissful daybreak, let all people clap their hands in thy radiance! Ch irus: Come, men and saints and cherubim and seraphim and archangel—ail bights, all depths, all immensities. Chorus: Roll Him through the heavens in a chariot of universal acclaim, over bridges of hosannas, under arches of coronation, along by the great towers chiming with eternal jubilee. Chorus: "Unto Him who hath loved us and washed us from our sins in His own bipod, to Him be glory, world without end!"

Again, the Holy Spirit is ready. Why is it that so many sermons drop dead that Christian songs do not get their wings under the peopie that so often a prayer goes no higher than a hunter's "halloa"? It

One year ago on Thanksgiving day I read for my text, "Oh, give thanks unto the Lord, for he is good for his mercy endureth fQrever." And there is a young man in the house to whose heart the Holy Spirit took that text for his eternal redemption. I might speak of ray own case. 1 will tell you I was brought to the peace of the gospel through the Syro-Phoenicean woman's cry to Christ, "Even the dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from the Master's table."

The great French orator, when the dead king lay before him, looked up and cried, "God only i« great." And the triumph of his eloquence has been told by the historians. But I have not beard that one soul was

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is because there is a link wauting— the work of the Holy Spirit. Unless that Spirit give grappling hooks to a sermon and lift the prayer and waft the sang everything is a dead I failure. That spirit is willing to come at our call and lead you to eternal life, or i*eadv to come with the same power with which he unhorsed Saul on the Damascus turnpike and broke down Lydia in her fine store and lifted the 3,000 from midnight into miduoon at the Pentecost. With that power the spirit of God now beats at the gate of your soul. Have you not noticed what homely and insignificant instrumentality the Spirit of God employs for man's conversion?

saved by the oratorical flourish. Worldly "critics may think that the early preaching of Thomas Chalmers was a masterpiece. Hut Thomas Chalmers says he never began to preach until ne camn out of the sickroom. white and emaciated, and told men the simple stoi^y of Jesus.

Oh, my friend, 1 wish we could feel it more and more that if anv good is done it is by the power ol i.Tod's omnipotent spirit. I do not know what wurds of the seripturc lessons 1 read may save your soul. Perhaps the spirit of 'jod may hurl the very text into your heart, "Come, for ail things are uow ready.''

Again, the church is ready. O man, if 1 could take the curtain off these Christian hearts. could show you a great many anxieties for your redemption. You think that old man is asleep, because his head is down and his eyes are shut. No no he is praying for your redemption and honing that, the words spoken mav strike your heart. Do you know the air is full of prayer? Do you know that prayer is going up from Ivuiton-st. prayer ineetiny and going up every hour of the day for the redemption of the people? And

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into one cry—bitter, agonizing over- hoisted the pillars, and swung its whelmin I gather all the pains that shot from sp?ar and spike and cross jolting into one pang—remorseless, grinding, excruciating. I take that one drop of sweat on his brow, and under the gospel glass that drop enlarges until I see in it lakes of sorrow and an ocean of agony. That being standing before you now, emaciated and gashfed and gorv, coaxes for your love with a pathos in which every word is a heartbreak and every sentence a martyrdom. How can you think he trifles?

should iust start toward the

door of the Christian church how quickly it would fly open! Hundreds of people would say: "Give that man room at the sacrament. Bring the silver bowl for his baptism. Give him the right hand of Christian fellowship. Rring him .into all Christian associations."

Oh, you wanderer on the cold mountains, come into the warm sheepfold. I let down the bars and bid you conic in. With the shepherd's crook I point you the way. Hundreds of Christian hands beckon you into the church of God. Many peotle do not like the church and say it is a mass of hypocrites, but it is a glorious church with all its imperfections. Christ bought it, and

?ates. and lifted its arches, and eurta'ned it with upholstery crimson with crucifixion carnage. Come into it.

Again, the angels of God are ready. A great many Christians think that the talk about angels is fanciful. You say it is a very good subject for theological students who have just begun to sermonize, but for older men it is improper. There is no more proof in that Bible that there is a God than that there are angels. Why, do not they swarm about Jacob's ladder? Are we not told that they conducted Lazarus upward that they stand before the throne, their faces covered u| with their wings, while they cry. "Holy, holy, is the Lord God Almighty"? Did not David see thousands and thousands? Did not one angel slay 185,000 men in Sennacherib's army? And shall they not be the chief harvesters at the judgment?

Again, your lc ind red in glory are al! ready for your coming. I pronounee modern spiritualism a fraud and a sham. If John Milton and George Whitelield have no better business than to crawl under a table and rattle the leaves, they had betI ter stay at home in glory. While I believe that modern spiritualism is bad. common sense, enlightened by the word of Gud, teaches us that our friends in giory sympathize with our redemption.

If I had shown you that "all things are. ready that Christ is ready: that the fioly spirit iVready that the angels in glory are ready that your glorified kindred are ready, then with all the concentrate ed emphasis of -my soul I ask you if you are ready? You see mv subject throws the whole responsibillty upon yourself. I If you do not go into the King's banquet,#it is because you do not» accept the invitation. You have the most importunate invitation. Two arms stretched down from the cross, soaked in blood from elbow to finger tips, two lips quivering in mortal anquish, two eyes beaming with infinite love, saving, "Come, come, for all things are now ready."

I would like to take every one of you by the hand and say, "Come!" Old man, who hast been wandering sixty or seventy years, thy sun almost gone down, through the dust of the evening fftretjh out your withered hand to Christ. He will not cast these off,old man. Oh, that one tear of repentance might trickle down thy wrinkled cheek! After Christ has fed thee all thy life long, do you not think you can afford to speak one word in his praise?

Do you think you can get into the feast with those rags? Why, the King's servant would tear them off and leave you naked at the gate. You must be born again. The defy is far spent. The cliffs begin to slide their long shadows across the plain. Do you know the feast has already begun—the feast to whu-h you are invited—and the King sits with His guests, and the servant ptands with his hands on the doo" of the banqueting room and he begins t.o swing it shut. It is half way shut. It is three-fourths shut. It is only just ajar. Soon it will be shut. "Come, for all things are now ready." Have I missed one man? Who has not felt himself called this hour? Then I call him now. This is the hour of thy redemption. While God invites how blest the day,

How sweet the gospel's charming sound Come sinner haste oh. haste away, While yet a pardoning god is found.

Not In His Case.

Indianapolis Journal..

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IHmOFTIIEWEEK

The business portion of Hath, Me., was burned. Sunday. Lass, ?500.(00. Geo. W. Childs, tho distinguished pditor and philanthropist, o? Philadelphia, is serioiu-Iy ill,

A St. Louis man attempted to stop a child's funeral until the parents paid him three day's rout.

JofTcrson Hall, a prosperous farmcrnear Atchison, Ivas.. killed himself upon hearing a dog howling in his yard.

President Cleveland was in Ilirtford, Conn.. Tuesday, to attend the funeral of his nephew. Henry E. Hastings.

Chaplain Dudley, of the Ohio prison, Columbus, was suspended jor appropriating money belonging to the prisoners.

IlnnfiTS near liinghampton. X. Y., accidentally discovered a copious flow of oil on a rocky iedge near that citv recently.

For receiving deposits after he knew the South .Sii!e Savings Hank, Milwaukee, was insolvent Cashier Koetling got ten years. Tuesday.

The American 1'ell Telephone Company will ask the Massachusetts Legislature to he allowed to increase iti stock from ?20.co .oo) to -moo) ooo.

The.six hat manufactories at Danbur/, Conn., emnloying 800 people, resinned operations mday after a shut-down on account of labor troubles.

In Chicago. Mrs. Annie Lindre was ii« badly crushed by a hungry mob white trying to get bread for her starving children that she. died. Tuesday.

At Pinev 1 e. Ivy.. Hob Marler was baptized in the. bath tub of the county jaii. The Rev. Mr. Borum. pastor of the IJaptist church, performed the ceremony.

Corbett and Mitcheil appeared in court at Jacksonville. Friday. Their cases were continued till Feb. 28 in bonds of ?5.009 pach. The both agreed to appear on the day set. and both mti left for New York.

Rosina Voices, the actress, died at London. Sunday, of quick consumption. Miss Voices wa* compelled to abandon her American tour last fall, and sailed for England in November. Her death had been expected for some time.

The ceremonies attending the opening of the mid-winter fair at San Francisco were held. Saturday. There was an immense attendance the weal *r was extremely favorable, and the enterprise was launched with every indication of success.

The town of Ft. Payne, Ala., has gone the way of other boom properties, being .-old to E. M. Cullom, a Birmingham capitalist. for ?C0.(X)). The purchaser assumed a mortgage for ?3u0.(i( 0. The property includes 30.0)!) acres of mineral land, roiling mill, furnaces, etc.. said to have cost. New England capitalists several million dollars.

Ueorue II. Painter, the Chicago-gam-hier who was convicted of having murdered his mistress, Alice Martin, was hanged in the jail at that city, Friday. It was a bungling execution. The rope broke at the first attempt Another rope was secured and he. was hanged a second time. Painter protested his innocence from the scaffold, and called on thns present to see that the real murderer of Alice Martin, who he said he dearly loved, is found and punished.

PORSIGN,

The British naval estimates for 1894 will provide for the expenditure of £7.000,000.

The Russian imperial porcelainv and gla^s works, together with their valuable machinery and models, have beeu burned.

Thero is a monthly deficit of 100.000 francs in the Peter's pence fund, and the Pope has been compelled to draw on his reserve. America leads in subscriptions tc the Holy Father's support.

Dispatches from the seat of war at Ric do Janeiro indicate that the presence ol Rear Admiral Henham. commanding the United States squadron now in-the harboi of the capital of the Brazilian republic, will 1 -ad to a speedy termination of thu rebellion.

The Bishop of Saragossa recently visited Salvador Franch, the Anarchist, who threw the bomb in the Liceo Theater at Barcelona. The good Bishop w.anted to convert the "red", but'the latter refused to discuss religion and attempted to convert the prelate to anarchism. 1

The French Chamber of Deputies became so turbulent, Saturday, that the session was summarily suspended by the President. The occasion of the trouble was a discussion of the means of repressing Anarchistic gatherings. Open charges were made that the Anarchists are being used as a cloak for attacks on the liberties of citizens.

Emp *.ror William has sent a bottlo of wine to Priusu liis.n irclc with a letter of congratulation upon the Prince's recovery from in'luenza. It is stated that thero has been, or shortly will be an entire reconciliation between the Emperor and the ex-Chancellor and there is great satisfaction throughout Germany. The newspapers hail the announcement of the reconciliation as the happiest event that has happened in Germagy for a long while, and the people everywhere give evidence of joyful excitement and thanksgiving.

TWELVE THOUSAND KILLED.1

Kutschan, Persia, Annihilated Earthquake.

Caspian territory.

Ha

Miss Millet—Is it true that you bicycle riders soon get attached tc your machines?

Mr. Wheeler—It hasn't worked that way with me yet. I can fall of my machine without the least trouble.

YOUH.

"V.

By an

A San Francisco dispatch Jan. 29, says: Additional advices by the steamer Belgic, from China, announce the complete annihilation by an earthquake of the town ol j-Tutschan. Persia. Twelve thousand people were killed in the awful disaster. Ten

(thousand

bodies had been recovered. The

once important and beautiful city of 20,00J people is now only a scene of death, .desoiation and terror. The district is in 'the western section of the valley stretching between bazar Mazjid and Ala Da li mountain ranges from Meshhed t(/ Phirvan. The valley communicates by a pass with the frontier of the Russian trans-

THE DALTONS AGAIN.

rhelr Attempt to Rob a Bank Safe la Not Successful,

At Pawnee, fifteen miles northeast ol Guthrie, Okla,, Wednesday, three members of the Dal ton gang rode into town and entered the bank, but found the safe locked with a time lock. They took 910C jrom the cash drawer and rode awaj carrying the cashier on a hor.io threi mileM into the country, and compelliof Wm tb walk back.

A GREAT RIVER.

The Source of the St. Lawrence Discussed. Where does the river St. Lawrence rise? How many can answer this question in geography? Some will probably say in Lake Ontario, others in Lake Superior. Neither answer is quite correct.

Like the Amazon, this river ha3 a different name fo each part of its course. The lower part of the great South American river is ealled by the natives the Amazonas, the middle part is the Soliinoes, and the upper pari the Maranon.

So the St. Lawrence, between Lake Eric and Lake Huron the St. Chiir and Detroit river, and between Lake Huron and Lake Superior the St Mary's river. Yet arc these all one and the si me river, the lakes bein.cj but so iny expansions of its waters.

Beyond Lake.Superior, to the northward. there is still another portion of its course, ealled the Nepigon,. a noble stream of cle .r azure-tinted water nearly aslirgeas the Hudson in volume, which ilows down from the great Lake Nenijr^n in the heart of the Canadian wilderness.

Until recently Lake Nepigon has been but little known. On our maps it is tigured as a much smaller lake than it really is. Its actual dimensions are about seventy-three miles in length by fifty-one in breadth. These figures give but an inadequate idea ofits size, for there are five great bays varying from twenty to ten miles in length. The actukl cast line of the lake is not inuch less than 600 miles.

Twelve rivers of considerable size, four of them rising far up on the "divide" toward James Bay, flow into it, and its waters rival those of Lake Veorge in purity and clearness. It literally swarms with whitefish and trout.

The Nepigon River—the outlet of the lake—mlty be fairly termed the northerly and upper course of the St. Lawrence, not only from its size, exceeding greatly all other rivers flowing into Lake Superior, but from the clearness and color of its water, and other general characteristics.

Whereas the other smaller rivers of Lake Superior are "black-water" rivers, that is to say, having turbid or stained wsit^r. the Nepigon is a clear and be utii'uI river of the same azure, sea-green and marine-blue water which one sees at Miagara and in the St. Lawrence.

A Pica for Rail Actors.

A venerable saying has it that "j man is known by the company litceeps." As it is with a man so it with a theatrical manager. Iiare olu Ben. De Bar, who was a good actoi himself, and a manager too tender at heart to get the best of a business deal, was often asked why he made up histock companies year after year with juch actors. For a moment tlx kind-hearted old manager would seen jO be thinking it over, and then h« would say: "Gad, sir, somebody must 9linage them, else by iny faith I think they would BtarveP*

181

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