Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 2 August 1894 — Page 3

ALL THE STRENGTH. and virtue has sometimes "dried out," whqn you get pills in leaky wooden or pasteboard boxes. For that reason, Dr.

and shape to carry about with you. Then, when you feel bilious or constipated, have a fit of indigestion after dinner, or feel a cold coming on, they're always ready for you.

They're the smallest, the pleasantest to take, and the most thoroughly natural remedy. With Sick or Bilious Headaches, Sour Stomach, Dyspepsia, Jaundice, Dizziness, and all derang#nents of the Liver, Stomach, and Bowels, they give you a lasting cure.

Headache obstruction of nose discharges falling into throat eyes weak ringing in ears offensive breath smell and taste impaired, and general debility—these are some of the symptoms of Catarrh. Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy has cured thousands of the worst cases,—will cure you.

Says an exchange: If there is one feature of farm life that givps promise of a most excellent and promising future it is that of the mutton Industry. To this there is no possibility of damage for a score of years to come unless it is done by those who are the most interested in promoting it. There is no more luscious or tasteful meat known to man, and we except none, than the well-fed, early matured mutton and the American people are very fast finding it out. They will pay more for it as the years pass than less, but it must be as described—well fed, young, tender.

Helen Gould is entertaining at her home. Woodv Crest, at Tarrvtown, thirty homeless girls from the Five Points mission. The children are at liberty to roam over the broad acres of close-cropped lawns and enjoy themselves to their heart's content.

Woman's Ucai ITi'lend It is the greatest of ail rewards to receive such letters as the following from:

Miss Louise Miiller, who lives at 44 Michigan Ave., in Evanston, 111.

KIDNEY LIVER «22

Dissolves Gravel

Gall stone, brick dust in urine, pain in urethra, straining after urination, pain in the back and hips, sudden stoppage of water with pressure.

Bright's Disease

Tube casts in urine, scanty urine. Swamp-Root cures urinary troubles and kidney difficulties.

Liver Complaint

Torpid or enlarged liver, foul breath, biliousness, bilious headache, poor digestion, gout.

Catarrh of the Bladder

Inflammation, irritation, ulceration, dribbling, frequent calls, pass blood, mucus or pus. At Druggists 50 cents and $1.00 Size. •'Invalids'"Guide to Health" free—Consultation free.

DR. KILMER & Co., BXNGHAMTON, N. Y.

McELREES

WINE OF CARDUI.J

For Female Diseases. FREE!

IK., A

Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are sealed up in little glass vials, just the size

She says: As I have used Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound, and have thereby become entirely well, I am recommending all my lady

friends to use it. I am sure it will hel them in all cases of womb troiible, Icucorrhcea, irregular or painful 'monthly periods.'

I am sure it is our best friend. I am so thankful to Mrs. Pinkham for the good she has done me that I wish every sick woman in America would write her at Lynn, Mass., and get her advice, or get her Vegetable Compound at any druggist's."

DR. KILMER'S

FACEBLEIC8

Madame Ruppert's

/STfTSV A |preci»tinK the fuct that thousands of Indie* of the U.S. have notu»eri my Face Bleach, on account of price, which la $2 per bottle, and in order that

ALL

may give It a fair trial, I

will send a Sample 13oltletsafely packed, all charpes prepaid, on receipt of 95c. FACE BLEACH removes and cure* absolutely all freckles, pimples, xnolh, blackheads, sallowis*, acne, enema, wrinkles, or roughness

of

in.snd beautifies theccinplexion. Addretf

MME. A. RUPPERT, Dpt.E. 6E. 14thSt.N.Y.Cltj

Consumptives and people who have weak iunfrs or Asthma, should use Piso's Cure for Consumption. It has cured 1 thousand •. It has not injured one. It is not bad to take.

It is the best cough syrup. Sold everywhere. *5e.

-r-

Ancient Dentistry and Job's Knowledge of Anatomy..

A Peculiar Homily From a Singular Tliemn—ir. Talmagc's Sermon.

Dr. Tal male's sermon for the press for last Sunday was from the subject, "Narrow Escapes," the text being taken from Job xix. 20: "I am escaped with the skin of my'teeth."

Job had it hard. What with boils and bereavements and bankruptcy and a fool of a wife he wished he was dead, and I do not blame him. His flesh was gone and his bones were dry. His teeth wasted away until nothing but the enamel seemed left. He cries cut, "I am escaped with the skin of my teeth."

There has been some difference of opinion about this passage. St. Jerome and Schultens and Brs. Good and l'ooie and Barnes have ail tried their forceps on Job's teeth. You deny my interpretation and say, ,'"\Vh*ht did Job know about the enamel of the teeth?" He knew everything about it. Dental surgery is almost as old as the earth. The mummies of Egypt, thousands of years old, are found today with gold fillings in their te'/th.

Paul expresses the same idea b}' a different figure when he says that some people are "saved as by fire.'" A vessel at sea is in llames. You ro to the stern of the vessel. The boats have shoved off. The flames advance. You can endure the heat no longer in your face. You slide down on the side of the vessel and hold on with your lingers until the forked tongue of the fire begins to lick the-back of your hand, and you feel that you must fall, when one of the lifeboats coined back, and the passengers say they think they have room for one more. The boat swings under you you drop into it you ure saved. So some men are pursued by temptation until they are partially consumed. but after all get off, "saved as by fire." But I like the figure of Job a little better than that of Paul, because the pulpit has not worn it nut. and I want to show you. if God will help, that some men make narrow escapes for their souls and are saved **vvith the skin of their teeth."

It is as easy for some people to look to the cross as for you to look to this pulpit. Mild, gentle, tractable. loving, you expect them to become Christians. Von go over to the store and say, "Grandon joined he church yesterday." Your business comrades say: "That is just what might have been expected. He always was of that turn of mind." In youth this person whom I describe was always good. He never broke things. He never laughed when it was improper to laugh. At 7 he could sit an hour in church perfectly quiet, looking neither to the right hand nor to the left, but straight into the eyes of the minister, as though he understood the whole discussion about the eternal rlecrees. He never upset things nor lost them. He floated into the kingdom of God so gradually that it is uncertain just when the matter was decided.

Jn other words, we all admit that it is easier for some men to accept the gospel than for others.

I may be addressing SO.JC people who have cut loose from churches and Bibles and Sundays, and who have at present no intention of be-t-oming Christians themselves, but just to see what is going on, and yet you may find yourself escaping, before you hear the end, as "with the skin of your teeth." I do not expect to waste this hour. I have seen boats ro off from Cape May or Long Branch and drop their nets, and after awhile come ashore, pulling in their nets without having caught a single fish. It was not a (rood day, or thev had not the right kind of a net. But we expect no such excursions today. The water is full of tish the wind is in the right direction the gospel net is strong. O Thou who didst help Simon and Andrew to fish, show us today how to cast the net on the right side of the ship!

Listen to two or three questions: Are you as happy as you used to be when you believed in the truth of the Christian religion? Would you like to have your children travel on in the road in which you are now traveling? You had a relative who professed to be a Christian and was thoroughly consist2nt, living and dving in the faith of the gospelWould yon not like to live the same quiet life and die the same peaceful death? I received a letter sent me by one who has rejected the Christian religion. It says, "I am old enough to know that the joys and pleasures of life are evanesant, and to realize the fact that it must be comfortable in old age to believe in something relative to the future and to have a faith in some system that proposes to save. I am free to confess that I would be happier if I could exercise (lie simple and beautful faith that is possessed by many whom I kdbw. I am not willingly out of the church or out of the faith. My state of uncertainty is one of unrest."

Let me also ask whether your trouble has not been that you confounded Christianity with the inconsistent character of some who profess it. You area lawyer. In your profession there are mean and dishonest men. Is that anything against the law? You ai*e a doctor. There are unskilled and contemptible men in your profession. Is that anything against medicine? You area merchant. There are thieves and defrauders in your business. Is that anything against merchandise?

Behold, then, the great unfairness ol charging upon Christianity the wick« edness of its disciples! We admil some of the charges against tbos« who profess religion. Some of the most gigantic swindles of the present day have been carried by members of* th,e church. There are men in the churches who would not be trusted for $5 without good collateral security. They leave their business dishonesties in the vestibule ol the church as they go in and sit at the communion. Having concluded the sacrament, they get up, wipe the wine from their lips, go out and take up their sins where they left off.

Again, there may be some of you who in the attempt after Christian life will have to run against powerful passions and appetites. Perhaps it is a disposition to anger that you have to contend against, and perhaps, while in a very serious mood, you hear of something that makei you feci that you must swear or die. I kno'.v of a Christian who was once so ex operated that he said to a mean customer: "I cannot swear at you myself for I am a member of the church, but down stairs my partner in business will swear at you."

If, with all the influences favorable for a right life, men make so many mistakes, how much harder it is when, for instance, some appetite thrusts its iron grapple into the roots of the tongue and pulls a man down with hands of destruction! If, under such circumstances, he break away, there will be no sport in the undertaking, no holiday enjoyment, but a struggle in which the wrestlers move from side to side and bend and twist and watch for an opportunity to get in a heavier stroke, until with one final effort in which the muscles aro distended, and the veins stand out, and the blood starts, the swarthy habit falls under the knee of the victor—escaped at last with the skin of his teeth.

In the last day it will be found that Hugh Latimer and John Knox and Huss and Ridley were not the greatest martyrs, but Christian men who went up incorrupt from the contaminations and perplexities of Wall street, Water street, Pearl street, Broad street, State street, Third street, Lombard street, and the bourse. On earth they were called brokers or stockjobbers, or retailers or importers, but in heaven Christian heroes. No fagots were heaped about their feet, no inquisition demanded from them recantation, no soldier aimed a spike at their heart, but they had mental tortures, compared with which all physical consuming is as the breath of a spring morning.

I find in the community a large class of men who have been so cheated, so lied about, so outrageously wronged that they have lost faith in everything. In a world where everything seems so topsy turvy they do not see how there can be any God. They are confounded and frenzied and misanthropic. Elaborate argument to prove to them the truth of Christianity or the truth of any thing else touches them nowhere. Hear me, all such men, I preach you no rounded periods,«no ornamental discourse, but I put my hand on your shoulder and invite you into the place of the gospel. Here is a rock on which you may stand firm, though the waves dash against it harder than the Atlantic pitching its surf clear above Eddystone lighthouse. Do not charge upon God all these troubles of the world. As long as the world stuck to God God stuck to the world, but the earth seceded from his government^ and hence all these outrages and all these woes. God is good. For many hundreds of years he has been coaxing the world to come back to Him, but the more he has coaxed the more violent have men been in their resistance, and they have stepped back and stepped until they have dropped into ruin.

Try this God, ye who have had the bloodhounds after you, and who have thought that God had forgotten you, Try Him and see if He will not help Try Him and see if He will not pardon. Try Him and see if He will not save. The flowers of spring have no bloom so sweet as the flowering of Christ's aflections. The sun hath no warmth compared with the glow of His heart. The waters have no refreshment like the fountain tha will slake the thirst of thy soul. At the moment the reindeer stands with his lip and nostril thrust into the cool mountain torrent the hunter may be coming through the thicket. Without crackling a stick under his foot, he comes close by the stag, aims his gun, draws the trigger, and the poor thing rears in its death agony and falls backward, its antlers crashing on the rocks, but the panting hart that drinketh from the water brooks of God's promise shall never be fatally wounded shall never die.

Injun Too Big for His Cc

Morning Oregonian.

There is trouble on the Umatilla Indian reservation because the cells in the calaboose are too small. The other day Swichlich, one of the tallest of the Governmet wards on the reservation, was arrested, and he could not enter the door of the guard house erect, and in the morning was found curled up like a spiral spring because the cell was not long enough for him to lie straight in. The Indian is seven feet tall, and the Indian police think the Government should build anew jail there.

An Insurmountable Obstacle. Brooklyn iilfe. "So you feel you cannot marry him?" 'Yes, I am fully decided."

Why, don't you like him?* Oh, like him well enough, but can't get him to propose."

if Highest of all leavening strength.—Latest 0. S. Gov. Food Report

Economy requires that in every receipt calling for baking powder the Royal shall be used. It will go further and make the food lighter, sweeter, of finer flavor, more digestible and wholesome

CITY OF llAMMOXIl.

The Character of Its Poiuilation— Impossible to Observe State Lines.

Chicago Inter Ocean.

The city of Hammond is peculiar. It as much an offshoot of Chicago as is South Chicago. Even more so, for South Chicago has a harbor of its own not very much of a one, still something, while Hammond owes its existence to this city. It came into beinsr as an annex to the stockyards, but has since developed other industries. Its is almost wholly over the Indiana line, but not quite. Four years ago, when the United States was taking the census of pop Nation and manufactures, no little difficulty was experienced in following the State line. Some manufacturing plants were partly in one State and partly in the other, and neighbors who could sit on their own respective front steps and talk easily in a conversational tone were in some cases citizens of different States. It would be simply impossible to observe State lines in the suppression of a riot in such a city and absurd to try it.

Hammond has much the same class of people as Packingtown. No doubt a largo majority of the people are law abiding, but there is a very considerable element of the foreignborn laborers who are steeped in the sral 1 of anarchy. They can hardly speak a word of English. They come from those portions of central and southern Europe where despotism has prevailed for centuries. They have an inherited hatred for government, and the moment something occurs to call out that spirit of hatred they all, men, women and children, are aflame with the fire that has come down from one generation to another for centuries. In the old countries they were accustomed to seeing great standing armies constantly watching them and they seem to have an idea that because this 3ountry has almost none at all they •an indulge their anarchistic tendencies. It is this class of people, in Hammond and Chicago, who are dong the looting, and no small part of the burning.

SUNDAY li.VC'ljKSIONS

[)n the !Linc of the Cincinnati, Hamilton ami Day to.i Kailroad.

The C. H. & D. R. R. has placed on sale at all offices along the line excursion tickets at )ii fart for me round trip, for the accommoda,ion of its friends on Sundays. These tickets vill be good going and returning only on day of sale. Tickets will be sold between all stations .v'nere the train service will permit excursionsis to make the round trip on Sundays. For ickets and all information call on local ticket gent(J. H. & D. It. R.. or address.

I

D. (J. EDWARDS, Gen. Passenger Agt.,

Carew Hnilding, Cincinnati. O.

I. D. Baldwin. D. P. A., Indianapolis, Ind.

Silken fabrics should never be kept folded in white paper. The chloride of lime which is used to bleach the paper causes a chemical change in the silk anct injures the color.

Can't Sleep

I have a tired, worn-out feeling. This iiicans that the nervous system is out of order. When this complaint is made. Hood's Sarsaparrilla is needed to purify and vitalize the blood, and thus supply nervous strength. Take it now. Remember

Hood'

Jl

Be sure to get Hood

and only Hood

Hood's Pills

Sarsaparilla

ures

•ills, biliousness.

TRAVEL VIA THIS

Looumij New AMM QHCASO BY.CO

rHBSHORT LINE

CHICAGO

Milwaukee, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Duluth, Omaha, Denver, San Francisco,

Portland, Seattle, Tacomo. Los Angeles, Spokane Falls, Helena AND ALL POINTS IN

WEST and NORTHWEST. The only line rnnnlng Solid Pullman Per tooted Safety Vestibuled Trains.

The only line running Dining Can Indianapolis and Chicago. Magnificent Pullman Sleeping and itarlor Oara.

For rates, maps, time tables, eto„ apply to I. D. BALDWIN, D. P. A.. No.3 W Washington St., Indl nanapoils, Ind FRANK J. REED. G. P. A., Chicago, 111 9.N.U 31—94 INDF»L9

Powder

ABSOLUTELY PURE

flOvAl BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NE.W YORK.

On the .-vil'n Side.

Everybody knows this is a pood place to bo b'it everybody does not take measures to be there. An efficient preventive places us on the safe side of incipient disease, and there is no ope more reliable than Hostetter's Stomach Bitters in cases where the kidneys are inactive, which is but the preliminary to various destructive maladies, which disregarded have a fatal1 termination. Bright's disease, diabetes, dropsy, oedema, are but the outgrowths of neglected inaction of the kidneys and bladder. They should be cheeked at the outset with the Bit-' ters, which will prevent their progress by arousing the renal organs into activity, and thus place those who resort to this saving med-1 icine on the safe side. This preservative of I safety also conquers constipation, liver complaint. malarial fever, nervousness and dyspepsia

Every judire should have the courage of his convictions. E. B. WALTHALL & Co.. Druggists, Horse Cave, Ky., say: Hall's Catarrh Cure cures everyone that takes it." Sold by Druggists, 75c. "There goes a man to be, trusted," said .Ta^son, as Dudeson entered the tailor, shop. I

He was maflly, passionutflv in love—won by the matchless beauty of her complexion. Glenn's Sulphur Soap had imparted the charm. \Ver«j You Ever South in Summer?

It is no hotter in Tennessee, Alabama or Georgia than here, and it is positively delightful on the Gulf Coast of Mississippi and West Florida. If you are looking for a location in the South go down now and see for yourself. The Louisville «fe Isashville Kailroad and connections will sell tickets to all points .South for trains of August 7th at one fare round trip. Ask your ticket agent about it, and if he can not sell you excursion tickets, write to C. P. Atinore, General Passenger Agent, Louisville, Ivy.

NIAGARA FALLS

E S I O N VIA

BIC FOUR ROUTE

Tuesday, August 7th.

ONLY S5.00 ROUND TRIP. Put-In-Bay and return. 34.00: Chautauqua and return. $5.00 Toronto and return, $0 00 Thousand Islands and return, $10.00. This will be randest excursion of the season, running ro ,''Q to Niagara Falls via Lake Shore and & 10 igan Southern Ry. and New York Central R. it., with solid train of elegant coaches, reclining chair cars, parlor cars and Wagner sleeping cars. No change of cars at any point and no delays en route going or coming. Big Four excursionists will not be compelled to layover at junction points for connections. Tickets good returning on all regular trains within live days from date of .sale. Thousand Islands tickets good ten days from date of sale.

Call at ticket ol'tice of the Big Four Route early and secure space. This will be the first, last and best excursion.

H. M.BKONSON.A.G.P.A., Indiananolis.Ind. E. O. McComiK'K. D. B. MAKTIN, Passenger Traf. Mng'r, Gen. Pass. Agt

Cincinnati.

fYVODCDOl A

A former sufferer will send you tlie

lUtSrtrMA

prescription that cured

•Wh*3UKi4eciBBIHB$atiSa

FKANIyLIX

hun.

Board, room and books, $2 per week. Catalogue free.

1

Manufactured by

The Hottest Spot on Earth.

The hottest spot on the earth is on the southwestern coast of Per si .where Persia borders the gul* of the SJime name. For forty consecutive ys ia the months of July and August the thermometer has bien known not to fall lower than 100°, nijrht or dav, and to often run up as high as 128" in Uie afternoon. At Biilirin, in the center of ths torrid part of this torrid belt, nnd as thoueh it were nature's intention to make the region as unbearab'e us possible. no water can be obtained from digging wells 100, 200 or even 500 feet deep, yet a comparatively numerous population contrive to live there, thanks to copious springs which break forth from the bottom of the gulf more than a mile from shore.

The water from these springs is obtained by divers, who dive to the bottom and fill goat-skin bags with the cooling liquid and sell it for a living. The source of these submarine fountain." is thought to be in the gr^en hill oi Osman, sons* 500 or COO miles aw .,y.

Admiral Kiunerly. i:o..i.aind of the 9aeilio squadron, has been ia the service' for forty years.

KNOWLEDGE

Bring.? comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live better than othei'3and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure^ liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Svrup of Figs.

Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly, beneficial properties of a perfect laxative effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevera and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, bccause it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free ironi every objectionable substance.

Syrup of Firs is for sale by all drugcists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup. Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,, and being well informed, you will not. accept any substitute i£ offered.

and Typcwritins School, Ii3linu iiolis BuninCM. hen 131ck. Oldest, lar^fiS". and beet ei|uippwl. Individual instruction by expen reporters, liook-keepmi:. Penman ship, Kiighbli.OftiU1 Training, etc., free. Chc:i| l»oiin'5it3JS. tuition (•atf paymenlH. Ponilioni* hevui'iKi \y on:, graduate*. Beautiful Illustrated Oatalosneand Tape:' free. WIKV^

ELY'S

CREAM BAU3

Dr. J. M. McLean,'^ Liver and Kidney Balni

THE PEERLESS REMEDY FOR

Brights Disease, Diabetes, Biliousress, Torpid Liver, Etc.

THE

Sold by Druggists Everywhere. One Dollar a Dottle. $

QI». J.

(i.

THE INGALLS LAND CO.,

Lombard Building^

Or Ingalls, Madison Co., Ind.

HEAD

PRICE 50CENTS, ALL DRUGGISTS

PATENTS.

j\d-

dress II. J. JerbyHlilre,liuriu»ali, O.

COLLEGE, New Athens. O.

TRADE-MARXS,

Examination and advice as to PatentaUUij invention. Sead for inventor (iiinle or Hov* to Get a Patent. PATRICK O FAUUELL, VVA,»A ington, D. C.

-'s, s/s/s/s/s. S, 'S/S'*

KlclEAN MEDICINE CO., St. Louis, ftloj

*ss/s/s/s/s/s/s/s/s/s/s/s/s/sss,///////// /'/////.///x/,/-/,•/,/ /,/////,s. s.

THESE ARE HARD T2ME3! And that is the Reason Why

Is prospering so marvelously. In gal Is is the most wonderful town As in the entire Indiana Natural Gas Belt. It was founded just lifteen months ago, on a high and beautiful tract of land situated twenty-three miles northeast of Indianapolis, on the Indianapolis and Cleveland Division of the C., C., C. & St. L. W., and named in honor of M. E. Ingalls, President of the Big Four Road. Although the times have been hard since the day the town was. started, nevertheless it ho,s grown and prospered in a way that has even surprised its promoters. Today it has seveu extensive factories, employing a large force of workmen, two churches, schools, many handsome dwellings, good business blocks, large stores, brick sidewalks, improved streets, 2,000 shade trees, and all the advantages of an old town, together with all the snap, push, and energy of a vigorous young city. Best of all it has an inoxhaustible"supply of Nature's Marvelous Free Fuel, Lots at Ingalls can be had at very low prices and on very easy terms. Ingalls will have a population of 5,000 people within a few months. Active energetic people who wish to better their condition by moving-1:A to a live town, are invited to write us. If you have a property anywhere that you would like to sell and place your money in alive, new town, write us, and perhaps we can secure you a buyer, We charge nothing for our services. Address for full particulars,

Indianapolis, lnd«

AFTER HARVES1

Invest your hard-earned dollars in a goo Uicycle. We give you a better Bicycle for le» money than any house in America, Get our prices. Agents wanted.

HAY &WILLITS,

CYCLISTS,

JON. Penn. St., INDIANAPOIilt