Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 11 October 1894 — Page 7
1'
te time. If there ba pain, headaehc, bactache, and nervous di=rap' ntrbances, or the general health not good, the judicious use of medicine should bo employed. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the best restorative tonic and nerv--1* ine at this time. The best bodily condition ,i results from its use. It's a remedy sp=•1 cially indicated for those delicate^ wcak-
Messes and derangements that afflict wc"I menkind at one period or another. You'll I find that the woman who has faithfully i[
1
ctscd the "Prescription" is the picture of health, she
looks well
and she
tem is poisoned and misery comcs.
DR. KILMER
*i*.s8*T KIDNEY LIVER JS
WIMP
BUDS, Sodety buds, young women just entering? the doors of society or womanhood, reauirs the wisest care. To off beautiful and charming they must have pcrfcct health, with all it implies a cleat chin, rosy o^eefcs, bright: eyes and £ood spirits. At this period the young woraan is especially sensitive, and tnauy nervous troubles, which continue through life, have their origin at tbia
feels well.
In catarrhal inflammation, in chronic displacements common to women, where thcro v, ore symptoms of backache, dizziness or fainting', bearing down sensations, disordcrcd stomach, moodiness, faligue, etc., the trouble is surely dispelled aud the sufferer brought back to health and good spirits.
1 WOMAN'S ILLS."
MRS. W. R. BATES,
of
IXiiworths JrumbuU Co., Ohio,
writes:
**A few years ago I Vook Doctor Pierce's favorite Prescription. *tech has been a creat benefit to me. I ara in excellent health now. I hope that every woman, who is troubled with 'women's ills,' will try tl:e 'Prescription and be bcucCtcd KSrX have been."
MRS. HATES.
(locomotive Hit Him auU Made Him Swear. N. Y. Sun.
Thorn is jnv.y of 37 Drigars fcvenue, Brooklyn, sat down on the railroad 1rack war Penny Bridge i:i Long Island City about 9 o'clock las^ night. He was still there when tho uresfc-bound Jamaica express can a lion?, and the pilot of the locomotive thoved him from his seat and topped bim over a steep e:nba,nkment.
The train was stopped, and the irew, with ten terns, began a search lor the supposed dead man. Soon 8hey heard Murray's voice. He was iwearing like a trooper and wanted "•to whip the engineer, but was too trunk to stand.
He was loaded on the train and taken to Long Island City, where ho was put to bed in St. John's Hospital to sleep ihe off effect of his ««preo tod his tussle with a looomotive.
Baseball i? ono busincsss that can't tourish without strikes.
Young Girls* Sensitiveness and modesty often puzzle their mothers and baffle the physician. They withhold what ought to be told.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
saves young girb from the dangers of organic disturbance.
It relieves suppression, retention, or irregularity of menses.
Nature has provided a time for purification. If the channels are obstructed, the entire sys
BCl?HE.n
("M IM§s©lvcs Gravel
Can stone, brick dust in urine, pain in urethra gtraining after urination, pain in thu back an "^J, hips, sndden stoppage of water with pressure.
jtji Briglat's Disease
Tabc castsin urine, scanty urine.
Swairqy-Ron
tfnres urinary troubles and kidney difficulties.
xY' liver Complaint
Torpid or enlarged liver, foul breath, bilious J,' ness, bilious headache, poor digestion, gout.
animation,
irritation, ulceration, dribbling
gnent calls, pass blood, mucus or pus. Druggists 50 cents and $1.00 Slzr nTjrifeiz' GnUte to Health" (re6-Consultation free.
DB. K".MKH & Co., BINGHAMTOW, N. Y.
& FOR
DUR^BiLiTY,Economy and fcs mem. Blacking is uneo Has An annual Sale of 3DC
QUAILED. 100 TONS.
WE ALSO MANUFACTURE THE
1.
mm*
Jrops.
Morse
{^s
A
Canton,Mass.
BEAUTIFUL ESTHER.
Lessons Drawn From the life oi the Jewish Queen of Persia.
In .Prosperity and A.lverilty Always True— ©r. Talmj£o'dS-rin.i for the i'r*sj.
The Rev. t)r. Tillmage, who 16 still absent on his round the world ioiir, selected as the subject of last Sunday's sermon through the press "tiadassah," the text chosen being Esther ii. 7. "And he brought up Hadassah."
A beautiful cliild was born in the capital of Persia. She was an orphan and a captive, her parents having baen stolen from their Isrea.itish home and carried to thsShushan and died, leaving their daughter poor and in a strange land. But an 1srealite who had been carried into the same captivity was attracted by the case of the orphan. He educated her in his holy religion, and under the roof of that good man this adopted child began to develop a sweet ness and excellencjr of character, if ever equalled, certainly never surpassed. Beautiful Hadassah! Could that adopted father ever spare her from his household? Herartlessness, her girlish sports, her innocence, her orphanage, had wound themselves thoroughly around his heart, just as around each parent's heart among us these tendrils climbing and fastening and blossoming and growing stronger. I expect he was like others who have loved ones at home- wondering sometimes if siclvnass will come and death and bereavement. Alas, worse than anything the father expects happens to his adopted child! Ah i,suerus. fi princely scoundrel, demands that Hadassah, the fairest one in all the kingdom, become his wife. Worse than death this marriage to such a monster of iniquity. IIow great the change when this young woman left the mie where God was worshipped and honored to enter a palace devoted to pride, idolatry and sensuality! "'As a lamb to the slaughter!"
Ahasuerus knew not that his wife was a Jewess. At the instigation of the infamous prime minister the king decreed that ali the Jews in the land should bo slain. Hadassah pleads the cause of her people, breaking through the rules of the court and presenting herself in the very face of death, crying, '"If I perish, I perish!" Oh, it was a sad time among that enslaved people! They had all heard the decree concerning their death. Sorrow, gaunt and ghastly, sat in thousands of households, and mothers wildly pressed Iheir infants to their breasts as tne days of massacre hastened on, praying that the sword stroke which slew the mother might also slav the child, rosebud and bud perishing in the same bl ast.
But Hadassah is busy at court. The hard heart of the king is touched by her story, and although he couid not reverse the decree for the slaying of the Jews, he sent forth an order that they should arm themselves for defense. On horseback, on mules, on dromedaries messengers sped through the land, bearing tne king's dispatches, and a shout of joy went up from that enslaved people at the faint hop* of siu cess. I doubt noS many a rusty blade was taken down and sharpened. Unbearded youths grew stout as giants at the thought of defending mo there and sisters. Desperat strung up cowards into heroes, and fragile women, grasping their weapons, swung them about the cradles, impatient for the time to strike the blow in behalf of household and country.
The day of execution dawned. Government officials, armed and drilled, cowed befoivd the battle shout of the oppressed people The crv of defeat rang back to the palaces, but above the mountains of dead, above. 75,000 crushed and mangled corpses, sounded the triumph of the delivered Jews, and their enthusiasm was as when the highlanders came to the relief of Lucknow, and the English army, which stood in the. very jaws of death, at the sudden hone of assistance and rescue, lifted the shout above belching cannon and the death groan of hosts, crying, "We are saved! We are saved!"
Mv subject, affords me opportunity of illustrating what Christian character may be under the greatest disadvantages. In the first place, our subject is an illustration of what Christian character may be under orphanage. This Bible line tells a long story about Hadassah. "She had neither father nor mother." A nobleman had become her guardian, but there is no one who can take the place of a parent. Who so able at night to hear a child's prayer, or at twilight to chide youthful wanderings or to soothe youthful sorrows? An individual will go through life bearing the marks of orphanage. It would require more strength, more persistence, more grace, to make such a one the right kind of a Christian. He who at forty years ioses a parent must reel under the blow. Even down to old age men are accustomed to rely upon the counsel or bo powerfully influenceo by the advice of parents if they aro still alive. But how much greater the bereavement when it comes in early life before the character is selfreliant and when naturally the heart is unsophisticated and easily led into temptation.
And yet behold what a nihility of disposition Hadassah exhibited. Though father and mother w^ro gone, grace had triumphed over all disadvantages. Her willingness to 33lf-Bacrifioe, her control over the
one of the best of the world's Chris*»
who adopted her suggest a condition of poverty. Yet from the very first acquaintance bad with Tla lassabi %vti find her the same happy aitfl contented Christian. It was only by compulsion she was afterward taken
At the commencement of business, at the entrance upon a profession, when friends are few and the world is afraid of you because there i^ a possibility of failure, manv of the noblest hearts that have struggled against poverty and are now struggling. To such I hear a message ol good cheer.
You have never told any one ol what a hard time you have had, but God knows it as weil as you know it. Your easy times will come after si while. Do not let your spirits break down midlife. What if your coat is thin? Run fast enough to keep warm. What if you have no luxuries on your table? High expectations will make your blood tingle better than the best Maderia. II you can not afford to smoke you can afford to whistle. But merely animal spirits are not sufficient the power of the gospel—that is what you want to wrench despair out of the soul and out you forward into the fi 0:11 of the hosts incased in iin* penetrable armor.
Again, our subject illustrated what religion may be under t-hi temptation of personal attractive^ ness. The inspired record savs of the heroine of ray text. "She wa? fair and beautiful." Her very nami signified "a myrtle."' Yet th.i admiration and praise and flitterv of the world did not blight her huniiip ty. The simplicity of her mannei and behavior equalled her extraori dinarv attritions. It is the sam? divine goodness which puts the tingf on the ruse's cheek, and the white' ness into the lily, and the gleam oi the wave, and that puts color in tli 4 cheek, and sparkle in the eye, an majesty in the forehead, and symmetry into the form, and gracefulness into the gait,. But many through the very charm of their per* sonal up pea ranee have been do* stroved.
Again, our subject exhibits whnt religion may be under bivd domesti 1 influences. Halassah was snatche I from the godly home into which sh 1 had been adopted and introduced in-* to ihe abominable r.siociations of which wicked Ahasuerus was the center. What a whirl of blasphemy and drunkenness and licontiousnessl No altar, no prayer, no S.ibb ith. no God! If this captive girl can be a Christian there, then it is possible to be a Christian anywhere. There are many of the best peonle of ihe world who are obliged to contend I with the most adverse domestic influences, children who have grown up into the love of Grd under the frown of parents and under the discouragement of bad example. Som? s:ster of the familv having possessed the faith of Jesus is the subject of unbounded satire inflicted by brothers and sisters- Yea, Hadassah was not the only Christian who had a queer husband.
Finallv our subject illustrates what religion may be in high worldly
Noble example, followed only by a very few. I address some who, through the goodness of God, have risen to positions of influence in the community where you live. In law, in merchandise, in medicine, in mechanics and in other useful occupations and professions you hold an influence for good or for evi!. Let us see whether, like Hadassah. you can stand elevation.
While last autumn all through the forests there were luxuriant trees with moderate oitbranch and moderate hight. pretending but little, there were foliage plants that shot far up, looking down with con-
My friends,
King, her humility, her faithful wor- jtraoeVhich outshona all the sple&4
position. The last we see in the .a court stenographer, and this sumiiible of Pers:a. Prepare now to mer she made a bicycle record of less see the departure of her humility than ten hours over the route from
and self-facrilice and religious prin ciple. As she goes up you may expect grace to go down. It is easier to be humble in the obscure house of her adopted father than on a throne of dominion. But you misjudge this noble woman. What she is A a herbeautv and her crown,she forgets not the cause of her suffering people and with all simplicty of heart still remains a worshipper of the God of heaven.
tempton the whole forest, clapping ficians on the sanitary corns of the New York Hoard of Health—Drp. Alice Mitchell, Helen Knight, and
th3ir hands in tho bresze and shouting, "Aha, do you not wish you were as high up as we are?" Gut last week a blast let loose from the north came rushing along and grappling the boasting oaks hurled them to the ground, and as they went down an old tree that had been singing The death of the "Blind Woman of psalms with the thunder a hundred Manzanares" has attracted wide atsutnmers crie 1 out, '"Pride goeth be-1 tentiou in Spain, where she was fore destruction and a haughty known from one end of the country spirit before a fall." And humblf to the other. She was a poet and hickory and pine and chestnut that had a remarkable talent for writing liad never said their prayers before begging verses, describing her misbowed their heads as much as to say, ery. Manv of the poems are beau"Amen." ,tifuland the author enjoyed a large
,cGod
THE FAIR SEX.
Again our subject is an illustra* Simpson, widow of Bishop tion of what religion may be undei ^tmpson, and her daughters, Mrs. the pressure of poverty. The cap-
au^
tivitv and crushed condition of this I their cottage at Long Branch, where orphan girl and of the kind man
theJ' hj*ye
seut
life there comos a season of strait- wiitei to as many of the sutleicrs as ened circumstances, when the severest calculation and most scraping cconomv are necessary in order tc subsistence and respect-ability.
her servants with glasses of
The daily wages of a factory girl Hiogo is nine sen, whereas in Toiio it is thirteen sen, and 10,000 pounds of coal, costing from twentyiwo to twenty-three yen in the latcity, can be had in the former !rom eighteen to nineteen yen. The ",en is equal to an American cent, ind the yen equivalent to a dollar.
A little girl In Twiggs co«nty, Georgia, caught a small live rattlesnake and brought it to her mamma. Luckily she had seized it by the neck uul so wasn't injured.
The study of nature had an absorbing interest for Celia Thaxter. In the summer she studied flowers md birds out of doors and in the printer she "read up" about them by her fireside, and if in her win tor drives she met a left over plant or bird she did not know, she made haste to write a naturalist and learn all she could about it. Her moments of greatest happiness were those she spent in her famous red and yellow garden with a Hock of eager and appreciative tourists about her.
Miss Sallie Monroe Swift, of Massachusetts, has won distinction in two ways. She is the official reporter of the Middlesex and Barnstable terms of the Supreme Court, being the first woman officially recognized
Yarmouth to Boston, 88J miles. She is said to be the first woman to make the ruu.
There are now three women phy-
Prancis G. Deane. They are under the same rules and are required to iio the same amount of hard work as their maseullue associates.
resisteth th? income. She was said to be one of
proud, but giveth grace to the hum- the best reciters in Spain, and many ble." Take from my eub'ect encour*iDf the most famous men in that ageraent. Attempt the service of Goc country made pilgrimages to her whatever vour disadvantages, and house to hear her. Queen Isabella whatever cur tot let us seek thai Rather a pension years ago, 6b« about
160.000.
P1t
W
Misses Simpson, are at
beon spending the sum-
mer. Mr?. Simusyn is enjoying excellent health,
Ladv Dufferin, who presides over the British embassy in Paris, is a ^uick-witted and warm hearted
into a sphere of honor and affluence. n*ish woman. While P: esideut CatIn the humble home of Mordecai,1 not bodv was lying in state, for her adopted father, she was a iight ^]oc^ around her house was a ira-s that illumined every privation. In ^-suffocating humanity. Lady Dufsorae period in almost every man's.
r&
"v^~ A
Tho outcome of a courtship nowadays largely a question of inconrm.
NICOTINIZED NERVES,
rhe Tobacco Iliblt Qnickly Broken nnd Nervo Force Cestorod—A Boon to Humanity.
A number of our great and most inreterate lobacc smoker* and cbe ^er.i bavequitthei.se cf tLo linhy wt-o 1. The ta ismanic ar.is.le ihat does tho nrorii is 1:0 to-bao. Thleform was started by Aaron Gorb r, who v\a* a ?oa. r:ed slave l'cr many years to tho a of tobucc tried the use 5f no-to-- ae, and to h's grrat surprise and delffiit it cureil
1
bim. Hen. W. As-hc ra, wh had in ii iried no-to-la aid it iured hinj. Jol. Samuel btoutener, who WOUIJ eat jp toi a oo li a cow ealc luiy, ir ed (itiw. nJerful re ed.v, and veu umJo!, aflor all his yea of Blav'ery, lo h! irj. .1. (J. Cobli-r, Le^ing r.vans, (rank Dell, Ge ge ii ay, C. Skillington, Iians 1 obinett, Frank Her. er^er, John Shinn, and others aave since tried no-to I an, a il in every :as^1hey report not nly a cure of t-hu lolacco habit but a w, nderful improvement in thei general physical ind mental condition, all wh eh \CGi to show that the of tobacco lad been in'iuLus to them in more *ra.vs than one. No to bac is pn ar rith the druggists, as the a'l sell un!er absolute" guarantee to ourj or re!i nd tho money.—From tho Press, Everett, i'a.
V- 7^7
Do You Wish the
Finest Bread and Cake
It is concedcd that the Royal Baking Powder is the purest and strongest of all the baking powders. The purest baking powder makes the finest, sweetest, most delicious food.
The strongest baking powder makes the lightest food. That baking powder which is both purest and strongest makes the most digestible and wholesome food.
Why should not every housekeeper avail herself of the baking powder which will give her the best food with the least trouble
Dr. Haines, of Rush Medical College, Consulting Chemist of the Chicago Board of Health, says: "Royal is not only the purest, but the strongest baking powder with which I am acquainted."
Chased the Chipmunk Down His Throat. 3iicft£0 Herald.
A very peculiar accident hapened recently to Eben White, a farmer living about four mile northwest of St. Johns, Mich. He had been workng in the woods and lay down to deep under a tree, and must have dept with his mouth open. A common liongrel pup and a small boy were lompanions. While the old man ilept the boy and the dog started a 1 chipmunk and proceeded to chase t. That chipmunk made tracks for safety, and seeing White's mouth pen dodged in. It was a new senuition to White to have a chipmunk trying to get down his throat alive, ind he woke up in a hurry. He learly choked to d?ath before he julled that chipmunk out, and then be killed the animal aud brought it .nto town to prove the truth of the story hetells. A doctor who examined 3 throat and mouth found it badly acerateJ, and says he believes Wbite's story is true.
End all tbe World K»ocus thic
!S THE BEST. 4.0 CQUEAKING.
$5. CORDOVAN,
FRENCH&. ENAMELLED CALF
1NECALF&1&NGAR01
$ o.l? F0LIGE.3 Soles.
*2 2 5 Z-
WORKINGHENs
EXTRA FINE.
-2JLy-3 BoysSchoolShqex •LADIES* 50$2.'1.75
,:""'DESTDCNG0tflm END FOR CATALOGUE
W-1.-DOUGLAS, D^OCKTON,
MASS.
You enn savo r:oney by wearing tho \V. L. Douglas
CZ.OD
Shoe.
Ilernnpr, v.-o aro tho largest manufacturers o! •his gradeuf shoes la Ciowurl.l, a«.l guarantees tlieii ralue by stamping llio iiu::io and prlco on tbi )tton., which protect you a!nst hish prices an :he middleman's profits. O-r shoes equal custom (Fork In style, easy fitting nnd wearing ^nalitloa iVehavethorn sild everywhere atlotvi-r pri.'.•»/»foi he value plven than nny ot jor m:!:n no sut» itltute. ir yoiir
coulee
cannot aupplj you,««« coo.
Madame Ruppert'a T',T7~ ppreeiaiinjc the factthftt thousand® #f of th« U. S. h»*e notuikui my Face i!lf»cb,ou account of price, which prr txitll«,«nil la order that all roiiy |?l*« k'r trlml, I will wnd a Sample Bottle, wfely pa'VeH, *U
rh«r(r«l
i»rep«W, on rerelpt ol SSt. ^ACK
BI.EACIi remoTM
ami
currt aiflolntely
all
frecklt*. phnplea. »»•'. Wackheaita, ""'o*-
nnm,
arno, owm, wrlokles, or roughn'm
rv:.,
«t
A
MMK. A.RTTPPKRT. Dpt. E. 6B. HthSt..N.Y.City
y\f
Wo offer employment to 3 men
0
women in eujh county
I/I/JSA/TT that will pay £15 a month. No "V-T\_fc capital required. Address 1\
W.
ZitttfliT St
Uo.. Box 1760,
Puilndelphia. Pit..
PATENTS. TRADE-MA«(S
Examination and advice as to Patentability of Invention. Send for inventors Guide or How :o tieta Patent. PAIHICK O'FAUHKLL., WUSN ngton, D. C.
AGENTS
WANTED In every city and village tor our detwtlff cr •eeretwork. Kxperieneeunnecfree. Uranium DetectlM
nmmrf. ParUeuUre free. Uranium MytectlM VdtMt U«ii Artad*! CiatlouUi OUUh
asm-*
71
Don't Offer Rownril
For your lost appetite. All know that it Is I valuable piece of personal property, but why K« to the expense whoa Host-ettor Stomach Bitters will restore it to you. A course
of
paralleled tonie and corrective not only Induce* a return
of
the relis'a for too 1.
A
rtamocr
Jt
is
confers upon
the stomach the power to gratify appetite without unpleasant sensations afterward For tht purpose of quh kenin,.c digestion, arousing a dormant liver or kidneys, and establishing regularity of tho bowels, no medicine can exceed this Kenia: family cordial, in wiii^h the pure al I coholio principle is modified by blending with it I l.otanic elements of tne ui-raest elMja.-.v. Avoid ie riery unalloyed stiiinlants of commnive as a moans of over^om u^ inactivity of any of tlifl' organs at ove menno.ied and use, insi-civd. tlifl the Hitters. T»iis prof 'ssionally sanctioned medicine remedies ma.aria and raeumatic ail' ments.
u=ually
put
tipon
a
CXJ&n
is
|WINE OF CARDUI.|
For Female Diseases.
45th Year—Bryant & Stratton.
Indianapolis USINESS UNIVERSIT
When Block. Elevator. Day and Ni« it School' Oldest, lartioet, best equipped nnd mcst wideii -y" known BusineeH, Shorthand. Penmanship an3 Preparatoty School. Pre-eminently superior i» every respect. Graduates assisted to positional. Call or write for Ol-pa.ro catalogue and speot 'v--k-mous of Penmanship. Telophone 409.
J2. J. HKGB. Mannger.
INDPLQ
CoiianmptlTee and ponple whohnve ireiiii Inntraor
A»%w
ma. ebonlrt use l*iso Cure
for
Coneumpilttii. It I mi curcil thonsnnda. It hns not ifijnrone. It ts iot b«d to t»K«.
Is the bfcs:. cnutfli syrnp. Bold everywhero. Sue. a?
r*
-.
'****&?#
••,
that ua-
theat
rical Venturis when it fails to draw well.
There is more Catarrh in this section of tho country than all otLer uisoases put together and until the last few years was supposed to bs iuourable. Fer a groat many years doctor# pronounced it alcotl disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly (ailing ta cure with local treatirioat. pronounced it incurable. isc'tuee has proven catarrh to be a constitutional uisease, aud thir«f»-re requires constitutional treatment. Hall's itarrh Oura manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on th® I market- It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly up* Ion the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for anj case it fails to Cc-ure. tend for cireulra aa4 testimonials. Adcietss
4
F. C'HKNEYA CO., Toledo O?
{3ir*Sold by all druggists, 7oc. Olio of the. brightest ideas of the century is the electric light.
The melody «f musieis divine, butitfsno more encaantin^ than a yiu i0r t'iri lace made supieaiely beautiful by tut aso of bi.ouu'* p.iur su.tp,
Letitia—Why d-j voti always go ont betwi'o.i t.Jiii acts? Von Hu.o.v— in vkos too much disturbance to go wniie lito act is in progress.
Mrs. Weif«io\v*4 SOOTHING SYIIBP for ehil drcn teething. Koftens the gi.m. reduves inflammation, allays p..iu. cures viind colic. &>o a Lottie.
A spring cold lia^ hunt. it. into our horut that cata Tii sometimes plays tho mischiof with the ear drum.
Moro
M'.clit^a II -urii!* i«
vi
I'o lntiyl-
vani l.iiinx.
On October 17th and November nth Homeseekers' Hxcursion Tickets to joints in Mionigan wiil be sold at rediu ed rates via Peiiiis.vlvania Lines, good reti rning twenty (as from date of sale, l-'or details apply to nearest Pennsylvania Line Ticket Agent.
Everybody Is Going South Now-n-flay* The only section of the country where
tha
farmers have made any money the ist year ia the South. If you wis to change yo.i saould go down now an.1 see for yourself. T.ie Lo lisvilla &Nashvil!e K.ailroad and con.lections will set tkkets to all points south fur all trains of Ootoi er a. November 6, aud Dei.eml.er4. at one fare for the round trip. Ask your ticko a.ent about it. and if he cannot sell jo iexeur sion tickets write to P. At.nore. Gen r.il Pas enger Agent. Louisville. Ky., or Geo. L. Cross, N. W. Jr\ A.. C.iicago, 111.
'"S's
CXJ%E»
I McELREES
1
is 'I
