Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 3 January 1895 — Page 2
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'THE GREENFIELD REPCBL1CAN
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. s|
-VOL. 16, Mo. 1—Entered at Uw Pot toft c«M tMond-filmsa mail matter. W. 8^'MONTGOMERY,
Publisher and Proprietor.
fenMon This Week, 2,596.
FABEWBLL 1894.
WKLCOME 1895.
R. HAPPY New Year to all our readers.
REMEMBER it is easy to make good resolutions but hard to keep them. Do your best at the latter.
GREENFIELD'S prospects for 1895 are brighter than for any year of her history. Let every citizen of our handsome little city come up to the level of his best work during 1895. If they all do, marvelous 1|| results will follow. Do your duty.
BSSTEI'K THE St. Louis Globe Democrat says that there are now four full fledged candidates for the Republican presidential nomination. Harrison, Reed, McKinley,
Allison. The Globe Democrat says the t*ifriii fight will be between Reed and McKinley and it favors Reed. If the fight is between Reed and McKinley the REPUBLICAN is decidedly in favor of Reed.
THE first crooked policeman who has been sentenced, as a result of the Lexow investigation, was ex-Police Captain John L. Stephenson, who was fined $1,000 and sentenced to Sing Sing for three years and nine months. The bribe he was sentenced on was only six bushels of peaches. Sing Sing won't hold all the corrupt policemen, sergeants, captains, commissioners, judges, etc., who have been caught by the Lexow drag net. If Police Supt Byrnes is not as guilty as the commoner ones he is an ignoramus, and on either grounds, wholly unfit to have charge of the New York police.
THE State Teachers Association recommended that the flag salute, as prepared and authorized by the Woman's Relief Corps, be a part of the exercises of all our public schools. We thoroughly believe in that idea, and thluk that a love and reverence for the American flag and all that it stands for should be instilled into "the hearts and minds of all oar school children, It will make them nobler and better men and women. Let the flag salute be given inside and the beautiful starry banner kept floating over every school-house in our land. We understand that steps will be taken in the near future to unfurl to the breezes handsome flags over all the school-houses in our city. Speed the day.
FOUR great battlefields are now being converted into national parks, viz: Gettysburg, Chickamauga, Antietam and Shiloh. These are to be preserved as jspamemorials, and proper tablets, stones, s,: artillery, etc., placed so as to mark as nearly as possible where various regiments were stationed and fought. Congress is united in thi3 work, and the promptness with which these measures were acted upon is significant. Four of the most famous fields of the civil war are now to be preserved for the wonder and study of farture generations, and that, too, with the hearty co-operation and by the mutual desires of victors and vanquished on the fields. It is doubtful whether there is anything quite like this to be found in history. These will be marks of valor that equal, if they do not surpass, everything in the pages of history. These will be Meccas for pilgrims.
IT WAS thought by many, the REPUBLICAN among the number that a canning factory was just the thing for Greenfield and the adjacent country. A factory properly put in and then operated in a careful, economical and business like ir&'c manner will no doubt pay but it looks like the canning industry was being over done somewhat. Smooth agents are now going around over Indiana and Illinois locating canning factories by means of joint stock companies and they are getting them so thick that the market will be overstocked with canned goods. These canneries like the creameries are being sold at about three or four times their proper value. Hancock county citizens know that they paid from $5,500 to $7,000 psjy for creameries that were worth from Sffi $1,500 to $2,500 at the outside. Joint p§ stock companies is a favorite way with aff smooth citizens to swindle people. They fS? generally secure some man in whom the a people have confidence sometimes by1 1^1 pulling the wool over his eyes and fooling him like they do the rest but frequently by giving him a share of stock (on the quiet) to help said smooth citizen to unload the rest of the stock on the neighbors and friends at three or four times its value. Creameries were worked in that way a few years ago.
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Canning factories have been and are being worked that way. Since the horse market has got dull and practically worthless stallions are being sold on the •^joint stock company- plan. Last year in
Grant county a Hackney stallion was put |off on a joint stock company at $3,500, iwtaen an importer in an adjoining conntv ?aid that he would have been glad to A \ave furnished equally as good a hoase of *e same, stock at $600. The REPUBLICAN justs that all the farmers of Hancock jnntjr will be on their guard against all mt stock* company swindlers£VN"ow
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tad you wf do not say all joint stock erprises ale cfwiudlee, for some are all but Jots of them will, bear invest!-
Dotft jump tofy quick at some tl'j
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LINE8 BY LEO XIII ON HIS DEATH.
The setting ran at this thy close of day On thee, OLeo, sheds its parting ray. Within thy withered veins, thy wasted frame. Slow, slow burns downward life's expiring flams. Death's arrow flies, the funeral veil unfolds. The oold remains, the grave her conquest holds, But swift the panting soul, her fetters riven, Spreads her free wings and aeeks her native heaven. The long and toilsome road has reached Its end. .^S Thy holy will, my Saviour, I attend, -gife And, if so great a graoe thou canst aoeord, 3 .- Reoeive my apixit in thy kingdom. Lord I 1 1 —Ckurchman.
HIS SURPRISE.
Adam and Eve were probably the only wedded couple of whom no one ever said, "How could he?" or "How could she?"
Certainly, when the staid old bachelor, Jonas Hingham ("35 if he's a day!" said the wondering "other girls"), carried off Mary Morton, not yet out of her teens, right in the face and eyes of many admiring boys, a great many people wondered, "How could she?"
At home she occupied the sometimes questionable position of the middle one in a family of three daughters. Nobody doubted that she was good and useful, but she was not brilliant and fascinating like her older sister, Amy, nor was she a pretty doll of a girl to be petted as everybody petted her younger sister, Bess.
Amy had troops of beaux that she wound around her finger and made her most obedient slaves, but Jonas Hingham was Mary's first attentive escort, and his devotion and sincerity carried her heart by storm.
Jonas pleaded eloquently for an early wedding day, and Mary was nothing loath, for life with Jonas and for him seemed like paradise in anticipation.
He lived three miles away on a large farm, his father's and grandfather's before him. His father had been dead several years, and his mother, though still active and industrious, was too old to work as she had always done. •Everybody knew the Hinghams were forehanded, free from debt and with money at interest. The Mortons, on the contrary, had always lived from hand to mouth, Mr. Morton's trade never having sufficed to do much more than provide a home, with ample food and clothing, besides educating the girls as they wanted to be, with music and painting and all the ornamentals which girls in country villages sigh after.
It is safe to say that Mary never dreamed of the change it would be for her to go from her snug, pretty homo into that great, bare farmhouse—like changing from soft, musical poetry to plain, dry prose.
Summer and winter the family had always worked and ate and sat in the great kitchen, except when company came. Then they rolled up the green paper shades in the sitting room and sat in there. Everything was stiff, bare, orderly and scrupulously clean. "Stepping into Mother Hingham's shoes" meant more real, downright hard work than Mary had ever dreamed of, but sho was young and strong and would not flinch when she saw that both Jonas and his mother expected her to be the notable, hardworking housewife the elder woman had always been.
Her hands grew brown and hard, her dresses grew old fashioned, and she had neither time nor care to remodel them, as she seldom went anywhere, except occasionally to church and more rarely still on a brief visit to her father's.
Then babies came as the years went by—boys, always boys. "If I only had a girl," thought Mary sometimes, "she might grow up to help me and do all the light and pretty things that 1 have forgotten how to do, but these boys will never care for such things."
Mother Hingham lived but a few years after Mary came there. To the last she was happy and content, fond of Mary and at homo in the farmhouse, still unchanged. "Jonas will have to hire help for his wife, now that his mother is gone," people said.
But he didn't seem to think of that. As long as Mary did not complain he never dreamed she was overdoing or needed anything she did not have.
One of the established traditions of the house was that they must have a hired girl through haying time, never at any other time of the year unless in case of sickness.
So through harvesting and the fall housecleaning, the meat killing and the spring sugaring, up to haying time again, Mary's one pair of hands did the work till—she broke down.
Jonas was worried about indoor matters, not that he was so miserly Ire did not like to pay hired help, but who was to take care and oversee it all?
Of course the Mortons were as agitated as Jonas himself, and as much as they could came to the rescue, but Mrs. Morton was growing old and could not work as she once had done, and Amy had made a brilliant match years ago.
Bessie was still at home and single, but had never enjoyed going there when Mary was well, and with Mary sick it could not be thought of.
Jonas had bad luck finding capable indoor help, and it was a great relief to them all when Aunt Vi, Mr. Morton's maiden sister, came from the west, and not having any particular home anywhere willingly took the leadership in the Hingham household.
But somehow Mary didn't seem to gain at *11, and Aunt Vi told Mrs. Morton that Mary seamed'to have lost all interest in life. "Jonas is just as kind as can be, and the boys are all smart and bright and fond of her. They are forehanded and have a good: homp, but it seems as if she doesn't care about living. I do think if she had an ambitiqn to get well die would." I •.Vjln the very depths «f winfer Mrs. orton's »l*terfrom Boston, Mr#.
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first visit to the place sinceMary's marriage. "Yon must go to see Mary in her own home," said Mrs. Morton, "but the poor ehild is too weak to Visit much. We will go there together and spend the day, and it will gratify her, though abw oannot enjoy it as if she was welL "I'll sleep with Mary tonight and wait upon her," said Mrs. Morton to Aunt Vi, as bedtime came on, "and 70a can go up stairs and get a good night's rest." "We'll sleep together, Aunt
Was it all chance that the chamber the two ladies occupied had in the wall auopen stovepipe hole leading through to the one where Jonas slept with 5 yearold Teddy?
He slept soundly for awhile, but perhaps it was his good angel that woke him just in time to hear Aunt Vi ask, "What do you think about Mary?"
Mrs. Cramer was a lady who used not only her eyes and ears, but her brains as well. Being new to the Hingham house, she saw it through unaccustomed eyes, and she made up her mind fully. "I think," she said impressively, "that she is starving to death!" "For the land sakes!" ejaculated Aunt Vi. "You don't know what you're talking about. Such a provider as Jonas is! Always buys his flour by the barrel and keeps two sorts, one for bread and one for pastry makes no end of maple sugar and buys all the white sugar a body has a mind to use kills the nicest of pork and beef every winter, with turkeys and chickens and geese and ducks lambs in the fall and the beautifulest veal every spring buys fresh meat any time in the summer, and of course they have milk and cream and eggs of their own all the year round. He's always bringing home honey and fruit and oysters, any luxury he happens to see. He's too fond of good living himself to starve anybody in his house!" "The eating is a very small part of true life," said Mrs. Cramer when Aunt Vi paused for breath. "1 can see that Mary's mind and soul are starving here in this bare house, where work and utility are the foremost things and beauty and pleasure have no place. Her better nature is being literally starved to death."
No matter what further the ladies said, Jonas Hingham heard no more, though he neither put his fingers in his ears nor rose and stopped the stovepipe hole. Mrs. Cramer's words had opened his eyes to a naked, unpalatable truth and set him to such serious thinking and plannings that he had no ears for anything more. "Mary looks brighter this morning," said Aunt Cramer at breakfast. "She certainly does," said Jonas, "and I think your visit has done her good. I tell you what, Mary," he said, turning to her, "I want you to hurry up and get stronger, so that the first jnild, pleasant day I can carry you to your father's to stay a week. I believe the change would do you good."
A warm, mellow day came like a smile into the heart of the winter. Jonas urged, and Aunt Vi seconded, till between them they wrapped her snugly, and cushioned in the warmest and softest of robes she took a sleigh ride to her father's house, where Jonas left her. "And now. Aunt Vi," he said, coming in on his return, with his arms loaded with rolls of paper, "I want your help in a conspiracy. The long and short of it is that you and I and the boys and all the help we need are going to work with paint and paper and carpets and furniture to make this house look so Mary won't know it at all when she comes back."
The painters came the next day the paperers followed. Jonas brought home nice carpets and women to make them. Loads of now furniture came to the door and new stoves to replace the-for-lorn, antiquated ones.
An elegant new bookcase was stocked with a well selected library, and choice pictures were purchased to hang on the renewed walls.
Jonas was not devoid of taste when he tried to exercise it, and when he doubted his own judgment he took counsel of those who were to be relied on.
One lovely day, the last of February, he went to bring her home. Aunt Vi and the boys waited patiently for their coming.
When the sleigh stopped at the door, Jonas lifted her carefully out and carried her, all wrapped, as .she was, into the house, straight through the hall into tbe long unused parlor and placed her in the softest and easiest of easy chairs.
A soft colored carpet covered th9 floor, pretty paper adorned the walls, sunlight streamed in warm at the windows, but did not outshine the cheerful fire in the open stove, new books and magazines lay on the table, the canary in a gilded cage was trilling his best songs, and the plants in the sunniest window seemed smiling a welcome to their mistress. "How pretty mother looks!" cried Teddy.'- -O"'
., It Paid the
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Truth to tell, a most becoming red had crept ihto the pale cheeks, perhaps agleam from the rose colored future her husband was portraying. W
Pills, powders and plasters were all given the go by, and Mary got well on happiness. Said Jonas: "Furniture bills and all those things are no higher than doctors' bills and vastly more satisfying. Comfort and happiness are more pleasant to take than medicine and do more good. I've learned my lesson rather late in life, but I've learned it once for all. "—Good Housekeeping.
We never kne\y of bijt oiie ease in which advertising did not pay. It occurred in Chicago.- A burglar overlooked $80 in a bureau drawer, and the paper so announced* Hp, returned the laext night, and not ohl/secured it* bat a suit of clothes
N, THURSDAY, JANUARY 3.1895.
ERRORS ABOUT HELL.
NO HELL HEREAFTER WOULD MEAN v, ALL HELL HERE.
There Is Boom In Heaven For Bvcry One of Vi, bat Ualeas We Live Bight That Room Will B« "To L«t" Through All Sterility.
God Bond to Poniah Sin.
Vi,"
added Mrs. Cramer, "and keep each other warm and have a good visit besides."
When we speak of hell, we call it all hell, indifferently and without distinction. There are great differences of conBtitution and of temperament, and there must be necessarily corresponding differences of moral obligation. That which is a temptation to one produces in another the feeling of intense disgust. Our natural capacities, our means of obtaining knowledge, our various aids to assist us in the pursuit of it, the different natures and qualities of our actions, will all be taken into consideration.
Christ will not let the devil have more in hell than there will be in heaven, for then satan would laugh at Christ. In the father's house are many mansions. St. John tells us that there will be a host beyond all count who will get into heaven. Why should not you, then, be saved? We quote the following to cheer up the disconsolate: "And he measured the city with a reed 12,000 furlongs. The length, height and breadth of it are equaL "—Revelation zxi, 16.
Twelve thousand furlongs—7,920,000 feet—whioh, being cubed, is 948,988,000,000,000,000,000,000 cubic feet, the half of which we will reserve for the throne of God and the court of heaven, half of the balance for the streets, and the remainder, divided by 4.96, the cubical feet in the rooms (19 feet square and 16 feet high), will be 5,743,758,000,000 rooms.
Rooms "To Let" Through Eternity.
We will now suppose the world always did and always will contain 900, 000,000 inhabitants, and a generation will last 38 years—2,700,000 every century—and that the world will stand 100,000 years—27,000,000,000,000 persons. Then suppose there were 11,280 such worlds equal to this number of inhabitants and duration of years then there would be a room 16 feet long and 17 feet wide and 15 feet high for each person, and yet there would be room." But a prepared place implies a prepared people. There is a room in heaven for every one of us, but unless we live right that room will be "to let" through all eternity. "God is love." But love is not an effeminate tenderness—a weak, womanish sympathy that cannot punish the disobedient. God is love, but he is also just, and justice always punishes. There was a timo when the terror of the law was preached too much. Now the pendulum has swung over to the other extreme—too much love. As a consequence we have much rose colored religion—a soft, sentimental thing, gaudy rhetorio which means nothing, a religion of words, words—words such as Rovers use. We need today an aggressive, vigorous, positive Christianity.
A Dead Letter Law.
God is bound by the holiness of his nature to punish sin. It is an exercise of power which becomes him as the moral governor of the world. There is nothing cruel or vindictive in God to prohibit sin by a law. A law without a penalty is a dead letter, and the penalty must be such as to deter men from sinning. Is it cruel in God to ordain man with the power of choice? Is God a monster of cruelty because when I abuse my free agency he leaves ine to suffer the result of my folly?
God is almighty, and therefore he will save everybody if he can, and if he can save everybody he will. When Christ was groaning in Gethsemane beneath a ponderous load of anguish, he cried out in tho deepest agony of his soul, "If it be possible, let this cup pass from me!" He prayed the same words three times, yet it appears that the cup did not pass from him, and why may it not be impossible for God to save sinners who hate his law, blaspheme his goodness, reject his grace, ecorn his Christ, laugh at his church, hoot at divine mercy, defy divine justice and persist in rebellion and impenitence to the end? God can no more save such men, because of his very nature, than he can oreate two mountains without a valley between them.
Will purgatorial flre fit a soul for heaven? If so, the fundamental Bible principle of divine forgiveness would be done away with. Then why did Christ die? As a matter of fact, in human experience, does punishment reform? If so, why is not one trial sufficient? Why are our most hardened criminals men who have been incarcerated over and over again? There have been reformations, but they were brought about through Christian influences.
The man given to lust suffers the most excruciating agony, with the full knowledge that his suffering is directly caused by his sin, and as soon as his paroxysms of suffering are over he goes again to his transgression and shame. The drunkard suffers again and again all the horrors of the delirium. He is overwhelmed with fears. He believes that the serpents twine themselves about his body, laughingly cuddle in his boots and fasten their poisonous fangs in his bloated cheeks. He knows that this is the awful penalty of his love for the cup. Aching, rasping, cruoifying, damning torture! In hell on earth. Does it reform him? The first thing in the early morning is his cup.
Time is the only stage of probation. Either here or nowhere are we to prove our fitness for heaven. If men will not hear Christ now, under favorable circnmstances, neither will they be persuaded if in some future world Christ should manifest himself to them. If mankind could be made to believe that there was no hell, or that'they would te given another chance to repent in the next toorld, Civilization would rush into barbarism. feNo hell hereafter would ne^aMi ibfcft here:
Dr C. A.
Office with D. W. R. King, West Mail. Street, Greenfield, Ind.
Practice limited to diseases of the
NOSE, THROAT, EAR andJYE.
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ELMER J. BINFCMID,
LAWYER.
Special attention given to collections, eettllni estates, guardian business, conveyancing, »tc Notary always in office.
Office—Wilson block, opposite court-house.
ANNA L- WILSON,
HOMEOPATHIC
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office 39 E. Main street. Residence, corner Bradley and Lincoln streets.
Specialty—Diseases of Women and Children. City and country calls promptly answered, dw
DB. U. LOCHHEAD,
HOMEOPATHIC PIII'SICIAN and SURGEON.
Office at 23X W. Main street, over Early's drug store. Prompt attention to calls in city or country.
Special attention to Childrens, Womens' and Chronic Diseases. Late resident physician St. Louis Childrens Hospital. ?9tly
L. B. GRIFFIJ, B. D.,
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON.
All calls answered promptly. Office and resllence No. 88 West Main St., (one-hall square west of postoffice) Greenfield, Ind. 93-18-ly)
"And the Leaves of the Tree Were for the Healing of the Nations."—Rev. YYTT—9
MAN-0-WA,
To whom it may concern: We the undersigned business men of Prankfort, Ind.. certify that, we have known Dr. W F. Peffiey (Man-O-Wa) the past two years, and know him to be not only a good citizen, honorable and square in all his dealings and reasonable in his charges, but also as a skillful physician, and that he has had a large and extensive practice during h.s residence here:
G. Y. FOWLKR, Editor Frankfort Times. STALEY & BURNS, Publishers News-Banner, A. D. BERRY, Pastor Baptist Church. T. C. DALBY, Postmaster. J. H. PARIS & SONS, Dry Goods, HANN A & MATTIX, Boots and Shoes. FISHERBKOS., Novelty Store. DAVID T. HfLL, Sheriff of Clinton County. W. P. STEVENS'.'N, Furniture. CUSHWA BROS, Confectionery. A. A. LAIRD, Druggist. N. 0. DAVIS, M. D. Of Anti Haldache Fame. L, HILSINGER, American?Express Agent.
DR. MAN-O-WA: Forover one year my daughter, Vira, was a constant sufferer from Cystetis. She was confined to the house, she was greatly reduced in flesh and strength. She was treated by several prominent physicians, but to no avail. We had dispaired of ever bavins her cured. But we are happy to say that after four months use of your Indian Herb Extracts, she is enjoring perfect health. BICHARD M. DAVIS, Geenfield, Ind., July 24, '94.
Dr. Man-O-Wa treats, and cures 85 per cent, of all chronic diseases given up by other physicians as incurable. Office in Wilson's New Block, Greenfield. Office days, Friday and Saturday of each week.
No money required of responsible parties to begin treatment. Terms $3.00 to $8.00 per month.
Positions Guaranteed
Under reasonable conditions. Do not say it can not be done, till you send for free 120 page Catalogue, of Drauhon's Practical Business College, Nashville, Tenn. This college is strongly indorsed by bankers and merchants all over the United States as well as Foreign Countries.
Four weeks by Draughon's method of teaching bookkeeping is equal to twelve weeks, by the old plan. Special advantages in shorthand, penmanship and telegraphy. Cheap board. Open to both sexes, 36 states and territories now represented. Write for 120 page Catalogue which will explain "all". Address J. F. Draughon, Prest, Nashville, Tenn. Mention this paper, '.-f-1
N. B. This College has prepared books for home study, bookkeeping, penmanship and shorthand. w-Jan-Feb.
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Secure a Position.
Wanted for office work, on salary, in most every conniy in the South, a young lady or gentlemen. Those from the coantry also accepted.
Experience not necessary. Infact prefer a beginner at a small salary at first, say, to begin from $80 to $60 per month, chances for promotion
4
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"W Ivi
Architect, Co.
Address, GREENF1'
Plans and spei
AT IiOV
Persons who are in\
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1855. I..
HUGHES
GREENFIl
Transact a gener ness, receive depos negotiate loans, ho insure property.
We also have a safe for the safe deeds and valuable of our customers fre«|
Money safe guardt and all modern impi We make a sped: loans on long time a rat" """Interest, ana can: investments in that kind anytime.
furni ofpav,
Bank. No. 29. West Main Street,
THE GREENFIELD
Charities,
Editorial, News of the week," Sunday-School, Ministerial Register,
Financial Insiuance, Old and Young, L'ebbles, Farih and (iiirden,
Odd Knots.
Westward.
Eastward.
'good." Must de
posit in bank cash, about $100. No loan asked no investment requireJ. It is a salaried and permanent position (strictfy Office work). Our enterprise is strongly endorsed by bankers. Address P. O. Box'433, Nashville, 7.eQQ* Mention this paper. ..... j/5f» d-w-Jan-Feb t-i,
Meals.
find
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•LAUNDRY
EAST MAIN STREET GREENFIELD, IND. First-class work at reasonable prices is our motto. Your patronage is respectfully solicited.
Office at the Lee Chong Laundry
West Main street. Leave your orders. I All work not satisfactory will, if I returned, be re-laundried free of I, charge.
Carpets cleaned at the lowest prices. 38tf
Li. L. Sing, Prop
The Independent.
NEW YORK.
A Religious, Literary and Family Newspaper.
Undenominational, unbiased and impartial. As? paper for clergymen, scholars, tenchcrs, business men anil Jamilies. It discusses every topic ot the day—religious, theological, political, literary, social, 'J 1 .irtistie ami scientific. Its contiilmiod ai Iicles are by the most eminent writers ?j. of the English /, S language.
It employs specialists and distinguished writ ers ol' its twenty-one departments, as follows: •. Literature, Science, Music, i'jne Arts, Sanitary, Missions, lteligious Intelligence, ,•••
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A paper for Sunday-School Workers, those who have a Farm, Harden or House Plants. A paper for the family, old and young.
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Indiaiiapolis Division.
ennsyivaniapes.
Schedule of Passenger Trains-Central Time
AMI I'M
*5 30*7 15
Colnmbus Urbana.. Piqua Covington Bradford Jc Gettysburg Greenville. Weavers New Madison Wileys New Pans Richmond. Centreville.. German town Cambridge City Dublin Strawns Lewisville Dunreitli Knightstown Ciiarlottsville Cleveland Greenfield Philadelphia Cumberland... Irvinston. miinii«»i»oli»..ar.
442 5 37 557 615
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1158l 6 37 12ID8 12 15 658 12121 12 29
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730
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1140 1230
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AM AM
3 30*5 10
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111 11 annpol s. .1 v. Irvington Cumberland Philadelphia Green Held Cleveland Cliarlottsvillo Knightstown Dunreitli Lewisville Strawns..: Dublin Cambridge City.." Germautown Centreville Richmond..
8 461208 C9 02I 906 917i1 93012 9 40,12# 9 471 966 10 02, 110107
7 0010 35 710,1049 f7 21110 56 f7 31jll'06 7 3811 13 f7 47ilU2a 7 58,1133 S f8 It 11 46I&-, 8251121115 m»' 834|12
New Paris VVileys New Madison Weavers (Ireenville Gettysburg lirariford .Ic Covington Piqua Urnana Columbus ar
23i.
8 4612 35,
9*0 12® 315,545 PM I PM
Flag Stop.
No*. 6,8 and 30 connect at Columbua
Pittsburgh and the East, and at Richtnond Day ton, xenia and Springfield, and No/1 &>£'. Cincinnati.
Trains leave Cambridge City
at
t7 05
Cambridge City t12.$t&nd ffi.35
a.
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00 P. m. for Rushvllle, ShelbyvilU
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JOSEPH WOOD,, E. A. FGRIP^TL MianllUaMilr.?4' mrtitnttmn, PKNft'A.' rcardwr^tai off 1mm
