Marshall County Republican, Volume 22, Number 31, Plymouth, Marshall County, 18 July 1878 — Page 4
THE REPUBLICAN.
BT SIDE RS A PIPER.
They Say." "They say! Ah! Well suppose they do; Rut can they prove this story true ? Suspicious may arise from naught But malice, envy, want of thought, Why count yourself among the "they" Who whisper what they dare not aay T "They say !" Bat why the tale rehearse, And help' to make the matter worse? No good ran possibly accrue From telling what may be untrue ; And is it not a nobler plan To speak uf all the beat you can? "They say!" Well, If it should be so. Why need you tell the tale of woeT Will it the bitter wrong redress, Or make the pang of sorrow lass? Will it the erring one restore Henceforth to "go and sin no more !" "They aay!" Oh, pause and look within! See how the heart inclines to sin; Watch, lest in temptation's hour Thou, too, sboulost sink beneath its power. Pity the frail, wsep o'er their fall. But speak of good or not at all.
Religious Intelligence, The new Methodist Hymnal is just ready for circulation. Ex-Senator Bevels, pastor of the Methodist church of colored folks in Indiana, has paralysis. The Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States will not celebrate its centennial till Christmas day, 1884. I1 Piere Hyacinthe, who is lecturing in Paris, draws only small and inferior audiences. His popularity is a thing of the past. The Bible has been printed in 30 different languages for the benefit of the aborigonees of this country ,and of Greenland, British America and Mexico. The Baptist Theological Seminary at Chicago, has a Scandinavian department, under charge of a special professor, who Is supported by voluntary contributions. Hereafter the question is to be asked those applying for admission into a Southern Methodist Episcopal Annual Conference. Are you in debt so as to embarrass you.?" The colored Baptists of the South are trying to help themselves to a better education. They are making efforts to establish a school to educate their preachers in Louisville Ky., and a theological seminary in Alabama. The average salary of the ministers of the Irish Presbyterian Church last year was $925. Besides this, many have means, furnished them. The entire income of the Church was $60,000 in advance of that of any previous year. The Zurich Gazette, Switzerland, recently contained the following: "Church of Fluntern. On the occasion of the national rifle contest, which will commenne on Sunday morning, public worship will be suspended. The Council of the Parirish." There are said to be 117,552 Scandinavian members in the Lutheran Church of this country, of whom 40,000 affiliated with the General Council, 53,800 with the Synodical Conference, 850 with the General Synod, and 33,631 maintained an independent position. After much delay, the edition of the Book of Common Prayer in the Dakota language is finished. It is the first instance of the publication of the entire Prayer Book in an Indian tongue. It is bouud in cloth, and has red edges to meet the prevailing Indian taste. The Canada Presbyterian Church reports the receipt of $45,067 in the past year for home missions. The expenditures were $51,857. There are 120 missions, 335 preaching stations, 102 churches, and 4,700 communicants. Aid is also given to about 120 congregations. The seven Congregational seminaries have 35 Professors and 19 lecturers. The number of students in them all is 327. Andover has lost its former superiority in numbers, having only 66 students this year to New Haven's 102. The three schools west of New England have only 79 in all. The high esteem entertained by the First Church people of Buffalo N. V., for their excellent pastor, the Rev. David R. Fraser, received fitting expression a few days ago by presenting him with a thousand dollar draft on New York, and through tickets to Liverpool, England, and return, for himself and family. Ex. The Friends of New England have adopted some New measures in admitting women to equal vote in the election of officors of the yearly meeting, deciding that all conveyances of real estate must be signed by both males and females concerned, and also voting that women are eligible to the offices of the Society of Friends. In the Church of St Catherine Cree, London, the twenty-sixth annual "Flower Sermon" has been preached. Everybody who attended the services carried a bouquet. A collection was made after the sermon, the object being to provide a fund for placing in the church a stained glacs-window, to be called the "Flow-er-sermon Window." The Episcopal Society of the increase of ministry declares its need of $15,000 to meet obligations which mature by the last of August. This is the high Church society, which has its headquartrs in Hartford. The
corresponding society of the Low Church party halls from Philadelphia, and needs about as much money as its High Church brother. Dr. Alexander Wincbell, of Syracuse, has been missed from the scientific lectureship of Vanderbilt University, because his views on the antiquity of man and on other subjects are considered by the Southern Methodists to conflict with the Word of God. Professor Winohill characterizes his dimissal as "ecclesiastical proscription for an opinion which must be settled by scientific evidence,
Complaints are still made, even among the Baptists, that Northern teachers in tho South are ignored and ostracised. The teachers in Leland University, for instance, a school of the American Baptist Home Mission Society, are not admitted to Baptist society in New Orleans, and this not withstanding the fact that the last Southern Baptist Convention adopted a report approving the educational work among the freedmen. The Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions issues an appeal to the Church, stating that there is a debt of $47,000 which, with the estimates of the missionaries, makes the whole sum required $553,000. This amount the Board has cut down to $476,000, which involves a "serious restriction of the work," which had rather to be enlarged. The Board asks the churches to increase their contributions so that the salaries, at least, of the missionaries, may remain undiminished. A mass-meeting of Christians at Philadelphia and vicinity," held lasc week, Bishop Simpson presiding, passed resolutions calling on the Mayor to enforce the laws of 1749, which binds individuals, societies and corporations to obstain from worldly business upon the first day of the week, and imposes a penalty upon any person who shall "do or perform any worldly employment or business whatsoever on the Lord's Day, commonly called Sunday, works of necessity and charity only excepted." At Newport, R. I., quite a revival has been in progress during the winter in which representatives of the C&tholic, Methodist, Episcopalian, Unitarian and Baptist bodies have confessed their faith among the Friends. Singularly enough in this work, the members of the society have broken loose from many of their peculiar customs, and have allowed singing and a free and full conference upon the subject of religion, the meetings in many instances resembling those peculiar to the Methodist denomination. Ex. There was a bit of sharp shooting the other evening in a Methodist Church in Tennessee. The pastor, who served in the war was a Union soldier, suffered in a battle the loss of an eye. He was speaking in prayermeeting on the glories of heaven, and an ex-Confederate chimed in saying: "Yes, brother there will be no oneeyed saints in glory." The pastor replied. That's so ; for there will be no rebels there so shoot their eyes out." Thers was no response of "Gloy ; hallelujah" on the part of the ex-Confederate.
Keep Toor Eye on the Wash Tab. When a lad only ten years old, Isaac Johnson, of Port Penn, Delaware, while enriching his youthful mind with treasures from Shakspear, read the words, "There is a tide in the affairs of men which taken at the flood leads on to fortune." Startled with the announcement and fearing he might not have read aright he perused the lines again and then threw the book aside. Looking stealthly around him and finding himself unobserved, ho cast his eye on the placid Delaware. It was high tide. He not only loved the immortal dramatic author, but believed in his utterances with unquestioning faith. The family wash-tub was leaning in the shade against the bouse, just where the hands of the doting mother had placed it when the duties of the last wash-day were ended. Here was his opportunity to test the accuracy of the predictions of his favorite author. Picking the novel boat up as if it were a mere toy he ran to the river, and, having launched it, he stepped on board his frail bark and committed himself to the mercy of the wind and tide. He drifted down until he reached the bay, where he was picked up by the bark Henry Roung, under command of Captain John Hall, was taken to the City of Mexico. He was adopted by a wealthy Spaniard, named Don Hidalog Henrandez, given a luxurious home and the advantages of a liberal education. At the close of his educational training his foster father established him in business, and young Johnson began to realize more forcibly than ever the truth of the theory he had started out to demonstrate, but being u strong supporter of Maximilian I. he had to escape to Texas. When the civil war in our country began he cast in his lot with the confederates and entered the service as aid-de-camp to General Sidney Johnson. Peace being declared, he engaged in an extensive shoe manufacturing business in this city, but here the tide turned against him, and through the dishonesty of his partners he was reduced to poverty and compelled to return to his native town, from which he had embarked when a boy. The tide, however, which swept away the fortune of former years, in returning to its flood has brought to the hero of an eventful life a fortune of $150,000. Of this sum $100,000 is in United States bonds, and the remaining $50,000 consists in property located in the City of Mexico. It is not unlikely that hereafter the Delaware will be dotted with washtubs containing ten-year-old boys, praying that the tide may "lead them on to fortune." Philadelphia Ledger.
A legal bushel of oats must weigh thirty pounds in Maine, New Hapshire and New Jersey; thirty-four pounds in Canada, thirty-six pounds in Oregon, thirty-fivo in Missouri, thirty-three in Iowa and thirty-two pounds in Massachusetts, New York and most other States.
FiliM iitioiial Col ii m ii.
OfKSTloNS AXSWKKEl). "The word Pionoer," comprohends in a single term that restlessness, enterprise and daring, that chafe under the restraints and formalities of established communities, and demand newer and wider fields of activity. It is the embodiment of the spirit which forms States, builds cities and stimulates civilization. It inspired Abraham to leave his father's house, and seek a country of which he knew not. It impelled Columbus to to embark fearlessly upon the Atlantic, and nerved the Pilgrims to form an Empire of liberty, on the inhosr table shores of New England. Pioneers are the advanced column of civilization, Their special work is to penetrate unoccupied regions, and "open tho way." "Oasis," is a name given by the ancients to the fertile spots found in the Libyan desert, and now become a general term for those situated in any desert It is derived from the Coptic word ouah, a resting place, because there the caravans halted in their journeys between eastern and western Africa. The most celebrated are the Ammoniraum, the modern ElSirvah, in lat 29 deg. N. long. 26 deg. E. Here are the ruins of tho temple of Ammon and the supposed "Fountain of the Sun." 2. Oasis minor, the modern El-Bahryeh, situated S. E. of El-Si wah in lat. 28 dog. 30 m. N. It contains temples and tombs belonging to the era of the Ptolemies. 3d. Oasis Trinytheos, the modern ElDahkleh situated in lat. 28 deg. N. ; W. of the ancient city of Hermopolis magna. 4th. Oasis magna, the modem El-Khargeh, situated about 90 miles of the Nile. It is 80 miles in length and about 10 miles in breadth stretching from lat 25 deg. to 26 deg. 6 m. N. Pantheism, is the modification of religious belief, or philosophical speculation, which affirms that God is all; all being here taken as the unity, which underlies, and is expressed In, individual, multiple existence. Tbe pantheist does not assert that everything is God, for this were tbe grossest polytheism; nor e-en that God is everything; nor yet that all is God, if all be understood in a collective sense, as the sum of individuals. The idea of unity (una et unica substantia) is essential to his system. Baron von Munchauson, a native of Hanover, was born in 1720, and died in 1797. In his youth he served as cavalry officer in the Russian army. He delighted in telling tbe most wonderful stories of his adventures in the campaign against the Turks in 1737-9, which gained for him in Germany, tbe reputation of one of the greatest living liars. The stories were soon repeated from one end of the country to the other, and created then as now, universal merriment. Papier Mache, is the pulp of paper mixed with glue or gumarabic, moulded and dried, or paper pasted in sheets upon models. Tho cheaper articles of papier mache are made of white or brown paper mashed in water and pressed in oiled moulds. The better articles are produced by pasting or glueing together sheets of paper, which, when a proper degree of thickness is attained, are powerfully pressed and dried. While moist, the preparation may be moulded into any required form, and when dry it may be planed and rasped to shape. It is rendered to a great extent water-proof by mixing with the pulp a sulphate of iron and glue, and made nearly fire-poof by adding to this,borax and phosphate of soda. Nebulae, (lat. mist, vapor,) an aggregation of stars or stellar matter, having the appearance through an ordinary telescope, of a small, cloudlike patch of light. An enlargement of telescopie power usually converts this appearance into a cluster of in - nummerable stars, beside bringing to light other nebulae before invisible. Nebulae proper, or those which have not been definitely resoived, are found in nearly every quarter of the firmament, though abounding especcially near the regions which have the fewest stars. Seeing the Lions, originated in this manner. When people visit the city the first time, tbe question is asked "did you see the Lions?" Formerly there was a menagerie In tbe Tower of London, in which lions were Kept; (long since discontinued.) During those times of comparative simplicity, when a stranger visits the metropolis for the first time it was usual to take him to the Tower and show him the lions as one of the chief sights; and on tho strangers return to the country it was usual to ask nim whether he had seen the lions. Now-a-days, when one visits a place for the first time, he is taken to see the most remarkable objects of the place, which are called the "lions." One constantly hears tho expression, "we have been lionizing," or "seeing the lions," but thousands who make use of it are ignorant of its origin. The same also answers to "seeing the Elephant,"
A good writer, who gets things down fine, can put several thousand words on a postal card, and the cost is a cent; but if he pastes a printed slip, containing a single word, on the card, tho expense is six cents one paid for the card and the other five collected from the card receiver; yet if words are printed on the card itself it is all right. If a person paste a printed slip on a card the size of a postal card, and puts tbe card and slip in ad open envelop, the Government will barry card, slip, and envelopo for a cent; yet it charges six cents for carrying a postal card and slip without the envelope.
Pastime. It is said that eating onions will prevent lips from chapping. Most girls prefer the chaps. Speaking of dancing, a clergyman says that "people usually do more evil with their tongues than with their toes." In reply to the question. "Will the coming man be bald?" the Norristown Herald affirms that "he generally is when he first comes." Young ladies are opposod to the telephone. They say they do not care to have young fellows whispering in their ears with their mouth twenty miles away. When a man reaches the top of a stairs and attempts to take one more step higher, the sensation is as as perplexing as if he had attempted to kick a dog that wasn't there. A warning A man who jumped over board and left a memorandum, saying, "Whisky did this." The coroner said that water did it and that if he had stuck to whisky he might have been alive now. "Can that horse run fast?" asked a boy of a milkman, the other morning. "No, sonny," replied the purveyor of aqueous lacteal fluid, "he can't run very fast, but he can stand the fastest of any horse you ever seen." Don't tell a man you sweat. It is vulgar. Inform him that you. are being deprived of the ealine and oleaginous fluids of your material substance through the excretories of your pellucid cuticle, with a sensible condensation of moisture upon the superficial exterior. A New Orleans lawyer was the other day defending a case against a railroad company for running over and maiming a child. He gravely told the jury that if they awarded damages, the people of New Orleans would be eternally sending their ohildren into the streets to be run over. A lawyer once asked a judge to charge the jury that "it is better that ninety-and-nine guilty men should escape than that one innocent man should be punished." "Yes," said the witty judge, "I will give that charge, but in the opinion of the Court the ninety-and-nine guilty men have already escaped in this country." A Successful Flyiuir Machine. The Siitntifii' American has a full account of the open air exhibition of the newly invented flying machine of Prof. C. F Ritchell, at Hartford, Conn., on the 12th and 13th Inst. Oue the first trial the machine, which weighs 114 pounds, went to a height of fully two hundred and fifty feet, past the spire of the Colt Memorial church and sailed over until over the Connecticut river, the operator meanwhile exhibiting bis power to change its direction and altitude at will. When he ascended there was but lit-
1 tie wind blowing, and the machine ap
peared under perfect control, but gradually a breeze sprang up, and it it was deemed safest to make a speedy return, as there wre indications in the sky of a gathering storm. The machine turned and made its way back in the teeth of the wind until it was directly over the ball ground it had ascended from and thero alighted only a few feet from the place of its departure. On the second trial, some time was epen in getting the weight and lifting power so neatly balanced as to show that the machine had a lifting power of its own. When this bad been effected to Prof. Ritcheil's satisfaction, the apparatus rested quietly upon the grass, but could be lifted or set back with a light pressure of a finger. When the word was given to "Go!" the operator, Quinlan, weighing 96 pounds, began turnii g the wheel, the horizontal fan revolved with a noise like a buzz saw. and the machine darted up almost vertically to a height of about two hundred feet. There a strong, steady wind setting toward the southwest was encountered, and the machine was swept broadSide on to the spectators. Then tbe operator was seen throwing his vertical fan into gear, and by its aid the aerial ship turned round, pointing its head in whatever direction he chose to have it. All this was the work of a few seconds. Although Quinlan could move the apparatus about, be could not make any headway against the strong wind. Reversing the momotion of the horizontal fan, he descended apparently about one hundred feet to get out of the current, but finding that impracticable, reascended to a much greater height than he had first reached. Still h e was swept off towards New Haven and soon was out of sight. He had vanished behind a distant hill and for awhile it was supposed he bad alighted. Then he was again sighted, far away and not less than a thousand feet above the earth. The cylinder of the machine looked no larger than an orange. At length he disappeared altogether. At 6 o'clock p. m., having been up battling with the wind for nearly an hour, he safely ascended at Newington, and at 10 o'clock was back in Hartford. He said at one time he was eight or ten miles from hi.- starting point, but by tacking and working between the gusts of wind, won his way back as far as Newington only five miles from Hartford. He says that the working of the machiue is so oasy that he could continue it for four consecutive hours, without fatigue, in a quiet atmosphere.
A n w publication, to be called the Poet's Journal, and devoted exclusivele to original poems, will make its appearanoe at Burlington, Vt, in a short time. Tho editor expects to make enough money to keep his papor going by selling rejected poems at two cents a pound.
The Drink Apnctile. Mr. Oough tells mo that even the smell of brandy ( purely physical sensation) would arouse the demon of desire for drink in his own frame. Mr. Gough hns been a sturdy, praying Christian for over thirty years. Once during his Christian life he was wickedly "drugged" in a soda-shop in New York, and under the mania of his aroused appetite he drank like a beast for several days. During the awful suspense attending his disappearance, I said to Dr. Hodge (at Princeton): "My hope for my friend Gough is that he is a child of God, and therefore has not gone back to his cups." "Ahl" replied Dr. Hodge, with a shake of his head, "a drunkard's appetite for drink is often a disease, a mania, that God's grace does not reach any more than it does a fever or a fit of insanity." Mr. Gough, furthermore, told mo lately that several inebriates who had loudly proclaimed that "conversion had extinguished their appetite" have gone back to their old debaucheries. A ftieud of mine often told us in our church prayer-meetings that the "grace of Jesus Christ had taken away his appetite for drink entirely." That poor man, after two years of Christian sobriety, went back to his cups, and died last year of delirium tremens! I could multiply these painful examples by the score. What is their meaning? Do they mean that no drunkard can conquer his old appetite by reliance on Divine grace? No; but they do prove that to conquer or successfully resist an appetite is one thing, and to have that appetite entirely obliterated i9 an entirely different thing. God gave Paul the grace to fight down his lusts, but God never took physical lusts so entirely out of Paul that he had nothing left to fight. Precisely so does God Impart to a truly converted inebriate the Divine strength to "keep under" a depraved lust for alcohol. This is the "drunkard's greatest hope" nay, his only hope. But let the converted man beware how he falls into the dangero is delusion that his old enemy is entirely dead, and dead for ever. I have been betrayed into this length and warmth of discussion because the subject is one of vital mom nt, and good men are easily caught by a plausible theory. The simple, solemn truth is that but few genuine drunkards are ever permanently reformed, and that is an overwhelming argument for total abstinence from the start. God never intended that when a man wantonly throws himself into the rapids ho should have an easy time in swimming ashore from the cataract T. L. Cuyler, in N. Y. Evangelist.
"Is that your offspring, madam, asked a judge of a woman on the witness stand, who was holding a boy by the hand. "No, jedge; this is my oldest son," she innocently replied.
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue has written a letter stating that the official returns in his department show that during tho last year there were more than 166,000 liquor dealers in the United States. Hon. Edward Young, Commissioner of Statistics, estimates the amount of money annually expended to be nearly $596,000.000.
SAN FORD'S RADICAL CURE For CATARRH INSTANTLY RELIEVES. 6,000 FEET ABOVE THE SEA. The iiillowlnar t'-ntlmonUU are from Messes. 3. O. Iioswoki II A Co., Iitnirr, Col., large and Influential druAreTlats. They report nnprecedontedly lark-e talis aurt universal satisfaction.. Ko other disease Is so alarminirly prcTarcnl In that region. They tpAk of the foUuwlUtf jrenUenica as aiuuutf Xhtii best ciucasue: SORELY AFFLICTED. J. 0. Bonn, r ik tt Co., Denver. COL. Omtteme, Prompted bj a fcliow-tVcliua; for those afflicted with Catarrh, I wbth to a id tu? u.-titnonr In behalf of SANFOKIVS RADICAL COKE fob CATARRH. 1 1. vc bt tnaordyadlcted with this fearful disease for four jrcant, and have tried every known remedy without avail, until I boorlit a bot. of the alovo CI UK from you. whtrh g .ve mo almost Instant relief. It bi ins a cooaututlooal ss well as a local r . inedy, I b- lleve It to be all Unit to claimed for It, a Radical Cure for Catarrh. Very truly voura. WM. AMKT1VK. Icnver. swpu 2S, li.x with Jenson, lilta & Co. GREATLYÄFFLICTED. Jfeerre. J. O. Honrortn & Cto., Denver; Gentlemen, I tak pli-aaure In rccommendlnc SANFoiUi'S RADICAL CURE rOU CATARRH to all who are atflicl.-d wlta tills disease. I was greatly afflicted
Uli U for a loi'ST time, and cured It with two bot-
tlea of the above CI' UK. About a year afterwards
I was MaSB taker- with Catarrh quite severely and
lniiut'dlalt'ly s ni fur another bottle, which fixed re sll right, giving me relief from the first dose, am confident that this remedy 111 do all that Is Claimed for It, and moru too. Wishing you success In lut introduction. 1 am very truly yours, A. St. BMtTH, Denver, Oct. 4, ISoJ. of Smith 4 DolL TRIED EVERYTHING. Jttnrt. J. O. Doetcorih tt Co., Denver , CM. : Gentlemen, I have used b ANrORD'S RADICAL ( I KK FOR CATARRH, tnd It has ghren perfect satlsfaetioa. I have tried almost everything, and It Is the only thing that hss given me relief. I therefore take pleasure In recommending lu nan to sll afflicted with Catarrh of any kind, and oOer this as my tc-stlmony to lu bvueflt. Very truly. W. 8. DECKER Duaver, Cel. 1. ViJL REV. J. H. WIGGIN SAYS: One of the best remedies for Catarrh, nay, the beat rcmely we have fonnd In a lifetime of tuflVr ing. ts 8AKFor.D'S RADICAL d'KE. It Is not unpleasant to Inks through the nostrils, snd thers com with each bottle a small glass tube for ose. In Inhalation. It clean the bead and throat so thoroughly that, taken each morning o rising, there are no unpleasant secretions sud no dtsagn-e-ala hacking during the entire day, but sn unprecedented clearness of voice and respiratory organs. luv J. il. WtggiH, in L-rcJitur tAfuatj Ikaeon, Esch psclrage contain Dr Ssnfordw Improved Inhaling: Tube, with full directions for nso In sll cases. Prien. $1.00. For sale by sll Wholesale and Retail Dri'.j.-lst sand Dealer throughout thel" nit 'd fctati-s ar d Canadaa. WEEKS 4 I'oTTK.R.Oen. ral AaTi-uta and Wholesale DruKKlst. Ronton , Mass.
COLLINS1 pijjjj VOLTAIC PLASTERS Tor IocsJ Paing, Lstmemess, BorensMg, "Wosknewa, Numbness and Inflammation of the Lungs, Liwcr, Kidneys, Spleen, Bowels, Bladdf r. Heart, and Muscles, sre equal to an army of doctors and acres of plant and shrubs. Even in Paralrtla, Epilepsy or Fit, and Nerroos and InToluntary Muscular Action, this Piaster, by Rallying the Nervous Forces, baa effected Cures when every other known remedy has failed, Priee 2ft Cents, Ask for Collins' Vol taio Plaster, and Insist on having it. Bold by all Whole sale and He tail t)rurisu throughout the United 8 taten and Canada. WEEKS a
POTTER, Proprietors, Boston,
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. NOTICE TO CONSUMERS OF
DRUGS AND MEDICINES
The great celebrity of our TIN TAG TOBACCO has caused many imitations tln-ruof to lie placed on the market, we therefore caution all Cliewera against putrhasiuK euch imitations. All dealers buying or selling other plug tohseco hearing a hard or metallic lalel, render themselves liable to the penalty of the law, and all persons violating our trade marks aie punished by fine and imrianeHMt SKE ACT OF CONGRESS, AUG It 1876. The genuine LORILLARD TIN TAG TOBACCO can be distinguished by a TIN TAG on each lump with the word LORILLARD stamped thereon. Over 7,088 tons tobacco sold in 1877, and nearly 3, OOO persons employed in factories. Taxes paid Government in 1877 about SJ3.500,OOO, and during the past 12 years, over SO,OUO,ooo. These goods are sold by all jobbers at manufacturer's rates. -Thc Tin Tut Smoking Tobacco is "second to none" in aroma, mildness, purity and quality.
SWEET
Chewim
NA?Y
ORGAN osMsfTjOO.
Awarded Aiy W prr at Centennial Exposition fas A"' cketeing (fualuiet and axesOaacs and lotting char acier of w ,y 04 ßaenring. The best tobsees) ever made. As oar blue strip trade -mark is closely imitated on Inferior (mods, ase that T 11 laiiiii'i Jlt is on every pi uf. gold hy all dealers. Ssad for sample, stas. m C. A. Jacsjos Co.. f fn.. PsssnbsB, Ts
DI Ali 11 Beautiful Concert Grand rlHllU Pi,,,,,,, fo, 1 00. onlv
mar. Sntaarb Grand Snuare l'in,- nut
only )255. Elegant t'pright Pianos, cort S8(0
only 9150 New Style Upright l'ianoe $11,60. Organs 3.1. Organs, Vi stops, S72.AO. Church Organs, 16 stops, cost $390, ouly $116. Elegant $375 Mirror Top Organs only $1C5. Tremendous Sacrifice to Close out Present Stock. New Steam Factory soon to be erected. Newspaper with much Information about cost of Pianos mi Organs, Sent Kree. Please address Daniel Beatty, Washington, N. J. n A DAY to Agenta canvassing for tho tD Firemide Visitor Turms ant Outtit Free. Adlndd P. O. VICBXKY. Augusta, Maine. 1
EVERY
AD Y
L
Her own phyaician. Information and prescriptions of the greatest value to every lady, scut free by addressing, with stamp. Dr. 4. C. Htone, W Poplar Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
HAVING SALOON.
s
JOHN MUELLER, Corner Michigan and Gano bt, Plymouth, Indiana. Shaving, Hair Cutting, and all kinds of Tonsorial Work Neatly Done. Particular attention paid to Cutting Children's Hair.
e
I I IUI, s
ever Agu
IN LIQUID OR PILLS. Positively t un-s the worst forms of Chills, Kever, Dumb, Ague, Third-day Ague, Fever without I'hllls, Nearalgria or Sick Headache. Cures Debility, Loss of Appetite, builds up the system to overcome malaria makes you feel like yourself snd never fails to cure. Sold by all Druggists in Marshall county Agents wanted wanted everywhere. Address PKKMIING Jt CO., Manufacturers,
1 l, H 77. a-13-tf Plymouth. Ind.
I
FOR THE CURE OF
RHEUMATISM AND NEURALGIA. Tili marvelous preparation has enrol hundreds of the most distressing rases of t hronte KhcumatiMii ami Neuralgia, even when all other remedies htm- failed. It is last bvconilng the Acknowledged Antidote for these disesses. and can 1? relied upon by sufferers to relieve them of their puma and effect a permanent cure. Do Xot Give Up
yonr case as hopeless and settle down to the conviction that no medicine will help you, all we ask is a fair trial of the Ci'rativk, ami that you bear In mind that the naturv of these diseases n-quire persistent and faithful Hppllcatioti to insure a perfect ' tire. In every com miinity where the Cckativr has been placed will be found many witnesses who will testify to what it has done for them. Diphtheria. Sore Throat, Burnt, Scalds, Bruises, Sprains, Wounds, Cuts, Chilblains, Inflammation, Headache, Toothache, Catarrh, Dyspepsia, Sour Stomach, can positively be cured by the free use of the C'rRATive. Send to us for testiiiiouisUs If you have any doubts. Sold by all Driiagstts. Price $1.00 per Bottle, 6 for 1.00. fsssraAMO BT Lawson Chemical Co.. Clevelaxd. 0. L. Tanner Agent.
GRAT, LIGHT,
FADED, --uroEED HAIR
Are changed by
.few applications
of the AMB&OSIA
to a beautiful auburn or
to the dark, lustrous eolors of youthful treason. Humors, Dandruff, Itching of tba Scalp, mail Falling of the Hair are at once cured by It. Where tho hair follicles are not destroyed, it will cauae the hair to grow on bald heads. It 1 perfumed with extracts from frnfrant Dowers. Ali who use it praise it.
S.TÄ fYwntbe SCALP B'fJ
tVVaT:I:IAaw?fvX3f
ANDREW POE
CHAS. D. CHAPMAN
THE PEOPLE'S
Store
t
POE fc CHAPMAN, Prop's. ROOffl NO 8 HOHAH'S BLOCK, L AP0RTE ST., PLYMOUTH, IHI VE KEEP ON HAND Complete, Fresh and Reliable Stock. We Sell only for CASH 1 We seek only a living Profit, and Quality taken In ?onsideration, propose Selling at the Lowest Prices. We solicit the continued favors of old friends and the patronage of all desiring anything in the line of DRUGS and MEDICINES. PEOPLE'S PHARMACY DEVOTED TO THE Treatment of all Chronic Complaints, OF EVERY FORM. This department of our business is under the control of the Senior Partner, who will at all times be found at his post. A continuance of tbe extensive practice we have enjoyed is respectfully solicited.
PITTHBl'KO,
FORT WAYNK KAILWAV.
CHICAGO
On and after May uth. 1S78. trains will leavs stations daily, (except Sunday.) as follows: O0INO WE8T.
No. 1 1 No. 7 F stEx Pac Ex
No. N"t Ex
Plttanunrh... 1146pm 9 00am Rochester 12&3am lOlfiam
Alliance s l0am!l2 60pm Orrville isftm aaepm Mansfield i T ooam ' 4 4pm Crestline.. .ari 7S0ajB i lApm
Crestline. . . Forest Lima Ft. Wayne. Plymouth.. Chicago....
lv
i aopm
a fcum 6 as um 7 12pm sopm S 46pm
No. s Mail
T atam 6 40pm 66pm 9 2ani 7 3.',pm , 11 tspm
uitoam oopm l as am
l Mpm 11 Bopm! 4oam
3 45pm l 48am. 4 6&am 7 oopm aoajB.' " 68am
6 ooam
7 u
I2pm Sllpsm 3 60pm
GOING EAST.
No. 4 i No. J No , No. 8 N't Ex Fst Ex Atl. Ex Mall Chicago I 910pm1 ooam Mfpm Plymouth....! 2 46am llS6am! Oopoa Ft. Wayne... 6 66am 3 lffpoa u sopm Lima : S 66am 4 lopm 1 'am Forest 10 10am 6 20pm 2 37 am CreHtllna...ar 11 44am Kpml i aoam Crestline, lv 12 06tm 7 15pm 4 3urui (Kam ManHflcld 12 36pm 7 44pm 6 ooam: saam Onville ' 126pm 9Mpm T loam 9 15am Alliance j 4 00pm liispm 9oam llMam Rochester 6 22pm laoam llosam 7 oopm Pitsburtrh I 7 SOpm 3 warn l i&pmi s 30pm
Trains No. I and 6 ran daily. Train No. 1 leaves Pittsburgh daily except Saturday. Train No. 4 leaves Chicago daily except Saturday. All others daily except Sunday. F. R. MYERS. Osn. Pass, and Ticket Agent.
INDIANAPOLIS, PERU CHICAGO.
On and after Mar 12. 1878. trains will ran on the road, Sundays excepted, as follows :
OOINO NORTH.
Colds. (Lwftt itfieuiiwlhrn, Stiff Neck, Keuraliria, Dysprpsia, Diarrhtea, Wie. Sore Threat ! Tvotbfhe
Are alleviated, and in most cases cured,, by the use of this PAIN ERADICATOR. It 1 an Invaluable Family Medicine, affording relief before a physician can be reached. Procure our circular describing above diseases and their proper treatment, and you will bloss tho Namedy that brings such healing.
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Indianapolis 6 oopm 7
Kokomo 8 usprn 9 62 Peru 9 20pm 10 47 Rochester 10 2pm 12 lopm Walnut 11144pm 12 29 Arsos 11 oopm 12 48
Plymouth 1125pm 107
Tyner 11 46pm 1 26
Wallterton 12 "5am 1 44 Laporte 13 st 3 30 Michigan City 140 BJ
GOING SOUTH.
Mtchinan City 9 ssam 8 nspm Laporte 10 so sse Walkerton 11 10 9 47 Trner 1127 loos Plymouth 1147 1033 Arifos 12 07pm 11 00
walnut.... 12 0 111 Rochester 12 40 11 3
Psru 140 19
Kokomo..., aa 146 Indlanapolia I so 4 00
F. P. WADE. Qn. Ticket AarenL
Z VIBRATOR Bsc. Hank SU
THE ORIGINAL ft ONLY GENUINE Vibrator" Threshers. wrm latrmovKO MOUNTED HORSE POWERS. A sad aUcsvsn Thresher l.nfln.i. Mdo only by NICHOLS, SHEPARD 4 CO., BATTLE CREEK, BBICBs.
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RAIN Raisers will set ttaassalt t the
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is RevnWtn (Shafts lastaV tke
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'111 Ires. J . H. UerVord A Ut Clcac, III
For s.ili by All Druggists. Prepared by E. M. TU BBS & CO. Proprietors of "Sing's Ambrosia " MANCHESTER, N. H. L. Tanner, Agt.
, A If IS. A areata wan t1 . Bosncss lea-Htniate Partie, fr.
UsArsst 1. WOBTB A W, I
Madison Dispensary Ol As. Clmrh St. Chltmja. 111. DR. C. B1GELOW,
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MARRIAGE GUIDE
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A PHYSIOLOGICAL
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Washington Kelly. AGENT, PLYMOUTH, IND.
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AAI.nLDPLATItD9tATrn.(ntA Cn !h known world. Sample Watch Fret Is I JfAjrnU. AAtdraa, A. CuvltU Oo., CkasJagWi j
RING'S VfiCBTABLK 1UIIBU
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This preparation has s wwli-wiif reputet inn lor runiiAj ETay hair to its vrtirinal color. chsQirtii; laftat, rsd, or faded hair to a beautifsl
auburn, erailrt-atiiif; danilruff, cunnjr arasi
and itrhinc of Ilia scalp. prsventiiiK falliBA of Ilia hair and baldness, suJ where the folioles
or hair produi'iiig Klandt are not destroyeo, cauMi..' ttew hasir to grew on bald places- It cleanaes the scalp, iariawsratt tks roots, aad prod lit es the soft glossy hair of j-outk. It k exiui.sitlr perfamed wrtk extra eta (Vom fraarsat flowers. It is aa elegant beur draaaasks; and is also extcnsirelj used ia rnliiritAf fcaVst ftdm kair, by diptiiait the kair ia am break
snd wster, wanned in an iroa vessel, it u
tiiisaaniiaii 1 upon seien u be priacialss fi
purest i ngredients. 1 1 has held ike naarket foi 14 years sgainst all com petition. Try bot tit for any of the above cause, and hare coarine iag kosM proof. WOU SALE BT ALL 1KD43GUT8.
COMPOUNDED AT THE CWMICAl LAIOUTOT
rmorkUETOBS or
Tubbs' Universal Pali. Srsdioslor, ktAllCHEtTDL, I. H. L. T AKNER Agent
