Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 16 February 1889 — Page 3

BAKING POWDER

royal warn ^gSOlUTIlV

POWDER

Absolutely Pure/

•This powder never varies a marvel of parity Mrength a whnlesimiuness. 51ore economicalthon the ordinary kinds, and cannot be sold i" competition with '11• multitude if low test «hort weight iilmn ur phiispli m- powders. 8ol Only in cans. H-IVA:. U*m "••WHKR Co.. UN* Wall St. N.»v

Wjfr

1 The WONDER

M-WeReclining.

rUL

lUBURG

Ing, LOUNGE, BED. An pail •r COUCH. Prlct$#«vU ap. make the largest rarioty of

jgcaBBgf

Ad|uiUblt, Reclining, Pliysictanc' Jiitd Surgeou' Operating, Invalid -Rolllm, Hammock, Office, Ubr:r

fsac*Carpel Folding, Reed and Rattan CHAIRS ard ROCKERS BICYCLES,TRICYCLES.VE" L.OCIPEDES and SELF PROPELLER: ALL KINDS OF APPLIANCES FOR INVALIDS. RABY POACHES 0?©r IOO different designs. Oar Patent Automatic Brake on nil Car. riages, fret. We have discontinued wholesaling by placing your orderdirect with the makers you can tevtrat profit*. Our /lathing pricct and special Barirafils will astonish] yoa. Goods sola under a guanmtt ?. I and delivered free to any point in Unitetl State*. HT Send stamp for Catalogue, and state class of goods yon WIKII it

LUBURG MFC. CO. 146 North Eighth Street, i'hilndelnliit

LITHOGRAPHER ELECTROTYPER ENGRAVER

A

BINDER

ST^

~«r\ Book and JolI N E BLANK BOOKS, ETC MOST COMPLETE HOUSE IN THE WES!

TEKSjtffh

-},-SHE^TT6f|^

iJOangef^

IS A LINIMENT PERFECTLY RARMLESS.AI.'Cl SHOULD BE USED A FEW MONTHS. BEFORE CONFINEMENT.

SEND FOR BOOK TO MOTHERS

iFIEIDTteGUL/tfORCOj

ATLANTA. GA.

Dr. I hv B. I let tinker

Plivsiciriii

Sin'i»v(ni and S{

36£ East, Washington Street

INDIAN A POL IS INI).

NO

bailie**! '.i :n-.-o ilu. lived looksnnil l'oelin" ppwik volume'-! Thi Krmi dy coi-rei Ur.ll co ditioiis, restores vigorJ w.il vilalily liMl Vrinir." lKiek yoi'thli.l bloom and beauty. .1 mtooitt*. rn-pnrnlal Or. Kilmer's utsl'KNSAKY, lUnjriiamton, K. Y.

G-, __0 i.-itpn uf inquiry nnsifcwd. Gui-ii'lo 1'iMlth' Sens I i.-ol.

O S

HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS

HOUSE

HfFOUTZ

FOUTZ

will die of

COI.TC. ROTS

or

POSTAL FACILITIES.

The Almost Marvelous Progress Made During the J'ast Fifty Years. There is no department of the Government with which so large a part of the people has to do, and none with which the people lias to deal so often, the post-office. On an average, every man, woman and child in the United States both sends and receives something by mail—a letter, a newspaper, a package, once a week throughout the year. Indeed, hardly any feature of the modern civilization is mora striking to one who can divest himself of the feeling that the post-oflice is a matter of course, than the development and present extent of communication by means of the mail.

X-UNO FK-

tku. If FoiitzV Powders arc useu 111 unu\ Fout/.'s Vbwders will cure find prevent

When we remember that fifty years ago it cost twenty-five cents to send a single piece of paper, written or printed, from Washington to Boston that the railroad system was in its infancy, and that letter-sending was a luxury not to be indulged in without consideration, we may see what a vast change half a century has wrought. At present every one who can write at all sendB letters. Children are encouraged to begin correspondence with relatives and friends as soon as they can "print" words. Business men are hardly more sparing of postage stamps than their wives are of pins. And this modem idea of the constant use of the post-ollico is wholly the growth of fifty years.

CITOT.F.HA.

Font7.'8 I'owdcra will prevent

GAPKSOGIX

Let us compare 1838 and 1888. Fifty years ago the mails were carried on only nineteen hundred miles of railroad in the United States—four hundred miles less than are now operated in the territorially small State of Massachusetts. Now the mails are carried on one hundred and forty thousand miles of railroad. There are, in 1888, lifty-seven thousand post-oflices, against twelve thousand in 1838. The revenue of the department was four and a quarter million dollars in 1838, and jnore than fifty-two and a half millions in the year ended last June.

Statistics were not kept of the number of letters and other parcels mailed fifty years ago, but in 1887-88 the letters transmitted numbered almost seventeen hundred and twenty millions the postal cards three hundred and seventy-two millions the newspapers and periodicals one thousand and sixtythree millions, and the packages three hundred and seventy-three millions— a total of three thousand five hundred and seventy-eight million pieces, and an average of almost sixty to each person of the sixty million inhabitants of the United States.

Fowi.s.

Koutz'p Powders increase the quantity of i},111* and cream twenty per cunt., and make the butter lirui and sweet.

I'ontx's Powders will ENR^ OR ^revent p.lTTiost EYETVT OiM' ASK to which Ho»vi v.i'i -Mibiort. POITTZ'R PNWRM US WILL 51V* SATISFACTION'.

SOKI

everywhere. DAVID E. FOUTZ, Proprietor. BAXTIMOBE. 2&D*

ETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAIN

1SY Tl! C'

DEWTA.L

VIBRATOR.

Kur i'^iiie DfP.i'il Wnrk

DR. S. EA.RHARTS A Dont'iil I!o"ui.i. 1, 2 and 0, lii',4 e.'ist. AVanhiiiL'tiin street lnitiiin:i|i.iliK. TeHli without pintef*. Si for full MM of tin-Hi. Uulilii'r. (Vlluloid C/nntin. UIHIH (inin mid (.Sold l'lntes made. Leave order firt- teeth in tin- niomintr and ^et. them tin' B.'ime day. Old iilatrs made ac Rood as new while you wait. Killinirs and Gold Cro\vu» at half rates. Teeth lllled without ]i,iiii. All work warranted. Teeth extracted without pain by the use of Dental Klectrie, Vibrator. Anyone can take it in perfect safety, old or voting. Gas and Vitalized Air and Kilter administered and Cocaine used.

American postage rates are by far the cheapest in the world. The En glish penny rate on letters is the same as the two-cent rate, but the distance traversed by letters hore is greatly in excess of that in the United Kingdom. Moreover, Great Britain has nothing to compare with the American system of sending newspapers to subscribers at a rate of one cent a pound. It costs a half-penny—one eont— to send each paper in England—at least six^times as high a rate as that in the United States, even if no account be taken of the greater distances herei

The English "parcel post"' is, however, cheaper than the American. Packages of merchandise can be sent at the rate of three pence—six cents— for a single pound, and at a rate growing smaller as the weight increases, until at eleven pounds the charge is only eighteen pence—or about three and a third cents a pound. The United States rate is uniform at one cent an ounce. A four-pound package—the limit of weight—would cost sixty-four ceuts in England it would cost fifteen ccnts.

No doubt this country will in time overtake and surpass its greatest rival in this department of the postal service, as it has already done in other departments. There is no conceivable limit to the expansion of this service, and as the service grows In amount, it, may grow cheaper. It is probably too soon to think of a one-cent rate for letters, but in a very few years, at present rates, the department will overcome the deficiency between receipts and expenditures—it was nearly five and a half millions during the past year— and then the one-cent rate will come, as surely as the three-cent rate superseded the five, and the two the threecent rate. Whether or not any of the other dreams of those who favor extending the postal service—postal telegraphs, savings banks and the like— are to come true, is a question for the future to answer. Youth's Companion-,

A Bell With a History.

.41851

At Lumpkin, Ga., is a church bell with a history. This old bell has done much service for many different people. It has engraved upon it the year 1600, the year in which it was made. For a number of years it tolled the hour for congregations in a convent in the Netherlands. It was afterward carried to Lisbon, and from there to Madrid, and was W the monastery at that place when the great Napoleon invaded that territory, taking every thing as ho pushed his forces over plains and up mountain sides, and all bells were being taken and re-cast into cannon for the furtherance of his warlike ambition. Tho owners of this bell, seeing his intentions, and loving their sacred property that had so long served them, secretly took it down from its lonely tower, and placing it on board a large vessel about to sail for this country, shipped it to New York, where it remained for many years, until it was purchased by a Lumpkin man for his church. It has been used BO much it has lost its tone, and will have to be laU aside. Washington Post

THE CRAWFORDSYILLE WEEKLY REVIEW

PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL.

—Mrs. Henry Ward Beccher has a great aversion to the idea of cremation. —Levi P. Morton made a fortune in the dry-goods trade before ho bccamo a banker. —A woman at Novi, Mich., l'as adduced strong evidence to prove, that 'she is one hundred and nineteen years old. —Five drummers traveling for Chicago houses in the grocery ti ade receive salaries of from $8,0U0 to $10,000 a year. —Lady Dudley, the famous English beauty, is remarkable for her extremely luir complexion. She is said to be as white as a pond lily. —Among the twenty odd women inspectors at the Now York Custom

House are a niece of Thurlow Weed and a sister of lioscoe Conkling. —Mrs. Harrison is said to be ah enthusiastic and successful china painter. She has her own kiln for firing her china, and attends to all the details of it herself.

A Boston gentlem.-in, who is in the vigor of life and likely 1o outlive some of his children, has presented each of them with $1,000,000, the share of the estate they would get were he to die. —Dona Maria de Andreda is considered to lie the most cultivated woman in Brazil. She spent four years in New York studying the American school system, which she is introducing with success into her own country. —Mme. Dieulafoy, the intrepid wife of the explorer in North Africa, is one of the latest women to receive the decoration of the Legion of Honor. Rosa Bonhuor is the only artist who has been honored, though thirty-four women in all have been given tlio red ribbon. —Louis McMurray, the first man to successfully can oysters and the owner of the largest corn canning factory in tho world, died recently at Frederick City, Md. He began business in 1851 in a modest way, and before his death employed more that two thousand hand- in a single establishment. He leaves behind a large fortune. —Dr. Henry Hiller, who made $3,000,000 in the manufacture of pills, was buried at Wilmington, Mass., in a casket which cost $9,000. Four coalblack horses curried him to a temporary brick tomb, which cost $500, on a catafalque which cost $2,000, and at the tomb the casket was placed in a big red cedar box, which cost $250, hold together by sixty big brass screws, which cost $18. —Miss Amanda Delmas is one of the most successful sugar planters in

Louisiana. She is a Creole, and was brought up to a life of indolence until the wheel of f^-tune took a backward turn and she was thrown upon her own resources. To the surprise of her friends she took the situation by the horns, and undertook the management of the plantation that belonged to her. Every morning Miss Delmas may bo seen riding horseback with a big sunshade over hor head, inspecting the gangs of workmen on her estate.

"A LITTLE NONSENSE.'

—A small boy rises to remark that most doughnuts come from Greece.— Boston Times. —A Cape Cod fisherman calls his boat "The Kiss," because it's nothing but a smack.—Puck. —"Holmes says: 'Poverty is a euro for dyspepsia.' Do you believe that?" "I can't say, Bromley. I've never had dyspepsia."—Time. —-'Can you tie a true lovers' knot, my dear?" inquired Merritt. "No," replied Mamie," hiding her blushes with her fau "but our new clergyman can do it very nicely."—Harper''s Bazar. —"Let me see," said a minister who was filling out a marriage certificate and had forgotten the date, "this is the 5tli, is it not?" Bride—"No, sir," with some indignation "this is only my second." —Willie—"Ma, can any thing be foreign and domestic, too?" Mother— "No, William." Willie—"Yes, it can." Mother—"You are wrong, my son." Willie—"I ain't. What's the matter with Bridget?"- -Amerir.a. —Citizen (out West)—"Is tho editor of the Tempcranci Trumpet in?" Officeboy—"No, sir. A box of stomach tonic arrived to-day from St. Louis, and he's gone out in the woods to doctor hisself."—Philadelphia Record. —A scientific sharp has discovered that the earth weighs 590,650,000,000,000,000 tons. But don't bet on it. The scientist may have weighed it on a coal dealer's scales which weigh only 1,800 pounds to the ton.—Drake's Magazine. —"You smoko a good deal, Tom," said a friend. "Yes," replied Tom "particularly after dinner. I have got so in the habit of smoking after dinner that the dinner doesn't taste right when 1 eat it unless I have a smoke afterwards." —Waiter—"Your orders, sir." Jack —"A glass of lager." ".loo—"I'll take Culn\bachor." Gus—"Give me

Milwaukee." Ed—"Give mo Milwaukee." Harry—"Bring me Burton." Ralph—"I'll have ale." Waiter (in a voice of thunder)—"Three ales and four beers."'—Time. —Visitor, to little brother of his fiancee—"Can 1 see your sister?" Little Brother—"Guess not. She can't talk. Out of breath." Visitor—"Indeed." L. B.—"Cousin Charlie's in the parlor big fellow naval uniform waxed moustache, and she's been kissing lti^n silly." The engagement i.s DtT. Town Topics.

HI!

aJst||l

'vetcftS

Veasant

PELLETS

eWets

QQ

rUBEL'S VEGETABLE! PERFECTLY HARMLESS!

TCiicqualcti as a MVEIl PILL,. Docs not rtpc.

ONE PELIjET A DOSE!

SMALLEST, CHEAPEST, EASIEST TO TAKE.

Tiewnro of Tmitations, containing Poisonous Minerals. Always nsk for

DR. PIERCE'S PELLETS, •which are little Sugar-coated Pilln, or Antibilious Granules.

Being: Purely Vegetable, Dr. Pierco's Pellets, operate without disturbance to tho system, diet, or occupation. Put up in glass vials, hermetically sealed. Always fresh and reliable. They are a gentle laxative, or an active purgative, according to size of dose.

SICK HEADACHE,

Billons Headaclie, Dizziness, Constipation, Indigestion, Billons Attacks, and all derangements of to a a bowels, are promptly relieved and permanently cured by tho use of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets. Sold by druggists, for 25 eta. a viaL

S500I™

is offered by the manufacturers of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, for a case of Catarrli in the Head which they cannot cure.

SYMPTOMS OF CATARRH -Dull, heavy headache, obstruction of the nasal passages, discharges falling from the head into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid the eyes aro weak and watery there is ringing- in the ears, deafness, hacking or coughing to clear the throat, expectoration of offensive matter, together with scabs from ulcers: the voice is changed and has a "nasal twang" the breath Is offensive smell and tasto arc itn paired there is a sensation of dizziness, with mental depression, a hacking cough and gen eral debility. Only a few of the above symptoms arc likely to be present in any one case. Thousands of cases annually, without manifesting half of the above symptoms, result in consumption, and end in the grave. No disease is so common, more deceptive and dangerous, or less understood by physicians.

By its mild, soothing, and healing properties. Dr. Sage's Catarrh Kcmcdy cures tho worst caseBor Catarrh, "Cold in the Head," Coryza, and Catarrhal Headache.

This infallible remedy does not, like the poisonous, irritating snuffs, creams," and strong caustic solutions with which the public hav long been humbugged, simply palliate for a short time, or drive the disease to the lungs.. as there is danger of doing, in the use of such agents, but it produces perfect and permanent cures of tho worst eases of Chronic Catarrh, as thousands can testify. "Cold in the Head," is curer" bv a few applications. Catarrhal Head' ache is relieved and curcd as if by magic, It removes offensive breath and cures loss or impairment of the sense of taste, smell or hearing, when cn. sed by the violence of Catarrh, as they all frequently are. Sold by druggists, 50 cents.

A complete Treatise on Catarrh, giving valuable hints as to clothing, diet, and other matters of importance, will bo mailed, postpaid to any address, on receipt of a two-cont postage stamp. Address,

World's Dispensary Medical Association,

C03 Main St., BUFFALO, N. "ST.

(Established 1850 (Reorganized 1685,

JSDMAPOLIS

USIEIESS

Elegant Catalogue,Write Free

scores

EMULSION

OF PURE 009 LIVER

OIL

aisti? HYPOPHOSPHITES Almost as Palatable as Milk. So dlssjulsed that It con bo taken, digested, and assimilated by the most, sen.ftlve stomach, when the plain oil cannot he tolerated and by the combination of the oil with the tiypophosphitos is much more efficacious.

Rem&rbablo as a flesh produecr. Persons gain rapidly while taking it. SCOTT'S EMULSION is acknowledged by Phvs iciaus to be the Finest nnd Best preparation in the world for the relief and cure of

CONSUMPTION, BCROFULA, GENERAL DEBILITY, WASTING DISEASES, EMACIATION,

COLDS and CHRONIC COUGHS. The great remedy for Consiimptian, and Wasting in Children. Sold by all Druggists.

Registered Trade Mark.

A delightful tonic prepared from tlio wonderful California Eucalyptus tree MALARIA ABSORBENT combined with. Iron.

THE GREAT MIND AND BODY INVI60RAT0R.

Cnrvi DjHpopnia, Io«» of Apottte, Lou of Vital rowers. General Debility and Xfot-TOUM RROHLRATIOTT.

A POSITIVE PREVENTIVE OF MALARIA. I'KICE, Sl.OO A. BOTTLE. LUYTJES PHARMACY CO., (Established lXVt.)

Sole Proprietors, \HUi§, RIO Forsale'nCP^VF5 r?aS,.f!, 15V 'f vi.-u.x. ...

Also O. ,,«» L" ZMF I »5 Homooopffliand COIK

QATA RRHsmkxV!

T^SFi»ee

EWM rli to ronviiH-o.

is. S. I.AUUEUBAI-II

Co., TT3 l5rotul-*t. Nowntk, N..J.

Ltf:V1 HI

for Infants and Qhildren*

"CMtorla li so well adapted to children that I CastorU cures Colic, Constipation, recommend it as superior to any prescription I

8our

Imown to me." H. A. Ancnxa, M.D. I

GROCERIES.

New Store

Brown & Ring have opened up a

large grocery store in Miller block on

north Washington street, where you

can find anything in the grocery line

in the city. We pay cash for

and sell goods below competition. Re­

spectfully,

Brown & King

HENLEY

LXTRACT

tew "Q'E||!p

traesiT

North IVonsyhsnia St., Opp. Postoffice.

82SMAH, EEEB & OBSOBiT, Pr!n:!pili aal Proprietors. Best facilities fVr iiusiness, Short-hand, Penman ship, English and Actual Business Training. Indi' vidual instruction Educatc for profit—least expensive in time and money. Attractive City. Graduates hold lucrative positions. A strictly business .chool. Open all year. Enter now. to us,

A fct Effective Combina::?

This well known Tonic nnd "Sv.rvUu- it v-r jrioat roputntinnas ncure for Iolili*v. ./• •iisu and NISKVOUS disorders. It lutcrmcl and debilitated condition* o? iV*? re he In el an 1

FOR 8ALK BY ALT. DttrtJOTS'iv

THE GREAT

BETWEEN TUB

BAST, WEST, NORTH AND SOUTH.

£sl£VAT

•-.J

"r

Indiana Bioomingtoii & Western it. v.

THE UGH

6 Passenger Trains 6

hich Run Daily, Including Sundays,

THE ELEGANT NEW

Woodruff Sleeping

AND

DRAWING-ROOM

Built exdreeely for and run exclusively on this Route and its connections. One or more ot these cars, together with superior or modern day coaches, arc attached to all through trains both day and night.

STEELRAILS,MILLER PLATFORMS and COUPLERS, AIR BRAKES and all MODERN IMPROV EMENTS. Shortest and Most Desirable Route

Between the East and West.

Through Tickets and Baggape Checks to all Principal Points. CTOING EAST. Mail and expices,daily, 6:55 Eastern and Southern Express, datly....2:l!0 am Cincinnati Special, daily exccpt Sunday,!):05 am

GOING WEST.

Paciflr Express and Mail, daily, 9:15 am Kansas City Exp'ss, d'ly exccpt Sunday.5:00 Bloom'gton & H'k Island Exp'ss,d'ly..12:28am

For lurlber information address G. E. Hoh'.Hson. sseir. I'luni street. C.B. HRNDEKSOU, H.M. BHONSON,

Gen'l-Jlunager. Uen'l Ticket Aijt. Indiimnpolis. lrulmuiipoli"

Vandalia Line—T. & l,. i'-ij HOBTlI laiayeltu & Toledo Exp'si.d'y ex J-mi'y :15 an Arcommodation, daily exc« .Sunday.. 12:00 avi-iitii( Axprcw, ,. .v 'glp ..6:15 «p

BOOTH

nat^as iV Texas Ex.. d'y ex. Sunday a Accommodation, daily except —1 a Gull Kxpr«»ss, 5:20 pro

Cntl -vrite to J. Educwort.h, a^ent Main ei K0fle ot. K. A. KORD, St. Louis, M,,.,. Gcn. PiiBS.A O CkTO OlidLCtj. w£m&fc

&

8tomach, Diarrhasa, Eructation.

Worras

gives sleep, and promotes dl-

111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Without injurious medication. TH* CETTADR COUPAKT, 185 Fulton Street, N. "T.

I MRTABLES.

InUISYIIK.IItWAtBAIItaCBlCACO RT.«9-

ALWAYS GIVES ITS PATRONS

The Fun "Worth, of Their Honey by Taking Them Bafely and Quickly between

Chicago Lafayette Indianapolis Cincinnati

UU1IUII) UUlUj

Louisville

1

builds up worn out XerveM nidsiluic* stores impaired or lost Vltnllt.y, nn«l youthful strength and vlcor. It is

|h'Metut«

Taste, and uspd regularly braces the Sys\»on »•$, •hr depressing influence of Mulsirhi. I'rlue—$1.00 per Uolllo of 24 ntmrc-

PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS ELEGANT PARLOR CARS ALL TRAINS RUN THROUGH SOLID Tickets Sold and Baggage

Checked to Destination.

X3TGet Maps and Time Tables If you wont to ba more fully informed—nil Ticket Agents atCoupo* Stations have them—or uddreaa .MAIMS.Fa«t Mail, daily except bttmluj, .. Niirht Bxprogc, duily .. Way Freight

.1:49 1:4f in 1 :-1S*

SOUTH BOUND TRAINS.

Fust Jlnil, daily except Sunday, Night. ICxprOB6," daily, .. Way Freight

1:48 1:4-2 a .8:30 am

Address W. Michie, mterii for farther particular*. JOHN 1$. UAKSOH, E. O. M'COKMICK Uen. Manager,

Q. A., kiciif o. Ubicago.

COAL AiND COK14

GEOKGE W. MALL,

DEALER IN* ALL ICIN'OS OP

COAL ANT) f!0 I-

and all kinds of glazed sewer pipe, fire brick, lime, lath, cement,etc.

Office and yards northwest corner-

Mirket and AY.ilimt Streets. grawfordsville.

TIME TABLES.

The 1'opulnr Route to

CINCINNATI INDIANAPOLIS, LAFAYETTE,

AND

CHICAGO.

The Entire Trains run Through Without change. Pullman Sleeping- and Elegant Reclining Chair

Oars on Night Trains Magniicent Parlor Cars on Day Trains.

ElegantlUeclining Chair Cars Through Without Chiingu Between

PEORIA, CJtLVN 0RDSVILLE and CINCINNATI.

On Night Express Trains

FOK

CHICAGO

Take the Vandnlin Line Trains to Colfax, where close connections ara made with the C. 1. St. L. &t) Ry. for Chicago.

The only line woich makes Cincinnati itB great objective point lor the distribution of Southern and Eastern tralllc. The fact that it connects in the entral Union Depot in Cincinnat with tho trains ol tin- W & B. (B. & O N. Y„ IV & O. H. It (Urii-.) tind the O. C. O. I. lt'y,

Bee Line lor the Enst. as well as with the trnins of the C. N O. & T. p. R'v (Cincinnati Southern) lor the South Southeast mid K-tsrh-west., L'ivcr it Htrads'ant.'ge over all tb cniup. tilois, lor mi route frnu' Chicago, Lafayette or Itidlannpo.is mi make these connections without competing pussengers to submit to along a .d dlsagreeanle ominlius tiam-l'er for both passeniier ami baggupc. t-tvetraius uiu'li way, dally exccpt Suuday. Three trains each way on Sunday, between Indianapolis and Cincinnati.

Through Tickets and Baggage Checks to all Principal points can ho obtained at any Ticket Oiflne, C. I.St L. & C. H'y., also via this line at all Coupon Offices throughout the country. .JOHN EQAN,

Gen. Pass. & Tkt. Agt.

J. II. MART1X, Cincinnati, O. Dist. Pass. Agt. f-. E. Cor. Washington & Meridian Sts., Indian polls' Ind.