Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 23 February 1889 — Page 3
PISOS CURE FOR
Piso's Cure for Consumption is also the best
Cough Medicine.
If you havo a Cough without disease of the Lungs, a few doses are all you need. But if you neglect this easy means of safety, the slight Cough may become a serious matter, and several bottles will bo required.
The
WON
Dr. lbv
CER PUS.
^Luburs
Combining a Parlor. Library. Tr ot-
Ing. Recllnlno. or Invalid LOUNGE., BCD. t*»J £ni or COUCH. Price 3*/nW.*' -i
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LUBURC MFC. CO. 145 North Eighth Street, l»bilude!|l a.
LITHOGRAPHER ELECTROTYPER ENGRAVER ^*02
BINDER I Book and Job I N E
Steam
BLANK BOOKS, ETC.
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IS A LINIMENT PERFECTS HARMLESS.Am SHOULD BE USED A F£W MONTHS,BEFORE CONFINEMENT. 'SEND FOR BOOK TO MOTHERS
feBADFIEID5REQULMDR Ctt_
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ijr.dies! 'i'In 'SO dull tired looks nnd leeLinc^r spciik volumes! Thisl Kcmodj' corrocts all coti ditions, restores vi^or nnd vitality nnd brings back yotilhlul bloom and beauty. Druggists. Pn'parcil at l)r. Kilmor'sDIsi'r..vAi:Y, niiiphauiton.N. 1.
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Foutz's I'owdprs will prevent GAPP.S IS FOWI.S. '•'ontz'p l'owdcrs "i'IW innren=e tlie quantity of nii'K snd cream twenty per cent., and make tlio butter linn nnd Mvcct.
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Solrt everywhere.
DAVID E. FOUTZ, Proprietor, BALTIMORE. IIS.
TEETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAIN
BY THE gj-.fi
DENTAL VIBRATOR. Kor Finc Dental W.irU go to
DR S. EARHART S
D.-nlal 1. v! ami liil east Washington jitrect. Inillniiaimlis. Tooth without platen. S5 for full si-t n! folli. Hubber. Celluloid, (.'ontinIIonn (imil :iinl (iolil l'latos made. Leave order fortoeili in the morning and yet thetn the same dav. Old jilates made as good as new while von wait. Filling!! and Gold Crowns at half iates Tneih liiU'il without pain. All work warranted. IVi-i li exl raoti'ii without pain by the use of Dental Klej'tfie Vibrator. Anyone e:wi take It in p"i feet -afety, old or yount?. tins nnd Vitalized Air nnd Ether aduunikUrod and Cocaine used.
A GORY CHAPTER.
Horrible Deeds of Bloodshed Minnesota and Michigan.
BRUTAL WORK AT GLEP'IU.E, MINN.
A M'»t1u»r nii'l Two l):uii htors Slnln by Itclalivo, Who lvIlls kSiuisell'—A Mini In ^?»Ii.:liii^iin Murders Hit* Wife mid Two
Ciirls iind Att«miUs Suicide....
A fillAS'n.Y RIOHT.
(ii.KNVii.LK, Minn., Keb. IS.—Joseph Clifemcleck Fruhty niurlit. killed Cliree personB and then coinnnttod suieide b}' siiootinjj hiinselt tilirouifh the licutl. 'J.he motive lor the initio murder in involved iu doubt. About o'clock Fricliiy evemnir Cliemeleok went to the residence ot .M. ij. Gheiueleek. his lmlfbrotlier, to Kjiend tlie oveniiij About o'clock he picked up liis hnt nnd went out ot doors, it was expected tbut be was froing to return, but instead ot coming buck he went to his father's home and procured a double-barreled shot-guu. He went buck to M. 1j. Cliemeleck's andnecreted himBelf in a grove near the house. About midnight Mary Cbcmeleck, agedO, and her sister Eose, aged 11, stepped out or doors, and a few minutes later two reports wero heard. The father rushed to the door and and as he opened it Jlary and llose stood 011 the steps, the blood trickling down their faces. "We have been shot by Joe Cheineleck," exclaimed Hose, ue she fell fainting to the floor. A hult-witted boy was sent for help, and, not returning, tho father went in search of aid. As soon RS he bad left the house Joe Chemeleck entered and going '.:p stairs shot down the mother of "the gjrls. Mary, who w!is half dead from loss of blood, managed to get out of the door, and, barefooted and half-clad, made her way a half-mile through the snow to a neighbor's, where she fell to the iioor dead. The murderer, after coinpie ting his bloody work, rushed out of the house into the yard, where voices from the road caused him to halt. Seeing that es^ cape was impossibly he placed a revolver to his temple and sent a bullet through his brain.
The girl Rose died shortly after midnight, and the bodies ot' the two girls and their mother were taken to an upper room to await the action of the coroner. The murderer's body lay all day where he had killed himself, and until Saturday evening, when it was picked up and taken to his father's house.
The only cause suggested for the murder is the fact that the girl Mary had given testimony against a friend of Chemeleck 111 a lawsuit last week.
AWFUL CI1IME IX MICHIGAN, ITFP, TECUMSEH. -Mich, Feb. 18.—One of the most terrible crimes ever enacted in Michigan took plaee Saturday night at this place. Frank L, .Silvers, a prominent horse-breeder and well-known citizen, shot his wife, his two daughters, aged and 11 years, respectively, and ended the awful deed by shooting himself.
The crime was not discovered until Sunday morning. About 10 o'clock some of the neighbors noticed that the curtains of the Silvers house were closely drawn and that there was no sign of life about the place. Their curiosity was excited, and after waiting for an hour it was decided to investigate. An axe was procured and the rear door was forced open.
The kitchen was deserted. The diningroom door stood ajar, however, and, pushing it open, the party entered the parlor, where a horrible sight met their gaze. There upon the floor near the stove, full-dressed and with her glassy eyes staring at tlie ceiling, la}- the body of Mrs Silvers in a pool of blood. But if this was not calculated to terrify, a more terrible one was in store for the investigators. Alter searching the lower part of the house they wended their way up-stairs. Entering a small bed-room, directly above the parlor, they found the bodies of the twe little girls only a few feet apart, while as tho foot of the bed Lay the form of Mr. Silvers weltering in blood, and with life almost extinct. The victinjs had ali been shot through the temple, and, with the exception of Mr. Silvers, all had died instantly.
Tho murder was carefully planned and coolly and systematically executed. Early Saturday evening
Mr. Silvers entered a hard
ware store and bought a o-'-caliber revolver of the Smith & Wesson pattern and a box of cartridges. He betrayed no agitation, audit was supposed that he intended to use the weapon in shooting rats, lie walked around town awhile after making liis purchase and spoke with several of his i'l iends in his customary free-hearted, easy mmmcr. He returned home about 8 o'clock, and as the bodies of his victims were cold when l'ouud it is supposed that he shot them before retiring and diii not take his own life until several hours later. This theory is strengthened by the fact that the neighbors were stirring very early in the morning and would undoubtedly have heard the shots had tliey been lired at that time.
Frank Silvers came here about ten years ago. He belonged to a highly respected family, and was raised on a farm about four miles" north of here. -He married a Miss Shephard in Lynn, N. Y., and had been living in the house where the tragedy occurred for netirly ten years.
Those who have known tho family say that Mr. and Mrs. Silvers were :i seemingly happy and affectionate pair. They went out together frequently and their home seemed bright and cheerful always. The little girls were uncommonly pretty and attractive, and, taken all in all, the family seemed to be one of the happiest thut could be found any where. This being the case, no cause can be ascribed for the crime. A note was found in Mr. Silvers' pocket requesting his friends to break open the safe and find directions for the disposal of his property and keepsakes. The note is written in a bold, steady hand, and in it the writer declares that the reason for the dreadful crime will never be known. Tho coroner is at work on the case, but no clew to the cause of the tragedy has been obtained, and the crime bids fair to prove ona or the most mysterious as it is one of the most atrocious ever committed in Michigan.
Alice .S'.imeo fllellcHii Man.
Kulin. tlu Young J«iiiiiin C'lnrjKMl -wlt!» MurtlrriiiK Y\ iilliiin Christian at l'rimriM«. Wis., ilrturnR from Km-opc In
Cliarfci? of ait Oltlcur. NEW \oitK Feb. 18.--Sbei iiT John M. Kstes, Of Sladlsou, Wis., arrived on the steamer Britannic Saturday with Hans lvubn, a young man, who was recently .•lrrefted In (.hiocnstown chiU'ged with the aider or liis employer. William Christian, a choesoniuker Irinirose. 1'ane (,'ounty. \\i.-., on the night of December i:$. Kulin was found his steernge berth hidden under some clothing. He still had in his possession a bloody knife and two •%.discs, In which he is supposed to ha\ c.uiicd away part ot his allotred victims body. The sheriff and his prisoner started AVest at once. Kuhn has 110 loiirs thut he %\ill be hanged, tor he savs there is no hanging law in Wisconsin, lie chuckles over the prospect of living at the .State's expense ior tho rest of his lite. llCulin. it is said, was known in Wisconsin as horse-tbief. He iisUed for and recc.ved shelter ono night ir. the liou^e of the country* mini whom he murdered. He got by tho murder tl50 in casli and an old silver watch.
Kuhn,It Is ollcged.'b'Ot Christian drunk, drugged him from his bouso to his cheese factory next door, lad lr,m in a vat, split open his head with an axe and cut up his body. He put the head in 3acU and the rest of the body into two valises. Ho dropped the sack into a lake near by, and hired a man to tx'lp him carry the valises to Monroe. On the way the man got blood on his hauds and clothes. Kuhn told lnm that the sachels contained newly shot rabbits. Kuhn took tho cars at Monroe for New York, and sailed from there on the steamship Lord Gough. Christian was thought to bu away on a spree until eight days after tho murder, when two boys, while fishing, got their lines entangled in the sack containing Christian's head. Kulin was traced aboard the Lord GougU, and tho Queenstown authorities were cabled to arrest hirn.l
GOVERNOR LARRABEE INDICTED.
Iowa's Chief Executive CliarRed with Criminally I.ilioling Mrs. Turney. DES MOINES, la., Feb. IS.—Governor Larrabee was on Saturday indicted for criminal libel by the Polk County grand jury. Three years ago Chester Turney. a boy. was arrested at Preston, ackson County, charged with the theft of several small articles from residences and stores in the village, mostly in the nature of food, wearing appsirel, or .Material to keep liini warm, which was carried to a cave in the woods where he made hia abode. His stepfather was a worthless man and his mother was ill, so that when he was placed on trial for the fourteen indictments pending against liim he had none but the lawyer uppointed by the court to counsel and advis- him. He was convicted on fourteen counts and sentenced to seventeen years in the penitentiary. When Mrs. Turney re ovcred from her illness she began the task of getting a pardon for her boy. Governor I.arrabee was urged with a good ueul of. persistence to take the case up, but he refused. Mrs. Turney appealed to the public aiul a monster petition ior his pardon was presented. Finally the press took the matter up. This drove the
Governor to make a defense, which came in the shape of a pamphlet giving his view of the case and containing au extract from a local paper in Jackson County charging that Mrs. Turney had two husbands living. This pamphlet was sent to almost every prominent man in Iowa. It is this publication that laid the foundation lor the indictment. When the pamphlet appeared with this attack upon licr honor Mrs. Turney and her friends felt that nothing was left for her to do but to appeal to the grand jury and the case was laid before that body about two weeks ago. The Governor was one of the witnesses summoned. An indictment was returned Saturday morning and tho warrant of arrest will be served to-day.
VICTIMS OF THE FLAMES.
A J.argo Stable In Kansas City Destroyed by Kiro—One of the I'roprieUirs Loses His Life Narrow Kseape of His Family—
Ninety-Four Horses HurntMl. KANSAS CITY, Feb. IS.—At 11 o'clock last night lire broke out in the large brick bim of J. K. Landis, corner of Tenth and Troost streets, causing the loss of ninety-four head of horses and seventy-five carriages and buggies. J. it. Hoffman, one of the partners, and liis family, occupied apartments up-stairs. They were aroused by the flames and jumped to the street be low. Mis. Huffman and child reached the ground in safety, Jbut Mr. Hoffman fell, striking his head against the curbing, knocking him insensible, and he was sull'o cated before he could be rescueu. me losa is estimated at $S(),0CK).
THE POPE'S LATI ST
The Holy Father Warns the Faithful Against Many Vices, uud Condemns the l'ublio School System.
NEW YORK, Feb. IS.—At all the masses at the Roman Catholic churches Sunday au encyclical letter from the Pope was read. In which the faithful are warned against avarice against immoral tendencies in literature and the drama, and against materialism in thought, which breeds socialism, communism, nihilism, etc. The letter also condemns public schools, and says of them: "There is no ecclesiastical authority left in them and during the years when it is most fitting for tender minds to be carefully trained in Christian virtue the precepts of religion are for the most part unheard.
MfrHARRISON'S STEWARD.
A Chlengoan Selected to Look After tho Needs of the Inner Itlan During tho New President's Kelgn at tlio White House.
CHICAGO, Feb. 18.— President-elect Harrison has selected for steward of the White House Hugo Ziemanu.of the Hotel Iticheliou, of this ctty, who will accompany General Harrison household to Washington when they depart from Indianapolis. Mr. Ziemonn is German, and has bt*jn employed in this city for a number of years, coming West from New York with Warren Leland.
A Virginia Legislator Killed. LANCASTER, Pa., Feb. IS.—David Pleming Houston, of ltoanoke, Ya., a State Senator, died here very suddenly yesterday. He arrived on the Atlantic express from Indianapolis, where he was in conference with President-elect Harrison. He fell on the ice while entering a relatives house and burst a blood vessel. His death resulted 111 a few minutes. •Frntriehle In Cinciuxwiti.
IS
OLIICAGO, Feb. 18.—See & Co., a corporation of Chinamen engaged in the grocery trade at 3!Si Clark street, mourn the loss of $1,(100 and the secretary, Sing You. Both departed Saturday night. Sing You slept in the store, and iui iie had the combination to the Kale it was no trouble to open it and take the money. His present whercaboutl tire not known. V" ''i?
Delitll of a Divine. &
CiiicAi o, Feb. 18.—Dev. Albert L. Grey, 1)1), late rector of liacine College, died at the Lelaiul Hotel iu this city early Sunday morning. Dr. Grey had a widelv extended acquaintance in literary and religious circlei ot tho East.
ltroko liis Net'k.
iftilAi/RINORE, JWtL. leb. It!. —George W. Uaden, a Baltimore & Ohio telegraph operator residing at Georgetown, D. C., wni killed in this city by lulling from a movies train and breaking hi* neck.
WMMBmlm
iI-\'--H:\V*-..
CINCINNATI. Feb. 18. —Edward Qiunn killed his brother John .Sunday afternoon by striking him on the head with a club during a quarrel i'.t their home on Shillito I street, Avondale. The murder was committed in the presence of tlicir mother. Both men wero intoxicated.
Confesseil to li.vtensive wiinl'.iiijr ATLANTA. Ga Fob. IS. John L. Adams, a member of the house of A. 11. Adams Son, cotton warehousemen of Alaoon, was arrested Saturday on the charge of forgery to the amount of §."0,000. He confesses his guilt and ascribes liis fall to dealings in cotton iuturea.
llomc l'or lown Oryliui..
SYC-VKOKE, 111., Feb. IS.—Daniel 1'ierce, 1 Oils place, will found an industrial home for orphan children in Iowa. There is a benuest in his will of §100,000 for this purpoce
.•'• -:V' V-CW.'-V:W.:R:
l'HE CRAWFORDSVILLE WEEKLY REVIEW
BROUGHT BACK.
t',"!,•
1
llllf!l ijj Ij (ill1
:'V'
i.®" .. r. lilfllllinilllliii—gllllhli The treatment of many 'thousands of cases of those chronic weaknesses and distressing ailments peculiar to females, at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., has afforded a vast experience in nicely adapting and thoroughly testing remedies for the cure of woman's peculiar maladies.
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Is the outgrowth, or result, of this great and valuable experience. Thousands of testimonials, received from patients and from physicians who have tested it in the more aggravated and obstinate cases which had bullied their skill, prove it to be tho most wonderful remedy over doTiscd for tho relief and cure of suffering' women. It is not recommended as a cure-all," but as a moBt perfect Specillc for woman's peculiar ailments. "Favorite Prescription" is the only medicino for women, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee from the manufacturers, that it will g-ive satisfaction in every case, or the money paid for it will bo refunded.
1WflBRANTED.
Asa powerful, invigorating tonic, It imparts strength to the whole system, and to the wotnb and its appendages in particular. For overworked, '"worn-out," "run-down," debilitated teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses,"shop-girls," house-
as an appetizing cordial and restorative tonic, As a soothing and strengthening nervine, "Favorite Prescription" is uneualed and is invaluable in allaying and subduing nervous excitability, irritability, exhaustion. prostration, hysteria, spasms and other distressing, nervous symptoms, commonly attendant upon functional and organic disease of the womb. It induces refreshing sleep and relieves mental anxiety and despondency.
Dr. Pierce's Favorite prescription is a legitimate medicine, carefully compounded by an experiencad and skillful physician, and adapted to woman's delicate organization. It is purely vegetable in its composition and perfectly harmless in its effects in any condition of the system. For morning sickness, or nausea, from whatever cause arising, weak stomach, indigestion, dysepsia and kindred symptoms, its use, in small oses, will prove very beneficial. "Favorite Prescription" is a positive cure for the most complicated and obstinate cases of leucorrhea, excessive flowing, painful menstruation, unnatural suppressions, prolapsus, or falling of the womb, weak back, female weakness, anteversion. retroversion, bearing-down sensations, chronic congestion, inflammation and ulceration of the womb, inflammation, pain and tenderness in ovaries, accompanied with "internal heat."
As a regulator and promoter of function^ action, at that critical period of change from girlhood to womanhood, Favorite Prescription is a perfectly safe remedial npent, and can produce only good results. It is equally efficacious and valuable in its effects wuen taken for those disorders and derangements incident to that later and most critical period, known as "The Change of Life." "Favorite Prescription." when taken in connection with the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and small laxative doses of Dr. Pierce's Purgutivo Pellets (Little Liver Pills), cures Liver, Kidney and Bladder diseases. Their combined use also removes blood taints, and abolishes cancerous and scrofulous liumora from the system.
Large Bottles $1.00, or Six Bottles for $5.00. For large, illustrated Treatise on Diseases of Women (100 pages, paper-covered), send ten cents in stamps. Address,
World's Dispensary Medical Association, 663 main St., BUFFALO, N. V.
Bi
(Established 1850.) ISDIAMPOHS (Reorganised 1885.)
USINESS UNIVERSIT
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SCOTT'S EMULSION
OF PURE COD LIVER OIL
&222 HYPOPHOSFHITES
Almost as Palatable as Milk. So digguised that it can be taken, digested, nnd as«lmllated by the most sensitive stomach, when the plain otl cannot be tolerated and by the coanbtnation of the oil with the hypophosphitos Is much more efficacious.
Remarkable as a flesh prodnecr. Persons gain rapidly "while taking it* SCOTT'S EMULSION iacknowledged by Phvsiciaus to be the Finest and Best preparation in the world for the relief and cure of
CONSUMPTION, SCROFULA, GENERAL DEBILITY, WASTING DISEASES, EMACIATION,
A doligliiful tonic prepared from tho wonderful California Eucalyptus tree MALARIA ABSORBENT com— binod with Iron.
THE GREAT MIND AND BODY INVIGORATOR.
Cures Dynpcpnln, X.OKH of Apetlte, I.o«* of Vital l'owors, ftoncral Debility anil Nervous Prunlrntion. A POSITIVE PREVENTIVE OF MALARIA. 1" It
ICE, Sl.OO A BOTTLE.
LUYTIES PHARMACY CO., (Established ISM.) Sole Proprietors, ?T 75USS, MOr
Forsale!nCRAWFCR£!?V:._! By n&A.. _.vAlso O ml .J ,-t Homoeopathic Fm" {p, -j I and Couv i.
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for Infants and Qhlldren.
"Castoda 1b so well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me." H. A. ABCHER, M. D.,
Ill So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
GROCERIES.
New Store
Brov.n & 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 & Ring
vOR. HE UVSACL
A Most Effective Combine:
This well known Tonic nnd »rvhio f.« irroat rouutatlonaa acure for •i.i, anil NKKVOUS disorders. It u'vvV Vuttt'iiiri and condition- n* loin strengthens the intellect, nnd hodJivli.f.i ImHds up worn out Nerv«»s tiidp15:." •tores Impaired or lost Vltiiltfv, Mini vouihful strength and vluor. It ls_ pltaw.jst
BETWEEN THE
BAST, WEST, NORTH AND SOUTH.
n«L«j^PAui.
/V^rrr*v'v ^'.
Indiana Bloommgton Yfostc-
THROUGH 7:
6
COLDS and CMRONIC COUGHS. The great remedy for Consumption, and Wasting in Children. Sold by all Druggists.
Trade Mark.
Registered
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COUPLERS, AIR BRAKES and all MODERN IMPR0YEMENTS. Shortest and Most Desirable Route
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For further information undress E. Kob.ason. neent. PHini street. C. E. HENDERSON, H. M. BltONSON,
Gcn'l Miinacer. Gen 1 Ticket A^t. I.-idiimapolis. ItidtaniiDoli'
Vandalia Lino—r. NORTH. W Laiayetle & Toledo Exp'SM.d'y ex hun aij^a n: Accommodation, daily exc "-uud tj .12:00 svenlna ^xjiress,
Castoria cures Colic, Constipation, 8our Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation, Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes dlithout injurious medication. TH* OCNRADU COMPANT, 188 Pulton Street, N.-£
.0:10 pin
SOUTH
hansas tf: Texas Ex., d'yex. OIILKIUV .. Accommodation, daily except 'Jul! KxpreBB,
Cail on Wrte to J. t. «oinstr W. eiiot-
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urA,e
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Address W. Michle, agent for further parJOHN 1$. CAKSON, ticularfi E. O. M'CORMICK
Gen. Manager. CHICAGO.
G. P. A., t'hicugo.
1
and used recularly braces tht* the depressing influence of Malariit. Crice—$1.00 per HoUln of 24 omu
FOR SALE BY AM.
THE GREA^
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GEOEGE W. HALL,
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and all kinds of glazed eewer pipe, fire brick, 11me, lath, cemcnt, etc.
Office and yards Dcrthwesl
Market and Walnut Streets. CRAWFORDSVILLE.
:47 am
1 am ,5:-20
Kdceworth. aeent, E. A. FOKD,
TIME TABLES.
The Popular Route to
CINCINNATI INDIAN APOLIS, LAFAYETTE,
6
hich Run Daily, Including Sundays.
THE ELEGANT NEW
Woodruff Sleeping
AND
DRAWING-ROOM
Built exdreBBly for and ran exclusively on this Route and its connections. One or
more
ot these cars, together with super
ior or modern day coaches, are attached to all Ihroogh truins both day and night.
AND
CHICAGO.
The Entire Trains run Through Without change. Pullman Sleeping and Elegant Heolining Chair
Oars on Night Trains Magnificent Parlor Cars on Day Trains. ElegantlReclining Chair Cars ThroiiKli Without
Chungs Between
PEORIA. CRAW I ORDSVJ LLE and
CINCINNATI.
On Night Express Trains
FOR
CHICAGO
Take the Vaudalia I.in" Trains to Oolfnx, where close connections am made with the O. J. St. L. fc O. Ky. for Chicit(.'o.
The only line woir.li makes Cincinnati its great objective point fur the distribution of Southern and Eastern trafllc. The fact that it lonnccts iu the Central Union Depot in Cincinnati with tho trains ol the C. W. fc B. 1{ It, (Ii. Jb O.) N. y., P. & O. R. R.. (£rie.) und the U. C. O. fc I. R'y,
(Bee
Line, for tlie Etist,, us well as with the trains of the C. N. O. & T. 1'. R'y (Cincinnati Southern) for the South. Southeast and Southwest, gives it an advantage over all :ts competitors, lor noToute from Chicago, I.afayetto or Indlaiinpoiis^tiii make these connections without compelling passengers to submit to along uud disagreeable omnibus transfer tor both passenger and bugeage.
Five trains each woy, daily except Sunday. Three trains each way on Sunday, hctweeii luui-. nnapolis und Cincinnati.
Through Tickets and Bageage Checks to all Principal points can be obtained at any Ticket Office, C. I.St. L. & C. R'y., ulso via this line at all Coupon Offices throughout tho country.
J.
St. Louis, Mo. Oen. Vase. A olicittct.
JOHN EG AN,.
Gen. Pass.fcTkt. Aet.
n.
MARTIN. Cincinnati, O. DiBt. Pass. Agt. S. E. Cor. Washington A Meiidtan Sis., India* polis' lud. i.
