Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 5 February 1897 — Page 2

WEEKLY JOURNAL.

ESTABLISHED IN 1848.

Successor to Die

Record.

tho first paper In

Criiwfordvllle, established in 1831. and to he People's Pros, established in lti44.

PRINTED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING.

THE JOURNAL COMPANY T, H. B. McCAIN. President, 1J. A. GKEENE, Secretary.

A. A. McCAIN,Treasurer

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THE DAILY JOURNAL. ESTABLISHED IN 1887. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:

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Intered at the Postofflce at Crawfordsville, Indiana, as sooond-olass matter.

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, lSOl

TUE sewer question having been settled, now let us have peace.

JUDGE JOSEPH MCKENNA, of California, has been tendered and accepted the Secretaryship of the Interior.

THE bill providing for an auditing board to audit the warrants of township trustees haB passed to engrossment in the Senate, as has also the bill that township trustees shall file with their August report a complete account of outstanding indebtedness.

BY the decision of the United States Supreme Court holding the tax law of Indiana to be vaild in regard to the assessment of telegraph and express companies, the State will be benefited in the aggregate about 8225,000, 8100,000 from the express companies" and $125,000 from the telegraph companies.

THIS is not a good time to monkey with the fee and salary law. After passing the necessary amendments curative of the defects in the present law the wisest thing to do is to stop right there. The people are in no mood for an increase in public expenditures in the present depressed- condition of their financial affairs.

THE price of wheat was lowest in the year 1894, when it averaged through the year 49 cents. In 1895 it averaged 50.9. In 1890 the average was 72.6, with a crop of 427,084,000 bushels, and with a prospect of still better prices in 1897. Such increase will bring millions into the hands of farmers in the West and Northwest.

EXPORTS of grain from Southern ports have increased at a remarkable rate during the last two years. The export of corn from New Orleans made a bound from 8,756,000 bushels in 1895, to 25,292,000 bushels in 1890, or more than 6,000,000 bushels in excess of the Bhipments from New York. The value of breadstuffs exported from Baltimore, Newport News, Norfolk and Galveston also shows a heavy increase.

CHICAGO ilntcr-Ocean: The Faycrweather will contest is not yet ended. The attorneys announce that this case will have another bout in the courts before the dozen or more colleges get bequests. Only about 820.000, besides lawyers' fees, has been expended thus far in the courts, and that is not regarded as a fair slice of a 83,000,000 estate. It is another fine object lesson to rich will makers to give of their abundance while alive and in health.

REPRESENTATIVE ROOT'S bill to do away with legislative junketing trips during the session has passed the House and will probably pass the Senate. It provides "that before the General Assembly convenes the Governor shall appoint a committee from the Senators and Representatives-elect to visit and inspect the penal and benevolent institutions, and make a report at the openingifof the session. Uader this plan the work will be more thoroughly and intelligently done and will be a saving of both time and expense.

THE State Board of Tax Commissioners has prepared af'statement showing the debt of each county in the State. There are twenly-one counties that have no indebtedness. The remaining seventy-one each has indebtedness running from 81,200 in Parke county, the lowest, to 81,050,000 in Marion county, the highest. Montgomery county is shown to have a bonded indebtednes of §75,000. The gross county debt in thefState amount to §0,843,806, an average [of nearly 875,000 to each county. Montgomery may therefore be 6et down »as belonging to the average.

TIJE subject ofigrautiug public franchises is being apitated, and the people appear to be jubt coming to understand that the franchises they have given gratis to all sorts of corporations are valuable,[and should not be given at all, or if given, not without a fair compensation. Jt is very doubtful if corporations will be able to secure these valuable»concessions in the fure as easily as they have in the past. There is no good reason why street railway companies, water companies and all similar corporations should not be made to pay for the privilege they monopolize.

IT is to be hoped that the Legislature will not listen to the demand that comes from some quarters that the State levy for school tuition shall Vie increased from 11 cents to 1(5 cents This demand comes from* those counties where they draw from the State much more than they pay in, and of course they would like to have the more wealthy counties assist them in their shortage. The Indianapolis Journal's point of objection is, therefore well taken when it says "that the amount raised by an 11-cent levy on the present taxable property brings more money than did the 1(1 cent levy under the previous valuation. The State now raises more than naif the money expended by townships for tuition. Many of them obtain from the State S3 where they pay 81 toward that tax. Besides, all cities are now paying for school, street and other improvements twice or three times as much on each 8100 of taxable property as do the townships in which those men live who ask that cities shall pay more of the money which they pay as salaries to teachers."

THE Auburn Dispatch says that a very large majority of our township trustees are honest capable men, who use economy in their official capacity, but the system is often brought into disrepute by a few wavering men who cannot say no, who are really too easily influenced and duped by agents of supply companies and purchase superfluous supplies for which the people must pay in the form of taxes. The law in force forty years ago would, we believe, be more satisfactory and cost the people no more than the present eystem. Then there were three township trustees, one clerk and one treasurer, called the township board. Regular stated meetings were held at the center of townships to transact township business no business could be transacted except at a regular or special meeting, and then a majority of the board had to be present. People were no more honest then than now, but the raising of the township orders was next to impossible without locating the forger and was never attempted.

SENATOR DAVID B. HILL has at last opened his mouth, and has written an article for the February Forum on the "Future Democratic Organization." Mr. Hill severely criticises the Chicago convention, wherein, he says, Democratic usages and principles were ignored from the outset, old and well established Democratic principles repudiated, and new and dangerous doctrines substituted. Be characterizes the action of that convention in replacing the time honored principles of Democracy with one Populistic principle—the free coinage of silver—as "suicidal, the end of which every intelligent man could foresee." Had reasonable judgment been exercised, however, Senator Hill believes that there ought to have been no difficulty in making the platform entirely acceptable to every Democrat and to all conservative citizens "but inst? fed thereof, passion, prejudice, selfishness, sectionalism and emotionalism ruled the hour, and thousands of voters were needlessly alienated."

THE treasury figures for the month of January, show the usual deficiency in revenues. The recepits for the month have fallen'§5,922,779.95 below the expenditures. The twenty-nine monthB in whfch the Wilson law has been in operation have resulted in a total deficit of 8126,877,201. This is a startling contrast with the corresponding history of the McKinley law. That act went into operation about same time in the year as did the Wil. son act, and opDortunity is thus given to make a comparison of their revenue producing capacities by comparing month by month their work. The Wilson law, as stated above, produced a deficit of 8126,877,210 in the first twenty-nine months, while an examination of the receipts and expenditures during the first twenty-nine months of the McKinley law will show that it produced a surplus of S23.026188 in the corresponding period of its history.

THE fourth member of Presidentelect McRinley's cabinet, definitely announced, is ex-Congressman James Wilson, of Iowa, for Secretary of Agriculture, the three others being John Sherman for Secretary of State, Lyman J. Gage for Secretary of the Treasury and Gen. Russell A. Alger for Secretary of War. Ex-Governor John D, Long, of Massachusetts, is pretty certain to be selected as Secretary of the Navy, and Judge Mclvenna, of California, for Secretary of the Interior. This will leave the Attorney General and Postmaster General to be filled. One of these positions will likely go to New York and the other to Tennessee or Maryland or from the South somewhere. The newspapers have already made up the entire cabinet, but it must be borne in mind that Major McKinley is the man who has the last

say.

PRESIDENT CLEVELAND has announced that he will veto the immigration bill which has just passed Congress. The next Congress will take it up and pass it, and it will be signed by President McKinley.

OXF. of the interesting features of Mr. Bryan's new book is the biograph-1 ical sketch written by Mrs. Bryan, who thus describes their first meeting "My personal knowledge of Mr. Bryan dates from September. 1S79 He was then entering upon his junior year. 1 t-aw liiin first in the parlors of the Young Ladies' school which I attended in Jacksonville. He entered the room with several other students, was taller than the rest and attracted my attention at once. His face was pale and thin a pair of keen, dark eyes looked out from beneath heavy brows his nose was prominent too large to k()k wel1, I thought a broad, thin-lipped mouth, and a square chiu completed the contour of his face. Lie iv as neatly though not fastidiously dressed, and stood firmly and with dignity. noted particularly his hair and his smile. The former black in color, fine in quality and parted distressingly straight the latter expansive and expressive. In later years this smile has been the subject of considerable comment, but the well rounded cheeks of Mr. Hryan now check its onward inarch, and no one has seen the real breadth of the smile who did not see it in the early days. Upon one occasion a heartless observer was heard to remark: 'That man whispers in his own ear,' but this was a cruel exaggera. tion."

THE mountain has labored and brought forth a mouse. The apportionment bill for legislative purposes as agreed upon by the Republican caucus provides that Montgomery and Putnam shall have one Senator, Montgomery one Representative, and a Joint Representative with Boone.

BROWN'S VALLEY.

Jim Lavne is on the sick list. Milton Carrington has the grip. Mrs. Harve Cochran went to Waveland Tuesday.

Miss Jessie Boyland went to Crawfordsville Saturday. George Vice has pneumonia and^is in a very bad condition.

Mrs. Facie and Mollie Galey went to Crawfordsville Tuesday. Arthur Davis, of Ladoga, was the guest of G. S. Davis Monday.

Walter Owens, of Fincastle, was the guest of relatives heie over Sunday. Miss Lota Miles was the guest of relatives at New Market Monday night.

Several from here went to Waveland Tuesday night to see fhe boys take the Orient.

Miss Mamye Davis was the guest of Miss Minnie Galey of Waveland, Saturday.

Mrs. Lennie Heard, of Terre Haute, was the truest of L. W. Reynolds over Sunday.

Clarence Burrow's supper was well attended at the Gott school house Monday night.

Thomas Patton and wife went to Ladoga Saturday to visit relatives there over Sunday.

Sherman and Leo Rice, of Alamo, were the guests of A. W. Johnston's family Monday night.

Johnny Wilson ^and family, of near Waveland, were the guests of Robert Goff's family Tuesday night.

Miss Belle Genette returned here from Frankfort Monday. She will leave here Thursday for Hendricks, Kentucky.

Charley Gilliland and Clay Owens went to see their best girls Sunday night and got excited and forgot to tie the horse and it ran off, but didn't do much damage, but they had to borrow a rig to come home.

SMARTSBURG.

The term of school-here is short this year. Mervin Shelton is« seen in Gobensville again.

Frank Catterlin sold a fine drove of hogs last week to Mr. Archie. Mrs. Jessie McTilbly and daughter, of Colfax, are visiting relatives here.

Wayne Shelton seems to have some attraction at the Stuarisbur^ store of late. Wonder what it is.

Meeting here the fourth Sunday in this month by Rev. Kelly, of Darlington, also Saturday night.

The party given last Saturday night at the home of Miss Mamie Martin was. largely attended and all report a good time.

Herbert Newkirk says if anyone should happen to ask you where he was Sunday evening ju6t tell them that you saw him going "WeBt,"

Misses Nora Goble, Mary Bryant, Myrtle Newlin, and Messrs. James Goble, Mervin Shelton and Frank Newlin went sleigh riding Friday night and report a good tin e.

Our little town of Smartsburg has one blacksmith shop, run by Mr. Wright one store owned by Dan Go ble, one postofflce, two churches, Baptist and Christian one school houscand one huckster, and a population of 108.

We could have a large attendance at Sunday school if the parents would send their children to Sunday school, but instead of that they allow their children to coast, skate and pitch horseshoes. It looks bad enough to see the little boys coasting on Sundays but it looks still worse to see the young men from 15 to 20 playing with little boys when they ought to be in the Sunday school. We hope the young men in this vicinity will quit coasting and attend Sunday school in the neqr future.

DoafneeB Cm.not He Currd

by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only oiift way to euro deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inllamed condition of the mucousllnitifr of the Eustachian Tube. When this Mibe pets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing and when it is entirely closed deafness is tlm result, and unlesslhe inflammation can be taken out and tills tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever nine cases out, of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of tho mucous surfaces.

We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deaf uoss (caused by catarrh) that cannot bo cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free.

F.J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, 0.

Sold by druggists. 75e. Hall's family Hills are tho best. FOB artistic worn see

TUB JOIHINAI.

Co..

PBINTEBS.

WORK IN HARMONY.

GOOD DISCIPLINE PREVAILS AMONG REPUBLICAN LEGISLATORS.

Obstructive Tactic* Adopted by Democrats liavo Hail Little Kftfect Thus Far. Unusually At tout iv« Committee Members Have Their Work Well In Hand.

Chat* About- Measufes, Members, Lobbyists and Kinploycs of the Two LawMaking IJranehes.

Special Correspondence. INDIANAPOLIS. Feb. 8.—Notwithstanding the obstructive tactics of the big Popocratic. minority in the house, the work of legislation has progressed further than it had at this stage in any of the sessions of tho legislature that I have observed within the last eight years. The committees have been unusually attentive to business and have practically all of the important measures, except the appropriation bill, iti proper shape for presentation upon the open floor. Quite a number of measures of importance have already passed both houses, among them the appellate court bill. It is true that the junketing trips have caused a loss of two or three days in the work of the session, but this is less than they usually cost, and if the Roots bill providing for a visiting committee, to be appointed by the governor before the session begins, goes through the senate with the same facility that it did through the house, this session •will see the last of tho junketing to the various state institutions.

Chief among the measures that have already gotten through is the appellate court bill, extending the life of the court four years. The magnificent discipline shown by the Republican majority in the house in lining up on this measure and upon the Gibson county contest was something beautiful. Every Republican vote was there and on tho right side, while on the court bill the minority went to pieces and eight of them voted with the majority, beinnr unable to swallow the idea of voting againsj extending the court when they had promised their own candidates for this bench'daring the campaign that they would vote for tho extention. Our people will need all their discipline in getting their political legislation through, for though they increased their majority in tho hotise by ousting the Gibson couuty Populist (Hart), the next day they lost one of their members in the illness of Dr. Woodruff, who will probably not be able to return during this session.

It requires 51 members for a constitutional majority to pass a bill, no matter if there are not more than a dozen voting on the other side. Tho majority of the house, with Dr. Woodruff away, has just 52 -lembers, and with a couple of men falling ill, being called away or growing obstreperous, legislation would be practically blocked. And it would not be political legislation alone. The Popocratic minority in tho house, or rather its leaders, show a disposition to delay legislation as much as possible, apparently the hope of compelling the legislature to adjourn at the end of its 60-days' session with nothing accomplished. They have fallen into the habit of offering all sorts of dilatory motions and demanding rollealls upon every proposition, even those of the slightest importance, and a rollcall occupies a good deal of time. In the senate the minority is so slight that it does not cut much figure. There the leaders regard discretion as a better part of valor and never draw political lines when they can help it.

There is a right nice little contest going .on for the leadership of the Popocratic forces in the house. Allen Swope nominally holds it by virtue of having been made the minority candidate for speaker, but Swope is a quiet fellow who cares more about being a good member of the legislature than about making political capital. In fact, he was one of the eight who voted for the appellate court bill. John R. East of Bloomington has taken it for granted that he is the natural leader of the minority, and he is on the floor every five minutes with a dilatory motion of some sort or other. East is a man of enormous size and it is said that the light of the setting sun glints through his blonde whiskers long after it has set upon everybody else among the rills of Monroe. For some unexplained reason East "has it in for" the newspapers and wherever he can find a law that requires advertisement he is around with a bill or an amendment to knock it out. He made a hard fight to amend the Roots bill by knocking out the clause requiring a three week'B advertisement of the intention to contract a debt, but ho fell down. Then he attacked that clause of the dog law requiring the advertisement of dog licenses and tried to make the house believe that there were 8,000 licensed dogs in ^Brown couuty. According to the average proportion of licensed and unlicensed dogs, this would mean that Brown county contains about 40,000 dogs. If what East says is true I do not wonder much at the heavy Democratic majority that Brown rolls up. ia

The real leader on the minority side is W. H. Eichhorn of Wells. He gets his leadership by indefatigable industry. Ho is a young lawyer of more than average intelligence and an enormous capacity for work. He seems to know something about every bill that comes up, and as the members of the minority pay little or no attention to committee meetings and nover read over tho printed bills laid upon their table they have fallen into the habit of looking to Eichhorn to see whether or not they shall make a fight upon any measure that comes up. Aside from his industry, his strength lies in the brief and matter

Of fact way that he argues a question. He does not saw the air or awaken the echoes of the hall, but says what he Whs to say briefly and' clearly and then sits down.

1

The struggle for leadership upon the majority side of tho house is not nearly so prominent a feature of this session as it has been in previous ones. The majority is so small that the strong men on the Republican side of tho house realize that there is no room for petty jealousies and they are working in' harmony rigiit handsomely. Messrs. Smith, Nicholson, Linck, Willoughby, Spooner and Blankensliip have had a little more to do upon the floor than other members, but there has developed no antagonism among them. Each, has his own particular line of work to do ana "tends to his knitting" without interfering with tho others. When it comej to a party question all of them can bo soen working together in getting all the Republican members in their seats and trying to snare a few Popocratic votes.

The most persistent lobby that has appeared about either branch this session is the committee of women representing the W. O. T. U. on the cigarette question. For two or three weeks thev have held Dossessicu of the postofllce room or tlie house, anil they owned everything in that vicinity to such an extent that the engrossing clerks, who have heretofore done their work there, had to move headquarters to another room. This room has always been a convenient place for members to slip out and take a smoke, but when any of them have attempted to do this of lato they have been treated to side remarks that put them to flight in shor* order. At first the women insisted that a bill should be passed absolutely prohibiting the manufacture and sale of cigarettes, but they finally learned from the headquarters of the anti-cigarette agitation in New York that the federal courts are in the habit of overthrowing this sort of law. It was then they agreed to jrst what tho^ agents of the trust asked—that is, a law prohibiting the sale of the "fool killers" to minors under heavy penalties. °4 "A

While the lobbyists have been watching closely affairs in committee they have not bceu much in evidence upon the floor, ilon. "Harry" Adams and Hon. "Jim" Stutesman have been around most of the time. Nobody knows just what they are up to, though tho supposition is that they are looking after the interests of the telephone companies, certain lines of manufactures, the wholesale grocers' interests and one or two other sido lines. I asked Harry Adams the other day what kept him so busy and with characteristic humor, he replied: "We are here in the interest of the State Horticultural society, which has a measure bef^iO tho assembly to prevent the spread of 'yellows' and 'blacknot' among necturian fruit trees. We find that our peach crop is danger of utter devastation if these insidious diseases are not nipped in tho bud by legislation."

Although Mr. Stutesman didn't say it I have an impression that he is representing the wiuebreeders in their efforts to kill off hog cholera.

Ex-Senator Baker is here and there have been some insinuations from unworthy sources that he was in the employ of the American Tobacco company, otherwise known as the cigarette trust. Senator Bak assures me, however, that it is his anxiety for the health of the youth of the laud that causes him to stay here and pay his board at the Denison. He desires that the cigarette leg islation sliouid take the form of a bill prohibiting tho sale to minors under 18 years of age, and he and the W. C. T. U. women have discovered that they are both working for practically the same noble purposes and axe about to come to an agreement that will simply prohibit the sale to all minors. It is probable that this would be about as effective as the present law, which forbids the sale of tobacco in any form to minors under 18 years. It has been enforced with such vigor that not one man in 10 knows of its existence, and if it were enforced it is probabio that all lads of 10 years and over would suddenly blossom oat into youths of 19.

The practice of "dividing time" among appointees to small clerkships and places on the doorkeepers' force is to be followed to some extent this year again, and a number of the boys will get their last vtftichers next Monday Under this plan a new set of clerks has to be "broken in" every session, and about the time they learn enough to become of some value some of them have to give way to new men in order that the clerk or doorkeeper may keep all his promises to members who assisted in his eleotion. While the senate method of appointing a "plunder committee" that takes full responsibility for all appointments is entirely outside of the law, it is a much better plan than permitting offiters to divide time among employes and use every other soheme imaginable to distribute patronage in payment for their election. In the senate the olerk and doorkeeper are left free to discharge any man who does not fill the bill and call upon the "plunder committee" to supply his place with the right kind of a man. It might be mentioned, by the way, that Marion county did not get everything in sight in the senate, as it did in the house, for the "plunder committee" divided things so that each Republican member had the privilege of appointing one man, and the appointments were thus well distributed over tho state..

The distribution of federal patronage has come out very much as I predioted A little council of the powers that be was held last week and the slate showed that Kercheval is to be marshal, Young is to be collector and Kealing is not to be district attorney. Senator Wishard stepped in and claimed this place for his own. RUSSET, M. SEED*.

Did you see the Preacher?

•'Helooksso much better lately." lie has been patronizing- tho

POPULAR BARBER SHOP

Of late." Clean towels used on every man

SIM ELDRIDGE

105 North Gre Street.

ROCK RIVER HERD Of.. ....

Poland Chinas

Farm & of a mile southeast of depot, rigst large and growthy with good style, quality'' and silt edge pedigrees, for sale at all times. Prices as low as is consistent for good stock. Visitors and old-time customers always wcl£22J£^~Jf. Ican't call and see my stock write me for particulars. Address DAVID OllOSC Thorntown. Inrl.

FAST HORSES

C——I [TOiBE SOLD. I will sell at Public Auction on Friday, *eb. 19, at my farm 2'/, miles east, of

Newtown and 3 miles northwest of Wingate, about 30 head of

TROTTERS AND [PACERS

This is not a culling out. sale, but everything goes. Also a good bicyclc, farming implements, wagons, harness, all bought new last year.

CHAS, C.[PALIN

Col. Tudo Hamilton, Auctioneer.

PARKER'S CINGER TONIC

JD«tc« Lung "noublcs. Debility, dlstrcning stomaclj and female Ills, and is noted ior innking :urca when allollwr treatment fails. Every mother ami invalid nhouM h«tv it,

—1 PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cleanse* and bcuutifiea tho hair. 1 romotcs a luxuriant growth.

Never Failo to HoBtoro Grayl Hair to its Youthful Color. Cure* scalp diseases & hair laiiine. _60c«auh31.00 at Druggists

H1NDERCOREV9S The only sure Cnre fbi Cores. Stops all pain. Makes walking easy. atDruggiiw.

The Crown 3 ci-.i's not ih'i.'ce thv lul iI shows that ha in th' kii-.u. So the TJE Cross ou JOHICKO.N'S BELLADONNA 9 I'LAST!: docs not confer excellence, but it guarantees ir. It means that this piaster is the very best of its kind. The lied Cross Society use

CATARRH

6

JS& it in their humane work. It is for j® every idinicnt in -which a plaster is employed. Examine when you buy. JR .JOHNSON & JOHNSON, E? Manufacturing Chemists, New York.

3A^4UllA*««*JMUMUMtK

is a

I.OCAI, DISEASE and Is the result of colds and sudden climatic changes

BALtt

climatic changes

ht.INlT,l,s

rel»edy

ifKrnn?^RvSJ"EA0^':ontain

does not

mercury or

any other injurious drug.

ELY'S

CREAM BALM Opens and cleans the -Nasal passage*,allays

„-—. pain and Inllamina-:

COLD 'N HEAD^cnts

U^lsmem(,brn0e

irom Colds, restores the senses of taste and smell. Is quickly absorbed. Gives relief at once. 50 cents at Druggists or by mall samples 10 C«nts by mall, ELY Bli THERS, 56 Warren St., New York

Miss MariaJParloa

is admitted to be a leadlnglAmerlcan authority on cooking: she

Says "Use

—-1 a good stock for the foundation of 5ESBB soups, sauces and many other things, and the best stock is

Liebig COMPANY'S !8 Extract of Beef."

BXE

100 of Miss Parloa's recipes sent, gratis by Dauchy& Co.,: 27 Park Place, New York.

__^Estate of Clinton Wllklns, deceased.

NOTICE

OF APPOINTMENT.* C—• CD JSDDFFTBHB CD

Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed and duly qualllled as administrator of the estate of Clinton Wllklns, late of Montgomery county. Indiana, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. ITHOMAS WILKINS,

Dated Jan. 29, '97-3t Administrator.

.... 1

c.

h. &:d. Ry:

-To-

Cincinnati,_.

Dayton, Toledo,

-^"Detroit.

MONON ROUTE.

NOKTH SOUTH 2:15 a. ..Night Express 1:40 a. 1:15 p. ....Fast Mall 1:15 p. 2:.'!0 p. .Local Freight 8:46 a. m.

Big 4—Peoria Division. U,«ST WEST' H:42 a. in...Dally, excopt Sunday... 5:50 p. in. I :li) f. t»...Daily, except Sunday... 8:55 a. 4:."i9 p. in -Daily 1:15 p. 1:47 a. in .Dally 12:37 a. m.

-V AND ALIA.

NORTH

9:24 a. m.l 8:18 a. 4:43 p. 8:16 p. my 12:10 p. 12:15 p.m