Decatur Democrat, Volume 26, Number 33, Decatur, Adams County, 17 November 1882 — Page 4
NAN-TOOK-IT! BY J. B. PARKER. It U funny to me That down by the sea That’s as wait as a cod when you cook it, A little old town Should declare up and down, “Nan-took-it! Nan-took-it: Nan-took-it!“ It is old, and O whishl It smells ilk ■ a tish When out of the water y u hook it! But it d ean t loriret To keep murmnrinu yet, “Nan-took-itl N an-took-, t! Nan-took-it!" What makes it so queer? Nan never was h»re, And non n ot the eyes that o’crlook it Ever saw her a minute, Ho what is t.iere in it. This endless “Nan-took-it! Nan-took-it?" If ’twas so nethin<» of cost I am sure it was lost By the sea. wh n some temveat has shook it And it’s mean ot the oc an T-»f'« er t ie notion “Nan-took-itl Nan-took t! Na -took-ltl I euess the ol I town, F/shv, «e>-s.-lt and hen Thinks a 1 of i s i?:a e has f >rs( ok it, An I find* com nr', n.a •e. In sa nr. mv. btK "Nan-took-i X n took-i . Nan- nok-i'i MY PRIVATE SECREIARY. “Well. Peter, have I seen the last of them? Reilly I begin to believe my advertisement reached the eyes of every man in London out of employment, and not yet am I fully s itiTied w i h a single applicant.” Thus I addressed mvself, half to myself half to my worthy butler, one morning in early May, when for two hours I had been interviewing a horde of men, nil anxions to obtain the situation of my private secretary. at figures much less, I ascertained, than those I had set upon in my mind as a proper estimate and valuation of their services. Within a year 1 had fallen heir to my Uncle’s fortune, and, being a bachelor of 35, and somewhat luxurious in trty tastes and habits, with peril ips a disinclination to labor, T discovered my increasing correspondence so sevi re a strain upon my time that I determined to find some one to relieve me of at I'ast a portion of the duties I found irksome, hence m v advertisement of a few days previous. I had had in all some 200 letters, perhaps, but frigji these I had selected twenty, nineteen of whom I had already seen. One, the One the wording of whose answer, perhaps h ;d pleased me most, had not yet put in an appearance. •There is one young person below, sir,” responded my good Ppter, ‘but it’s not a mall, sir. It's a young lady.” “A..young lady ? What can a woman ! want with me ? However, I will see her. Shur, her up.” A'few minutes later, a rustling of skirts informed tne that my latest visitor had arrived upon the scene. I looked up to find a young lady of ' 20, perhaps, simply, almost shabbily, I dressed, but pos-ei-iug a pair of very ‘ pretty eyes, which were taking me in with an intentness which, had I been a bashful man, would certainly have inspired a blush. As it was, spite of the shabby dress, something in the young woman’s air caused me to spring hastily to my feet mid beg her to be se ited, while she told in what way I could be of service to her in any way, “I received a note from you this morning, Mr. Rodman,” she replied, in a voice which was at once sweet and refined. “This, I think, was the hour you : named for me to call.” " A note from me ?” I stammered, in j amaze. Without further argument, she rose, : and, laying on the table beside me a note addressed in my own efiirography to G. Thorpe, Esq., resumed her seat. “The ‘Esq.’ was not quite correct, you see,” she continued: “bit I am G. Thorpe. The initial stands for Grace.” By all the powers, the writer of the twentieth note was before me, and was in petticoats! “I—l advertised for a male secre- ; tary,” I explained, half amazed and half amused; “I am a bachelor and liv- I ing in bachelor quarters.” “I inferred it was a man yon wished to fill the place, but, inasmuch as the duties only occupied certain hours of . the day, I thought it urg'd be equally well filled by a woman. lam very desirous of such a position. lam a good and rapid penman and. if my sex is not mi insurmountable obstiele, I think that I might give yon satisfaction.” As she spoke I remembered the note —short, concise, and withal expressed with a certain elegance of diction. , Even the signature recurred to me—“G. Thorpe.” I smiled to remembei i that- no doubt of the writer being a mm had entered my mind. I had even men tally determined the first name wa- ■ George. The idea she presented to me was en- I tirely new. Yet I reallv knew no rea- | son why a woman should not do ai well | as a man. If she had no objections to accepting the post, I did not know why i I should have any to granting it. She would have her own ro m, entirely disconnected from my personal I ! suit of apartments, and I should expect to see her bnt for a short time each morning, to give her directions for her Work during the day. There was no occasion for my remembering her presence any more than that nf my housekeeper, or the numerous maids. This, of course, was all mental, but ; when G. Thorpe, some fifteen minute; later, hade me good morning, it was understood that from tiie following Monday the hours between 10 ami 4 be- j longed to me. on consideration of a certain valuation, which my secretary deci ired far too liberal. This frank avowal was the first un-business-like expression I had heard her utter. Monday morning I awakened with a j singular sensation that something unu- I sual was about to happen. A few , moment >’ consideration resolve 1 the ; something into the fact that my new secrotary was that day to enter'upon her i duties. When I entered the apartment I had ; o-dered prepared for her—a little study opening out of my library—l iounit tier already at her post. Her hat and cl ak were laid aside, and, as she i looked up with a grave smile to bid me good-morning, I started at the sudden I discovery that an extremelv pretty woman stood awaiting my orders. This discovery gave me anything but pleasure. Instantly I became colder i and more reserved. Os course, I told myself, she would try to fascinate me, j and equally, of course, ignominious * failure would attend her < (Torts. As clearly and concisely as possible I tried to make her understand her du ■ ties. For a time I would lay the letters la-fore her with a rough draught of mv replies, hut later, when she grew accustomed to my mole of expression, I would merely indicate the tone of the response, whether negative, affirmit ve, or the conditions to InHue <-e either. She grasped m . ideas very qu cklv. and at 3 o’clock sent me her replie . With one or two exceptions thev were wholly satisfactory. These I took to her to further explain. I fmcied, as I entered the room, she looked weary—there was a sudden Badness in her expression, I had not previously detected. Bn l I refrained from any outspoken sympathy, and was somewhat more curt tha i usual in giving her the necessary details. “I am sorry to have been wrong.” the raid. ’lt will t.ke me but a few moments to rewrite these as you desire.” Her verv humilitv angered me.
“They will wait until morning,” I re plie 1. “I prefer you should not work over hours.” But when, an hour later, 1 looked oiit of my window, as the street door c osed, I saw that Miss Thorpe hid just left, mid, going down to the study, I discovered tiie letter.-, readv to post, upon the table. So the first day was mirkel by an act of disobedien e ami a discovery— Miss Thorpe was possessed of a will of her own. Two weeks passed along, everything working smoothly, when my coirespomlenee became more involved. Some building was being done under my directions, and I was obliged to inspect plans and go into minute details so that part of the time Miss Thorpe could only perform the manual labor kt my dictation. It was Wonderful how much less irksome I found the task than I had anticipated. The fears I had had in the beginning, that my secretary would attempt to fasc nate me, died. Her reserve and dignity equaled my ownnay, exceeded it: for, when I would have led the conversation into other channels, she brought it back to the present with consummate skill. My secretary had been with me six weeks, and, further than that she was G. Thorpe, and infinitely charming, 1 knew nothing. I h .ve forborne to state that, just at this period, I was placed in a most delicate and trying position. By the terms of mv uncle’s will, I was to marry my cousin, Alice Thornleigh, or forfeit to her one-half the estate. The latter consideration would by no means have induced me to give my hand without my heart, since I was alri'A 1V abundantly provided with this world’s goods; but I felt bound in honor to carry out my uncle’s wish, so far as meeting my cousin, whom I had not seen since a child, and endeavoring, if possible, to make her the offer enforced upon me by his generosity. My aunt and cousin had been spending the last- eight years in America. It was just as mV stery begins that they Cabled mb that they ivtue about to sail for London, so that four weeks previous ' toy cousin and I had met. I found her a very beiutiful girl, but utterly cold and indifferent in manner. ; It certainly, however, I told myself, would not be difficult to learn to love I her, and I resolutely set myself to the I task; yet at the end of four weeks I was ; no neirerthe desired result than at the ! 1 eginuing of that period. Indeed, to be no nearer, argued that I was fur- I ther off, since to stand still in such cases , is impossible. One day, frheti I had just left Miss Thorpe to her duties, my brother start- I led me by the announcement that Mad- I am and Miss Thornleigh had honored mo bv a call. “We were so anxions to see yon- in your bachelor apartments, my dear ; boy,” exclaimed my aunt, as I welcomed her, “that I Could not resist the impulse tn bring Alice to see you. Now yon must take us all over, and show us everything. ” “Everything but one room,” was my mental reservation, shrinking involuntarily from that shrill-voic d commant' on the occupant of the study. “Not there,” I said, as we ente ed the library, and my aunt had moved toward tiie door her quick eye had detected. < “Th t is my den.” But, as fate would have it, hearing toy voice and utterly unsuspecting anvthing as unwonted as visi ors, Miss Thorpe, wishing to ask toe some question, herself opi-nt-d the door. For a moment the ladies regarded each other ! in silence; then, with a burning blush, Miss Thorpe withdrew, but not before my aunt had drawn herself up with conscious virtue and chilling disapproval. “My dear,” she said, turning to Alice, “we have evidently made a mistake in our intrusion. We. will remmlv it ,>» far as we may by bidding you, cousin, good-morning.” “You must not misunderstand the position, however, aunt,” I replied eagerly. “The young lady whom you have seen is my secretary and anrannensis. I should have been frank in the first instance, but I hoped there would be no necessity for an explanation.” “I only am to blame for having I brought Alice here,” was the haughty reply, and the two ladies went out of my doors. “I stood troubled and perplexed for a moment, then went into the study. Mi-s Thorpe was : gain busily writing, bnt I fancied her face was very pale, and I wondered if she had overheard' my aunt’s words. She did not long leave mo in doubt. “It will be two months to-morrow. Mr. Rodman. since I entered upon my engagement with von. Will you kin.ll v accept this short notice of mv resignation ?” “Your resignation? You wish to leave me just when yon have learned to understand all my ways, and have made me so dependent on vo i?” So dependent 1 Had I reallv utterec those words, and having uttered could J retract them? A thousand new ideas went whirling thYongh my brain, but her voice calmed them. “I have known always,” she said, “that my position here was an anoma lons one, but I felt by preserving my owr dignity and womanhood I could reconcile its necessity to myself. I find th.it lam wrong. Thanks to your generosity, Mr. Rodman, my need is not sc great as when I applied to yon, and 1 shall doubtless be able before verv long to find some other emplovment. But however this may be, I shall always feel for you the deepest gratitude. ” As she spoke the last words her lins quivered and her voice trembled: but 1 knew now why I had been so indifferent t*' Alice, and why the hours in the quiet little study bad grown so dear to me. “You say yon will be grateful, Grace.” I answered. “Then prove it by remaining with me. I cannot do without my secretary; bnt we will give the post another name—l cannot do without my wife. Grace, darling, v.hen you stole my heart I do not know, but I think on that first morning, when, standing in your shabby dress and hat, I determined to harden it against the wiles and fascinations of G. Thorpe.” So 1 wot my wife, ana so my cousin Alice came into half my uncle's fortune; but, though all this happened long years ago, I have never ceased to be grateful that I gave to the twentieth applicant upon my list the post of “my private secretary.” Mt:. Sanobal, a Cuban, residing near Lake Hiekpochee. Georgia, discovered a monster alligator lying on Mnd Point, some fifty or sixty feet from the water, anil apparently asleep Mr. Sanobal, jierceiving that it would be a great prize to capture the saurian, for he was fully twenty-two feet long. !>egan building a stockade about him. He had completed tiie work, and was putting up :.ome braces, when the alligator climbed up on the stockade unnoticed, reached his tail over and struck Mr. Sanobal a fearful blow across his throat, killing him almost instantly. A lawsuit in New Y'ork involved the Bum of 7 cents. A man bought two penny pears and tendered a coin in pavment. The seller gave him 1 cent in change The buyer said the coin he tendered was a dime; the seller ar ;erted it was a 3-cent piece. They’ went to law about it and the jury disagreed.
I <»BITI AitY; k tAfori th’o Chicago Tinies.j Died, Nfiv. -7,18-8, of an overdose of party ;t Vres dent, the K-public.m party, aged 2G I years. j' ! The deceased entered into this life Z in the year 1856. It (being of the neuc ter gender) was the offspring of the I union of Political Motive and Public n Consc'enoe. Like Hercules, it came ” into the world with a grand mission—namely, to strangle the polycephalmis g dragon, Slavery, and its slimy brood, - Stateism, Nullification, Secession. Bonrbonism, etc, composing a family called the Democratic partv. Like our army } at Btt'd Run, it was defeated in its first a contest with the pilblic enemy, led by r a chieftain popularly styled “ Ohl Buck.” But, fur years later, the ■ I young Hercules had attained t > such i strength and vigor tint the political e | dragon was driven to the wall. Still, the dragdn refused to surrender. Mustering all the members of its siluii.in family, excepting some of those in the 1 northern parts of the land, who eni rolled themselves under the national t binner, of which the Deliverer hal gained possession, the De troyer un- : furled the fligof Secession and proj claimed the holy war of the Rebellion. I How the youthful Deliverer triumphed in that war, abolished Slavery, strani gled Secession and Nullifies ion. banished Stateism, broke the back of B inr- ! boiiisni and established National Supremacy on an immovable foundation, > is a familiar history which no power of this wOi-ld can unwrite. , With the consummation of the socalled “reconstruction” of the nation d order, the political mission of the dei ceased was fulfilled. But such was the . irresistible force avith which it had moved on to the fulfillment that it was not easy at that point to arrest or control the momentum. Two great _ reasons appeared for the continuance of its organised activities. Une, and the i strohgel'’ rcilsdii; iyas that the Democrat ’ dracoh, though dismembered and mu- ! tilated and reduced to a miserable rump, still exhibited signs of life, and ■ refused to bury its putrefying carcass I I out of sight. If that putrid reminis- ’ i cence had crawled into its proper hole I I and given up the ghost upon the sup- ' pression of its rebellion, the triumphant I party which had delivered the land i from its hateful dominion would also i I have broken up and disappeared in ’ 1872, and perhaps earlier, It was mainly ptlb’fc fear Os the did Bourbon i dragotl; which persisted in squatting in 1 its corner and showing its unpleasant fangs, that kept the delivering party in existence. . i The other cause of the prolongation I 1 of its organic life after the fulfillment I of its political mission was an appetite : forthe “spoils of office.” Among its I most active and conspicuous men were many who had been trained in the politif al school of Marcy and A. Jackson; men who, like “the veteran” Thurlow Weed, “believed in the spoils system,” and regarded parties as merely organized election machines to be used by professional politicians as appliances for getting the offices. To these were ; speedily added innumerable others who became easy converts to that view, sc that hardly had the deceased party accomplished its political mission than ; the professional politician began to emj ploy its organization as an election maI chine for office-getting, and to exclude I political considerations as matters interfering xvith its tisef aluess to them as h machine. But this reduction of party to the ; character of a mere election machine ; inoculated it with the loathsome and i fatal disease known as the spoils distemper. which has its genesis in the party President. Strong symptoms oi | the malady began to appear in Grant’s I reign; wherefore they were called Grantism. They did not differ, howi ever, from the symptoms of the same l malady under other party Presidents. What was called Grantism, and so exI asperated the country against the President that a large number of the provinces which supported his candidacy in 1868 turned against him in 1872, was, i reduced to its simplest expression, the i employment of the appointing power as ' a means of paying his political debts, | bribing party support, ami rewarding ; the questionable characters whom a Missouri Senator of the President’s own party described as “Grant’s cursed old bar-room cronies.* The dose of party President which Grant gave it in his first term was so strong that it reduced the party nigh unto death in 1872, and probably it would have kicked the ] bucket then if the offensive carcass of the Democrat dragon had not been I lugged in at Cincinnati and Baltimore to frighten the country into keeping , Grant four years longer. The party did not recover from the spoils disease. Grant would not let it. On the contrary, he increased the dose , of party Prer, dent. The consequence wa-, th .t. in 1864, the party which, at I Grant’s first election, had a majority of i two-thirds in the Representatives, lost its s ' majority in that assembly, and did not I recover it for six years. Moreover, so l ■ sick was the party made by Grant’s j I second dose of party President that, in I ; 1876, i’s popular majority also van- , ished, and the interposition of a Lonisi- ’! ana “Returning Board” alone saved to ' : its bosses the appointing power, the ; . i scandalous abuse of which had brought t it so near to death’s door. Dr. Hayes undertook to cure the sick party of the spoils distemper. He I failed, partly from the lack of “back- : [ bone,” and partly- from not grasping t i the nature and cause of the disease. >i Nevertheless, his treatment benefitel I the p itient. After all the denunciation ! s I of his course by the stalwart bosses of I the machine, the party was in bett- r t health at the close of his ministr tiou t than it had l>een in many years. It re- : gained its lost majority in the Repre- > : sent .-.fives. It was able to keep the ex- . 1 ecutive without the aid of a Louisiana Re- ,- turning Board, a batch of “ visitingstates- . mon” and an “Electoral Commission. Plainly, its health had improved under e the treatment of a President who fora bade his subordinates to use the public i offices as manipulators of the party mal chine, and did not degrade his own of- ” i five by engaging personally in the elec--5 tioneei ing work of a machine politician. Great hopes were felt that the beneficial treatment of the sick party by Dr. I Hives would be continued, with still t better results, by Dr. Garfield. That such hopes would have been fulfilled ■ there are some good reasons to doubt. But a machine politician of the name of Gniteiu prevented the po-sibilitv of r ; . ] their fulfillment by removing Garfield ami putting the sick pirty in the hands oi political quack. Dr. Arthur, who immediately began to treat the ease p upon the principle .ibnilia zimilibus v < ui-n;ifur, bv dosing the patient with more party Presi tcut than any previous “J party has ever lived or died under. No Pre ident, since Jackson, and not Jackson him ,e’s, h is so openly and uns hesitatingly pro titu’.ed the powers and duties of his office to the service of a n partv machine a< Arthur has done. No President, beneath an as umpt on of personal dignity, has behaved a tone of I polit c.il moral;, so degi-aded and vicious. 0 I No Pl evident, not even Grant, has tn form so degraded a coneepII **’ * c ; lice. No Pri- ident ha, so viciously 4 overstepped the proper bounds of his lv oft-.-iil function to interfere with popular elections and supersede the
bloctors in the free exercise of their office. No President has so . liberally lent the appointing power ; to party bosses, or permitted them to employ it so freely for the corruption of > electors and the destruction of the • elective independence. No President , has so openly permitted and encouraged the infamous practice of levying contributions on the public service to fasten ’ upon the people t-lie intolerable tyranny of the machine, the damnable despot’ i Ism of party I Ossisui. Putting all in .4 single proposition, no President haß given the country so large and n utseating a dose t)f ; th’fit I'rexiib iilkiii as the present iiienmbent: In a singllj year he has filled the land with the ao ; Cumulated offensiveness of Grant’s ■ eight year Most his majority in the Representatives, and carried his party back not onlv to the desperately sick state in which Hayes found it, bnt put it probablv beyond the hop -of resurrection. This is, and will be, the general verdict. Mr. Groter Cleveland, not misinterpreting the significance of his election over the President’s own candidate for Governor of New Y'ork by more than lull.ooo votes to spare, has said, with as much truth as candor, that it would be a mistake to infer from the result that public sentiment is turn'ng ba.-k to the old Botlrbon party machines “The immediate cause is the interference of the national Executive with the people’s politics.” It is, in other words, the spo Is disease, a more specific name for which would he the party-President disease; of which the President’s party has virtually expired. Let the country bury it. and inscribe on its gravestone, j in plain words that even stupid keepers of the o'd Bourbon election machine 1 can read, this fitting epitaph: HIC JACKT DKFCNCTUS THE REPUBLICAN PARTY. IN ITS INFANCY A MOTIVE OF PCLtTICAI righteousness; in its maturity an ORGANIZATION OF THE NOBLEST POt>rTICAL_ASFIIIATIONB OF A i’EoptK; in its age an ELECTION MACHINE MANIPULATED BY PARTY BOSSES, BROUGHT TO ITS DEATH BY AN OVERDOSI OF PARTY PRESIDENT. REQUIESCAT IN PECTOItE JAY HUBBELL. ————— Arcadian Honeymoons. All the old episodes in the union of two fond hearts are discarded. There site no mow? bridesmaids, po more best limn, no throwing off of old slippers, nd sprinkling of rice over the departing pair. Nor do the pair depart in the old way. The young woman of the period objects to making an exhibition or herself. She shrinks from the ordeal of the “bridal-room” in the palace-car. She refuses to l>e made the passing i comment of ribald youth or cynical age in the hotel parlors. She refuses to be ' made the object of smirking advanced I on the part of elderly gossips, bent on examining her diamonds or trousseau under the artless plea that fier own dear girl went through th.-i s anM > martyrdom not long before. Indeed, the bride of to-day proclaims that she does . not think it an unalloyed joy to suffer the insinuating impertinences of curil ous strangers under the plea of sympathy. as if marriage were matter of condolence. Nor is the simpering insinuations of the bevies of susceptible i onng misses, exhibited in hotel parlors, as a sort of marriage mart, entirely tolerable to a young bride no matter how overpowering her trousseau. It is the horror of this magpie chattering of the coquette squadrons that has brought the old wedding tour into disuse. No woman but enjoys the admiring glances and silent devotion that mankind pays to beauty, particularly at this interesting epoch of her life; but there are few women that can bear rq> under the punie admiration of ri- | val ein the guise of disciples. It is not until later in life that the bride feels | like imparting the delicious details of com t 'up—what he said and how he said it. Nor is tt lP first intoxicating joy of lio|m- fulfilled the moment when a tender bride cares to share with her ' sex the amount of hei trousseau, the cost of her jewels, papa’s pres»>nt. or the contributions of the family and friends. The bride of the present, backed by recent judicial declarations. ' says in substance; “I don’t propose to i ' make an exhibition of myself. When - the Rev. Mr. Swearem asks me to love, i honor and obey, I shall substitute ; cherish for that odious word.” It is - true that such conduct may at first scandalize the fogies, and that the groom may not justify the expectations of the assembly by preserving the funeral gravity usual to such occasions, i Tiie bridal-tour she regards as a vulgar concession to an imbecile custom, with which site will have no more to do. and that there is no more reason why two modest people unitedin wedlock should set out to make an exhibition of themselves than that the fond parents should i carry the first-born to some public place to display its linen and silver-spoon. To the women, marriage is a sacrament, and it is desecrated by sharing its fresh joys with a wicked and incredulous world. As it is the condition of all men to be married sooner or later, unless celibacy be put upon them for their sins of vanity and obstinacy, it is jnst as well that this new departure from the honeymoon should bo accepted at onee. Nor is it likely the average lover will resist the edict. The happy lover will relinquish the parade of his happiness with alacrity. H<- svmpathizes, on sentimental grounds at least, with the desire of his charmer, to avoid the odious ordeal of the resorts where the men are all g,i nblers and the women all fash- ' ion-plates. Instead, he will go willing 1 to <mn- forest of Arden, where liis wife shall lie the Rosalind of the sylvan sc ■ and the world shall lie only a memory. Under such conditions, too, an-, girl worthy the name and ministry ci »ite can soon transform the most obstinate Benedict into a perfect Darby, whose onlv joy in life will be the love ami cherishing always promised, but rarely performed.—P/il/ade/p/iill Dress. The Extravagant Tailor. Gilhooly, who was very much in debt, happening to pass down Austin avenue, looked into a restaurant, and saw Snip, his tailor, with some friends, regaling themselves with some champagne and tempting viands. “M hat doos this extravagance mean ?” asked Gilhooly, who is remarkable for i his impudence, as he stalked into the i restaurant. , "It is none of your business!” said the tailor, defiantly. , lesitis my business. Here you have lieen dunning me the last two 1 years to pay you for that pair of pant-, yon made for me. saying that von needed your money, whereas, if r On ]j V ed ! within your means, and did not guzzle - hampngne. von would not l lavp s o botlicr gentlemen by sending them bills. ' You would even have ruonev to lend ; gentlemen who patronize von if von i vei-etogivenp your extravagant and habits.” retorted Gilbnolv : r so impudentlv that, j ; Gib. ;>y li.. concluded towitl-draw hi ■- ■ custom ho ra the felloe sift- ! I iitEY tot] a to:;.- of a cert'.in New' ’ York Judge who wo id red “whv ii t ill Th-v- wanted to give Humboldt | ' » statue m Central Park? Here- • dd anything but unent—b i.-hn’ —i 1 Ad’ -i"
IndlAnA state news. I ______ ' ! GEORGE W. BLAKEMORE, ft WtjUKnO«n ' citizen of Logansport, is dead. The Indiana Equal Suffrage Association has a membership of over 4,000. Harry Webbs met with a horrible ' ! death by falling down the air shaft of the. Shelburne coal mine, in Sullivan County, ft distance of IWO feet: A viGit.ANCE committee has been Ofgamzed mi the borders of Clark and i Seott counties io stop horse stealing thereabouts. i ' ,T. W. Dawson, of Lafayette, a former I : resident of New Albany, died in the • former city. The remains were interred I at New Albany. Mrs, Catherine Roberts, of Ander son, sued Dr. O. W. Brownback for $5,000 damages, for malpractice, and i was aw arded SSO. The puddlersat the Terre Haute Iron I and Nail Works and the Wnb.i*h Iron ' Co., went out on a strike, demanding $0 per ton until the first of June. A EIRE at Farmersburg, tiifl Other 1 night, destroyed the general stores of J. R. Cummins and J. D. Baldridge. Loss about $0,000; insured for $3,000. The saloon of L. L. Fowler, at NewCastle. was fired by incendiaries on the j night of the 6th." The fire was extinguished without material damage, Like McCray, a prominent young politician, was run Otrir and killed by a train near Indianapolis. Ids remains j being scattered along the track for il mile. John W. Berns, proprietor of the ! Shelbyville Volunteer, was shot by I some unknown person while on his way home the other night. His wound is not serious. The pay-roll of the Indiana, Bloom- | ington and Western system for October . was $113,873. Some $12,000 of this amount is chargeable to new construction account on the middle division. John Blckle. a pfOminmA farmer of Wabash county, on Sunfldy morning, | fqll dead at his'home, south of Wabash, I A ruptured blood-vessel caused his death. Mr. Bickle was 70 years of age. , The Novelty Chair Company of Evansville filed articles of incorpora- ; tion with the Secretary of Stat ■ recently. Theca rital stock is $25,000, and the directors are M. T. Burks, D. L. Akers and W. H. H. Miller. The safes of David Trnsh, William | Bitner and Mi>th‘? & I’*'" 1 !’, a* La; port*-, were robbed the Other night of $750, $45 and $1(1, respectively, the burglars blowing open the safes and escaping without leaving a clew. On Saturday night, a young man ! named Henry Ruble was strr.ek and killed at DeSoto, six miles east of Muncie. by a train on the Lake Erie road. He was attempting to cross the track at the time. He was about 17 years old. TltE other night the magnificent resident of Geo. A. Smith, of Cleveland . Township, near Elkhart, was struck by lightning. It struck the rod, divided and tore through four different parts or the house. The damage is quite extensive. A young man named McCra, son of former Commissioner McCra, of Indianapolis, was found on the railroad track in this city terribly mangled. It is not known w hether he was killed by a train or murdered and placed on the track. It is stated that the DePaUw Amerfc Can Flate=Glass Works, at New Albany, tire soon to be considerably enlarged. | Additional buildings are to be erected for the reception of new machinery, and the capacity Os the works much in- ; creased. Thr postoffice at Brunsville was tolp ! ber of nearly S6OO in money and stamps ‘ ' at an early hour the other morning, | The safe was blown open with powder, | The thieves stole a horse and buggy i and drove to Evansville, where all trace of them is lost. Barton Powell, aged 35 years, who i resides two miles south of Morristown, was found in bed the other morning, dead. The deceased was afflicted with white swelling on one of his hips, and I was also subject, to fits, bnt was in his Usual health when he retired. Dr. George Manners, of New Richmond. Montgomery county, has given Asbury University $15,000, which, with ' liis donation in June. 1880, makes his j total gift to the University $25,000. i This leaves but $119,000 to be raised tn tneet the requirements of the proposed I DePauw endowment Mary A. Royer, of Indianapolis, has ’ brought suit for SIO,OOO damages against the Indianapolis, Decatur and Spring- j field Railroad Company, before Judge Walker, for the death of her husband. ! He, with another man, was run over and killed by an 1,. D. & S. engine at a crossing in that city about two years j ago. The gang of track-layers on the new Chicago and Atlantic railroad has j reached Laketon. Wabash county, and are putting down ties and rails at the j rate of three-fourths of a mile per dav. All the grading on the road has been | completed, the bridges are in, and in ! less than ten days the gap lietween Huntington and Rochester will Be filled. John M. McGee, Democratic candidate for Clerk of Monroe county, at the i late election, has filed a libel suit against | the Indianapolis Journal, claiming ' SIO,OOO damages. The suit is based on a card from Private Dalzell and published in the Journal, in which Mr. McGee was referred to as a “bitter rebel sympathizer during the war.” McGee claims he was but fourteen years old at the close of the war. Miss Alice Moore, of Huntington, succeeded to the care of a large drygoods store in that place, upon the demise of her father. She has entire control of the business, birring her own s;«rk and employing subordinates of both sexes. During the five years since she has hold this responsible position, she has more than trebled the capital which came into her hands. Not only is she a woman of great energy and ability, but she has many accomplis!mints. Governor Hendricks suffers no material pain, and rests well. His appetite is fair, his brain is clear, and he is in good spirits. The disease is limited to the toe, and the swelling of the feet has materially decreased. The physicians, however, report that there is no doubting the correctness of the original j diagnosis, that the disease is gangrenous. and it can not lie said thev are | sanguine. The hope lies in the possibhity that it may prove self-limiting i hut. Whether it is or not. there is no danger of an immediate demise. Even . if it be constitutional, he mav live for j months. I Fritz Bt hi.f. aged almut 30. put in i jail at Lafayette, to answer a charge of i indecently exposing his person, was disI covered, dnad soon after when the turn | key v.eut to his ceil. When put in he i complained of his head, which was , beaten on the temple, and at timhs was j nig.ity. At others he was rational. He I accounted for his wounds bvsaving he ha«l a fuss The doctor thinks the injuries in the head caused his death and 'an be learned Rnhle came from Galveston lexas, having letter of recomwnd ition from Charter De Lain, of mat place, m one of his pockets. --7-vning home the other night ±b p. e - Ivtl r s of the 1 i r £f-en>.nQ discovered a
burglar milking his exit through a window. ami. with a kind of donrage char- i acteristic of reporters when thhir world]v possessions arf •« danger, made an, effort to capture the thief o- jffmpmg out of the window after him. However, tin" fleet fugitive made his escape, enrrving with him $33 in cash, and jewelry to the value of SIOO. A •‘jimmy” used in opening windows wns left behind in the haste of dcpartnfc. The thief was ft bov diqirtfontlv n<4 over 15 years Old. The'indiscretion Os Mr. Matthews iff having more than 10 ertds, tire < nstomarv professional reserve fund, Is ttfident A Most rknuirknbl* case of matured love that overcame eD*.vßiing was exhibited in that of Mrs. Jennie COun«-'l; j a handsome and wealthy young widow ■ of Columbus, who took for a second spouse a M k . Griffin, anplil acquaintance. After a joyoiik W«l<Jlng trip the couple returned to the himi* of tho bride, but as she entered the pat lift i the first object that met her gaze was a full-length portrait of her former hus- | band. The sight of the familiar and ' I loved features so wrought upon her as ib ertil»e i» ei'inpletc revulsion of feeling toward 111 1 ! ii'w bits!"and. AftCf brooding over het 1 trouble' for d fifty Rr two she confessed all to het llnsband, dSj dared she could never love itldu ana besought him for the sake of both !0 leave her. She persisted in this, and an attorney w as called in, who drew up a statement signed by both and forming ftn agreement to separate, A noted and desperate chnrncter ! fiambd Jas M.. Wiley, died in the county • jail .it GrOeneidifg. ft fe'w days ago, of ■ Helerinm trt>m6ns. He was (iff fears of , age. On the night of Oct. 19, 186 f- 1 while the Republicans of Milford and vicinity were engaged an ratifying th6' j l election, one Joseph Woiidard was brutally murdered. Jim Wiley was i ■ indieted,and. in June next, was sen- . fenced to thbpenitentiary for life. About five years afterward. Gov. Hendricks pardoned him. for which net he was heartily condemned by the good boodle 'lf that jmd adjoining counties. , Wiley returned id (1)8 ***ncs of his , former fonqnbt-ts. rind s >bn became rs ' terror to the kothniunity again. He sold liquor nearly all the time since, though not licensed, ami was many , times indieted, but invariably laid out his time in jail rather than pay fine ami costs. On Monday night last he shot ; and slightly wounded one William | Bradburn at Milford. He told the I officersth.it he shot with the intent to I kill, but., being nervous, missed his aim. i His sttti i« nttw serving a term in the ' penitentiary. . _, The Constitutional -\inen<linent’*. Senator McDonald was interviewed, , yesterday, by a Journal reporter, rela- | tive to the alleged discovery of defective 1 procedure by the two legislative bodies in the adoption of the projiosed constitutional amendments, rendering their submission to a vote of the people nugatory. It is claimed that the Democratic leaders Jiave been in possession of the know ledge sot some time, but, , for reasons best knOwn to themselves, they have taken care t<l ectaeenl it front the public until after the election, thS ! announcement of its discovery being ; ont for the first time the night after the . election by Senator McDonald, a state- | ment of w hich appeared in the Journal ■ of yesterday. Senator McDonald and I Jason B. Brown, who was a member of the Senate when the amendments were passed, were found at the Democratic rit'ite Central Committee rooms, and when questioned regarding the matter, Mr. McDonald said: “The whole thing is within a narrow compass. The first section of article 1(1, providing for ! amendments to theconstitution, requires that any proposed amandment shall be I agreed to by a majority of the members Os both houses; that such proposed amendments shall, with the yeas and nays, be entered on their journals, and referred to the General Assembly to be ; chosen at the next general election; and, if agreed to by the next General Assembly, they shall be submitted to the voters of the State for ratification. The requirments of this law have never been complied w ith. The official journals i show nothing recorded in the procedings of either body, except the yeas and nays of the final vote. No reference of the > proposed amendments to the next Legislature wns made', ami consequently that ! body will have no power to act in any ; other manner than in accordance with the provisions of the constitution." “And the amendments are now”— “Not before the next Legislature.” the Senator interrupted; “and before any action can be taken for their submission to the people, thev will hare to properly go through the initial steps of being, regularly agreed to by the General Assembly.” Jason B. Brown, whose shrewdness as a lawyer, as well aft a politician, is well known the State over, was sitting beside Mr. McDonald, and repeated the statement, adding that he was verv i much surprised to find that the name’s ’ were not enrolled, as Mr. Nixon was Clerk of the Senate at the time of the adoption of the amendments. It is thought by those who know Mr. Brown best that there were far more improbable things that he is the person who made the discovery. His sagacity for getting people and parties through very small loop-holes when in close quarters has been often commented upon a qnite remarkable. The reporter suggested that the discovery would prob b'y relieve the D >mocratic party of a great responsibility in Indiana, and Senator McDonald replied : “I cannot speak for the Democratic party, but there is no question about the law. Speaking as a law ver, and not as a politician, I think that the proposed amendments cannot be legally submitted to the people by the next Legislature.” It would seem that Indiana is going to have very little constitution left, if the Democratic discovery holds good. A preceden* in the present case is cited by Mr. W. W. Thorntown, the Depute Attorney-General, in the amendment to the constitution repudiating the debts ofthe Wabash and Erie canal. Mr. 1 horn town finds that the amendment was proposed in the Legislature of 1871, and w as not recorded in the journal of either house. It was agreed to bv the House on November 14, 1872, and by the Senate on December, 9, 1872, at a special Marion. The joj.t resolution ; submitting it to the people was passed bl the House. January 28, 1873, and it was adopted February 28. 1873. The objection was then ‘ made that the 1 amendment could not lie submitted, because it had never been placed upon the journal,. In his message to the Legislature, Governor Baker made sjjecial reference to the objections w Inch had been raised, giving it as his opinion that the omission was not a detect Which would invalidate the amendment, which, he -aid, hadls-en enrolled ami signed by the Speaker of t’.e Hous.- and the President of the Senate ami duly deposited in the office of the Secretary of State. The yeas and M v ß : had Icen entered in full on the journals be argued, and this was a substantial' compliance with the constitution This men? OODdlt ! on of ‘he pending amendments. and the validity of this mode H I ’'? ceednrp has never been quesuoued.—lndia nnrtolift Journal. 9th. A \ Ini,-,-.• amateur thief ooi.. , L urunken man. whom he found laying ill »' - Street, and i in off in time u -)>t? be’j.t ca’ig’it by a jjolieeman. ex. m-,rning Lis deaxl body was found wimS. ”™ ' T '
FMIM NOTES. — Tn shipping pJulfry to the cit' market be sure to mark the hr>« ar jxickage 1 idaintv with name of consignor Mid con- , iignee. Also send invoice by mail. Soiik /IWiHe recommend the placing of a laver of oats llrttle# th* «»n<l »» ( ! which slips are planted. They itet a« il i stimulant and feeder to the young ■ roots. KfNVLoWER seed given to a horse nt each morning and night feed will k<-ep him in good spirits and give his hair a sleek appearance. Bo says the .\ahonal farmed. Srirurn ft»« AKntAts.-The Toimt Homextead: ‘ 'Hie iw of snlphnr with live st'A-’k bf ail kinds has “ value in preventing filany forms of disease, and espcciallv akin disewses. It muat lw used cautiously, as it is #n active poison. The average hired hand must not 1>" trusted in using it. Mix thoroughly i e.iid thore io no danger in giving it. DestroVlXO Peach Gri bs.- The President of the Indirna Horticultural Socictv recommends th? destruction of grubs bv removing a small D'rtion of the earth from the body near the roots | and filling its place with a pint to a | quart of soft soap, from the middle to the last o< Mav. If the grub has previott.lv found Ins way into the tree the ' so. p"ill kill him; if he is not there, he will not get in »<b>r the soap is i placed there. I ALTH..VGH CotSWOM 1 , 1 rge frame and iv.’nt lleecc, suitable for farmers hot of the IW quality.' ' when used for crowing. d<» De 1111 ‘ . the s'ze. although the grade of A OOI * liettor. The' Sorithdtfwn 1» best ° common flocks, as they are bred so. mutton in preference to’wM, and being I h irdy and active the ero* is less vio- i lent than those lietween the Cotswolds and our small natives. The wool from I t i-‘ Sonthd-iwn Is not inferior, being ’ , las-i <1 with the middle grades, n<< is it deficient in quality as compared with i I common stock, but much aliove file | I average. Their excellence is in the snperiorift iff she mutton, and in that re-pect they iiavfift"’ rivals. —Farm and . Giirdew , i Ke* PING Apples.—The scarcity and conSspient high price of good apples m the spring has induced large nnniliers to study the art Os hoping apples. We learned it years ago. Hfre it is: Pick without bruising, store without 1 frosting, keep in bulk with a free cir--1 culntion of air. and as cool as jiossible > thont freezing. Some would say keep iff dry air. This is a n istake. We have sV'ert bflndreds of bushels kept in bins holding rind ImdieD in .[ a cellar where the water w.-fs ftix inches ' deep on the liottom. The apples were kept up on blocks and not stirred front the time they w ere put in until April, and when taken out were perfectly souud and covered witii Off oily coating The variety was Rhode Islind green- j ings. The less apples a e stirred the better when well picked and carefully ; Stored,— Germnnloirn Te e irarh. Tiifi Vvi.t’P o? Rye —Rye is w ill adapted to ffutmotle old pastures. Take a piece fit sandy Or gravellv land that has been nsed for pa-stufe Until It w ill I I hardly produce feed for slieep, an<l L I covered with pcnuyro'val. mulleins, | rasplierry bushes and the like; pow . the last of Angnst. no matter if not ■ turned over very smoolh: <1 rag well so as to be mellow; sowaliont two bu-hcls , I of seed to the acre, and the resn’t will 1 e almost ceitin to b" grod. paying 1 crops. Again, it will lie found tha* the ’ rottening of the turf has improved the ' pasture, all bushes are killed, the grass roots renewed, and the field will b ar tnore and sweeter fee l for yeirs after, j The grain Will generally more than pay all the outlav in its cultivation, while ! the straw w ill sell for about the pri -e of I hay, and sometime- even more, always ; being in good demand. — Afhhiyan Farmer. Keeping Sweet P vrFrogs. —To keep them through the winter has been attended with much labor and has sel- ' dom been entirely successful. Wo have J heard of several different inodes of I keeping them, bnt all merging into i very nearly the general metliod. First, they must be dug with care, allbrni-'sl or cut tubers to be sorted out for imi mediate use or sale. Second, after digging they should be left to dry in the sun, and then spread out, under cover, in thin layeis on a dry floor, whether the floor be of boards or dry, han't ground. Third, thev should then be carefully packed in barrels, boxes or bins, with perfectly dry sand, and i placed either in a warm, dry, cellar or room, where the temperature should lie as equable as possible, and always alxive the freezing point. Some persons pack them in barrels, etc., with tine shavings, and say it answers as well as sand, but not according to cur information.— rmantou n Telegraph. Goon Water for the Stock.—l’nre water and abundance of it is one of the essentials of every good farm. This water should be at or near the barn or tiarns. During the summer months, when the farm s‘ock is in the pastures with green fodder, the water -upply does not seem to be of so great importance. A good stream may be all that is necessary, even if it is situated a half-mile from the farm buildings; bnt in winter a supply close at hand is of gn at value. Barn-yard wells are convenient, but are seldom receptacles of pure wa*er. Tim water too frequently would serve a better purpose if used as a fertilizer on the land than given to the animals. Far superior to I the well-water is that of some spring | which is brought to various places in ami around the farm buildings from a neighboring hillside. There are many places where pipes can lie laid and the very best of water brought in to supply the wants of the stock. There is a great Uss sustained by farmers in giving or allowing their cattle to seek and drink water that is at the point of freezing. It not only chil's the system, but requires a ‘large amonnt of f ood to bring it to blood heat. Spring water, though cool, is not ice-cold. Before the winter sets in and the stock are all in their quarters, every one should see that his water supply is a hat it should lie. for the sake of the comfort and health of his animals, and : the profit which conies with such thoughtfulness.— American Auriculturi.it. , An Arkansaw man se nredafree I m oyer a railroad. Ik was verv much pleased at first, but. after discoverin ’ that if injured in an accident he could not recover damages, he approached the Sni erintendeiit and said: “Look here, how abont this thin??” “What's the luat'er with it?” “What if I get killed on the road: mv wife wouldn't r<cover damages.” “No. sir." “Tlmn I den t want the pass. I ain't got wife nor no relations, but I w.mt to feel that if I had a wife she'd get pav for mv death. I'm much oblige! to ver. but ! re.-ken 11l hive to wa k. '— Arkan.< ;ir Traveler. Grandpa, does !mn- mike their own egg ? Yes, mdee I they do, Johnnie ” ,‘ hp - r a, " ' n l” f ,hf ' . vok “ in the middle?” “(In.-, time do. Johnnie' “An’do they put the -tar.-h around it to keep the yellow t:• ,m rubbing off '’ “Quite likely, mv little Iwv." An’ wle se - s the cover on ? ’ Ihj. ; .f lmp! .q th( old gentmman, ac .i U barriiaded Johnnie s month i Al, lMlipoi> -lon don Soctti’i.
UneertahKy us i(> tl > q 1 j “What I want to knowi sw | M I the first blow?” said an \, M /'■ i io Jun Mebster, iyho was the ■ W | witneae in an.assanlt ,m,i W I "Uncle Ike, dah. ho hit ,|. ■ Jeplled Jim. "Are Vl , u ' st J I Uncle Ike struck the first |>i fl Didn't I si ' ,fl •nd hlt-U itwilick, but 1..-,-;," I I"' bit bi'fo nmt ,fl lieks de udder l.igg a r j,’ t ™fl more dan I'se wiilm'fc, ' Te.rus Silttnax. Ul HIE MM;;,! is, NEW YORK. j Beeves • < Hofis cotton ' Ft our--®!’.’ •orfl’M' ,1 •». Wheat—N-». 1 White ?.;? "HAH No. 2 Bed • * ’ ■ Corn—No. 2.............. ' Oats—No. 2 ■*** Pori—Me«s Lard CHICAGO. ’ 2 « fl | Beeves—Good to Fane\ StAvrs 5 fowi ar.«l Heifers Medium to Fair ... " aL I Hon* •'«, ' : Fi.oi-h Fan-'x V. Good to Choice Bn*!,'Ex IH : Wheat-No. 2 Sprine ‘ «fl No. 2 Red Winter.. . '. t - , a ! Corn—No. 2 i Oats—No. 2 I Rtf.—No. 2 ' j Barley—No. 2 L’ * i RinTEß—Choice Creamery. Eggs—Frwh 7. ’ 1 Pork—Mew ." " ■ I Lard ‘ FORT WAYNE. S j Flour —No. 1 White $ .9 No. 1 Family i Wheat—No. 2 Red, new... 90 « I Oa» . ■ Corn—ln car—old ,7 i Rte M fl lIAHI.KT fl Butter—Fresh % ' ■ Boos Potatoes Laud CINCINNATI [Wheat— No. 2 Rt'd Ou fl OATh, 3; I J 5 RTF ... * -®2 - jfl '■ •- - ■ ■‘ ■ fi ■ 1.1:; . . WttMT fit % 1 Cohn. ..//z.-.-1 OATR-Jfaa « 4 J 1 ’ WHL.t* .No. 1 Wlrftr . Corn—tfo. ‘ Oato—Mixed ■'* *fl Pork—Meas INDIAN A Wheat-Na 2 Red *4 : Corn—No. 2 Mixetf EAST LIBERTY. PA. ■ Cattle—Best 6. w er •«■ Fair / - r , U Common ....n 4,n» '.fl| 1 Hogs jai WfSKPr.., - 2.75 PRiNGiPAL-Hi i hH U Ll\ ..E E’. fl And "T 1 n ’0 ‘ 8 point* In T .r I j Nebralitß.MiMOurL ta*. Xor Met***. ArUuna, tana *sd Texa*. _ j OITI C A £ ?;i» L I.a- » I - •' -1 be the best equip ped :>< fl Railroad In lh«* World for jm||| all < of travrl, M KANSAS CITTI Yhrcngh xATCy K 1 it kt t» v in «)rat all oflk*** 'xz/X. :hc V S. Canada. " i <>fr ■ Cil'-lfll e" • •• X -A fl T J POTTER. PERCEVAL I id Vice Pru’t Jf-tnaoer, Os / • *■- 3 Chicago. 11l I GRANO RAPIDS & INDIAN* ML*d Ji» Effect October 15, 1882. COM MBIS TIME. „■ ! goinU Sr>T: i f;. ■ | St-itino— No. L > ‘Afl f T.1., ( . H. V D. . h .. 1 Bicl ni-md jv Sftpmli i 1 f Wim-h'-.ffter 4 11’ U.’livin'. ■ , KidxeUHe 4Xi ' 1’ ” I'tnllanii f. 105 11 L’lD ; I‘euaDtr 513 '? in 12’ Fort W.«yn* 4ir 1 10 . - ■ , Fort Wayne lv ....... KcndaliriUe » . J‘J ." ■ i V'i<-k*bun? • f V !*»*■ • KahiuaTUH* ar j *' ■ I Kalamazoo h • w *V ■ Allegan ** • ■ Grand Rapid* ar I' l ’■ l ' • . H Grand Rapids Iv J 45am ' 3 D.*M.('ro*Mnif ... .55 1 ' xy a Howard Cit> 9 17 !. Gin a 1 Big Rapjd.t i-ill ’ A B : R<-e<l nty Vi .*-> 2 M , 0 ; O ■ I Cadillac ar 12(firn* , I ll'hllM" 1V .'i» I TriMer-tr ... ar .• Kalkaska . - r ■ Mancelona '? 11 L I Boyne Fall* • • l * . ’ a Petoakey ! - 4 ■ Harter Sprines I '-, I Mackinaw , ■ , "going stiriH -r i Statu-pa— i No. 2. _> '■ s I i.ri'U iw l< , , w ,, I ' I*eto key 1 I s. 3 Boyne Fall* a Mancdona. | »j I Traverae City . : I OadHlar ar '.‘J- , I Cadillac Jv < "vm l™ • 5 I !-:• I How.nl i -.tr «'• *. ■ “ - I I>. fc M. <r—lug.. ' K j 2 ... I Grand Rapid' ar . -'i ’ Grand Rjirid* !v 7 tOrnt . Aib-icaij ‘‘ J 2 I Kalamason ar •• Ml • . 'I Kalamazoo Iv, 9 Ofi 1 l . : * I Vickablint. HGS 1... ■' .. I Sturvi. Kl■.!£ I Xk « LM- it **> ; r | F< rt W«'. n<- ar 100 pm . . , : | Fort Wayne Iv 1/) 6 i.';i.i ■ I Decatur ' 2in ’ i ‘ r.’ | Portland 3’o , > s / I Ridgeville 8 ST I WincLeHti-r 35« ’ •»* .’r.' I Richmond 5 00 ’ :.*? I Cincinnati I 7 4N) l ‘A 11 ? J A —- —7 1 No. 5 leaves Cincinnati and N->- s | inaw City Jally, except Saturda'. a trains d .ily excel* Sunday. . H e hr Woodruff sleeping cars mN', ‘ r I tween Cincinnati and Grand Ebp’- I' e | ing and chair cars on sam treo Grand Rapida and Petoskt sleeping cars on Nos. 7 a’.d H v'fj. I Rapids and Mackinaw City. '; ■_ ;; cD t Gen 1. I TOLtUO, CINCINNATI & SI. LO Time Tabhs—ln Effect >’ •»{. | _jsoing West. , Western J’ ’ ll * A 11 T~7~T"5~I PL'‘Al n 6 \:A A. M. P. M. A. M. Lv. Ar. r>l \ - •' J - ' ( l 0 ' 5 45 5 '»4 to 1»» ...Marion - r * ; 7 6 .’.3 Kokomo- 1 (ioinu S-mUi. Dayton I 9 | 1 > Division- _ J— -7; *' \r p m. P ” ... CM. P M Lv. ' • f * J lt I'. - •“ .- ff i- .... 45s 2 ><• . .Sn**ncerville.. 11 ;i, f <*• 3.1 .. Celim 1 -1. .... 7 IS 4 55 .. . V«* -«.vPT * . . -] .... 7 ■ san . Covin? k 28 6 p» i 841 631 Union. 1- ,56 .. .’ ft ts 6 Harrishn-- ... J 025 *. 15 . i . ... I. . ...Ar, I' V JL--—'S 5" *— “7 V. est. Frankfort and I 11 - S-a’ Ll"’ 11 ' ' ■ ' ,4 ■ . T 4 .1 K-.konn . j « -li 7 01. Kuftfti»vill<‘, 1«t ;> t mv m 7 30 ar.FranVort lv —7 ’il PHttMJ-S.’ - Uh Gen Manacei fl A, . irent W S. MATTHIAS A»CtW. ; a.P»«-‘ M
