Decatur Democrat, Volume 40, Number 15, Decatur, Adams County, 26 June 1896 — Page 7
Business Directory. THE DECATIiK NATIOHL BASK. tIEC.VU'IC. • INDIANA. CAPITAL s’l’OC'K. MOO.OOy. SI Ill’Ll s. - - . 1,000. / OFIUERS* P W Smith.'‘rv-i<lent: .1 li ’ A H'll.T.b.l -> '•ice Ph Pent ' A if. in, (tHshier; 11. X. F.II'I via ..'A-.-811l ('ii-lner. DIREtTOUS .lons it iI .; ;H■ •rsi:. .It . c.H.r. in < . v h'i. >v. I. Il I' iiiif :k !’ W Bmpi h. 11. 11. 'lni.: / I I) Hilf. InH-r*!”’ tflven «»n nion» y h'p I <wi time The Old Adams County Bank CAPITAL. ?12ij.'»Hl. ESTABLISHED. 1871 Otßcert>:-W. H. Niblick. Pre®.. D. Stmlii oakt-r. Vii'e-pri-s: Hutu® K. Allison. Cashier Chas S. Niblick. A—’l Cashier. boa general banking business. Collections made iu all paJts <il the country. County, City ami Township orders bought. Foreign anti Domestic Exchange bought and •old. Interest paid on time deposits. Pocft <r. I/ooper. Attorney zxt Law Decatur, Indiana. Patents a specialty. R, S. PETERSON, Attorney zxt Law OEC.VII It. - - - INDIANA. . Ossie ■ Hoorn.- I and 2 A Holtlioti-e Bloc k. J. TT. LOBO, «I 4STT.It <<> ’I HIS-ION Jilt AND t I'TOitN lIV-A I - LAW. Keal Esia’e and < ’ollect 1 in • ft. K. EHWI\, Attorn oy-at-Tnaxv, Koom ' and - Niblick N Tonhellier Block. Decatur, Indiana. it. It. Dl< KKKSON. A ttoi~n oy mici Notary X’txTollo. Pension claims a specialty Keal estate and Collection agent. Geneva, - - Indiana. i ifpceand residence one <l<">r north ol- M. F church. Ihseases ot W-Ouieu and children'a specialty. "A. G. HOLLOWAY. Physician and Surgeon. Office over Boston Store. Residence across the street from ids birmyi home. 38-3 HI . FKANIT-’dt lIKKKTJIAX. Office:—Nos.- 1.- and-3. oyer rhe Adams Countv Bank. Cojleetions a specmlty. D. .1. Illtu IN. □E»lxysgtijatiaxji rfc Surgeon, Ail cabs promptly attended day or- night. Office and residence over Journal office, corner of Monroe and Third streets. T. L. HICKMAN, M. D. Physic and Slip. Treats all forms of acute or chronic diseases medical or surgical. Terms reasonable. Office in Wellley Block. All calls responded to day or night. <lf J. C?. NTEFTUDJE. DENTIST. Now located over rfolt house’s shoe store. b prepared to do all work pertaining to the dental profession. Gold tilling a specialty. By the use of Mayo’s Vapor he is enabled to extract teeth without pain. Work guaranteed. J. D. HALE, DEALER IN— Grain, Oil, z ■' Seeds, Coal, Wool Lime, 1 Salt, Fertilizers, Elevators on the Chicago & Erie and Clover Leaf railroads. CfSce and Retail itore southeast corner of Second and Jefferson fMTYOUR PATRONAGE SOLICITED Hansa Plants, Cut Flowers, . —- ' e ‘ Met Pieces for iiinei’als , Flowers for aravi's. Or.iiitineiitnl trees for eenieteries. > Fruit Trees and Vines of all kinds. All Soli at Lowest Prices.. _ Will open sales room and yards April Ist. AU stock fresh from Springfield, 'Ohio. Troy, Ohio, Fort Wayne, Ind. I. J. MIESSE.
A full line of fresh meats of all kinds and everything in the fruij line at our usually low prices. We pan make you jobbers prices in-quanties. Yours Truly. 37 ts. COITEE& Baker. Farmers Attention! I am now ready to cry sales. Terms reasonable Satisfaction guaranteed. Address, J. W. Hill, 48wtf ’ > Pleasant Mills, Ind.
To Remove That T*ircd Feeling, Take IYER’S THE ONLY WORLD’? FAIR ® Over Half a Century Old. Why Not Get the Best? AYER’S PILLS cure Headache. Notice to High school Teacher®. Superintendents, principals and teachers of all commissioned and noncommissioned high schools of Adams county, Indiana, take notice: That in .June, .July anil August, lsb6, the Department of Public Instruction will furnish county superintendents with lists for the examination ot high school teachers, covering the blanches provided for in the course of study of Ihe ' school .in which the applicant expects 1 to teach. For the township graded schools and I non-commissioned high schools, in ad- ■ dition to the common school sul fftis 1 will be: 1. I'bysieal geegraph;.. ...2. Outline of general history. 3. Hay’s ■ highei arithmetic. 4 Civil government ’> Book keeping. I For the city high efioo! o,t; Decatur: *l. Algebra. 2. Civics. 3. Latin, 4. Bhelorie. 5. Physical geography, •>. General History, 7. Physics, s Geometry- 9. Chemistry. 10 English ‘ and American literature. High school licenses will he issued I for six, twelve, twenty-four and thirtysix months qp the standard of glides made by applicants for common school licenses. Teachers holding state certificates and diplomas from the state normal school are exempt from examination on the high school subjects. No teacher is elligible to contract to do high • school work anti he or she holds a valid high school license, (Sec. 4425,4501, It. S.) also order of st ate su perin tend en t. (Jut of regard for the old soldiers asd their friends, the May examination of teachers’Will be held Friday, May 29th. Respectfully, 685:15 3w3m J. F Snow, Co. Supt. Far. Famed. There is no medicine that has riven satisfaction equal to that of Dr. Marshall’s Lung Syrup. syrup is hailed with delight from all part' ot the world, evn be nothing that has so strongij ’established itselt in the minds and hearts of the American people. Every day we receive a hearty greeting and words of praise from some oneTwho has been cured by this marvelous remedy.’ If you should need a medicine for your cough, ail we ask s a trial and we aresatistied tliat you will use no other. It is guaranteed to cure. Price 25c, 50c and sl. Sold by ail druggists. j
Wanted—Several trustworthy gentlemen or ladies to travel in Indiana for established, reliable house Salary S7BO and expenses. Steady position. Enclose reference and self-addressed stamped envelope’. The Dominion Co.. Third Floor, Omaha Building, Chicago, Illinois. 5()w24 Notice of Trustees. I will be at my office on Tuesday of each week. George W. Brown. Trustee of Kirkland township. • w29-bm ' I. will be at my office Tuesday of each week. L, W. Lkavton, 2wtf Trustee Root township. I will be at my office on Tuesday of each week. J. D. Nidlinger, ltf Trustee Union Tp. The otlice days of the trustee of Washington township will be Tuesdays and Saturdays in the Surveyor’s office, and Wednesdays a: home. John Steele, '.22tf Trustee cf Washington Tp. »"■' —— ..... . .. r -.— Cheaper I’lian Ever AtrEhighes" GHHiiU-&- "Marble-Worter*-Fifteen per cent, o’ a discount for the year 1996. All woik warranted to be new and first-efrss. Lettering done in German and English. You are invited to stop and get prices. 7 L. C. A Wai. Hughes. /47tf (Successorsto W- S- Hughss.) Go to Ed Johnsoi> and get a quart of sweet corn for Ive cents.'- Vegetable plants [such SS Cabbage, totHatoes, sweet potatoes, etc. While there he will show yoi the freshest and best garden seeds on the. market., st II is arc all home grown. Seed potatoes, the genuine early rose, the bell rose. He has the famous Banner potato, whijh.be guarantees to excell all others in yield ain’t quality. Last, year he raised over a bushel from i one potato. lwt,f For Sale — A gooc - farm of SO acres well imprdVed, gooi house, good barn, and thoroughly imderdrained. Good orchard, dose to school, church and the postoflice; two good wells of water I Call or address this office. 34tf
' I “Cori.DNT STAND IT.” I I SO THE PRESIDENT IS SAID TO HAVE | SPOKEN Or A THIRD TERM. |■ ' r - - ■■ ! Mr. < li .claihl TnHc® to th« .Manager of the LoulsvlM ■ I).ill Trillo ' h.i’lt’d !’!<*» inti? A.bo 'f Olrl Time*. I leprec i!«•! the I lea of A'lnther Proi.lrleAtlai Term, Follnwing the tall: that M.ijoi NlcKinb v ib t'.Ts W'.ilo <lk y p [nirt 'V, Pres 'i< if Clevi hiiul'li.is p l l'untteil himself, t'l bo inji-'Viev.’i'd by a ball player. i “Billy’’ M” r iimiiigle. manager of the Louisville chib, is the man who induced tin' president to talk. 1 S''V' iit" ii yars ago, when Mr. Cleveland was a Struggling attorney of Buffalo and a popular mar. about town, I “Billy’’ McGunnigle p.iclied for the Buffalo team in the National league and was the star of that season. I Mr. Cleveland was one of Buffalo's ' noted admirers of baseball who attended the games and “rooted’’for the hifcne . .team. I The two men started an acquaintance which blossomed into a warm friendship. • l The Louisville team reached Washington Thursday; and the players rook advantage of the opportunity to pay a 1 visit to President Cleveland at the White House. . 4 I McGunnigle offered to bet a box of cigars that Jlr. Cleveland would r< cog- : nizo him, and Treasurer Harry Pulliam ' ' ai’o’ptcd the bet. When the players got in line to meet ' I Mr. Cleveland and the White House usher presented. Mr. McGunnigle, the president survey, d “M;;c“ with a.kindly eyi', grasp-d his hand and exc•!.,lined “Why, 'Mhc, how are youg We 1 1 haveti’t met va years. So you are man- ; aging th' Louisville Bas. ball club now? Well, I hope for ycur sake, Mac, that the team wins. ’’ , | “Thank you, Mt. . Cleveland, ” re-; ■ spend'.■ I McGunnligJ.. “I hope, Mr. | I Cleveland, that Louisville-wins, the 1 pennant, anti that you will accept a I third term. I know you would be, elect* i <l.' I The president, with a deprecatory nod j of the head, replied: I “No third terni for me. Really, I couldn’t stand it. ” j And Mac inferred that the president ' was weary and would welcome the day , that brought with it retirement from 1 public life. The president and McGunnigle chat- ! I ted about t] r> days in Buffalo. Mae in- ' vited the president to yesterday’s game, but th" invitation was good naturedly . I declined. | The president said he would be de- 1 ' lighted to witness a game between the ! Louisvilles end Senators, but when the : I Colonels play their next game in Wash- I ; ington Mr. Cleveland will bo at his ' 1 summer home’on Ctipe Cod.—New York | World. TO RECAPTURE RICHMOND. 1 Reunion of Confederates to Be Heid >, June 30. ' The Confederate > are again to take ] ! possession of Richmond. About 50,000 I ' or 75.000 of them will be there June 30 I and July 1 and 2 to attend the sixth an- 1 nual reunion of the United Confederate I Veterans. Richmond, is expecting the I largest number of strangers she has ever, liad to care for. For a year past the city has been preparing for this event. An auditorium tc Seat 12,000 people has been built at the exposition grounds. The city council appropriated the money for this purpose, and also £IO,OOO for the entertainment of the .veterans. The railroads east of the Mississippi river have given the best rates they have ever offered for an occasion of this kind, and from all parts of the south whole camps of old soldiers will come.' The great feature of the reunion will be the laying of the cornerstone of the Jefferson Davis monument. This will take place July 2, and there will be a monstrous parade of veterans and soldiers. It is expected to have 75,000 people in line. General John B. Gordon | will be the chief marshal, and he will have for his aids many of the most distinguished former < Confederates. Th)' oration is to be delivered by General Stephen D. Lee of Mississippi, who was a lifelong and an intimate friend of Davis. The monument is to be in lovely Monroe park, which is in the fashionable part of the' city. It is proposed to spend $200,000 on the memorial. Minh <>f the money is already in hand. The designs are all in, but a se1 lection has not been made. An important question to be: settled in the reunion will be the site for the Charles BroadwaJ’ Rpuss Confederate museum or Battle Abbey of the South. Mr. Rouss, who is an ex-Confpdorate, is a millionaire New York merchant. He ha,s offered to give SIOO,OOO to the museum, provided the amtntnLcan ..be. thm,.. plicatedRichmond, Atlanta, New Orleans, - Nashville and Washington are asking for the museum. Nashville ed to })ledge $65,000 and a splendid site, which, will probably be the best offer, from a ■ financial point of view, that will be made. Richmond can offer her Confederate museum as a nucleus upon, .which to build. — New Yopk World. ■. The Dig Hat Again. The big hat has again begun to intrude itself aggressively upon public notice. For months we have patiently dodged its feathery, flowery expanse j and viewed our plays “as through a ' glass darkly.’’ .But the Louisiana Legis- ’ latufe is. sitting upon it, liberally, ‘ but itt. solemn metaphor, and its banish- j ment from the theaters’ is the eonsum 7 ■’ 1 niation hoped for,.. —New York World. A Happy Family. C. (>. Barnes has a cat at his hopio in Goldeiklaly which ’ is suckling tlrreo . young squirrels, which were caught near town. She also sueklck one kitten, i the others having been k.Jled to make I 100 m for the squirrels.—Goldcndale Sentinel. , . T _ I ■ u , • z ’ . * ' ■' ’
THE OLDEST ’LOCK.', 1 ' It IVffaicrly Scr-nri'd One of the Doors of 1 i'alane of Nluevoii. I Tl.< vi-y (.Idpst )■:■!< : .’,l„exno •jj.’-.i ’3 ’ OB- v. li'i' l ) f\ii m"i’,ly' ar'd'/u: ■us tl.a . do'4.-'.if a..pal.a<’e.of Nii.i'V) h. It isa gig.i.r ;ir, and th' 1: y to it, W.'i’eh.is as j ii" : ... • i,e nttin <■ in ,cinivi'im nily car . r ,'iinds-la''4'tit • KcNptu.' I passa." !>• th" ]■: ' I 1:1 1!: ri,fi wh t ' ■ imt-ru. nt- !■' leg c.ii’in-l < n tl." :lil r. 1 ■1 a n.s in th' , pa.- .■ I, '.rod ’■' . “A' .l th" !■:■; of t I. ..■■ ■ t L..vid I will lay up n ' his- iiii.r." T • ii.’ti.) .us k«-y to the I'ick from Niti l v J is ::i"ii'ly fi'ct in length 1 anil <f f li" tiiic];n» s.s -f u four inch ?:.i 1 tih'. If .was found at tl'mend- c.f a ruined ' liaiabor, whore.a largo wood'll door had pn l.sl lv bine stood, the gigantic bras-, liing.s and heavy bars I. :ng still in fair < edition, though somewhat coi‘reded. This’relic of the olden times has but few points of resemblance to the keys of modern manufactur*, <r t ven to those of the early part of the Christian I era. The tubularjdea had never been thought out in those (lay-, but the key is f'-arfully and wonii'rfullv made, being iqually as intricate a t'ioce ts ma-, chin'.-ry as the 1 ,ck in which it was I used. A great many of th" bars and' . pegs in the lock are believed to have I been mail'- * t wood, as their pl.i<- are ' , n<»W ciapty. Th<' ir G-hes and pegs in | . tlx k' v. howiv r. si w that there vt'corn-;, laiing p- g- :m.l 11 u> in'till' !•■ k I |at '),. me. Th .•" i ■' tai'ir n 1 irs at .tip- ■ :a! fth k’-y, with th..at c. m- ; -plicat' -i .t ’. ip!? s. -Ur..r.< j but ips, ■ ■<■.. are prffi f 'li.i.i th I k’, s .< IV■' '■: 1 ■■ ’. •!. T -’I - 1 • i' g ♦’. ca l - ."it -)■ as - >1 th tat ( Mi,' t ..T” d )'' • t’; tp )’ •.'" o ui'i ; hot have '•n ■ t d until tl ■ k<y had I . been r- d*^ - ! so r dr:.r to * tli" ' >■’ g\ I. ■k ■ f the b lit 1. r. ’•■ d ;by r .’- :.- • > : . y ’ > and ’ , which I; 11; I a v.-'i ri 'tlr lrr. -.-s : ' upon h.iv:. _ 1.. 1 witliflrm n. ' Sin il a- !■ "i:< at. 1 I: re in US" in ' Egypt 5,0' " y. us ago.—~t. Louis Re- j public. -i THERE WE~E-RSH. ~ !, | •• _-_z2 I 1 : Bnt It Took an Extra Q’?„irter to Find | t Where They Were. I “Th" nr ~t taciturn people in the ; world live in western North Carolina’’ 1 and '-ast Ti i.-nessee, ” said a elepartment 1 1 clerk. 1 I “I went fNhing Park, and j ' tn Hin.-d flit'streams down there is 1" the finest trout fishing in the world, j There w re four of us in the party, and i ’ we v.’i nt up •ne i f the mountain creeks I I for ah'ut tl:r"o ni'ies. A native passed > ■ us, and I a.-k -1: I “ ‘Av there any trout in the creek?" T “,’Yop.’ I “W" threw ov.r lines, and fished •v-ry I hole in th< cret k 1 r tw ) mil - wifh< ut 1 ; getting a bitc’tlien walked b.. »-t.’wirl I row,i with ■ ’.i :v -I.ask. •>. 3lct ring ih> I native mm . 1 .'m i; • ” I ■’“ ’I ‘t! "..hr y-u stated there war*tv wt ra-C-m ■< k?’ | | ! “ ‘Well. w. jli'.ln-.t g"t n biti.' j’- “ I "loW'-d y■■’ a’.l wotilckid when I seed y.,’ ft y.' I “ ’Wliy not, aro fi.sh’thcfe?' I “Yi ’ didn’t ax t f thar war trout i whar yo" was iishin. ’ “’/what did I ask you?’ I inquired, getting angry. “ ‘Ef thar war trout in the crick, an thar is heap of ’em. ’ . . - ■ “ ‘Where are they?" “ ‘Still in the crick. ’ “ ‘What part of tlie creek?" • “ ‘ln tluHniddle, ".ci pt them as at the Thar ain’t none’ on the banks. ’ “I gave him a quarter and he said: “ ‘They don’t never come up this far. ’Bout two miles down the crick thar’s plenty.'' “We went down the crick, and the native was right. I never s:|w better fishing. "’ —Washington Star. Asbestus. An interestingxlistinction. though not generally understood, is made the ; qualities of asbestus by those who are I engaged in the industrial handling of e that article. Though, broadly speaking, this substanee is a silicate of magnesia, in some cases lime displaces, the magnesia base.- In rare eases alumina,rakes the place’of magnesia, and what isicalled blue .asbestus is a'silicate i f iron, iron in this case displacing the magnesia. This blue asbestus or fibrptis silicate of ■ iron pdssi sses many times the strength ; of true asbestus, a thread of it only one 1 twenty-fifth of an inch in diameter car- ' Tying 100 pounds, but by reason of its | containing from 30 to 40 per cept of ; protoxide of iron it is neither tire . nor acid nor is it a good 111 ncondui'tor of heat: hence does not possess the val- : liable properties of true asbestus. Silica and water are the only two,, elements 1 that are always) constant in asbestus, ’ ) the- sjlic.') rm-ely f'lllinir below . 10- parts - to the IQO, wliile in some of the an"hydrous varieties the water lulls as low as 2 or 3"parts, to the lOtb—New YorkSun. W ■■ Tiny Trees. ’ „ ■ The midget c.f the -whole tree family ik the,Greenland} birch. It is :‘t peiTect tree in every sense of that term, and lives its allott/d number of years friju 75 to 130 ,fits! as other- species of the I -gi'eat—4hk4i—4'amilv— <l* *, .-al t-huugh—its | height.under the liiost favorable eqr..liotions seldom exceeds s. Whole bluffs of the east and southeast coast 1 f Greenland are covpfed with “thickets of this diminutive, species ot woody pl'ant, and in many places where# the soil is uneomnionly poor and frozen from eight to tKli “iikuiths -a yeuVc a “forest " of these trees will fioti- -h f. r "half a ceiituri without go wing to aheight exeei ding .four .iceljjr'. Neatly Out it, - S|W— Yim sum I liaiiaf;:.’. th :t would ’step :t ir. iat in the uwildlo of tly'__ block. V He*—l did. " J .k takes.' a nuglity good looking woman to get g coudu.ctoi. to d.) that - ludiaiiapolis Journal. - -I'’. ■ . . ' ' ■ ' ■/■ . .. ■ » •
F, SCHAFER & I.OCH’S .t ' HBBWAES STOHH } • , * •“ r i 1 > ' . XXcm i o ,'jj * n . £ BTfIW GsiJw&ib MaMvdbwi ii ‘inter is now close at hand and you wil; need -a stove, if e have an endless variety and a laryc ,-tock to select from, and our prices are WORLD B™_S A ■ C<J 1 £• Rohe's, Blankets, IBhips, Onr kIAPk AT Slei^hs > Busies Snrreys, vill ulvVll vi carts and the celebrated Tunbiil Batons Is Unequalled in the City. SPCall and. see us, 2nd street, Decatur, Ind
STFU. K A WHALE. .' r d 51 A dost. IkoockD'l Out a L'..nb<‘r I M aooner. Th- s' I : i 2Etna, on hr v ‘ fir.a Jam; - ...g? , I’ia., to t.ms port, ■ ran in: > a v”.,..’ •'i Capo Ha" on ’ May 1 Winch fared worse in I, • vol- ’ hsion Captain Chipman, cannot t li, f.- r | h>' saw the whale spouting blood while ■ li- m:t menovn the Low of his .< ;.'><.jier I • - ■' O ' | to put in a few planks. ■ " “We loft Jacksonville- on the 13th,” said Captain Chipman, “and that didn't mean -any good. We hadn't signufl sol mudlfas a gull for, five days, wb :i at | 5 :30 o'clock in the mopiing th' m ite | call'd out thak something was J.-, ad/ which lie couldn't make out. ‘■Looking ahead, I saw the spout nf a sperm whale, and thia discover-d fhaj at least a dozen whales were hearing | directly do'Wn on us. I ordered the } fiourm'cf my m. :r r “Thefi the wb.al"-: disappeared. I sup- j pose ti:>, y wiTi- abdut six ship’s 1. ngtlis I ah< id < f us, and I thought that was the last if them. "I went i. low, leaving the sehooper in cli-.rg of the mate,. Mr. Mims. I. had just pv.’ 1 ' I off liny ei.-at wh- nI f -It I a terrible shock. ■‘l rushed on deck. The v.’".’*. r tiround * the-s-.’h") mer was ri d with bio* .;. The mate explained that'we hail wabbled over a whal It had sounded with the. school, winch was appurintly appivaehing u., but had com*- up iln eth;_ under our be.v.x “The schconer was j-ialcing as least eight kt" -ts. and 1 think the whale was doing b. tter. It had Lit the martingale first and torn that away, and tin n struck the ports es the starboard side. “Tile planks were -smashed 'as-if they were shingles and we came to a stand- . still. Thi n the schooner, with a cargo. ’of 290.000 feet of yellow pine, lifted until tier keel was almost, out of water, plunged as if she were bn a Cape Horn billow, and we had slid iiyer the back | of a whale. “I cut the halyards with an ax and we furled in sail immediately. Men I were sent over the box in slings and pulled out a plank, which is there on i deck, “and the skipper pointed to a broken board which had formed a por- I tipn of the schooner. Wrapped around j the plank were. a few. pit ces c.f what whalers call black skin, the outer covering of a whale. Captain Chipman di’recteil the vessel's, course t$ Delaware Break-water as soon j as the damage was repaired, and she I 'then ]troceeued to...{his port.—New York i Herald. — T* — . | His Platform. A Georgia man is going to run for any ofiiee he can get on the following i platform: “I never*.was in tire war. 1 Never hollered at the siirrender, and never killed anybody that let me alone, an<l the only thing I know about the financial m question is this, I med., "money. ” —New York Tribune. Loved by a Cat. But for the timely discovery of the blnzi'- in a Providence house the other, morning net one of the. 16 oceupaiits of i the ill fated ; bjiilfling would have escaped alive. It was found that the. Tnewiugvf.il c;1 -4 F'd to the disc., very of. de.SßTsttvl'ii thelives of the 14 who escaped
■ ■■ . \,.. 0 ‘ 1 "< / : Daniel Schlegel, DEALER INUGHLMXG RODS, SPWIIX6, ROOFiXG, AID Tinware of all Kinds. Slm-fijw, Espairi aifl Menfling to to ofc ■ < Front St.. near Jefferson Street. Decatur, - “ ■ Indiana, •' - . -" - *■ ■ ■■' 7 ' ■” ■ 1 .... ■■ '.
l-l tv rv* I? O ,y /hi a 1--N 1 E IV. lx . ■ ' ' ■' / / Schsdiilejn q. -- ’, .TrctLus Lt-ige Dcctcfur rx-s j- ■ - j Nc. 5; Vestibule Im .-u'd. daily fer 1 . , Chicaim ;md W. 9 1 - ’’' - “ No. 3. Pacific Exwe-. daily tor. , . |. Chicaganni tin Vv.it , ; .l ’ ' I No. 1, Express, lany exo.-pt Ftp- ) li >0 A v day’ for Chicago anil tin. West [ No. 13. Weils Fars'" I.luiited Ex i press, daiii i wept Monday A■ ■ ■l’ M day'aDei'.iegal iii Hdii.ys 1 ! NO. 31. Local, daily, except Sun- ‘ , . . | day {“J- 1 ' A I No. ’‘■.■Vestibule Limited, daily for i • : . ~ New Yocs and 805t0.u..: j ' '' : No. -. Express daily except Sum ) ~ p day far New York. .. .;■ ( " ‘ No. 12. Express, daily for New, . . , York f 1 ? A I No. 30. Local, daily except Sun- . I lav flO-.-l AM. I \ iyuujia (.vtu-ues and sleeping ear- to NeI Vork and B. ston. Trams lui <1 2.stop at al stations on th«- 0. : g E. di vise.n. N- ■' Tl a.n .1 (.'I ■: X 1 . ..1:1 cv.i 11 ps--i I. yi l- Bi ■..>: as 1!f itrain No. 12 ci.rr.e-s i. rough s-eei*" ■; - ” Columbts, Circ.eviile .’lmlicoihe. w,.-..,. * Purrslroritc:-. so: Kenov*. v:.t Cclun ; .s ij. V ; . .... Jc 'lice.io and ?• .rt'. K .... i a esterr. Lines. J. W. PELnr-G. Airent. ’ ( w. G. v.ti- 1’ P A > Gr&ia & Iliana 1 .. 22, fc. Gi ING NORTH. STATIONS. * No. 3 l No. 5 . No.-7 I .’ineinnati Ive - fagm " 15pm' ... ' . . • .{wfimond 2,i pit. if - 'jj . I .... Winchester... > ti 13;'. 1 ’ ■ t-I-Portland • • \X- i > 1 1242 pm 1--• 1 . ' .'......j Decatur ■5 .. . .-•> I'l- . ... ... I rt. Wayne., arr •'2"> . 2 35. 1115 .. ire: u-i-n 2 V>pm 11 ~’. -15 am -Xendal’.ville... ’ ~ 4 ‘"j .. 12'ciati) H2'j.. Home Citv ! 7 in 4 I'l 9 45 . Wolcottville 4 21." 1951 Valentine I. 133 '1 02 La'..; range 4 42 1; 11 Lima.... 1 4 54 1' 24 . Sturgis s'ii. 120. 1951. Vicksbjirg 556 .. Jut .. :t I Ka.nmazoo. arr No. 11 |n 20. 2t-.. 12 2 I “ .. Ive except i11.'.. 2 0 12 l,prjj Or. Rapids..arr.Suiufy ’ -'.’s . >’Oam i 35 .’.lye 5 25pu: II i)., 4iXi , 2'l.' j D.. Gt.H.Jc M.er 5W . 11 15 2li .. I ’-Inward City... »i 3;i . 12 15 2 ">7 . Sig Rapids .... 721 .. 1)2 ’.7 ’22 . . in .. deed City ' 5 125 5 ;5 .. , 4 ", I Cadil.ac art- 9 "•> : 2 2- .ij i , 1 4.50 .. " .... Ive- [2 40 . 64 .. I 51" .. 1 Traverse City. 1.-..... -2; 7f .. Kalkaska 1:.....».1 ■’ ,2 ■ Petoskey | 5 19 21 .. . .. M.u v.n'HeCtv 1 . I 72: 11 I ■ 1 . GOING SOI TH. " ■ ■ ’ - T j~ j 7 ' STATIONS. No. 2 No. 6 I No. 1 .No. 3 ' Mackinac City s 00pm * 35am I 2.’npm I Petoskey ...... In 2g.. ■ 45 .. 355 Kalkaska '2 I3ani . 1... .... ..... I Traverse City.. II li' .. I 5 Cn .. 1........ [ Cadillac ... ..arr t 45 .. 1 lOptni ii 13 .. 1.. . . ” ... .-Ivei 21 d ..11 35 .. . 7 1.5 .. ; 735 am I Reed City ’ 250 .. I 245 . I 755 . I S3S .. i 'Big Rapids 13 21). US., -p. . ;9.- ; Howard City..-i 4n2 j- I'l 1 ... ,95n.. ID.. G. H.xM.ci >l').. st® .. ’■ 945 In 55 . Gr. Rapids arr .>;?•>.. 5'45 .. ipj uij .. 1110... .Ive 725 am .. mo .. 10 15.. j 2 00pni KalamaZOO.srf '9 26.. 755 111 40 3 45. " _,..ive 925 ...’ll 45 .. ’3 50 .. ■ - Vicksburg....: 919 ... 4 15..** Sturgis-... ii ; io ... i 12 5> ~ go . Lima........... b‘ 5A . ■ ............. 5 17 . ■LaGrange... . 11 0. 529 .' Valentine ..111-lS No. I’2 5 37 .. Wolcottville... 11 30 .. j-—; — ’5 46.. I Rome City 11l >•’> .. ’ 6 15.. •, '• 51 . Kendallville. .I’ll 50 . ■ 29 . 142 .. t’ 10 . Ft Wavne. arr, 12 55 . 7 .2 i 7 15 . “ ~lve 115 pm o-g'atn “ Decatur 159. .| h 3i> ,z 27 . i Portland. ....." 300.. 7 .‘'"ani'M i'.i’.. WinehestoxU -■ ’. 44 .. . >‘ ; 9 .. lii.. 1 , Richmond ..... 4-45 .. iwis . 535 .. I Cincinnati..... 725 13 -j I'. 1 7_T5 ■ Trains 2 and 4 ran daily -Ketweeu Grand Kavi'is am! C .iC-tmati. -—’ —~ ’ C, 1.. LOCKWOOD. Gen. Pass. Agent <KFF. BRYSON Agent. _ • Decatur-Ind
