Decatur Democrat, Volume 46, Number 8, Decatur, Adams County, 1 May 1902 — Page 4
In this ;st there are many {rood p roper L- s. offered below actual cost of im prove mt nt. we have other properties not'l.sted bore for rent, sale or trade. Ca«h transactions are an -<v&ntAfre to buyer and seller, anil now bare a larnre numtier of cast, purchasers ;** soon as what they want is pUced upon the mark*' If y i are inter-Med ;n the purchase or sale of farm lands, business residences, m. machinery town or eity property. write or ca.. for one of cur recent lists tor full descriptions Refer t - properties by number. Address East side Second St J. f. SNOW, Decatur, Indiana.
Mo ST for rale. Thirty-fire buiidin- lou in ■ >rtoe from 8X35 to foie. No. SI for sale. Four acres s< uth of Decatur, vineyard. o®. No. 97 for sale. One-half acre south of Decatur. house, etc.. o®. No. <56 for sale of trade. Thirty acres north of Geneva .. land 5-'lO No SS for sae or trade Twelve acres in west De..-atur. Fruit and poultry farm 0750 No. 1«6 for sale Silty acres good farm land. Wabaan township 07®. No. KT for sale or trade. Sixty acres. Boot townste.p. near Decatur >-•' No for sale. One acre in northwest Decatur. house, stable, etc. *156 No. Ki for sale. Twenty acres in n* rth Treble township *BO3. No > for sale. A forty acre farm in Union aownsbip Sl3®. No. W for sale. A forty acre tract m Union •ownship tisto. No MB for sale. A forty acre -ract In East Washington township ot<.« « No K<l for sa e Aneigbty acre iract, south Washington 84®0 No MB for sale. An eighty acre tract in Mor. roe township, fair buildings 84710. No !ft> for sale. An eightr acre tract in Boot township *4s®. N*» 110 for sale. One hundred and two acres East Washington No. 102 for sale One hundred twenty a res. W ash ingtse township boo No. 64 for sale. One hundred fifty and onehalf acres. Boot t wash: r ’ No. 91 for sale or trade Two hundred and ninety acres, near 7>eeatur. IndianaS3®®. No. 105 for «a eof trade. Ti e New Craig” bote. in C>s-.*.-.. Indiana *&® Na. 11l for sale cr trade. A arse fire stand roller flour mix. in Decatur Indiana ■ opacity .a barrels . t flour daily Jc’O. No. lid for sale or trade. A larg*- and modern bote, property. 'The Burt. Decatur. Indr ana Hsa 113 for sale or trade. Five acres of coar-e grave, near Decatur S&u No. 114 for sale. Two story brick business room on East Monroe street. Decatur tv®. No. tS for sale or trade. Two story business' ro»>m *> Wmcnesier street. De-catur Ills.. No.® for sale. Neat new cottage on Jacssou street, five noms 075. Na IK for sale. A r odern. new. five roe csgtare. large lot, on Mercer S'.reet 111® No. Ik for saie >r trade. A seven roou. outage on So ;th Tenth -tree’, 87®. Na 75 for sale 'ix room costace. three lots. Seventh street 111®' No. IK for sale or trade Modern six room cottage on N rth rec nd street P 375. Ma 117 tor sale Surry and a half nine room Lowe on Monroe -tree’ 05® No 73 for ~sle. A nine ro m two st ry brick on Sorth second street 08®.
LOVE’S SACRIFICE. — A» Fnzacemeßt Rins Wbieh Ampntatei m Finger Joint. Ethn< -.meal experts agree that with most Australian tribes every woman is betrothed in infancy or even in anticipation of her birth. According to some mysterious law of their own. this is | Arranged by the old men of the family, I the women baring no voice in the matter. The age of the proposed busband is not taken into consideration, so that it frequently Luppens that by the time the girl is of a marriageable age her intended is an old mam If in the meantime some younger man has set i his heart upon tier, this means a fight, in which the unfortunate bride to be. a« she is dragged away, is certain to 1 come in for a share of the blows which ! the rival »tuitors deal out to each other. In some of the coast districts, where ' not ell the girls are promised in infan-: cy. the betrothal of a young woman to i a man who follows the occupation of i a fisherman compels her to lose the' first joint of the little finger of her left hand. This slow and painful operation Is performed by a stout string bound tightly about the joint—an engagement ring with wk. h one would willingly dispense! A marriage 11- ; cense, equally unique, is common in some sections, where the chief gives to the prospective groom a peculiarly knotted string, possessing wit- a be is free to seek the wife of his choice.— Woman s Home Companion. How Maiirati Are Tnppri. Trapping ,s one of the modes by which muskrats are secured. The traps are made w>f boards about six inches wide and three feet long. These are nailed together like an ordinary tor trap, the open ends being secured by swinging doors of wire network, fastened to the upper part of both entrances. These doors allow easy ingress to the trap, but once in the rat cannot get out without opening the door by pulling it to him, which secret they seem very slow to discover. These traps are put in the leads running from the bouses to the water when the tide is at low ebb and the rats are out feeding. On the return they crawl up the leads, push against one of the wire doors of ths trap, which immediately opens into tho trap, but they cannot go farther, as the next door opens toward them. Before they can gnaw out the tide makes up. and they are drowned in the trap. A Story Told kr Dlaraell. Disraeli once said: “You know I hare the honor of being one of the elder brethren of the Trinity House. Well, there is a special uniform belonging to the office. One day I was about to attend a levee at St James’ palace, and my valet laid out my diplomatic uniform ready for me to put on. Placing implicit confidence in him. I put It an and went to the levee. On appear ing before the prince his royal highness jocularly remarked: ’lt won’t do. You're found out.’ 'ln what, sir? I Inqr'red. ’Ob.’ said the prince, ‘you’ve get the wrong trot.sers on.* And to my herror, on iook'ng down I found that
No 11' for sa ■ story and a half seven rerun house and also a four room house- on Jefferson street B3&1' No .75 for sa e seven rc- m cottage on Monroe and Tenth street 11300. No. Sb for sa.e or trade v rht ro >tn st- ry and a half residence in Monroevne. Indiana 114® 5 70 for sa.e or trade. Large nine room bnca residence on North Second st fisao. No. A’s r sale r trade. A moden. seven room story and a half residence on West Monroe street 11 AU- , No. 51 for sale or trade A la-re two story nine room res dence. on Marsha st. (15®. No -7 for sale or trade Nine room residence J property in Ft. Recovery Ohio *l4® No TN for saae Story and a halt sev< n room house on Madison street soN S for sale. Good six room cottage m Geneva foOO. Na f<T sai<. Story and a half eight room h ._n Nulman an -ixt . street «i 250 N -0 for sale Four room cottage on South, t < bestn it street o®. No. '1 for sale. Demrab.e six roon. cotrace. 1 near Fifth street. North Decatur *>& . No. 47 for sale or trade. A two story residence property and two ■■ ts on Elm st flSiu. I No s-for-ale or trade. New modern eight room, st ry and a baif residence on Marshall : -tree: tififib. No ?.i f- r sale or trade. Sevro room story i anc a ba f residence property in Linn Grove Indiana KUU. Na ii for sale or trade. A six room cottage , on street Bi.W. No. 4- for sale. Large two story tec room ' residence on Winchester street *I7OO. No. 104 for sale. A nine root c ttage u Sixth street, near M nroe 11175. Na 9C for sale. Seven rosin cottage on Rugc ■ street BAu. N ll»forsale. Story ani a half seven room re-idenee on North Second street SHOO. N 13) for sale. Cottage of six rooms on Short street »M» No. 71 for sale or trade. Story and a half eight room residence on Line street *llsO. No. 74 for sale. Story end a half seven room i rc Jen .e on Monroe street JlfiSo No LSI f r sale Modern two story briek reeideno . large »nd roomy, on Eist Monroe street H Or. No. 77 for sa.e or traie Fire room cottage near South Thirl street (W. No. lif for sa e. New four room cottage on West Madison street fsdk No IS7 for sa.e Story and a had res fence on Chestnut street 5725. No 134 for sale. A new five room residence on South Main street 1000. No. IS for sale A cottace residence, five rooms, near West Elm street IS®. No. 135 for sale. Two story brick residence and store room in Hoagland. Ind. 07®.
— — : bad g t my dip.omatic uniform coat I on with the Trii.it.- House trousers. It | seemed to amuse the prince immense-1 j iy ” The Oldest Epitaph. The oldest epit- ph in English, which is found in a <: urchyard in Oxford- , shire and dates t -om the year 1370. to j ;...dern readers would be unintelligible not only fruit its antique typography but from its obsolete language, i the first two lined of which run as folI lows and may Lt. taken as a sample of ’ the whole: "Man com A- v how scbal alle dede be: wen yow co nes bad & bare: noth Lav ven we awty fare: all ye werines > yt ve for care." The modern reading would be: “Man, ; come and see t,ow shall all dead be 1 when you come poor and bare: nothing have when we sway fare. All is weariness that we t-sr care.” Ears. If your ears born, people say. sent one is talking auout you. This is very old. for Pliny says. “When our ears do glow and tingle. some do talk of us in our absence.” Shakespeare, ‘n “Much Ado About Nothing.” makes Beatrice say to Urania and Hero, who had been talking of her. “What ftre is in mine ears."” Sir Thomas Browne ascribes this , eoncelj to the superstition of guardian angels, who touch the right ear if the talk and the left if otherwise. This is done to cheer or warn. One ear Uufie* acne there be That are sziarllEg cx/w at me. — Before Mirrors. Mrs Scsgg-s—l read a paragraph lx the paper which said. "Woman war made before mirrors but it wasn't bet fault." Doc t you think that Is a mean remark to make about woman? Mr. Snaggs—Yes. 1 think it la What the writer meant to say was that woman was cia.de before mirrors and had 1 been before them ever since —Ex- ’ change. > Weeded Xo Help. i Mrs. Hiram Offen—And do you think > you cc-nld de the cooking for the family i .with a little help from me? i Applicant—No, ma'am. O ; do not , Mrs. Hiram Offen—You don’t? . Applicant—No. ma'am, but Ol m sort > Oi cud do it wldout anny help from you.—Philadelphia Press. Xs C»M« For Alarm. Nervous Passenger ion New Haren , steamer*—There's a very peculiar noise • in the water tonight Do you notice it captain? y Captain—Yea. madam: that’s the reg y ular Long Island sound — Harlem IJfe The Shrew. The shrew was originally the shrew, mouse, which, when her young were helpless, would fight desperately in their defense, and so well known was the courage of this little animal, which • would even go out of its way to seek ( an enemy at times when the nest needed protection, that the word became ’ applied to a woman who wit ever | 1 reedy to seek a uuarreL
WEAR OF THE EARTH — HOW THE FACE OF OUR GLOBE IS CONTINUALLY CHANGING. Geological Agents That Are Always Busy Is Nature's Great Workshop. Where Man Has Comparatively Little influence. The atmosphere plays its part in ge«> log eal vperatiomL Its corroding power, backed by rain and wind, decfiy and disintegrate those nwks which ere exposed to its influence. Rain completes the work thus begun. Wind blows dust sand and volcanic ashes over large tracts of earth—in fact, over the whole of it. It is only of late years that geologists have discovered that fine volj eanic dust is carried over the whole cf the earth’s surface ana plays a very important part in the deep sea deposits On deserts and nearly rainless regions blown sand will wear away the hardest rocks by beating against them. Some sandstone formations appear to hare been piled up by winds. Winds cause ocean currents, waves i and storms. The great denuding power of the sea is largely due to the atmosphere. Some parts of the English coasts are being rapidly washed j away. Plants and animals have their ; distribution considerably affected oy - winds and ocean currents. Again. > whether living in water or on land. : animals live on the oxygen supplied from the atmosphere, and land plants i absorb carbonic acid from the same source. Rain acts in two ways: (11 chemic- - ally by dissolving certain substances, | such as lime, out of the rocks, and (.21 ■ mechanically by wearing down their ! surfaces as it flows over them. Any | old building—a ruined castle or cathe- ■ j ural. for instance—shows a "weatb- . cred” surface resulting from the aci tion of rain and wind. In sandstone i structures the details of carving are often lost, and on old tombstones the lettering can hardly be deciphered. Springs are due to rainwater collecting in rocks and rising to the surface. Rivers are fed by rains and springs. A river Is a very powerful geological agent. In the hardest rocks rivers gradually carve out a valley or gorge. This is accomplished partly by chemically dissolving certain mineral substances, but chiefly by mechanical the stones, sand and mud wearing away the bed of a stream as they run and tumble over it. The finest examples of river action are the famous canyons of Colorado, which In some places are gorges 5,000 or even 6,000 feet deep, with vertical sides. But. as already pointed out. rivers have a constructive action quite ns important as ’heir destructive action. By bringing down their burden I of sediment into lakes, estuaries and seas they build up great piles of rock and “sow the dust of continents to be." Glaciers are rivers of ice fed by the “eternal snows" of high mountain ranges such as the Alps. They wear out their own valleys as rivers do; they transport mud. sand and stones to great distances, in some cases sending them sealed up in icebergs to float far out to sea and on melting deposit their burdens on the sea floor. Off the coast of Newfoundland northern icebergs are deixisitiug a great mass of ‘glacial drift” The sea is a great denuding agent; but its work is more constructive than destructive. V is the workshop where nearly all the stratified rocka haev been accumulated and ranged in layers or strata. The rivers and ocean curs ♦» b in fceah suppiies of debr.s even for hundreds of miles. Man. compared with the lower animals. produces but little effect as age olog'ca! agent Still the human race Las considerably modified the distribution of plants by cutting down forests ! and by cultivating certain plants to supply food. So with animals. Cer-' tain useful species have been cultlvat- ‘ ed and enormously increased at the expense of others which prove useless or harmful. But pbnts and animali hare had., I snd still have, far tr.'»re influence geoj logically. Coal seams are made up of I vegetable remains of former periods. Forests have an important influence on climate and on animal as well a* i Ida nt life. In the comparatively unknown world of the ocean marine plants doubtless hare important functions. Marine animals accomplish a vast amount of geological constructive work. Great deposits thousands of feet thick owe their existence to small alcareous createres living in the sea. j Coral reefs afford the most f*mi~kr | Illustration. The force known as beat Is of great importance. The earth is hotter below the surface and probably has a very high temperature toward Its center. In some places not very far below its surface it eonUlns h ghly bested rock, which occasionally flows over the surface during volcanic eruptions In rttpr places *• find hot springs In eon- : section with volcanic action. H«.t exercises a powerful Influence on rocks deeply buried below the earth’s surface, chiefly by means of heated water and steam. In this way rock* have been very much altered or The crystalline schist* have thus l>een brought to their present state by a series of chemical change* doe to beau and there 1* no doubt that they were once ordinary deposits of day, sand, etc.—Hutchinson's “Autobiography of the Earth;" the Appleton Company. Aa Varellable Gslfle. Freddy—Ma. according to my appetite It must be near dinner time. Mamma-Ye*, but your appetite 1* j usually fast —Judge. ' ■ I I. ■ S.
The Blow l.a»3ed. She doesn’t go to her dubs and euchres half as much as she did. Peo- ; pie used to say this charming woman spent s st of her time at these gather-1 ing- One day she called on a dear friend to reprove her for her slacken--1 ing interest in the club. I Ik-lieie it ■ was a dub for reforming the gas met- • er or somefhiug— anyhow it was a reform affair. “Look here. Llsxie." said the enthu-, s .“whj on earth don't you come to th-' meetings? Here you are paying ' your dues and never showing up. You | ’ owe it to the club to take an interest 1 in the work." I "But 1 can’t come." explained her 1 frieml. "There’s the l-abv. and Henry doesn't come home sometimes till late, and supi<--r must wait, and if be wants to go out I can’t go away and leave' the children. I would worry myself; ' j to death." "Well. I must say Henry is inconsid-1 erate,” said the caller. “Why. there s my husband and children too. They give me no trouble. Every time I want to go to the dub Charlie says he will be clad to stay at home with Bridget; . and keep an eye on things till I come i i back. He net er objects.” ■ i "Maybe," retorted the amiable host-! ■' ess. "if I had a housegirl as handsome 1 ! and y as Bridget Henry would l<e ' glad to stay at home. too. but mine is black and g>>e« la me at nighta.” The blow landed, and Charlie hasn’t been asked to look after Bridget and the house since.—Louisville Time*. I.eiiKth ot Dreams. Three physicians were discussing the matter of the length of dreams a day or two ago. when one of them related a strange ex pc rience. “Yesterday afternoon.” he said. "I - J called to see a patient, and. much to my satisfaction. I found him sleeping soundly. I sat by his bed. felt of his pulse without disturbing him and waited for him to awaken. After a few minutes a junk dealer * cart with discordant ringing bells turned into the street, and as their first tones u« my patient opened bi* eyes. “ ’Doctor.' he said. 'l'm glsd to see you and awfully glad that you woke me. for I have been tortured by a most distressing dream that must have lasted for several hours. I dreamed that I was sick, as I am. and that my boy came into the room with a string of most horribly sounding sleighbells and rang them in my ears, while I hadn't power to move or speak to him. I suffered torture* for what appeared to be an interminable time. I'm so glad yon woke me.’ "The ringing of those bells for one second had caused all of that dream and just at the waking msment.”— i New York Herald. Halrbroflbea. No amount of washing of the hair will keep it clean if dirty brushes are used, yet person* otherwise fairly neat are careless in this respecu A specialist says that hairbrushes should be washed once a week and. if used on hair in which there is much dandruff, i twice a week is not too often. The brushes should be washed in cold, not hot. water, to which, cloudy ammonia ' has been added in the proportion of a scant tablespoonfn! to a quart of wa- : ter. Care should be taken not to wet the backs of the brushes, and when washed and rinsed—a good way to rinse them properly is to use a shower spray on them—they saoald i>e p cu edge in the air to dry ’>-■ -■ « :_bs. ■ too. should be fr«•? cleaned, a ; , comb cleaner being used for the pur- j ! pose. “A N(»e Days’ Wonder.” The memorable reign of Lady Jane Grey is said to Lavs given rise to the phrase. ‘‘A nine days' wonder.” lAdy Jane wa* proclaimed qoeen of England July 10, 1553. four day* after the death of Edward VI. After the lapse of a period of nine days, on July 18. she relinquished her title to the crown, thus terminating her reign in the short space of a week and a half. A noted Eng- j lisL historian say*. 'Thus we come to the end of the diary of that »bort and troubled reign that from it* length 1* said to have given rise to the now i (1'520< popular phrase, A nine days' wonder.’ ” RrrkleaiiMi. “Inherited wealth.” exclaimed the blase young man, witn a dreary yawn, "is a curse.’” ‘ Then why don't yon try to get rid of ft” asked the youth who hadn’t inherited any wealth. “I am doing the best I can,” rejoined the other. “1 keep a yacht, run an automobile. belong to a swell golf club and lend yt>u money.”—Chicago Tribune. A Novelty. "Suppose I give you your supper,” said the tired looking woman. “What will you do to earn It?’ “Madam." said Meandering Mike. “I’ll , give you de opportunity of seein' a man go t'roo a whole meal wit'out findin’ fault wit? a single thing." The woman thought a minute and then told him to come in and she'd set the table.—Washington Star. Now They Dm'l Speak. Etbel— If ten men were to ask you tu J marry them, wuat would that be? . Amy-What would it be? Ethel—A tender. Amy—And if one should ask you I what would that be? ‘ Etbel—l don't know. What? Amy—A wonder.—lxindou Eun. Homlllty. Humility is the mean* of progress. When we realize bow little we know, we shall yearn and strive to know more: when we feel how Jmpe-fect I* our ebaracter, and not till then, we shall make oarneat effort* after our j improvement
the Cough 54 orks oft the Cold. Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets , cure a cold in one day. No cure, no pay. Price 25 cents. ” French lick springs. In the Indiana highlands, on the Monon Route, excell all other mineral springs in America in the treatment of all blood disease, cutaneous affections, dyspepsia, alcoholism, etc. New fire proof hotel, fine golf links etc. Send for booklet. L. C. Helton, T. P. A., Lafaxette. Special notice. Charleston. S. C.. I 'exposition, via the Southern Railwav. For those visiting Asheville, N. C., during the Southern Baptist convention. May *th 15th, for xvhich a rate of one fare for the round trip has been made, a rate of $5.00 from Asheville to Charleston. S. C.. and return, will be announced. Tickets will be sold May 12th and 13th, good to re turn three days from date of sale. < This is less than one cent per mile. Write. J. S. McCullough. N. W. P. A.. 225 Dearborn St.. Chicago. 111. The Chicago 400, an illsutrated journal of travel and topics, issued by the Chicago A; North Western R'v. is one of the finest illustrated publications ever printed. The tinted halftones rival those of the finest magazines. and the letter-press ot the whole edition is perfect pictorially and descriptively mirroring California's wonderful scenery. Copy delivered free on application, or mailed to any address upon receipt of two cent postage by W. B Kniskern, 22 Ffth avenue Chicago 111. Your vacation. Are you going to take a vacation this summer? A cheap and delightful way to spend your vacation is to gather a few congenial i friends and camp out in the Rocky mountains. Very low iound trip | rates to Colorado and Utah points via the Missouri Pacific railway will be on sale after June Ist. You can learn where to go, what to wear, what to take as camp comforts, supplies and utensils, what they will cost and where to get them, by addressing G. A. A. Deane, Jr.,’T. P. A. Mo. Pac. Ry.. 2(0 Sentinel bldg.. Indianapolis. Indiana. 7tf. $50.00 round trip to California. Chicago X North Western R'y from Chicago. May 27 June 8. The New Overland Limited, the luxurious every day train, leaves Chicago 800 p. m. Only three days enroute. Unrivaled scenery. Variable routes. New drawing room sleeping cars and compartment cars, observation cars <with telephone. I Al! meals in dining cars. Buffet library cars (with barber. < Electric lighted through- ' out. Two other fast trains 1000 a. m.. and 11:30 p. m.. daily. The best of everything. Daily and personally conducted tourist car excursions to California. Oregon and Washington. Apply to your nearest ticket agent or address. A. H. Waggener, 22 Fifth avenue, Chicago. 111. 8-2 Uppon application we will send free of charge, copy of a beautiful souvenir I book discriptive of St. Clair river, upper Lake Michigan and Canadian summer resorts reached by the White Star Line. Will also quote lowest rates and trive fall information relative to yoor k-epii.g while there. Ra •» w h.njibe reach < f all; besides t > irroandiugs. scenic of otherwise rnoxt charming and healthful. We will be pleased to arrange schedule and offer suggestions that will surely be profitable and useful. How many in your party, when do you expect to journey and what point have you in view Do you wish accommodations reserved ftnd at what price. More expensive. medium or cheaper. J. W. Conrad, G. A. Toledo, Ohio. A series which should have been named "The Enchantments of our Modern Aladdin,” if considered solely from the point of view of romance, is begun in the May Cosmopolitan. But these sketches possess as well a , business interest equally for clerk and capitalist for manufacturer, farmer and merchant. The man who would understand the drift of our news in finance and business must read these lives, so full of incident of chance, of hard labor and marvelous success. As it is. the series receives only the com mon-plaee name of "Captains of industry." Eachebaracter is treated by a hoted writer familiar with his subject.
the SOUTHERN t R A I L w A V . Is direct lino from till principal sections of the country to the [south CAROLINA . INTERSTATE AND WEST INDIAN > EXPOSITION Charleston, South 1 Carolina. Through sleeping car service frxau St. Lotus, Louisville and Cincinnati either via Atlanta or Ashville. N. C. through the famous "Land of The ; VERY LOW RATES ' N in^ P A ’» D ~’ G^rt ALLFN '* 0 F * * Louta. mm-
nil I • I I •■Lilts, r. /’-I-If ■ gKF I ■ a<lajs the . -4» f . ■ | ■ Let. Dr. WlLiam, ;, L* rs M ■ ment iiprepar<-<l for }> . . j'V's.- H ■ Inc of the private par*. f ■ "■ warrante!. By dnurtU K celpt ot pr.ee. «0 cents an.i #!.,«, £,.??*■ MANUFACTURING CO . Prop.. M Nacbtrieb i Fuelling. KIDNEY..! "S I backache I All Bladder and f"l’ 13 p I Urinary Diseases. I Kt K I RAILROAD I WEST. H No. 5. vestibule limited, dally for H Chicago i 1’ 5- „ No. 3. Pacific express, daily for • H Cbicaco ■■ >- No. 1. express, dally except Sun-■ K day for Chicago I ]. , a , EAST K No 8, vestibule limited, dally for ■ H New York and Boston .* - — . _ No. 2. express, daily except Sun- < K day for New York f i k d _ ■ No 12. express, daily for New ■ York { > B| . M Through coaches and sleeping car , : York and Boston Trsins 1 andistop at all stations . : •■.<■,. H E. Division. Train No. 12 carries through s>.; •.- .... to Columbus. Circleville. ChiliicotL. . v _. »R Ly. Portsmouth. Ironton, and Kt.-, vs r . SB Columbus. Hocking Valley A Tu.eu.,. ■ Norfolk k Western lines •No. 13 will not carry any Iwgzsre. — EAST. ■ No 8 The Comm 1 Traveler daily * . a- - 2. Mail, daily, except Sunday M No. 4. Day express, daily. :.p i No. 22. Leal freight ■ WEST. B No. 3 Day express, daily * .* » - H No. I. MaiL daily except Sunday ,ll:'.-t. ai K Ng. 5. The Comm'l Traveler, daiiy ; T No. 23 Local freight Ir p. L ■ Grand Rapids A. Indiana, | [Effect March 2, 1902.; H TRAINS NORTH. ■ STAT!'>NS~~ ♦No*s ■ Richmond. ... 11:10p m 12:60 p m S:4uis K Fountain City lie-pm l:»pm -a. ■ Johnson 6:(Wa m ■ Lynn U ripm 1:21 pmifi ll a 3 ■ Snow Hili’ 1 S:i. tI ■ Winchester 12:<Bam 1.3* pm ' a i ■ Ridgeville. 12:® am 1:57 pm «.«»x ■ Portland 12:39 am 2:17 p m 7:9-a x ■ Briant j 2:31 ptn 7.1-sc. ■ Geneva I.ooam 2:4opm 7 ■ Berne ... l:Ubam *:to pm 7:35 am ■ Monroe * 3:U5 p m 7:47 a m ■ DECATUR 1:10am 3:l9pm - u a_ H Williams 3:»pmlk:liax | Hoagland I 3:V pn> I I*T< az. I Fort Wayne... 2:Wam 4-06 pm -ea ■ Kendallville. 3 15am 5:15 pml9 5i 1 | Sturgis 4:loam 0:50 p m *Jt» ’• „ ■ Kalamazoo ... 515 am 8:<» p m :12 • p3l I Grand Kapids . h;Vj a m 9:46 p m 7'■p -p | Howard City. .. s:49am !S:ou nt : 3.2» ps. I Reed City 10:07 am IO am <<■■ I Cadillac . ... 11:10am 2:loam 5 41.1 ; I Petoskey 2:50 pm 5:18 am ! 9:25 p m I Mackinaw City 4:15 pm *:» a m 'l l C; ~ I •Daily, except Sunday. • Dally. I TRAINS SOUTH | STATIONS. »No.Z. »So 4. T I Mackinaw City 9:15 pm : 3:15 a m I Petoskey 1035 pm 9:®am I Cadillac 2:o6am 110 p n 7.50a- I Reed City 3:® am 2:® pm 8:5'1 am | Howard City 4:3oam 3:54pm Ivina | Grand Rapids fJOam 6:lopm 11:30a | Kaian.azov 8:50 am 8:15 pm | Sturgis . lv:'oam 9.35 pm J Kendallville... ,11:07am 10:29pm | Fort Wayne 12:10 p m ,11:® p m 5:»l I Hoagland 12:57 p m 12:0» a m OJ* al. I Williams l:(0pm .... 8:14a I DECATUR I:l9pm 12.27 am 6:®ani Monroe Idlpm 12:39 am 6:37 a = Berne 1:44 pm 12:51am 6:47 a- - 1*52 p m 1.00 a m «:56auBriant 2:®pm 1:09a ui *:o4an Portland 2:17 pm l:»fc m 7:20a Ridgeville 2:34 pm 1:47 am 7:4ia Winchester.... a.rjpm 2:04 am a m Snow HUI ... 8:07 a t. I-ynn 3:04 pm 2:19 am 8:12 am Johnson 8:1? ar. Fountain City 3:17 pm 2:33 am -:2S a- - 3:36 pm 2.Warn -:45 a ♦Dally. tDally ex. Sunday. ‘Dally except Saturday from Mackinac Citv. _ , , Jgyr Bbtsow Agent □ L Lvckwooa Gen. Pas Agent. Mlracks ' X/|o 4KIEXAS A NEW FAST TRAIN Between St. Louis and Kansas City and OKLAHOMA CITY. WICHITA. 1 OEIMSOIN. SHERMAN. DALLAS. FORT WORTH w **?’ in new throughout and made up of thu flneat equipment, provide i w.th electric lights and ail other modem traveling conveniences. It runs via our dow completed Red River Division. K_ ll^y er T •PPHanee known to modern oar I” 11 , 1 !’ D F and railroading baa been employe * in the make-up of thia Mrvioe. Including Case Observation Cars* SS?i e s mana rement of Fred. Harvey Full information ai to rates and all details of LJI'P J 1 * thli n « w route will be cheerful! r aPPHcatlon. by any representative of the .-b Hvllly^General Agent. c ntoa Tru*t Bldg, 07 Walnut st. Cine InnxL
