Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 142, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 June 1910 — Page 4

Classified. Column. ' FOB §ALE. For Sale— Spring chickens, and cream. Mrs. York. - . For Sale— Good seasoned posts and cord wood. Apply to Emil Johnson, on the Rankin Halstead place, 7 miles northwest' of Rensselaer, or phone Mt. Ayr, 21 D. For Sale— Driving mare, buggy and harness. James H. Chapman. For Sale— First class milk delivered to any part of the city, 5c per quart; separated cream, 15c per pint; skimmed milk, 10c per gallon. Spencer Bros. For Sale— Choice timothy hay in moW at my farm 4 miles west of Rensselaer. Jones scales on the farm. A. C. Pancoast. Phone 510 A. For Sale— s acres, black land, fine for truck or suburban borne; has large tile through it for drainage; lies on north Main street, Outside the corporation. Will sell at right price on favorable terms. G. F. Meyers. FOB BENT. For Bent— s room cottage. Inquire at the Jasper Savings & Trust Co. For Bent— Two houses, 1 has one lot, the other two; produce planted goes with one house. $6 per month for either; located on West Clark street. Chas. Battleday. For Bent— Six room cement cottage. Ray D. Thompson. For Bent— s room house with large garden and fruit. Inquire of A. H. Hopkins or Ellen Sayler. WANTED. Wanted— Lawns to mow or garden work of any kind. Call Ross Monahan through phone 428, or box 236. Wanted— Two unfurnished rooms In a good residence district. Address X. Y. Z., care Republican. Wanted— Owner of first-class machine to do the threshing for about 800 acres of grain in Jordan township. Address John Grey, R. D„ Remington Indiana. Wanted— Position as linotype operator by young man. Has just compiet od course at linotype school. Understands machine but lacks speed. Will work for reduced wages until speed is attained. Harve Robinson, care Repu oilcan; Rensselaer, Indiana.

LOST. Leet—Solid gold brooch, set with an opal and several pearls. Finder please return to Mrs. Van Grant or leave at this office. FOUND. Found—Man's coat, brown, with black stripe. Inquire here. MONEY TO LOAN. . Money to Loan Insurance company money on first farm mortgage security. Inquire of E. P. Honan. lo.tf Fought Catarrh for 20 Years. Here is a 1 letter that we sincerely ask every reader of the Republican to read. If you suffer from catarrh or any nose, throat or lung ailment, read* it over twice, and then consider if you can afford to ignore a prescription with the healing virtue of Hyomei (pronounce it Hy-o-me): Booth's Hyomei Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Gentlemen—“l suffered terribly with catarrh in the head for twenty years, and I tried many prescriptions, but never found relief. I have used Hyomei for two weeks and find it the best preparation I have ever used for catarrh. Every hold I would catch seemed to go to my throat, and I had to use gargles for days at a time. Now when I catch a cold in the throat I use the Hyomei inhaler and this soreness disappears over night. Hyomei has put me on the good road to getting rid of my catarrh, and if you want to use this letter to publish in your advertising, do so. Perhaps it will help some other sufferer.”—W. K. Engle, 703 Walnut St., Reading, Pa., Oct. 5, 1909. Complete outfit |1.00; extra bottle 50 cents at druggists everywhere and at Fendig’s Drug Store. I. A. Gorman, superintendent of the Richmond police department received a warrant Wednesday from Wayne county for |SOO, representing the county’s reward for the capture of the murderer of Mrs. Frank Allison, near Cambridge City. Superintendent Gorman will turn this check into the city treasury as required by law.

CHICAGO LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN MARKET.

CHICAGO LIVE STOCK u/s. Yards, Juni 15. Receipts of livd stock today: Hogs, 2U.000; cattle, 18,000; sheep, 18,000. Estimated tomorrow! Hogs, 14,000; cattle, 15,000; sheep, 12,000. Hogs strong, 5c higher, mixed, $9.20 to $9.50, heavy, $9.35 to $9.47, rough, $9.20 to $9.30, light, $9.20 to $9.55. Cattle steady, 10C lower, beeves, $5.80 to $8.75, cows, $2.75 to $7.10 Stockers, $4.15 to $6.40, Texans, $6.00 to $7.35, calves, $6.75 to $9.00. Sheep steady and weak, $4.25 to $5.90, lambs, $6.00 to $9.00. CASK GBAXM Wheat No. 2 red, sl.Ol to $1.03. No. 3 red, 95c to SI.OO. No. 2 hard, 94c to 98c. No. 3 hard, 90c to 96c. No. INS, $1.02 to $1.05. No. 2 N S, sl.Ol to $1.03. No. 3 S, 95c to sl.Ol. Com No. 2. 58c. No. 2 W, 62 %c to No. 2 Y, 58%c to 59%c. No. 3, 57%c to 57 lie. No. 3 W, 61c to 61%c. No. 3 Y, 58%c to 58%c. No. 4 Y. 54%c to 57c. Oats No. 2 W,38 %c to 39%c. No. 3W, 37c to 38%c. No. 4 W, 36e to 37c. Standard, 38%c to 39c. ——— PITTUBES July Sept. Dec. Wheat Open .... 92% 89%% 89%% High .... 93% 90% 91% Low 92% 89% 89% Close .... 92% 90 91 Com Open ..... 57% 57% 55%% High .... 58% 58% 56% Low ..... 57% 57% 55% Close .... 58% 58% 56% Oats Open .... 36—% 34%% 35%% High .... 36% 35% 36% Low ...;. 36 34% 35% Close .... 36X 35% 36% Must Nbt Walk Streets, Says Logansport Police. The police authorities of Logansport a step in the—right direction in trying to put a stop to young girls parading the streets at night. Girls who are on the streets every night, unaccompanied, are being spotted by the patrolmen, and reported to Superintendent Morris, who in turn calls them to his office, one at a time, and has a talk with them. The Logansport Reporter in speaking of the matter says: “With the coming of warm weather, girls twelve to sixteen years old, begin to turn out and parade the business districts at night. Girls of that age have no business on the streets at night unless accompanied, and Tor that reason the police are informing them one by one that they must stay at home. The system of quietly speaking to the girls, one at a time, is effective, and none of the girls leave the superintendant’s office without first promising to remain off the streets at night. They are not strictly forbidden to appear on the streets, but they are told that it is for their own good to stay at home, and most of them are seeing the matter in that light.” The same thing is true of many othbr towns. At the same time it is a good proposition to be looking after boys of the same age. There is noticing to be gained for them in the way of morals or business education by becoming habitual street loiterers at night.

REAPING BENEFIT.

From the Experiment of Rensselaer People. We are fortunate indeed to be able to profit by the experience of our neighbors. The public utterances of Rensselaer residents on the following subject will interest and benefit thousands of our readers. Read this statement. No better proof can be had. L. G. Anderson, E. Vine street, Rensselaer, Ind., says: “Last November I strained my back while lifting and I suffered so intensely that I thought 1 would be obliged to lay off from work. The pain across the small of my back was almost unbearable at times. I happened to read a statement in the local papers regarding Doan’s Kidney Pills and I lost no time in getting a supply, i took this remedy strictly according to directions and in three or four days I noticed a marked improvement. By the time I had finished the contents of one box, I was free from the trouble. Doan’s Kidney Pills deserve the highest praise.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo New York, sole agents for the United Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other. _ A ' ■

NEWS IN PARAGRAPHS.

The Ft. Wayne board of public safety has issued an order to the police department for a safe and sane Fourth of July in that city. The day will be celebrated with a monster picnic at Swinney Park. By the order no dealers can sell cannon crackers or any fireworks until July 2. Vital statistics made the public show a decrease in the birth rate in France. The births during 1909 were 770,000 against 792,000 in the preceding year. Since 1851 the population of the republic has increased by 3,000,000 only, wlijle the population of Germany In the same period has been increased by 30,000,000. David E. Sherrick, of Indianapolis, former auditor of state, was married Wednesday to Miss Cora Carolyn Williams, daughter of John J. Williams, of Newcastle. It was a quiet wedding, with only a few personal friends and relatives in attendance. Mrs. Sherrick has been engaged as a trained nurse in Indianapolis. George Wilson, of Chicago, engineer of an excursion train of twelve cars loaded with people bound for a picnic at Kenosha, Wis., averted a disastrous wreck near Harlem, on the Chicago & Northwestern road, Wednesday, by quick work. Wilson halted the train on the edge of a bridge which had been almost completely burned away. Milk theives are getting in their work in Princeton, evidently following dairy wagons and stealing the bottles of milk from doorsteps before any one comes out of the house to get them. Within the last few days one dairyman has lost twenty bottles of milk in various parts of the city in this way and other dairymen have sustained similar losses. Police are working on the case. >... The master bakers are unable to bring to an end the bread war which has been on in South Bend and in Mishawaka for several months. At a strenuous meeting all efforts to settle the matter and establish a uniform price for loaves failed. All that was accomplished was the decision to renovate their shops so as to comply with the laws laid down by the state board of health. As he stepped from the Eastern penitentiary at Philadelphia, after completing a three-years’ term for forgery, Alexander Van'Horning was arrested by detectives on the charge of breaking a parole given him at the Indiana state prison in Michigan City. With the detectives was Thomas Larmore, an agent of the Indiana penitentiary, who went to Philadelphia to bring Von Horning back. Seeking revenge for v having been outwitted by Lelah Leonard and Myron Murphy, who eloped to Warsaw and were married, a crowd of seventy-five acquaintances and a brass band met the young couple at the railway station when they returned to Silver Lake and loading them on a wagon drawn by a team of mules, paraded them through the streets, constantly showering them with rice and old shoes. The E. I. DuPont de Nemours Powder company, incorporated in New Jersey, with headquarters at Wilmington, Del., has filed in the federal court a suit against the Aetna Powder company of this state, alleging that the defendant is infringing patents for the manufacture of explosives granted to Christian Emil Bechel, of Germany, and now held by the plaintiff. The suit asks for an accounting for the proceeds of the sale of products manufactured under the infringement and for an injunction against further infringement.

Fire originating from sparks thrown out by a locomotive on the Grand Trunk railroad, which burned over a section of farm land in Laporte county in 1908, will cost the company the sum of $2,275 in court judgments, according to a decision of Judge Walter A. Funk, of the St. Joseph circuit court. Attorney General Dana Malone, of Massachusetts, has filed a petition in the supreme court of that state asking for an injunction restraining the order of Owls, of South Bend, Ind., from doing business in Massachusetts on the ground that the order has been engaged in the fraternal insurance business without authority. The petition will be heard June 21. Plain drunks” will receive lashings, instead of fines, if Muncipal Judge C. A. Houston, of Tulsa, Okla r -h<>q his way; He has asked the city commissioner to supply him with a post and a whip in order that the court may mete out punishment to the Intoxicated offenders. The average number of arrests on a charge of drunkenness made at Tulsa Is six a . . . a.'

Rensselaer Doctor Gives Monticello Editor Automobile Ride.

Monticello Journal. As the guest of Dr. F. A. Turfler, C. E. Newton, of the Journal, had the pleasure Thursday of making a trip through eastern Jasper county and western Pulaski, going as for east as Winamac in the doctor’s Maxwell runabout. The first stop after a run through the onion lands and a part ot the Gifford marsh was made east of Kniman, at the Doctor’s ranch, which he is carving out of the swamp, having, turned the first furrows in it last autumn. Now he has thirty acres of corn that is as good as any other to be seen on the road and five acres of potatoes that can’t be beaten. The soil is of prairie muck intermixed with coarst sand on a solid subsoil. He used commercial fertilizer with the potatoes. A run was made through the oil field of Jasper county. All rigs are standing idle and many tanks and pumping outfits are dismantled and abandoned. In one place enough oil was seen in the ditch by the road side to have oiled Harrison street from end to end. Thousands of dollars have ffeen spent there in a fruitless endeavor to secure oil in paying quantities. Evidently the true basin has not been located yet. After a splendid dinner at Medaryville a run was made to Winamac to talk over the hemp and peppermint propositions that are now occupying the minds of many farmers and business men of that section. The growing of hemp is a new idea for northern Indiana, the first experiments having been tried near Kouts and North Liberty only last year. The pioneers met with a splendid success, receiving an enormous return on their money invested. Mr. C. W. Riddick, of the Winamac Republican, who is branching out as a farmer, became interested in the proposition through a relative, who is connected with a big fibre company and proceeded to talk the matter up with both the community and the company. Finally he succeded in getting an agreement out of the company that it would plant from 800 to 1,000 acres, renting the land for cash and taking all the risk themselves. It proved to be a difficult matter to employ enough teams to plow the land and sow the crop, but they succeeded so well that it is thought the 800 acres will all be seeded by today. Great hopes are being put on land that is very low priced and of practically no value for corn or wheat, being too mucky. The person driving east from Medaryville to Winamac now for the'first time can scarcely be convinced that he is going over country that fifty years ago was considered so wet or so sandy that it would scarcely product a disturbance, let alone a crop of grain or vegetables. Today the big dredge ditches have drained off the surface water and the land begins to look like one big garden. Lateral tile drains running into the big open ditches are now being laid all through the country and the land is steadily growing solider and being brought up in producing powers. There is plenty of land there that brings S7O to SBS an acre that was bought fifteen years ago for from $7 to $lO per acre, and it has cost no big fortune per acre to drain and improve it, either. Jefferson township, once the laughing stock of Pulaski county, is becoming the center, not only of the county geographically, but also of the same as a wealth producer.

Notice to Those Wishing Fourth of July Concessions. Those desiring concessions for the Fourth of July celebration should apply in person or by letter to any of the following members of tht concession committee: D. M. Worland, J. H. S. Ellis or C. G. Spitler. Notice to Rebekahs. All members of Rensselaer Rebekah Lodge No. 346 I. O. 6. F. are earnestly requested to be present at the regular meeting on Friday, June 17th, for the transaction of Important business. CORA COEN, N. G. L. IDA BENJAMIN, Secy. After blowing a safe in the M. Hene dry goods establishment at Muncie and securing more than SIOO in cash, a gang of buglars got away without even leaving a suspicion of the robbery behind. The safe which was blown stood within eighteen inches of a glass window, and the work was so cleverly executed that the glass was not even cracked. ' i Printing that pleases. “We print anything for anybody.”—The Republican.

CT- * Vs I

A TBXBUTE TO MIXBOY. General Milroy lies at rest Somewhere out in the great, wild west, But his memory is not forgot, By his old friends hereabout. In 1861, when the civil war begun, Milroy—he was the first to call A company of men: Who enlisted in the service, Their country to defend. The people tried to honor this brave, old knight. So they purchased a horse; "Old Jasper” was his name, And gave it to the General, To ride away to fame. They marched away to battle, Leaving dear ones all behind; And suffered all the hardships Of body, soul and mind. But many that went with them, Their country to defend. Lie buried in the Southland, Far away from home and friends. But their loyalty is not forgotten By the people far and near Who are sending their money back To dear old Rensselaer. Their names will be engraved Upon a tablet of stone; And their lives will live on In ages to-come. Let us pay a lasting tribute To the ones that lie at rest With the Stars and Stripes above them, They who are numbered with the blest. So let us honor these dead heros Who gave Uieir lives to save - The best old country on this earth And to free the bonded slaves. Th® “Old Gray Eagle" Bas soared away to realms unknown, With his battles fought And his victories won. Strew their graves with flowers, And leave a falling tear Upon the mounds of those we loved so dear. And see that all their names are carved Upon this monument of ours. MELLE WRIGHT MEDICUS.

coMMxnsxoxrEßS* allowaitces. Following are the allowances made by the Board of Commissioners of Jasper County, Indiana, at the June term. 1910: Vaughn Woodworth, g r rep 2d dis* 700 J.N.Leatherman, sal Co auditor. . 575.00 B. F. Fendig, supplies Aud office. 1.25 C. C. Warner, salary Co clerk.... 375.00 B. I>. Fendig, supplies same 75 John W. Tilton, salary recorder.. 425.00 J. W. Tilton, postage 6.95 Burt-Haywood Co.,supplies same. 6.30 A. Halleck, salary Co Attorney.. 100.00 Ernest Lamson, per diem Co. Supt. 135.00 Same, express and postage 2 40 Burt-Haywood, supplies same.... 6.00 F. E. Babcock, same 6.10 John Q. Lewis, salary Co Ass’r. . 150.00 Same, expense assessor's office. . . 2 05 Chas.A.Lefler,assessing Hang G. . 105.00 James Rodgers, same Gillam .. . 77.50 J.W.Stevens, same, dep Gillam... 22.00 Henry C.Meyers,assessing Walker 140.00 L. M. Meyers, helper, same 20.00 C. W ’.J te £ d ’ assessing Barkley... 140.00 Nora G. Reed, helper, same 12.00 »• „v£. edd ' assessing Marion.... 108.00 Geo.W-Scott. same. Rensselaer... 160.00 Jos.E.Thomas, same. Newton.... 155.00 C. E. I-airchild, same, Keener.... 142.50 Charity Fairchild, helper same... L. B. Collins, assessing Kankakee 125'00 Henry Misch, same, Wheatfield.. 135.00 t U; same. Carpenter... 50.00 w w ? h . e,ps ' same, deputy 130.00 W. E. Culp. assessing Milroy.... 70.00 Sol Norman, same, Union.. ... .. 155 00 C. D. Lakin, same, helper Go., sup - assessors 25’50 W.F.Osborne, per diem Co Surv.. 32.00 £?,‘h r ,Y P; Gahorne, deputy surv.... 48.00 Supply Co.,rep surv instrum 4.45 W. F. Osborne, postage Co surv.. 5.00 Same, misc supplies same 1 25 Same, exp Com court ’'' 10 50 E. J. Duvall, same ’t oo W. B. McNeil, same \ ‘ Ghas. Morlan, janitor court house 45.00 J.L.Griggs, fireman boiler house. . 39 00 Jesse Gates, expense court house. 900 Chas. Morlan, same 90 G. J. Jessen, same 2 50 Fitch Dust-Down Co., same.... 8 40 Eger Bros., same 46 - 6 K B. F. Fendig, same \ “ 3'oo o 2’ AJ lp, an, frt su PPHes c h. . . ’ G. B. Porter, supplies court house. 200 Rowles & Parker, same.... 43 Jesse Nichols, sal Supt.Co.Farm. ' 175.00 J. E. Cooper, labor same 11 06 Peter Kline, same 26 00 Grace Grant, same . 3 00 Rose Lambert, same . ' 900 Roth Bros., supplies same. .“ “ “ 12 50 Eger Bros., same ’ ■>%'7a Bros,, 5ame........... ’’ . 5 ' 60 G. B. Porter, same 52 15 D. S. Makeever. stock same. 30.00 xr C i, G vf n & Go " re Pairs, same. .. 34.32 N- F. King, expense same 13 40 J. A. Larsh, same 25 95 o’ £ h L rer ' boarding prisoners.. IL6O ?’ t ’ Osborne, repair county jail. 611 n Pi supplies 5ame....... 3 00 Fendig, same 10 90 The Star Mfg. Co., same 7’75 Hans Nelson, g r repair Ist dist.. eioo G. W. Smith, same 4 r. n Chas. Henderson, same ‘ 4 ’r.A Paris T. Robinson, same 2d dist 8 00 Elmer E. Pullins, same ” 3’oy C. F. Tillett, same : “ 600 John Johnson, same ' qaa A. Woodworth, same 59'50 Hary McGee, same o’aa Vaughn Woodworth. same./Z“ 3’50 P e 5 u sl .f- Muston, same BLOO J- E. Gilmore, same io»o John Hordeman, same .9’oo Leroy Thomas, same ’ 20 25 Alter Bros., 5ame............. * 4,7 Franklin Grant, same, assigned L. H. Kalfcerer, same o D. T. Crease, same 3d dist. 86 25 Gasparis Stone Co., same ; 100 §9 J; McEwen, public printing . 3 00 * Clark, same. 14 85 F. E. Babcock, same. 7 es John Jordan, refund err taxes. ' 34’52 S’ o’ E arkins ° n ' 5> u , p Po° r children 5’39 E. P. Honan. Co. Bd. Charities.... 7 00 Mrs Carrie Brenner, emr bd hth. . 17’14 & Clark, not.sale Howe d b 600 J.D.Allman, bonds Iroquois ditch.B6B2 50 Same, same, Hazlett ditch 542 80 Same, same. Smith ditch 16216 Same, same, Tyler ditch. ' 30’79 Same, same, S Barkley g r 2150 00 Same, same, Hanging Grove s r.. 952 56 Same, same, Parker s r 854 82 Same, same Gillam g r.. 1 mJ; Same, same, Ott s r .'“ ‘223125 Same, same, Knowlton s r 3575 00 George Turner gr repair Ist dis. . LOO JAMES N. LEATHERMAN, Auditor Jasper County.

It Takes

A pretty girl to draw attention, A team of horses to draw a wagon. An artist to draw a picture, A free lunch to draw a crowd, A bank account to draw a check, Time to draw a salary, and A Republican Want Ad to draw results. It pays to advertise in this paper.

DR. ROSE ffl. REMWIEk N OPTOMETRIST. < ► ,' < ► <» GLASSES PRESCRIBED AND FITTED. < ► Harris Block Phone 403 X

jwl' wk * * You Make A Mistake When you do not entrust your milling with us. Modem facilities enable us to do the work quickly and properly, and at the smallest cost. River Queen Mills Phone 92. Professional Cards DR. E. C. ENGLISH pktbxcxam aud subgeom n?.* 1 calls given prompt attention. Residence phone, 116. Office phone, 177. Bensselaer, Ind. DR. I. M. WASHBURN. PKTSICXAK ASTD SUBGEOH Makes a specialty of Diseases of the Eyes. Over Both Brothers. Bensselaer, Ind. DR. F. A. TURFLER. ~ OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICXAH Rooms 1 and 2, Murray Building Rensselaer. Indiana. Phones, Office—2 rings on 300, residence—3 rings on 300, Successfully treats both acute and chronic diseases. Spinal curvatures a specialty. DR. E. N. LOY ~ Successor to Dr. W. W. Hartsell. HOMEOPATHIST Office—Frame building on Cullen street, east of court house. OPPICE PHONE 89 Residence College Avenue, Phone 169. Bensselaer, Indiana. F. IL HEMPHILL, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Special attention to diseases of women and low grades of fever. Office In Williams block. Opposite Court House. Telephone, office and residence, 442. Rensselaer, Ind. ARTHUR H. HOPKINS lAW, XOA2TS AITD BEAX ESTATE Loans' on farms and city property, personal security and chattel mortgage. Buy, sell and rent farms and city property. Farm and city Are insurance. Office over Chicago Bargain Store. Bensselaer, Indiana. ~~ FRANK FOLTZ Lawyer Practices in AU Courts Telephone No. 16 J. JP. Irwin 8. C. Irwin IRWIN & IRWIN tAW, BEAX ESTATE AMD XMSUBAHOE. 6 per cent farm loans. Office in Odd Fellows' Block. Bensselaer, Indiana. E. P. HONAN ATTOBHEY AT LAW kaw, Loans, Abstracts, Insurance and Real Estate. Will practice in all the courts. All business attended to with promptness and dispatch. Bensselaer, Indiana. If. L. BROWN S9 d . B Hdge Work and Teeth Without Plates a Specialty. AU the latest methods in Dentistry. Gas administered for painless extraction. Office over Larsh's Drug Store. I. O. O. F. Building. Phone 162. JOHN A. DUXLAP, Xawyer. Practice in all courts. Estates settled. Farm Loans. Collection department. Notary in the office. Rensselaer. Indiana.

Ob i2**° to Worthwest, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, and the South, LouleVillo and French Kick Springs. BEKBSELAEB TIKE TABU BOUTS BOUND. No. s—Loulpvnie Mall ......10:55 am. No. 33-y-rqdtanapolia Mall ... 1:58 P.m. No. 39*— Milk Accom 6:02 p.m. No. Ex 11:05 p.m. No. 3t—Fast Mall 4:45 am. „ , WOBTXBOUN9. Na- 4— Mall 4:49 am. Npk 40—Milk Accom 7:31 am. N<x 32—Fast Mall 10:05 am. bto. 6—Mall and Ex. 3:13 p.m. No. 30—Cin. to Chi. Mail ... 6:02 pan. No. 5, south bound, makes connection at Monon for Indianapolis, arriving in that city at 1:20 p. m. Also train No. 38, north bound, leaves Indianapolis at 11:45 a m., and connects at Monon with No. 6. arriving at Rensselaer at 3:13 p. m. Train No. 31 makes connection at Monon for Lafayette, arriving at Lafayette at 6:15 am. No. 14, leaving Lafayette at 4:80 p. m., connects with Na 30 at Monon, arriving at Rensselaer at 6:02 p. m. ;« Effective April 15th and until further notice. Cedar Lake will be a flag stop for trains Na 8, ,4, 80 and 88. *