Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 289, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 December 1910 — New Time Table on Monon In Effect Next Sunday. [ARTICLE]

New Time Table on Monon In Effect Next Sunday.

The Monon railroad is to have a new passenger schedule with two new passenger trains. It will go into effect next Sunday, Dec. 11th. The new trains will be 37 and 38, which have heretofore run between Monon and Indianapolis only, connecting with trains 5 and 6 at Monon. The running of these trains between Chicago and Indianapolis will alter the schedule of several other trains.

No. 32, the northbound morning passenger, will continue to run at 10:05, and will meet No. 5, the Louisville train, at Lowell, and No. 37, the new train, at Cedar Bake. No 5, now due here at 10:55, will not arrive until 11:23 and No. 37 will arrive at 11:41. The latter train will make only one stop en route here from Chicago, that being at Hammond. No. 6, due here at 3:13, and which has been a combination of both the Louisville and Indianapolis trains, will now arrive at 3:15, but the new train from Indianapolis will arrive at 2:53. It will make only one stop between Rensselaer and Chicago and will be a first-class evening train. No. 30, due from the south at 6:02, will now come at 5:58 and will pass the milk train at Surrey instead of Rensselaer, and the milk train will not reach Rensselaer until 6:18. The new time table will be published within a few days.

, Jasper Kenton and wife, who came recently from Mitchell, S. Dak., have not determined positively on their future movements. They will go from here to Oklahoma and may remain there all winter, although it is possible that they will go down into Texas to remain part of the time. They are also undecided about whether they will again return to Mitchell to reside permanently. He says there are good opportunities to invest money in South Dakota land to the west and north of Mitchell and then wait for it to advance, but don’t look for such sudden advances as those that favored the purchasers in the neighborhood of Mitchell a few years ago and in which he and his brother Mason shared so abundantly.