Evening Republican, Volume 59, Number 97, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 May 1917 — Page 4

CLASSIIED ADS fK HK BRING ®$ TO USERS

RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN ~ BAIX.T MTO nm-WMUT CIULMK flMUhm MM TbTOAT IMHDB SBBB0V&AB wssni nnnoi i Beml-Weekly Republican entered Jan. 1, 1887, ■ second class mall matter, at the postofflce at Rensselaer, Indiana, under the act of March 8, 1878. Evening Republican entered Jan. I, 1887, as second class mail matter at ths postofflce at Rensselaer, Ind., under the act of March 8, 1878. BATBS IOBMimT ADVERTISING -ua B4TSIWI CLASSITIXDADS Three Unss or less. Pgr of six issues of The Evening Republican and two of The Semi-Weekly Republican, 2t cents. Additional space pro rata EuBBCBXPTIOB BATES Daily by Carrier, 10 cents woes. By Mail, »5.50 a year Semi-Weekly. in advance, year. $2.0-.

Classified Coliim FOR SALK. FOR SALE—The Bedford farm of 37 acres, adjoining city of Rensselaer; splendid location for fine home. S2OO per acre. Terms, one-third down, one-third nine months, one-n—third-eighteen months, CHAS. W. POSTILL, Administrator.

FOR SALE—Good 10 ft oak extension table, a bargain. —Mrs. E. D. Rhoades, Phone 146. FOR SALE—Fox hounds, 6 weeks of age; call 109 or see Leo Mecklenburg. ~FOR SALE—Good brood and work mare for sale. —M. I. Adams. FOR SALE—A three burner Jewel oil stove; also nice fern.—H. R. Lange. .' — —- FOR SALE—Now is the best time to get your bee supplies and have everything ready for the swarming season. Get your new iuves, supers, and all other supplies oi Clark &. Kooinson, at this office. Call Phone 18 or 516 for prices. A line of Root’s supplies on hand at ail times. FOR RENT —6 room house, soft and hard water in house, big garden. Phone 216-Black. R. A Sayler. FOR SALE OR RENT—B room dwelling, large rooms, electric lights, city water, cistern, hardwood flows, chicken park, large plat ground. Rental $25 per month.—James H. Chapman.

FOR SALE —Good 120 acre farm. —Mrs. Fred Karen, R. D. 1, Wheatfield, Ind. FOR SALE—I 2 cents each, 1 car load of white oak fence posts, 6 inch tip by 7 ft, just received at Rensselaer. See B. Forsythe or Phone 287. ~FOR SALE—ReaI bargain, improved 80 acre farm, new 5 room house, new barn, 3% miles from Wheatfield, Ind., $35 per acre. Will take live stock first payment, easy terms on balance. —Harvey Davisson, Phone 246 or 499. _____ FOR SALE—A well established hotel or twarrling house traie. For further information write P. O. Box 511 or FOR SALE—Hallet and Davis piano, in Ist class condition. Bargain if taken at once.—H. R. Lange. ~FQR SALE—AII staple sizes, No. 1, oak lumber, $12.00 to SIB.OO per m. 12.000 No. 1, white oak posts, 10c each All F. O. B. Tefft, Indiana. See T. H. Hayes, at Tefft, or B. Forsyth*, Rensselaer, Indiana.

FOR SALE—Bargain. Lot, 3 blocks west of Five Pointe, $l5O.— Harvey Davisson. FOR SALE OR RENT —Possession June Ist, at a bargain, 9 room modem house, not and cold, soft and hard water. Lot 75x180 feet Half block north Catholic church.—John Poole, Phone 297. _____ FOR SALE—No. 12 DeLaval cream separator. Good as new. $27.00. Phono 904-L. FOR SALE —Strawberry plants, 50c a hundred. Phone 947, Mrs. O. M. Peek. FOR SALE—‘Lot 8, block 23, one block south and one block east of court house, center lot of former Lewis Davisson property, 50x150 feet Cail Frank Trufiey, Phoue 945-B. FOR SALE —My residence property on Franklin street All modern conveniences.—Samuel Roth. _ . '• _7 111 1 111 u——* FOR SALE —One good recorded Shorthorn bull, eight mouths eld.— Ed Raoton, Ph eta 954-D. FOR SALE—Rug and carpet weaving outfit, a money W. Bissetnden, Phone 267. ~FOR SALE —Overland 5 passenger touring car, in good condition, at a bargain price. Terms to suit purchaser.—E. M. Laßue, Phone 45. ~FOR SALE—Eggs for setting tram White Plymouth Rock farm nm chickens, 75c for 15 or $4.00 per 100.—John M. Johnson, Phone 929-H.

FOR SALE—Second hand bicycles. Jim C. Clark, Phone 218. FOR SALE —1 Papec ensilage cutter, 2 sets knives, 30 feet pipe; 1 Johnstone binder, 8 foot tongue truck, new canvass, sprocket wheel for engine; 1 Satley com planter, fertilizer attachments, 80 rods wire; 1 school wagon, handy for hucksters. These articles are nearly new, in first class condition; guarantee satisfaction; 1 horse 3 years old, 1300 pounds; 1 horse 8 years old, 1300 pounds, gentle driver; 1 brood mare, 12 years old, 1600 pounds; 1 brood mare 1300 pounds. Will cell on time or take young stock.—Joseph Kosta, Fair Oaks, Ind. -K. D. L Phone Mt. Ayr, 92-D.

WANTED. WANTED—Good sewing at my residence, 1002 North Cullen street. — Mrs. Julius Taylor. WANTED—FamiIy washings and ironings.—Mrs. Charles Elder. One block north and half block east of laundry. - WANTED—Copy of 1909 Jaspei County Atlas. —Charleg G. Spitler. WANTED—To do your spraying; now is the time.—W. H. Holmes, Phone 322. WANTED —Small washings to do. Send me a card, —Mrs. Albert Bisseaden, Box 234, Rensselaer, Ind. WANTED —Lawn mowers to sharpen. Have installed the latest improved power driven lawn mower grinder. — Jim C. Clark, Phone 218.

- - WANTED—Two setting hens ana a Scotch Collie dog. Phone 106, £. J. Gamester. ———- : WANTED —Al persons owing me for horse service to pay Guss Grant or The Trust & Savings Bank. Grant has service books. —W. H. Barkley. WANTED—Plumbing and heating contracts. —Watson Plumbing Co., Phone 204. FOR RENT FOR RENT —Furnished house, modern equipment. Phone 329-Green. Mabie C. Atwood. FOR RENT —Eight room house, hard and soft water, cellar, large garden, bam and chicken park. Phone 255 Green, or Mrs. A J. Abbott.

FOR RENT —7 room h use, bath, cistern, well, cellar, garden, electric lights. Phone 478 White, John Mauck. FOR RENT—After May 16, a six room house with bxth and furnace, hot and soft water inside, chicken house, garage and garden .lanted. Pasture for one cow. —Mrs. Emma York, Phone 160 Black. FOR RENT —120 acre farm on stone road, 6 miles from town; good improvements. —John A Dunlap. FOR RENT—Residence, 8 blocks from court house square.—Dr. F. A Turner.

FARM LQAN3 FARM LOANS—An unlimited supply of 5 per cent money to loan.— Chas. J. Dean & Sen, Odd Fellows Building. ~MONEY TO LOAN—S per cent farm loans. —John A Dunlap. LOST—Suit case between Fred Phillips’ residence and Main Garage Friday, May 11th. Finder leave at this office. LOST—On Saturday, May 12, 1917, on east side of State Bank building in Rensselaer, one lynx fur collar. Finder please notify Republican office or telephone 55. George Healey, Jr. went to Chicago on the afternoon train. Dr. Emil Besser, of Remington, was in Rensselaer today. The following attorneys autoed to Kentland today: Moses Leopold, E. M. Laßue and John A. Dunlap. Mr. and Mite. Alex Jensen, their son, Lpuis, and Mrs. Jensen’s mother, Mrs. J. H. Tilton, were in Rensselaer today. Mr. Jensen is the cashier of the Wheatfield bank. ■ Mrs. Jesse D, Allman was called to Lafayette today on account of the very serious condition of her uncle, Levi Hawking, whose death is expected at any moment. Several auto loads of people from Rensselaer, including twelve or fifteen members of the local band, went to Lowel 1 this morning to attend the funeral of Otto Braun, which was te have been held this afternoon. George Collins, who. is the representative of the local lodge, went to Indianapolis this afternoon to attend the semi-annual meeting of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. 1% H. P. gasoline engine with Webster magneto, $42.50. We bought these engines at the old price and we guarantee them to be first class. — Watson Plumbing Co.

Hon. E. P. Honan went to LaPorte today, where he will attend the funeral of Rev. George Schrom, who was a high officer in the state organization of the Catholic Foresters. Mrs. Isiah Duffy, of Wabash, and son Isaac, age 11, and daughter Ruth, aige ’7, came yesterday fdr a few days’ visit with her sister, \Mrs. Jesse Nichols and other relatives. Mrs. Duffy was formerly Miss Maude Walker, being a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Walker, of Barkely township. She was for a number of years one of Jasper county’s very popular and efficient school teachers. . r.,.-. -T_— •--jj-jf--

THB EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, ICT.

LATE WAR NOTES.

Six grain boards meet in Chicago today to curb gambling. New dry bill may be offered in congress. British drive on the coal city of Lens was materially advanced. General Haig’s troops have completed the difficult task of driving the Germans out of Roeux. . Germany’s stand on the socialist’s peace plan, it is believed, will be made known in the Reichstag today by Chancellor von Bethmann-Wollweg. The disaster which threatens Russia today called forth the suggestion that a dictatorship may be necessary to prevent the dissolution of the country. '

Words True and Prophetic.

Out quarrel, as the president has told congress, is not so much with the Genman people as with the German government, whose offense is—again using the president’s laguage—in developing cunningly contrived plans of deception or aggression, such as can be worked out and kept from the light only “within the privacy of courts or behind the carefully guarded confidences of a narrow and privileged class.” Yet the president is now carrying on our quarrel with the German government along the same lines of action which he has condemned in that government. We have no royal court in America, nor is it, perhaps, wholly just to say that Mr. Wilson is developing any cunningly contrived plans of deception or aggression. But it is undeniable that he is working out whatever plans he may have and that he is keeping them front the light “behind the carefully guarded confidences of a narrow and privileged class.” That class is made up of a few democrats—two or three senators, two or three representatives and Col. E. M House. The senators and represenatives take no responsibility except to rise in their places on sibn and say, “I have just received a message from the president to such and such effect.” Col. House takes no responsibility whatever. He holds no office. He is answerable to nobody—and he sees the president before the president sees the two or three senators and representatives. What the president and Col. House decide upon is communicated to the little group of congressional dictagraphs, and from them goes the word which is expected to spur the constituted representatives of a hundred millions of free men into blind action. Under this system, hundreds as millions are voted without adequate discussion and with no semblance of adequate explanation: and unheard of powers are-proposed for therpresident and his yet unnamed subordinates. Nothing in the course of Germany’s development of her schemes of aggression and expansion has exceeded the scope cf some of the proposals which have been put To the American congress in the last few weeks. It may be urged that this is fighting the devil with fire: and it is sufficient answer to say. that we are not provided with asbestos gloves such as a combat of that kind requires. This nation is not accustomed to “wars provoked and waged in the interest of dynasties or of little groups of ambitious men,” to draw once snore from the president’s ample vocabulary: and such a war has been deemed, as Mr. Wilson has intimated, “happily impossible” for us because, as the president himself has said, this is a land “where public opinion commands and insists upon full information concerning the nation’s affairs?’ Those words, spoke to congress on that fateful second of April, were true and they are prophetic. The spirit which they contain will prevail in this country, espionage bills, embargo measures and attempted secrecy of legislation to the contrary notwithstanding.

Mrs. John I. Gwin left this morning for Jamestcflvn, N. Dak. Mr. and Mrs. Gwin own a very excellent farm near Jamestown and they are anxious to add to this holding by buying more of the good North Dakota soil. The following Wheatfield boys have enlisted in the U. S. navy: Richard Demarah and a young man by the name of Maize. The. following from Wheatfield have enlisted in the regular army: Richard Bowie, Russell Hickam, Allen Fendig, Dee Dunn, Frank Ferguson, George Williams, Fred Yeagley and Clifford Hamilton. It is understood that Fendig and ■Hamilton were unable to pass the physical examination.

347 ACRE FARM FOR SALE WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1917. I will offer my farm at auction, consisting of 347 acres, all tillable, on Wednesday, May 23, at 2:30 p. m., at the farm, 4 miles east of Rensselaer, Ind., Marion township, Pleasant Ridge Station and Stock Yards at corner of farm. This feim is improved with two l ouses, 2 barns, 2 double cribs, stock shed, stock scales, granary, tool house/ wind mill, 2 good wells, 2 water tanks, one never-fail-ing flowing spring in yard, walnut grove in front yard, land all in a body and fenced off in 40 acre fields, mostly new fences of barbed and woven wire, hog tight fence only two years old on three sides of farm. The soil is good and land lies a little sloping mostly to the .oath. About 30,000 tile in land, working good. No incumbrance. Title will be free from ditch or road assessments, if any. Possession given at once. Buyer carrying out the lease with tenant and receiving owner’s share of crop and cash rent and come in full possession of the farm March 1, 1918. TERMS OF SALE—WiII sell on time if so desired. One-fourth down, onerfourth in one year, balance three to five years at 5 per cent Parties wishing tb kok farm over call Fred Phillips, Auctioneer, or C. Tryon, Owner, Rensselaer, Ihd. For results, use our classified column.

WONDERS HAVE SHORT LEASE

Magazine Writer Shows How Rapidly Remarkable Inventions Tread on Each Other's Heels. “Not a great many years ago a spectacled and skeptical old scientist wrote a long thesis In which he claimed that the world’s great discoveries all lay In the past, that the future had no new wdnders to disclose, and that all the really fundamental Inventions, discoveries and researches had already beep made,” sayg J.S. Newman, in the February St. Nicholas. “ ‘For,’ said the pessimistic philosopher, ‘there are no more strange lands to explore, no more conceivable inventions for the benefit of mankind. The telegraph, electric light, telephone and electric motor are already here. The camera and microscope, telescope and linotype, printing press and sewing machine, airship and steamboat are already What else is there left that is really new?’ “But Mother Nature seemed "to have kept her most wonderful secrets for just such an occasion. As if deliberately to disprove the fooljsh scientist, the next ten years brought out the most astounding collection of new inventions and discoveries the world has ever known. For in the period Immediately following the bold claim of this doubting Thomas, Hertz discovered electric waves, Marconi invented wireless telegraphy, Roentgen stumbled upon the X-ray, Madame Curie isolated radium, Sir William Ramsay found five new chemical • elements, Edison made his first moving picture the Wright brothers conquered the air and countless greater or lesser discoveries astounded the scientific world. “So the seven great wonders, of today will become the commonplaces of tomorrow I”

COW IS A REAL ASSET

Goes Through Her Span of Years Yielding Her Full Quota • of Milk. With no apparent effort the cow goes through her span of years yielding her full quota of milk and looking always as if she could Impart great secrets to the world If she had the gift of speech. She is an industrial asset, not a mere purveyor of baby food. It has been proved that casein, which forms over 3 per cent of the total weight of cow’s milk, is an Important commercial product, and may be profitably employed in the manufacture of glue, combs, buttons, linoleum, hairpins, toys, paints and even shoe polish. In the preparation of casein for commercial purposes, about" 700 gallons of skimmed milk are put into a great vat and heated to about 135 degrees Fahrenheit, says Popular Science Monthly. Then very dilute sulphuric acid Is added to precipitate the casein or curd. The whey Is drawn off and the curd Is drained and cut Into chunks, after which streams of cold water are played on it to wash out the acid. The curd is then dried with rotary fans and ground into powder, In which form It Is placed on the market. One hundred pounds of skimmed milk will yield about 3% pounds of casein powder.

Dynamite for Mosquitoes.

The residents of a small town In New Jersey were for years pestered by an unusual number of mosquitoes which, upon investigation, were found to be propagating in stagnant pools of water lying between the railroad tracks and the nearest street. It was found that these could not be drained to the street gutters, hence another method had to be employed, and It was decided to sink the water into the ground. A heavy charge of dynamite was sunk and discharged about 20 feet under the surface. This caused the pools of water to disappear in short order, and they disappeared permanently, too! —Garden Magazine.

Good-By, Home Life.

“A primary cause of divorce Is the disappearance of home life —the extinction among us of all home sentiment.” The speaker was Mary Pickford, the movie actress. She went on: “A man said to me the other day: “ ‘No, I’m rarely home. You’ll find me, as a rule, at the Country club. I’d rather play golf than eat.’ ” "‘But how about your wife,’ said I. ‘Does she approve of such sentiments?’ “ ‘Sure!’ he answered. ‘She’d rather play bridge than cook.’ ” —Washington Star.

Such Is Life.

“Alas!” she cried, “it is my fate, I might have expected it. All my life things have gone wrong with me. Luck has always been against me. I must have been born under an evil star.” “My dear,” her friend asked, “what has happened? Why are you so depressed?" “I have practiced 18 months to become able to shed tears at will, and now that I’ve got it, I can’t get a job either in melodrama or the movies.”— Judge.

Sign of the Times.

“Is it true that the monarchlal form of government Is on its last legs?’’ “Perhaps so. At any rate, you will notice that press agents no longer lay particular stress on the fact that their stars have played before the crowned heads of Europe.”

Important

T Would-Be Writer—What do yon .consider the most impoptqnt for a beginner In literature? Old Hahd —A small appetite.

CARE OF SICK CHILDREN

Ruses Adopted to Make the Ailing Youngsters Take .the Prescribed s Food. Everyone who the care of a convalescent child knows how hard It is to make him eat the things that the doctor has prescribed. Ingenious mothers and nurses have Invented all sorts of schemes and devices to make the simple diet of the sick child acceptable and interesting.,— .. ;.... --- The Invalid who refuses to take his milk and eggs will often drink an eggnog from a tall glass through a straw, observes a writer in the NeW York Tribune. A little girl admires parties, and will eat almost anything If it is served from a doll’s tea set, especially If some of lier dolls are Invited to share the feast. The dessert may be covered with a little tent, house or wigwam, with a tiny doll standing guard at the door, and no peeking is allowed until everything else on the tray is eaten. Faces may be sketched on the eggs and hats or caps tied on them. Toast cut in fancy shapes is most exciting. It can be trimmed with a knife and made into little houses with doors and windows, or it may be cut with cooky cutters. A doll’s chafing dish is alot of fun. If the invalid is strong enough to sit up, a small table may be set, and he will never know what is being served if father Is the waiter with a napkin over his arm. With a little thought and care the child may be made to eat almost anything.

GARDEN A MEDICINE CHEST

Curative Properties Found in Many of the Ordinary Vfcget Every man who has a kitchen garden has a medicine chest in his back yard, although he probably has. not seriously looked upon it as such, remarks a writer in the Portland Oregonian. In the onion, for example, he has a sulphur oil which gives the onion Its reputation as a remedy for Insomnia and which some physicians hold as a valuable anodyne for “rheumatic” pains. There are certain oils in turnips and parsnips that have aperient and diuretic properties. There Is solanin in the potato, and spinach contained Iron. Cabbage Ishlghly regarded *as a preventive and corrective of scurvy and scrofula. The composition of the tomato Is chemically so subtle that It is not yet fully understood, although several active principles have been isolated and names have been given to them. Thus the man who eats freely of vegetables Is taking medicine without paying for a prescription and without being bothered by the high cost of drugs. In the normal individual the instinctive appetite automatically regulates the size of the “dose.”

Riches and Wants.

“As riches Increase,” says Solomon, “Bo do the mouths that devour them.” The master mouth has no more than before. The owner, methinks, Is like Ocnus in the fable, who is perpetually winding a rope of hay, and an ass at the end perpetually eating It. Out of these inconveniences arises naturally one more, which is, that no greatness can be satisfied or contented with Itself; still, if it could mount up a little higher, it would be happy; if it could gain but that point, It would obtain all its desires; but yet at last, when it is up to the very top of the Peak of Teneriffe, it is in very great danger of breaking its neck downward, but in no possibility of ascending upward into the seat of tranquility above the moon. —Abraham Cowley.

The Chief End of Brains.

A member of congress, a new man and therefore not widely known In Washington, found himself one day in the hands of a barber of the proverbial talkative sort who was employed in a Washington hostelry, says the Youth’s Companion. “You have a large head, sir,” observed the barber, as he was trimming the locks of the statesman. “It is a good thing to have a large head, for a large head means a large stain, and a large brain is the most useful thing a man can have, for it nourishes the roots of the hair.”

Delineating the Giraffe.

Gibbon’s note on the giraffe shows what a mystery the beast was to our eighteenth century ancestors. Descr|bing the inglorious achievements of the Emperor tri the Amphitheater, he menttonsJOjat “Commddus killed a Camelopardalis, or giraffe, the tallest, the most gentle ang the most useless of the large quadrupeds;" and adds: “This singular animal, a native of the interior parts of Africa, has not been seen in Europe since the revival of letters, and though M. de Buffon has endeavored to describe, he has not ventured to delineate the giraffe."

No Escape.

“Do you believe man was made to mourn?” “I do,” answered the pessimist. “Even when a person has little to complain of himself, he is often made unhappy by the hard luck.stories other people insist on telling him."

Imitation for Imitation.

“Excuse me," said the waiter, “but this quarter you gw me tor a tip is pewter.” “Well, you brought me a cold age egg and oleomargarine/’

The township assessors’ reports are due today.■ Irene Yeoman was able to leave the couhty hospital today. Miss Alice Worland went to Chicago on the early morning tram. Bicycle tires, all new stock. Phone 218. Jim Clark. ] Dr. I. M. Washburn and W. C. Babcock went to Chicago this morning. Edson Murray returned to his school ork at Champaign, 111., today. Special prices on bicycle tires for 30 days only.—Watson Plumbing Co. Conrad Kellner and John Halliday were in Chicago Monday on business.; Mrs. Charles Rishling is spending the day with Mrs. Henry Cntton at Monon. W V. Porter, of this city, and L. E. Ponsler, of Mt. Ayr, went to Chicago this monung. • E. V. Severson, fine piano tuning and repairing. Al Iwork guaranteed. Phone orders to C. W. Rhoades, 148. Attorney Jasper Guy, ton, arrived in this city on the 10: ob train this morning. Marie Stringer went to Lafayette this morning, where she is having an eye treated by a specialist. Just received a car No. 1 timothy hay in large bales at $1.35 per bale. Kellner & Callahan, —— Drs. W. Lu Myer and H. L. Brown are attending the state dentist meeting in Indianapolis. W. J. Wright is attending the Indiana Undertakers’ convention at Indianapolis this week. John Finn and John Shirer, .ot Tefft, and Abraham DeKoker, of DeMotte, were in Renseslaer today. J. N. Leathern!sff“and John R. Lew is went to Tipton via automobile today.

The firm of Kellner & Callahan now have five carloads on track. Three of these cars are sewer, one is hay and the other is coal. Anise Harper, surgical nurse at the hospital, went to Indianapolis today, where she will take the state examination for registered nurse. Mrs. Harry Hartley has as her guests Mrs. William Stewart, of Goodland, and Mrs. Isaac Colburn, of Monroeville, Cal. , • 30,000' spring plains. 86 kinds. Home grown, climated, and well rooted. Shrubs should be planted now. — J. 11. Holden, Phone 426. Mrs. Will Stewart, of Goodland, and Mrs. Isaac Corbin, of Monrovia, Cal., are spending the day with Mrs. Harry , Hartley. The Rensselaer band and several others from here are attending the funeral of Otto Braun at Lowell this afternoon. Attorney Abraham Halleck left this morning on-the milk train forKentland. This was call day in the May term of the Newton circuit court. Mrs. Joseph Dluzak, of near. Remington, took the train here this morning for Kankakee, 111., where she will visit for a few days with her mother. Mrs. Barbara Hoshaw went to Chicago this morning and will attend the twenty-fifth wedding anniversary of her son, Chris Sealman. Rev. Asa McDaniel, pastor of the First Christian church of this city, is attending the state convention of the Disciples of Indiana which is being held at Kokomo.

CASTO RIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears the fjP* Signatured

The Yellow Bus Rensselaer-Remington ’Bus Line Schedule 2 TRIPS DAILY Lv. Rensselaer .............7:45 am Ar. Remington 8:80 an Lv. Remington 9:10 am Ar. Rensselaer 9:55 am Ar. Remington f. .4:45 pm Lv. Rensselaer .4:00 pm Lv. Remington .5:15 pm Ar. Rensselaer .6:00 pm FARE 75c EACH WAT. BILLY FRYEL Prop Chicago and the West, XndlanapoUe, Cincinnati and the South. XrtralaviUe and French Lick Springs. CHICAGO, XHDXAMATOUS * M3VXB- - ST. . SOUTHBOUND. Louisville and French Lick. No. 3 •' P® Indianapolis and Cincinnati. No. 38 I:<* * m _— JLoulsvtlle and French Lick. No. 8 ..' ....10:68 am Indianapolis and Cincinnati. No. 37 11:1* am Ind'polls, Cincinnati and French Lick. No. S 3 ’., 1:87 pm Lafayette and Michigan City. No. 80 *:** Pm Indianapolis and Lafayette. No. 31 7:81 Pm NORTHBOUND. No. 33 Chicago .'. 4:61 am No. 4 Chicago .............. 8:01 am No. 40 Chicago (a0c0m.),..... 7:30 am No. 33 Chicago 10:33 am Stl;S S 3 - N< n>r fiu&er tafonMtlon roll <m W. H. BEAM. Agont.