Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 22 December 1894 — Page 3

ONLY

We intend, shall eclipse anything ever offered the American public. They will be on exhibition in our east window tomorrow evening.

Listen! One hundred and fifty pairs of Ladies and Misses $2, $2.50, $3 and $4 Shoes at the wonderfully low price

of

-A PAIR.

Common Sense heel and toe, Opera heel and toe and Common Sense heel and Opera toe, Widths, D, E, EE.

A large number of men's Shoos will be offered at a great sacrifice. The opportunity of your life. Respsctfully,

WHITF fERlliCE.

mp

NEW CURRENCY BILL

One Has Just Been Presented in Congress.

SUBSTITUTE FOR THE ORIGINAL.

It. lias lSe!ii Agreed Upon by the Democrutic Members of the Hanking and Cur­

rency Committee and Endorsed, It Is

,aiil, by the Secretary of the Treasury.

J'ate of the Carlisle Bill.

WASHINGTON, Dec. 2S.—The entire time of the house was occupied in debute on the currency bill, the speakers being Messrs. Pendleton (Deni., W. Va.) and Sickles (Dem., N. Y.) in favor of the bill, and Messrs. Russell (Rep., Conn.),

MoJ.aurin (Dem., S. C.) and

Rawlins (Dem., U. T.) ayainst it. Before tiie close of the session Mr. Springer, the chairman of the banking and currency committee, presented the amendments to the measure agreed npoll by the Democratic members of the committee and endorsed, it is said, by tlu- secretary of the treasury. The bill, as altered ly the amendments, is a substitute for the original bill, and upon this substitute tiie fate of the measure will depend.

It is substantially a new measure, although some of the sections of the original measure are retained in the new bill. The new bill is arranged so as to show the new features in parenthesis. The first section is as follows: "That (so much of) all acts and parts of acts as require, or authorize the deposit of United States bunds to secure circulating note. issued by national associations (or as require such associations to deposit or keep on deposit, United States bonds for any purpose except as security for public inonuy), be, and the same is hereby, repealed (as to associations taking out circulation under this act) aud such notes shall not contain the statement that they are so secured."

Section 2 is changed so that banks can not only deposit legal tenders to secure circulation, bur also currency certificates issued under Section GO, uf the revised statutes of the United States.

Section 3 is retained entire, except that its provisions are restricted to apply to national banking associations, "taking out circulation under this act."

Sect? 4 inserts "the comptroller of tha eurr^-icy" as the officer to designate the i- s) whtre notes are to be renee. 'i.

Tn

con prevision is made for

keeping up th safety fund and in addition to the terms of the original bill it is that the collection of said tax of o:• -rurth of 1 per cent for each half e--v ^, '1 be resumed and continued until the said fund is restored to an amount equal to ."3 per cent upon the total circulation outstanding. Ail circulation notes of failed national banks not redeemed on presentation to the treasurer of the United States or an assistant treasurer o£ the United States shall bear interest at the rate of (5 per cent per anuni from the date of the sus- I pension of the bank until i5U days after public notice has been given that funds are on hand for their redemption, aud such notes sliail constitute a first lien I upon ail moneys thereafter received into the safety fund.

Section 0, allowing the secretaay of the treasury to invest money in the I safety land in bonds, is tiie same as in the original bill.

Section 7 is entirely new and takes the place of a section which has been eliminated. The new section is as follows: "That every national banking association heretofore organized and having bonds on deposit to secure circulation may withdraw such bonds upon the deposit of lawful money of the United States, now provided by law and thereafter such association may take out circulation under this act and be entitled to all the rights, privileges and immunities herein conferred."

Section specifies that the portion of the national banking act to be repealed is limited to so much of Section 12, "as directs the secretary of the treasury to receive deposits of gold and to issue certilicates thereon."

Section is substantially the same as in the original bill. Section 10, providing for state banks, is also the same as in the original bill, except that in the restriction on state banks a new provision is made that the guarantee fund maintained by them may include "currency certificates issued under Section 5193 of the revised statutes.

An entire new provision is added to the state banks as follows: "Whenever the secretary of the treasury and the comptroller of the currency shall be satisfied that any banking corporation duly organized under the laws of any state and which transacts no other than a banking business as provided in this section has been incorporated under the laws of the state in which it is located, which laws require that the stockholders shall be individually liable for the redemption of its circulating notes to the full extent of their ownership of stock, and that such laws require that the circulating notes thereof shall constitute a lirst lien upon all the assets of the bank, and also that such laws require such bank to keep on deposit at all times with an official of the state authorized by law to recei'fe and hold the same a guarantee fund, as required in the fourth paragraph of this section, they shall issue to said bank a certificate to that etl'eot. Thereupon said bank may issue its notes, as provided in this act, and thereafter the tax of 10 per cent heretofore imposed by law upon the circulation of the notes of state banks shi'll not Do assessed or collected upon the notes of such bank unless it appears that said bank lias issued circulating notes in excess of io percent of its paid up and unimpaired capital, or that its capital is impaired ami has remained so for 30 days, or that the bank has not kept on deposit with the state official authorised by law to receive and hold the same a guarantee fund as required in the fourth paragraph of this section, or that said bank has not promptly redeemed its notes in lawful money at. par on demand at its principal office or at one or more of its branch offices, if it has a branch office and that no person or corporation other than the bank issuing such notes in violation of the provisions of this act, shall be liable to the tax of 10 per cent upon the circulating notes of statu banks as now provided by law."

Most of Section 11 is new and is as

follows, the new portions being in parenthesis: "(That any banking association organized under the laws of any state may deposit with the treasurer of the United States legal tender notes and. reoeive certificates therefore in the manner provided in Section 50, 193, of the revised statutes of the United States, and the secretary of the treasury may, under proper rules and regulations to be established by him, permit such banks to procure and use in the preparation of their notes the distinctive paper used in printing United States securities but no state bank shall print or engrave its notes in similitude of a United States note or certificate or national bank note.

Two bills were then passed by unanimous consent, one by Mr. Ellis of Oregon to exempt articles designed for the Portland universal exposition from duty, and the other by Mr. Lynch (Dem.,Wis.) for the relief of homesteaders whose property was devastated by the forest tires last year. The special order for a night session was vacated and the house then, at 5:JU p. in., adjourned.

ARMENIAN OUTRAGES.

The Sullan of Turkey Unwilling For an Inquiry to He 3Iade.

WASHIXWTOX, Dec.

2 2

—The-latesr ad­

vices from United States Minister Terrell, at Constantinople, to the state department, indicate that the porte is still linn in its opposition to the inquiry proposed to be made into the Armenian outrages by United States Consul Jewett under the conditions prescribed by the president.

If Mr. Jewett persists in undertaking the inquiry in spite of the refusal of the porte to sanction his mission, he will do so at great personal risk. It would be extremely unsafe for him to venture into tiie disturbed country without an armed escort and the porte seems disinclined to furnish But-, an escort, even though requested to do so by Mr. Terrell, speaking for the president.

It is probable that the United States minister will persist in his efforts to induce the porte to accede to this request, and if it should be finally refused, Mr. Jewett will still undertake the inquiry with which he is charged, and the Turkish government will be held responsible for his safety, for the state department can not concede the right of a foreign nation to prevent its officers from collecting information for its own use and guidance.

Fire in Cleveland.

CLEVELAND, Dec. 22.—Fire made a big black spot in Cleveland near the Union passenger station early yesterday evening. It broke out in the new 4-story brick block at the corner of Water and Main streets, owned by the Doan estate and Darius Adams, and destroyed it quickly. The loss on the building is ijviO.OOO.

The occupants, the E. D. Rox

company and the French Delicacy company, lost. §140,000 and $o7,000 respectively. The old wooden Empire hotel across Water street caught fire and I burned down loss, §10,000 and the cable railroad waiting room, adjacent I to it, worth §1,000, was also consumed.

3Iurder« Ilart Placed in Prison. COI.UMISLS, ()., Dec. 22.—John Hart,

the boy who killed the Good children in Paulding county, was placed in the annex at the penitentiary yesterday to await his death. He was brought to Columbus by the sheriff of Defiance county. After being placed in jail to await transfer to the penitentiary, the sheriff of Paulding county came down to place Hart in the penitentiary in order to get the fees. He had the death warrant and both sheriffs took Hart to the prison. They will have a lively contest over the fees.

3Iurdcrud and Kobhed.

BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Dec. 22.—Dr. J. H. Card of Birmingham, a traveling medicine vender, was murdered and robbed near Roanoke, Randolph county, Thursday night. He had been out in the country, and failing to return, search was instituted yesterday morning, which resulted in the finding of his dead body by the roadside. Several hundred dollars which he is known to have had on his person and a diamond was missing. The assassins are thought to be negroes.

Desperadoes Driven Away.

PICKKY, O. T., Dec. 22.—A gang of men attempted to break into Farmer John Yankins' house, several miles east of here, last night, but several well directed shots from Yankins' and his daughter's revolvers drove them away. As the gang left on horses Yankins shot one of the men and he fell to thejground but was taken aw a}" by his companions. Later the men attacked the house and nearly7 riddled it with bullets. It is thought that the gang was a part of the Cook gang.

Wapalioneta Oil.

WM'AKONHTA, O., Dec. 22.—The oil field west of here has assumed a brighter prospect since the advance of crude oil to 48 1-2 cents. Oil magnates have contracts for a dozen new derricks to be erected at once. There are now over 16 wells on the Preaser lease, and are all good ones they are all pumped by one engine. Senator Shaw's leases on the Link farm are netting him a neat sum. Four new ones will come in Saturday. The oil territory is now within one mile of this city.

Dead to ltights.

NOKWALK, O., Dec. 22.—James Casey, one of the four men who robbed Dana Moftitt of his clothing and valuables and threw him from a Lake Shore train Thursday, was arrested at Townsend and brought to or walk last night, Mollitt recognized Casey as one oi the men who robbed him. Casey had on Moffitt's clothes, and also had his re- I volver.

Scalded to Death.

SmtiNGFiKLD, O., Dec. 22.—Edward I Clawson, who resides near South Charleston, met with a sad facility in his family. His 22-months-old daughter fell into a tub of hot water, which its mother had placed on the kitchen floor for the purpose of scrubbing, and was scalded to death.

Struck by an Klectric Car.

NORWALK, O., DOC. 22.—Joseph Zimmerman, while driving across the electric railroad track on West Main street Friday, was run into by a motor car. His horse was killed, and he recoived bruises about the head and body which prove fatal.

Cull For Condition of Hanks.

WASHINGTON, Dec. 22.—Comptroller Eckels has issued a call for tho condition of national banks at tho close of business ou Wednesday, Dec. 19.

ST. LOUIS UP TO DATE

A WIDE AWAKE CITY AND ITS GREAT INDUSTRIES.

tl Claims the Largest Shoe Factory, To­

bacco Factory and Heer lircwery In the

World—It Also lias a S?-1,000,000 Rail­

way Station and a S3,000,000 Hotel.

ST. Lons, Dec, —If you have a notion, from what you may have heard about St. Louis, that it is a retrogressive town, that its citizens have made up their minds because Chicago lias a little the start just now in the way of population,

TUT: nioN I:\ILWAY STATION.

that it's a good thing to settle back and let things slide, you'd better ask the first} St. Louis man you meet about it. He will very quickly undeceive yon.

I had not been hrre an hour before I learned that my preconceived opinions of St. Louis were unfounded in fact. The place is brimming over with public spirit, and its citizens propose to put in their best licks from this time on. They predict that ten veins from now they will lie away up toward the front. ••Already," said a loyal and enthusiastic St. Louisan with whom I took dinner today,

i-this

I

:ity has gone along way to­

ward transforming itself from an easy f*oing town of the old fashioned southern type into a hustling settlement of the most progressive modern sort. And we are proud to say that the hustling has been done mostly by natives and rising young men from our own state too. Yes, the city is smoky, very smoky, worse than any other town I know of, perhaps—almost as bad, in fact, as was Pittsburg at its worst. But whore there is smoke there is also fire, and the smoke here means that we are burning the fires of business in many great manufacturing establishments nowadays, whereas in the old times we not only furnished a very small quota of manufactured articles to tho world, but we bought most of our own too. Let mo tell you a few things. •'During tho ten years between 1880 and 18!)0 the number of persons employed in the industries here increased from 41,000 to 91,000, or 117 percent. The amount of wages paid out annually increased 200 per cent in the samt time, the figures for 18i)0 being $52,000,000. The amount of capital invested in manufacturing establishments in the decade grew from $50,000,000 to .$*:!0,000,u00, and the annual value of the product at net wholesale factory prices doubled, the figures for lhi)0 being $225,000,0!):). Now, since lssio, when the last census was taken, and trom which I get my detailed information, there has been a moderate net increase notwithstanding the depression that began in 1S1KS, though just how much in any line I can't undertake to say.

I Tilings In St. Louis.

'"Now, let me tell you some more things. Boston is the center of the greatest boot and shoe manufacturing industry in the country and the greatest distributing point, but not all the shoes art? made in Boston. Lynn and Brockton and half a dozen other smaller nearby cities help to make the enormous output of footwear that is distributed from the Hub, and today St. Louis makes more boots and shoes than any other sir.glo American city, is tho next largest distributing point after Boston of footwear and has the largest shoo manufactory under one roof in the world. St. Louis is the greatest tobacco market in the world and possesses the biggest tobacco factory. This factory contributes luore to Uncle Sam's strongbox- than any onier in the United States, and it has for companions the biggest brewery in tho country and the most extensive drug houso. Its hardware and wooden ware establishments are so much larger than any others on this earth that I doubt if j-ou'd beliovo me were I to give their output. "I am not yet done either. St. Louis makers of stoves and cooking ranges manufacture more of those necessary things than are made in any other city in tho world, more saddlery and harness are made hero than anywhere else in America, the town has the biggest blank book manufactory anywhere to be found, it is the greatest horse and mule market in the world, more pressed bricks are made hero than in any other American city, and its dealers in hard wood lumber buy and sell more extensively than the dealers of any other city in the United States. All this is to be expected when you come to think of the fact that our town, which some people consider a little slow going, is the largest city on tho longest river in the world and is therefore the chief port on the greatest system of inland navigation anywhere, though unfortunately our great river is not the grand highway for freight and passenger business that it once was. •'The railroad system centering here is not to be sneezed at either. It may bo inferior to Chicago's, but the mileage of lines of steel centering in St. Louis is fully 10,000 miles greater than the entire system of either England or France. St. Louis is, in fact, the grand jumping off point, the transfer station, so to speak, between tho regions east and west of tho Mississippi, and since the completion of tho great Union depot—the finest and biggest in America, by the way—the intricate work of transferring passengers arriving from and bound to the most remote parts of the country lias been unequaled anywhere.

St. Louis Now Erecting Fine Buildings. It lias not been possible for me to prove or disprove all that my enthusiastic St. Louis acquaintance had to say, but he is certainly right in his praiso of the big depot. The passenger trains of 20 distinct railroads arrive in and depart from its broad train shed. Three hundred and twenty four passenger trains arrive and depart every 21 hours, or one every 4 minutes and 24 seconds. As the major part of them arrive and depart in the daylight hours, there are trains going and coming much oftener than that between 0 in the morning and 0 in the evening. It is truly bewildering to the stranger about to leave St. Louis who looks out in the train shed and sees the many trains, all ready to steam out. He is pretty certain to wonder if he may not make some blunder in selecting the proper train for himself, buC so perfect are the arrangements for proventing travelers' mistakes and so attentive are tho employees whoso duty it is to carry out those arrangements that he must bo stupid and self willed to boot who

could get upon the wrong train. The number of freight trains arriving and doparting here is still larger and more difficult to arrive at, too, but it is estimated that it is between 300and :J80 a day on an average. There are two general freight terminal systems—one in the Mill creek valley, and one in the neighborhood of tho new Merchants' bridge. The latter was established at a comparatively recent date, and millions of dollars were expended in the land and improvements required.

But tho big Union depot and the buildings of the freight terminals arc not tho only structures worth mentioning in this letter. The most interesting one to me is the courthouse, though St. Louisans do Hot talk about it as they do about some of tho other buildings. It is an old fashioned pile, built years and years ago, of massive blocks of stone, in that so called classic style of which many great pillars are a prominent external feature. It is only two stories high, but its ceilings are lofty, and it is topped by a dome from which, but for the dense black smoke, that hangs over the town, every street and alley of St. Louis and the country for miles about could be clearly seen. Originally the courthouse was of the color of gray freestone, which is probably the material that was used in building it, but the outside walls have been lately painted a glaring white, and this makes it, independent of its old fashioned peculiarities, by all odds the most conspicuous structure in town, for all other St. Louis buildings are dingy and brown, running to black. Irom the all pervading smoke. The painter who was lucky enough to get: the job has made great use of it as an advertisement, having been allowed by tiie authorities to place on each of the columned porticoes a sign, painted gaudily in red and green and yellow, whereon is inscribed a legend setting forth his merits as a contracting painter, together with the location .of.,his place of business.

It is evident from the fresh paint" on this fine old courthouse that tho transformation process in St. Louis is not likely soon to extend to the temple of justice, and that fact is not one to be regretted by any save those who desire to see nothing but newness everywhere. Tho new city hall, however, now nearly completed, will be one of the most splendid domiciles of municipal government in the United States. Tho old city hall, in which as many of the municipal departments as can find room are still housed, is quite as interesting in its way as the courthouse, but not so conspicuous, because it has never been painted white. It is a brick building and must have been considered a very large one when erected. In architectural stylo it resembles a great tobacco curing warehouse, and it is absolutely without outside ador inner t.

The buildings which aro pointed out to strangers here are, first, the Union station, of course, which cost more than $4,000,000 a gorgeous new hotel of many stories, just finished at a cost of nearly $2,000,000 the 11 story, basement and observatory building of the Union Trust company the 10 story $1,000,000 Rialto, the board of education building, etc. Somo $10,000,000 was laid out in high buildings last year, my St. Louis acquaintance assures me, ^nd other lofty structures to cost $l0,00o,000 more are now a-building or projected to go forward as soon as times are definitely decided to have picked up. It is these new buildings perhaps as much as anything else that have contributed to tho apparent transformation of the town, and next to them tho banishment of horses and mules as traction power for the street cars, the cable and the trolley having taken their place on all but two lines.

St. Louis is peculiar among cities of similar magnitude—its population is now estimated at not far from 000,000—in having few residence suburbs. When you leave the city limits, you step right out into the country, and no mistake. This is explained by St. Louisans to lie due to the fact that the soil the immediate vi-

jW *77

igs'i

-T*1/

-s?

SIMM.

THK I'LANTKU'S IIOTKL.

cinity is thin and clayey, so poor, in fact, that gardens and lawns do not flourish. The peculiar nature of the soil, too, and the broken character of tho territory, they say, make the building of good roads a diilicult and expensive matter. The result is that in its growth St. Louis has been more solidly built up than any other great American city

St. Louis is also the solidest city financially in all the land, for during all the depression there has not been one bank failure, and the business failures have been few and comparatively insignificant.

Of Interest to Women. [Special Correspondence. 1

New YOHK, Dee. 10.—The tails of line old overcoats are utilized by the ingenious and tho frugal for making fashionable women's capes.

A dog who is really swell these days does not wear his ribbon tied in a bow around his neck. He has it made up into a collar, with a big rosette at each side, just like the rosettes on each side of his mistress' new hat.

Mrs. Van Rensselaer Cruger (.Julien Gordon) is just now devoted to empire gowns of the scantiest cut for the house. She says they are economical, because you can't wear anything to speak of underneath them. .Julien Gordon is not a handsome woman, but she has a famously handsome ligure uncommonly well adapted for such costuming. 1'1 aster casts of great works of art are more and more seen in the best drawing rooms as well as in artists' st udios. People are finding out that casts, and easts only, make it possible for everybody to own masterpieces. A millionaire's new house in Ualtimore has a dado around the music room of casts from Lucca della Robia's works in high relief. They are. tinted like old ivory. They cost less than $~U0, too little to suit the taste of the "new rich," but this gentleman is content with reflecting that lie has the most beautiful dado in America if it was disgustingly cheap.

ISAllKLLA PKOCTOK.

New Slot Machine.

Tho City Railway company of Rerlin has adopted the nickel-in-the-slot plan for selling tickets during the busy hours. Tho improved machines are so constructed that the coin drops out again if a wrong one has been put in or if there are no more ticket*.

Ts to look around before slio makes a pur-

cliase, liut when one conies to

LAKE'S GALLERY

Harvey's old stand)

Slie seeks no further.

0

Pictures PIbdso

Photos,

see lis.

P. I.

Panels and Cabi-

nets, all styles and prices,and we guarantee

to

please. Call

.j I

Greenfield, Ind.

\iAfj

On tiie corner of Main and Pennsvl\auia streets.

I AVhere yon will find us ready to

give you better bargains than ever I AVe have a general line of every-

thing for House-keeping.-"- Come

and get bargains, as we want to

reduce our stock.

100 Bedsteads at 50cts, each.

To call and examine our line of

CluistiMs Cai#

i'

And Nuts.

We will have the finest line in tiie city, and at way-down prices. We also keep a full line of everything in the way •••\of Hread, Pies, Cakes,

Ilougiiuuts, etc.

R\'r BREAD

A l.\V A OX li AND.

Mrs. Ella Bohm.

John Tiiulalt Manager.

I si tl iai apol is 5 3 vi t. TTI

Schedule of Passenger Trains-Central Time

"7 I Westward.

(•oIuuibiiH rliana Piqua I L'ovinglon ... i)radioril .Jo. (.Jetlyslmrn... (reen vilie ....

AM AM A

I.eu'isville 1 Mmrei! Knightsiown I "harlotlsvillt ..." Cleveland (ircen iield I'liiladelpiiia

I. 1). Marshall.

Eastward.

I rvin^lon 'umberland ... I'liiladelpiiia ... (ireenlield Cleveland 1 'harlottsville Kniyhtstown .... I innreil hewisville Straw 11s 1 ii bl in 1 'anibridLre ('ity icrina ntovv 11. Ceatreviile Kicbiiioml

New Paris W leys New Madison ... Weavers (!reen\ ille 1 iettysbiiry 1 iraiifird ,le ('ovin^toii Pitpia Crbana I'olllllillU.M ar.

,,M

AM

1v *2 35^*5 30 '7 15 ^8 45 3 00,*7 15 7 00. a 110 25 4 42l 8 3C

7

50'

NIT

111 15

5 371 9 13

8 04 \,l ill 23 5 57! 8 20: ii, 111 40 6 15i 9 35

ill 461'f) 23,Arr.

... 8 39 £. 53 37 ."'I-1 IST, 12'D8 j- .rassi'is-g 12 15 6 58 :l r-im ar. 00! 9 25 10 4012 40 7

Weavers .N'.-w .Madisoi Wiley.New Paris UiclisuuiHl. fVntrovillo (liTiuanlown ... I ('amliridia City.. iluhlin st rawns

301'AM

Iv.: 605 930 *10 4S

12 55 7 40162C 1 06 7 54 6 33

21 I 6 5C

10 02 1 26 8 13 t5 55 1 32 8 20! 7 02 1 39 1 7 10 1 45 7 17 1 51 .... 7 25 10 37: 5,1 2 02 8 54! 7 35 2 12 I 7 46 12 151...- '7 50 11 00

73

1 'limlierlaud I rvington iitlianu|»»ll.s. ar.

2 27 9 25 8 03 2 3 4 1 8 1 1 2 45 1 8 23 3 00 8 37

7 45.11 40 i2 30 3 2010 15 8 55 AM AM I'M I I'M P.M AM

I It I'M I'M I I'M '3 30 5 10 ^4 00 1 ....1415 4 27 4 37 5 45 4 45 '4 53

A 1 AM AM I •4 50 1-8 00*1130 .. 8 14 8 25 ... 8 38

?!ali:iiia|to!ivt

Iv

5 26 8 4612OS 1 9 0 2 9 0612'17 5 47 9 17 1 2 24! 5 58 9 3012 34 ... I 94012'42t

I I 5 02

S 6 09,5 13 6 20 5 24 5 40 5 47 5 55 6 00 6 05 6 18 5 10 7 15: 6 30 5 15 7 35 I'M

I 9 47 95612'55

6 24 10 02 1 00! 10I07 6 4510 22 1 19j 7 0010 35 1 35: 7 1010 45 1 55 t'7 21 10 56' 7 31 11106 7 3811 13 f? 4711122 7 5811 33 18 1111 46 £.« 8 25 12 15

6 47

ar. iv.

/S 02

8 21

!iO

H3 33

I

S 34 12 23 H. S 4612 35 9 40. 1 25 11 15 3 15 5 45|

8 45'5 50 8 *4! 5 57 9 06! 6 09 9 59' 6 53

8 1511 30 S10 I'M I'M I'M

I'M I

'M I

Meals. l-'laj: Stop.

*'»». O, Kami v!i» conned at Colmnluis for Pittsburgh and llie Kasl, and al Kielmiond lor liayton, Xenia and Springfield, and Sio. 1 lor Cincinnati.

Trains leave Cambridge Cii al 17.05 a. m. mid 12 00 I' "i. lor Kusliville. Shelby ville, himbus and lnlermediale stations. lArrlva CanibridKO City |12 30 and 16 35 I1- »». JOSEHL WOOD, A. CORP.

Graaral Manser, Gcn'r il Passenger 1i tYrrsiirudit, Pi?nn'a. i'"or time cards, rales of fare, hroiu.-h I lekets, liasmiw checks and further informa 1 nn reliardinir the ninnimr of trains apply to any Ajjeatof tho Pennsylvania Lines.

Dr. Price'sCream Baking Powder

Awarded Gold Medal Midwinter Fair, San Francisco.