Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 25 November 1895 — Page 4
I
INDIANA CENTENNIAL
COMMISSIONER SHIRLEY'S IDEA OF WHAT IT OUGHT TO BE.
9f« FaTor* Making It Strictly a State Affair and Thinks That Indiana Alone Should Provide All Necessary Funds.
Hon. C. C. Shirley of Kokomo, member of the Indiana centennial commission for the Tenth congressional district, thinks that the proposed celebration should be a great state affair rather than an interstate enterprise. In expressing his views regarding the matter he says: zazz "After considerable reflection upon {the subject of the proposed centennial celebration, I have formed in my mind an outline of what it seems to me that event ought to be. The details, however, are so indistinct and imperfectly fanned that I find it difficult to express my oonception of the affair. Some general conclusions I have reached though are as follows:
"I
believe the event should be
strictly a state affair intended to exhibit the growth, development and resources of a hundred years of progress. The territory now out of the state, but which formerly constituted apart of the original territory of Indiana, ought perhaps to be urged to join us in the movement the other states and the world at large we shall of course invite to participate, "but rather as our guests than otherwise. I am not disposed to look favorably upon the proposition to make it either in name or in fact a mid-continent exposition. To make it such will be at once to invite comparison with the World's Fair, the National Centennial at Philadelphia, and the more recent expositions at San Francisco and Atlanta. What we want is to bring the greatest possible good to the state, and in the greatest possible degree to spread its fame. This, 1 think, can only be done by preserving, in its name and in its snope and purpose, the central idea of a urate event, aiul the greatest state event oi its kind that ever occurred. •'I do not believe that we should be able to enlist federal aid to promote the enterprise. It is true, the general government has contributed to the Atlanta exposition, out" the conditions there were exceptional. Tho general feeling that it would be a gracious thing to do because the event was strictly sontliern contributed largely to it, and after all it was regameu as a wonderful achievement to have induced congress to vote an appropriation for anything less than a strictly national affair. "I approve the suggestion of Judge Martindale that out of the event should spring some permanent memorial, •which I am inclined to think should be a building in which should be collected an-! treasured whatever may be found of such vast interest and value as to deserve perpetuation. This memorial should of itself be a thing that would comer lasting credit upon the state. In its construction it should suggest the history, the progress, the art, the education, the industries and the wealth of the state and upon it, if the idea is to be successfully carried out, should be expended a sufficient sum of money to erect a structure so beautiful and permanent in its character as to invite the admiration of the whole country. This necessarily means that I do not believe the other suggestion, also of Judge Mart.indalo, that the building now occupied by the institution for the blind should be utilized for this purpose, is practicable. It is a shabby old structure at ike best, and the permanent building which is to be housed the best results of the century's growth must be the creation and the offspring of this cuwi.inating event. The grounds of the institution tor the blind rro admirably siiirr. 1 to our purpose bur if the state will devote it to our purpose, the first improvement 1 would suggest would be to r.ize the present structure to the Kroniid. "It would be impossible to enlist sufficient interest, or raise sufficient money to fittingly celebrate the event, or even to construct the memorial above suggested, unless the occasion is so far popularized as to arouse the interest of all no people of the state, particularly the t-ommon people. There will have to a certain amount of pageantry and onto rainment, which will necessarily take the form, in a general way, of some of t.ie former expositions, upon which, if we accomplish the purpose of our commission's creation, we shall be able to imorove, at least, in some degree. "To these ends we must have a law permitting cities and counties to vote contributions for the purpose of making exhibits of their own peculiar resources, and 1:1 addition seek from the legislature the broadest possible encourage menfc and patronage. Then there should be placed a sufficient amount of stock in the company charged with the execution oi.' the plan among the enterprising poop!- of the state, and particularly the city G. Indianapolis, as was done at Chicago, to raise such a fund as the liberal plan upon which this scheme must be carried out, if carried out at ail, will require. To promote and effect this purpose is in my notion the duty to which the Indiana centennial commission should dedicate itself earnestly and unceasi.i rly."
Co 'uissioner John H. Weathers of Leavj. '.worth, says: "The state of Indiana )iis* never had an exhibition of her resourtes that did her credit. While the great states about her and the gre.it cities near her have spent time and energy in holding celebrations and exhibitions of their resources and growth, •our state has failed in that respect. We Slave a great state. All she needs is advertising to be brought into public jQotica No more fitting way to do this couid be suggested than by the contemplated centennial. Her history, her growth, her commercial importance, could be thus shown and the public eye of the nation directed to her greatness. That such a celebration would be of incalculable advantage to the state, to all of her citizens, cannot be gainsaid. Jjet us have the centennial. Let there be no stint nor false economy urged against it. Let us have a celebration that will pay the debt of our past neglect
to
our great commonwealth."
A Football Victim.
^S&MKMPHIS, Nov. 25.—George Phealen, tlie son of the late Congressman Phealan of this district, died at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, yesterday, fro5ti injuries received in a football jpain esterday. He will be buried !Lere.
5
STREETS OF THE CITY
LESSONS SHOULD BE LEARNED FROM THE MEN WE DAILY SEE.
Dr. Madison C. Peters Calls Attention to the Wretchedness Caused by Drink—Street Beggars Are Undeserving 'If a Man
Work Not, Neither Should He Eat."
At Bloomingdale Reformed church, New York, Sunday evening, Nov. 24, Dr. Madison C. Peters preached on "The Streets of the City." His text was Proverbs i, 20, "Wisdom uttereth her voice in the streets.'' The speaker said:
Christ's textbook was every day life. He spoke to the times. He did not read off any dry theological abstractions. He spoke to the men who lived around him doing all kinds of mischief. We find him in the market places, in the streets where the people congregated. We find him in all the activities of life. He lived in an age of corruption, and he never shut his mouth concerning it. He never used language of diplomacy of expediency, of policy. He called everything by its right name.
Let us pass along the streets of beauty, comfort and wealth. These people who live here have come up mostly from the multitude. Here we see the rewards of industry, economy and perseverance. You say they are lucky. I say they were plucky.
But how did they get on? By never getting off on sprees and spending their time in idleness. They cultivated the higher attributes of manhood, for brain power always takes the precedence of brute force. Instead of spending their time in clamoring for higher wages and fewer hours of work per day they devoted their time to learning how to do better work, which so often insures that prosperity which clamor and complaining never win.
I think valuable lessons should be learned from the men we see daily on our streets, the very pictures of wretchedness, making exhibitions of themselves through the use of strong drink. Why spend your time, your money, your health, for such miserable stuff as this? There are men who are shrewd in all their dealings, but allow themselves to be cheated by filthy and unhealthy adulterations and robbed of their senses. No respectable man ought to go into a saloon.
For the street beggar I like the scant bill of fare which Paul wrote out for the Thessalonian loafers, "If a man work not, neither should he eat." Imprisonment will not abate the street beggars. That won't scare them. A good many of them would like it. The jail would be a comfortable home for them.
As a rule peoplo who don't work don't want to work. You have tried them. They are invariably much obliged, but they have a sore arm or a headache, and I know one instance where a beggar just asked for a few minutes to go and tell his friend, so that he would not be waiting for him while he did the work, but it .seemed to take all day to dismiss his friends, as he never came back again. The man who doesn't work generally doesn't want to work. And a man who can work and won't work ought to be compelled to work.
But there are poor, worthy poor, along cur streets, said, "Ye have the poor always with you." Thia always was and always will be true. There aro those who are poor without blame. They are poor for causes for which they are not responsible and which they would gladly remove if fliey could. There are those among the poor as learned, as giftefl, as refined and as self respecting as their richest fellow citizens. The worthy jt^or must be helped. They almost never beg. They will perish in silence. These must be found. Therefore it is our duty to give some time to the attentive consideration of the jioor. To provide means for their relief. To contribute liberally to the numerous organized charities and co-operative societies which dot the streets of our city as no other city in the Union, covering all conceivable cases of need and suffering. If the applicant will not be helped by any of these, then he proclaims his unfitness for private beneficence. Let each citizen contribute to some especial church or society and refuse to give aid to persons unknown to him. Let the work of beneficence bo carried forth practically and judiciously. Let us put ourselves in brotherly communication with some poor man or poor family and strive by friendly advice to lift them to a self supporting plane. Let us so cultivate our spiritual and moral senses that we shall become quick to detect the needs of others and be swift to relieve. Let us act more Christ-like to the worthy poor. But what of the unworthy poor? They, too, are to be helped. But money is no help to them. They must be cured. They need moral culture. It is our duty to impart it to them. Let us make a practical test of our religion. Let us bear the infirmities of the weak, for thus we fulfill the law of Christ.
Oh, these streets, these streets of this vast city of ours, when will they be cleaned and cleared and how can they be cleared of filth, of disease, of poverty, of ignorance, of licentiousness, of crime, of dishonesty, of trickery and of fraud? When will every home be the abode of cleanliness, of purity, of health, of virtue, of plenty, of happiness, of religion, of God? Hope thou in God. Have faith in him. If we do our duty earnestly and faithfully, the glory Gf the Lord will yet fill this city and the works of evil will be destroyed. In this faith let us all live, in this faith let us all pray, in this faith let us all labor, in this faith let us all die, assured that every pleasant smile, every kind word, every cheerful look, every good deed, every noble effort, is a good seed which tinder the blessing of God will some day spring up out of the dust and bring forth abundant fruit, to the happiness of man and the glory of our God.
N
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Jtr t* t?*
1
'f*
AT A TENEMENT WINDOW.
Sometimes my needle stops with half drawn thread. (Not often, though. Each moment's waste means bread, And missing stitches leave the little months unfed.) I look down on the dingy court below. A tuft of grass is all it has to show, A broken pump where thirsty children go. Above there shines a bit of sky so small That it might be a pasfiing bluebird's wing. One tree leans up against the high brick wall, And there the sparrows twitter of the spring Until they waken in my heart a cry Of hunger that no bread can satisfy.
Always before when May time took her way Across the fields I followed close. Today I can but dream of all her bright array. My work drops down. Across the sill I lean And long with bitter longing for unseen Bain freshened paths where budding woods grow green. The water trickles from the pump below Upon the stones. With eyes half shut I hear It falling in a pool where rushes grow And feel a cooling presence drawing near. And now the sparrows chirp again. No, hark! A singing as of some far meadow lark.
It is the same old miracle applied Unto myself, that on the mountain side The few small loaves and fishes multiplied. Behold how strange and sweet the mystery! The birds, the broken pump, the. gnarled tree Have brought the fullness of the spring to me, For in the leaves fchat rustle by the wall All forests find a tongue. And so that grass Can with its struggling tuft of green recall Wide bloom filled meadows where the cattle pass. How it can be but dimly I divine. These crumbs, God given, make the whole loaf mine. —Annie P. Johnston in Youth's Companion.
HER ALARM CLOCK.
And Why She Had Good Reason For Being Incensed Against It.
A
suburban woman not long since purchased an alarm clock. It was a fat nickel plated little affair with the customary gong atop. The woman got the clock because she felt an overwhelming desire to play the role of the early bird. That night, therefore, she set the timepiece according to the specified directions. But for some reason or other the clock failed to go off. The woman gave it a second trial. Again it played her false. She took it to the suburban jeweler. He said the clock was outrageously out of order, hinted darkly at the dishonesty of any individual who would palm off such an article as perfect goods and prescribed a course of treatment which he would be gracious enough to administer for the sum of 75 cents. The clock's original cost had been $1.50.
The night that it came back from the suburban jeweler the woman wound it up with a feeling of unassailable security. This time the role of the early bird would be her? for certain. The next morning, however, it failed to go off, just as before. The woman took it back to the suburban jeweler, who received it with an "I told you that clock was terribly out of order. Encore, 75 cents.
Time passed, the clock, like the cat in the canticle, "came back," and the woman woke up (some hours later than she had intended) only to find that it hadn't "gone off" again. She now took the troublesome timepiece to the city jeweler from whom she had first purchased it. Ho declared the clock to have been all right until "ruined" by the suburban jeweler, but consented to repair it—also to charge $1 for so doing. The woman then bore it home in triumph.
Next morning, though, tjie same old drama was enacted, and the woman was once more unable to assume the role of the early bird. Had she been a man she might have sworn. As it was, she confided her woes to tlio breakfast tableful. "Why, that clock's been going off all the time," observed the woman who occupied the neighboring room to the clock owner. "It's waked me up every morning regularly. The trouble is it hasn't waited you.''
Whereupon the woman felt more incensed against the clock than ever. To think of its having so little discrimination and discretion as to wake up the wrong person !—New York Sun.
Queer Facts About Air.
The celebrated chemist of the sixteenth century who argued that it would be impossible for us to live on the earth's surface if the atmosphere should suddenly increase to twice its present thickness co«
Id not have been far wrong,
after all—that is, if the experiments of Dr. Arnott are to be taken as conclusive. In his observations on atmospheric pressure at the bottoms of the deep mining shafts of Europe, Professor Arnott has found that the change between the readings of a barometer at the bottom of a 4,000 foot shaft and one at the surface is great enough to warrant- him in making the statement that air at the bottom of a shaft 20 miles deep would be as dense as water. Figuring on the same ratio, ho finds {hat if a hole could be sunk 40 miles into the bowels of the earth the density of the air at the bottom would be as great as that of quicksilver.—St. Louis Republic.
Women on the Kicyele.
What a pretty tiling a woman on a bicycle is! Her pose is good. She sits erect and rides easily, gracelully. Most men stoop while riding. Women sit erect. Men always seem to be on business bent and in a hurry. Women appear to ride for pleasure and in no hurry. Men have the bicycle face, arising, it is said, from the care they have to bestow to avoid accident. Women have the air of easy indifference, unconsciousness of risk. They ride as the true goddess walked.—Cincinnati Commercial Gazette.
The world of reaflity has its limits. The world of imagination is boundless. Not being able to enlarge the one, let us contract the other, for it is from their difference that all the evils arise which render us unhappy.—Rousseau.
In Holland and Belgium to kill a stork is considered one of the greatest misfortunes that can happen to a man. Ill luck is certain to follow him through life.
A knife that has been used for cutting onions should at once be plunged two or three times into the earth to free it from the unpleasant smell.
A Yellowstone Park Trip
Will do more to over come that feeling of lassitude or laziness which ever yon prefer to call it than all the medicine in the apothecary's shop. Get out of the harness for awhile take a lay off and Jgo to the park and become renewed in body and mind. See the geysers play, hear the paint pots pop, the cataracts roar, climb about tbe canyon walls, catch trout iu the Yellowstone lake, take on anew life. Send Chas. S. Fee, General Passenger Agent, Northern Pacific railroad, six cents for the new and Illustrated Tourist book. 34t8&d.
EXCURSIONS SOUTH.
Lover Bates to Atlanta via Pennsylvania .Lines.
Three forms of excursion tickets to Atlanta account the Cotton States Exposition are for sale via Pennsylvania Lines. One ticket is good returning twenty days from date of sale, another is good for return trip until Jan. 7, 1896. and a third goodj returning ten days. Twenty* day ticketsg and those good to return until Jan. 7 may be obtained any time during the exposition. The ten day tickets will be sold only on Oct. 26, Nov. 5, 15, and 25, and Dec. 5 and 16, at special low rates. The fare is exceptionally cheap. For details apply to nearest ticket agent of Pennsvlvania Lines. d&wtf
THE INDEPENDENT
NEW YORK.
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It discusses every topic of the day— religious, theological, political, literary, social, artistic- and scientific. It's contributed articles ere by the most eminent writers of the
English language.
It employes specialists and distinguished writers p.s editors of its TWEN-TY-ONE DEPARTMENTS.
A paper particularly fitted for lawyers, doctors, clergymen, those engaged iu business, young people of both series—men and women who read and think for themselves.
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A paper for Sunday School Workers, those who have a Farm, Garden or House Plants.
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THE INDEPENDENT announces to its subscribers, and to any who may become so, that it is prepared to furnish any papers and magazines published in this country, England, France and Germany, at a very large reduction from publishers' rate3. This opportunity is open only to subscribers of TIJE INDEPENDENT. Upon receiving Jisfc of papers or magazines from individuals or reading rooms, an estimate will be given by return mail.
It's yearly subscription is $3.00 or at that rate for any part of a year. Clubs of five, p2 each. "Trial Trip," one Month, 25 cents.
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THE INDEPENDENT,
P. O, Box 2 7 S 7 1 3 0 it Street, New York,
Longevity of Ants.
Sir John Lubbock, the naturalist, who has done more to popularize the study of insect ways and habits than all the oilier modern entomologists combined, has been experimenting to find out how long the common ant would live if kept out of harm's way. On Aug. 8, 1888, an ant which had been thus kept and tenderly cared for died at the age of 15 years, which is the greatest age any species of insect has yet been known to attain. Another individual of the same species of ant (Formica fusca) lived to the advanced age of 18 years, and the queen of another kind (Lasius niger) laid fertile eggs after she had passed the age of 9 years.—St. Louis Republic.
The Devil's Cap.
In mediaeval dramas the part of the devil was always played in a pointed red cap, with two sido points or tassels. So much importance was attached to this cap thai: on one occasion, in France, an actor refused to play, and tbe entertainment was postponed because his "devil's cap" had been stolen audit was impossible to play the part of satan without a proper headpiece.
Sovereign anil tlic Fops»
"WASHINGTON, NOV. 25.—At the meeting oi' the executive board of t-ho Knights of Labor Saturday afternoon General Master Workman Sovereign was elected :!ratemal delegate to the National Farmers' Alliance convention.
A Hungarian's Awful Crime. NEW YOKK, Nov. :25.—Andrew Tinks, a Hungarian, while intoxicated yesterday, attempted to murder his 15-year-old daughter, because she would not submit to his desires, and then committed suicide.
Irving on One Food.
We hold that a well devised dietary system does not need frequent changes. All do not require to eat the same in amount or kind. Uncooked fruits and nuts suit some others live almost entirely on bread and oatmeal but when the correct diet has been found it is not necessary to change. Animals in a state of nature live on one food throughout their lives.—Vegetarian.
Immortal Fame.
Did any man ever achieve distinction ty lying?—San Francisco Post. Yes. Baron Munchausen. —New York Sun.
1895 November. 1895
Su. Mo. Tu. We. Th. Fr. Sa.
1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 2§ 27 28 29 30
"BIG FOUR
ROUTE TO
ATLANTA.
Cotton States and International Exposition.
Travelers to the South during the fall and the early part of the winter season will have an unusual opportunity of see ing the South at its best advantage. The Atlanta Exposition is the largest exposi tion of its kind in this country, with the exception of the world's fair at Chicago.
HOW TO REACH ATLANTA.
From Chicago, Peoria, Indianapolis, Terre Haute, LaFayette, Benton Harbor and intermediate points, the North and Northwest, the "Big Four" route offers the choice of the two great gaitways to the South—Cincinnati and Louisville. Solid trains with parlor cars, magnificent sleeping cars and dining cars run daily from Chicago and Indianapolis to Cincinnati and Louisville.
From New York, Boston Buffalo, Cleveland. Columbus, Springfield, Sandusky, Dayton and intermediate points, magnifi cent through trains run daily into Cincinnati. All trains of the Four" arrive at Central Union Station, Cincinnati, making direct, connections with through trains of the Queen & Crescent routa to Atlanta. Through sleeping cars via the Q. & C. route run directly to Chattanooga, thence via Southern railway to Atlanta. Many points of historical interest ss well as beautiful scenery may be enjoyed enroute. Of these Chickamanga National Park and.Lookout Mountain at Cha ttanooga are foremost, and should be visited by everyone on the way ta Atlanta.
For full information as to rates, routes, time «f trains, etc., call on or address any agent Big Four Route.
D. B. MARTIN,
Gen'l Pass. & Ticket Agt.
E. O. M'CORMICK, Pass. Traffic Mgr. 41t3
Companion Calendar, for 18!(
The publishers of The Youth's Companion are now sending to thi ml scribers free, an art calendar which will be highly appreciated. Four elegant water-coior paintings aro reproduced in all the beauty of color and design of the originals, and of such size, 7x10 inches, that they may be framed with fine effect.
The first two pictures offer a striking contrast, a blustering March day in a sugar orchard, and a peaceful scene in midsummer. Then follows the noonday rest in the harvest field, a charming bit of colar with a foreground of goldenrod and brilliant autumn foliage. The winter walk to church over the snow covered fields is the last of the series.
To all new subscribers to the paper who send their name and address and $1.75 at once, the publishers offer to send free this handsome calendar,"lithographed in-nine colors, the retail price of which is£ fifty cents, The Companion free every week until. January 1, 1S96, including Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's double numbers, and The ^Youth's Companion fifty-two- weeks, a full year to January 1, 1897. Address,
THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, 195 Columbus Avenue, Boston.
The publishers of the Youth's Companion are sending free to the subscribers to the paper, a handsome four-page calendar, 7x10 inches lithographed in nine colors. It is made, up of four charming pictures, each pleasing ...in design, under each of which are the monthly calendar for the year 1896. The retail price of this calendar is 50 cents.
New subscribers to the Companion will receive this beautiful calendar free and besides the Companion free every week until January 1, 1896. Also the Thanks giving, Christmas jfcand New Year's double, numbers free, 'and the Companion fifty-two weeks, a full'year )to January 1, 1897. Address,
THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, 195 Columbus Avenue, Boston.
The Historic Koute.
The Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway, the model railroad of the Sought in equipment, roadway and service is also the greatest in historical interest, more than fifty famous battlefields and five national cemeteries being located on the various lines
of
preferred
route to Atlanta for the Cotton
State and International exposition, open from September 18, to December 31, 1895, for which very low excursion rates have been made. Through sleeping car service from St. Louis to Atlanta via Evansville, Nashville and Chattanooga. This is the route of the famous "Dixie Flyer" through sleeping car line which runs the year round between Nashville and Jacksonville, Fla. For further information address R. C. Cowardin, Western Passenger Agent, Railway Exchange Building, St. Louis, Missouri, or
W. L. DANI^EY, G. P. &T. A., Nashville, Tenn.
COTTON STAT KB EXPOSITION.
Atlanta, G«. Sept. 18,Dee 31,1885 The schedule printed below is a comprehensive guide to the shortest and quickest route to Atlanta from the Nort* and Northwest, Chicago, Indianapolis, Terre Haute and Evansville,
Palace Day Coaches and Pullman Sleeping Cars are attached to all trains shown in this schedule.
Extremely low rates have been made to Atlanta and return, via the Nashville. Chattamooga and St* Louis Railway. A8 trains run solid between Nashville and Atlanta. The train in last column, which leaves Cincinnati at 4:30 P. runs solid to Atlanta. This is the route of the famous "Dixie Flyer" through "all the year round" sleeping car line between Nashville, Tenn., and Jacksonville, Fla.
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10:15
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2:20
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7:15
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11:55
4:30
8:40
2:15
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Or lUl t/ilCJ. luiuiuiawvu uuui^.t F. Hill, Northern Passenger Agent, 328 Marquette Building, Chicago, 111. R. C. Cowardin, Western Passenger Agent, 405 Ry. Exchange Building, St. Louis, Mo. or D. J. Mullaney, Eastern Passenger A^ent, 59 W. Fourth St., Cincinnati, O.
W. L. DANLEY,
G. P. & T. A. Nashville, Tenn.
Oct. 21-d&w-tf
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$500.00 GfJvA RANTED. ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS. Will not injure hands or fa'oric.
No Washboard needed, can use hard watefl same as soft. Full Directions on every package.
8-oz. package for 5 cts. or 6for 25 cts, Sold by retai! grocers everywhere.
Af
"When the Hour Hand Points to Nine, Have Your Washing ors the Line."
Indianapc!-3 Division.
Vv7estward. CoSnnabus lv, 'Jrbana Fiqua Covington ... Bradford Jc.. Gettysburg cjreenville... Wen vers T. Madison.. \V 1 leys New Paris... fiiehmond Oentreville... German town"
senner Trains-Cer.tr
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10 2511 20 35! 11 48! 1H56
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Dublin Sirawns hewisville.... IKmreiUi Knijjhtstown" Charlottsville
08 6
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12 08
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12(20 12 28 12135
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12 43
6 07 615
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4 55 7 3" 4 58 7 4"'B20 7 54
110 122 i"1 34 138 145 153 2 00 2 217 2 28 2 31 2 43 f2 50 304 315 330
City...
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5 45
5 3C 5 43
I 9 30: I 9 40,
6 09
6 20
f5 51
IB 05 6 10 f6 16 6 35 6 50 6 55 17 07 17 18 7 25 17 35 7 47 13 01 815 8 25
1
9 47: 9 56
7 0610 01 10'06: 10 20 7 3010 35
41
840
4 25 7 15 4 30 7 35 7$ i'7 46 $$ 55 18 02
7 3510 38
8 43
10 51 '11101 1108
.... 1U17 8151128 ... 1140 8 3512
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8 21
1110 AM
+2.00
this system. This is the
+12.30
SO I'M
f8 33 845 8 54 9 06 10 00
08
'5 23 5 30 5 43 6 25 7 40 I'M
1217!
8 38 9 34
8 5512 31! 9 44,
1 25!
11 20, 3 15,11 50 AMll'M I I'M
7 40,11 30 TM
1
I'M
Meals. Flag Stop.
Wos. 2. (, and 20 connect at Columbus for Pittsburgh and the Kast., and at Richmond tor Dayton, Xeniu and Springfield, und N«.20 for Cincinnati.
Trains leave Cambridge City at, +7 05 a m. and
p. m. for Rushville, Sheloyville, Co
lumbus and intermediate stations. Arrive Oambridgo City
and
+6.35
p. in.
JOSEPH WOOD, E. A. FORD, Gsntral Manager,fBBSK General Passenger Agent
10-20-95-TFC PITTSBURGH, PENN'A. For time cards, rates of fare, tlirougli tickets, bnggftge checks and further information regarding the running of trains apply to any Agent of the Pennsylvania Lines.
The Rocky Mountains.
Along the line of the Northern Pacific Rafeoad abound in large game. Moose, dear, I bear, elk, montain lions, etc., can yet be found there. The true sportsman is willing to go there for them. A little book called "Natural Game Preserves," published by the Northern Pacific Railroad, will be sent upon receipt of four cents in stamps by Charles S. Fee. Gen'l Pass. Agent, St. Paul, Minn. 15tf
