Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 20 September 1889 — Page 6
THE REPUBLICAN.
Published by
W. S. MONTGOMERY.
GREENFIELD. INDIANA
THE cost of Princess Louise's trousseau was
£i,
000.
DAVID M. STONE, editor of the New York Journal of Commerce, has not taken a day off in twenty-nine years.
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON, the novelist, is on his way to the Ellis group ol Islands in the South Sea, whose natives are still addicted to cannibalism,
ONE of the richest men in Boston is Nathaniel Thayer, whose estate amounts to $15,000,000. He is a young man of fine ability and the bost of habits.
JOAQUIN MILLER is describe! as "a slender, sparely built man well along in years, with long, yellowish while hair that lays on his shoulders in cui'ls."
SIR TIIOMAS ESMONDE, who recently visited this country in behalf of the Irish Nationalist agitation, is about to be married to an Irish girl in Australia, where he now is.
AT Patti's farewell appearance at Buenos Ayres the receipts were $23,000. It is hard to say farewell when farewell reappearances are attendeJ with such large profits.
Miss ETHELM. MACKENZIE, daughter of Sir Morell Mackenzie, has taken up journalism as a profession or a pastime. She has begun by playing the role of correspondent to American newspapers.
PROF. J. P. MAHAFFY-, of Trinity College, Dublin, now lecturing at Chautauqua, is a Home Ruler and one of the finest of Irish wits. He speaks with a delightful north of Ireland brogue.
TIIE author of "Home, Sweet Home," as every one knows, died without a home. Now George W. Allen, of Ohio, the author of the homestead law, has no homestead of his own and if dying in poverty.
FERDINAND GUZMAN, the most famous bandit in Spain, is a dwarf who at one time kept a small stove in Granada. Ho became angered at some action taken by the authorities and took to the mountains. He is hideously ugly in appearance and utterly unscrupulous. The romantic ohivalry attributed to Spanish bandits does not apply to hirn at all. He has gathered about him a crew of the worst cut-throats in Europe and over them he reigns supreme.
For one of the best examples of rapidly acquired wealth the South Dakotans point to Frank II. Haggerty, now 33 years of age, and the commissioner of immigration for the Dak etas. Mr. Haggerty came from Pennsylvania about eight years ago, and when he reached Jamestown his capital consisted of $18,50. By inducing others to put up two-thirds of the money he gob possession of a tree claim in the outskirts of what has become the thrifty city of Aberdeen. Going into real estate he handled his small capital so judiciously that he is today worth, at a moderate estimate, $150,000.
ABOUT a year ago Sir Douglas Stewart agreed to sell his family estates at Grandtully and Murthly castle, in Perthshire, to John Stewart Kennedy of New York for £372,983. No sooner had he sealed the agreement than he changed his mind and he has since been engaged in litigation with the object of evading it. He has taken resort to an old Scotch law, by which he may claim to be "weak and facile of mind," and therefore "easy to be imposed upon" and induced to agree to the sale by "fraud or circumvention" and when lying under "essential error." The judges of the Court of cession have allowed the case to be tried on the issue of fraud, and what ever the decision at Edinburg it is thought certain to be carried to the house of lords.
June:!•: ST!- PIII:N JOHNSON FIKT.D is a brother to David Dudley, Cyrus West, and the Rev. Henry M. Field. David Dudley is 85 years old, Stephen J. is 73. Cyrus W. 70, and Ilenry M. 67. They are sons of the Rev. David Dudley Field, a Congregational clergyman of Connecticut, who died in 18(57, aged 86. Judge Field went to California in 1819 and has been a resident of the state ever since. He was appointed to the Supreme court by President Lincoln in 18G3. He was then a republican, but for twenty years or more has been a democrat.
DANIEL WEBSTER'S coachman has become almost as prevalent a9 George Washington's body-servant. "Uncle Bill Webster," who recently died at the Soldiers' Home in Togus, Me., claimed to have been Webster's coachman from 18-14 to 1816. He used to say that Daniel was a great fisherman, a: persevering consumer of whisky and a most careless in about money. The great orator would often start for Washington without a cent in his pocket. "Uncle Bill "fit" in the late war, and iid ih:it he seized Sheridan's borsc when the famous cavalryman reached Cedar Creek after his ride from
u-'inchesler.
THE HIGHWAY OF LIFE.
Dr Talmage Talks about the Lessons of the City Street.
The Many who Swagger and Strut and the Few who Do Not.
The sermon of Rev. T. De Witt Talmage last Sunday was directed to the lesson of life as gathered from tho3e with whom we meet in our daily walks. His text was: "Wisdom cricth without she uttereth her voice in the streets." Prov. i, 30. He said:
We are all ready to listen to the voices of nature—the voices of the mountain, the voices of the sea, the voices of the storm, the voices of the star. As in some of the cathedrals in Europe there is an organ at either end of the building, and the one instrument responds musically to the other, so in the great cathedral of nature day responds to day, and night to night, and flower tc flower, and star to star, in the great harmonies of the universe. The spring time is an evangelist in blossoms preaching of God's love and the winter is a prophet—wtiite beanled—denouncing woe against our sins. We are all ready to listen to the voices of nature but how few of us learn anything from the voices of the noisy and dusty street. You go to your merchandise, and your mechanism, and to your work, and you come back again —and often with an indifferent heart you pass through the streets. Are there no things for us to learn from these pavements over which we passAre there no tufts of truth growing up between these cobblestones, beaten with the feet of toil, and pain, and pleasure, the slow tread of old age, and the quick step of childhood? Aye, there are great harvests to be reaped and now I thrust in the sickle because the harvest is ripe. "Wisdom crieth without she uttereth her voice in the streets."
In the first place the street Impresses me with the fact that this life is a scene of toil and struggle. By 10 o'clock every day the city is jarring with wheels, and shuffling with feet, and humming with voices, and covered with the breath of smokestacks, and a-rush with traffickers. Once in a while you rind a man going along with folded arms and with leisurely step, as though he nad nothing to do but for the most part, as you find men going down these streets, on the way to business, there is anxiety in their faces, as though they had some errand which must be executed at the first possible moment. You are jostled by those who have bargains to make and notes to sell. Up this ladder with a hod of bricks, out of this bank with a roll of bills, on this dray with a load of goods, digging a cellar, or shingling a roof, or shoeing a horse, or building a wall, or mending a watch, or binding a book. Industry, with her thousand arms, and thousand eyes, and thousand feet, goes on singing her song of work! work! work! while the mills drum it, and the steam whistles life it. AH this is not because men love toil. Some one remarked: "Every man is as lazy as he can afford to be." But it is because necessity, with stern brow and with uplifted whip, stands over them ready whenever they relax their toil to make their shoulders sting with the lash. Can it be that, passing up and down these streets on your way to work and business, you do not learn anything of the world's toil, and anxiety, and struggle* Oh! how many drooping hearts, how many eyes on the watch, how many miles traveled, how many burdens carried, how many losses suffered, how many battles fought, how many victories gained, how many defeats suffered, how many exasperations endured —what losses, what hunger, what wretchedness, what pallor, what disease, what agony, what dispair! Sometimes I have stopped at the corner of the street as the multitude went hitner and you, it has seemed to be a great pantomine, and as I looked upon it my heart broke. This great tide of human life that goes down the street is a rapid, tossed and turned aside, and dashing ahead and driven back—beautiful in its confusion and confused in its beauty. In the carpeted aisles of the forest, in the woods from which the eternal shadow is never lifted, on the shore ot'the sea over whose iron coast tosses the tangled foam, sprinkling the cracked cliffs with a bapti.sm of whirlwind and tempest, is the best place to study God but in the rushing, swarming, raving street is the best place to study man. Going down to your place of business and coming home again, I charge you look about—see these signs of poverty, of wretchedness, of hunger, of sin, of bereavement—and as you go through the streets, and come back through the streets, gather up in the arms of your prayer all the sorrow, all the losses. all the suffering, all the bereavements of those whom you pass, and present them in prayer be:ore an all sympathetic God. Then in the great day of eternity there will be thousands of persons with whom you in this world never exchanged one word who will raise up and call you blessed and there will be a thousand fingers pointed at you in heaven, saying: "That is the mau, that is the woman, who helped me when I was hungry, and sick, and wandering, and lost, and heart broken. That is the man, that is the woman," and the olessing Avill come down upon you as Christ shall say: "1 wns hungry and ye fed rne. I was naked and ye clothed me, I was sick and in prison and ye visited me: inasmuch as ye did it to these poor waifs of the streets, ye did it to me."
Again, the street impresses me wit,li the fact that all classes and conditions of society must commingle. We sometimes culture a wicked exclusiveness. Intellect despises ignorance. Refinement will have nothing to do with boorishness. Gloves hate the sunburned hand, and the high forehead despises the flat head and the trim hedgerow will have nothing to do with the wild corpsewood. and Anthens hates Nazereth. This ought not to be so. The astronomer must come down from his starry revelry and help us in our navigation. The surgeon must come away from his study of the human organism and set our broken bones. The cheihist must come away from his laboratory, where he has been studying analysis and synthesis, and help us to understand the nature of the soils. I bless God that all classes of people are compelled to meet on the street. The glittering coach wheel clashes against the scavenger's cart. Fine robes run against the peddler's pack. Robust health meet- wan sickness. Honesty confronts fraud. Every class of people meets every other class. Indepcndence and modesty, pride and humility, purity ana beasll'ness, frankness and livpocrisy. meetincr on the same block, in the same street, in the same city. Oh! that is what Solomon meant when lie said:
l-The
rich and the poor meet together: the Lord is the Maker of them all." I like this democratic, principle of the Gospel of Jesus Christ which recognizes the fact that we stand before God on one and the same platform. Do not take on any airs whatever position you have gained in society, you are nothing but a man, born of the same parent, regenerated bv the same Spirit, cleansed by the same blood, to lie down in the same dust, to get up in the same resurrection. It is high time that we all acknowledged not only the Fatherhood of God, but the brotherhood of man.
Again, the street impresses mo with the fact that it is a very hard thing for a man to keep his heart right, and to get to heaven. Iniinite temptations spring upon us from these places of public, concourse. Amid so much affluence how much temptation to covetousness, and to be discontented with our humble lot. Amid so many opportunities for overreaching, what temptation to vanity. Amid so many saloons of strong drink, what allurement to dissipation. In tne maelstroms of the street, how many make quick and eternal shipwreck. If a man-of-war comes back from a battle, and is towed into the navy yard, we go down to look at the splintered spars and count the bullet holes, and look with natriotic admiration on the flag that floated in victory from the masthead. But that man is more of a curiosity who has gone through thirty years of the •harp-shooting of business life, and yet
sails on, victor of the temptations of the street. Oh! how many have gone down under the pressure, leaving not so much as the patch of canvass to tell where they perished. They never had any peace. Their dishonesties kept tolling in their ears. If 1 had an ax, and could split open'the beams of that fine house, perhaps I would find in the very heart of it a skeleton. In his very best wine there is a smack of the poor man's sweat. Oh! is it strange that when a man has devoured widows' houses, he is disturbed with indigestion? All the forces of nature are against him. The floods are ready to drown him, and the earthquake to swallow him, and tne fires to consume him and the lightings to smite him. But the children of God are on every street, and in the day when the crowns of heaven are distributed, some of the brightest will be given to those men who were faithful to God and faithful to the souls of others amid the marts of business, proving themselves the heroes of the street. Mighty were their temptations, mighty was their deliverance and mighty shall be their triumph..
Again, the street impresses me with the fact that life is full of pretensions and sham. What subterfuge, what double dealing, what two-facedness! Do all the people who wish you good morning really hope for you a happy day? Do all the people who shake hands love each other? Are all those anxious about your health who inquire concerning it? Do all want to see you who ask you to call? Does all the world know half as much as it pretends to know? Is there not many a wretched stock of goods with a a brilliant show window? Passing up and down these streets to your business and your work, are you not impressed with the fact that much of society is hollow, and that there are subterfuges and pretensions? Oh! how many there are who swagger and strut, and how few people who are natural and walk. While fops simper, and fools chuckle,and simpletons giggle,how few people are natural and laugh. The courtesan and the libertine go down the street in beautiful apparel, while within the heart there are volcanoes of passion consuming their life away. I say these things not to create in you incredulity and misanthropy, nor do I forget there are thousands of people a great deal better than they seem but 1 do not think any man is prepared for the conflict of this life until he knows this particular peril. Ehud comes pretending to pay his tax to King Eglon. and while he stands in front of the king, stabs him through with a dagger until the haft went in after the blade. Judas Iscariot kissed Christ.
Again the street impresses me with the fact that it is a great field for Christian charity. There are hunger and suffering, and Wi'.nt and wretchedness in the country but these evils chiefly congregate in our great cities. On every street crime prowls, and drunkenness staggers, and shame winks, and pauperism thrusts out its hand asking for alms. Here want is most squalid and hunger is most iean. A Christian man, going along a street in New York, saw a poor iad and he stopped and said: "My boy, do you know how to read and write?" The boy made no answer. The man asked the question twice and thrice: "Can you read and write?" and then the boy answered with a tear plashing on the back of his hand. He said in defiance: '-No, sir I can't read nor write neither. God, sir, don't want me to read and write. Didn't he take away my father so long ago I never remember to have seen him? and haven't I had to go along the street to get something to fetch home to eat for the folks? and didn't l, as soon as I could carry a basket, have to go out and pick up cinders, and never have no schooling, sir? God don't want me to read, sir. I can't read nor write neither." Oh, these poor wanderers! They have no chance. Born in degradation, as they get up from their hands and knees to walk, they take their first step on the road to despair. Let us go forth in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ to rescue them. If you are not willing to go forth yourself, then give of your means: and if you are too lazy to go and too stingy to help, then get out of the way, and hide yourself in the dens and caves of the earth, lest, when Christ's chariot comes along, the horses' hoofs trample you into the mire. Beware least the thousands of the destitute of your city, in the last great day, rise up and curse your stupidity and your neglect. One cold winter's day, as a Christian man was going along the Battery in New York, he saw a little girl seated at the gate, shivering in the cold. He said to her: "My child, what do you sit there for this cold day?" "Oh." she replied, "I am waiting for somebody to come and take care of me." "Why," said the man, "what makes you think anybody will come and take care of you?" "Oh," she said,
l-my
mother died last week and I was crying very much, and she said: 'Don't cry, my dear though 1 am gone and your father is gone, the Lord will send somebody to take care of you.' My mother never told a lie: she said some one would come and take care of me, and I am waiting for them to come." O yes, they are waiting for you. Men of great hearts, gather them in, gather them in. It is not the will of your Heavenly Father that one of theso little ones should perish.
Lastly, the street impresses me with the fact that all the people are looking forward. I see expectancy written on almost every face I meet between here and Brooklyn bridge, or vaiking the whole length of Broadway. Where you iind a thousand people walking straight on, you only find one man stopping and looking back. The fact is, God made us all to look ahead because we are immortal. In this tramp of the multitude on the streets, I hear the tramp of a great host, marching and inarching for eternity. Beyond the office, the store, the shop, there is a world, populous and tremendous. Through God's grace, may you reach that blessed place. A great throng fills those boulevards and the streets are a-rush with the chariots of conquerors. The inhabitants go up and down, but they never weep and they never toil. A river Hows through that city, with rounded and luxurious banks, and trees of life laden with everlasting fruitage bend their branches to dip the crystal. No illumed hearse rattles over that pavement, for tliey are never sick. With immortal health glowing in every vein tne.v know not how to die. Those towers of strength, those palaces of beauty, gleam in the light of a sun that never sets. Oh, heaven, beautiful heaven! Heaven, where our friends are. They take no census in that city, for it is inhabited by "a multitude which no man can number." Rank above rank. Host above host. Galiei'.v above gallery, sweeping all around the heavens. Thousands of thousands. Millions of millions. Blessed are they who enter in through the gate into that city. Oh! start for it today. Through the blood of the great sacrifice of the Son of God, ike up your march to heaven. ''The Spirit and the Bride say come, and whosoever will, let him come and take of the water of life ireely. Join this great throng marching heavenward. All the doors of invitation are open. "And I saw twelve gates, and there were twelve pearls."
Language the Lord Understood.
The clergy cannot always insist on the use of ecclesiastical nomenclature, says the N. Y. Tribune. Not long ago a clergyman was asked to visit a rough old fellow who was dying. "Do you realize that you have committed many sins?1' asked the clergyman. "Dunno 'bout committin' sins," was the reply, "but am pooty blamed sure that 1 have made a great many bad breaks in my life." As a "bad break" was evidently his equivalent for a sin, the clergyman accepted the acknowledgmeiit and ssed on to the question: "Are you sincerely penitent?" "Dunno 'bout that, either, Mr. Minis ter," was the reply, "but I know that I have been nn everlastin1 chump, and ain't no good to nobody, not even to I the Lord, and I'm mighty sorry for it." The language of this confession was rude and crude enough, but the clergyman accepted it as the honest expression of a human soul, ana the poor old fellow was reconciled to the church before he died.
TANNER RESIGNS.
Radical Differences with Secretary N«M« Causes a Vacancy in the Pension Com* missionship.
President Harrison Wednesday received the resignation of James W. Tanner as Commissioner of Pensions. In his letter conveying the resignation it is said the commissioner writes that he recognizes that differences exist bet veen himself and the Secretary of the Interior respecting the administration of the Pension Bureau, and those differences being radical, in the interest of a thoroughly satisfactory administration of the office, he should resign. Serious differences arose between Secretary Noble and Commissioner Tanner over questions concerning the administration of the Pension Bureau, but not in any wise affecting the Commissioner's personal character, in the sense of imputing any corruption in his acts.
The following is Commissioner Tanner's letter of resignation and President Harrison's reply thereto:
DEPARTMENT
OF TITE
INTF.IUOH,
BrKi-AU
OF
WASHINGTON',
PENSIONS,
D. C., September 12, '89.
To the President: The differences which exist between the Secretary of the Interior and myself as to the policy to be pursued in the adminis tration of the Pension Bureau have vo-.icli-ed a stage which threatens to embarrass you to an extent which I fool you should not be called upon to suffer and as the investigation into the affairs of the Bureau has been completed, and I am assured, both by yourself and by the Secretary of the Interior, contains no reflection on my integrity as an individual or as an officer., I herewith place my resignation in your hands to take effect at your pleasure, to the end that you may be x*eiieved of any further embarassment in the matter.
Very respectfully yours, JAMES TAXNEK, Commissioner.
Executive Mansion, Washington, September 12,1SS9. Hon. James Tanner, Commissioner of Pensions:
DEAR SIK—Your
letter tendering your
resignation of the office of the Commissioner of Pensions has been received and your resignation is accepted, to take effect on the appointment and qualification of your successor.
I do not think it neccessary, in this correspondence, to discuss the causes which have led to the present attitude of affairs in the Pension Office. You have been kindly and fully advised of my views upon most of these matters. It gives me pleasure to add that so far as I am advised your honesty has not at any time been called in question, and I beg to renew the expression of my personal good will.
Very truly yours, BENJAMIN HAF.KIPON.
The following statement of the beginning and end of the Tanner difficulty is official and thoroughly verified in every respect: Before his departure from Washington for his vacation trip Secretary Noble, on several occasions, spoke to the President about the course of Commissioner Tanner and his clerks in the matter of re-i'ating pensions, and also in relation to unguarded remarks which the Commissioner had made from time to time. The President was inclined to defend Mr. Tanner, and he did so several times. Re cently Mr. Tanner made speeches at Elmira, Chautauqua and Milwaukee which called forth strong protests from prominent Republicans. Directly after the Milwaukee incident Secretary Noble returned to this city, determined to bring the Tanner matter to a climax. He put his views before the President in a very positive manner, and intimated that he would retire from the Interior Department if Mr. Tanner was continued in offico much longer.
On Tuesday Senator Hiscock, of New York, who had been talking with the President about the matter, and who had learned from him that it was likely to come to a climax, went to Commissioner Tanner, without authority from the President, however, and said that the Commissioner had better resign his office, as, if he did not he wonld be removed. From this grew the report that he had been asked for bis resignation. Wednesday evening Daniel Ransdell called on Tanner in a personal capacity, he said, and suggested that the Commissioner would better relieve the President of the difficulty in which he found himself placed by resigning. As a result of this interview Ransdell carried the resignation away in bia pocket. Thurday Mr. Tanner was given leave of absence until his successor was appointed and he retired from the position.
RACE WAR IN ILLINOIS.
Negroes ISrrak into a Jail and a liattle liusues—Two Killed.
Lawrenceville, 111., was the scone of a desperate fi^lit between whites and blacks Sunday night. County Judge Barnes ar rested a negro on the street for running "amuck7' with a knife. The negroes attempted to rescue the prisoner, and the whites went to Barnes'sassistance. There was a hard fight, but the whites won, and landeti four negroes in jail. The negroes rallied again, broke in the ]ail and rescued the prisoners. The whites organized, and in the fight that followed Judge Barnes was shot, but not fatally, and two negroes were killed. About a dozen were wounded on both sides. The ringleader was captured and put in jail. A posse armed with Winchesters surrounded the jail, and the negroes fled, panic-stricken, from the town.
Interesting News from China. Peking Gazette.
To-morrow morning at 2 o'clock the Emperor leaves the palace by the Shenchen and Shen-we Gates, and, proceeding thorough the Hou Men and the Anting Men, visits the Temple of the Earth, where he will perform worship at 1 A. M.
These ceremoies having been completed, his Ma jesty, will return through An-ting Gate and proceed to the Yungho Kung, where he will change his dress and partake of early breakfast.
Thence the Imperial procession will
continue on its way to the Temple of the God of Fire, where his Majesty will burn incense, after which it will return through the Hou Men and. traversing1 the Pei-ch'ang street, will reenter the Palace by the Hsl-yuan Gate.
On his return the Emperor will give audience to his Ministers and proceed to transact official business.
The Emperor announces his intention of px*oceeding on the 25th inst. to the Ta-ko Tien to offer thanks for the rain which Heaven has sent in response to his prayers.
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Stantlj) stopped, Jil't iII Coil-
face. s, nrarhisii vifxim•nostion and 7'« 11 c.
or union of nerves from the (trent spinal nerve. «, 7, H,
or-'
JsUshof JSlflod to the .Head
Hervesofthe arm. 0, Tl.o-e
(t rt
arrCStfd at Oliec. S If hit-
that na«s under the rib*. •», ,,
10.
Lumbar Pleiu,.
11 .inuiff of the Head, ertlfpr
fiaeral Plexus. l'J, It,
Ullll J) i-JZilleSM It I'f/110 )l I If
Heivoa of the lower limbJ.
currl
J. J?or XereoUS lletu\.
ache and Jnsom ia or Xcrrous Vt'akefvlnes.t, it is a specific. It brings street repose, a nd. refreshment to the tired Jirain. Jt in jxn-ticxi-larly adapted to Nervous and Del irate. Ladies. Overworked Business th a S.hattered N'ervoUs System, rif/uire it. l'ers,u~ ii Sorrow and Nervous from J,osn of Friends, will find Immediate JteJief. The entire A'ervous System, is strengthened, and anew vi
/i.%
imparted. For Palpitation and Ft littering of the Heart., hoss of Memory, Mela nchoh/. Aversion to Society. Confusirnof Ideas, J'npleasant Dreams.
Fainting Spells, Hysteria,
Smotheri g, Fear and. Dread of Coming Danger, Sense of Self Destrnrtion. IJqhtJfea 'dedness, Dots or Specks before the JCyes, Jilatched Face, and all Despondent Symptoms,resulting from Overwork.Furcessesanti Ttidiscretions Jt Works Wonders, It is in fact-THE GREAT NERVE RESTORER.
It is prompt, sure and safe in its action, nearly always and as if by magic, arresting all Fits, Epilepsy. Jrt-itable, Excitable, and Unsteady Nervous Affections by first day's use of the medicine. A trial is conviction. No Delicately Organized. Nervous System should ever be without it. It is not an Opiate! Does not contain Narcotic Poisons, nor docs it disagree, irith the system. For full particulars send for Free Treatise to
R. II. KLINE, M. D. O 931 Arch. Street. Philadelphia, Pa. Price, $1.00 And $2.00
8ee
Galva
Druggists,
THE POPULABLOE BETWEEN
Cincinnati, Indianapolis
LAFAYETTE AND
2 A O
.MJuro
The Entire Trains run Through Without Change. Pullman Sleepers and Elegant Reclining Chair Cars on Night Trams.
Magnificent Parlor Cars on Day ruins.
SPECIAL PULLMAN SLEEPERS
On Night Trains bet. Indianapolis am? Chicago.
nUlflAPn close conncction made with ail
A 8 Ull luMuU "nes for the West and Sorihwcst.
niUfllMMATI close connection made for
A I LIN LI rs la A E I
nil points East and Southeast.
The fact that it connects in tne Central Union Depot, in Cincinnati,with the trainsof the C.W. & ti. K.K. (B.& 0.),Ts.
Y.P.& O. K. R. (Eric), and the C.C.
C. & I. IIv (Bee Line), for the East, as well as with the trains of the C. N. O. & T. P. Ry (Cincinnati Southern), for the South and Southeast, gives itan advantage over all its competitors, for no route from Chicago, Lafayetto or Indianapolis can make these connections without compelling passengers to submit t) a long and disagreeable omnibus transfer for both passenger and baggfagc. Five Trains pacli w:vy. daily except
Sunday, ffhrcn Trtusss way on Sunday, between Indianapolis and Cincinnati. Through Tickets and Bag-page Checks to all Principal Points can be obtained :U any
Ticket Oflicc, C. I. St.L.& C. H'y, also via this line at all Coupon Ticket Offices throughout the country. J. II. MAKTIX, C. S. LaFOLLETTE,
Dist. Pasr,'r Accnt,
Western
Pass Aeent,
IXDIAKArOMS, ISB. I.A1* A1ETTE, 1AU.
JOHN EG AN, Gen'l Pass'r and Ticket Agent, t'lNCIKKATI,O.
I
LOUISVIttl.^CWAlEAHY a
CHICAGO
ALWAYS GIVE? IIS PATRONS
ikcjeper. Warrants, linuvy (Solid Gold Hunting Cases, tilegant and nmqnJflcent. UotU ladien'&iid guots'MUes rttU works nnd cnft*s of equal vr.lue.OWE PCUSOIV
"Iho Full "Worth of Their Money by
Taking Them Safely nnd Quickly between
1 each locality can Bccnrc ona 'EllCE. How lo thispo3ilblet answer—we want on 3 por»
Chicago Lafayette Indianapolis Cincinnati
in each locality, to kenp In
homes,lui.Tshow to those
who-nllarmns^Ltol1 nj-ofnar
Bencl free.atiil
kept them in your home
after you
fur
55 monl.io anl shown t.ieui
Louisville
at
cmco
where they can be seen, all over America. Write at once, and nmkeaure of the chance. Header it will be hardly any trouhlo tor vo'u to show the samples to those who may call at your homo •nd" your reward will bo most HHtlafnctory. A postal card on which to write us costs but I cent anil after you know all,if yon do not care to
further, why no harm is dons, lint If yon do
•end your address at once, you can secure IIEIi one ot tu» best solid Kold watches In tho world and our lar^e linooJ cos ri. SAMPLES. We pay all express, freight, etc. Addreaa
throat.
Arrow! thntCutarrh,Hroncliitist or .Asthma. This Jtemody relieves quickly,
Cures permanently. It! provents Pecllne. Night-Sweats) ii ml ileiitli from
Consumption,
6V Prepared at int.
KILMER'8r
uisi'KNSAUY, Bintrhamtoii, N. Y. I.eitcrsof inquiry answered. Guide to Health Sent Free).
.25i
1
Sr. «a-'
Ikasscla*.
\vul
LA F4Y£rr
£SPORT
c,*ndoval
drOttn
i.rxicgton
PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS ELEGANT PARLOR CARS
ALLTRAiNS RUH THROUGH SOLID
Tickets Sold and Baggage Checked to Destination.
|3f~Get Maps and Time Tables i? you want to b« more fully informed—aJl Ticke' Acenta floupoo Stations have tnem—or address JAMKH IUKKF.K. Cicu.
PIUsender A^t. Chcago
I.D.&W.
RAILWAY FOR
KANSAS GUY
AND ALL POINTS WEST. Lv. Indianapolis, I ml 3.51 p.m. 11.00 p.m.Ar. Decatur, Ills 9.06 4.00 a.m.
St. Louis, Mo «-4i ti: Snrinufleld, Ills 10.25 "bv 5.Jw Jacksonville, Ills ll.IHj "zw 7.12 y, Quiucy, His 10 45 Keokuk, Ia 11.oO
1 II TD
fs,
Hannibal, Mo 2.00a.m. 10.40 Ar. Kansas City, Mo 9.20 a.m. 6.30 p.m.
3
ri Tn I III Has Parlor Coaches to
01 li IN I nnlll
Decatur, and Elegant
Reclining ("hair Cars, fwe of extra charge, aud Polacc Bufi'ct Sleeping Cars Decatur to Kansas City. Time cn route, between ludianapolis and Kansas City, only 17)^ hours.
AIM
Has a Parlor Reclining
I |i Mi I nMlll
Chair Car for Keokuk,
Ia., passing through Decatur, Springfield. Jacksonville. Cimpin, UluflV, and Clayton, Ills. To Quiucy. Ills., or llannibal, Mo., without leaving tho train.
Rcclining Chair and Sleeping Car space reserved at I., D. W. Ticket OfHee, i»i) S. Illinois l3t., under Surgical Institutes Indianapolis.
Jno. 8. Lazarus, H. A. Cherrlcr,
Ges'i i'us. A Ben I. Citjr Tlckut Agent.
