Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 18 October 1889 — Page 6
THE REPUBLICAN.! FARM AND HOUSEHOLD.
Published by
W. S. MONTGOMERY.
GREENFIELD. INDIANA
TUSSLE WITH A 'OATEtt.
Exciting Encounter with a Big Mouthed Monster. Following1 are the particulars of a remarkable adventure of W. H. Abbott, of indigo aDd racing fame, as narrated by a writer in the Military Gazette:
It was in the rains when the jamadar told us that there was a huge alligator under the bridge of the river. Sending for a gun and a couple of bullets, we went up to the bridge, and, sure enough, about 20 yards off, there was au enormous "ghurial" some 20 feet long, with his head just visible above the water. A well-directed shot caught him between the eyes, and the brute, mortally wounded, plunged into deep water, rolling over and over, and was carried by the tide down toward the bungalow, which was a quarter of a mile off. Abbott seized a long rope lying there, and rapidly made a slipknot in it, and, declaring that he was not going to lose so lovely a skin, kicked off his boots, and just as he was —in socks, breeches and shirt—jumped into the river, giving me and a lot of other natives the other end of the rope to hold. He got well into the middle of the stream and was quietly treading water while we were all anxiously watching, when suddenly within two feet of the swimmer the alligator plunged straight up out of the water, snout foremost, as alligators generally do when hit in the head. Without the least hesitation Abbott Hung both arms right aroung the snout and a regular rough-and-tumbled ensued.
Presently the brute's whole body appeared. Abbott calmly mounted him, evidently trying the while to disengage the slip-knot, which had now got tight round his own arm, and to shove it over the brute's head. Then the alligator started swimming and we following down the bank, when, just as we were opposite the bungalow, he pulled dead up, brought his tail out of the water, and with a fearful side sweep capsized Abbott, snapping at him as he fell. Then came another fight such as I never wish again to see, the pair eventually disappearing beneath the water. Wo hauled away at the rope, thinking it was still attached to Abbott, when unexpectedly we saw him come up a few yards from the bnnk, evidently almost senseless. A Rajpoot peon jumped in and dragged his master up the slope. He was bleeding awfully, and was a gruesome sight—shirt in ribbons, arms and chest torn all over, both hands badly maimed, and the right foot completely crushed. He came to at once, and only said, "The rope's safe over his nose and so it was, sure enough for the natives to whom I had thrown the rope were busily engaged in hauling the defunct saurian on shore.
I never saw a man in such a mesg and, to add to the horror, down to the edge of the river, just as we had dragged up her half-killed husband, rushed his young wife, wringing her hands and, naturally, half out of her wits with terror. While she was standing over him, and the servants were carrying him to the house, he was singing, "Home They Brought Her Warrior Dead." A nice time of it we had out in a jungle, with no appliances to tie the severed arteries, and with a patient who would insist on trying to get out of bed to see how the skinning of the alligator was getting on. We tried to hire kahars, but the whole country was under water, and they refused to budge from home so we put him into a shampony and took him into the doctor at Mozufferpore, taking from 10 o'clock Tuesday till 7 o'clock the next morning to do the twenty miles.
Life in Japan.
An article in the Century by the artist Wores says: "In Japan women have always held a higher position than In other Asiatic countries. They go about freely wherever they please, and the seclusion of the Chinese is wholly unknown to them. The schools receive as many girls as boys and as a result of my observations I can safely say, without idle compliment, that the former are brighter than the latter. "By degrees, and under these favorable conditions for general observation, some of the causes of the people's happy spirit of independence began to be reve led to me. The simplicity of their lives, in which enters no selfish rivalry to outdo one another, accounts in a large measure for this enviab le result. Regarding one another very much as belonging to one family, their mode of life is more or less on the same plane, and consequently a great spirit of harmony prevails. A very small in ome is sufficient to supply the ordinary necessities of life, and everything else is secured with but little effort. Household effects are few and inexpensive: and should everything be destroyed by fire or lost in any way. it is not an irreparable calamity. All can be replaced at a small outlay and life go on the same as before."
Foot-Crnmpine in China.
Our esteemed Chinese contemporary, Hu Pao, says the N Y. Sun, has been investigating the origin of foot-cramp-ing by Chinese women. The practice is of very ancient date. Some affirm that it arose in the time of the five dynasties—that is in the tenth century A. D. Jao Niang, the mistress of Li Yu, the last emperor of these dynasties, tied uphor feet with silk into the shape
Harrowing Wheat.
A good many farmers have not the nerve to harrow their wheat in the spring any more than they have to run a harrow broadcast over the corn-field after the crop is up. Next spring is a good time for those who are timid on this point to gain some wisdom by personal experience. If you have never tried harrowing your wheat, try some of it next spring and institute a comparison by comparing results of one kind of treatment with the oth er.
With hardly an exception in the whole line of agricultural products.univcrsal experience has proven that cultivation is essential to the best possible results. General analogy would be sufficient of itself to suggest the beneficial results of tillage applied to I wheat, but the matter has not been left to analogical inference. Many experiments have been made by thoroughly cultivating the crop, when so planted, as to make it possible and with wonderful results as to increase I of product but in addition to that, the practice of giving wheat a thorough harrowing in the spring has come to be quite general in many localities. The best harrowing for the purpose will probably be a "smoothing" one, but any harrow not having too large teeth will answer.
Of course a few plants will be jerked out by the roots, but the smallness of the number of such will be remarkable. The loss by this will not begin to offset the gain made by loosening the soil, so as to give the roots a chance io penetrate the greatest possible distance. Then, too, the benefit from preserving moisture in the soil, by this loosening of the surface, may be great in case of drouth about the time the grain begins to fill. The packing process by the continual fall of rains for seven months makes the wheat field a pretty solid surface by the time the plant begins fairly to grow in the spring. In addition to the good it does the wheat, this harrowing also very greatly aids in getting a good catch of clover or grass seed. Where the fields are seeded down harrowing for this purpose alone more than pays for the trouble. It is always best, if possible to time the harrowing just before a rain, and the ground should be just right when it is done.
Improving: the Farm.
The best and shortest way to improve a farm is to reduce the stock, plow your fallows in winter so that the soil will be warm and dry and the subsoil decomposed early in the spring Harrow well and then sow ten or twelve quarts of grass seed to th# acre when you put in your oats. If all take, your chance is good for obtaining from five to ten acres of oats and a field seeded down to grass. Then prepare as many acres for rye sowing, provided your land is not good enough for wheat and the two crops will give you all the straw you need and the corn-field, with usual good luck, will produce enough to fat stock. At the end of the season you will have the produce from fifteen or twenty acres of land, represented in oats, corn and potatoes and as many acres sown with rye and wheat. Keep just stock enough to eat up the produce in grain and hay, and after gathering your next year's crops of hay and gram, covering say fifty acres of your farm of 100 acres, you may think of adding as many head of cattle as your farm will sustain without purchasing very heavily of foreign supplies. By the end of the fourth year you are ready to put in a crop of wheat and save plowing up your bottom meadow, you have re-seeded the whoie farm and are now ready to enlarge your dairy—and at the expiration of ten years your land ought to be a condition to double your crops and the number of your cattle. This is rotation.—Practical Farmer.
Farm Notes.
No succulent food is more greedily eaten by pigs at any age than beets. They may be fed any time from the first thinnings during the growing season to the fully grown roots in winter. They are especially valuable as a part of the winter food for breeding sows, andsome beets should always be saved for that purpose.
A scythe will pull the buckwheat together in bundles that will need no binding except a slight twist of straw around the head, setting each bundle by itself on its butt. When dried by cold weather, the flail on a smooth floor will take out the grain better, cheaper and nearly as quickly as it can be done by thrashing machines. This is the old-fashioned way, and it is as good as any.
We do not understand why cheese is not more generally used as food by all classes. In England it largely takes the place of meat, which it supercedes, not only because of its cheapness, but its superiority. The poor quality of much cheese offered in market is pr)bably the reason for the popular prejudice against it. We eat more meet in this country than any people in Europe, and cheese ought largely to take its place.
Sometimes when a very heavy grain crop has been grown the field is more easily prepared for wheat seedinsr by burning over the stubble. A few furrows should be plowed next the fences, to prevent the fire spreading where not wanted. Oat stubble, however large, does not burn as easily as that of wheat. Its stalk is not so firm. In burning wheat stubble many Hassian flies will usually be destroyed, thus making it safer to sow wheat after wheat.
1
of the crescent moon, and all the other be iuties of the time imitated her. The literature of previous dynasties does not allude to the custom. During the reign of King Hi (1664 A. D.) an: edict forbade foot-cramping under various penalties, the local officials being held responsible in some degree for violation of the law by people in their district. But the fashion was too strong, and in 1(W8, at the instigation of the board of ceremonies, this edict was withdrawn. It is still universal in Kuantung and Kuangsi.
Sometimes after threshing cows turned into the barnyard at night, with access to a fresh straw stack, will •lick at the chaff and eat enough to diminish their milk flow. It is this often, rather than the diminished pasture, that lessens the milk yield at this season. We have known farmers to put a fence around the stack, so as to keep their cows from injuring themselves at it, as a simple minded person is said once to have put a fence around a very poor lot to keep his stock from grazing on it—American Cultivator.
The Household.
TRAVELING LUNCH.—Chop together sardines, ham and a few pickles mix with mustard, pepper, catsup, salt and vinegar spi'ead between butteredj bread. This is to be cut crosswise, like! jelly cake.
TOMATO SALAD.—Take nearly ripe tomatoes, slice in a dish and set on ice to get hard and firm, then just before using chop a large onion fine, and sprinkle over them, and add salt, vinegar and pepper to taste.
BREAD FOR SOUP.—Cutslices of stale bread in small squares, throw them in boiling lard and fry till brown. Skim out, drain and put in a soup tureen before serving the soup. For oyster soup, crackers crisped in the oven are nice.
CHEESE SCALLOP.—Soak one cup oJ dry breadcrumbs in fresh milk beat into it three eggs, and add one tablespoon of butter and a half-pound of grated cheese strew upon the top sifted breadcrumbs, and bake in the oven a delicate brown.
CORN* PUDDING.—Two cups of corn boiled and cut from the ear, one pint of milk, two eggs, salt to taste. Beat the eggs until very light add the other ingredients put the mixture in a buttered pudding dish and bake about forty minutes.
APPLE TAPIOCA PUDDING.—Soak over night one cup of tapioca in six cups of water. Next morning add one cup of sugar, one egg and beat well together. Then pare, core and chop fine six or more apples, and stir with the tapioca in a pudding dish, and bake slowly.
A Noisy Man.
Although a noisy man may be A nuisance worth abusi ng I rather like the fellow. He
Is, somhow, so amusing. It's fun to hear the endless flow Of senseless sound he's dropping And think that he is wound to go
Forever without stopping. While others writhe in pain because He's malting themso tired 1 watch the motion of his jaws
And wonder if they're wired. Though he is called a "windy bag And other names as funny It's worth, I think, to hear him brag
About one cent of money. While people hate his vain conceit A in is it And sadly snub him on the street 1 feel for him a pity. Born without brains he cannot see
Himself as others see him Besides he's very good—to be A freak in some mu-see-um. Because I pity him, in such
A proper place I'd shove him For, while I iike him—rather much— I cannot say I love him. Still, tliougli he's such a nuisance cool
That, gladly, we'd destroy him, He doesn't incan to be. The fool Imagines we enjoy him. -H. Dodge.
Electric Car Brakes.
The expression, electric brake, is now often heard, and requires a word of explanation. There are various forms of so called electric brakes which are practicable, and even efficient working devices. In none of them, however, does electricity furnish the power by which the brakes are applied it merely puts in operation some other power. In one type of electric brake the active braking force is taken from an axle of each car. A small friction drum is made fast to the axle. Another friction drum hung from the body of the car swings near the axle. If, when the car is in motion, these drums are brought in contact, that one which hangs from the car takes motion from the other, and may be made to wind a chain on its shaft. Winding in this chain pulls on the brake levers precisely as if it had been wound on the shaft of the hand brake. The sole function of electricity in this form of brake is to bring the friction drums together. In a French brake which has been used experimentally for some years with much success an electric current, controlled by the engine driver, energiz.es an electric magnet which forms part of the swinging frame, in which the loose friction pulley is carried. This electro magnet being vitalized, is attracted toward the axle, thus bringing the friction drums in contact. In an American brake lately exhibited on a long freight train a smaller electro magnet is used, but the same end is accomplished by multiplying the power by the intervention of a lever and wheel. The other type of so called electric brake is that in which the motive power is compressed air, and the function of the electric device is simply to manipulate the valves under each car, by which the air is let into the brake cylinder or allowed to escape, thus putting on or releasing the brake3. All of these devices have this advantage, that, whatever the length of the train, the application ol the brakes is simultaneous on all the wheels, and stops can be made from high speed with little shock.—H. G. Prout in Scribner's Magazine.
Animal Life in the Gulf Stream.
The surface waters in the Gulf Stream teem with minute life of all kinds. There the young of larger animals exist, microscopic in size, and adult animals which never grow large enough to be plainly visible to the naked eye occur in immense quantities. By dragging a fine silk net behind tlio vessel, these minute forms are easily taken, and when placad in glass dishes millions uncounted are seen swimming backward and forward. When looked at through a microscope we see young jelly fishes, the young of barnacles, crabs and shrimps, beside the adult microscopic species.
5
which are very
abundant. The toothless whale finds in these his only food. Rushing through the water, with mouth wide open, by means of hir. whalebone strainers the minute forms are separated from the water. Swallowing those obtained after a short period of straining, he repeats the operation. The abundance of this kind of life can be judged from the fact that nearly all kinds of whales exist exclusively upon these animals, most of them so small that they are not noticed on the Burface.—Ralph S. Tarr, in Popular Science Monthly.
WOMAN'S WORK AND WORLD.
Train the Girls.
When a girl is ten years, old shs should be given household duties to perform according to her size and strength, for which a sum of money should be paid her weekly. She needs a little pocket money, and the knowledge how to spend it judiciously, which can so well be given by a mother to her little girl. She should be required to furnish a part of her wardrobe with this money. For instance, if she gets ten cents a week, she should purchase all her stockings, or all her gloves, as her mother may decide and doing this under the mother's supervision she will Boon learn to trade with judgment and economy. Of course the mother will see to it that the sum is sufficient to do this, and yot leave a trifle for the child to spend as she pleases. This will supply a healthy stimulus it will give her a proper ambition and pride in her labor, and the ability to use money properly. As she grows older these household duties should be increased, with the proportionate increase of money paid for the performance of them. We know a lady who divided the wages of a servant among her three daughters. There is a systematic arrangement of their labor, which is done with a thoroughness and alacrity rarely found, either with a hired girl or a daughter who feels that she has it to do with nothing to encourage or stimulate her in the work.
The True Iady—Advice to Young Women.
It is the duty of every woman to be a true lady. Brazen boldness is a thing which girls cannot afford to practice. Wildness of manner and an open defiance of all those wholesome laws which have made woman's name illustrious both in sacred and profane history from the begining of time, are no more becoming to girls and "young ladies," so-called, than in angels. Delicacy is an innate quality of the female heart, which, when once lost, can never be regained, No art can restore to the grape its bloom or its sweetness to tfte taste, when the mildews of night have once settled down upon the vine. Familiarity without love, without confidence, without regard to the common rules of etiquette even, is destructive of all that makes woman exalting and ennobling. '"The world is wide, these things are small,
They may be nothing, but they're all."
A Whiff of Lavender.
Lavender, the favorite perfume of our grandmothers, has again come into favor. The lavender is put into little bags of cambric or silk, and placed between the sheets and table-cloths, as well as in the drawers where underwear is kept. Some women prefer rose or violet perfume, and make long mats of thin silk or cotton, fitted to the size of a drawer or trunk-tray, sprinkle them well with eatchet powder, cover with another piece of silk and "tuft" it with embroidered silk. Sometimes these bags are made of cheese cloth, which are less costly and answer the same purpose equally well. They retain their perfume for a year or more, and if kept in the bottom of a trunk or drawer will perfume the entire contents.
The Round Waist, Sleeves, Etc.
The round waist is without darts, and, paradoxical as it may sound, is slightly pointed in front and back. It has but few seams, and may be either plain or full on the shoulders its fullness below is plaited or gathered to the points at the waiste line, and it is trimmed there by Vandyke points of embroidery or of passementerie, or else it is edged by a folded ribbon fastened by a bow without ends on the left side. The round shallow yoke so often mentioned will still be made of velvet, silk, moire, or embroidery, or of the dress material covered by passementerie. The high st inding collar and mutton-leg sleeves will be made for most woolen dresses cloth dresses, however, seldom have very full sleeves, as they cannot be worn under a cloth jacket or fitted coat.
Autumn Dresses.
The first French dresses imported for autumn repeat many of the designs brought out late in the summer by Parisian modistes. Round waists, full sleeves and straight skirts reappear with variations. Jacket waists and elaborate fronts of corsages remain in vogue, and basques are not wholly abandoned. Some features of the Directoire coat tire retained, and new ones are added. Passementerie, braiding, fur and feathers with velvet cut bias and also velvet ribbons, are the trimming of the first dark dresses.
The Chambermaid Cure.
The Queen of Sweden is undergoing peculiar treatment to restore her nerves to a normal condition. Her doctors have ordered her to rise early, make her own bed and dust and sweep the room. She has to take a walk in the garden before breakfast, work among the flowers afterward, and lead an active out-door existence all day long. Already the Queen has been benefited by this curious euro—the chambermaid treatment, as it is called. It is not likely to become popular.
Worry Kills, Not Work.
It is not work that kills, but worry. It is not the revolution that destroys the machinery, but fiction. Work is good for the soul, good for the body and good for the mind. If you want a good appetite don't worry. If you want to stand well with yourself and the world, and want things to go right in your home and your business, do not worry. If you want to size up 100 cents on the dollar, do not worry.
Sounded Just I/ke Him.
Wife—John, I read in the morninir paper that a very badly intoxicated man fell out of the fifth-story window of one of the down-town hotels and was killed, Nobody can identity him.
Husband—Well, what of that Wife—I wish you would go down the Morgue and see if it isn't you. Judge.
Artesian Fish.
There is a fish pond at Delano, Cal., which is supplied from aa artesian well
The fish are spurted out every day, and belong to the same species as those at Owen's lake on the other side of the coast range
Shoes and Stockings.
Evening shoes and open-work stockings have been worn by English women in the afternoon during the entire summer.
=Hu
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Isold StO» un-
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Warnwite-i.
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Letters of inquiry answered. I Guide to Health Sent Free). Sold by Hmggtwt*.
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to 7ure a Baa
Use "Dr. Kilmer's Cough-Cure (Consumption Oil). It relieves quickly, stops tickling in the throat, Hacking, Catarrh dropping, Decline, Nightsweat and prevents death from cen~ sumption. Trice 25c. Pamphlet Free. Binghampton, N. Y. Sold, recommended and guaranteed by all druggist.
I E S
One of every five we I ha or no or 11 cart Disease, and is in eon-1 slant danger oi' Apoplexy,! Shock or Sudden Death 1 I mil ltcmouy ii.«ulatoa, rc-j licvos, corrrcls ana euros. I
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6 for. I .otters olinotnry auswerctf.
$5.°°
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To Cure Heart Disease
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Hack view or the hrain. '""l
•pinol cord and its branch.-.
the ramification* of (he -Wf
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2, The Cerebellum, or
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Sl/StCUl. It is IIII III fallible-
£3. »r »"•«/«»«»-,
(ftPjMtff 1' 1 It Or St*.
throughout the body.
J'jtttS9-w
Figure
Jfs Vifrrfs hi
the Cerebrum. ...
brum J?*tSf or /•(fUntff
of Ihe nervous ayatem. S,
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Nerves or the lower luabs. JVVnvw* Headache and Insomnia or Xi rrons nl. rfiilnr.is,, it is a specific. It brhir/.s sirrrt r' /io.^eaml refreshment. to thr ti-rrd lirain. Jt. is pai'ttenia rli/ adapted, to ye-nroim and Jetirate J.adies. OrctiforUo.d Hasinrss Men, irit/i a Shattered JS'r.rroils Si/stem, require it. J'ersonin. Sorrow and Xervotis from J.oss o/ Friends,, will find Immediate llelief. The entire Nervous Si/stmiifi 8trenffthened, and a neir vlf/oi•tin/iartcd. For t'aljritation. and Untterimj of the Heart, TjOss of M'emori/, Melanehoh/,. Arersionto Society, ('on fusion of Ideas, I'it pleasant Dreams.Faintin Spells, lh/steria,. bmotheri nfl Fear and Dread of C"iitiirf Danger, Senso of Self Jtestriirtion. Lif/htIke.adedness. Dots or Speclc/i before the Fi/es,, Blotched Face, and all ]es])ondent. S /m/~ toms,resultimj from Orerieork. I'Jj-ce.ises and Indiscretions It Works I landers. It is in. fact-THE GREAT NERVE RESTORER.
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R. H. KLINE, 3ME. D. O 931 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Price, 81.00 ftnd $2.00
DlVKSro&T
GaWa1
See Druyyi&ts,
THE I'OPULAIt LI'E BETWEEN Cincinnati, Indianapolis
LAFAYETTE AND
irdon
lint are you talk
ing: about «n '"What lody talks about they s-ay
conn
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A O
[iKuriiJ
The Entire Trains run Through Without Change. Pullman Sleepers and Elpgnnt. Reclimny Chair Cars on jSitrltt Trams.
Magnificent Parlor ^irs on Day »rainsl fc SPECIAL PULLMAN SLEEPERS On Wight Trains bet. Inrtinnnpolfc ami Chicago. A I A
A I UmbRuU
connection made with all
S
lines for the Nest and Sorthnest.
niMniftlfUAT! close connection made for
A I lINMrmAI
all points East and Southeast.
The fact that it connects in the Central Union Depot* in Cincinnati.with the trainsof the C.W. & 1. K.K(B.& O.), N. Y.P.& O. R. K. (Frie), anil the C. C. C. &I. Rv (Bee Line), for the East, as well as with the trains of the C. N. O. & T. P. Ky (Cincinnati Southern), for the South and Southeast, gives it an
A N A O I N S W E S Lv. Tndiartapoli.s. Ind 3.51 JI.TU. 11.00 p.m. Ar. Iceatur, Ills S.03 4.00 a.m.
St. Louis, Mo 7,45 Springfield, Ills 10.2."
3C
I'%' sumples five, aa thecliowtnjiof
samples have tiecn Inn localitj for a month or two
we usually get from «100 to 65MU In trade rom tha surrounding country. This, tha most wonderful niter ever known.la made In order that our samples may le placed at once where they can be seen, all over America. Write at once, and make'sure of the chance. Reader It will be hardly any troubl* for you to show thesamples to those who may call at your hom» and your reward will bo most satisfactory. A postal card on which to write ua costs but 1
cent
and after you know all,if yon
do not care to go further, why no harm Is done. But If do •end your address at once, yon can secure I- HKI. 0110 or th»
I TD
Reclining Chair and Sleeping Car space reserved at I., D. & W. Ticket Olliee, 90 S. Illinois St., under Surgical Institute, Indianapolis.
Jno. S. Lazarus, H. A. Cherrier, (icr.'i A
L'i'tit.
lw,
advantage over all its competitors, for no route c'. from Chicacro,Lafayette or Indianapolis can make these connections without compclline issenliers to submit a longr and disagrccsio.e omnibustransfer for both passenger and batrgagc. Five "Trains each way« daily exccpt
Sunday, Three Trams c-ach way on Smiaay, hetwceai Indianapolis at id Cincinnati. Through Tickets and BacfTC-rTO Chocks to all Principal Points can obtained at any 'J icket Office,' C. I. St. L. & C. JVy, also via this line at all Coupon Ticket Ofiices throughout the ,, country. a. J. H. 3IART1X, 0. S. I.-aFOLliETTE,
Dist. Pas: 'r Acrenf, Western
1
A?? lira.
INDIANArOUf- IXD. AlETTE, 1HB. JOHN EGAN, Gen'l Pass'r and Ticket Agent, CINCINNATI, O.
I.D.&W.
RAILWAY FOR
KANSAS CITY
ri.35
Jacksonville, Ills ll.:K» "r 7.12 Quiiicv, Ills 10.45 Keokuk, la 11.50 Hannibal, Mo 2.00 a.m. 10.40 Ar. Kansas City, Mo 9.20a.m. 0.30
p.m.
AIM
IIns
Parlor Coaches to
01 If W« I nnlll
Decatur, ami Elegant
Reclining Cliair Cars, free of extra charge, and Palace P.ull'et Sleeping Cars Decatur to Kansas City. I^pic en route between Indianapolis und Kansas City, only 172 hours. I I li TD A III Tins a Parlor Reclining II li mi I (IAIN Chair Car for^ Keokuk, la., passing through Decatur, Springfield, Jacksonville, Chapin, Bluffs, and Clayton, Ills.
To Quiney, Ills., or Hannibal, Mo., without leaving the "train.
City Tickut Agent.
"P^TiouisvmE. NEW AIBABY ~CHICA6O Rr.((9-
ALWAYS
6IVES
ITS PATRONS
njongn
U?dar
Tho Full ^orth of Their Honey by Taking Them Safely and Quickly between
Chicago Lafayette Indianapolis Cincinnati
Rotthda
Louisville
PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS ELEGANT PARLOR CARS
ULTRAINS RUN THROUGH SOLID
Tickets Sold and Baggage Checked to Destination.
pyCet ffiapa and Timo Tables if you want to ba moro fully informed—all Tickot Aecnt3 atCoupozMk. Stations have them—or adclref"
Jamb* B.uikbr.
Geu. Passenger Agt.: ChicastO
p. BALDWIN, I)is rirt Fn^ a 'ger Agt., 23 Sr. Illinois St.. Indiai.a j'i.i.
