Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 25 October 1889 — Page 7
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FARM AND HOUSEHOLD.
Salt for Dairy Stock.
"We have never had any doubt of the importance of free access to salt by iry stock. But we now and then meet with people who think salt an injury to both animals and men, and some have gone so far as to deprive their animals of salt altogether, except wnat they derive from the food •they eat—every kind of which contains -at least a tracc of common salt. Lack •of salt for cows used to be considered a cause of hard churning, and is now so considered by many good judges, who at once administer salt to their -cows as a remedy for the evil. But in "•earlier d:iys dairymen had not yet reached the point of keeping salt constantly within reach of their cows, so that they could at will help themselves.
All these early notions were founded on tradition and loose observation but it is interesting to note how closely they agree with modern scientific •conclusions. The experiments of European nations—notably of the French—seems to have definitely determined the value of salt for all kinds -of stock. Modern observers have reached the conclusion that salt is necessary to the best health and performance of the cow. Prof. Robertson, of theGuelph Experiment Station, Ontario, Canada, says a series of experiments convinced him that to deny •cows salt for even one week reduces -their flow of milk 14.V to 17.} per cent in quantity and lowers the quality. Milk given when cows are deprived •of salt, he tys, will sour 2-1 hours sooner than that given when they have a full supply of it. It is greatly relished by all animals, which is strong presumptive evidence in its favor, and there cannot be a reasonable doubt, at Ihislated y, that salt is /beneficial to them.—Michigan Farmer.
Keep Improved Stoclv.
This is no longer the breeder's text, 'but is proclaimed as the result of experience from every enterprising farmer in the land. Who ever heard of a farmer who, after trying the Shorthorns or any of the improved breeds of •cattle, quit them and went back to the natives or scrub stock? A man in the least interested in poultry, for pleasure •or profit, is not content with the old •dung-hill fowl. There is no better key required to determine the degree of prosperity of any farmer than the kind -of stock that is kept on his premises.
The enterprising and intelligent farmer realizes that the best is none too good, and prompted by this sense of this right, he is always on the lookout for improvement, and a constant and systematic weeding out process is going on in his herds and llocks. The objectionable anim '-Is are going out each year and better ones are being added. This is the corrcct principle of breeding up, and it is within the control of every farmer to avail himself of the means, and to just such an extent as .his circumstances seem to demand.
This same principle of improvement should be observed on every farm, not alone with the m.n who handles grade stock, but with the breeder of thoroughbred stock as well. There is always room for improvement, and in no line of business is improvement so marked as in the breeding of stock.
Cultivate Fruit on the Farm. If you have not already planted an orchard do so at once. Go to the nursery and buy your trees if there is one within a reasonable distance. You want to be certain you are getting what you buy, and that your trees are fresh, healthy and in good growing -condition. Experience has taught farmers that there is more fraud and deception practiced by fruit tree dealers or gents, than with any other class of men they have to deal with. It is much better to send your order direct to some good, reliable nursery, if you cannot make your selection in .person, and have your bill of trees shipped to you. It is perferable to get northern grown trees for this climate.
Some of the most successful fruit culturists advise purchases to be made from nursery stock grown north of where the trees 'are to be planted for fruit purposes. Before planting an orchard it is absolutely necessary to put the ground in a good state of cultivation. It should be plowed to the greatest depth possible and thoroughly pulverized.
Assort Your Sliccp,
The secret of success in raising and handling sheep, is to keep them at all seasons of the year well graded and sorted up, as to age and physical condition. The lamb flock, if composed of only 100, will need some weeding out there will be some inferior lambs take these out and put them in a small pasture lot by themselves, and if possible sell them to the first buyer that chances along. Your flock of lambs are more valuable without them. Like all young and growing stock, the lamb must have the best of care and attention from the time it is dropped until it is one year old, if you expect to make it a profit Our good results have all came from :mbs under these conditions. We have no better example of successful sheep husbandry than those furnished us by the merino feeders of Vermont, who astonish the world with their large growthy yearlings. •\VasIiiii!»-Iay Hints.
A practical housekeeper, writing to an exchange, says she has tested the following recipe for lightening the labor of washingday, and recommends others to make the experiment, being careful to follow the directions exactly. lill the boiler two-thirds full of water, and shave a bar of good soap in it. When the water boils and the soap is dissolved, add teaspoonfuls of keroso tie oil. It will immediately unite with the soap, and, if you have been exact with the amount of each, there j.- will be no oil on the top of the water. .Now put the cleanest pieces, like tablecloths and napkins, without previous soaking or wetting, loosely into the boiler. Oo not put too many pieces in at a time. Boil hard for ten minutes, then rinse through two waters, and hang out to dry. Put more pieces
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In the same boiler. Examine the articles of body clothing after they are taken cut, and, if not thoroughly cleansed, put them back in the boiler for another ten minutes, lightly.
Lime, gravel or crushed bones should always be kept where the fowls can have access to them.
Fowls of all kinds should be provided with plenty of drinking water each day, and the drinking vessels should be washed out each before filling.
The safest way of caring for seed corn is to be sure that it is thoroughly dried in the fall. Then store it in a dry place in a temperature above freezing during the winter and out of the reach of mice. Wooden frames covered with wire netting and hung in an attic or some place kept warm by a chimney is a good place.
In reply to an inquiry, the American Cultivator says that a little tar on sheep's noses in summer is very necessary to protect them from the fly that lays the egg that produces grub in the head. Sheep will often dig holes in the ground into which to thrust their noses to protect themselves from the attacks of the fly but it is far better to tar the nose, and thus save them from all trouble.
Poisonous potatoes—Last season was a very peculiar one for all vegetable growths, and the result of this is strikingly seen in its effects on the quality of potato i-aised in some localities. These appear all right to the eye, but when cooked are found not only to be deficient in the dryness and good flavor we so highly esteem in this vegetable, but they have a bitter taste in the month and cause a burning, or a smarting sensation in the throat. When such results follow from eating them, we maybe sure that a poisonous clement has been developed in the tubers, and they are no longer fit for healthful human food.
Milk Twice a Day—According to no less an authority in dairy matters than Col. F. D. Curtis, the old-fashioned, notion to milk only in the morning after cows drop off in their yield is a mistake. If worth milking at all a cow is worth milking twice a day. She will noi only give more, but the milk will be of a great deal bettor quality. It does not do milk any good to remain in the udder so many hours after it is secreted, and it does not do the cow any good. Just why the last milk drawn is the best is unexplained. But we know it is the richest, and if the reason is because it is the last secreted, I then the twenty-four hours1 rule of milking is a poor one in more than one sense—poor in quantity and' quality.
The Western Rural says: We would say to a correspondent who inquires about keeping sweet potatoes, that they can be kept for several months in an ordinary cellar, if he is careful in handling them. They should be' thoroughly dried before being put away, and so carefully handled as not to bruise them. The drying may be done in the sunshine, spreading them out, carefully covering them at night so that the dews will not get on them, Or they may bo dried in a kiln. For family use, drying in the sunshine! would, of course, be the cheapest and would answer all purposes. The1 cellar in which they are kept should ba dry, and it is better when possible to so put them away as that the air can have free access through them.
Household Suggestions.
Chocolate icing can be and is better made -with yolks of eggs instead of whites making a softer icing and disposing of the yolks of the eggs.
Carbolic acid is recommended for moistening the tools with which metals are worked. The efficiency of the grindstone is said to be greatly increased by this means.
A single piece of paper or linen moistened in turpentine and put into wardrobes or drawers for a single day two or three times a year, is a preventive against moths.
To set delicate colors in embroidered handkerchiefs, soak them ten minutes previous to washing in a pail of tepid water, in which a dessert spoonful of turpentine has been well stirred,
Knives with rubber handles should never be washed in soap suds, as it takes the gloss oft' the rubber a,nd causes them to flake up. Ivory, bone or wood handles should not be put in hot water.
Be sure to put your clothes pins in hot soap suds at least once in two weeks and let them boil after which they may be taken out, dried, and put away in a bag, ready for use on next wash day.
Ink stains are entirely removed by the immediate application of dry salt before the ink has dried. When the salt becomes discolored by absorbing the ink, brush it off and apply more wet slightly. Continue this till the ink is all removed.
The following is the best way to wash flannel shirts: Souse the garment in hot soap suds don't rub put x'epeatedly through a wringer never wring it with the hands, and never put into cold water. At first washing it should shrink half an inch after that, not at all, if properly washed.
A little powdered potash thrown into rat holes will drive the rodents away that arc so annoying in cellar or kitchen cayenne pepper will have the same effect on rats and cockroaches, and a mouse will never gnaw through a piece of cotton sprinkied with cayenne, that is stuffed into his hole.
An Erratic Corpse.
A man fell from a train down at Baltimore, and when the police picked him up he was apparently a fit subject for the coroner, so they took him to the station and notified the coroner to corne around and sic on him. While they were waiting for the coroner the corpse got up from the bench where it had been laid out and walked off. The police stopped it, but after a vigorous protest on the part of the corpse it was allowed to go. It was a mighty mean trick to play on the police and coroner, though.
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or else rubj
Farm Notes.
Women make the best and most suecessful poultry raisers. All farmers should remember that' thorough cultivation is better than a mortgage on the farm. I
THE SOUTH POLE.
What is Known About That Mystsrious and Fascinating E^gion.
Burning Mountains Shut In by Barriers of Ice—Discoveries by the Different Expeditions.
Three expeditions to the South Pole are under discussion, and have been more or less determined upon. England has one under consideration, the French scientists are urging their government to take up the matter, and the Germans of Hamburg, with Villard as their American agent, have been seriously contemplating sending down a body of explorers to the mysterious regions of the Antarctic circle. A general revival of interest in this comparatively neglected portion of the globe seems to be promised, and the time seems to be at hand when the existence of a great antarctic continent, the magnetic conditions of the south and the relative tlatness of the earth at that point will be definitely settled.
It was supposed by the old geographers that in order to balance the continents of the north, tbe Southern or Antarctic Ocean ought to nave some great continents likewise and. for two hundred years or so, occasional voyages were made in the hope of discovering some such stretches of dry land. Juan Fernandez, more than 300 years ago, reached a pleasant land which is now supposed to have been New Zealand, but then lie was 3,000 miles distant from the south pole. Twenty years later a Dutch whaler was driven by a storm so far as the high snowy islands, now known as the South Shotlands, nearly duo south of Cape Horn. About the beginning of the following century Do Quires, searching about for the southern continent, lighted upon Pitcairn's Island and the new Hebrides, and many other islands continued to be found in the vast southern sea by the storm-driven mariners and hardy explorers steering straight for something new. It remained, however, i'or Capt. Cook to first penetrate the Antarctic circle, although all he did was to sight the shores of Sandwich Land. Great things had been expected from this voyager, and the report was so disappointing that the geographers thereupon removed from their maps the term of Terra Australia.
Navigators, however, continued still to believe in the existence of this southern land, and in the beginning of the present century one of them discovered the South Orkneys. Then the governments of Europe and our own took a hand in the matter and sent out expeditions of discovery. 'J he United States expedition was placed in charge of Lieut. Wilkes, his instructions being to push as far south as possible. Altogether the fleet of exploration was absent four years, during which much ocean was explored for the first time and a number of small islands set down on the charts. Wilkes claimed at first to have discovered an antarctic continent, but it v/as afterward found to be Adele Land.
Then came the expeditions under Sir James Ross, which left England in 1839 and did not see it again until 1813. After passing the Cape of Good Hope Ross and his men remained for two months on Kergueien's island—discovered in .1772 then proceed to Tasmania and then pushed on for the south. He first sighted large, compact icebergs in latitude 63°, four degrees farther south bringing him to the edge of the pack, a vast field of hummock ice extending over an unknown number of miles. The men were supplied with extra warm clothing, and preparations were made for dashing through the floe ice and hammocks at points where the more solid pack could be avoided. Steering boldly but cautiously through huge masses of ice, and experiencing alternate fog and sunshine, they at length espied real land in the shape of two magnificent ice-capped mountains, each extending 7,000 feet in bight, with glaciers filling in the intervening valleys.
On dry land near these mountains, after many struggles, Sir James Ross hoisted the Britlisb flag, and named the place Victoria Land, being then about 1,300 miles from the South Pole and 1,800 due south of New Zealand. Further inland other magnificent ice-covered mountains could be seen, soaring to a bight of 12,000 or 14,000 feet, thus far exceeding anything known in the Arctic regions. Still coasting the shore, Ross pushed farther south until he had reached the 76th degree of south latitude, the South Pole being then about 1,000 miles distant. The two loftiest mountains continued well in sight all during this journey, and were named after the ships Erebus and Terror. Erebus was esteemed to be 12,000 feet high and was an active volcano, while Terror was either extinct or tempcrorarily quiet.
On one particular afternoon Mount Erebus was observed to emit smoke and ilaines in unusual quantities, producing a most grand spectacle. A volume of dense smoke was projected at each successive jet with great force in a vertiele column to a bight of between 1.500 and 2,000 feet above the mouth of tbe crater, when condensing first at its upper part, it descended in mist and snow and gradually disappeared. to be succeeded by another splendid exhibition of the same kind in about half an hour afterward.
The results of all these expeditions have now to be considered. What do we know of the South Pole? In the first place we know that nobody has got within 700 or ,800 miles of it. Ross touched tne seventy-eighth parallel of latitude, and in all probability no human being has ever made a nearer approach to the South Pole, but this is less bv 300 or 400 miles than the approach which has been made to the Nor ill Pole.
In the second place, the extent of a possible Antarctic continent has shrunk so by each succeeding exploration that it is certain that even does such a continent exist, it cannot be more than 1.600 or 1,800 miles in measurement either way.
In the third place these islands that have been discovered are of compara
tively small extent, and there i3 littTe doubt that the great southern seas which lie within the triangulation of Cape Horn, the Cape of Good Hope and Tasmania extend unbroken by any considerable archipelago cle ir up to the 6oth degree of south latitude. This vast expanse of deep ocean oilers a source of danger to the explorer which is unknown in the high northern latitudes. Sweeping currents and winds have to be borne that are of a power by no means easy to cope with. On one occasion when Ross was becalmed for a few hours, the dead set of the ocean waves drifted the ships toward a range of huge icebergs, against which the sea broke with appalling violence. "Every eye was transfiixed with the tremendous spectacle, and destruction appeared inevitable." The ships were thus driven on for eight hours until within half a mile of the gigantic icebergs, when a gentle air began to stir and the peril was averted.
In the next place it has been discovered that the climate of the southern ocean is sometimes a peculiarly disagreeable one. In the very middle of the Antarctic summer there are opposing currents, thick fogs and gaies to be encountered, and this in no higher latitude 66w.
In the next place the ice barrier that seems to shut out exploration of the polar lands is of a peculiarly forbidding description. So far as it has been skirted it is an inaccessible, unbroken wall of ice. That land does exist within this cliff of frozen snow there is also no doubt. The existence of volcanic peaks and chains of mountains of enormous bight show this but so far as it has been seen that land is covered with snow at all seasons no human being has been met with beyond f)6 of latitude no vegetable growth, except lichens, has been seen beyond oS °, and no land quadruped is known to exist beyond
Lastly it has been found that between the northern and southern lights there arc some striking points of difference that tend to prove piiTerent magnetic conditions. The electrical display at both poles occurs simultaneously and seems to correspond on an immense sc ile with the discharges from the positive and negative poles of a battery.
Much more has been conjectured concerning this mysterious region, but the above is a resume of all that is actually known concerning it.—San Francisco Chronicle.
Well-Paid Evangelists.
The pay evangelists receive is very small when it is remembered how exhausting and responsible their work is, says Ben Deering*, of St. Louis. I mean the ordinary evangelist—the man who is without a National reputation. I have preached in a Missouri town for a week and crowded the church four times a day, receiving only !?G0 at the end of my work. Of course, the evangelists whose fame is spread over the whole country make more money than this, but even their pay is nothing like what it is made by extravagant popular stories. Harrison, the boy preacher, is always in demand, and charges $10 a iy for his services* whether he is engaged for a week or a month. He is worth about §00,000. Moody makes no charge for his services, but he is paid much better than Harrison. His two week's preaching in St. Louis made him $1,000. He is worth about §'J0,000. S.im Jones is tbe best paid man of them all, but he gives away so much money that he is not wealthy, For nearly a month's work in Kansas City he got §3,000 and Sam Small got §1,000. St. Joe paid Jones $1,500 for two weeks. I gave him §1,000 for his week at Culver Park camp-meeting this summer. He is worth about §30,000. all of his money being invested in Georgia property. He maintains a camp-meeting tabernacle near his home, where he holds a two weeks' revival every year. He pays all the expenses of the preachers who come, and they amount to a good deal of money. He never makes a fixed charge for his work. Sam Small has come into great demand as a campaign Prohibition orator, and is now stumping Dakota. He is being paid $75 a day and his traveling expenses.
That Odious 01(1 Shah
The shah gave an infinity of trouble at Vienna. The London Truth says tii it after the first state dinner he suddenly started from his scat at the table and rushed out of the room, and the Archduchess Elizabeth, who represented the empress, had literally to chase him, in order that they might enter the saloon together at the head of the guests. At the Schonbrunn Menagerie the king of kings diverted himself by knocking at tbe more savage animals with a stick, which threw them into transports of fury, and at the imperial banquet he kept the Emperor waiting for twenty minutes. On the last evening of his stay the Persian minister gave a reception and supper, but to the horror of the trembling diplomatist the shah positively refused to see any of the guests, insisting on taking his meal apart, in tno company of little Aziz, who created a disturbance on the night of the gala performance at the theatre, as, deeming himself to have been insulted by one of the court functionaries, ho screamed, stamped his foot and bawled, "Allez, diable, bclc
A Substitute.
A lady who is opposed to corporal punishment visited a lioston school where the rod was being applied. Before going away she said a few words to the offender, and asked him to come and see her on a certain evening, promising1 that her daughter should sing and play to him. He said he would come, and at the appointed time a boy dressed in his best was ushered into her parlor, and for an hour or more his kind entertainers devoted themselves to his enjoyment. After-wai-d the older lady took him one side and began to speak of the importance of good behavior and obedience to rules, when she was interrupted with: "Oh, I ain't that fellar! He gin me ten cents to cum instid er him."—Texas Sittings.
WINGED MISSILE3.
Rose Elizabeth Cleveland now publishes her own novels. Senator Ingalls is said to be engaged on a novel of Washington life.
Marion Crawford, the novelist, says he can walk forty miles at a stretch. Christian science is said to have gone quite out of fashion in Philadelphia.
Jay Gould has an orchid in his conservatory at Irvington that is valued at $o,OOD. The Grand Duke Constantine, cusino to the czar, has recently published a book of poems.
Mr. Selah Chamberlain, of Cleveland, gave his beautiful niece $10,000 as a wedding present.
An English lady has left $50,000 to be dedevoted to the photographing of stars, planets and nebulae.
M. Barbediene, the famous bronze founder of Paris, exhibits at the Exposition a slock that is valued at $70,030.
Gen. M. C. Meigs says that we shall be found by the census of lS'.H) to have 07,2-10,-)00 people in the United States.
The Emperor of Japan has just taken possession of anew palace, furnished in European style. It cost him $4,000,000.
The Alpine cow-bell has become the rage among visitors to Switzerland this .year and enterprising dealers have flooded the bazars with miniature cow-bells in gold, silver aDd enamol.
Max Strakosch, who brought some of the oiost brilliant singers to this country that sver left the other side of the Atlantic, is in the Home for Incurables at Fordham, N. Y., a paralytic.
An American system of police alarm boxes has heen put up in London. A small district has been served with it as an experiment, which,if successful, will probably be repeated all over the great city.
Charles Henry Butler, who died recently in a camp near Nahma, Delta Co., Mich., was the owner of Henry Ward Beecher's place at Peekskill, known as "iJoscobel." He paid 335,000 for it, but had oul.y livad there since May.
Richard Watson Gilder, the editor of the Century, is a dark, poetical, melancholy looking man. Why he should be melancholy with an income of $-U,0J0 from his magazine it is hard to understand, unless, like Byron, he thinks it poetical, «awpqnmjiuinwwpna«w—a—
5/A
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It yi\ci* Jilt 1st to
ct "i'le to II. 1- iit-r..
To Cn re Kidnoy Troubles
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MIS
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•howing llu* posterior li-
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In CA'.-l* locality, to ke«sp
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pay all cxnress, freight, ete.
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Ivy UrtiTirlstis.
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DR, KILMER'S
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IT IS THE GREAT
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Convulsions,
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crut (phial"'llttshof Jilood to the Jietttl utrves of iii» arm. o. Tiio»e are arrested at once. StrimiS."' »•. of the n, „d, v,-, f,,o Harrai piexm.
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la, n, and Dizsilu'ssareprvMpt!!/"
Of the lower limb.- js,,r Xereoitg Headache and Insomn ia or Xeremts Wakefulness,, it is a, specific. It briny street repose a ml refreshment to the. tired Jirttin. Jt is ]articnlarli/ adapted, to JScyeoitr. ami Jielieafe J.tidies. OrcrtvorJccd Jinsine.is jfleiif tcith a Shattered Nervous
System, require it. J'ersons in.
Sorrow and Nervous from, I.oss of J-'rientls, will find Immediate. Jielief. The entire Nervous Sysfrmis streiif/thened, ami a neierif/or imparted. For J'aljiitation ami I it 11 ri it of the Heart, Loss of Mentory. Melancholy, Avcrsionto Society, Confusionof Ideas, Unpleasant Dreams, h'ainlimj Spells, II uteri a, Smothering fJ-^ear ami Dread of Comimj Danger, Sense of Self Jtestruetion. JJithiIPettdedness. Dots or Sieel befnre the JJyes, Jilotched Face, and. all Despomhut Symptoms, result front Overteorlz, Fxc.esses an A. Indiscretions Jt Mor/i.s' If finders. Jt is in fact—THE GREAT NERVE RESTORfR.
Jt nrotn pt, sit re and safe in its action,, neurit ahrai/s ami as ifbymatfic.arrestinff all Juts. Fpilepst!,
Jrritahlr,
.rcilable. a ml
Unsteady Nerro'tts Affections by first day'.'f use of the. inedieine. A trial is coni'ictionv. No Jirlicatcly (tryani-.etl Nerroits System should ever be u-ithout it. It is not an Opiate! Do' not contain. Narcotic J'oixons, nor docs it tlisattree irifft-the system. For full particulars send for Free Treatise to 3R. MilLaSrSfE ES. 33- 2 931 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Price, 81.OO o.nd 82.00 See Druggists.
FOR
St. Louis, Mo Springfield, IIIs 10.25 Jacksonville, Ills 'il.oti Quincv, Ills
Keokukj la. Hannibal, Mo 2.00 a.m. Ar. Kansas City, Mo 0.20 a.m.
3C
•J, ii
'"t
D.&W.
KANSAS CITY
AMD ALL POINTS WEST. Lv. Indianapolis, Ind 3.5! p.m. Ar. Decatur, Ills 9.0.}
11.00 p.m. 4.00 a.m. 7.45 5.55 7.1'2 10.45 11.50 10.40 0.30 p.m.
I 1J TD AIM Has Parlor Coaches
a a
To Quincv, Ills., or Iliinnibal, Mo., without leaving the train. Reclining Chair and Sleeping Car space reserved at I., I), iv W. Ticket Otlice, 9U S. Illinois 3t., under Surgical Institute, Indianapolis.
Jrio. S. Lazarus, H. A. Cherrier,
tic^^ Ta.-s. Airnnt. C:ty Ticket Agent.
S
to
01 Ti m. I nfltlfl Decatur, and Elegant licelininpr Chair Cars, free of extra charge, and Palace Bullet Sleeping Cars Decatur to Kansas City, lipie en route between Indianapolis and Kansas City, only 1714 hours. I TDAIM
'if
Parlor Reclining-
II r. til, imsil Chair Car for Keokuk, la., passing through Decatur, Springfield, Jacksonville, Chapin, Bluffs, and Clayton, Ills.
"3i! \.
I'KE FOrCLAlt LINE
/virdA
ST. LO
XV TENSAiiY, lJi«irhnmtontN. Y. Letters of ir.miiry- answered. Guide to Health (Si
yivmo«
The Entire Trains rua Through Wilhoat Change. Pnllman Sleepers nnri Elegant Reclining uhair Cars on INitfiit 'Ariiii^»
Maenifirent Parlor i:»rs on »?ay »mina.
SPECIAL PULIRM SLEEPERS On Wight Trains hot. InriSnnapoiyi and Chicago.. closc connection made with all AT bHlimbi#
lines for the West and Jortlwest. close conncctirn m:u!e for all points East and Southeast
The factthat"it connccts in tnc Cer.trnl Union Depot, in Cincinnati,with the trainsof the C. W. A b. jl.U. (B. & O.), N. Y. P. & O. R. R. (Erie), and the C.
Sunday, rsiitis ti« oil Sunday, between ludiaiidpoiw aiti Cinciamati. Throtxs-h Tickets and Bag-p-pe Checks to ell Principal Points can be obtained .it any
Ticket Office, C. I. St..L.& C. K'y, also \i.i this line at all Coupon Ticket Ollices throughout the country^ J. n. MARTIN, G. f!. LaFOLIjETTE,
Dist. I'as:-,'r Aeent, Y.' cstern Pass' IKDIANAI'OUS, :m IjA* AYKTTE, 1KB. JOHN
EGAM, Gcn'l Pnss'r and Tickct
$
ti
C.
C. &I. Ry (Bee Line), for the East.as well as .th the trains of the O. N. O. & T. P. Ky (Cincinnati Southern), for the South and Southeast, gn cs it.111 advantage over all its competitors, lor no route from Chiraso,Lsfayetto or Indianapolis can make these connections without compelling passenetrs to submit a long- and disagreeable oraouus transfer for both passenger and STive Train*) each way. «lai3y except
Agent,
CINCINNATI. O.
N?yriOUISYIllE.MEWAlBAItVg CHICAGO Rr.((Qr
ALWAYS GIVEST ITS PATRONS The Full "Worth of
Bwusctai]!
Their Money byTaking Them Safely and Quickly botween
Chicago Lafayette ndianapol Cincinnati
Koarhdale
VinccQiie
Louisville
f-
Lexington
PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS ELEGANT PARLOR CARS
ALLTRAINS RUN THROUGH SOLID
Tickets Sold and Baggage Checked to Destination. fTTn».
3Iapa and Time Tables it you want to b«. more fUlly Informed—all Ticket Agents at Coupon Btationa have tb«m—or address
Jambh Barker, Ooa. Passen?9r A«t.: Chtcasto 1). BALDWIN, District Tasjeigcr Agt., Illinois St., Indlana^u.is. •,
