Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 29 October 1891 — Page 6
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His Encounter With a Bear in the Shadow. He had been telling her some of his hunting experiences. "And did you ever really encounter a bear?" she asked. "Yes," he said, modestly, "but the Btory is scarcely worth relating1. I remember it was a bright, frosty night, and I had become separated from my companions. I was walking along briskly, not in the mood for excitement at all, but rather thoughtful aud unobservant. I had been walking in the light for some time, but turned for a moment into the shadow, when suddenly my hand brushed against something soft. I started, stopped, and there, so close that I had actually touched him in passing, was a huge bear. He sat motionless, erect on his haunches, his white teeth gleaming and his fiery eyes gazing straight into my face. I tell you it was close quarters. I do not know just what I did, but I got away without a scratch, and left a dead bear there." "Oh, George!'" exclaimed the girl, looking into his face with glistening syes. She said no more, but sho thought how noble, how brave, how strong! as she nestled closer to him.
George kissed her tenderly. Forty-five minutes later George was walking down Broadway, and as he ipproached a furriers shop he turned into the shadow and stood before the jign of the biar bear to light his cigar. "Old friend," he saicl, between puffs, "I leave thee dead again," and he passed on. —Puck.
The National Flower.
The proposition that a. national lower be selected by popular vote has slicited wide discussion. Many contestants have basn named, chiefly the irbutus or Mayflower, the sunflower, he daisy and the golden-rod. Sentimental considerations connect the arjutus with early New England history. but it is a flower rarely seen in many parts of the land. Probably not more than one-half of the people of the United States have ever seen one. As for the golden-rod and the daisy, they are weeds, and quite too plentiful for popularity. The sunflower is preferable to either of these. So long as more than one-hulf of the people of fchis couutry are farmers, and all are iependent upon the farming industry, ft is hardly likely that on a full vote any weed can obtain the requisite number of votes.
We propose anew contestant. What Is the matter with clover as a national
flower? It is beautiful, fragrant and useful. Afield of clover in bloom is a 5ne sight, far finer than a field of daisies or golden-rod could possibly be.
No one of the contestants has such agreeable fragrance. From white clover also the finest honey is made. It is true clover is not a native plant, the argument of nativity being the stronghold of the advo3ates of the arbutus and golden-rod. But we, too, are not indigenous he *e. Most Americans now are of European descent, with an infusion of African blood in some sections. As the Indian has given way to white civilization, so the golden-rod with its picturesqueness will give way to fields of clover. In the good time coming there will not be as many daisies or as much golden-rod or arbutus as now. Civilization will subdue these and replace them with something better. So we had better be a little careful about selecting as a national flower something that is known to half the country mainly as a weed, and that
Is likely to grow less and less, that is not really representative of anything in our national character and prospects. American Cultivator.
A Saving Pastor.
There has just died at Patterdale, in Westmoreland, a clergyman of the name of Matheson, aged 90, and who had been an incumbent of that parish for the long period of sixty years. During the early part of his life his benefice brought him only £12, orabout $60, a year, but this was afterward increased to £18, or about $90, a year, which it never exceeded. On this he married, brought up four children and lived comfortably with his neighbors educated a son at the university and left $8,000 behind him. With that singular simplicity and inattention to form which characterizes a country life, he himself read the burial service •over his mother he married his father to a second wife, and afterward buried him also he published his own banns of marriage in his church with a woman whom he had previously christened, artd he himself solemnized the marriage -of all his children.—London Paper.
Science Always Ready.
1
'Caller—"Doctor, Mr. Divine, the ^muscle reader, fell into a sort of trance a little while ago and we cannot arouse him. Is it catalepsy or death?"
Doctor [a great scientist] "Bring me Tiis head and I'll soon tell you."—New York Weekly.
A a 5
Young Husband—"My dear, after a yur-of unremitting labor and closest •eetoomy we have, I find, succeeded in saving about $300. What shall we do .with it?"
Young Wife—"Well )my dear we both need rest. Let's go to a summer resort ie** at ek."—New Y-prk Weekly.
How Naval Officers Spend Their Spare Time on a Long: Cruise. The wardroom i9 an odd little world, where the rigors of red tape and officialism are tempered by good fellowship or rendered well nigh unendurable by petty tyranuy. Each ship has from ten to twenty officers in the wardroom. Here, often, within smaller space than is accorded to as many convicts in a well-regulated prison, these men eat, drink and sleep. Opening off the wardroom saloon are the officers1 private room—in most ships tiny apartments, barley high enough for a tall man to stand up in and just about long enough for him to lie down in. Sitting at the wardroom table you may shake hands with a man in the nearest bunk. Some of the new ships have larger wardrooms, and, again, some of them haven't. A voyage of three months in these cramped quarters is a crucial test of a man's social qualities. If the executive officer, who is in effect the captain of the wardroom, be a martinet or a blackguard, which latter he seldom is, the ship is a floating hades. Two or three evil spirits among subordinate officers may make a dozen brother officers uncomfortable. Sometimes the ship goes half around the world with the wardroom's occupants in a state of mutual hatred. Perhaps the executive officer is unpopular, and three-fourths of his subordinates never address him except in the courso of duty. Perhaps the perennial war of line and staff is such that the right side of the dinner table finds it eifficult to be civil to the left side. These conditions, however, seem to be comparatively rare, and now and then the wardroom is. the scene of absolute peace and good will. Of course nearly every wardroom has its bore. Perhaps he makes bad puns, perhaps he tells long stories, perhaps he talks about himself, perhaps he rides a hobby. He is soon found out. Indeed he is often known beforehand, for there are bores who have a fame throughout the navy. They have marred a whole generation of wards rooms in the China Seas, going down the Mediterranean, on the home station, in the frozen north, in the tropics. Brother officers study the legister and rejoice to discover that so.me old familiar bore will be retired before another cruise.
What of wardroom talk? First, and always, chaff. The doctor's flirtatious at Cape Town, the lieutenant's little go at Zanzibar, one man's luck at cards in an English garrison, an other's coming examination for the next grade? The little vanities, the personal habits, the petty likes and dislikes of each are known and hinted at. Then there are stories to be told. One may tefl the same story twice in a cruise without incurring serious penalty, but if the cruise be long every man is likely to have spun his yarns until they are known by heart. One man on an arctic cruise, maddened by the "damnable iteration" of long days in a solid ice-pack, actually started to walk south over the frozen ocean. He however, was a civilian, undisciplined by other voyages.
Wardroom talk is seldom learned. A dozen clever, well-educatod, goodnatured men together find it impossible to keep themselves up to a general discussion of literary, social or political topics. The magazines, from one to three months old, are on board, and the ship can muster some hundreds of readable books. These are a resource when a shipmate is ill-tempered or tiresome. You shake for everything. Smith shakes Jones for a bottle of beer, and Robinson begs to be let in for a cigar. Everybody looks on with interest, and all eagerly comment on combinations of dice that have come up a hundred times before.
Monotonous, isn't it? What is the compensation? Moderate pay for life slow, but sure promotion unquestio fled social standing the sight of strange lands the world over, and whatever moral reward comes of faithful service to the Stars and Stripes!—New York Star.
The Church Supplies Two.
The Pastor's Wife—Dr. Talkvvell exchanges with my husband next Sunday.
Thoughtless Parishioner—Indeed! Perhaps I can persuade my husband to come to church.—Life.
A man, last Sunday, was about to lay his hand upon the door of the church, when a little girl in the street said: "You can't get in there, mister." "Why," he said, "isn't this church?" "Yes," said the little girl, "but the preacher has gone to Europe for six months and taken God with him."— Detroit Iribune.
Agassiz's Snakes.
That famous naturalist missed one morning three snakes ho had brought home the night before. On searching high and low he found two, but one was still missing. Mrs. Agassi/, (who was dressing), in putting on her boots, found it coiled inside her boot. Her screams of surprise brought Agassiz, who exclaimed: "Oh, Lizzie, how terreeble it might have been!" "What!" said his wife, "are they poisonous?" "Oh, yes, the most poisonous little serpents you can think—so rare—and you might have crushed the nice litttq tbip°r." Keoollect?on9. S
IS ALU* FOISOSOUS?
Hall's Journal of Health.
This question has caused a good deal of discussion. Alum is used bj many bakers to whiten their bread, enabling them to use an inferior flour. It is most extensively employed as cheap substitute for cream of tartai in the manufacture of baking pow« ders. It has not been considered immediately dangerous, although il continued it induces dyspepsia and obstinate constipation. But the facl that many cases of poisoning have occurred from the use of alum, puts the question in a more serious aspect, and prudent people will exercise caution in the selection of baking pow» ders." "Under what conditions, then, does this substance—formerly used only for mechanical or medicinal purposes—become poisonous? They are certainlJSfrbscure, and at present we can only surmise what they may be. We suspect that the cause exists in the individual poisoned some peculiarity of the constitution producing a (morbid change in the secretions of •the stomach, with which the alum combines and forms an active poison or the secretions may be healthy but in unusual proportions, and that these less or greater proportions in' combination with the alum constitute a poison."
For example, two parts of mercury and two parts of chiorino form calomel, which is not poisonous, but change the proportions to pne part mercury and two parts of chlorine, and we get corrosive sublimate, which is a deadly poison. "Then again we know nothing oi the constitutional peculiarities. Why is it that one person can eat aU kinds of green fruits and vegetables with impunity, while the same courso might cost another individual his life? One person can handle poison ivy and sumac without being in the least affected another is poisoned ij he approaches to within ten feet of them. Out of a family residing in a malarial district, some of the mem^ bers will suffer half the year with fever and ague, while the others will enjoy excellent health during the en-i tire year. Foods that are whole6ome to some persons are actually poisonous to others. This is especially true of some kinds of fish. There is no safety in taking alum into the stomach, as it is shown to be always injurious, and often dangerous.''
The Scientific American published
in a recent number a list of alum and
ammonia baking powders, which is of great value at this time. Following is the list compiled from official reports. Powders marked with a star seem to have a general sale, as they are mentioned in at least two of the official reports.
•ATLANTIC & PACIFIC. COOKS'S FAVORITE. CROWN. CRYSTAL.^ DAISY. *DAVI8' O. K, DRY YEAST. OEM. GLOBE. *KENTON. .PEARSON'S. PERFECTION. PEERLESS. PURITY.
1
$
*ROYAL. SCIOTO. SILVER SPOON. SILVER STAR. *SNOWDRIFT. SOVEREIGN. STAR. STATE. STANDARD. SUNFLOWER.®' WASHINGTON. WINDSOR. ZIPP'S GRAPE.
CRYSTAL.
There are, in addition to the foregoing list from the Scientific American, a number of such powders sold in the western that were not found in the eastern stores.
Following is the list to date: CALUMET Contains Alum. (Calumet Baking Powder Co., Chicago.) FOllEST CITY Contains Ammonia
Alum. (Vouwie Bros., Cleveland.) CHICAGO YEAST Contains Ammonia Alum. (Clapman «fc Smith Co.,
Chicago.)
BON BON Contains Alum. HOTEL Contains Ammonia Alum. (J. C. Grant Baking Powder
Co.. Chicago.)
UNRIVALED Contains Alum. (Spragues, Warner & Griswold, Chicago.) ONE SPOON, TAYLOR'S Ammonia
Alum. (Taylor Mfg. Co., St. Louis.) YARNALL'8 Contains Alum. (Yarnall Mfg. Co,, St. Louis.) SHAW'S SNOW PUFF Contains
Alum. (Mercantile Mfg. Association, St. Louis.f DODSON & HIL'S Contains Alum. (Dodson & Hil's, St. Louis.) SHEPARD'S Contains Ammonia
Alum. (\Ym. H. Shephard, St. Louis.) BAIN'S Contains Alum. (Meyer-Bain Mfg. Co., St. Louis.) MONARCH Contains Ammonia
Alum. (Reid, Murdoch & CO., Chicago.) SNOW BALL Contains Alum. (Bengal Coffee & Spice Mills, Chicago.) GIANT ... Contains Alum. MILK Contains Alum. (W. F. McLaughlin & Co., Chicago.) ECHO ... Contains Alum. (Spencer Blueing Paddle Co., Chicago.)' KALBFELL'S PURITY,Contains Alum. (Ivalbfell Mfg. Co., Chicago.) RISING SUN Contains Ammonia. (Phoenix Chemical Works, Chicago.) WHITE ROSE Contains Ammonia
Alum. (Globe Coffee & Spice Mills, Minneapolis.) WOOD'S ACME Contains Ammonia. (Thos. Wood & Co., Philadelphia.) ANDREWS' PEARL Contains Ammonia. (C. E. Andrews & Co., Milwaukee.) HARRIES' FAVORITE Contains Alum, (H. II. Harries, Minneapolis.) FIDELITY Contains Alum. SOLAR Contains Alnm. (Sherman Bros., Chicago.) PUTNAM S BEST Contains Alum. (Wells, Putnam & Co., Chicago.) CHINA -T" HOUSE Contains Alum. (Noah McDowell, St. Paul, Minn.) TWIN CITY Contains Alum. (J. K. Ferguson, Minneapolis, Minn.) HERCULES Contains Ammonia. (Hercules Baking Powder Co., San Franciscoj) CLIMAX Contains Ammonia. (Climax Baking Powder Co., Indianapolis.)
There are pure cream tarter bakng powders on the market. All authorities report Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder as free from Alum, Ammonia, Lime or any other adulterant. The purity of this brand has never been questioned.
Put fresh fish in salted water for half an hour before cooking it. It hardens the fish and improves the flavor. y4
Never boil vinegar it tencta to a
A Little Girl Artlessly Relates Her l'tpe rieuve Wltli a Heathen. ,,
"Oh, say," she exclaimed to a Washington
Star
reporter, throwing a great
emphasis on the "say." and her face beaming with a sudden recollection, "have told you about my Chinaman?" She was a modest little school-girl, and her question seemed a trifle odd, and so the
Star
man expressed an appropri»
ate amount of genuine surprise, and told her that he had never heard of "her Chinaman." "Well, let me tell you," she con? tinued, and as her auditor did not protest she proceeded: "He is just too cute for anything, and he is so bright that I am sure he will learn to speak real good English very soon, and then I am going to have* him teach me Chinese. Won't that be nice?" "But you have not told ine who and what he is," suggested the reporter. "Haven't I? Well, he is my pupil at the Chinese Sunday-school at the Ascension Chuivh—all my own—aud I am teaching him. You see, we have got to teach them to speak English, before we try to teach thorn any religion. and so I am now trying to make him understand me. It is pretty hard sometimes, but I atu sure that h« is going to learn." "How many lessons have you given him," asked the reporter. "Only one, but he can say several things already and he is real bright. You see there is a little primer book that we use that is written partly in English and partly in Chiuese—just like one of those horrid Latin books, you know. First there is a line at the top, where there are given seme English words, you know, and opposite these are the same words in Chinese. Down below, at the bottom of the page, there is a little story that brings in these words and so he learns. He is very eager to learn, but he can not pronounce some of the words, for he has trouble with his 'r,' which he will persist in calling an '1.' I can't break him of the habit. I said he was bright, didn't I? Well, he is in some things, but he was so stupid last Sunday. The word 'hand' was in the copy and I wanted to illustrate its use to him. aud so I just stretched out my hand and said: 'My hand.' What does the stupid do but reach over aud take my hand and say, 'My hand.' Oi coursc, he did not mean to bo rudo, but it sounded so presumptuous that it made me mad for a minute. But the more I tried to show him his error the more he persisted in saying that my hand was his. At last I took hold of his hand anil said, 'Your hand,' and theu lie did the same for me and said: -Your
han(1 It W!IS a little
ft
Sunday "I suppose he is a high-toned Chinaman, from the legation, perhaps, with Jots of silks and other nice clothes?" suggested the reporter. "No, indeed, lie is not," was tho somewhat indignant reply. "He is not one of those Chinamen, but a real nice, hard-working, poor Chinaman, who washes clothos for a living, and I do not think an}* the less of him for it. I wouldn't have one of those legation Chinamen they are so proud and stuck up they think that there is nothing like them. They don't come to Sun-day-school they know enough already." "Well, do you like to teach Chinamen?" queried the reporter to round off the conversation. "I should say I did. I think it is just too lovely for anything but I don't want to have him think that my hand .is his, for it isn't and never will be," and a pair of very black eyes sparkled charmingly. "I really don't know what I am goinir to teach him when I get him so that he can read, but I suppose that it will be something religious."
Worth Trying.
Softleigh (walking in the Bjstoi public garden)—Look at that, sign "No Dogrs Allowed in this Garden!"
Friend—Well, what of it? Softleigh—I'm going to have o:ie those on my place next year. Th dogs have scratched up everything have planted this season and how nir everything looks here!
Consumption Cured.
An old physician, retired from practice, taving had placed in his hands by an Eas1 ndia missionary the formula of a simpl egetable remedy for the speedy and per iianent cure of consumption, bronchitis atarrh, asthma and all throat and lunf flections, also a positive and radical curor nervous debility and all nervous com ilainto, after having tested its wonderfu urative powers in thousands of case^ las felt it his duty to make it known da suffering fellows. Actuated by thi notive and a desire to relieve human snJ ering, I will send free of charge, to ai vho desire it, this recipe in German [Trench or English, with full directions to reparing and using. Sent by mail by ad Iressing with etamr, naming this paper V.
A. Noyes, 820 Powers' Block, Roche* •fer, N. Y. 10*
HUMPHREYS'
Db. Hgmpurevb'Specifics
CtoOmngUtiMdlMiWiim
IMMMM
Gnaw State iai Sllyp* ItfMta.
MmBnwuUib
0RKKVF1ELD, nrDXAKA
J£ABY Z» BRUNKB, X. D.,
DlseMea of Womtn.
IMUUM,
North Feaaaylvaate St.,
OKEENFIELD INDIA** 81tf
WARREN R. KING,
R.
FHT8XOXAX AND
Capt.
are scientifically and
carefully prepared prescriptions used for many years fu private practice with8uccess,andforover thirty years used by the people. Every single Specific is a special cure for the disease named.
LIST OF PHIHCIPAJ. NOfi. CUKES. PBICE8. 1 Fevers, Congestion. Inflammation... .2$ 'JS Worun. Worm Fever, Worm Colic.. .'2a 3 Crying Colic, or Teething of Infants 4 Diarrhea, of Children or Adults.... 5 lH« utery, Griping, Bilious CoUc....
Cholera Morbus, Vomiting 7 Voagba, Cold, Bronchitis 8 Ncpvnlsrin, Toothache,Facenche—
Heiidiicbct) Sick Headache. Vertigo 10 JIXyKpepsiti, Bilious Stomach 13 Supjprefigud or Pnlnfnl Periods. lli Whiten, too Profuse Periods lif Crnuti, Cough, Difficult Breathing.... 14 Suit It !iou m, Er.yoipelaH, Eruptions. .'» RlieiiiiiiitiHiu, Rheumatic Pains.... ltt Fever and A sue. Chilis, Malaria XV 1'ilcs, Blind or Uioedfng ll {'sitnrrh. Influenza, Oifi! in (heHead
.BoUl ly Druu'i :ot8, or postpaid on rocclpt of price, fill. UnupitttKYa'
T.IasdaiRtvut
IDltOEOX.
Omci—In Gant's Block, corner Pens And Maim streets. Residence, W««t Mats rtnet
ORBBNFIBLD, IND.
J. H. BINFORD,
ATTORNKT.AT-:LAIV,
GREENFIELD, IND.
CURRY ft THOMAS,
INSURANCE LOAN AGENTS.
MONUMENTS IN
MARBLE AND GRANITE.
Boom
ISXm
C.JThayer Block. 15t27
WABTXR O. BRAGS. Jomr
J^OBERT A. GUY,
provoking, but I
hoping he will know better next
P. A. CARD
has
eharge of the city sales of the Creamery.
All
orders given
him will receive prompt attention.
1
A Special Offer.
To give all a chance to test this wonderful Food
—OXIEN—we will send, post-paid, a sample Bos
or lOo. Regular size Box, 35c. GIANT BOX
(size 5x8 Inches,) containing oyer 119 doses, only
SI.00. DON'T FAIL TO TRY IT. Get the Giant
Box first, and you will save time and money.
Address,
GEOKGE GKSKLKB,
X7yrl New Palestine, Ind.
FAEMEES
I am actually selling first-class fruit trees of all descriptions larg3 ajid small for half tlie price asked by other agents for the same goods. Tf you contemplate buying nursery stock, be sure and see me.
SAMUEL E. D'CAMF
Eden, Ind.
-ri
., p»tfua)rlot)ty buund Iti cloth
and Old, ULK.'J ltl£K. KurvnniiVG* d., & iruiun sc., KewYorfr.
E IF I S
|1» Indianapolis Division*
Ifennsulvania
Cnluinlms Urbana Fiqiut Covington
Madison.
W leys New Pans Richmond.
Eastward.
CORCOBAX.
Walter 0. Bracer & Co.. ABSTRACTORS OF TITLE, NOTARIES PUBLIC,
LOAN, and INSURANCE AGENTS.
Room 14, L. C. Thayer Block.
•A-Vi.otion.eer and Fainter,
HAPLE VALLEY, INDIANA.
Prices reasonable and satisfaction guaranteed.
11-91-tf
GREENFIELD
o.
89
Peoria Division.
Formerly I. B. A W. R'y.
SHORT LINE EAST AND WEST. Wagner Sleepers and Reclining Chair cars on light trains. Best modern day coaches on all rains. Connecting with solid vestibule trains ai )loomington and Peoria to and from Missouri river, enver and the Pacific coast at Indianapolis, CinInnati, Springfield and tfelurabus to and from the Eastern and seaboard cities. Trains at indlan&poia Uuion Station
DEPART ARRIVH (PKORIA DIVISION) WEST. 7:45 a. m. 8:25 a. m. 11:45 a.m. 11:05 a.m. 5:05 p.m. 8:10 p.m. U:30p.m. 6:35 p.m. (PEORIA DIVISION) BAST. 8:40 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 6:50 p. m. 11:15 P*
v,/,cu
n-
Fte fall Information oall on or address, D. C. DRAKE. Jeneral Agent, 138 South Illinois St., Indianapolis'
Union Station, or any Aj^ut on the line.
x.,,
H. M. BRONSON,
wv -»Asa't.
1«
Pass. Agent,
\'',r Indianapolis.
Ask Your Dealer For
TRADE MARK.
rEATHERBOlVR is made from Enameled Quills—nature's own toughest* And strongest elastic material. Best wearing whips mada
SJM FEATHEBBONE.
saraf
ftTiB B*
O. M. NILBS, CluuiottMyille, Ind.
Lines.!
Schedule of Passenger Trains-Central Time Wes
Sward
aiTil I
AMI AM AM PM
.lv.
Gettysburg Greenville Weavers
3*g
*540*8 05 raoofasr 7011 7 42j 755!
Jc
2.
3s
808
111 11! 121 12(2 12: 121
3 2
828l
n* crs.
f.l
12 48
|9 io il 25 9 30i*'l 35
lv
E2L 3 A il gs
310$ If
Cent rovJ lie Gerniuntov/n Cambridge City.. Dublin Stnwvns Lewisville Dunreitli '{Jgdon Knightstown Chariot,tsville "Cleveland Greenfield Philadelphia Cumberland. Irvington XudiiiuitpoliMar.
IE!
iL
151 70| 158,'F715
... f&:
956
"147
20® ...
S.P-
J& 210}....
ZZ 223 746 I,
:i f2 22U-
10 34!
$ae rr (9 «... •o
io58^
ia»?
*3 317 329!
125 3451 9 00
1140
I'M PM I PM
AM
iajaa|
4
AM PM
PM PM
AM '4 4519 002 00*5 30f4 Otf 9161 9 231 9 33! 9 461 •959^«
Tiirii nnnpoS i* .1 v. Irvington Cumberland Philadelphia Greenfield Clevel-ind i)harlottsville Kuightstown 'Ogden Dunreit.li. liewisville JStrawiis Publin Cambridge City.. Germantown Centrevllle mcbuinnd
416
1428 439
5 25
610! 4 47 jf500 504 29 513 *520 6 37 5 24 536 543
U»r
lv.
New Paris Wiieys iNew Madison Weavers Greenville Gettysburg 3rafi^»rd Jc .Covington Piaua Urbana (,'oiuiaibuM ar. 1130
MP
3
5 47 559
I9 02i?° ID 12[!5 [10120}s 2 10 25 N4» 1034}£~ 10 40 §-3 10 4-71 £3
C& 5T t9
!i
3B
I 552
6 24H0 52 mis»
7 00 5 57
|10!56j
[602
6 4211 12!"T". 617 6 55!!!il25i 34Si!7 30 6 30 7051145j.350 750 r\M 1717(1156 5 17 29 i2fD6(a4 7 3312 13!,-. 7 f7 4312*23 o* 3 12 341
a
8g &
fg 15i 22 p® 832St f844! 855 9 03 915 1002
8 01
f8 16 8 30 8 41 854 9 53
vM
2071
3 45 7 101130! I'M I ?M PM
I AM
®s. O, 8 and 20 connect at Columbus for Pittsburgh and the East, and at, Richmond lor Pay ton, Xcni.i and Springfleld, aud 'o. for Cincinnati.
Trains leave Cambridge City at f7.00 a. in. &ndt3-30P- for Uushville, Shelby ville, Columbus and intermod iHe stations. ArrlT® Cambridge City
tl-43
and
tS 50
P-
JOSEPN WOOD, J:. A TOF.D, Gja:ral Manager, Gaaeral Passenger Agnnt 7-19-91-"R PITTSBURGH, PENN'A.
For time cards, rates of fare, through tickets, baggage checks and further information regarding the runnin-r of trains imply to any of the Pennsylvania Lines. W. TT. SCOTT, AGENT,
Greenfield, Indiana.
A
Local Tims TASLL.
laHMtall,* tUMTwii Bilww 3 AHDQBXT ud PSOBl*
DKMOV mumUM to yeteU ia nt
Trains Arrive and depart from Ia» dlanapolie Union Station n* Woirm
DKPART -KO. IOPASKSIRE*. MS
a.
SO.
passenger, *fc20 p. m. N* 14 pcaaeagw^
•L MO.
16 express, |11:1A p. s*.
$
Trains aot marked run daOy tncy* IRRJVB—No. 9 passenger, *wm la.Ra '4F passenger,*2:jOp. m. No. Uptfsengec, WiMjS's
OL
No. 17 express, f&10 a.
M.
•Dally. axoept Saturday. No. 12, via Tipton, arrive BloumlMton aSMI a. nu, making direct connection wita C. A A. Luittr&in arriving at Kansas City 8:30 Mi aiorning, connecting direct at Kansas Cttjr
CM
Denver, San Francisco and all points Weafc free Tectining chair can betwesa Vipton aai tfisseori river tor all passengen.
Nos. 9,10,12 and oocaect at Tlptea mainline trains for Baaduaky. BJoomrtgKMI utd all points Kaataad West.
Trains 18 and 17 kave elegant ncUntnn ekaCto «an free to all passenOera, aad make dimi connection at Pern with the Wabsah faat tratai^ for Ft Wayne, Toledo, Chtosea, Oetastt Sew York. nr further intoraaOea In regard to nrtea routes, etc., call on A. H. Hellua, City Faassa* gar Agent, 46 S. Illinois St., or address, Hi
PARKER, Trifflo Manager, C.
I.
DALZ, Auc. Oad'1 Pant, aud Tkt. Aft. INDIASiPOLIS. END.
The Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton Railroad is tHe only Line Running Pullman's Perfected Safety Vestibuled Trains, with Dining Cars, between Cincinnati, Indianapolis and Chicago.
Chair Car* OB
Train* and
Ths
Sleeping Car* on Night
Trains
Finest OO Eartfi.
between
Cincinnati, Indianapolis Chicago,
1.
St. Louis, Toledo
ylf~, and Detroit. Chair Car between
Cincinnati and Keokuk.
M. 0. WOODFORD, President & General Mamger. E.
0. McCGRKICK, Genera) Passenger
A
Ticket 4gtni
CINCINNATI, O
yttiR HEBRAa
^{RLOLACREAM THIS
preparation, without injury, removes
Freckles, lOiver-Moles,
Pimples, Black-Heads, Sunburn and Tan. A few applications will render the most stubbornly red ekin soft} smooth and white. Viola Cream is not a paint or powder to cover defects, but a remedy to cure. It is. superior.to all other preparations, and is guarantee^ give satisfaction. At druggists or mailJ
Prepared by
ed for SO cents. Tolsdo. QWo«
J. O. BRANSON, E
Jew Palestine Druggist
Keeps me of the Best Lines of
Drags, Medicines, Paints, Oils Varnishes, Etc., to be found in the county and Prioea as low as they can be made.
GIT* HIM A -ICAUi" 1012
mf
M).
FI. C. MTT^.4 CO-
