Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 4 August 1892 — Page 7

mmem.

1

I

DO YOU WANT TO MARRY?

OrdoTon wish social lettersfrom gentleman and •dies of culture and means from 'all over tlie countfyf If so, Just send on ten cents and receive a Jopy of the elegant, matrimonial journal called 'he Orange Blossoms, which will afford you more tealthful enjoyinerit than you have had for many (day. Eacli number contains hundreds of letters nn young ladies and gentlemen wanting corres? (indents from those of the opposite sex. The Orange Blossoms has the largest matrimonial bujeau In the United- States, through which hunIreda are introduced to each other yearly and pany are the happy marriages thereby formed, the business has grown to be recoenizad by the leading people of flew England as filling a longlelt want in society. One would be surprised to ice the high-toned class of people who do business frith this bureau. It is no "Cheap John' affair Hit one of the leading business concerns of Boston tnd is largely patronized by the better element md by that means the honest, •worthy people who ire working at fair wages and are looking for a frue mate somewhere. If there is a man or woman V.'ho has not fouudhirfor her affinity here's the "taportunlty. Don't wait, as this advertisement

Font appear lonjj in this paper unless there are •any responses. Address: ORANGE BLOSSOMS, 18 Boylston St., Boston Mass. 82-13-yr.l

ROBERT SMITH, D. V. 3.

,rish to say to my many patrons that I have fully recovered from my accident, and am prepared to

\ttend to all Calls Day or Night

have a full set of Implements for use in case they are needed in delivery. Also will castrate at the proper time. Calls for castration may be sent by postal card, Box 177.

Satisfaction Guaranteed

IN EVERY CASE.

I have had over thirty years experience in mj trofession, and fully understand every detail. tESI-DENCE COR. NORTH AND SCHOOL STS

Calls left at Selman's drugstore or Huston's li vry barn promptly attended to.

Ciaclnnatl, jar—JI»«« Vid DayUn JUilroa*

•nly

Running Pullman's Perfected Safety Veatibulod Trains, with Dining Cant, Aetween

Cincinnati, Indianapolis and Chieag*.

TJfs.

Westward.

M§Urbana "1f«Plqua .'Covington

Bradford Jc Gettysburg Greenville

Weavers N«w Madison .... WI leys New Paris Richmond.... Centreville Germantown Cambridge City.." Dublin g&Strawns ^^Lewisville *I)unreith

v'0#en

^Ktfightstown ?^ChArlottsville •Cleveland

Ogden anreith ewisville

'dtrawns. Dublin ... Cambridge City.

New Paris

ROBERT SMITH,

lOtf

Greenfield. Ind.

[AB7 Ik Slim, M.

5*

Diseases mi Wmm«

laaMenea, V«ek PuujrlTuii Mm

ramnnxL* INKAV4

DR.

WARREN R.KING,

I? ramoiAar Am inraioir,, Omoi—Im Oant'v Block, comer Vrn •ni Mala strata.

IUiMmim, WmI

Mal»

•KSBMKBM, m.

rUV

H. BINFORD,

iXIOMIT AT.LAW,

GREENFIELD, IND.

The

Cfcali Cart •a

Day

Train* aad

The

the

Slaaplng Cari on Night

Traina

Finest on

betw«ea

Cincinnati, Indianapolis Chicago, fit. Louis,

Toledo and Detroit.

Chair Cat between Cincinnati and

Keokakt

M. D. WOODFORD, Pnildinl ft Qsniral Manager. B. 0. MeCORMltCK, Beneral Passenger* Ttaket4ga* "•MCINMATI. O

Indianapolis Division.'

ennsulvania Lines.

Schedule of Passenger Trains-Central Time.

21 45 AM I

11 1 l.'S PM I 2.^

AM-1 AM *2 50*5 40 701 7 42 7 55 g.g 8 08 ,"5

-Columbus

AM

*7 05 +9 00 Via j1038 y. !U 26 ton.

is

3 15 452 5M,P6 OG 615| f(i 23

11 40 1155 12 02 1214 12125 12 33 12I3R 1243 1 00t 7 91, 1 201 UWZ1 1 32| 7 6 3i 47 6 5d 151! 8 GB 6 52 1 5S,: 8 15 7 0E 2 01 7 IE 2 10 7 21 219-... 7 3C "2 22 ... T7 3C2 29 8 54j 7 4C 240 75 ^2 44 .... f756 257 9 25 3 05 320 331 3451015

S.ta S. 55* -n cj-rn

G3

6 £8

610 615

1027

19 10 9 30*10 35

AM

956

10 34

Greenfield Philadelphia •V Cumberland

10 58

Jrvineton .Indianapolis ar,

indlnnapolls .lv,

Irvington....

Cumberland •Philadelphia Greenfield

80S 816 83 8 4? 9 0C AM 71 PM

122 NO'N

7 551140 AMI AM] 4« AM AM AM *500f8 00*1145 81612® 8 30 .. 8 40| .. 8 4712 281 '8 59 .....V 9 0312*41 91312 50 f9 20

Eastward.

PM I PM 2M PM PM *3 00*5 ai

IS!

3. 3 3

427 4 3/ 445

536

Cleveland. ..

gnlgtatstown

iarJofctsvllle

f4

58

558

.^5 02 6a 513 f520 6 33( 524 5 36 5 5.. 7 00 5 57 602

8 5

609

100

924 934 940 950 956

1 07 i3f 1 20 124

635

Germantown jpCentreville ... ^iuehmond... fvr'

10101

6501016fl 44 7 0510 30 71510 40 •7 2610 51 f7 3611102 1110 11*20

200 205

W Madison Weavers Greenville Gettysburg Bradford Jc Covington Plqua Orbana Columbus ar.

4 45 455 rt Hd 2

7 30 6 7 5tf pm

7 43

f751 8 0211 32 f81611 46 83012115 84012 24 124! 141 3 30j

("8 15: Si .... sj 8 32 fc f8 44 ®03 8 55 9 03, 915 1002

t* W

5

853 9 48

B.

1120 AM

8 15111 30 PM I PM I

PM

PM

Itfts. 6, 8 and

20 connect, at Columbus for

MibUiirb and the East, and at Richmond for n, Xenia and Springfield, and Wo. 1 for Cincinnati. .'rains leave Cambridge City at 17.00 a. m. a 30 P-

m-

for

Bashviile, Shelbyville, Co-

bus and Intermediate stations. Arrive bridge City tl 45 and ffi.50 P. m. WOOD, E.

A.

FORD,

fcunlluHP, Cwwrri Pi—yr Ifist Frr»B0Ma, JWSNH'A. LWeHatar

PRE-EMINENT JESUS-

Christ is the Over-Topping Figure of All Time.

Brighter Than the Light, Fresher than the Fountains and Deeper Than the Seas •re Bible Themes.

The sermon selected for this week is entitled "Pre-eminent, the text being John iii, 31, He that cometh from above is above all. He said

The most conspicuous character of history steps out upon the platform. The finger which, diamonded with light, pointed down to him from the Bethlehem sky, was only a ratification of the finger of prophecy, the linger of genealogy, the finger of chronology, the finger of events—all five fingers pointing in one direction. Christ is the overtopping figure of all time. He is the vox hum an a in all music, the gracefulest line in all sculpture, the most exquisite mingliug of lights and shades in all painting, the acme of all climaxes, the dome of all cathedraled grandeur and the peroration of all splendid language.

The Greek alphabet is made up of twenty-four letters, and when Christ compared himself to the first letter and the last letter, the alpha and the omega, he appropriated to himself all the splendors that you can spell out either with those two letters and all letters between them. I am the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last. Or, if you prefer the words of the text, above all.

First, Christ must be above all else in our pi-eaching. There are so many books on homiletics scattei-ed through the world that all laymen, as well as all clergymen, have made up theirminds what sermons ought to be. That sermon is most effectual which most pointedly puts forth Christ as the pardon of all sin and the correction of all evil, individual social, political, national. There is no reason why we should ring the endless changes on a few phrases. There are those who think that if an exhortation or a discourse have frequent mention of justification, sunctification, covenant of words and covenant of grace, that, therefore it must ue profoundly evangelical, while thev are suspicious of a discourse whicn presents the same truth, but under different phraseology.

Now, I say th6re is nothing in all the opulent realm of Anglo-Saxon-ism or all the word treasures that we inherited from the Latin and the Greek anc the Indo-European but we have aright to marshal it in religious discussion. Christ sets the example. His illustrations were from the grass, the flowers, the spittle, the salve, the barnyard fowl, the crystals of salt, as well as from the seas and the stars, and we do not propose in our Sabbath school teaching and in our pulpit address to be put on the limits.

Jonathan Edwards preached Christ in the severest argument ever penned and John Bunvan preached Christ in the sublimest allegory ever composed. Edward Payson, sick and exhausted, leaned up against the side of the pulpit and wept out his discourse, while George Whitetield, with the manner and the voice and the start of au actor, overwhelmed his audience. It would have been a different thing if Jonathan Edwards had tried to write and dream about the pilgrim's progress to the celestial city or John Bunyan had attempted an essay on the human will.

Brighter than the light, fresher than the fountains, deeper than the seas are all these gospel themes. Song has no melody, flowers have no sweetness, »unset sky has no color compared with these giorious themes. These harvests of grace spring up quicker than we can sickle them. Kindling pulpits with their fire, and producing revolutions with their power, lighting up dying beds with their gloiy, they are the sweetest thought for the poet, and they are the most brilliant illustration for the orator, and they offer the most intense scene for' the artist, and they are to the ambassador of the sky ail enthusiasm. Complete pardon for direst guilt. Sweetest comfort for ghastliest ayonv. Brightest hope for grimmest death. Grandest resurrection for darkest sepulcher.

Oh, what a Gospel to preach! Christ over all in it. His birth, His suffering, His miracles. His parables, His sweat. His tears. His blood, His atonement, His intercession— what glorious themes!

And how much we need Him in our sorrows! We are independent of circumstances if we have fiis grace. Why, He made Paul sing in his dungeon. and under that grace St. John from desolate Patmos heard the blast of the apocalyptic trumpets. After all other candles have been snuffed out. this is the light that gets brighter and brighter unto the perfect day.

A thousand feet underground, by light of torch, toiling in a miner's shaft, a ledge of rock may fall upon us and we may die a miner's death. Far out at sea, falling from the slippery ratlines and broken on the halyards, we may die a sailor's death. On mission of mercy in hospital, amid broken bones and reeking leprosies and raging fevers we may die a philanthropist's death. On the field of battle, serving God and our country, the gun carriage may roll over us and we may die a patriot's death. But after all there are only two styles of departure—the death of the righteous and the death of the wicked, and we all want to die the former,

God grant wbenthathour

your hand. You want your children to surround you. You want the. light on your pillow from eyes that have long reflected your love. You want the room still. You do "not want any curious strangers standing around watching ytU.. You waht your kindred from afar to hear, your last prayer. I think that is the wish of all of us. But is that all? Can earthly friends hold us when the billows of death come up to the girdle? Can human voice charm open heaven's gate? Can human hands pilot us through the narrows of death into heaven's harbor? Can an earthly friendship shield us from the arrows of death and in the hour whensatan shall practice upon us his infernal archery? No, no, no, no! Alas! poor soul, if that is ail. Better die in the wilderness, far from treejhadow and from fountain, alone, vureures circling through the air vaiting for our body, unknown to men, aud to have no burial, if only Christ could say through the solitudes, "I will never leave thee, I will never forsake thee." From that pillow of stone a ladder would soar heaven-ward angels coming and going and across the solitude and the barrenness would come the sweet notes of heavenly minstrelsy.

There is a place for us, whether marked or not, where you and I will sleep our last sleep, and the men are now living who will, with solemn tread, carry us to our resting place. Aye, it is known in heaven whether our departure will be a coronation or a banishment. Brighter than a banqueting hall through which the light feet of the dancers go up and down to the sound of the trumpeters will be the sepulcher through whose rifts the holy light of heaven streameth. God will watch you. He will send his angels to guard your slumbering ground until, at Christ's behest, they shall roll away the stone.

So also Christ is above all in heaven. The bible distinctly says that Christ is chief theme of the celestial ascription, all the thrones facing his throne, all the palms waved before his face, all the crowns down at his feet. Cherubim to cherubim, seraphim to seraphim, redeemed spirit to redeemed spirit shall recite the Savior's earthly sacrifice.

Stand on some high hill of heaven, and in all the radiant sweep the most glorious object will be Jesus. Myriads gazing on the scars of his suffering, in silence first, afterward breaking forth into acclamation. The martyrs, all the purer for the flame through which they passed, will say, "This is Jesus, for whom we died." The apostles, all the happier for the shipwreck and the scourging through which they went, will say, "This is the Jesus whom we preached at Corinth, and at Cappadocia, and at Antioch, and at Jerusalem. Little children clad in white will say, "This is the Jesus who took us in his arms and blessed us, and when the storms of the world were too cold and loud brought us into this beautiful place." The multitudes of the bereft will saj', "This is the Jesus who comforted us when our heart broke." Many who had wandered clear off from God and plunged into vagabondism, but were saved by grace will say: "This is the Jesus who pardoned us. We were lost on the mountains, and be brought us home. We were guilty,and he made us white as snow." Mercy boundless, grace unparalleled. And then, after each one has recited his peculiar deliverances and peculiar mercies, recited them as by solo, all the voices will come together in a great chorus, which shall make the archer echo and re-echo with the eternal reverberation of gladness and peace and triumph.

Edward I was so anxious to

go

to

the Holy Land that when he was about to expire he bequeathed

$160,-

000 to have his heart after his decease taken to the Holy Land in Asia Minor, and his request was complied with. But there are hundreds to-day whose hearts are already in the holy land of heaven. Where your treasures are there are your hearts also. John Bunyan, of whom 1 spoke at the opening of the discourse, caught a glimpse of that place, and in his quaint way he said: 'And I heard in my dream, and lo! the bells of the city rang again for joy and as they spened the gates to let in the men looked in after them, and lo! the city shone like the sun, and there were streets of gold, and men walked on them, harps in their hands, to sing praises with all and after that they shut up the gates which when 1 had seen I wished myself among them!"

PEOPLE.

Senator Sawyer, though one of the richest, is one of the least ostentatious men in Congress. |A niece of the late James Russell Lowell, Miss Ruth Burnett, is soon to become a sister of charity.

Maj.-Gen. George R. Snowden, who is now in command of the Pennsylvania trooDs at Homestead, saw service during the great strike of 1887.

Minister Lincoln resumption of his homes," open to all iting London cards.

announces the periodical "at Americans vis-

and presenting their

The Salvation Army publishes sixty-one weekly newspapers and five monthly magazines, with a total annual circulation of 45,000,000 copies.

Bernhardt is making her platas to stay in London for several months more. Next winter she will give an xhibition ofpaintingsaudsculpture

Tlie Indian as a Gambler.

But to tell how the noble red man hazards his wealth, says the Piedmont exposition reporter of the Atlanta Constitution. I walked over to where a crowd of people—red, white and bl^ck—were gathered, all seemingly deeply interested in something- that was transpiring in their midst. Seated in a circle round an old red blanket were ten or a dozen Indians, while others, including squaws, stood up at the outer edge of trie'circle. All were bedecked with paints, and feathers, and beads, and jewelry of all descriptions. The only sound was the rattle and jingle of the silver, with an occasional low exclamation from one of the players. The Indians all had money in their hands, which they threw promiscuously into the center of the blanket. Then the dealer, who in addition to his warpaint and decorations wore a pair of green goggles, would cut his cards, throwing them all around the circle. When this was completed the players each reached over and took part of the pile. At least, the winners took it. The game is so intricate and complicated that very few besides the Indians know how it is played. They call it monte, but Dr. Strom, 'the interpreter, who has spent his life among the Indians has never been able to learn bow to play it. It is simply wonderful to see how the Indians keep track of their several coins after they have been thrown in the pile and mixed up. Occasionally an Indian standing several fards away on the outer edge of the crowd will throw in 25 cents or $1, the amount of his winning being decided by the size of his stake.

An Educated Snake.

"You. remember me telling you about that time when caught so many three-foot pickerel that the boat sunk and I lost 'em and had to swim half a mile ashore?'' said he as he sat down blithely on the desk. ••Well, about a month after that I caught a water moccasin while fishing one day and took it and tamed it and made it a pet. You know how fond water moccasins are of, sun fish? Well, I trnined this snake so that all I had to do was to tie a string to its tail and turn it loose in the river and it would go forth and catch a lot of sun fish, wrapping itself around them like twine around a bundle, and when it had all it could take care of it would give three quick pulls on the line as a signal for me to haul up. Then I would empty the sun fish in a bucket and send the moccasin out for more. I've caught bushels of beautiful sunfish in that way."

Dronlcenaesa, or tlie Liquor Hatolt, Po tively Cured by Administering Dr. jialnea' Golden Specific.

It is •saafaot as a powder, which can b« {lren in a glac to r, a eup of eoffee or tea or ir food, without, he kno fledge of the patient. It ii absolutely han and. will effeet a permanent gftd speedy cure, whether the patient is a moderatt tinker or an alcoholio wreck. It has been giver itathoqsands of cases, and in every instanee a per cor* Has followed. It never Fails. The systen •nee impregnated with the Specific, it becomes ai ntter impossibility for tip liquor appetite to exist Cure guaranteed. 4S page book of particulars free

eeiSsr BPEOIVIC CO., 18S Raee St., Clndnaatii Ohio.

CHEATING HORSE

BLANKETS

Nearly every pattern of

Blanket

5A Horse Blankets

/are copied is strong evidence (that they are THE STANDARD, land every buyer should see that 5/v trade mark is sewed on inside of the Blanket.

fStiilllSfl

Horse

is imitated in color and

'style. In most cases the imitation looks just as good as the genuine, but it

hasn't the ivarp threads,

and'

so lacks strength, and while it sells Ifor only a little less than the genuine it isn't worth one-half as much. tThe fact that

Five Mile Boss Electric Extra Test Baker

HORSE BLANKETS

ARE THE STRONGEST 100 5/A STYLES at prices to suit everybody. If you can get them from your dealer, write us. Ask for the 5^ Book. You can get it without charge. WM. AYRES & SONS, Philadelphia-

HOFFMAN'S HARMLESS HEADACHE POWDERS •re on honeet medicine for which only honest, straightforward statements are made. Bee that you ret the rentiae Hoffman's. Insist them. Tli Headaches

on havins

They Cur® AJJj

They ar« not a Cathartl«-

0UBBT* nOUBk

3

ill

MONUMENTS IM

HARBL£ IHD GR1NITE.

I MXm Bleek.

fiixaa*. Ibaot. I«n

Walter 0. Bnunr ft Co-.

IMTSACTOBa or

TITL1,

jroiu^pKr

mmmm

PATENT

AND DENTIST.

GREENFIELD, INDIANA,

Office at Kinder's LiTerv 8table, resldeuee cornel »f Swopeand Lincoln streets. All calls promptly attended to day or night. Twenty-five years eiperienee as a veterinary. 15yi.

HAM & PUSEY,

Manufacturers and Dealers in all kinds of

E E E W O

Designs Furnished. Estimates Given.

Work Erected in any Cemetery in the State.

Fine Granite Monuments a Specialty.

Correspondence solicited with all parties in need of work. All work guaranteed as represented. Office and Works on North Harrison St., near Water Mill.

White & Son,

M. Y. SHAFFER, [iy Graduate

O

Medicine, Surgery and Dentistry.

Oflo* at Jefftles & Son's Barn.

Residence, East Osage Street.

Ghreenfield, Ind.

RIPANS TABULES regulate the stomach, blood, are pleas-*-^lif,-,-

ant to

SHELBYVILLE, IND.

Wagon Manufacturers!

Our wagoas are of superior woskmanship, material the best, and painting unsurpassed. Call aoA •xamine tbem. Also dealers In Buggies, Carriages and the "New Spindle" Road Wagon. The best o* Barth. New work and repairing done to order. Bring us your shoeing and repair work. Your atteor |lon ia respectfully flailed to our repairing, painting and trimming. Notice the workman-hip, beautj Ind symmetry of our vehicles. Prices lower than any other dealers or manufacturers. Respectfully

&

W I E

OR NO FEE

A 48-page book free. Address W. T. ITZGERA/.D, Att'y-at-Law, -•2-52 Cor. 8th and F.

Sts, W ASHIN GT ON.

Dr. 1. W. McGuire,

A reliable

remedy tor Biliousness, moicuea on the Face, Bright's Disease, Catarrh, Colic, Constipation, Chronic Diarrhoea. Chrome Liver Trouble, Diabetes. Disordered Stomach, Dizziness, Dysentery,

Eczema, Flatulence, Female Com-

etite, Mental depression, Nausea. Paiaful Digesltush of Blood

S[ead,

lexion, Salt Scrofache, Skin DisStomach.Tired Liver, Ulcers, and every othor disease that

Sallow

Com-

It lieum. Scald ula,Sick HenUeases.Sour Feeling,Torpid Water Brn.sh er symptom results from ierform-

impure blood or a Sailufe in the proper pei ance of their functions by the stomach, hver and intestines. Persons given to over-eating are benefited by taking one tabule after each meal.

Holders of second-class tickets to North Pacific Coast points, via Northern Pajiflc Railroad, are allowed the privilege )f stopping over at Spokane, Washington, and points west thereof, for the purpose of examining all sections of this magnificent State before locating. Northern Pacific through express trains carry free colonists sleeping cars from St. Paul and Pullman tourist sleepers from Chicago (via Wisconsin Central Liae) to Montana and Pacific Coast Points daily.

California tourists, and traveler* to Montana and the North Pacific Coast,can purchase round trip excursion tickets at ates which amount to but little more than the one fare way. Choice of routes is

allowed on these tickets, which are good for three or six months, according to destinatiou, and permit of stop-overs.

The elegant equipment on the Northsrn Pacific Railroad the dining car service the through first-class sleeping cars from Chicago (via both Wisconsin Central Line and C. M. & St. P. Ry.,) to Pacific Coast, and the most magnificent scenery of seven States, are among the advantages and attractions offered to travelers by ttyis line.

The "Wonderland" book issued by the Northern Pacific Railroad describes the country between the Great Lakes and Pacific Ocean, with maps and illustrations.

Forany of

SON,

FORTYILLE, INDI^IST^.

T.'

A

continued use of the Kipnns Tabules is the surest cure for obstinate constipation. Tbey contain nothirg that can be injurious to the most delicate. 1 gioss 2, 1-2 gross $1.25, 1-t gross 75c., 1-24 gross 16 cents. Sent by mail postage paid. Address THE RIPANS CHEMICAL C031PAN*, P. O. Box 672. New York.

Xhe Grtat Northwest.

The States of Montana and Washing' ton are very fully described in two folders issued by the Northern Pacific Bail* road, entitled "Golden Montana" and "Fruitful Washington." The folders contain good county maps of the States aamed, and information in reference to climate, lands, resources, and other sublets of interest to capitalists, business men or settlers.

THE

the above publications, and

map*, time tables, write to anyG«n-

&X.VT'

(NIAGARA FALLS EXCURSION,

I

THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1892.

VIA. THE

Lake Erie Western Railroad.

"NATURAL GAS ROUTE."

On Thursday, July 28, 18!2, tho Luke I rio A Western R. R. will run their popular annual ex* furslon to Cleveland, Chautauque Lake, Buffalo tnd Niagara'Falls at following very low rates, via: Peoria Sloomington iFayette icklgan City...,

Indianapolis Tipton Uimr

17 50 Ft. Wayne .... 85 Ofr 7 00 Muncie .... 5 00 6 00 Connersville .... 5 00 6 00 Rusliville .... 0 Ofr S 00 New Castle 5 00 5 00 Cambridge City... ..._ 5 90 4 00 Fremont .... 5

Sandusky, S4 00

With corresponding reductions from intermediate points. In addition to the above, the purchasers of these tickets will be given privilege of special excursion pide trips to Lewiston-on-the-Lake, including steamboat ride on Lake Ontario, for 25 cents. To Toronto and return by Lake from Lewistown, fl.00 to Thousand Islands, S3.00. Tickets for the above side trips can be had when purchasing, Niagara Falls ticket, or at any time on train.

Besides the above privileges, with that of spends lng Sunday at the Falla, we will furnifh all those who desire aside trip from Brocton Junction ta.: Chautauqua Lake and return FREE OF CHARGE.

Tickets of admission to places of special interest at or near Niagara Fulls, but outside the reservation, including toll over the International Bridge to the Canadian side, elevators to the water,s edg' at Whirlpool Rapids on the Canadian side, will be offered on train at a reduotion from prices charged after reaching the Falls.

Do not miss this opportunity to spend Sunday at Niagara Falls. The excursion train will arrive at Niagara Falls 7 a. m. Friday, July 29,1892, and will leiiye the Falls returning Sunday mornings July 31st at 6 o'clock, stopping at Cleveland Sun* iay afternoon, giving an opportunity to visit th» magnificent manument of the late President Gar* fi*14, and many other Interesting poiuta.

Tloketo will be good, however, to retura on re» alar trains leaving the Falla Saturday, July 80, too those nut desitiag to remain over. Tioket* wil also be good returning on all regular trains up to and Including Tuesday, Augi^st 2, 1892. Secuxt jetfr tickets, also Chair and Sleeping Car Acco*». W&atUias, early. These dealrljog can secure a» iQtha.4 can wUfie at the Fall* ,£0rfttyB^)nf^matiea oal! on any agent Lgk}

Ii. a4di-«as C. F. DAIrf, Ocq. •C'aw. Arfsnt,

:TRAVEL:

lmrsvullncw

SHO.RT LINE

CHICAGO,

Milwaukee, St. rani, Minneapolis^ Duluth, Omala, Denver, San Francisco,

Portland, Seattle, Tacoma,

Los Angeles, SpokaDe Falls, Helena AND ALL POINTS IN WEST AXD NORTHWEST.

The only line running Solid Pullman Perfected Safety Vestibuled Trnins. The only line running Dining Cars between Ind!*' anapolis and Chicago

Alagniticeut Pullman Sleet ing mid ir'or Cbr% For rates, maps, time tables, etc.. apply tu I. D. BALDWIN. D. I\ A.,

No. 26, S. Illinois St., Indiiinap -Ii-i, In$ JAMES BARKER. P. A., Chicago.

DO

-wJPlImm

you

KNOW

That thrWiaconsta Central an4 northern Paolte jjines run through Pullman Vestlbuled Drawls# Room and Tourist Sleepers witheut ehano* fc* Sre'r

0110

an*

•A

,1

-"'1

cS .-•-a

ifr

iS

4/

ft, *3

'tfl

''M

TOu ,/v -Ssj

VY

Wash., and Pertianl,

The train know* aa the Paalfle Express Umtm }P* ""pplflcent naw Grand Central Passenger Chicago, aver/ day at 10:45 p. m.

P*r tickets, Wrtha in Tourist orPnllaua Ue«»