Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 8 September 1892 — Page 2

OITTRIAL.

That's a good way to buy a medicine, but it's pretty I hard condition I under which to MM it. Perhaps you've noticed that the orJdinary, hit or raise

»wfa., medicine doesn't atI tempt it. I 1 I I The only remedy of its kind so rein .its effects that it can be sold on

this plan is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. As a blood-cleanser, strength restorer, and flesh-builder, there's nothing like it ijjnown to medical science. In every disease I "Where the fault is in the liver or the blood, as {Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Biliousness, and the {most stubborn Skin, Scalp, and Scrofulous

1affections,

it is guaranteed in every case to

benefit or cure, or you have your money back.

To every sufferer from Catarrh, no matter jhow bad the caso or of how long standing, the proprietors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh .Remedy say this: "If "we can't cure it. 'perfectly and permanently, we'll pay you $500 in cash." Sold by all druggists.

I E S

Kidney* Liver and Bladder Cure

Rheumatism,

Lumbago, pain in joints or back, brick dust in urine, frequent colls, irritation, inflamation» k, gravel, ulceration or catarrh of bladder.

'Disordered Liver,

Impaired digestion, gout, billious-headache. BWAlttP-llOOT cures kidney difficulties, La Grippe, urinary trouble, bright's disease.

Impure Blood,

8crof ula, malaria, gen'l weakness or debility. Guarantee—Use content* of One Bottle, if not be» eflted, Druggists will refund to you tho price paid. I At Druggiitty SOc. Size $1.00 Size# •Invalids' Guide to Health"tree—Consultation free.

DR. KIUIBB & Co.. BLNGHAUTGN. N.

Lydia E.

A hannless positive cure for the worst form of Female Complaints, all Ovarian troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling and Displacements, also

Pinkham's

Vegetable

Compound

Spinal Weakness and Leucorrhoea. It will dissolve and expel tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of development, and checks the tendency to cancerous humors.

It removes faintness, flatulency, weakness of the stomach, cures floating, Headache, Nervous Prostration, GENERAL DEBILITY, Sleeplessness, Depression, Indigestion, that el in of a in a us in a in •weight, and backache.

All Druggist* iell it, or lent ||p fcy wmil, in form of Pill# or I*ozengc4, on receipt of 91 .OO. liver Pillf, Correliver Pillf,

Site.

Corre-

•pondenc* freely aniwered. Addre«« in confidence, £. PINKIIAM Co.,

LYSM, MASSmED.

£imples

j£RE EVIDENCE That the blood is wrong, and that nature is endeavoring to throw off the impurities. Wothing is so beneficial in assisting nature as Swiff Specific (S. S. S.) It is a simple vegetable compound. Is harmless to the most delicate child, yet it forces the poison to the surface and eliminates it from the blood.

S.SS

I contracted a severe case of blood poison that unfitted me for business for four years. A few bottles of Swift's Specific (S. S. S.) cured me. J. C.JONES, City Marshal,

r\

Fulton, Arkansas^

Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed bee.

SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.Atlanta,Ga.

9 0

•Tutt'sTiny Pills®

enable the dyspeptic to eat whatever he wishes. Xliey cause the food to asjm.siraUate and nourish the body, givo^ ^appetite and develop flesh. Price, 25 fjfc, cents. Exact size shown JJI border.

PILES

m,

"M wti»M wiit t'i pounds, now it in IV

Mr*.. Alio* Maple, Oregon. Mo., writ* WH*

reduction of For circuUm »idren». witUGc. T*»\ O.W.V.SN'i Ufi K. M"Vir.ksr'« Thfuttr*. Chicaoo.lll

*ISH

ffroe*

V&J pounds, now it in IV

ct circuUm »idren». witUGc.

^oWE^:

This Trade Mark Is on the best

WATERPROOF COAT SS3&&1 In the World!

A. J. TOWER, BOSTON. MASS.

[BEST POLISH THE WORLD.

00 NOT BE DECEIVED with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain tlio bands, injure the iron ,.and bum off. The Rising

San Stove Polish is Bril­

liant, 0(lorlcs3{ Durable, and tho consumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase. »3ftS AH ANNUAL SALE OF3,000 TOKS.

THE REPUBLICAN.

Published by

W. S. MONTGOMERY.

GREENFIELD INDIANA

THE

a

Kentucky Legislature, after

session of 231 days, adjourned in August for a three months recess. The people of Kentucky are to be commiserated.

THE

larger number of accidents

and fatalities that occur in hot weather is in the main accounted for by the greatly increased amount of travel incident to the heated term. Biff excursions, heavily loaded trains and steamers, pleasure driving and boating and large crowds are the features of the season. The danger from these sources is apparent and all that can be done is to minimize it by care, prudence and good management.

AN

interesting legal question has just arisen in a curious way.

SPECIAL

fw

Blotches

A

widow, desiring to remove the body of her husband from a cemetery whose managers wish to retain it, has appealed to the courts to compel the managers to deliver the body to her. It cannot be denied that the question involved is a grave one. And undertaking to discuss it from a legal stand point is apt to expose the undertaker to the charge of runnihg the thing into the ground. Strange as it may seem, the widow did not ask for a write of habea3 corpus—apparently the most appropriate remedy under the circumstances. It is really a question of opening a case already closed in fact and in law. The decisions on this point of the legal rights to a corpse and its surroundings leave the whole matter shrouded in mystery.

committees and joint com­

mittees of Congress have been en. gaged for j'ears past in investigating the subject of immigration, so that needed legislation in regard to it might be adopted. Special commissioners have been senfc abroad at a heavy cost to obtain information volumes of testimony have been \vken and printed tedious speeches upon it have been made in the Senate and the House, and we don't knovr how many bills about it have been introduced, referred to committees and sold as waste paper. It has been impossible to secure the legislation that is needed, though the need for protective legislation is very press* ing-

Now that Congress has adjourned, the Joint Committee upon Immigration is to resume the investigation which has been going on for years. The committee will com« to New York and go to other ports, call wit nesses, take trips to Ellis Island, examine the officials there, probably cross to Europe, ask questions that have been answered a hundred times, print more evidence like that which has been printed in various reports, and go again over tho old ground that ends nowhere,

We know all about immigration by this time, and the law that is needed, very much ^needed, for its regulation, could be drawn up in two hours.—New York Sun.

IT

ANA KJil.SlS sivtisinsit. rebel. »mi is an INPALJT.ii BLE CUKE for PILE* Price, $1 at druggists by nxail,. Samples free Addrewa "ANA KE.SIS," Box IMI'R -NS7 YORK Cm

FAT FOLKS REDUCES

looks as though there might be an exciting time in this country next spring capturing and expelling the Chinese who shall not have complied with the new registry law by that time. The law requires every Chinaman now in the country to procure from the collector of internal revenue in the district where-he lives a certificate of residence, to which must be attached his photograph. The certificate will be, in effect, a license to remain in the country, and the photograph will be an identification. A second copy of the photograph must be attached to the application, and a third must be filed in the collector's office. All Chinamen found without certificates after next May are to be summarily arrested and sent to China. No arrangements are made to induce Chinamen to comply with the law, and no effort will be made to call their attention to its provisions. They are supposed to inform themselves as to its requirement and to comply with then^ and failure to dq so will involve the penalty of expulsion From the country. It is highly probable that a great many Chinese now in the country will fail to comply with the law, and that after May 5 many of them will have to be sent out of the country. The scenes attending a wholesale expulsion of this kind may prove quite exciting. and about that time we may look for some retaliatory measures by

C!U»P

AN OUTRAGE ON THF. SEA.

Sealing Schooners Seized by a

Russian Vessel.

The Craws Subjected to Indignities and Held In Frl*on, and Their Boats Confiscated— International

Trouble Possible.

Tho American bark Majestic, from Pe« tropaulovski, reached Victoria, Ii. C., on tho 31st. Aboard of her were the captains and crews of the four sealing schoonefa— Rosie, Olson, Ariel and Wjllio McQowiin» flying tho British flag, and tho American ichooner, C. H. White, of San Francisco. These four were scaling off Copper Island, about forty and fifty miles, during tho latter part of July, when the Russian ^ar ship Scabraka. mounting sixtcon gans and the fur company's steamer Kodlalr, bearing tho Governor of Bering Island, rounded them up ono by one, sent the Bchooners to bo hold at Petropaulovski, and made the captains and crews prisonnrs. The former objected to .tho seizures^ claiming they were free men on free water, whereupon the marine pricked them with tho point of their bayonets and informed them that there was such a place as iflborla for those who spoke too loudly of freedom.

Both tho British and American skippers recognized that it was no time for talking. Still they ventured to protest that they were away outside tho three-mile limit, and were met with tho astounding information from the officers of the Seabralca "Russia is sovereign over tho water a thousand miles from her shores." Tho captain of tho Russian cruiser based his action on the ground that Russia exercised jurisdiction over all tho land and water westward of tho line of demarkation. After being taken aboard the Scabraka the masters of tho schooners were asked to sign a paper written in Russian and explained by the interpreter as an acknowledgment that hi) had been sealing in Russian waters. The skippers protested and were told that those who did not sign would be sent to Vladivostock to bo court-martialed, and then sent to the Siberian mines. Under compulsion the captains signed and they and the crews then underwent a taste of Russian prison life, twonty-one of them being kept for days in a room 11x11 feet, with a leaky roof and a broken floor.

Tho men wore finally turned out, and the Majestic coming that way, a contract was ontcrcd into for transportation to American or British soil, and in tho evening tho prisoners were shipped away on board, no particular effort being made by the guards to detain them. The Majestic sailed at night, and the next morning the Seabraka started out on another hunting cruise, tho schooners being the game sought. _•

t'

QUARANTINE FOR TWENTY DAYS.

United States Forts Closed by Order of the President.

To collectors of customs, medical jpfficers of the Marino Hospital servictMpirelgn steamship companies, State aud local boards of health:

It having been officially declared that cholera is prevailing in various portions of Russia, Germany and France, and at certain ports in Great Britain, as well as in Asia and it having been made to appear that immigrants in largo numbers are coming to the United States from the infected districts aforesaid, and that they and their personal effects are liable to introduce cholera into the United States, and that vessels conveying them are thereby a direct menace to tho public health and it having been further shown that under tho laws of the several States quarantine detentions may bo imposed upon these vessels a sufficient length of time to insure against the introduction of contagious diseases, it is hereby ordered that no vessel from any foreign portcarrving immigrants shall be admitted to enter any port of the United States until said vessel shall have undergone aquarentine detention of twenty days (unless such detention is forbidden by the laws of the State or the regulations made thereunder), and of such greater number of days as may be fixed in each special caso by tho Stato authorities.

This circular to tako immediate effect except in caso of vessels afloat at this date, which wili be made tho subject of special consideration upon due application to this department.

WALTEK WYMAN,

Supervising Surgeon-General U. S. Ma* rino Hospital Service. CAARLEB FOSTER, CM

Secretary of tho Treasury.

Approved. BENJAMIN HAKKISON.

IN NEW YORK HARBOR.

The Yellow'Flag Flies From the Sloravla —Other Vessels Under Suspicion.

NEW YORK, Sept. 1.—Tho steamship Moravia, which arrived from HambUrgt on Tuesday night, having had

ed to determine whether the disease Is of tho true Asiatic typo. WASHINGTON, Aug. 31.—Tho following .dispatch was received at the State Depart* mentfrom the United States'consn] at Glasgow: "Cholera outbreak here among Russlaq emigrants for America.

There wero 800 new cases of cholera and 317 deaths from tho disease reported on the 31st from Hamburg.

The British and American eensuls at ,Havro do not regard the situation as alarming. As a matter of precaution the American consul appointed a committee of physicians to inspect all outgoing At Iantic steamers. Tho Minister of the In* terior has ordered every possible facility to bo extendod to the foreign consuls in 'the matter of abode and extent of the disease and its progress. The weather appears to have no effect on tho epidemic. Yesterday there was a marked change in the weather at Havre, it being cold and windy yet both the cases of the cholera and tho doaths "from this disease were more numerous than ever. Sixty fresh cases of cholcra have been found there today and twenty-four cases have ended fatally.

Twenty one fresh cases of cholera were reported in Paris Wednesday. The»*e wero ten doaths from the disease.

It is reported that a genuine case of cholera has been discovered in a tenement h3USo in Now York. ^'.implanting Fruit Trees«

A continual caution is kept before planters to look out particular^ for an abundance of fibrous roots. It should not be forgotten that fibers are only annual they serve as feeders for the year, and at the end of the year die away just as leaves do. Among these fibers a very small proportion become permanent roots. It should be a much greater care to have plants with an abundancp of two or three old roots, that are young, active and vigorous, than mere fibers. If this is understood, all right but very often the worst thing a tree can Lave is too many fibers. When over abundant they prevent the earth from getting near the active roots, and as they die away before the season is over they make a vacuum which is of no value whatever to the plant. The earth thould be packed in tight around tho energetic roots, and not merely around the small fibers. In regard to the evergreen trees, it is a common thing to have transplanted hemlock spruces, Norway spruces and other similar plants with a very large mass of fibers, die. Th« reason is the one we have already given, that so dense a mass prevents tho earth from getting around the real roots, that should be properly so called. It may be again impressed in a brief paragraph that what is wanted i3 an abundance of two or three-year-old roots to a tree, and not mere annual fibers.—Meehan's Monthly.

There are said to be over 23,000 Indians in the United States who can read English, and over 10,000 who can read Indian languages.

THE MARKETS.

Oats—No.3 white,

10.50

twenty-

two deaths from cholera among her passengers during the trip, was ordered this morning down to the lowor quarantine, two miles south of Swinburne Island. She lay in Gravesend Bay last night, and at daybreak hoisted tho yellow flag, warning all vessels to giyo her a wide berth. No new cases of disease have broken out among her passengers. Dr. Tulmage.after working among the vessols in tho upper quarantine this morning, visited tho Moravia. He was met by Captain Shieie and the ship's doctor, and the three made a tour of the ship. The two women who wqiQ attacked with the disease on the vbyago here wero found to be on a fair road to recovery. They are convalescing in an isolated part of the ship. Tho Moravia's passengers will receive a bath this afternoon. Tho steamer will remain b. low Swinburno Island until the health officers are certain that all trace of tho plague is removed from her. CHOLER A-STEICKKN EMIGRANTS DETAINED

LIVERPOOL, August 31.—Four Russian emigrants, who were to sail hence for America, were to-day stricken with the pestilence. They were at once removed to/ hospital, whort tkoy are closely watcfo

A

INDiAirA.POrjti .JSept. S. 18311

AH Quotation* for XudUuapolii wliou aot ap4oilla.l 6 BAIN. Wheat—No. 2 red, 71c No. 3 red, C5c wagon wheat, 70c.

Corn—No.lwhite, 51c Ivo.3 white. 51c white mixed, 4Sc Ho. 3 white, 48v«r0e, No. 2 yellow, 47£c No. 3 yellow, 47c No 2 mixed, 48c No. 3 mixed, 47c: oar, 48c.

36c No. 3

No. 3,

ClilCi'KO 3 r'd 754 Cincinnati— 2 r'd 734 St.. Louis 2 r'd 77 New Yorlc.... 2 r'(l 81 Baltimore ....

Philadelphia. 3 77 Toledo 78'/, Detroit wh 81 Minneapolis..! 73U

white,

$10.00

35c

No. 3 mixed, 32^c rejected, 32c. Hay—Timothy, choice, $14.00 No. 1. if

No. 1 prairie, 16.50 No

2 fb.!0 mixed hay, $7.50 clover, 18.00. 'Bran $11.00 per ton. "W lie at. Core. Oats, Rya.

34

01

(»t 3 01 49 31'/, 61 C5 40 6H 58 4,'! 73 60 39 Clorar 60

I 7?J.J

See.'..

52 V4 3 5 70 63!«

mi ........

CATTLE.

Export grades $4 25(3!4 75 Uood to choice shippers 3 8.(a)4 li Fair to medium shippers 3 40^/3 6 Common shippers 3 75ia3 *J0 Blockers, common to good 25(e63 0o Good to choice heifers 3 2()(aj3 r0 Fair to medium heifers 3 C5(a)3 03 Common,thin heifers 1 7f@2 25 Good to choice cows 2 65ca-3 00 Fair to medium cows 3 20 a2 ro Common old cows 1 00^3 0) Veala, good to choice... 4 2'/«5-oo Bulls, common to medium.... 1 50(5)2 no Milkers, good to choice ~5 00®?.roo Milkers, common to medium.. l."00@200

UOGS.

Heavy packing aud shipping.' |3 0@.» S2 Lights i?W~ 7 Mixed 5 0(3r» 0 Heavy

roughs... 4 25(g4 bUKKl'.

Good

to choice 94 0(24 so Fair to medium 0(i|, 5 Common to medium 3 500 35 Lambs, good to choice 4 25(85 oj

POULTRY AND OTHER PllODUCE.

Poultry- -liens, 9c ott young chickens, yc lb turkeys, fat choice hens, IOJ to and yc for fancy young toms ducks, 7c to geese, $4.80 for choice.

Eggs—Shippers paying 13c. liutter—Choice country butter, 12Jin5c common, 8v«.l0c creamery, retailing from store at 25c.

skims Feai»"u.a duck, 20c i#) to. lieeswax—Dark, 35c yellow, 40c (selling price) dealers pay 18(g20c._

Wool—Now clip line merino, 16c coarse wool, 17@18c medium, 20c black, burry, cotts, choilly and broken, 15@17c.

HIDES, TALLOW, ETC.

Illde9—No. 1 green hides, 3^c No. 2 oreen hides 2)^c No, 1 G. S. hides, 4nc X^o.3 G. 8. hides, 3%c: No. 1 tallow, 4c No. 3 tallow, 3£c

Horse Hides—[email protected]. Tallow—No. 1, 44'C* NO, 2, 3^c. Grease—While, 2^c yellow, 3c brown, 2Kc.

FRUITS AN» VEGETBLES.

Cucumbers—~0c ti dozen. Watermelons—§.o@l5 $ 100. Peaches—Bushel crate, $2.50 and $3,00. Tomatoes, $1 10 'shol crate onions, 13j4c i) doz. radishes, I'-i'Ac if) doz.

Apples—Green, $3^3.25 lb brl ono-third bushel box, 3"ic. Cabbage—Homo grown, 91 9 brl. I

Slew Potatoes, 1.15 brl. Ken sweot potatoes. [email protected] Uf Egg plant, I1.G0 0 49*

r! O

PATENT

Greenfield. IncL

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 grjoranteeft represented. Office and Works on North Harrison St., near Water Mill.

8HELEYVIL1E, fflD.

White & Son,

v-K'tf.'ri'v p.- •/.

Wagon Manufacturers!

Oar wagoat are of superior woskmanghtp, material the beat, and painting unsurpassed. Call an! examine them. Alio dealers la Buggies, Carriages and the "New Spindle" Road Wagon. The best 04 fearth. New wdtfe antl repairing done to older. Bring us your shoeintr and repair work. Your attsni (ton is respectfully called to our repairing, painting and trimming. Notice the workmanship, beauty |nd symmetry ot our Tehioles. Price* lower than any other dealers or manufacturers. Kespectlully)

WHITE & SON,

FOETYILLE, INDIANA.

OB

NO FEE

A 48-page book free. Address W.T. MTZUERAt.D, Att'y-at-Law,

43-83 Cor. 3th andF. Sts. WASHINGTON. D.

Dr. I. W. McGuire.

Veterinary Surgeon,

AND DENTIST.

GREENFIELD, INDIANA.

Offlee at Kinder's WTery Stable, resldeuee corner tf Swope and Lincoln streets. All calls promptly attended to day or night. Twenty-ftn) years experleBceas a veterinary. loyi.

M. Y. SHAFFER,

WeriMiy. Graduate

O

Medicine, Surgery and Dentistry.

Offlo* at JafTrles 55 Son's Burn.

Residence, East Osage Street.

iMOfOMOMia

Walter 0. Braw 4 Co-.

AMTBACTOBS OT TITLB, VOTARIES PUBLIC, LOAX, aa4 DtSUBAVCS A*!

KLC. n*r« MMhi

The Great Northwest.

The States of Montana and Washing* '.on are very fully described in two folders issued by the Northern Pacific Railroad, entitled "Golden Montana" and "Fruitful Washington." The folders contain good county maps of the States named, and information in reference to, climate, lands, resources, and other sub-( fects of interest to capitalists, business men or settlers.

Holders of second-class tickets to North Pacific Coast points, via Northern Fai»iflc 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 Chi--ago (via Wisconsin Central Line) to Montana and Pacific Coast Points daily.

California tourists, and travelers to Montapa 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, wh'.ch 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 carst from Chicago (via both Wisconsin Central Line and C. M. & St. P. Ry.,) to Paiflc Coast, and the most magnificent^ scenery of seven States, are among the Advantages and attractious offered to1 travelers by this line.

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

For any of the above publications, and rates, maps, time tables,write to any General or District Passenger Agent, or Obas. (P. Fee, G. P. & T. A., N. P. R. B., St. tauL Minn

The Rev. Dr. Primrose—"I was delighted to receive those east-otF garments for the poor of

my

parish. Il

shows that there is still some hope of your becoming a Christian." Brown —"Well, you see the old clothes man offered me only six shillings for the lot and I would sooner have thrown them in the lira than be cheated like that»"—» &>o«A.

1. B. FUSET.

PUSEY,

&

CHEATING Z" HORSE BLANKETS

Nearly every pattern of HoVSe

Blanket

is imitated in color and

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

hasn't the tvarp threads,

The fact that

inside of the 1

5/A

Ask for

and

so lacks strength, and while it sells for only a little less than the genu* ine it isn't worth one-half as much.

5A

Horse Blanket

are copied is strong evidence that they are THE STANDARD, and every buyer should see that the trade mark is sewed oa the inside of the Blanket.

iFive Milei8S§ .BossHi^ Electric Extra Test Baker

I

HORSE BLANKETS

ARE THE STRONGEST. IOO 5/A STYLES

at prices to suit everybody. If you can't get them from your dealer, write us. Ask fot the 5/A

Book. You aan get it without charge. WM AYRES & SONS, Philadelphia,

rpHE IUPASS TABOLES regulate the stomach, 1 liver and bowels, pift-lfy tho blood, aro pleasant to take, safe and always effectual. A reliable a, B:

betes. Disordered Stomach, Dizzinesa, Dysentery, Dyspepsia, Eczema, ^Flatulence, Female ComJUUiCiUU) A |»»1UVUVV| WH*

Iknte. Foul Breath, Headache, Heartburn, Hives, "ice. Kidney Complaints, Lirer Troubles,

Mental Depression, Nausea,

Jaundice, Loes of Appc Nettle Itash, tion. Pimples to the Head, plexion. Salt Head. Scrofiwhe, Skin DisStomach,

Tired

Liver, Ulcers, and eyerj- oth-

Painful DigceRush of Blood Sallow Com Rheom, Scald ula, Sick Headcases.Sour Feeling,Torpid Water Brash er symptom esulta from

to ~_

impure blood or a failure in the proper perforn^ ance of their functions by the stomach, liver and intestines. Persons given to over-eating *re benefited by taking one tabule after each meal. A continued use of the Ripana Tabulesis the surest euro foi* obstinate constipation. They contain nothing? that can be injurious to the most delicate. 1 gross 42, 1-2 gross $1.25, 14 gross 75c., 1-34 grogs 15 cents. Sent by mail postage paid. Address THE KIPANS CHEMICAL COMPANY, P. O. Box 672. New York.

TRAVEL

Y2A. THB

the short LINE

10

CHICAGO,

Milwaukee, St. Taul, Minneapolis Duluth, Omal a, Denver, San Francisco,

j. **'u

Portland, Seattle, Tacoma,

Los Angeles, Spokane Falls, Helen* A2TD ALL POIXTS I2» WEST ASD NORTHWEST.

The enly line running Solid Pullman*Perfected Safety V«*tibuled Trains. The only line running Dining Car* between Mk anapolis nnd Chicago.

Mcgnlllcent Pullman Sleeping nnd Parlor Cfciq For ratei, map*, time tubles, etc., apply to I. D. BALDWIN, D. P. A.,

No. 26, 8. Illinois St., indianapottt, In^ JAMES BARKER, O. P. A., Chicago*

OO YOU

j-

KNOW

4011

"„S." tU

That the Wisconsin Ontral and northern Ptolfle I.ir.ei run through Pullman Vectibuled Drawing Room and Touriat 81eepers without change W rwe$n Chicago and Tacoma, Waah., and Pertlani. ")ie.

The train knows aa the Paetfle Expreas learn ihe magnificent new Grand Central Paaaenger Mi** don, Chicago, every day at 10:45 p.

at.

For ticket*, bertha in Touriat er Pullman Sleep* IN, apply to GEO. THOMPSON, City Paaaoager and Ticket Ageat,

«rt» SM Clark M. 7. J. KO»T, Depet Ticket Agent, OnuU C—UM hmajw Stathet,