Indianapolis Journal, Volume 53, Number 87, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 March 1903 — Page 8
THE INDIANAPOLIS
VITAL STATISTICSf-MARCH 27. Ilirtli. J. aad D. Rush, 2T Cushion, boy. F. and . Klln. 17 East Palmer. glrL l and D. Mofcl. 71) Huron. lrl. C. W. anl G. Hackelman. Irvington, girl. A. and M. Ills tow. 12 .8 Hoyt. boy. W. A. an.l I. Hrooks-. Kast North, boy. I. Y. and T. l;arnhill. 111 JSlalne, glrL P. and L. I.TUj". Camp. girl. E. and D. liurk. II Douglass, boy. Death. Terrence Murphy, sixty. 4H Blake, locomotor Henry L. Wstal. feventy-two, 613 Fort Wayne, heart insufficiency. John Toben, thirty-nine. 732 South West, gastritis. . F. V. Eidy, sixty-two. 2104 Central, heart disease. . Alexander Mitchell, fifty. Ml North Liberty, tuberculoses. A. W. Mulbn, ninety-one, 2401 East Michigan, senility. ' FIXEHAL NOTICE. SMaARThe'rm from horn cf her mother. Mrs. Crowe, Maywood. Monday at 2 p. m. Friends invited. Burial at Crown Hill.
JIONL'MENTS. MONUMENTS-Krumshleld. 212 E. Ohio st. MONUMENTS M. H. Farrell, ZU West Washington St. New 'Phone 2I1S. MONUMENTS IL J. GuDFIlEY, ?47 Massachusetts av.; lowest prices. 'Phone. Black 7552. MONUMENTS-A. DIENF.il. Hi E. Washington. TL 2ii. Branch works E. entrance Crown HilL FUNERAL DIRECTORS. TUTEWILER & SON. Undertakers. 12J W. Market st. TeL 211 New nL ADAMS & KRIEGER. Main 1154. Funeral directors, 15 N. 111. Ladyttendant. JOIIN'SOy, IIASSLeR & GEORGE. 257 Massachusstts it. New 'Phone 63. Old Main 1430. DOTH 'PHONES 2-0. C. E. KREOELO SELLS A BURGLAR-PROOF VAULT THAT GHOULS CANNOT BREAK. 223 N. DELAWARE ST. FLAN NEU & BUCHANAN (Licensed embahners.) Can ship diphtheria and scarlet ferer. Lady embalmer for ladies and children. 30 N. Illinois etieet. Telephon 64L new or old. JOURNAL BUSINESS DIRECTORY. FUNERAL DIRECTORSFRANK BLANCH A HD. 99 N. Delaware st. Tel. 41L Lady attendant FLORISTS BERTERMANN BROS., New No. 241 Mass. av.. 228 N. DeL at. TeL S40. BALE AND LIVERY STABLES HORACE WOOD. (Carriages. Tran, Buckboards, etc. 2i Circle. Tel. 1007. THE PEERLESS FOUNDRY, 710-18 E. Maryland, manufactures stove repairs and do repairing. FINANCIAL. FINANCIAL Insure with FRANK SAWYER. LOANS Money on mortgages. C. F. SAYLE3 & CO.. 127 East Market street. FINANCIAL Money to loan; private funds; lowest rate. D. V. COFFIN, 42 Lombard. FINANCIAL 5 per cent, money on Indianapolis city property, or on city property in any county seat town, or on farm property anywhere In Indiana; we use our own funds; no delay; partial payments. Call or acdress C. N. WILLIAMS & CO., 8-10 E. Market st. NOTICE. NOTICE City chimney sweep; flues cleaned, repaired; chimney doctor. 34 E. Ohio. New 'Phone 1708. NoaiC& JOSEPH GAUDNEH. gaivaauea Iron cornices and skylights; tin. Iron, steel and , slate rooflng and hot air furnaces. 29 Kenlucky ave. Telephone 322. STORAGE. STORAGE INDPLS. WAREHOUSE CO., . W. E. Kurt. Pres. H. A. Crossland, Mgr. zii-it-i . rtnn. leiepnone lö-ii. We STORE. PACK and HAUL. STORAGE Th Union Transfer and Storage Company, corner East Ohio st. and Union tracks; only first -class storage solicited. Crating and packing. 'Phones 725. legal advertisements. ot7ciT"oT; Notice is hereby given that the undersigned lias duly qualified as administrator of estate of Anna M. Schilllneer. late of Marinn - emmtv Indiana, deceased. Said estate Is supposed to be solvent. LGÜ E. YUNCKER. - NOTICE OK APPOINTMENT Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned has duly qualified as administrator of estate ct i-;iixa i. oru, late or aiarion county. Indiana. neceasen. oaiu esiaie is supposeu to De solvent. NO. 5716. W1LUAJI M. LOCKE v NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT. Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned has duly qualified as administrator of estate of Maria u& iwu luumj, luuuiiui, UcCCaScQ. emu rs.Jiv i tunjicu tu ue suivcni. No. 66SÄ. JOHN E. WHITNEY. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT7 ! Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned h duly qualified as administrator of estate of Chris tina h Kesener, iate or Marion county, Indiana, uevrcuou. caiu rniaiu is suyjiuwu 10 le Solvent No. 5631. CHARLES F. W. STAHLHUT. NOTICE OF APP01NT3IENT. Notice la hereby given that the undersigned has duly qualified as administrator de bonis non of estate or buitne mn, late or .Marlon county, Indiana, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be fOivenL ALBERT It. HENRY. No. 5317. Indianapolls, Ind.. March 23. 1&Ü3. The annual meeting of th- stockholders of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company of Indiana, for the election of directors and the transaction of such other business as mav le fally come before the meeting:, will be he4d at he omce of the comrany. 756 Newton Claypool Building. Indianapolis. Ind., on Saturday. April li. lx. ii i- o cioca. noon. aitL.VILLE tuLbsiu.N, secretary. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. Sealed bids will be received by the Board of Fduc-tion of Alexandria, Ind., until 2 o'clock p. m. of April 13. 1W.1, for the construction of a new iiign cnooi ouuaing. in accordance with I'ians prepared by Kramer & Harpster. architects. Flndlay. O., and on file with the secretary of the board. Bids are to be made on blank forms, which may le obtained from the secretary, and each bid for the construction of the bulldincr must be accompanied with a certified check in the sum of five hundred dollars ($500) as a guarantee that If bl.i is accepted by the board contract will bo entered into and bond given as per specifications. Checks are to be on a bank dolni; a regular banking business in Alexandria. Ind.. and maJe payable to the secretary of the Board of Education. The board will receive bids on the same date for a steam heating riant (Blower svstemi tn the above building. Heating contractors are to submit complete plans ana specincatlons with their bid; the specincatlons are to conform In a general way to inose ouuinea by the archl tects. Each bid Is to be accompanied with i certified check In the sum of three hundred dol lars S300) as a guarantee that If bid Is accent. contract will be entered into and satisfactory bond given guaranteeing the successful operation of the heating system. All the bids must contain the name of every nerson intererted therein, and be filed with th secretary pf tho board. The board reserves the right to reject any or an uios presented. A. F. SALA. Secretary of the Board of Education SEALED PROPOSALS. DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE. omce or cuy comptroller. Room No. 1 Courthouse. Indianapolis. Indiana. March 25. 1303. Sealed bids will be received by the City Comptroller of the City of Indianapolis, Indiana, until 12 o clock m. on feaiuruay, tho 2th day of April, lJa. lor tne wnoie or any iart or iiH,mo Indian Ioii9 boulevard bonds of VMS of said city. Said bonl shall be designated "Indianapolis pouievaru lionus or it, win be dated May 1, ana oe oi tne a-nominauon of Jl.uoo each, with Interest coupon" attached: will bear lnl terest at the rate of three and one-half i3Vj) per cent, per annum, payable semi-annually on the 1st day of January and the 1st day of July of each year. The flrst coupon on each bond to be for two months interest only, cr from May 1 to July 1. i:H)X The principal Is payable thirty (30) years from dale thereof, and both principal and Interest are payari at tne tanking house of Wlnslow, Lanier & Co., or ureaier New York. State of New York. Bids for the purchase of said bonds should be indorsed "I'roi'osal for Indianapolis Boulevard Bonds of lvxs." and directed tu the City Comptroller. Indianapolis. Indiana. Th proposal will be oin-d by the City Comptroller at hU otnoe on the 25th day of April l'OJ, between the hours of 12 o'clock m. and 2 o ciocK p. m.. ana saia comptroller will thereupon ward Mid bonds, or. If he shall Bee nt a tart of any number thereof, to the highest and est bidder thfrefor, tut the said comptroller shall hare the right to reject any and all Md or proposals, or any tart th-r-of. and shall have the right to accept a rart of any bid and to award uixm any bid the whole or any it-ss number of bonil covnxl by such bid. exceptln only that no bond shall b sold at less than par nd accrued interest. He may, als in his Judgment and discretion, award a part cf said bonds to one bidder an 1 part to another. Each bid shall be accompanied by a certified check u;.n some rfsponslble bank of the City of Indianapolis, taxable to the order of Armin C Koenne. City Treasurer, for a sum of money equal to two and one-ha if 24 per cent, of the face cr par value of the lnd bid for or proteose-) to be purchaeed. The N.nds awarded will be delivered at the office- of the City Treasurer of Indianapolis. Indiana, on the 1st day of May. 12. and the successful bidder, or bidders shall tske and pay for the bor.-ts awarded to him or them, and his or their omlMlun, neglect or refusal to do so shall l a breach of the contract of bis bid or'pronosa!, on account of which damage shall be retained or recovered as liquidated and provided in th ordinance covering this Issue. Kali bonds are cftYred for rale under and by frtue of the provisions of general ordinance II o. 47. VML parsed by the Common Council on tv,e 2d Ly of .March. 1'ja, and Bj.; roved by the LiyOT on the SM day of March, 1J. CZO. T. BREUNJU. City Comptroller.
SUNDAY CHURCH SERVICES.
Daptlst. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCK-Northeast comer of New York and Pennsylvania streets. Rev. Thomas J. Viller, pastor. Rev. S. Hartwell lYatt. of New York, acting pastor, preaches at 11 a. m.; topic. "The World's Cry to the Church." U. Y. I. U., 6:30 p. m. Evening service. 7:30 o. m irman to young men. Spe cial meetings Wednesday. Thursday and Friday evenings. The public welcome to an our services. Young men especially welcome to the evening services. Christian. CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH-Comer Del aware and Walnut streets. Rev. Allan u. rnu..iitt . t Ksrvlra, tn.mnrrnw at 10 ;4 j a. m. and 7:45 p. m., conducted by the pastor. l.v nnirfct nn.inv nrhool at 9:20 a. TCI. - V -J J 'UUI t. . !. . Christian Endeavor Society at 6:3l p. m. Junior Society at a a. m. Miawee meewns "ui evening at 7:43 o'clock. Every one welcomed to all these services. Episcopal. ST. PAUL'S CHURCH Comer New York and .... . . TTU f eA. Illinois streets. Jtev. tewis urown, vr n Mi a m kAl nmmnnlnn- 4 : Xn A. TT1-- FUTlday school; 10.40 a. m.. confirmation by Bishop rrancis, and rciy communion; y. whfirmatmn of- f PMiin' Mission: 7:20 a. m.. a mm ts v ivii at fe-jw a. s ' - . s "The American Church. s A J ut4 aa. v ff - The public cordially invited. Methodist. CENTARL-AVENUE METHODIST EPISCO PAL CHURCH Corner Central avenue ana Twelfth street. Sermon at 10:45 a. m. by the pastor. Rev. H. W. Kellogg. D. D.; subject, Beauty of Holliness." 'Illustrated Sacied Song Service" at 7:30 p. m. Epworth League at 6:30 p. m. All are welcome. MERIDIAN-STREET METHODIST EPISCO PAL CHURCH Preaching at ii:o a. m. uy the pastor. Rev. Joshua Stansfleld. D. D. At 7:30 p. m. Rev. Mr. Kerr will preach. Epworth T oao-iiA at rt m Knnilav school at 9:30 a. III. Evangelistic services every evening during the week at 7:30 p. m. ROBERTS PARK M. E. CHURCH-Corner Del aware and Vermont streets, sunaay serv.ee. 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m., preaching by the pastor, lr C V. Ilacnn 20 and A. m.. Classes: 10 a. m., Sunday school; :30 p. m., Epworth league. MiaweeK service oi leacning auu Thursday evening at 7 and 1p.m. Illustrated Sons Service. AN ILLUSTRATED SONG SERVICE To-morrow morning at the Central-avenue M. E. Charch the pastor. Rev. Dr. Kellogg, will speak on The Beauty of Holiness." At this service a contralto solo will be rendered by Miss Litta Grimm. In the evening an Illustrated sacred . Fl rr .. mm song service win oe given, ine ymu will be thrown upon the canvas Irom a stereoptlcon. Presibrterlan. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH North Ala bama, near Firteentn street, in pasiur. 1 Rev. M. L. Haines. D. D.. will preach to-morrow morning at 11 o'clock. Bible school at :30 a. m. Society of Christian Endeavor at 7 p. tn. Midweek prayer and conference meeting on Thursday evening at 7:45. All are cordially Invited. SECOND PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH-Corner of Pennsylvania and Vermont streets. The Rev. Owen Davies Odell, pastor. ! Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Preaching by the pastor at 11 a. no. and 7:45 p. m. Evening topic: "Christian Optimism." Organ recital at 7:20 by Mr. Charles Hansen. Appropriate and additional music by the quartet. Thursday evening prayer meeting at 7:45.- Mayer Chapel Corner of West and Catherine streets. The Rev. W. T. Seyfert, pastor. Preaching at 7:43 p. m. Sunday school at 2:30 p. m. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 7:30. TABERNACLE CHURCH-Corner of Meridian anil Vlav.nth ulrt Th Rev. J. Cumming Smith, D. D., pastor. Preaching by the pastor at 11 a. m. bunaay scnooi, a: a. m i" people's services, 6:45 p m. LECTURE. LECTURE Dr. C. I. Fletcher will repeat his est inula,. .Martinique, iuoni x cicc mime, with several new views, in the Universalist Church, corner of New Jersey and Fifteenth sts.. Wednesday evening. April 8. This lecture will be given in connection with the Easter festival and sale by the young ladies of the church. (WANTED MALE HELP. WANTED 500 Men. ladies, misses and children to attend Shoe sale at 110 V. Georgia st. WANTED We want two machinists, first-class. capable men. competent to do the best of work; married men preferred, who would bring their families to Anderson; steady work to the right men. Apply In person or by letter to THE J. W. SEFTON MFG. CO., Anderson. Ind. WANTED For U. S. Army, able-bodied, unmarried men, between ages of twenty-one and thirty-five, citizens of United States, of good character and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write English. For Information apply to Recruiting Officer, 25 North Illinois street. Indianapolis, ind WANTED Person to call on retail trade and agents for' manufacturing house; local territory; salary JW.70, paid weekly, and expense money advanced; previous experience unnecessary; business successful; inclose self-addressed envelope. STAN O Alio iiouü-.. laxion mag., Chicago. - WANTED A GREAT CHANCE. A celebrated manufacturing company .Is enlarging its plant and la about to open many positions to high-class workmen as follows: Experlenced punch press hands; must be accustomed to A. W. Biiss .and Farracute presses. Assemblers; men accustomed to assembling fine work, such as sewing machines, small arms, typewriters, etc. Milling machine hands, profile machine hands and bench hands; hand screw machine operators and automatic screw machine operators, the latter to run Cleveland and Acme machines: tool makers, arm press nanas. meiai pattern makers, carpenters, cabinet makers and all-around wood mill men. Address E. F. GALLA UDET, Dayton, O. WANTED-Recruits for the United States Ma rlne Corps, able-bodied men of good character between the ages of 21 and 33 years, not less than 6 feet 4 Inches and not over 6. feet 1 Inch In height, of good character and not addicted to the use cf liauor. must be citizens of the United States or persons who have legally declared tnelr Intentions to become citizens, aoie to reaa and write English properly, as well as speak It. No minors or married men will be accepted. This important branch of the Naval Service öfters SPECIAL INDUCEMENT TO RECRUITS, as the law PROVIDES for the PROMOTION of WORTHY NONCOMMISSIONED OFFICERS to SECOND LIEUTENANTS. Marines are enlisted for a period of four years, and are generally stationed in large cities, and are now serving In Cuba, Porto Rico, Manila and Uuhm, and when sent to sea have a fine opportunity to see all parts of the world. Pay from $13 to 44 per month. Clothing, board and medical attendance nre provided in addition to pay. Apply at U. S. MARINE CORPS RECRUITING OFFICE. Room 730 Newton Claypool Bldg., cor ner of Pennsylvania and Ohio streets. AV ANTEDFEMALE HELP. WANTED Good cooks; also pie and cake bakers; women. Apply 33 B. Meridian at.. win i t. Si. L.O. WANTED Good German girl for housework no washing; good wages. SPACKE. 410 Duniup I. WANTF.n Oirl tn Vi. In In rilnlntr mnm .v.nr hours, good pay and no Sunday work. Apply u a. -lenuian si., tviiiit. ec , WANTED HELP. WANTED At once, two first-class coat makers C. J. PANTON, 311 Market St., Logansport. ina FOR SALE REAL ESTATE. REAL ESTATE Good lots on English av. car line; and nair cash; balance easy. THE CENTRAL TRUST CO.. 150-154 E. Mar ket st. REAL ESTATE Best stock and grain farm In southeastern ivansas; sw a. in center of oil oe-ii; not leasea. Aaaress v. s. llAiS, Inde pendence, Kan. REAL ESTATE New, four-room house. West Indianapolis; ii.ww; sjw aown, 113 per month until paid for; interest 6 per cent. THE CEN THAL TRUST CO., 150-134 E. Market st. FOR SALE OR TRADE Good 7-room house. S Arsenal av.; $!.6u; Incumbrance Ju0, at 6 per cent.; Daiance casn or win iraae ror vacant lots near car line, the CENTRAL TRUST CO., IjO-4 e. Marxet st. REAL ESTATE A No. 1 location for a doctor, Property In a small town In Vigo county, Indiana, surrounded by good agriculture countrv A doctor's stand for twenty years. Reasons for selling, old age. particulars on' application. JOHN CRAVENS, Einton, ind. FOR SALE BICYCLES. ONE LADIES' BICYCLE ONE GENTLEMEN'S BICYCLE But little used and In good, repair. Will sell cneap. WATSON & CO., New York St. and Mass. Av. FOL SALE 31ISCELLAE0US. FOR SALE Or Rent: Invalid and recilnlnsr cnirs. . Auuiau vaj.. sr jm. Alabama. FOR SALE Typewriters: Llsht Runninsand other leading m.ikes; rentals. t2.H0 rer . n v. - t 1LI zri f ii-r - . ... "Winn. v. m. v,i.ikikv IV, VIVU. AKL. Ill Ü. tf..t. I ... 1 T)k An.. M FU SALE Typewriters, ail makes. 5 up. Machines rented, 12.50 per month. TY.PKJVJUT? )l F25.CI 1 ANG E.J2 Monument pL FK SALE One Dean Bros,' duplex rower pump, inquire . at tne Chalfant. corner of Pennsylvania and Michigan streets. T,lnnhnn. Vai FOR RENT HOUSES. FOR RENT Se list at 131 E. Market: ground floor. GREGORY & APPEL. Folt RENT A nine-room house, 1720 North Me ridian street; mooern. wun suble. J. a I'KLSb, liw r.. aiamri si. OCULIST. OCUIJST-Dr. Walter N. Sharp, dcullst nate of Boston.) Third floor. 317 Newton Claypool
THE' MASTEEV.
BY Copyright, 1932, The CHAPTER XVI. HOW JENNIFER THREW A MAIN WITH DEATH. 'Tis a sure mark of healthful sleep that it never makes account of time. No odds how long the night, 'tis but a moment from the lapse of consciousness to Its re covery in the morning. But this deep sleep that crept upon me as I lay in the pirogue listening to the tinkling drip from Jennifer's paddle was not of healthful weariness. and when I came awake from It there was a dim and troubled vista of vague and broken dreams to measure off the longest night I could ever remember. The place of this awakening was a bur row in the earth. My bed of bear skins over fragrant pine tufts was spread upon the ground, and by the flickering light of a handful of fire I could see the earth walls of the burrow, which were worn smooth as if the place had been the well-used den of some wild creature. But overhead there was the mark of human occupancy, since the earth arch was sooted and blackened with the reek of many fires. When I stirred there was another stir beyond the handful of fire, - and Jennifer came to kneel beside me, taking my hand and chafing it as a tender-hearted woman might and asking if I knew him. "Know you? Why should I not?" said I. wondering why the words took so many breaths between. "O Jack!" was all I had in answer, but when he had found a tongue to babble out his Joy I learned the why and wherefore. Once more grim death had reached for me, lying await in the twirled tomahawk that set me dreaming of my mother's lap and lullaby. For a week I had lain here upon the bed of pine tufts poised upon the brink of the death pit with only my dear lad to hold and draw mc back. "A week?". I queried when he had named the Interval. "And you have been here all the time?" "I've never left you save .to forage for the pot," he admitted. "I dared not leave you. Jack." "But where are we?" I would ask. "In a den on the river's edge a mile or more above your sacked cabin. 'Tis soma dodge hole hollowed out by the Catawbas long aro and shared since by them and the bears, Judging from the stinking reek of It. Uncanoola steered me hither the night of the raid." "Then the chief came off safely?" I said, falling into a dumb and Impotent rage that the saying of two words should scant me so of strength to say a third. ' "Right as a trivet scalps and all," laughed Jennifer. "He'll be the envy of every warrior in the tribe when he vaunts himself at the Catawbas council fire." I let it rest a while at that, casting' about for words to shape a hungrier question. "Have you no news?" I asked at length. ' "Little or none," he answered shortly. "But you have had some word some news from Appleby Hundred?" I stammered feebly. "Nothing you'd care to hear." he rejoined, evasively, I thought. 'Tis as you left it, save that Tarleton whipped away to the south again as suddenly as he came, and our cursing baronet has made the manor house his headquarters in fact, lodging himself and all his troop on Mr. Stair. From his lying quiet and keeping the Cherokees in tow there will be some deviltry afoot I'll warrant." I knew that Falconnet was waiting for the powder cargo, but another matter crowded this aside. "But but Margery?" I queried, on sharpest tenter hooks to know how much or little he had heard. I thought his brow darkened at the question, but mayhap it was only a shadow cast by the flickering fire. At any rate, he laughed hardily. "She .is well and well, content, I dare swear. 'Twas only yesterday I saw her taking the air on the river road with Falconnet for an escort. You told me once he had a sure hand with the women and it made me mad. but, truly, I have come to think you drew It mild. Jack." Now, though I could ply a decent ready blade or keep a firing line from lurching at a pinch. I had not learned to put a snaffle on a blundering tongue, as I have said before. "Damn him as you please, Dick, and he'll warrant it. But you must not Judge the lady over harshly nor always by appearances. She may have flouted you as a boyish lover, and yet I think " I stopped in sheer bewilderment, shot through and through with keenest agonies of remorseful recollection. For at the moment I had clean forgot the gulf impassable I had set between these two. So I would have lapsed into shamed silence, but Jennifer would not suffer It. "Well, what it is that you think?" he demanded. "1 think nay, I may say I know that she thinks well of you, Dick." I blundered on, seeing no way to put him off. He gripped my hand, and in his eyes there was the light of the old love reawakening. "Don't lift me up to fling me down again. Jack! How can you know what she thinks of me?" he broke in, eageily. I should have told him then all there was to tell. He had been thrice my saWor, and his heart was soft and malleable on the side of friendship. I knew it knew that the pregnant moment for full confession had arrived, and yet I could not force my tongue to shape the words. Indeed. I saw more clearly than before that never any word of mine could make him understand that I was not a faithless traitor in intention. So I paltered with the truth like any .wretched coward of them all. "You forget that I have come to know her well." I said. "I was a month or more under the same roof with her, and in that time she told me many things." Now, this witless speech was no better than a whip to flog him on. "What things?" he questioned, promptly. "Oh, many things. She spoke often of you." "What did Bhe say of me. Jack? Tell me what she said." he begged. "It can make no difference now; she is less than nothing to me nay, 'tis even worse than that since she would play Delilah if she could. But oh. Jack, I love her! I should love her if I stood on the gallows and she ftood by to spring the drop and turn me off!" Truly, if the lash of remorse had lacked its keenest thong, this passionate outburst of his would have added it. None the less. I must needs be weaker than water and fall back another step and put him off. "Another time. Richard. I am strangely unnerved and dizzy-headed now. By and by when I am stronger I will tell you all." Taking a reproach where none was meant, he sprang up with a self-aimed malison upon his lack of care for me, stirred the fire alive and brewed me a most delicious smelling cup of broth. And afterward when I had drunk the broth with some small beckonlngs of returning appetite he spread his coat to screen me from the fire light and would have driven me to sleep again. "At any rate, you shall not talk," he promised. "If you are wakeful I will talk to you and tell you what little I have gleaned about the fighting." His news was chiefly a later repetition of Father Matthieu's and Capt. Abram Forney's, but there was this to add: the Congress had appointed the Englishman, Horatio Gates, chief of the army in the South and this new leader was on his way to take command. De Kalb, with the Maryland and Delaware lines and Colonel Armand' legion.
OF, APPLEBY
Boven - Merrill Company. was encamped on Deep river waiting for the newly appointed general, and Caswell and Griffith Rutherford, with the militia, were already pressing forward to some handgrips with my Lord Cornwallis in the South. Nearer at hand the partisan war fire flamed afresh wherever a Tory company met a patriot, and there were wicked doings, more like savage massacres than fairfought battles of the soldier sort. When he had made an end of his 6mall war budget I set him on to tell me how he came to be at hand to help me so in the nick of time on the night of the cabin sack. " 'Twas partly chance," he said. "A redcoat troop had me in durance at Jennifer House, and while they offered to hold me at parole I never gave consent to that, and so was kept a prisoner. They shut me in the wine bin with a guard, and when the fellow was well soaked and silly I bound and gagged him and broke Jail. I took the river for it, . meaning to outlle until the hue and cry was over; and Just at dusk Uncanoola dropped upon me and told me of your need. From that to helping him cut you out of your raffle with the Cherokees was but a hand's turn in the day's work." "A lucky turn for me," I said, and then at second thought I would deny the saying, though not for him to hear. But this was dangerous ground again, and I clawed off from it like a desperate mariner tempest driven on a lee shore, asking him how he had learned the broadsword play and where he got the antique claymore. He laughed heartily, and more like my care-free Dick this time. "Thereby hangs a tale, I told you how I was out with the minute men In '76 at Moore's creek, where we fought the Scotchmen. It was our first pitched battle, and I opine it smelled somewhat of severity on both sides no quarter was asked, and the Tory MacDonalds fought like fiends for King George, small cause as they had to love the house of Hanover." "How was that?" I would ask, "being as little familiar with the low country settlements as any native born Carolinian could be. . "They were expatriates for the pretender's sake, many of them. Mistress Flora's husband was one of the prisoners we took. But, as I was saying, they were Tories to a man, and they fought wickedly. When it was over the prisoners would have fared hardly but for a woman. In the thick of the fight Mistress Mary Slocumb, of Dobbs, whose husband was with us, came storming down upon the field, having rode a-gallop some forty odd miles because she dreamed her good man was killed. She begged for the prisoners, and so Caswell hanged only those who were blood guilty these and the house burners. A raw-boned piper named McGillicuddy fell to my lot, and he is now my major domo at Jennifer House, as honest a fellow as ever skirled a pibroch." "That was like you," I said, "to make a friend and retainer out of your prisoner. And so this highland piper has been your fencing master, has he?" " 'Twas he taught me what little I know of the claymore play, and this stout old blade is his. 'Tis as good as a woodman's ax when you have the knack of swinging it." "Truly," said I. "Also, you seemed to have the knack and the strength as well in spite of the crippled arm you were carrying In a sling the night before when they haled you into Colonel Tarleton's court at Appleby." "A little ruse of war," he said, laughing and making a, fist to show me his arm was strong and sound again. " "Twas McGillicuddy put me up to it, saying they would be like to deal the gentler with a wounded man. But how came you to know?" Here was another chatice to tell him what he should be told, but the words would not say themselves. "I stood within arm's reach of you that night," said I, and from that I hastened swiftly through the story of my trial as a spy and what it came to in the morning, and never mentioned Margery's part in it at all. "You have a bitter enemy in Frank Falconnet," was his comment when I had made an end of this recounting of my adventures. "He knows you are in hiding hereabouts and has been scouring the neighborhood well for you or, more belike, for both of us." . "How do you know this?" I asked. "I have both seen and heard. This den of ours opens on the river's edge, and two days since his Indians came within an ace of nabbing me. 'Twas Just at dusk, and I made out to dodge them by doubling past in the canoe." "But you say you have heard as well?" "Yes." "How." "Don't ask me, Jack." I said I had no right to ask more than he chose to tell, and at this he blurted out an oath and let me have the sharp-edged truth. "Falconnet has an ally whose wit is shrewder than his. Can you guess who It is?" "No." "'Tis this same Madge Stair you, have been defending. Jack," he said bitterly. "It seems that Falconnet made sure we had both gone to Join the army, which was but natural. If she were less than the spiteful little Tory vixen that she is she would have been content to let it rest so. But she would not let it rest so. With her own lips she assured Falconnet he still had us to reckon with; nay, more she made a boast of it that we would never go so far away from her." Weak and feyer shaken as I was, I yet made shift to get upon my elbow feebly fierce, denouncing it hotly for a lie. "Who slandered her like this, Dick? Put a name to the cur, and as I live and get my strength again I'll hunt him down and choke him with that lie!" "Nay," he objected soberly, "that would be my quarrel were there ever a peg to hang a quarrel on. But it came by a sure hand and one that is friendly enough to all concerned. An old free borderer, Ephraim Yeates by name, brought me the tale. He had been spying around at Appleby Hundred,, wanting to know for some purpose of his own why the redcoats and Cherokees were hanging on so long, and this much he overheard one night when he was outlying under the window of the withdrawing room. He says she was in a pretty passion at the baronet's slackness, stamping her foot at him and lashing him with the taunt that he was afeard of one or both of us." I fell back on the bear skins to shut my eyes and call up all the might of love to grapple with this fresh misery. It was in this fierce conflict of faith against apparent fact that I descried the parting of the ways ior tne lover ana tne nusDana. Jennifer believed this most incredible thing, and yet he loved her would go on loving her, as he had said, in spite of all. That was the lover's road, and I could never bear him company on it. Could I believe her so pitiless cruel as this I made sure no husband love could live beyond that moment of conviction. But at this perilous pass tho husband's road ran truer than the lover's. Richard believed her capable of this hard-hearted thing and. went on loving her blindly In spite of it. But as for me. I said I would never Kive belief an inch of standing: room; that had I stood in Ephraim Yeates's shoes, having the witness of my own eyes and ears. I would still have found excuse and exculpation for her. I stole a glance at Jennifer. He was sitting with his face in his hands, a silent figure of a strong man humbled. He had called her a Delilah, and tbe green withes of her binding cut sore Into the flesh. "You say you love her. Dick: can you believe her capable of this and yet go on loving her?" I asked. He let me see his face. It was haggard and grief marred. "I'd pay the devil's own price could I say 'no to that. Jack. But I cannot." "Then I swear I love her better than you do, Richard Jennifer. She hates me wellGod knows she has good cause to hate me fiercely; yet I would trust her with my life." I looked to see him pin nie down at this; and though the words had fairly shaped and said themselves, I laid fast hold of my courage and was prepared to make them good. But he would only smile and draw the bear skin cover over me. tucking me in as tenderly as a mother and saying very gently: "So she has bewitched you. too, and now there are two poor fools of love instead of
one. But you are stronger than I, Jack. You will break the spell and put it down and live beyond it, and that I never shall God help me!" And with that he went to his own bed beside the fire, telling me I must lie . quiet and try to sleep. I did He quiet, but sleep came not, nor did I woo It. For long past the time when I could -hear his measured breathing I lay awake to plan how I might draw the baronet's man hunt to myself and so free my loyal Richard of the peril that by rights was mine. To Be Continued. OWNERSHIP OF C, R. & M.
IMPRESSION THAT IT BELONGS TO THE MOORE-LEEDS SYNDICATE. Excellent Earning Exhibits of Big: Four The Big Four May Have a Shorter Line to Chicago. The energy displayed in the construction of the Cincinnati, Richmond & Munde extension to Cincinnati 4and towards Chicago is evidence that there are ample funds behind the project, and the belief increases that the Moore-Leeds syndicate, owners of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific road, are behind iL W. H. Moore, one of the heaviest owners of the Rock Island, in conversation concerning the property said: "All I care to say about Rock Island affairs is that the road does not borrow money; the owners who control the Rock Island do not borrow, money and carry loans in bank. Whenever the Rock Island makes purchases of property the financial arrangements are made in advance. Both the road and its backers are prepared for any depression. The Rock Island carries in cash on hand at all times between $15,000,000 and $20,000,000. never has an approaching liabililty, and whatever enterprises it becomes interested in mean suc-f cess." Injunction Against Tax Collection. At Grand Rapids,' Mich., Friday, Judge Wanty, in the United States Circuit Court for the Western district of Michigan, granted a temporary restraining order forbidding Auditor General Perry F. Powers to collect ad valorem taxes levied against the railroads of Michigan under the new Michigan taxation law. Each of the twenty-four railroads in Michigan filed individual and almost identical bills of complaint, asserting that the ad valorem taxation amendment was repugnant to the fourteenth amendment of the Constitution of the United States, because it discriminated between the various kinds of transportation companies. Ail the roads have paid their specific taxes under the old law. Arguments will be heard on May 26 on a petition for a permanent injuncetion to take the place of the temporary restraining order Issued yesterday. The railroads in question are the Chicago & Northwestern, the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul.-Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic, the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern, the Grand Trunk, the Michigan Central, the Pere Marquette, the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis, the Ann Arbor, the Wabash, the Boyne City & Southeastern, the Detroit & Mackinac, the South Haven & Eastern, the Pontiac, Oxford & Northern, the Indiana, Illinois & Iowa, the Wisconsin Central, Manistee & Northeastern, the Mason '& Oceana, the Milwaukee, Benton Harbor & Columbus, Detroit & Lima Northern, the Wisconsin & Michigan, the Münsing Railroad, the Mineral Range and the Manistique. Shortening: the Big: Four. An official connected with the Big Four said yesterday that a move was on foot which, if carried out, would give the Big Four the short line between Indianapolis and Chicago and between Chicago and St. Louis. It is well known that the St. Louis & San Francisco, which owns the Chicago & Eastern Illinois, Is jointly laying a second track . between Shelbyvllle and St. Louis, and the St. Louis & San Francisco will double-track the gap between Shelbyvllle and St. Anne, on the Chicago & Eastern Illinois, where It strikes a double track into Chicago. It is said that when this track is completed the Big Four will use it from St. Anne to Chicago, which would give it a nine miles shorter line between Indianapolis and Chicago than it now has and the shortest line between St. Louis and Chicago. "The plan Is being seriously talked of," says the official, "and it really becomes necessary for the Big Four to perfect such arrangement to hold Its position among the lines between Indianapolis and Chicago." While there is doubtless some speculation on the part of the official quoted, this plan seems practicable, and it is well known that President Ingalls, of the Big Four, desires to make it the short line between Cincinnati and Chicago as well as between SL Louis and Chicago. Summer Tourist Rates. The making of summer tourist rates to California was proposed to lines in the Western teritory Thursday by the management of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad. The Santa Fe officials not only submitted their plan, but announced that if the plan did not carry the Santa Fe would take independent action and put in a rate of one fare for the round trip to Coronado beach from June 1 to Aug. 31. The plan Is for the lines to issue a combination ticket, which shall Include transportation to and from San Diego, sleeping car fare, meals en route, hotel and expenses on side trips and two weeks' board at the beach. Under this plan a two weeks' stay at San Diego or at the beach across the bay from San Diego and one day at the Grand Canyon would cost a Chlcagoan $13S, including everything, and if he went in a tourist sleeper 1122. Grand Rapids & Indiana. Report. The seventh annual report of the Grand Rapids & Indiana Railroad Company, the annual meeting of which will be held April L was issued Friday. The gross earnings of all lines operated by the company for the year ending Dec. Si. were $4,041,775; operating expenses, $3.057,419; net earnings, $y57,2Sk, an increase of $S1,7 over 1901. The net income was $251,178; increase, $112.520. The net earnings of the main line from Fort Wayne, Ind., to Mackinaw City, were $782,379, an increase of $S2.553, or 11.94 per cent. The net earnings of the Cincinnati, Richmond & Fort Wayne division were $124.165, a decrease of $6,S39 as compared with 1901. Pennsylvania Relief Report. The bulletin of benefits paid by the Voluntary Relief Department of the Pennsylvania lines west for February was as follows: Death benefits, due to accident, $8.500; due to natural causes, $3,500; disablement benefits, due to accidents. $12,726.70; due to sickness, $14,340.80. The total paid in benefits is given as $29,067, being among the largest month's disbursements in the history of the association. The total amount paid out from July 1. 18S9, to Feb. 28, 1903, was $3.837,939.62. The total number of members receiving benefits during that time was 147.026. Big Four Enrnlngs. The Big Fouf lines proper earned in the third week of March $CGG.704.61, an Increase over the corresponding week of 1902 of $29,fS0.13. The earnings for the three weeks were $1.065.19S.3S. an Increase over the corresponding period last year of $54.127.23. The Peoria & Eastern earned in the third week of March $5S.1S6.92. an increase over the corresponding week last year of I9.SS9.56. The earnings for the three weeks were $176,016.S2, an increase of $31,124.76. Personal, Local and General Notes. IL Grlswold. division freight agent of the Vandalia. with headquarters at Terre Haute, was in Indianapolis yesterday. C. P. Lambert, general manager of the Erie Dispatch fast freight line, was in the city yesterday, going on to SL Louis at noon. Superintendents of motive power report that they now have all the firemen required, the first time they have been in that condition for a long time. W. H. McDoel, president of the Monon, who has been South for a month, returned yesterday as far as French Lick Springs. He Is much Improved in health. The Cincinnati, Richmond & Muncle has put a large force of men at work and a number ol gravel trains .ballasting the tracks preparatory for faster travel. Frank J. Reed, general passenger agent of th Monon. was la the city yesterday.
AMUSEMENTS.
PARK-
A Powerful Story of Life in tho Frozen North. TBE GREAT YOLCANO SCENE IS THE MOST SENSATIONAL EFFECT KNOWN TO THE STAGE PRICES 10c, 20c, SOc. Everybody goes to the Park. Monday "Lover's Lane
This Afternoon and To-Night Charles Froh man presents WILLIAM FAVERSÜAM In II. V. Esmond's greatest comedy Original Empire Theater cast, FKICES $1.50, f 1, 75c, 50c, 25c POLO .TOIGHT. ...CYCLOKAHA Jlxrtlt. Indianapolis vs. Elwood Game Called, 9:00. Amateur Game, 8:lä. Next Game Tuesday, March 81 MUNCIE. ADMISSION 2.c. Seats at Ruder'. He says the road Is doing a highly satisfactory passenger business and Its freight traffic is limited by cars furnished. The officials of the Southern Indiana road are on their annual inspection trip, President John R. Walsh and several other Chicago officials accompanying the party. Robert Gould has been appointed agent of the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton at Arlington, Ind. He has been in the employ of the Cincinnati. Richmond & Muncie road. ' Thirty carloads of flour are being shipped daily frora Minneapolis to Seattle cn route to Australia. Railroad and ocean rates have been made satisfactory, and millers say they can deliver their product at a profit In Australia. ( The Detroit, Monroe & Toledo Shortline Railway Company announces that it will spend $1,000,000 during the coming summer in the extension of the line from Monroe to Detroit. Work on this extension will begin April 1. The 'Frisco tracklayers have completed the line into Crescent City, eighteen miles northwest of Gutherie, O. T., on the Denver, Enid & Gulf line into Guthrie from Enid. Trains will be running over the road to Guthrie by May 1. The Western Maryland Railroad Company announces the following appointments cf officers: F. M. Howell, general passenger agent; William T. Hunter, general freight agent. The appointments are to take effect on April 1. A fast freight on the Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chicago, twenty-two cars of perishable freight, made the run from Chicago to Fort Wayne on Thursday in five hours, forty minutes less than some of the first-class passenger trains. The Wabash shopmen at Fort Wayne have decided to run their annual excursion to Detroit on Saturday, June 27. That time is selected because the pay car will arrive a few days before the event and the employs will be well provided with money. C. B. Kols, superintendent of the dining car service of the Big Four, says the cars are now making the best earnings since placed on the road, being 30 per cent, ahead of last year. As soon as the new dining cars are received they will run between Indianapolis and Cleveland. W. W. Richardson, district passenger agent of the Pennsylvania, states that in his connection with the road he has never known a March in which passenger business waj so satisfactory, it being fully equal to that in May, which is considered among the best months of the year. Announcement is made that Edward E. Davis, assistant superintendent of motive power of the New York Central, will retire on May 1. It is reported that there is considerable friction in the mechanical department, which is responsible for the retirement of Mr. Waitt, also that of Mr. Davis. M. J. Buck, trainmaster for the Chicago & Eastern Illinois, with headquarters at Danville, will on April 1 retire to take a similar position on the Pere Marquette. He will be succeeded by Samuel Hopkins, who has been trainmaster in Chicago. Mr. Buck has been in the employ of the C, E. & I. roaa nrteen years. . Although Edward Pollltz, who is rounding up proxies for James R. Keene, declares, according to the San Francisco Bulletin, that he has met with encouraging success, it has been learned that Harriman already has obtained the right to vote 1S7.000 of the 193,000 shares of Southern Pacific stock held in San Francisco. A circular announces the appointment of Thomas J. Foley to succeed Mr. Loree as superintendent of the Chicago division of the Pennsylvania lines. Mr. Foley's rise in the railroad world has been rapid, he commencing as a messenger boy in the telegraphic department of the Pennsylvania office and passing through the usual promotions until he became trainmaster. Active work has been begun at the site of the C, R. & M. shops at the west edge of Peru. A new turntable Is completed, and foundation and track work has been started. The shops are to be modern and complete. The tract of land Is more than twenty acres on the north bank of the Wabash river. After thirty-eight years continuous service in the railroad business E. P. Bryan, vice president and general manager of the Interborough Rapid Transit Company of New York, will assume entire charge of the Manhattan Elevated Railway on April 1. Mr. Bryan has advanced step by step from the. position of operator at Lebanon, a small town in Kentucky. Official announcement has been made at a meeting of the directors of the Zanesville, Marietta & Parkersburg Railway in Zanesville, O., that contracts for building the line will be let Monday. President Blair will make the announcement of the names from Pittsburg. The proposed line is a link in the new Wabash route to tidewater. , The Vandalia is starting its bridge gangs. All the bridges between Indianapolis and St. Louis will be strengthened preparatory to using the heavier type of locomotives and increasing the speed of trains. It Is stated there will be no new depots built this year, but three water stations will be constructed, one at Greencastle, one at West Terre Haute and one in the east yards at Terre Haute. The Chicago, Burlington & Quincy and the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe are engaged in a bitter struggle for carrying the malls between Chicago and Kansas City. It is stated that the struggle has come to be an open warfare which has disturbed the passenger service and involved three railroads in a bad snarl. For years the C, B. & Q. has been the official mail route between the two cities named. T. F. Sweat, traveling freight agent of the Illinois Central, was in the city yesterday. He states that the business in his territory, which covers Indiana, portions of Illinois, Ohio and Michigan, is heavy beyond precedent and varied in character. Within the last eighteen months tho Central has added 9,000 cars to its freight equipment and engines in the same proportion, and still is short of both power and cars. The Pennsylvania Railroad shareholders at their annual election ratified by the largest stock vote every cast in the history of the country the action Increasing capital to $400,000,000. The vote on both propositions was unanimous, 2,892,452 shares, 76 per cent., of outstanding stock having been cast. The largest number of shares of stock voted at any previous annual election of the company was in March, 1902. when 2.294,811 shares were voted for directors. The Pennsylvania Railroad has filed with the Interstate-commerce Commission an answer to the complaint of Charles A. Thompson, a coal shipper of Irwin, Pa., that the railroad was discriminating in the supply of coal cars. The answer denies that the complainant is regularly engaged in coal shipments or that It has discriminated in supplying cars and says that its regulation that no cars can be furnished for coal to be loaded on its sidings from wagons Is a reasonable one. J. J. Turner, vice president; E. L. Peck, general manager: Thomas Rodd, chief engineer: W. H. Potter, superintendent of the Toledo division, and Benjamin McKeen, superintendent of the Chicago division, were in Sandusky yesterday considering the question of improving the dock facilities. The. company proposes to spend a large amount of money in that direction at that point, the Pennsylvania believing that it can build up a large lake business by a liberal expenditure. Several changes In the general officers of the Great Northern Railway were announced on Friday. General Freight Agent George O. Somers becomes assistant to Fourth Vice President Blabon; W. W. Broughton, now on the Eastern division, is to be general freight agent for the entire system; William Kimball becomes assistant general freight agent in charge of lake-and-rail business of the Eastern district. Harry Jones, chief clerk for Mr. Börners, will be traveling freight arent; p. U, i-
ö r. m. Lincoln J. Carter Great Af ACTf A,f i m. cicenlc Play lArlOlWrl
(GS-IKE Ä K ID) MELVILLE STETSON, C. H. UNTHAN and HM STEPHENS BEATRICE MORUAND JOHhHY CARROLL THE BIOSCOPE THREE LIVIkGSTOlS ÜUKYU Ö KEARHlf BROS, fl TCHIkG Msfisees Dailf. All Sttts 25:. EMPIRE THEATER OC13 WISISIC ONLY Commencing Monday Matinee. March 23 Matinee Dally. Every XlgnL Rose Hill's English Folly Co 2 BIG BURLESQUES 2 Prices of admission 10c. 15c. 25c. POc. NEXT WEEK "TRANSATLANTICS. Telephone (1317) New. KAILKOAD TIME CARD. I'.M. time Is tn BLACK fipirea. Trains marked Ihos: D&llTt S Sleeper; Parlor On O Chair Car; 0 Dlnln Car: t Except bundayj benday only. tlslly exoept Monday. J3IO FOUR ROUTE, City Ticket Offlc, Xo. 1 East Washington St. Depart. Arrirs. CLEVELAND LDXK. Cleveland express 4.M 10.10 Anderson aecom roods tion 8.15 CleTfland. New York and Boston ex, .tJ0Q 11.4S Fort Wayne express TJG io ta Union City and CleTeland accona ..... 11.1 e.SO New York sod Boston limited. d s....S.&3 S.IO Union CitT accommodation 4.4A t.S M.Y.andBo. - Knickerbocker," d s.0.23 IIA) BENTON HAKiJOR LLNK. Ren ton Harbor express 143 8.1S Benton Harbor express, p ....U.ia 8.10 Klknart accommodation , 4.4S ssXt ST. LOUIS LINK. "Th World's faf R9tlt" St. Lonis accommodation 7 JO 8.SS St. Louis southwestern, Ilm, ds..M....U.4S e.lO 8t. Lools limited, d s 3.23 S.fiO Terre Haute and Mattoon accom S.OO 10.53 tt. Louis express, s 10.40 -Exposition JTlyer" ni.0J CHICAGO LIKE. Kankakee accommodation TjM ItM Lafayette accommodation ......0.15 8.18 Chiearo fast mall, d p , ll.M H.40 Chicago "White City special, d p 3.30 Ö.IO Chicago night express, s IX. 0 IM Cincinnati Like. Cincinnati express, a. Ai 11.40 Cincinnati express, a HJQ l 1 . AO Cincinnati express, s TA 7.88 Cincinnati accommodation 10 43 U-uJ Cincinnati express. p .ÄO 3.23 Greensburg accommodation. ...... ....5. 20 Cincinnati, Wa.hln?ton f 1 ex, a d....6.20 11N. Vernon and LouisTllle ex, 3.43 11.3tf N. Vernon and Lou tr ills ex 8.80 11.44 FEOBIA LINE. Peoria, Bloomlngton, m and ex T.tJ 2.40 Peoria and Bloomlnrton. f er. dp ....Ii. 6.08 Champaign accommodation, p d. 4. 1 0 UM Peoria and Bloorotngton, ex s 11. 80 -) 8PKINU FIELD AND COLUMBUS LINE. Columbus and PpringHeld ex -00 11 Ohio special, dp...... 3.00 lO 31 Lynn sccommodatlon 0.15 HI CINM XIAM. A DAYTOX UY. City Ticket Office. 25 W. Wash. SL Cincinnati express, s e... 4.M 11.43 .Cincinnati fast mail, s....S.03 43 rCln. and Dayton ex. p ...tlO.44 10.33 Toledo and Detroit express, p 10.40 10. 33 Cincinnati and Dayton ex, p. 11. Cincinnati limited, p d... ............. Ö.OO 13.23 Cincinnati and Dayton express 7.02 17.24 Toledo and Detroit express 7.02 17.24 arKlNUFlKLD DIVISION (a, LAW. RV.l Decatur and cpringfleld express..... rs 0) t4.iiO Chicago Expreai tll.M 2.40 Tuscola Accommodation t3.SO tlo.13 bpiingfleldandDeeatnrlCx.se..Ma11.10 t V ViMfri.WiViit7rk Clll 'D- louis nr. Vtil4Uv'UliiUJ Ticket Office, S3 West Wash St. Chicago fast mail, s. p f IM IM Chicago Express, p d. 11.M '2. 4 Chicago vestibule, p d.. ............... 13. 35 4.63 Monon acoom 4.QO 'lit Lake Erie & Western It R. Toledo, Chicago and Michigan ex tT-ll 10.t Toledo, Detroit and Chicago lioa....13.20 13.23 Muncle, Lafayt and Mica C y ipeo.t7.23 tlO 2 J Ticket offices ac Station and at corner Illinois and Washington Streets. ennsulvanialfjnes. TrMoa Sua tor Oaewai TUB Philadelphia and New York, Baltimore and Washington ) Columbus, Ind. and Louisville... 40 Columbus. Ind. and Lonis Hie. ..7j0t Klehmond, Piquaand wlambu, O.....7-S0 Yineennes Kxpresa 73 Columbus. Ind. k Madison. ............. T7M Louisville Accommodation.... ........ .tUM North Vernon and Madison.. t3 Dayton and Xenta 6.10 Pittsburg and Easu PhiL. New York,..H.I Logansport and Chicago. ......ll.M Martin rille Accommodation 112.30 KlchmU way points to Bradford, O.tl.25 Philadelphia and New York 3.05 Baltimore and Washington 3.05 Dayton and tprlngüekl. 3.05 Vlncennes Accommodatioa...M....M3.ft5 Louisville and Madison 8.A3 VltLsburgapd East 6.oo Columbus, Pittsburg and East Ö.OO Bpenoer Accommodation .............T7.13 IxHjtsTille Accommodation 0.15 Phil, and New York, -Tne Llalted".7.1ö Dayton and Xeola 7.15 Richmond Accommodation..... ......tLogansport and Chicago la lO 411 10. 4U 11. SO 7. .US 10.4U .13 .13 T&.4U 13. 40 CM 12. .1(1 3. 13. .40 .43 t2.0U 12. 12. 1. .1U ,1U .10 10X3 11 JS 4.4S 3.20 TT.M 10.1 .51 cat tKa VANDALIA LINE. Et. Louis limited tM 7 .OO Terre Haute, St. Lools and West 7.S3 4.45 Terre Haute, 8C Louis and West.. ..13. 15 .55 Western Express 3.30 tM Terre Haute and Eflngham Ace t4.00 11. 20 Terre Haute express 7.iu lO.tw bt. Louis and ail points West 11.20 . Daily. tDaUy cxeept Saaday. rSoaday only. L'NION TRACTIOX CO. OF INDIANA Station, Masjuolla Building, Corner Kentucky and South Capitol For .'Anderson. Muncle, Marlon, Alexandria. Elwood and Tipton and Intermediate stations leave 4:15 a. m. and each hour thereafter until 9:15 p. m. and 11:13 p. m. . Limited trains for Anderson and Muncle. arriving In AnOrson In 1 hour and 25 minutes and . Muncle in 2 hours, leave at 8 ni 11 a. m. and I i and S p. m. The 11 L a and S p. m. trains make direct connection at Anderson with limited trains for Elwood. Express cars leave Indianapolis station, corner Kentucky and S. Capitol avenues, for Muncle and Anderson at 4:30 a. m. and Z:3( p. m. Morning car makes direct connection with express car for Elwood, Marion and Alexandria. INDIANAPOLIS EASTERN II. II. CO. GREENFIELD LINE. General Ofllces, Franklin Dulldlnsr. For Greenfield. Knlghtstown and Intermediate stations. PassenKer cars leave Meridian and Washington streets. First car 5:55 a. m. (except Sunday, when first car leaves at :55 a. m.) and hourly thereafter until 9:iS p. m. Next and last car leaves at 11:15 p. m. Combination paseniter and express cars leave Meridian and Vahington streets at 5:15 a. nx., 7-55 a. m., 11:55 - m- Z'- P- rn., J;55p. m. Freight Cars. For Greenfield and intermediate stations only. Arrive at Georgia and Meridian streets at 7:57 a ro. and leave at 9 a. m. Also arrive at 2:27 p." m. and leave at S:30 p. m. INDIANAPOLIS, SIIELD WILLE A SOUTHEASTERN TRACTION COMPANY. Cars leave Indianapolis for Fhelbyvlll and all Intermediate rtops from the corner of Washington and Meridian streets on the following hours: V - . a m in o'clock n. m. Round-trip tickets, Indlsnapolls to EheJbyvllle. e'n be purchased at Under s drug store, corner WashinRton and Pennsylvania "treats, and at the E. K. En ley's jharmacy. fetutblns Hotel block. INDIANAPOLIS, GltEESWOOD & FRANKLIN R. It. CO. Pascnper cam leave Pennsylvania and Wanhtnrton -treett First car at a. m. and hoHr thereafter until 10 p. m. Last car leave at 11:1 Combination rnser inl express lcarea OeVrf in M",1i1 r!" for Greenwood onl at s:o R. m. ana p. in. INDIANAPOLIS & MARTINSVILLE RAPID TRANSIT CO. For Moorevllle and intermediate points: First r leaves Kentucky av. and Washington t. at t lii a. m.. nd every hour thereafter, on the half-hour mark, to and Including 6:30 p. m., after hich time a tar will leave at 1:30 p. m. and "ieavlnK Mooresvllle: First car at C a. m.. the next at 7:50 a. m., and every hour thereafter, oa the half-hour mark, to and Including T:Z0 p. m.. aftr which time a car will leave at 10 p. m. Hourly service from Mooresville to Urooklrn. elman. chief clerk for Mr. Rlabon, becomes assistant in the Asiatic traffic department. The spring time table on the Cincinnati, Richmond & Muncle will go Into effect about April 19. Two new trains each way will be inaugurated. During the winter on train -ach way was taken off on account of the lack of engines, but the company recently received some new Iialdwin locomotives, which will be used in the freight service. reiealnc others for paxsenger duty. The Sunday excurrlon business will be inaugurated about May L Special preparatlona are being made to meet tho demands el till department.
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t 7 ft 9 10 11 o ctiK.a a. w.. i uwn, ana l 2 3 4 . 7. and 11:13 o'clock p. m. Car leave Fhelbyville for Indianapolis and all Intermediate stations a Jo-. . J. 8. 9 10. u
