Ligonier Banner., Volume 15, Number 50, Ligonier, Noble County, 31 March 1881 — Page 4
. * W Tlhe Liguniey Banney, fggi‘OLL, Editor a;nd° i’repri;;;;.' THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 1881.
POSTMASTER GENERAL T. L. JAMES threatens to.leave Garfield’s cabinet unless the appointment of Judge Robertson is withdrawn. President Garfield is disposed to stand by Blaine.
Tue DEMOCRATS of Toledo have nominated their old war-horse, Gen. James B. Steedman, for/mayor. In Cincinnati the Democrats feel very sanguine of electing their candidate, Wm. Means, to the mayoralty. The Glazette (rep.) supports him.
Foßr THESAKE of obtaining Mahone’s yote, the republican Senators have ngreed to elect a Virginia ex-rebel and repudiationist, named Riddleberger, as sergeant-at-arms of the U.S. Senate. The better class of Republicans are making wry faces at this bargain, but the majority will listen to no protest.
THE total number. of vetes cast at the constitutional amendments election on the 14th was only 172,915, The total vote cast at the last October election was 470,738, This shows that nearly 300,000 of Indiana’s voters were wholly unconcerned as to whether the amendments were voted‘up or down.
ATTORNEY GENERAL Wayne MacVeigh being something of a reformer, is very much displeased over the appointment of Blaine’s political freebooter, Wm. E. Chandler, to the important Office of Solicitor General. He is also dissatisfied with the nomination of Jay Gould’s -attorney, Stanley Matthews, to the supreme bench. It is generally believed that MacVeigh will not long remain in the cabinet.
BLAINE’s purpose in leaving the Senate for a seat in Garfield’s cabinet is beecoming more and more apparent. e is “getting his work in” very handsomely. Day by day his special friends are being appointed to places cf importance and commanding influence. Mr. Blaine’s latest achievement in this direction is the appointment of Bill Chandler to the office of Solicitor-Gen-eral. William E. Chandler hails from New Hampshire and is a knowing and tricky politician who hélped to steal the vote of Florida for Hayes. It was Bill Chandler, and not Zach. who in 1876 telegraped from New York, all oyer the country, “Hayes has 185 votes, and is elected,” to which he took the liberty to sign Zach’s mame, It was the same Bill Chandler who corceived the iniquitous plan to steal the Presidency, and who subsequently delivered the goods. After Hayes was inducted into office” he failed to give Chandler the mission to Spain, for which he was an applicant. = Chandler then broke with the Administration and was one of .its leading defamers. He started early in the game and never let up.
THAT GRACEFUL and matchless political writer, Col. John W. Forney, gives his views off the Senator who began by propesing to repudiate part of the debt of Virginia and ended by repudiating his political obligations to his constituents, in the last number of Progress: “The Federal plutocracy hangs on to government by a very slender tendril. It is the fabled sword of Damocles, always ready rapidly to descend. It is the guillotine, ever threatening to cut off the head of the inventor. The hair that holds this leaden load is the little repudiating rebel, Mahone, of Virginia. Ominousname! Och hone! Mahone! And it is by this putrid thread that the whole republican party is held. What a pestilent accident! The destiny of this great country dependent upon the vote of a man who was elected by the State of Virginia to the very thing which he refused to do, and who boasts of repudiation as a second religion. Upon this insignificant manikin the whole Government depends. = If he dies the Senate changes at once, as he ¢an have no successor like himself. If he is ill all the office-holders elected by his vote would be thrown Into convulsions. 1f he is absent even courtesy refuses to pair with a man powerful only in perfidy, It would not be safe to charge that this atom was bought to betray hisown State; but nobody doubts what he himself shudders from. Theslightest accident may obliterate him, and then the whole fabric held by his attenuated support falls to the ground like a- dead corpse. This is a miserable spectacle. A breath made as a breath may unmake Mahone; and to secure his vote the whole Administration strains every nerve; yet the double shame remains an undying infamy. When that was secured the President sent him flowers and the galleries applauded. Why should we hope for honesty or courage in others when our rulers set such an example?”
CARTER HARRISON has been renominated for Maycr by the Chicago Democrats. He eught to be re-elected by a rousing majority. Chicago has never had a more eflficient mayer than Carter Harrison. ; '
TaE following notice, which appeased in the Baltimore American of Saturday, will be read with regret by many who uhew the graceful Harriet Lane, the niece of President Buchanan, and who presided over his household during his term of office: DIED—On March 25, 1881, in the fifteenth year of his age, JAMES BUCHANAN, eldest son of Henry Elliott and Harriet Lane JOHNSTON. . - The boy is spoken of as having been a remarkably bright young fellow. THAT-Mr. Windom, Secretary of the Treasury under Garfleld, is no friend of monopolies, may reasonably be inferred from the following extract from a letter which he sent to the anti-mo-nopoly league of New York last February: o ' I repeat to-day, in substance, words uttered seven years ago, that *‘there are in this ‘country four men who, in the matter of taxation, possess. and frequently ‘exercise powers which neither Congress nor any of our State Legislatures would dare to exert—powers which, if exercised in Great Britain, would shake the throne to its very foundation. These men may at any time, and for any reason satislactory to themselves by a stroke of the pen reduce the value of property in the United States by hundreds of millions. They may at their own will and pleasure disarrange and embarrass business, depress one city orlocality and build up another, enrich one individual and ruin his competitors and when complaint is nm_de; coolly reply, ‘Whatare you going to do aboutit? ”’ e It remains to be seem whether Mr. Windom will be as putty in the hands of these “four men,” or whether he will faithfully guard the interests of the public Treasury and of the United States. L :
- LAsT MoNDAY little Mahone, the dickering repudiationist of Virginia, delivered what he was pleased to call a “defense” of his bargain with the Republicans. His effort turned out to be a flat failure. He had a flne audience, and a fine opportunity, but he failed to rise to the grandeur of the occasion, so to speak. He read a long rambling essay from manuscript, mainly devoted to ;showing that repudiation was not so bad as it had been represented, because he and his party oaly proposed to: repudiate part of the debt. He did not deny that his object was to strengthen the Readjuster party in Virginia, or that readjustment meant repudiation, but only tried to show that repudiatien in Virginia is entirely justifiable. The Republicans were disappointed because this speech was a virtual admissien of all that had been charged against him, and the galleries were ‘disappointed because he failed to ¢ pitch into” somebody. The whole thing was lame and terribly tedioeus, and long before he finished the galleries were empty, and few Senators on the floor were paying any attention to him. There was so much noise of laughing, talking and rustling of papers that the littie man’s defense of repudiation and his explanation of his sudden conversion to Republicanism, were hardly heard by any one.
. THAT ABLE and conservative democratic organ, the Syracuse (N. Y.) Courier, in speaking of the pending contest between Conkling and GarfieldBlaine, says: < Our own impression is that Conkling will be compelled, in the long run, te surrender. Garfield carries too many guns for him. Conkling has not a namby-pamby Hayes to deal with this time, but in Garfield and Blaine a brace of the shrewdest politicians in the republican party. If Conkling expects the democratic Senators to pull his chestnuts out of the fire for him this time he will count, we predict, without his host. The democratic party is under no obligations to Roscoe Conkling. . It can lose nothing by seeing his wings cut and his feathers pulled and his power crippled. Let Garfield 20 on with the goqd work. ! The nomination of Judge Robertson for the collectorship of the Port of New York is one eminently fit to be made and should be promptly confirmed by the Democrats of the Senate. His appointment has beem endorsed, on motion of a Dem_oc:at, by the unani mous voice of the New York Senate, of whieh body Judge Robertson is an honored member, elected from a democratic district by reason of his popularity and acknowledged ability. There is no good reason why democratic Senators should not vote for his confirmation. To yote against him would be simply to gratify the spleen of Roscoe Conkling, to whom, as the Courier correctly observes, the Democracy is under no obligation. With Judge Robertson as collector of the Port the despotic rule of Roscoe Comkling must sooner or later come to an end in the Empire State. If, in course of events, the two contending factions should use each other up, as now seems probable, Democrats need not shed tears. Robertson is a natural leader,as evidenced by his skillful fight against the ConklingGrant faction in the Chicago conven~ tion. Fe carried with him nearly onehalf of the New York delegation, thus forever putting a quietus on the third term business. Such a man deserves to be upheld, theugh he be closely allied with the audacious demagogue, James @&, Blaine. &
THae Mahone business is a very bitter pill for the better class of republican Senators. Senator Hawley, of Connecticut, is credited with the remark that if the Republicans want to see half the Northern States go Democratic next fall, they have only to persevere in the'Mahone foolishness a little longer. : -
The numerous preachers of Indianapolis are aroused by the immorality existing there, and will, on next Sunday, endeavor to create public sentiment on the subject. They censure the police for not more rigidly enforcing the laws of the city in the interest of public morality. The police say that the force is not large enough, and that their time is taken up in looking after criminals.—[South Bend Tribune. . Indianapolis has for years been under ‘r}epublican rule, and yet we hear from republican sources that vice and immorality are holding high carnival in that stronghold of republicanism. Why are things thus? Has the republican organization ceased to be a “God and morality party ?” We are in search of information. It is even hinted that the preachers of Indianapolis have concluded that reform under republican auspices is entirely out of question and that the only hope of a better state of‘affairs lies in the election of a democratic Mayor. :
- TmE Chicago Z'tmes of last Saturday published eolumns of interviews with hundreds of prominent Democrats in all parts of the United States on the subject of reorganizing the democratic party under another name, and making the next presidential canvass on the issue of a tariff for revenue ogly. In the West and Northwest the prevailing sentiment is one of outspoken advocacy of low tariff principles, but whenever a manufacturing centre is approached a difference in feeling is manifested. In lowa, Nebraska, Minnesota, Kansas, Illinois.and Wisconsin the Democrats have little hesitation in declaring for a tariff for revenue only, while in parts of Michigan, Indiana, and Ohio the sentiment is exactly the reverse. The preponderance of opinion in the South is against the active agitation of the subject.
IT 1s HARDLY necessary to state that THE BANNER, has not been able to commend many of the utterances of the late occupant of the White House at Washington, not that we did not have the disposition to do so, but because little has dropped from his lips that commended itself to our judgment. The opportunity of eordially endorsing a recent utterance by that gentleman is, however, now presented, and we cheerfully avail ourself thereof. On his return to his home at Fremont he took occasion to observe: - It strikes me that this is a good place to find an answer to the question, which is often heard: “What is to become of the man, what is he to'do, where is his place, who having been chief magistrate of the Republie, retires at the end of his term to private life?”’. It seems to me the answer is near at hand and sufficient. Let him, like every other good American citizen, be willing promptly to bear his part in every useful wgrk that will promote the welfare, the happiness, and the progress of his family, His town, his State, and his country. With this disposition he will have work enough to do and that sort of work which wields more individual cententment and gratification than the more conspicuous employments of public life, from which he’ has retired. : .
There is a great deal of solid sense in these words, and they reflact the utmost credit upon Mr. Hayes. The significant language employed by that gentleman contains a severe arraignment of General Grant who seems to labor under the impression that it is the duty of the government to provide for him in a manner net heretofore deemeéd necessary or proper. The example of George Washington, who returned to his farm after refusing to serve the people longer than two terms, is apparently of no concern to Geun. Grant. Mr. Hayes _experiences no difficulty in taking care of himself upon his retirement from office. By and by it may dawn upon General Grant’s mind that he has been sufficiently honored by the American people and that he ought to have gracefully accepted the situation by retiring to private life and emulating the example of hisillustrieus predecessor.
- PRESIDENT GARFIELD has stirred up a hornet’s nest in the republican camp by nominating for the important and lucrative office of collector of the Port of New York the Hon. W. H. Robertson, the acknowledged leader of the anti-Conkling faction of the Empire State. This appointment 18 doubtless the work of Secretary Blaine who thus serves notice upon Senator Conkling that henceforth his domination over New York politics is no longer to be tamely acquiesced in. It has created consternation iln the camp of Conkling’s followers. Of all the anti-Grant politicians in the land the lordly Roscoe recognizes in Judge Robertson his most dangerous and implacable enemy. The selection of such a man at once endangers the supremacy of Senator Coukling, and it is not to be wondered that he has already set about to defeat the nomination at all hazards. He imperiously demands the withdrawal of Robertson’s nomination, but in this he
encouniers the atern oppesition ot his old enemy, James G. Blaine, who plainly informs President Garfield that if he now cowardly yields to the demands of Senator Conkling, self-respect will compel him to leave the cabinet. Garfield 18 well aware that Conkling never was his friend, in view of which faet it is hardly probable that he,in spite of his lack of backbone, will stultify hin - self in the eyes of the nation by withdrawing a nomination the propriety and fitness of' which has been emphatically attested by the unanimous vote of the New York Senate. Garfield, just the day before Robertson’s nomination, sent to the Senate the names of a number of Semator Conkling’s trusted friends for important and lucrative pesitions; hence it will be diflicult to convince the average Republican that he has. not fared liberally in the distribution of the spoils. But Conkling realizes that Robertson’s appointment outweighs them all in point of influence, and he therefore serves notice that this shall with him be considered a life struggle. War, it is said, has been declared upon the administration, and it will be waged with all the fierceness for which the New York Senator is famous. The President has been -informed by letter of this decision, and the further request made that the nomination be withdrawn as the only means of preventing the intervening of an unbridgeable gulf between the President and the New York Stalwarts.
Real Estate Transfers In Noble county, for the week edding March 25th, 1881: ' John Fleck to Nancy J. Ott, 40 acres in Green twp., - - - $BOO.OO Kincaide Faux to William and Elizabeth Hague, 40 acres in Orange twp., - $2000.00 Thos. Graham to Josiah Darrow, 40 acres in Allen twp., - - - $lBOO.OO E.!B. Parkman to Wm. B. Dunn, lot 5, Bliss add., Brimfield, - - $500.00 Mary M. Diehm, et. al. to John M. Diehm, undiyided 2-7ths of 80 acres in Allen township, = - - = a 0 = §llOO.OO 0. D. Holt to John D. and J. W. Yerger, a small tract in Cromywell, - 1 $400.00 C. R. Wiley to Matilda Mayfield, 80 acres in'Noble twp., - . = - $1200.00 Adam Hoffman to J. M. Schemmerhorn, 40 acres in Orange twp., - = $lBOO.OO Nancy J. Ott to Nancy Rodenbaugh, lot 30, Iddings add., Kendallville; - $300.00 James B. Kimball to Mason M. and Mary A. Bowen, part lot 9 and alley vacated, Kendallville, - - - - $3500.00 Sol. Mier to Christian Butz, 73 acres in York twp.. = e oG $5350.00 Heirs of John M. Sticht, deceased, to Mason M. Bowen, lot 96, Mitchell’s addition, Kendallville, - - $1200.00 John R. Smith to Mary Lohman, lot 27, Mitchell’s add., Kendallville, - $1400.00 Isaac Musser to Sol. Mier, 73 acres in York twp., =i 0e 0o $5500,00 Frank Smith to John R. Smith, part lot 161 Mitchell’s add., Kendallville, - —— Straus Bros, to Daniel B. Drain, 72acres in Perry twp., - = - - $7400.00 Solomon M. D. Fulford to Dudley H. Reynolds, 40 acres in York twp., - $650,00 M. M. Bowen to Elizabeth Thompson, lot 58, Mitchell’s add., Kendallyille, - $1750.00 Jacksen Iddings to R, D. Rheu, 77 acres in Orange twp., - - - $4000.00 Josiah B. Frost to Frank Landgraff, lot 31, Tiffin add., Albion, - = ~ $lOO.OO Deeds and Mortga%es drawn by ALEX. AuUMOND, Notary Publie, in the Auditor’s Office, Albion. ‘
Ne Step Backward. [ Utica Observer, March 2.] . The administration created by Wells, Anderson, Kenner and Cassanave goes out of power with the gratuitous odium upon its skirts of having defeated a vital financial measure, which commanded the votes of a great majority in Congress, and had the approval of the people. Coming upon the heels of a defeat of an equitable Apportionment bill by the majority in Congress, this veto puts the democratie party in sympathy with the popular thought as. it has not been before since 1876. The veto was at the instarce of Mr. Garfield, and shows that the new administration, like th# old, has chosen the money power as its guide and staff. If the democratic Jleaders heed the promptings of the people behind them, no step backward from Mr. Carlisle’s position will be takem in the Fortyseventh Cengress. o e T G e The sSmall Pex. A promiagent business man was heard to say that the small-pox scare had already damaged business in the city to the extent of $200,000. He I€~ ports business good in every branch at all other points except this. Commerce has literally been driven away and the streets of Ft. Wayne and the business houses present anything but an enlivening scene. The few cases of this dread disease which have occurred in this city have been so magnified as to make the entire placeseem infected. The red flag has been so high in print, that it cannot be hauled down; people have been so effectually “warned” that they stay warned and it will be many a day before the city will recover from the damaging effect of this injudicious advertising of .its misfortune.—-Fit. Wayne Journal.
~ Kansas’ Kolly. ' A correspondent of the Infer Ocean says: “Kansas finds her vaunted temperance bill g }ittle more than she expected. The genergl gatisfaction and rejoicing that held sway imymediately after its adoption have given way to a feeling of dismay as the people fully comprehend for the first time the force of some of its provisions. No preparation of aleohol, including cologne, bay rum, and spirits of ecamphor, can be bought without a physician’s pregcription. ‘Wine is net allowed to he used, even in the communion service.” It Makes a Difference. : ; (Columbia City Post.) Gov. Porter vetoed the bill giving jurors $2.00 aday. Heapproved,however, of the bill increasing the pay of the Lieutenant Governor and Speaker of the House, to $B.OO a day. It does make some difference whether a man is a farmer or an office-holder. :
Save Your Hair. Keep it Beautifal, The LONDON HAIR COLOR RESTORER . isthe most delightful articic ever introduced to the American people and is totally - ~different from all other Hair Restorers, . being entirely free from all impnr‘e‘ingre-‘ ! dients that render many other articles for . thehair obnoxious. W here baldness, or falling of the hair exists, or prematurely . grayness, from sickness, or other causes, its use will restore the natural youthful - color, and cause a healthy growth, cleansing the scalp from all impurities, dandruff, &c., at the same time a most pleasing and lasting hair dressing, fragrantly perfuaed, . rendericg the hair goft and pliable, making it an indispensible article in every toilet, o - Ask your druggist for London Hair Color Restorer. Price, 75 cents a bottle. Six bottles, $4.00. Main depot for the United States, 330 North Sixth Street, Philadelmhia. Sold by C. Eldred & Son.
- NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. - e e 50,000 AcresinfMi¥ Y ON THE LINE OF THE = ._ . & Wiseonsin Central R. R. Full particulars, which will be sent free, address CHARLES L. COLBY, Land Commissioner, Milwaukee, Wis. $5 AN D U PWARDS Parties withlim- : LU Vited capital desiring to become interested in Mining enterprises, at bottom, figures, please send address for free prospectus to JOSIAH FLETCHER, 37 Broadway, New York City. - T o oAT N M AS A OSN LB R eALMTR Y 4 TSRS ' A YEAR and expenses to ! 77 7 agents. Outfit Free. Address s : ! P.O.VICKERY, Augusta. Me. 8 year to agents, and expense%. 86 gggoutfit free.. Address F. SWAIN - & CO., Augusta, Malne. : S - DISCOVERY! LOST MANHOOD RESTORED. A victim of youthful imprudence causing Premature Decay, Nervous Debility, Lost Manhood, etc., having tried in vain every known remedy, has discovered a gimple self cure, which he will send FRER to his fellow-sufferers, address J. H. REEVES, 43 Chatham st., N. Y. - . Health is Wealth! ‘Dr E.C. West’s NERVE AND BRAIN TREATMENT ¢ a epecific for Hysteria, Dizziness, Convulgions, Nervous Headache, Mental Depression, Loss of Memory, Spermatorrhe, Impotency; Involcntary Emissions, -Premature Old Age, caused by overexertion, selt-abuse, or over-indulgence, which leads to misery, decay and death. One box will cure recent cases. Each box contains one month’s treatment. One dollar a box, or gix boxes for five dollars; sent by .mail prepaid on receint of %ice. We guoarantee six boxes to cure any case. ith each order received by us for 81X boxes, ac: companied with five dolldrs, we will gend the purchaser our written gnarantee to return the money if the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued only when the treatment is ordered direct from us. Address G. S.' Woodraff, sole agent, Ligonier, Ind. JOHX C. WEST &CO, sole proprietors, 181 & 183 W. Madison Street, Chicago, IIL [ 45- ' . —AND— L 0 = ’ Cabinet = Rooms . ; - _'@;’7.::7',////;",,/,'//,,_ S ' - [N e L) ; ' ) SN ""ffi L \\\ SN 1;:' - oY A NSNS . 7% 4“\\\ i /V/, ‘(fi‘_\\:\c \<~\\\lé AR RN 7 SR O AR R RN\ 2y N g N e O | N : : ,/{"’,///%’ : /’ - | =gE | e e e e T e T @‘ e e e . R.D. KERR Respectfully announces to the citizens of Noble county that he has always on hand a large and su- : perior stock of : CABINET WARE, Consisting in part of Dressing Bureaus, Tables, Standsand War=Robes, Lounges Cupboards, Moulding, Chairs, Bedsteads, - And in fact everything usually kept in a first-class Cabinet Shop. garticnlar attention paid to the . Untiertaking Business. e COFFINS Alway son hand ang made to order on short notice. Algo all kinds of shop work made to order. = Furniture Ware Rooms, corner 4th and Cavin streets, west side, Ligonier, Ind. i : A&~ A good Hearse alwaysin readiness, May9,1879.-Itf - , o
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£ = : TG . I a ; ° i Rail Road Directory. .t o : Mich. Southern Rail Road. On and after December 14; 1879, trsing vfill leave - Stations as follows: . RY 1& I 'OING EAST. :f‘A'j‘ila"n"‘uc'EE % Express. . Stations. |- press. B e A onlb i iow Soo miott e 920 am..|ecac. . ChiCBZO. cine-- | 535 pm.. ] lODm.- ;..;..,.1E1khflrt......;.‘ -9 50 2 e A 0 LG Goshere LLa s 1010 «- 144 L[l llMhllersburg ....-.i-v—-—_»—-—~ ; - 3206 ol hiponier oLo ]ilogs e 207 Liliiiin . Wawaßa Lol |de——ee <+ 216 | il cßrimfleld ol i -- 230 .."......Kenda’llvul‘e"._..... it .- 840pm_.|.......;T01ede05.. . .1l 240 am. . Chicago Bx-' GOING WES'T. | Pacific Ex- | _" Dresg, ‘Stations. : l press. e eet e A s e <lO5 Bm. .. c.eo Toledo. oio . TE 19 0] g 14 240 pm.‘.’....,.Kendanville sauiba 800 - 245 soleesaci Bimßeld oL iRt s LS <« 200 lllasseeaWawaka il bo . e 307 ‘ Ligonier .. ... ' 540 ° | woße . ...-...Mi.llersburg......'r“—-.—, —— 3388 eofsnnisvanOßDOßL .o L 1W s 4 400 Y. Las o Bilkharbi ol {485 ..800pm.. ....;;..Chicago.’.......t.‘ g2O s, Where time is not given, trains do Yot stop, Atlantic and Pacific Express trains leaves daily both ways. ' CHAS. PAINE Gen. Supt., i ' C eveland, Ohio, T. C. MONTGOMERY, Agent, Ligonier, Ind. Pittsburg, Ft. W. & Chicago R. R. From and after Nov. 7th 1880, trains wil leave o .- stations as follqvvs: i FastEx, LIMitKX GOING WEST. Pac Ex, Ni. Ex, No 1. | No. 5. |- Statiens, - l Noj 7. { No. 3. T —————————————— 1205 am; 730 pm. Pittsbarg..| 918 am| 150 pm ' 115amj......t. L.Rochester.. {lOlO ‘ Q 55 330 1025 pmy..Alhance..:| 120 pm! 535 500 fiil. i fOrrvillec ] 314 713 655 cees weus o Mansfield .. 540 920 795 140 am!Crestline..A.! 615 945 pm e —————————————————————————————————— {by 14y Urestiine. .| 633 955 pm - 1995 dediiivol o Torest o 814 1198 ¢ 1040 ssasswanleincitin | 930 12 32 am 115pm| 5385 |Fort Wayne(l2oB am| 2 10 346 ‘ 716 ,;..Plymomh..'fi 50 456 . 700 pml 940'am|..Chicago...| 600 am| 800 am NO. 4. | No. 2. | @oING-EABT. | No. 6. ’ No, 8. At,lc.Ex.l,\lorn Ex} Stations. #lN.lfi.Ex. F’stLine R lo'pm, 830 am|.. Chicago .! 330 pm| 940 pm 925 1153 *....lflymouth. desslensed 200 am 1215am| 2385 pm Fort Wayne| 835 655 238 4386 . LA dicl s . aol BRG 355 043+ o Haresto o|, iaianillon 530 am! 710 pmiCrestline..A.{l23s am|[ll 45am 6 40. am; 730 pm Cresuiine, L, 12 40 am 12 05 pm 720 803 ..Mangfield .| 115 am 1235 923 1006 . {...Orrville:.} 250 - | 226 / 1125 1145 ..Alliance...| 425 400 | 210 - | 204 am|..Rochester.|.... ....| 622 315 pmi 315 am|..Pittshnrg .! 730 am| 730 pm .Trains Nos. 3 and 6 and Nos. 5 and 4 run daily train No. 1 leaves Pittsburgh-daily excspt Satur—day; train No. 8 will leave Chicago daily except Saturday. All other trains daily, except Sunday. S ; F. R. MYERS, : . General Passenger and Ticket Agent. Cincinnati, Wabash & Mich. R. R. Time table, taking effect-July 4th, 1880. s L P . R 4 AN HouTH, o e ‘ | NORTH. No. 4. | No. 2. |A Stations, LI Neo. 1, | No. 3. 1245 pm|ll 10 pm{indianapolis.| 4 30 am]| 7 30 pm 10 55 am| -9 10 pm|Anderson J.,| 600 am| 915 pm 1028 - | 843 - |.Alexandria.| 631 942 939 | 754 . |..:Mariom.. | 728 |lO3l 850 705 ° |...Wabash..| 845 - (1125 804 621 {N. Manchestr! 925 {l2ooam 718 B3T |...Warsaw..|lolB |1249 649 009 - 1.00 Milford.c. 1082« | 119 634 454 .New Pa;’is.'illeg .1 138 620 440 ...Gosheu.»..tll:so 1150 600 am| 420 pm|{L. Elkhart. A /1150 am{ 210 am Close connections made at Goshen and Elkhart withthe L S & M 8 RR; at Milford with the B & OR R; avt Warsaw with the P, Ft W& C R R; at North Manchester with the D & E R RR; at Wabash with the T, W & W R R; at Marton with the P.C &St L RR. Through coaches will berun on trains No. 3 and 4between Elkhart and Indiapolis. NOGRMAN BECKLEY, Gen. Man.
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= NI O e 1 SRACEERCE PP ROFTLO Ll m TGfarch) way. s U AR s ] 4 ) Glyndon /. GAL,NE 3H= ?& f o Allingl NG I(;_][,{ B L. /e ot 1P NS O\ LA S Q 0 NS 1 X !At A MGFPAUL -\ | ;I R MINNEAPO! . EauClnreO o M;’/ TN ST one o i Capeefif] :es O A lOV sy Ko “'i'o“”' L Al 3 d 202" B i : ¥R /[ ' st DUg,; Yoo, Bl » NI 08 ):‘ = R ’ e, VAN N\ \ AHALEZC, & RAmes - Coy, & , (0204,0 . Des Moines ar apigs ,L clfichGO Lincoln “9_"t [CHICAGO & NORTH-WESTEAN RAILWAY] |
—THE—--1 Chicago & North-Western Is the OLDEST! BEST CONSTRUCTED! BEST ; EQUIPPED! and hence the. Leading Railway : . ) % ;T—'OF THE—————' bl WEST AND NORTHWEST ! It is the shortest and best route between Chicagg- ; and qlt points in - : ! Northern Illinois, loewa, Dakota, Wyom- ~ ing, Nebraska, California, Oregon, “Arizona, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, : Montana, Neyada, and for , Council Bluffs, Omaha, DENVER, LEADVILLE, Salt Lake, San Francisco, Deadwood, Sioux City, Cedar, Rapids, Des Moines, Columbus, and ali points in the Territories, and the West. Also, for Milwaukee, Green' Bay. Oshkosh, Sheboygan, Marqueite, Fond du Lac, Watertown, Houghton, Neenah, Menasha, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Huron, Volga, Fargo, Bismarck, Winona, Owafionna, La Crosse, and all points in Minnesota, Dakota, Wiscousin and the Northwest. (. = At Council Blaffs the trains of 'the Chicago & North-Western and U. P, R’ys depart from, arrive at and use the same joint Union Depot. At Chicago close connectionsare made with the Lake Shore, Michigan Central, Baltimore & Ohio, Fort Wayne and Pennsylvania, and Chicago & Grand Trunk R’ys, anid the Kanksakee and Pan Handle Routes. Sl : . Clese connections made at Junction Points. . 1t is the ONLY LINE running i r - Tre e Pullman Hotel Dining Cars e Chicago and Ceungil Biuity, Pullman Slee;{er’s on all §ight ".!JraL,n%. Insist npon' Ticket Agents selling yon Tickets via this road. Examine your Tickets, and refuse to buy if they de not read over the Chicago & North-Western Railway, X If you wish the Best ’lzravelln% Accommodations Wn will buy your tickets by this route, 82 AND ILL TAKE NONE OTHER. - : " All Ticket. Agents sell.’l‘lcket,s;li{ this Line. Vo . "MARVIN HUGHITT, 48-ly 24 V. P.and General Manager, Chicago. : % R haAT i 2% iy WAL "~ %1,000 Farfeit] ‘Having the utmost confl,%euce, in its superiorltg over all others, and after thousands of tésts of th most complicated and severest cases we conld find, we K»e‘. justified 1n ofigring‘tofo)‘fei'tl.flnb Thousand Dollars for any case o :Coqm Colds, gore throat, inflnenza, hoarseness, bronchitis, consumption, in Its early stages, whooping ¢ongh, and sall qi’isep,ses of thg;thmwand_..l_un%g.» except Asthma, for y’}#p we only claim relief, that we can’t c:;ire vy_ig:r .},,gwg.cp gh Syrup, when taken - according to directions. §a; filp.bpt leg 25 and 50 cents; larfe ’goflleqwne dojlar, Gengjne yrapgeuorfly n blue. Sold by all dry einls .tg eht § express on mcqi{)t f pricé. JOHN C. WESF & Qo-a ao}e_propt as‘%rs' 181& 188 W 03] St-., Chicazo. 1111. R ldby Gflfil‘“’. ', oOd ‘ ; Ligopler,dpg, .. - o . Wy
