Ligonier Banner., Volume 15, Number 50, Ligonier, Noble County, 31 March 1881 — Page 5

<e i W @he Ligonier Banner, TEBES OF SUBSCRIPTION. One copy, one year, in advance,..... --..---$2.00 SBix months, in adyanee.......tce..coseessao. 1.00 Eleven copies to one address, one year....... 20,00

OUR NEIGHBQRS. Monroeville, Allen county, has n,ineE cases of small pox. . 5 The ladies of South Bend have established a kinder-garten school. ‘ The mother of Mayor Zellinger, of Ft. Wayne, was buried last Sunday. The Northeastern Indiana Medical Society met at Auburn last Tuesday. Monroeville, over in Allen county, has eight cases of small-pox and any number of cases of measles. . i The Bpard of Trustees of the Fort Wayne water works want $25,000 additional to complete the same. The new Catholic library building in Fort Wayne, to be erected on' the Cathedral lot, will cost over $40,000. A conference of the Lutheran Synod of Northern Indiana was in session last week at Sedan, DeKalb county. The town of Auburg will sell additional bonds to the amount of $6,000, to re-build the burned school house, ' - As soon as the weather will permit grading and track laying will re-com-mence on the Detroit and Butler road. There are twelve surveying parties at work between Cleveland and Chicaoo on the New York, Chicago and St. Loouis Railroad. Tlereafter all freight for. Wabash points from the Grand Rapids, will be transferred to the Eel River railway at LaOtto. Tlleretofore it has been transferred at Ft. Wayne, We would warn our subscribers against the innumerable swindlers and black-legs who will soon be going the rounds. Oaur advice in all cases is, do net trust any of them.—ZLagrange Standard.

Ligonier’s corporation tax is only 20 | cents on the $lOO valuation. Modest councilmen, these Ligonierites. In aristocratic Columbia City we pay 50 cents corporation and 20 cents interest and sisking fund.—Post. - Prof. Goetz moves this week to Kendallville, where he is engaged as teacher of the city band. Lagrange loses two brilliant musicians in the persons of the Professor and his wife, by this arrangement.— Lagrange Standard. .Dr. S. B. Collins, the celebrated opium doctor of LaPorte, recently brought # suit of libel against his former wife, hnt the case was decided against him. e had been divoreed from her and a’ former wife, and his third wife died recently. ; ’ Elkhart is making another desperate effort to secure the C., W. & M. railroad extension. The manufacturers have pledged $B,OOO, it is understood, and tax payers will be selicited again to vote a tax sufficient to make up the $22,000 balance required, 5 " Dr. George W. McConnell, of Angola, the Republican says, stopped’ at Cleveland on his return from the inauguration, to inguire aboutthe prospeets of the new railread projeet, and reports that the permanent survey is being made, and the grade stalkes driven, et People of Huntington and Antioch -are all torn up over the prospective greatness of the latter place. which is thought will shortly rival Chicago in its goodly propertions. . The railroad shops of the Wabash road are about to be removed frocm Ft. Wayne to ‘Antioch. e i

. The unsophisticated Polanders of South Bend who were “ persuaded ” by their republican employers to support Garfield, on the plea that Democratic ascendancy meant a shutting down of all large manufactories, are rapidly being ousted and their places filled with Swedes.— Wabash Courier. - ForT WAYNE, March 26.—The fast line east on the Fort Wayne, road last night ran over and instantly killed a negro named Henry Beyer, who was: lying on the track asleep at Washington Station. He was seen a few hours before walking on tlie track very much intoxicated. The body was shockingly mangled, i : Those: who think the railroads donot agsist the matter of taxes, will be interested in knowing the amount of taxes paid into the, treasury of this county by the two leading roads. The figures as furnished by Treasurer Miller, show that the B. & O. road pays taxes amounting to $4,640,66, and .the Lake Shore roaé payg $6,630.30.— Auburn Courier.. - i Last week as one of our (German fellow-citizens was coming from the post-office, reading a letter, he stopped all at once and slapped himself on the leg, at the same time, gazing intently at the letter, then gave a harder slap thap before. When asked the cause for his joy, he exclaimed: “I got goot news from Germany, my mother died and leafe me dree hundred dollar!”— Auburn Courier. . el

A man living at Plymouth-discover- | ed his carpet on fire one day last week, and on examination, the Republican says, found that it.was caused by the rays of the sun shining through a window pane. At the point where the ¢4yB were concentrated a match wonld {gnite ingtantly, and he could hoid bis tfand there put an instant. No doubt put many mysterious fires are caused in the same way.— Warsaw Republican. On Friday, the 18th inst., while Mr. J. E. Thomson and wife, of Smithfield, were at Waterloo, they left their daughter, a girl of sixteen ztears, in charge of the house. In the afternoon gne of those fine-haired tramps ealled »nd wanted a pje for § centa. 'Ebe;%irl gave him 3 pie and when he had eaten b sgid‘};e did not haye to pay for it, and told her he wanted some money, ‘mot legs than %I._ She told him she did pot know as there was any money in the hoyse. He said people that could bnild such a house and barn had mon-

ey, and she must get him gome. She finally gave him some ghange, and he passed on without further demands,— Waterloo Press. '

“grotection” and Whges. The assertion that the working men of America are benefited by tariff monopolies was met the other day by Congressman Hurd in the following remarks made to a newspaper correspondent in Whashington: “Protection operates as a robbery of the laboring man and the man receiving wages. The agriculturist has no protection except pretentiously on wool, while he has to pay ‘seventy-five to one hundred per ceat. on the woolen goods he must needs wear. The daylaborer receiving *a wage, or .the mechanic, earpenter, shoemaker and men on a salary all have no protection, and all are compelled to pay from twentyfive to sixty per cemrt. of what they receive in the increased price of goods which are protected, and which they are obliged to buy. I'visited the house of a friend of minein Toledo the other day who had a wage ef $1.50 a day, bringing him,4in a yewr, an income of $450. I asked him how much he paid for the clothing ef his family. He said $lOO, at least. I told him he could have bought those clothes in Canada for $75, I demonstrated to him that he paid in a year nearly $2OO more for articles required by himself and family than they could have been purchased for in Cariada. I told him that this was the nefarious result of a protective tariff. He said this was a new

light to him, and that he would tell all his neighbors and friends that the protective tariff was taking nearly onehalf their wages, which the government did pot receive because these goods were manufactured in America, and therefore paid no duty to the government, but whieh went into the pockets lof the home manufacturer. The result of a protective tariff for twenty years has been the rebbery of all. men on wages of from one-third to one-half of what they have received, with no advantage to compensate for the loss of any, unless it be those who are employed in the manufacturing industries whose products are protected. Bat these men are out of employment a great portion of the time, and for the last ten years I will undertake to show the average wages of the meén in such manufacturingindustries have been less daily than those of the same persons similarly employed for the ten years preceding 1860 under a revenue tarciff.” ! - s

A Republican Protest. (Plymouth Démocrat.) o The New York 7Z'%imes is one of the Republican journals which exhibits some political sense when dealing with the banking and finance questions generally. It notices, “ with regret,” that when it was proposed in the refunding bill, now hefore congress, to put a partial check on the power of the national banks to tamper with the currency of the country, as their interest may dictate, the Republican side of the house rallied at once to the support of the bankers and antagoniz»d any attempt to limit their power, on the ground that'it was * an assault upon the banking system”—an assertion which is expected to silence ali criticism. The Times goes on to show that when a national bank thinks it for its interest to retire its circulation it proceeds to do so, throwing on the government the responsibility of taking care of it. But in order to prevent this, and as a measure of stability=to the volume of money, it is new proposed that no national bank shall be allowed to withdraw the bonds it puts up as security for its circulation to an amount below one-half of its capital. As at present regulated, there is a large margin for “kiting” the currency, as there would be also even under this restriction; and congress is acting wisely when it proposes that the eirculation of the banks shall be regulated not wholly in their own interests, but in agcordance ‘with the requirements of the people ‘and the “ wauts of trade.” At present the clearings in the bank circulation are almost wholly controlied by the prices of the bonds, not by the necesgities of trade and commerce. 7To prevent the evils “of this wholly selfish control on the part.of the baunks is a duty that congress ought not to neglect, and the 7'imes is perfectly right in demanding that it should be true to its trust in the matter. ]<O BR—————

The Incurably Insane. (LaPorte Argus.) It is a burning disgrace to Indiana that the Legislature does not provide | for the proper care of the incurably insane. These unfortunate people are uow turned away from the asylym, to be confined in the county poor house. It is rare that their friends are able to properly care for them, and it is still rarer that they are, or can be, furnish‘ed with suitable care at the county poor house, The gonduct of the State toward these unfortupates is shameful in the extreme, and has less te commend it than did the aets of the ancients who killed their incurably insane. Probably every county in the State has from one to a half dozen of these incurables to care for, and it 18 equally as probable that not one of the counties has' the requisite ' provisions for doing the work properly. The doors of the State asylum are too frequently opened to turn out incurables that room may be made for the admission of chronie drankards, opium eaters or petty thieves, whose waalth or position causes them to pass more politely as kleptomaniacs. laying aside all sentimtentality and coming down to the square test of facts, the drunkard can control his acts if he really desires to do so, but the iudividual who is a raving maniac occupies an entirely different plane and is fairly entitled to better treatment at the hands of the publhic. Itisa question of humanity that appeals to the sympathies of all thoughtful citizens, but is one that the counties eaunnot succegsfully grapple with fn their present giafe of dbvelop: ment. The state cannot too speedily Qhan%? its policy in rélation” to the treatinent of the incurably insane.

M. L. Hallenbeck is conducting revival meetings in San Fraoeisco, in connection with the singing evangelist, Stebbing, and is meeting with great sicoegs, His discourses are published infull in-the Daily Evening Post of that city.

MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. - Thetrunklines havereduced freights five cents per hundred pounds on live stock from Chicago to the seaboard. The Bible and Shakspeare were the late Senator Carpenter’s text books, He could repeat some of Shakspeare’s plays from beginning to end, without error. : From an interview with a reporter of the New York 7'ribune, it appears that Gen. J. H. Devereux thinks the present speculative tendency in railroad building to be the symptom of a panic like that of 1873. ! Experiments are now in progress for the purpose of using the electric light instead of oil as headlights on locomotives. Such light might enable engineers to see a great way ahead, if not round curves and from one station to another, . A Mifflin county (Pa.) youth invested 31.50 in a New York firm to discover “How to appear well in society.” The recipe which he received by return mail was short, simple and easi- ‘ ly understood: *“Always keep your‘ nose clean, and don’t suck more than | one finger at a time.” .. : \ Philadelphia has struck a big re-| publican gas swindle. An investigation has developed facts which show that the price charged for gas is 30 cents too high, entailing a loss, on the public of $l,OOO a day, and that theunnecessary waste of gas by leakage is in the aggregate $437,000 annually, which the city has been paying. The base step of the massive stone steps in front of the new house Wiil--lam H. Vanderbilt is building in New York, which was shipped from Bedford, Ind., a short time since, reached its destination safely and since has been placed in position at a cost to Mr. Vanderbilt of $856. The. bloek of stone was 33 feet long 1015 feet wide, 214 feet thick, and weighed 35,000 pounds. i

. There are thirty thousand labsrers on railroads in Texas and the demand for them is not entirely filled. Itig estimated that not less than a thoufian‘d men enter the state daily to seek 'employment in ,railroad construetion. When the projected enterprises in Mexico get fairly under way of construetion, there will probably be as lively demand for laborers as has ever been known in America. :

A wedding assembly at Columbus, Ohio, after waiting -half an hour beyoud the appointed time for the ceremony, was astounded by the entrafigce of the bridegroom with the bride’s sister on his arm, and there announced that they had just been married by a clergyman around the corner. This trick threw the outraged girl into brain fever, from which she is likely to die; but the wedded couple have gone on a bridal tour. . ; : The late Henry Wilson is reported as sayiug that, until he was t'wenty-one years old, he never had a dollar in meney to spend for anything. . During his whole apprenticeshiv bis master never gave him a penny but once; thea he presented theboy with three cents and allowed him to spend it at a muster. Yet Henry Wilson bgcame one of the great men of Massachusetts and Vice President of the United States. Penniless boys, take courage. Vice President Arthur will have no sinecure office. Ie cannot leave his place in the Senate to go fishing as Mr. Wheeler did. As long as the Senate remains ia session and whenever it is in session, Vice President Arthur must be on hand to preside, for whenever he is absent the republican majority will disappear. Ie cannot pair with z,mybody and if he should be out of his seat for any cause the Democrats could create a disturbance.

The Louisville Courier-Journal says that the protectionists hate any discussion of the tariff; they are doing all they can to prevent it; they fear such discussion; it brings out toomuch truth; they can not stand it. In spite of them, however, the tariff question is discussed, and it will be discussed more, and the people will contrive' to be better informed as to how they are swindled under the pleaof “protection.” The time is not far distant when the entrenchments of the favored sect will be overturned. That it will require hard work is admitted, but it will be ‘done. : ; ~ Impression prevails that an extra ‘session of Congress will be ealled to meet about the middle of May. Republicans are frightened at the rising storm of indignation caused by the defeat of the funding bill by that party. A million a month exacted from the pecple for the benefit of a few bondholders is something that the people will not. quietly endure; Hence the Republican anxiety for an extra session to pass a funding bill, The Democrats in case an extra session is called will be justified by precedent as well as publie policy in fillibustering to defeat any funding bill other than the one passed by them in the last Congress.—Cleveland Plaindealer.

Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. . The best Salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, cqorng, and all kinds of skin eryptions. - This Salve is guaranteed to gixpe perfpct satisfaction in eyery cash or tponey retundéd. Yrice'ad eents per box. For galé by H. C. Cunningham and D, S. Scott & Son, Ligonier, 15-Iy. ) <G> PR— Itching Piles—Symptoms and Cure. The symptoms are moisture, like perspiration, intense itching, increased by scratching, very distressing, particularly at night, as if pin worms were crawling in and about the rectum; the private parts are sometimes atfectgd;‘ i{ .gllqv;ged to continue Yery serious reguiia may follow. Dz. Bwayne’s ALg-Heaning OintyeNT i 8 & pleasant ‘sare qure. %11;0 for Tetter, Itch, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, x.'ysipelas. Barbers’ I‘tchs, Blotches, all Scaly, Orusty, Cutaneous Eruptions. Price 50 cents, 3 boxes for $1.25. Sent by mail to any address on receipt of currency, or three cent postage stamps. Prepared only by Dr. Swayne & Son, 830 North Sixth Street, Philadeiphia, Pa. Soid by all prominent druggista, Swayne’s Tys AND SaßsaPARITLA Prirsare excellent. Cure Sick and Nertoue Headaghe, Diyspepsia, Indigestion, ward off Malarial Fevers, clearsing the system and bowels of all impurities, restoring to healthy activity all the organs of the human body. Price 25 cents & box, flye boxes $l. Sold by C, Eldred & Son.

Oliver'sChille dPlows. /%= | ‘ — ;»-—“"'fif‘pz‘é:?“”’%if/%,fi s _ ! k:, l@re*“j’é’au/}igij%m fi/s : Wfifl ia i _ll‘flfl perrEcr -t A= i [asii; Satisfaction. CrEESESEee sS e s - — Warranted I wish to call Special Atttention to the new features of the above Plows. Alsoto - | 71 TheOriginal Spring Tooth Harrow. (i veiidde The Best and Only Genuine. “319 }';xi)f -' Deere (Moline) Corn Plow, Fence Wire, a large Assort2&\%@ j‘%‘ ment of the Best Cook Stoves, Roofing Slate, & ?Kfi M ECHANICS TOOLS *v L £§ | And all Kinds of Building Material. =~ Reed’s I’a\tgeht.' 15-47- E«. B'.- GERBER.

The Largest Establishment in Northern Indiana. ~ J. KELLER & CO. | KENDALLVILILE, : : : : INDIANA. ® o ——lnvite the publjc to visit their— ' | » ; ;—NOWV STOCKED WlTH——— : '

——A complete line of — A . ‘f"\ : BRY GOOODS, NOTIONS, ‘ : Fine Boots & Shoes, - —The latest Novelties in— Dress Goods and Shawls, \ FinéLines of LACES, HOSIERY, , OIL CLOTHS AND CARPETS, 7' TRUNKS AND VALISES.

3 : ;’ (e AL 1 . e " ¥ Gk B ¢ e/ o _ A WR A% 9% 0 , S o goo W o&, C (=2 T e e N e ") SN S AN | ——r—— ' \\g&%q‘g‘{:’gx R) ) N i-*;\ N G S I SR\ eAN & W e AN N 5 el %{%‘«}f’i‘a O|,§ L | e \ -‘"fi}f‘ it Bl i B ez R s R \¢ &x . 1 still keep my two spacivus Ware-Rooms well filled with all kinds of ; @ %« . ‘ ¢ X @ ¢ G 4 o , At the old Stand, Corner Cavin and Second Streets. UNDERTAKING DEPARTMENT. - Caskets, Coffins, Ladies’ and Gents’ Burial Robes Always on Hand. ’l‘emporar_y embalming when desired. I have also supplied myself with about as fine a hearse as can be found in Northern Indiana. Charges same as for former hearse. Thankful for past patronage, thf i?g‘:)r;fi%rribeié J:sgecitsiggly solicits a continuation of the same. W. A.. BROWN. -

MENDELSSOHN PIANO COMP™Y e n Will make, for the next 60 days only, a Grand Offer of R, | PIANOS AWNDORGANS, $B5O Square Grand Piano for Only $245, STYLE 3.Magniflcent rosewood case elegantly finished, 3 strings 7 1-3 Octaves full | patent eantante agraffes, our new patent overstrung scale, beautifully carved legs and lyre heavy superfine and large fancy moulding round case, full iron Frame, French Grand Action, Grand Hammers, in fact every improvement which can in any way tend to the perfection of the metrnme&xt has ibo:aen added. S 2~ our price for this instrument boxed and delivered on hoard the cars at New York, with fine Piano Cover, Stool and Beok, only $245000 This Piano will pe sent on test trial. Please send reference if yon do not send mon y with order. Cash sent with order will be refunded and freight charges paid by us both ways if Piano is not just as represented in this advertisement. Thonsands in use. Send for catalogue, Every instrument fully warranted for five years, : #165 TO %400 [with Stool, Cover and Book]. All strictly First- ! class and sold at Wholesale Factory Prices. These Pianos made one of 3 the finest di?lays at the Centennial Exhibition, and were nunanimously recommended for the Hienest Honors, The Squares. contain our new Patent Scale the greatest improvement in the history of Piano making. The Uprights are the finest 10 America, Positively we make the finest Pianas, of the righest tone and greatest durability. Whey are recommended by the Lighest musical authority in the country. ©Over 14,000 in use, and not one dissatisfed purchaser, All Pianos and Crgane senton 15 days’ test trial—freight free if unsatisfactory, Don’t fail to write us hefore buying. Positively we offer the best hargains, Ca,talogne mailed free, Handsome Jlnsirated and Degeriptive of 48 pages mailed for 3c stamp. Every Piano fally warrantegd for 4v aTg. : , \ B Our "I;‘qfléu Grand Jubilee Organ,” style 85, is the finest and sweetest \ toned reed Organ ever offered the musical public. 1t contains Five 03; ; taves, Five ‘sets of Reeds, four of 2} octaves each, and one of Thr Octaves. Thirteen stops with Grand Organ—Diapason. Melodia, Viola, te. Celeste, Dulcet, Echo, Melodia-Forte, Celestina, Violina. Flute-Forte. Tremolo, Grané-Organ and Grand-Swell, Knee-Stops. Height, 74 in.: Length, 43 in,; Width, 24 in.; Weight, boxed, 360 gnnnds. .The case is of solid ,walnut, veneered with choice woods, and is of an entirely new and eautiful design, elaborately carved, with raised panels, music closet, Jamp stands, fretwork, etc., all elegantly finished. Possesses all the latest and best improvements, with great power, d?th. brilliancy and sympathetic quality of tone. Beautiful solo e?‘eots and and perfect stop action, e¥ular retail price $285. Our wholesale net cash price to have it introduced, with stool and book, only $97--a8 one organ sold sells others. Positively no deviasion in price. No payment required until you have rulli tested the organ in your own homg. We sénd all organs on 15 days test trial and pay freight both ways if instrument is nat g 8 raprasonted. Fully warranted for five years. Other styles—B stop organ only £65; 9 stopas, B‘?}s§ 14 stops, $ll5. Over 32,000 sold, and every or%f.n has given the fulleat satisfaction. Jljlustrated circular mailed free. Factory and Warerooms, 57th St. anf 10th Ave, q E UIC at one-third price. Catalogue of 3,000 choice pieces sent for 3¢ stamp. A 3 ] _ LU This Catalogue includes most of the popnflu‘ music of the day and every varlety of musiqal composition, by thebest authors. Address, MENDELSSOHN PIANO CO., P. 0. BOX 2058; New York City,

ARGHY WILSON, FASHIONARLI ‘ BARBER AND HAIR-DRESSER, mer%tl\ing goqnegted’ with the bnsiness done neatIy and ¢xpeditiously. Room--Fjirst door north ot ‘Green’q meat market, Ligonter, Ind. 7-tf T 3 T, P s e T 3 3T A T T e BN T M S STt | THIS P APER mafiobc found on file at Geo. | " P. Rowell & Co’s Newggzfie‘er | Advertising Bureau (10 Spruce St.&where advertising | ~ecutracts may be made for it IN NEW YORK. ! W - o - N Watches. Stém winderss3.so, White metal Hunting Case l 32 $5. Tmitation gold $6. Solid gold $l2. Cheapest and best: for your own use or speculative purposes, Valuable cataloguefree, THOMPSON & €O, 132 fiomust. New Xork.

' The handsomest line of Ready - Made CLOTHING ' Ever shown in this market. Their Merchant Tailoring 1 DEPARTMENT Is filled with the latest styles of Foreign - and Domestic CASSIMERES AND WORSTEDS For Suitings and Pantings. Also a full ; assortment of HATS & CAPS, Gents’ Furnishing Goods ‘ ‘ A e i

BR. SHEFFER. ' . ' @ PAINTER, GRAINER, GLOSSER, ‘Paper-HanP'or and White-Washer, Give meacall, Shop on Mitchell street, east of meat shop, Kendallville, Indiana. ; [l4-6-tf e HIAIR WEAVING. I AM PREPARED to do hair weaving and guarantee my work. Hair Switches and Braids made at 50 cents per ounce; Puffs for 10 cts, each ; Qurls and Frizzes reasonable, TR ot . Mgs,: B. M. SCHLOTTERBACK, 28-t1) Martin Bt., sonth-west part of Ligonier S RS 0 SR Old papers for sale at this office

- OF ALL. ' FOR MAN AND BEAST. | For more than a third of a century the Mexican Miustang Liniment hasbeen known to millions all over the world as the only safe reliance for the relief of accidents and Pain.' It is a medicine above price and praise—the best of its tl; ind. F¥orevery formn of external pain ie o : Mustang Liniment is without an equal. It penetrates flesh and muscle to the very bome—making the continuance of pain and inflammation impossible. Its effects upon Human Flesh and the Brute Creation are egually wonderful. The Mexican - Liniment is meeded: by somebody in every house. Every day brings news of the agony of an awful scald or burn subdued, of rheumatic martyrs rec-| stored, or a wvaluablé horse or ox saved by the healing power of this which speedily cures such ailments of the HUMAN FLESH as | Rheumatism, Swellings, Stiff Joints, Contracted Muscles, IBurns and Scalds, Cuts; DBruises and! Sprains, Poisonous Bites and Stings, Stiffness, ~ Lameness, Old Sores, Ulcers, Frosthbites, Chilblains, tSore Nipples, Caked Breast, andl indeed every form of extermal dis=ease. It heals without scars. <) For the BRUTE CREATION it cures « = Spraing, Swinny, « Stiff Joints, Founder, Harness Sores, Hoof Diseases, F'oot Rot, Screw Worm, Scab, Hollow HHorn,* Scratches, Wind=s@l 18, Spavin, - Thrush, Ringbone, 1d Sores, PolliXvil, Film unpon the Sight and every other ailment to ‘which the¥occupants of the Stable and Stock Yard are liable. The Mexican Mustang Liniment always cures and never disappoints; and it is, positively, 1 : THE BEST . OFfALLY. . FOR MAN OR BEAST.,

ee RN zrfih“’i\f /el o s bl Sl X/ £9 S e N = ‘4‘3’) . AHTOARE 2! A\ y A I F}‘ \‘R: AU AT A’h 0 N rf‘ NS T b Tt 48 0 M 2 Ol ""m h G =\ K ' i ‘l‘-51."5'!!!‘!‘,‘4"5. 1 ."ln"mmu ] i i R \MM I, \(FOR ALL POINTSY .@:\m“:m»m;uuuuw o ,e i L) TI I# SJ fl‘!n& ik A WIS Il

- THE CGREAT ) s 7 Y BUREINGTON ROUTE. §%" No other line runs Three Through Pasgenger Traing Daily between Chicago, Des Moines, Council Bluffs, Omaha, Lincoln, St. Joseph, Atchison, Topeka and Kansag, City. Direct- connections for all points in Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming: Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Arizonsa, Idaho, Oregon and California. : ’ The Shortest, Speediest and Most Comforta-. ble Route via Hannibal to Fort Scott, Denison, Dallas, Houston, Austin, San Antonio, Galveston and all' points in Texas: ‘ The unequaled inducements offered by this Line to Travelers and Touristg, are as follows: The celebrated Pullman (16-wheel) Palace Sleeping Cars, run only on this Line, C., B. & Q. Palace Drawing-Room Cars, with Horton’s Reclining Chairs. No extra charge for Seats in Reclining Chairs. The famous 0.,, R. & Q. Palace Dining Cars. Gorgeous Smoking Cars fitted with Elegant High-Backed Rattan Revolving Chairs for the exclusive use of first~ class passengers. i T Steel Track and Superior Equigment, eom--bined with their Great Through Car Arrange- . ‘ment, makes this, above all others, the favorite Ivtvoutte to the South,’South-West, and the Faxr' £BO. el 5 ; : Try it, and you will find traveling a luxury instead of a discomfort. o : ; Through Tickets via this Celebrated@ Line Eor. s&tle at all offices in the United States and gHRan. o . s All information about Rates of Fare, Sleep~ ing Car Aec¢ommodations, Time Tables, &c., will be cheerfully given by applying to Lo s SN TR W i . @eneral Pas,ah}gvgofia‘em;efim , ' General Manager, Chioagay