Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 51, 6 April 1908 — Page 6
PAGE SIX.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AXD SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, APRIL 6, 190S.
SALOON MEN ARE MUCH ALARMED
Fighting for Their Life, But Fear Defeat in Illinois, Tuesday. VOTE ON PROHIBITION. IF THE "DRYS" WIN THE GREATER NUMBER OF COUNTIES IN THE STATE MUST DO WITHOUT SALOONS IN FUTURE. Chicago, April C More than I.!?) Illinois cities, towns and villages will vote on prohibition Tuesday and on April --'1. If the "drys" win 8 of the 103 counties in the state must do without saloons. Leaders of the anti saloon forces claimed today they would in at least 000 of the 1,'JOO communities. There are only eight cities in the litate where the question will not. be settled Chicago, Peoria, Quincy, East fit. Louis, Streator, IaSalle and Galena. The anti-saloon people are confident in winning in Rockford, Waukegan, Elgin, Rock Island, Galeshurg, Bloomington, Danville and Decatur. Even In Springfield, Aurora and .Toliet the rising- wave of prohibition sentiment in the last 10 days has given the temperance workers hope of victory. The saloon forces are alarmed at the prospect of defeat, and have been making a bitter figftt. In many cities personal friendships of long standing liave been broken under the bitterness of the campaign, banks and business i louses have been boycotted and even preachers have seen their congregations abandon them. PUBLIC AUCTION. Household goods will be sold Wednesday, April 8th at 1:30 P. M. 840 8outh 8 th. 5-3 1 ECONOMY. IND. Economy, Ind., April C Mrs. Amanda and Miss Ida Lamb, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lamb and children Zella, Lela and Reece, were' shopping in Richmond. W. H. Haynes, president of the Modoc telephone company, was here. Charles Smith of Hagerstown, and 'irvey Shank of West Alexandria, O., uiests of Edwards brothers re.tuUy. Mr. and Mrs. Olie Weyl attended the M. E. annual conference at Anderson last week. Mrs. Carrie Jackson was visiting relatives in Anderson last week. Miss Bessie Taylor went to Muncie last week. Prof, and Mrs. Moore and Miss Effie Wilson were entertained Saturday by Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Peirce of Greensfork. Tom Parker and sister Oral, were Mr. and Mrs. John Franklin's visitors last week. Mrs. Louie Albertson. our efficient postmistress, Is back at the office after a few days' vacation. Mrs. Matilda Martin is reported some better. She has been suffering with rheumatism for the past several weeks. The last day of Miss Esther Jones's school of Dalton township, occurred last week. There was a big dinner served and a program rendered. Will Stolts has not returned yet owing to the Illness of his father. Several from here attended the M. E. Conference at Anderson. MASONIC CALENDAR. Monday, April 6 Richmond Comtnandary No. 8, K. T. Stated conclave. Tuesday, April 7 Richmond lodge, No. 196, F. & A. M. Stated meeting. Thursday, April 9 Wayne Council R. & S. M. Rehearsal Super Ex defree. Friday, April 10 King Solomon's Chapter No. 4, R. A. M. Stated convocation. Nervous Break-Down Nerve energy is tHe force that controls the organs of respiration, circulation, digestion and elimination. When you feel -weak, nervous, irritable, sick, it is often because you lack nerve energy, and the process of rebuilding and sustaining life is interfered with. Dr. Miles' Xervine has cured thousands of such cases, and will we believe benefit if not entirely cure vou. Try it. "My nervous system gave away completely, and left me on the verse of the m-ave. 1 tried skilled physicians but got no permanent relief. I a-ot so bad I had to give up my business. I began taking Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine. In a few days 1 -was much better, and I continued to Improve until entirely cured. I am In business again, and never miss an opportunltv to recommend this remedy." MRS. W. U BURKK. Myrtle Creek. Oregon. Your drugglit sells Dr. Miles' Nervine, and we authorize him to return price of first bottle (only) If It fails to benefit you. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind
FOUND DEAD IN BARN
George White of Near Dublin, Supposed to Have Died Of Heart Trouble. DECEASED WAS PROMINENT Dublin, Ind., April 6.-George White, an aged man residing on a farm about four miles west of town, was found dead in the barn at his home Saturday. Mr. While left the house in apparent good health. He did not return from the barn for some time and members of the household became alarmed. An investigation revealed his lifeless body lying on the floor. Death is supposed to have been due to heart failure. He is survived by his wife and a niece. Miss Butler, who made her home with the Whites. The deceased was a prominent member of the Friends' church and always was an active worker for its welfare. The funeral was held this morning at the Friends church. The interment was at Walnut Ridge cemetery. CAMBRIDGE CITY, IND. Cambridge City, Ind., April .-Miss Hattie McClave, who has spent the winter with Mrs. Rebecca Ritter. north of town, has returned to her home. P. H. Zehrung returned from the Indianapolis convention quite sick, but is now convalescent. Everett White, of Richmond, visited Mr. and Mrs. O. E. White of this city on Sunday. Harry Zehrung and wife of Connersville. spent. Saturday with their parents in this city. John E. Gray was appointed on an Important committee at the North Indiana conference. Mrs. George Cary and Miss Rose Greisinger spent Friday afternoon in Richmond. Mr. Otton Grass and wife having concluded their contract with the Hall department store in this place have gone to Jackson, Ohio. Mrs. John Hazelrigg and daughter, were shopping in Richmond on Saturday. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Amos Lannerd, a son." Mrs. Harry McCrae, who has been spending a few weeks with Mrs. Geo. Paul has returned to her home in Chicago. Miss Grace Mills and Miss Alma McWhorter spent Sunday in Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Penny of Richmond, spent Sunday in this city. Miss Annette M. Edmunds spent Sunday with her sister in Indianapolis. Ernil Ebert of Greenfield. spent Sunday with his family in this city. Miss Dora Wallace, who has been spending her vacation with friends in this vicinity, returned to Bloomington this morninig to resume her work in the State university. Clifford Marson was '21 years of age on Saturday, and in view of the fact his parents planned and carried out for him a pleasant surprise. His sister, Mrs. O. E. Huddleson, and cousin. Miss laurin Griffith, of Muncie, and Miss Olive Ford, of Richmond, were present on the occasion. Ten of his gentlemen friends took supper with him in the evening, and presented him with a unique remembrance twentyone gifts in a bundle, symbolical of the years. A special train was run from this place to Rushville on Saturday evening for the accommodation of those who wished to attend the Watson reception. More than a hundred persons from Cambridge City and other towns were in attendance. The delegation was accompanied by the Cambridge City Band. Among the number who went, were Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Callaway, Mr. and Mrs. O. E. White, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hicks, Mr. and Mrs. Omer Guyton, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Myers, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Ogborn Mr. and Mrs. Orange Hall, Mr. and Mrs. Wright Sparks, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Penny. GREENSFORK, IND. Greensfork. Ind., April f. Frank Gilmore of Richmond silent Saturday here. Phillip Miller of Jaeksonburg was in town Saturday. Dr. and Mrs. Crump spent Saturday with relatives in Hagerstown. Corn is getting to be a very scarce article in this vicinity. The farmers are buying corn and are paying Co cents per bushel and hauling it from the crib. There is a large crop of spring pigs and la growing them, they are preparing to feed corn while their pigs are on pasture in order to get ; the best results. Very few hogs axe being fed in this locality for May mar-1 ket. I Oliver Hatfield's mother-in-law,! Mrs. Shaw, who is spending the win-j ter with them, has had a stroke of par-; alyses. j Mrs. Sue Gaylor of Richmond spent j Saturday and Sunday with relatives j here. j Mrs. William Roller and daughter.; Helen, are guests of relatives at Straughn s for a few days. Mrs. Horace Dean entertained the Thimble club Saturday afternoon. Dr. AY. . Neff has returned from the M. E. conference at Anderson. Miss Estella Hunt is spending a few days with relatives in Richmond. Rev. Franklin, wife and son of Indianapolis are spending a few days here. He will preach Sunday morning and evening at the Christian church. DUBLIN.JND. Dublin, Ind., April Will Floyd was iu New- Castle last week. Charles Evan went to Indianapolis. Saturday. Mrs. Matt Brown and daughter, Mndfl. axe visiting, friends nera.
HOPE TO SECURE PERSON OF TAYLOR
Man Hiding in Indiana Wanted Badly in Kentucky. Is WAS ACCUSED OF CRIME. THOUGHT THAT HE WAS ACCOMPLICE IN MURDER OF GOVERNOR GOEBEL FAIR TRIAL IF HE IS RETURNED. Lexington, Ky., April 6. Efforts to get Governor Willson to issue requisi tion papers for the return of Governor W. S. Taylor from Indiana will likely 1)3 made this week, when the Franklin circuit court term begins. The first case on the docket is that of Tay lor. charged with complicity in the as sassination of William Goebel, and it has been the first case at the head of the docket for eight years. In the last message received here from Taylor he gave as his reason for not returning to Kentucky that he could not get a fair trial. R. L. Stout, the regular trial judge of this court, has disqualified himself from serving as the trial judge in the Taylor case because he assisted in draw ing the jury in a trial of Jim Howard, a companion case, on the same charge. Governor Willson, therefore, would have to appoint the judge to try Taylor and would select a man who he believed would give Taylor a fair trial. There is some speculation here as to whether the judge selected will be a democrat or a republican. Efforts will also be made to get Governor Willson to issue a requisition for Charles Finley, who is indicted for complicity in the same murder. CENTERVILLE. IND. Centervillc, Ind., April 6. All the teachers of the Centervillo public schools attended the Teacher's Northern Association meetings at Indianapolis last week. There was no school on Friday. Mrs. Nettie Charman has gone to Winchester to spend a few days with relatives. Mrs. Walter Stevens and son, of Indianapolis, were recent guests of Mrs. Catherine O'Melia. Mrs. Ellen Vastbinder of Manistique, Michigan, has been visiting her brother, M. B. Reynolds and wife. Mrs. Edith Ball and son'Robert, of Williamsburg, Ind., were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Reynolds recently. Miss Laura Bertsch will visit in Muncie on her return from the Methodist conference and will be the. guest of Mrs. Alice Williams. A number of the relatives of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Darnel!, gave them a delightful surprise party at their home on East Walnut street. THE CLIMBING PERCH. An East Indian Flih That Travels Over the Land. As a rule, fish come out of the water only at the end of a line or by other involuntary process, but the climbing perch of the East Indies thinks nothing of leaving a pool with which it is not satisfied and starting overland in search of one more to its taste. This usually happens as a result of the evaporation of a pool in the extremely dry season. When the fish decide that the water in the particular pool formed during the rainy season is in danger of drying out completely they make all preparations for moving and late at night or early In the morning deliberately climb the banks and start off iu search of some more commodious pool or stream not in danger of going dry. When the journey is made at the hour it usually is the lish are favored by the heavy dew which lies on the grass, but if an emergency arises they will boldly strike out at noontime along the dusty road. They travel by means of the strong bony fins which are full of sharp spiues, like those of the common perch. They have a receptacle in -which they carry water with them to moisten their gills. It is said that they will live several days out of water, and with the assistance of the dew laden grass the fish that starts iu search of a satisfactory pool or stream is practically sure of living until it finds it. Brockton Times. Origin of 'nlts." The members of the Society of Jesus appear first to have been given their ! familiar shnrt n.imv ".T,snit " hv nnno i other than Calvin. Tope Sixtus V. attempted to chauge their name from "Society of Jesus" to "Society of Ignatius," after their founder, Iguatius Loyola, but the attempt miscarried, and the Jesuits have never become "Ignatians," after the model of the Franciscans. Dominicans and Benedictines, although their enemies in Spain used to call them "Inigisias" tlnigo being the Spanish original of Loyola's Christian name. In France after their expulsion in 17(55 those who ventured to remain temporarily called themselves 'Fathers of the Faith," or "Clerks of the Sacred Heart"- London Chronicle. The Dart tine Ttap. Trolonged "forty winks" during the day are severely condemned by many doctors on the ground that they affect one's regular sleep. Scientists have fcund that in the ordinary course In the human being there Is the greatest vitality between 10 a. m. and - p. m. and the least between 2 o'clock and 6 o'clock in the morning. Long sleeps during the day interfere with this order of nature, sometimes causing headache. The nap of forty winks, but only forty, proves refreshing to many because it is too short to have any Injurious consequences. Eeckt: Uoid Medal Flour for m.
SCHEDULE IS FIXED
Great Battle Fleet Will Leave Magdalena Bay Next Saturday. WESTERN CITIES RECEIVE. Washington, April C Secretary Metcalf has made public the details of the greatest naval show the Pacific coast has ever had, being the itinerary of the fleet from Magdalena Bay to San Francisco. The fleet will sail from Magdalena Bay Saturday. The following Tuesday at 2 o'clock in the afternoon, it will drop anchor at San Diego Bay, where it will remain until 0 a. m., Saturday, April IK Each night the "big sixteen" will be illuminated, and each day the ships will put on full dress. At San Pedro Bay, which will be reached in the afternoon of Saturday. April IS, the fleet will divide. The first division will remain at San Pedro while the second will go to Ixmg Beach, the third to Santa Monica and the fourth to Rodondo. small places alone the coast, adiacent to Los Angeles. These visits will occupy the fleet until Saturday. April 25, when it will sail for Santa Barbara, where it will arrive on the same day and remain until the last day of April. Santa Cruz will be the next show place reached on the 1st of May for a four days' stay, and two day's later, May ;, the grand triumphal eutry to San Francisco harbor will be made, and preparations begun for the review, which is to take place two days later, with Secretary Mettalf's flag at the masthead of the Yorktown as the receiving ship. The schedule of dates, it is explained is subject to change if rendered necessary for unforeseen circumstances. Hours of arrival and departure will depend on weather conditions and ab sence of fogs. DESTINY OF THE JEW To Give the World iiomoseneoa. Humanity, Hnym Walter Hart Zionism, as it presents itself to me. Is a beautiful but a barren dream. It is the noble conception -of a splendid sentimentalist, born from the grand brain and nursed in the great heart of Theodore Herxl and well calculated to inspire the imagination of a people that have cherished through the centuries its imperishable ideals. It is the flower of a mighty love that never can know a momentary fruition. In this clannlshness of the Jew, enf uuu iu yuiionopiiy in couui uons inai appear to us as cruel. Ills has been but a preparatory experience. The strongest bond of brotherhood in the world today is that of Jewish blood. It is the red badge of a freemasonry founded on a community of suffering, an 1 Its ritual is written large upon each heart in letters of pain. And this it is that at last will weld the world together. With the infusion of Jewish blood into the universal social body blood become so distinctive that it will tincture the whole vast volumemen will meet from the ends of the earth and, looklug in each other's face, will recognize a clansman. r, . i . ; . i i , . . , . . .ii, is ii.e unuiif mentu lor uie jc w iuis is nis socioiogie luncuou to break down the barriers of race! that partition society Into nations and give to the world a homogeneous humanity. Walter Hurt in Culturist. Shrinking; Flannel. All good flannel is shrunk before beingoffered to the public, and the process is carried on by the most experi enced cloth workers. The flannels are piacea Detween two neavy wet sneers first and left in that position for twenty four to thirty-six hours. When removed they are spread out on specially prepared rails in a drying room heated by steam pipes, where they are allowed to remain until thoroughly dry. The next process is to place the lengths of .u uuuuc. iu iuiuo urmwu Kjjrtrin ui ing by hydraulic machines. The more pressure they are subjected to the more valuable and heavy the flannels be - come. London Graphic. An ingaiiant Wish. . In the court of sessions in Scotland the judges who do not attend or give a proper excuse for their absence are by law liable to a fine. This law, how - ever, is never eiuorced, but it is com - mon on the first day of the session for the absentee to send an excuse to the lord president. Lord Stonefield having sent such an excuse, on the president mentioning it the late Lord Justice Cierk Braxfleld said iu his broad dialect, "What excuse can a stout fellow like him ha'e?" "My lord," saiQ the president, "he has lost his wife." The justice, who was fitted with a Xantippe, replied: "Has he? That is a gude excuse indeed. I wish we had a' the same." Real Kvidenee. "My only objection to the youne, man," said the father, speaking of the youth who proposed to his daughter, "is thit he doesn't seem to have the least bit of sense or foresight." "But," answered the mother, "he has as much sense as you had when you asked for my band." "Confound it! That's just why I object to him." Philadelphia Inquirer. The Same Old Watch. "Hello, Rummel. I hear you had your watch stolen the other day." "Yes. but the thief Is already caught. Just think, the fool took it to the pawnshop, and there they immediately recognized it as mine and detained him." Fllegende Blatter. Bohemian Rates. Van Dauber-How much do you pay a week for vour board and room STlbbler Well, some expressmen charge me $1 and some 75 cents. Puck. There Is not a single moment in lif4 ttat e can afford to lose.-Goulbura.
A HOLE INJHE ROCK The Story of an Attempted Escape From Gibraltar.
1 BURROWING OUT OF PRISON. ! The Wonderful Secret Work That Convict Realff Performed In the Teeth of Constant and Systematic Supervision by His Jailers. Ambrose Realff was undergoing a life sentence ou the towering rock of Gibraltar for scuttling his ship for the sake of the insuratue umuey. The governor told the story of Iteu'ifT's attempt to escape: "That fellow led a roving life a daredevil that otteyed every impulse, good or bad. And yet for three whole years I found him a model prisoner. At first he was employed as carpenter, and a little later we put him on the harbor works. But suddVnly to this wild nature came an unquenchable thirst for freedom. At that time Realff was in charge of all the laborers' pick handles and wheelbarrows in the Rosia quarry, where he was installed in a little lean-to shed against a hollow in the mighty cliff. Every report put Wore me man's good behavior. extolled the "Well, every afternoon at 4 the working party of convicts would form up and return to the prison which, as you know, contains some of the toughest characters of both east and west and an officer would go to Realff's shed to unlock him and bring him along with the rest. "Rut this afternoon the door was opened in vain. Realff was not there. And yet twenty minutes previously he had been seen through the little winSow when visited by the chief warder. He had even answered to his name as he stood planing at his bench in a dark recess. He was gone, how or where not a soul knew. Unquestionably the shed was locked on the outside, and the lock had not been tampered with. And there appeared no other exit except the door, nothing but solid rock. The little shanty was ransacked, emptied, but without result. "Could the man, I wondered, have discovered some secret recess? You know the whole rock is fairlv bonev- , conibe,i with holes, both natural and artificial, like Gruyere cheese. Alarmed at the results such an escape would have on the morale of my dangerous gangs. I had torches brought and personally examined every nook and cranny of the cliff against which the shed was built. Then my lest officers went over it all with hammer and crowbar. But no, nothing but solid rock. Now for the floor. It was level and fairly smooth, just covered In places with a little loose shingle. Bring me a bucket of water, I cried with sudden inspiration. When it rame, I threw it carefully out. and we nil watched. 'More and more!" We fairly inundated the floor and shouted with excitement as we saw it ebb almost as swiftly as we poured. "Mere absorption was impossible. The rock was not porous. There must be a cave or tunnel lelow. The man hunt was growing hotter now. Relentlessly we traced the ebbing streams to a dark and distant corner, w here 1 had a ! to .get dow n on all fours to crawl un der a massive rock shelf. Here the i last trickle disappeared, j "lake a flash our crowbars were at ! work, and, lo, a big block was pried up, revealing a dark gulf below. I approac.lie(1 it cautiously. 'Now, Realff,' 1 cried sternly, 'it's all up! We've got you:' "There was no reply. My chief warder poked a pole down and found a depth of eight feet. He and two giant subordinates got out their revolvers, seized lanterns and swung themselves in as ticklish a job as routing out a wounded tiger from his lair. We above waited long and i ,ponth!f.iT Suddenly a faint shout i traveled up to us. followed by sounds j of a desperate struggle in the cavern, j ; jiy and by back they came, with Realff j securely handcuffed. Lowering rojes. ! : we hauled him up. battered, but smil- ! lng. "He faced his disappointment with rare pluck. Cashed a smile on me and ;paiu, tsetter lucK next time, coionei.' j patient years of endeavor. I think he , discovered the pit shortly after he ! was first put in the shed. And he had j not only enlarged it with a scrap of , iron and the patience of another Baron Trench, but he had also extended it I laterally, no doubt hoping for ultimate ' escape to the 6ea by the subterranean j passage. I 1 "But even this in any event was only ; , the first stage. Realff s provision weut ; much farther. He had actually built himself a boat out of nondescript scraps of canvas, old sacks and odds and ends of timber. It was a marvel : of constructive skill, yet surely none lut a desperate man would think of committing himself to the Mediterranean or Atlantic In such a crazy skiff a mere tiny coracle barely capable of keeping a man afloat. Of course he felt sure that once launched he would soon Ik; picked up by some passing craft in the crowded strait of Cibraltar, and he had a story ready for his saviors as well as provisions for himself. Of these last he had abundance chiefly biscuit and salt pork laid by bit by bit from his rations and carried out daily from thf prison in such small quantities as to elude the search made at every parade. "But that the man was able to labor In his cave and build and provision his boat in the teeth of constant and systematic supervision seems to me little short of marvelous." New YorlC Tribune. NOTICE. The annual meeting of the stock holders of the Richmond Trust Company will be held at the office of the company, 715 Main St., Richmond, i Ind., on Tuesday, April 7, 1&08, at 4 ; twe,ye directors to serve the en. suing year, and the transaction of any I other business that may properly come before the meeting. E. G. HIBBERD, President. 2628-31-3-6 jpjUJjQIUllM WANT ADS. PAY
II M
SHOE For Men " Built on reasomb!e lines. Every curve and swell of the foot finds a corresponding form in a 4Bostonian"shoe. That means actual and unqualified foot-comfort, because tired feet, sore joints and those
agonizing little things called corns, are caused by shoes which attempt to shape the foot to themselves rather than shape themselves to the foot.
"Bostonian" shoes fit like touch all over but they do it easy
come to "Bostonian" 14 style " and "wear," there's nothing to be desired. :?i'.e by the Commonwealth Shoe and Leather Company, Boston. CUNNINGHAM & LAHRMAN
-t.:ir.j It r.il In. The prose.-uiiu.tr witness in the damage suit against the city was giving in his testimony. "Now. then, Mr. Bleedem," paid his lawyer, "you will please tell the Jury w here you were Injured." "On my knee, iu my feelings and right in front of the city hall," rapidly answered the witness, fearing au objection on the part of the other attorney. Chicago Tribune. I,
How You Lose Money If your refrigerator uses more ice than it should then you are losing money, and you ought to come in and order a McCray today and begin to save money.
Save 54 on Ice Bills because the McCray Patent System of Refrigeration is the best system ever invented and because their insulation is so perfect that the walls of the refrigerator keep the cold air in and the warm air out. Come in and let us phow- you how the wall of a McCray Refrigerator ' is made and how it keeps the cold air in and the warm air out.
SOLD
Jones Hardware Conrapainy
! gj I Borne Tel. 2062
Bwromtiwa
Chicago, Cincinnati &
Easlbound Clilcago Cincinnati
1 3 S 31 STATION'S Except , Dally Dally Snna'ay Sunday Lr Chicago 8.35am 9.30pm 8.25am Ar Peru 12.40pm l.r.Gam 12.40pm Lv Peru 12.50pm 2.0r.am 6.00am 4.40pm Lv Marion 1.44pm 2.53am 7.03am 5.37pm Lv Muncie 2.41pm 3.57am 8.10am, 6.40pm Lv Richmond 4.05pm 5.15am f.35am 8.05pm Lv Cottage Grove 4.45pra t.53am 8.45pm Ar Cincinnati 6.35pm 7.30am 10.25pm Westbound CincinnatiChicago 2 4 33 STATIONS j Except J Dally Dally Sunday I Sunday Lr Clndnratl 8.40am 9.00pm 8.40ara Lv Cottage Grove 10.13am 10.40pm 10.15am Lv Richmond 10.55am 11.15pm 6,20pm 10.55am Lv Muncie 12.17pm 32.45am 8.00pm 12.17pm Lv Marion 1.19pm 1.44am 9.00pm 1.19pm Ar Peni 2.15pm 2.35am 19.00pm 2.15pra Lv Peru 2.25pm 2.45am 4.50pm Ar Chicago (12th St Station) 6.40pm 7.00am 9.20pm
Through Vestlbuled Trains between Chicago and Cincinnati over our own rails. Double daily service. Through Sleepers on trains Nos. 3 and 4 between Chicago and Cincinnati. Local sleeper between 'Muncie. Marion, Peru and Chicago, handled in trains Nob. 5 and 6, between Honda anl Peru, thence trains Nos. 3 and 4, between Peru and Chicago. For train connections and other Information aU C. A. BI,ATBt P. A. T. A.
V. ' TV
a sock they ; and when yon The Angel Makers. Roltert Smith, brother of Sydney Smith and an ex-advocate general, on one occasion engaged in an argument with a physician over the relative merits of their rexpective professions. "I don't say that all lawyers are crooks." said the doctor, "but you'll have to admit that your profession doesn't make angels of men." "No." retorted Smith. "You doctors certainly hT the bast of us there." St James' Gazette. - - iV. ONLY BY Home Tel. 2062 Louisville Railroad Co,
