Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 55, 2 January 1909 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM A2TO SUN-TELEGBAM, BATURDAY, .JANUARY 2, 1909.
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Tte Rictond Palladium an Snn-Telecram Published and own ad by the PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. Issued 1 dtf Kh wuk, evenings , and Sunday morning. Offlc Corner North tth and A street. Horn Phone lltl. RICHMOND, INDIANA,
O. Leeds Managing Kdtter. H. If organ Bnslaeee Manager, i ffalia Trmr Kdltor. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. In Richmond $5.00 per year (In advanoe) or 10c per week. MAIL. SUBSCRIPTIONa Ob year. In advance ........ ....$5.00 nix months, in advance One month. In advance ....... 2.89 45 RURAL. ROUTES. One year. In advance . At nuinthi. In Advance $2.00 ....... l.co One month. In advance -25 Address changed as often an deslreM; both new and old addresses must b given. Subscriber will pleane remit with order- which should be Riven for a specified term; name will not bo entered until payment is received. Entered at Richmond. Indiana, postoffice as second class mall matter. "THE DEVIL." Richmond owes ?) a vote of thanks to Henry W. Savage for favoring it with a Bight of his famous (?) pro duction, "The Devil." It evidently felt Its debt, according .to the size of the audience that cheerfully contributed good money to see the excellently act cd version of this damnable play. Hu man nature to attend such a play? i Yes, for the writer was present at the .performance and wants just such an excuse one that would have come well from the lips of the plausible devil, last night for having been there. The Devil, however, is one of those plays that leaves a "cold, gray dawn" taste in one's mouth. It deals with the bad in good and bad men and good and bad. women. With triumphant bad, if you please made so by the plausibility and vepeerlng of distasteful truth, of which our personal devils are capable. It seta at naught the seventh and tenth commandments of our Lord, "Thou shalt not commit adultery," "Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's wife." The Devil, as is easily seen, is nothing more or less than the story of a man who did covet . his neighbor's wife, who argued down his best Instincts with the old. thread bare plea of "if I do not. some one else may." A fine kind of a play to place before any people! A fine kind of a money maker for Mr. Savage, with his eighty-odd productions of The Devil, thoroughly disseminating , this story of uncleanly and filthy character throughout our land. God knows the so-called "tainted money" of. John D. Rockefeller, is as fragrant as the heavenly perfumes of ancient Olympus, as pure and-undented as a new born babe, as sweet as the first kiss of a virgin, when compared to the money Mr. Savage is reaping from his play, that deals with a story that is told a hundred times a day in the divorce courts of our na- . tlon, that typifies rottenness and almost exalts the overturning of our Lord's commandments with a "and there you are" shrug of the shoulders. The Devil, however, shows only one Bide of the story. It ends with the seduction of a woman. In real life, as every one realizes, that is the beginning. The real end begins when the passion, for it is not love, that brings about such results, begins to wane, when the man and woman, if they be of the right calibre and not mere perverts, realize the depths to which they " have fallen, realize the shame and dishonor that will be their inevitable companions through the rest of their lives, and in that realization comes the end. For nearly every right thinking, decent and honorable man and woman worships purity, and it is a sad, sad day when they are brought to a sudden stop by the full realization that "the saddest thought of tongue or pen, are those sad words, it might have been." The stage, after a fashion, exerts almost as much influence upon the peo pie as the press. What the press tells " about, on the stage is reproduced as though in actual life. On account of this great influence the stage exerts, , it sould be the aim of those who con trol us destinies, to produce those things that up-lift and not those that degrade and encourage perverted ideas. And it is our earnest wish that the "devil's own luck" will not hold good in this instance and that some way will be found to cut short the career of The Devil, that soul-shrivelling and fetid breathed monstrosity, parading about the country in all its utter indecency and moral perverting godlessness. .There are now 66? women students la ; the University of ; Glasgow. This Is said to be the largest number on record. Queen Margaret College is the women's hall, which is presided over by Miss Galloway. LL. D., and Miss Janet Spens, M. A. South Dakota is congratulating heri self on the greatest gold year in her history. The report of the State mine inspector, filed with the Governor, shows the State's gold production for the last year to have been $7,460,000. : , MASONIC CALENDAR. Saturday Jan 2- Loyal Chapter,
,o." 49. Ol XL S. Stated meetin
Will Tell What Drove His Brother Insane
T. J. HAINS AND New York, Jan. 2. Soon after the Hains trial is resumed Monday morn ing, T. Jenkins Hains,. defendant, will take the stand in his own behalf, and will tell his version of the events of Aug. 15 at the Bayside Yacht club. He also will ten of the many things which led up to the killing of William E. Annis by his brother, Capt. Peter C. Hains, Jr. One part of the prisoner's own tes timony, which bo far lias not been revealed, and upon which the attorneys for the defense place much importance, will be his statement in regard to the two occasions on which, while in his company, Capt. Hains met Annis after the captain's hurried return from the Philippines. "INCURABLE" HEART DISEASE SOON CURED By the Great Specialist in Treating Weak and Diseased Hearts, FRANKLIN MILES, M. D., LL. B. Who Will Send $2.50 Worth of Special Treatment and New Book Free. To demonstrate the remarkable curative powers of his new and complete Special Personal Treatments for heart disease, short breath, pain in the side, oppression in the chest, irregular pulse, palpitation, smothering spells, puffing of the ankles or dropsy, Dr. Miles will send, free, to every afflicted person, $2.50 worth of treatment. The worst cases soon relieved. They are the result of 2S years of extensive research and remarkable success in treating the various ailments of the heart, stomach and nerves, which so often complicate each case. So astonishing are the results of his treatment that he does not hesitate to offer all afflicted persons a two-pound Trial Treatment free. Certainly nothing could be more generous. Few physicians have such confidence in their treatments. There is no reason why all afflicted persons should not avail themselves of this liberal offer, as they may never have such an opportunity again. Delays are dangerous. No death comes more suddenly than that from heart disease..",: Mr. J. B. Hann, 119 W. Maryland St, Indianapolis, Ind., cured after physicians failed. Mrs. Elvina Bonders, Decatur, Neb., after 10 failed. Mr. P. W. Runyan, Spencer, Iowa, after S failed. Mr. L. A. Prbut, Lisbon Falls, Me., after 12 failed, Mrs. Mary DeHart, Greenville, Pa. after 11 failed. Mr. C. E. Smith, Wayne, Mich., after 3 failed. Mrs. Elizabeth Boa!, Eaglesport, O., after 4 failed. Other cures from your state sent on request. Many cured after 5 to 13 physicians and professors had pronounced them ""incurable." Send to Dr. Franklin Miles. Dept. H, 90S to 918 Main St, Elkhart, Indiana, at once, for Heart Book, Examination Chart, Opinion and Free TreatimenL Describe your disease-- . '
CAPT. HAINS.
One of these accidental meetings was at Thirty-third street and Broadway, about the first of August, about two weeks before the shooting. The second was four or five days later, and at a place not yet made public. On both of these occasions T. Jenkins Hains will testify that the captain appeared to be seized with an uncontrollable impulse to do bodily injury to the man he believed had wrecked his home, and that the defendant was compelled to use all his powers of persuasion, as well as physical force, to restrain his brotoher. The defense then will claim there were three such insane outbreaks on the part of the captain, each brought on by the sight of Annis, the third resulting in Annis' death. DESIRES REHEARING Standard Company of Indiana Asks Supreme Court Permission to Continue. WOULD STAY IN MISSOURI. Jefferson City, Mo., Jan. 2. In a motion for a rehearing in the Missouri ouster suit against it, filed in the Supreme Court here, the Standard Oil Company of Indiana, asked to be allowed to remain in Missouri as long as it conforms to rules and regulations that may be laid down by the court An appeal also was filed with the court for a remittance of the fine of $50,000 imposed on the Republic Oil Company on the ground that . this company has gone out of business. The motion for a rehearing and the appeal are signed by Alfred D. Eddy of Chicago, and Frank Hagerman of Kansas City, attorneys for the company. Mr. Hagerman will depart for New York tomorow to consult with the chief officers of the company. While the company has filed a motion for a rehearing it is said the Standard Oil attorneys will seek a modification of the recent decision of the Supreme Court Attorney General Hadley will not consent to a modification of the decision unless the Su preme Court orders It The company especially desires to be allowed to continue the Sugar Greek refinery, near Kansas City, in operation. Miss Harriet S. Hayward, qf Brock ton, Mass., is the first woman to be elected by a county in Massachusetts to preside at a county teachers asso ciation. She is the primary supervisor of schools In Brockton, and the Plymouth County teachers Association, over which she was selected to preside, is one of the largest in the State. The meeting is said to have been the best ever held. The snail's teeth are on its tongue and there are thousands of Utesa-
THREE MORE ARE
0(1 WATER WAGON State-WideJrohibition Effective in North Carolina, Mississippi, Alabama. LOUISIANA HAS NEW LAW REGULATION OF LIQUOR TRAFFIC BECAME EFFECTIVE IN THAT STATE YESTERDAY KENTUCKY WANTS OPTION. Atlanta, Ga., Jan. 2. State-wide prohibition laws went into effect yesterday in three Southern states North Carolina, Mississippi and Alabama, Georgia is the only other state where in statutory prohibition exists, the law having been in operation one year. A new law which seeks to regulate the liquor traffic in Louisiana became effective yesterday, and although the law is not so sweeping in its terms as a state-wide measure. Prohibitionists , contend that if it is strictly enforced it will drive the saloons out of the re maining saloon strongholds. Having won their state-wide fights in four states, the anti-saloon forces have greatly enlarged the South's "dry" area, and they are now lining up for earlv campaigns in several otner states. Saloons Restricted to Cities. In those states now listed as "wet,' the anti-saloon forces by persistent work at the polls have restricted the sale of liquor to a small territory,, mainly in the larger cities and in these it is expected a vigorous attack will be made. The Prohibitionists contend they will be able to pass a state-wide bill before the Tennessee Legislature, which meets this month. In other states, notably Texas and Arkansas, the voters probably will be called upon this summer to vote upon a constitutional amendment for prohibition. KENTUCKIANS WANT OPTION. Anti-Saloon League Asks Special Session to Pass County Bill. Frankfort, Ky., Jan. 2. The Kentucky Anti-Saloon League issued a statement which in part follows: "The Kentucky Anti-Saloon League asks Its constituents all over the commonwealth to press the work of circulating petitions to his excellency) Governor Augustus E. Willson, asking for a special session of the Legislature to pass the uniform county unit bill and not to include in the call any such measures as the redisricting bill, which would serve to embarrass the county unit measure, as did happen at the last regular session. "Our reasons for so doing, in spite of the fact that his excellency, the Governor, has given expression to his unwillingness to do so upon information conveyed to him through newspaper reports of our intentions in this matter of the petition, in part follow; "We have not yet had an opportunity to present to Governor Willson our petition and the grounds we have for asking for an extraordinary session of the Legislature. We have strong hope that when we can formally get our case before him he will give it favorable consideration. We are confident of such a fair and impartial hearing as he always gives to any other matters claiming rightfully the attention of the executive. "We feel confident that the present Legislature will certainly pass the county unit bill if allowed a clear field, free of measures which would obstruct it - "If the uniform unit bill is passed at a special session called in the hear future, we can within the next twelve months carry about twenty counties, or. all but four or five counties in Kentucky, for the prohibition of the sa loons and thus relieve the long-suffer ing populations of these counties from the iniquitous bondage they suffer, the crimes committed and the disorders endangered." FOREIGN STUDY. , Washington, Jan. 2. Foreign study for the officers of the army, native in structors in the languages' and a con tinuation of the annual war eames. are tne principal points of the report of the commandant and instructors of the School of the Line, the Signal School, and the Staff College for the year in the three army service schools at Fort Leavenworth. Mrs. .Margaret .cane wiener was cnosen county clerk in Salt Lake county, Utah, this year on the Repub lican ticket ; THE ESQUOO eats blubber. The lumbermen eat pork. The Norwegian fishermen live on cod liver oil. These people are constantly exposed to cold and physical strain. Experience has taught them that fatty foods give warmth and nourishment. For those who have cold and thin bodies, or are threatened with consumption or any wasting disease, there is no fat in so digestible and palatable a form as Scott's Emulsion Physicians prescribe it
THE SCRAP BOOK
it Dazed Beecher. Among the financial Mends of Henry Ward Beecbcr was one old broker in New York, an aggressive Unitarian, which sect be often said bore "the trademark of honesty. One day be $set Mr. Beecher hurrying toward Wall street ferry to avoid the downpour of a sudden rainstorm. "Take my umbrella, said the broker. "I don't need it The coming bus takes me to my door. At the ferry Mr. Beecher met a Presbyterian lady, a prominent worker of a sister church, who. having no umbrella, was lamenting her inability to reach her car safely. The urbane preacher forced the umbrella upon her as he said. "I will be out your way tomorrow and will call and get if But the great expounder of truth and honesty was horrified when upon opening the umbrella the good sister at once discovered a pasted slip upon which . was written in. a bold round hand, "Stolen by some Presbyterian thief I" THE LIGHT. A tender child of summers three, seekingher bed at night. Paused on the dark stair timidly, "Ob. mother, take my hand." aald she. "And then the dark will be all light" We older children grope our way from dark behind to dark before. And only when our hands we lay, dear Lord, in thine the night Is day And there is darkness nevermoreReach downward to the sunless days wherein our guides are blind as we And faith is small and hope delays, take thou the hands of prayer we raise. And let us feel the light of thee! WhltUer. Ha Failad to Pass. General Benjamin F. Butler was one of a commission to examine young ap plicants for admission to the bar. and before him came a youth who failed miserably on all that pertained to Jur isprudence, case, law, civil law, sump tuary law. unwritten law and due process of law. , Finally Butler, who rather liked the chap and wanted to see him through, asked: "What Would you like to be examined in? You have failed in everything we have suggested." The reply came. "Try me on the statutes. I'm up on them." Butler shook his bead, solemnly. My young friend," he said, "I'm afraid you won't do. You may be ever so familiar with the statutes, but what is to prevent a fool legislature from repealing all you know?" Dumas' Quick Wit. Dumas found a man asleep in the Theatre Francais during the playing of a piece written by his friend Soumet. "You see that?" said he. "That's your work." Next evening a Dumas comedy wan put on. The two friends looked in again and found a sleeper. "You see, dear Dumas," said Sou-'! met, "your works can produce sleep. "Do you refer to that manjj replied Dumas. "Why, that's the man who was there last night He's not awake yet!" ' A Market For Coras. The garden of the new house of the Rev. Mr. Brown backed against the play yard of an orphan asylum. Eight-year-old Johnny Brown was allowed to scale the fence and play with the orphans. Presently Mrs. Brown noticed that her apple supply was dropping low. She asked Master Johnny if he were not eating a good many apples for a small boy. "Yes, mother," be replied. "I got to." , "Ob, Indeed!" queried Mrs. Brown. "Are you quite surer "Oh, yes, mother; they're needed! I just got to eat all I can stuff down." "But why, my dear"' "Because," said Johnny earnestly, "the orphans need the cores." His Clavar Scheme. . The man with the large head and the protruding eyebrows stepped into the cigar emporium. "Give me the poorest cigar you've got "Five or ten center?" queried the man behind the showcase. "I don't know whether you're going to give me a five or ten center. I'm going to give you a dime. Remember, now, the poorest cigar in the place." The clerk handed out a box, and the customer selected one, calmly lighted it and puffed curiously. Then be left with an air of supreme satisfaction. "Ah, this tastes good!" he muttered on the outside. "I knew my little scheme would work. The fellow gave me the best cigar he had in the store. The cigar dispenser on the Inside soliloquized: "I just took that old .codger at bis word. I handed him a box of three for a nickel." Lipplncott's. Progress. Let us, then, be of good cheer. From the great law of progress we may derive at once our duties and our encouragements. Humanity has ever advanced, urged by the instincts and necessities implanted by God, thwarted sometimes by obstacles which nave caused it for a time a moment only in the immensity of ages to deviate from its true lines or to seem to retreat, but still ever onward. Charles Sumner. The Peer Cannibal. man once went to the circus. Kear the main entrance to the circus there waa a side show, and vast and brilliant oil painting portrayed In all Its horrors a cannibal feast corpses cooking over fires, node natives squatted in a circle, holding to their mouths grilled forearms, hands and such like delicacies. A genuine cannibal, the poster said, was to be seen within. Paying a dime, the man entered. The cannibal, very lightly clad, sat with crossed tegs on a divan, languidly toyIng with a spear. His teeth were flleL The visitor was a man of markedly religions temperament, and he gased at the cannibal with horror. Ts this really a cannibal?" he asked the showman. , "You bet be is!" the showman answered. "Do you know how be was captured? That great living enrioatty was captured, sir, In the act of boiling aa agad
r tbe-7l&ttarad.
"Oh, my friend, "why don't "yon convert him?The showman made a gesture of disgust. "Convert him?" he said. "Do yon think the public would pay a dime a head to see a Christian?
A Reference. A firm of shady outside Londor brokers was prosecuted for swindlmg. In acquitting them the court, with great severity, said: "There is not sufficient evidence to convict you. but it any one wishes to know my opinion of you I hope they will refer to me." Next day the firm's advertisement appeared in every available medium with the following, well displayed: "Refer ence as to probity, by special permis sion, the lord chief Justice of England His Reformation. lie was rather given to late hours, ani his wife remonstrated with him. so he promised her faithfully that he would reform. It would have been ail right if his friends had not heard of it "So John II. has reformed, has be? ITumnh well see." They "saw" him in procession. First he met one old chum, then another, and It never dawn ed upon him that is was a conspiracy. The first night that John II. reached home after he had made that promise to his wife it was very late, or, rather. It was very early. In fact, it was early morning. He took off his boots, man aged to hang his bat up and walked softly into the room where his wife slumbered. So far all wss good. He divested himself of bis coat, and just as be was banging it on the gas bracket his wife woke up. "Why, John." she exclaimed, "what on earth are you getting up so early for? This was a noser, but John was equal to the occasion. "That's all right," he said. "You know I've reformed, Mary, an there's lots of people I've got to see early In the mornln'." And he deliberately put on his coat and boots, found his hat and went out again, while Mrs. H. turned over, with a fiendish chuckle, and went to sleep. Leva. Think what it is not to hate any thing but sin, to be full of love to every creature, to be angered at noth ing. to be sure that all things will turn to good, not to mind pain because it is our Father's will, to know that noth' ing no. not if the earth was to be burnt up or the waters come and drown us nothing could part us from God, who loves us and who fills our souls with peace and Joy, because we are sure that whatever he wills holy, just and good. George Eliot The Drawback. Beardman was av writer of plays, ultimately fairly well known in hit day. For nearly twenty years be struggled ,and fought his way along without meeting with any very pro nounced success, each play In turn proving more or less of a failure. At last, however, be produced a play that really caught the public taste. He and the famous Sheridan happened to be present together on the opening night All went well. Success followed success, and applause greeted and ended each scene. At the end of the second act Beardman's elation got the better of his discretion, and, leaning over toward Sheridan as usual, too witty to be merely sympathetic be exclaimed: "Sheridan, Sheridan, it's going to be a success, a complete success!" "Ah, yes," murmured Sheridan, with exquisite compassion in his voice, "too bad. too bad!" "Too bad?" stammered bis friend, completely taken on his guard. "Why, too bad that it should prove a success?" "Because now," retorted Sheridan, "if 11 take you another twenty years to convince any one yon wrote it" Politely Put. The manager of a fashionable hotel received complaints from several of i bis best patrons that the occupant of! a certain room on their floor kept them awake nights with his Incessant and. night piercing snoring. The next day j the manager sought out the objection- j able . snorer. who happened to be a singer of foreign renown, and ae-. qnainted him with the situation. j "Vat! I snore night?" exclaimed the artist, bristling at this accusation. "Dc yon know who I am? I am Spitzler. the great GSrman basso!" ) "Well, then." rejoined the hotel manager, "kindly refrain from sinsinf nights!" Maintained His Point Roger Mlnot Sherman while arguing 8 celebrated case said that his opponent could no more prove bis point than he could cut a hah lengthwise. While be was still talking the opponent who happened to have a very sharp knife, pulled a hair from hi beard and split it As be held it up tht court began to laugh, and Mr. Sherman oulcklv called out T said a halt sir not a bristle." . . Irish Wit In the .early sixties there lived in the west of Ireland a priest and a Protestant minister who were very friendly with one another. Each of them possessed a spice of the true native wit. The priest owned a mare which had ben given to him by a parishioner In the days of his youth. The old mare vaa getting on in years and at last fell vary sick. She tottered rather than trotted and refused to eat the finest corn or the freshest hay. Each day the mlnWer oa meeting his friend. Father Daly, would inquire particularly after the poor old animal's health, and each day for a week or so he received the same answer, "She Is no better, but still alive. At last one day after the usual sympaUwtic inquiry he waa told that the man was dead. Thinking to take his Mend unawares and with a twinkle la his eye, he asked Father Daly If he bad grvsan the poor animal absolution before she died. Quick as a flash of lightning the pricsrs reply: "Ks. I eonidaX
DEV. THOIM DIES Passes Away at Age of Sev
enty-five at Portland, Indiana. FORMER WAYNE C0UNTIAI. Rev. II C. Thornton, a former Wayne countian. and best knoxtn among the members of the Friends' church, died Friday at his home in Portland at the age of 73 years. His death was due to paralysis. He is sur vived by his wife, Mrs. Martha B. Thornton. Robert Handle of this city is a nephew. Rev. Thornton will be buried Mon day morning at Fountain City, his former home. The services will be held at the Friends church. He was born and reared at Fountain City and was educated at the Friends Boarding School in this city. During. his school day 8 he was a class mate to Joseph Cannon, speaker of the bouse of representatives. After graduating from school he becamo an educator and then went into the ministry - OPEN HOUSE FOR i MEMBERS ONLY Entre Nous, Elks and Eagles Celebrate. Open house to members only was held yesterday by three secret orders and clubs, including the Entre Nous. the Elks and the Eagles. The Eagles and Entre Nous had specially ar ranged programs and had much amusement Banquets were served lit each Instance, with the exception of the Elks where but light luncheon was served. With the modern skyscraping w fice building has come a new form of building scaffold from below, which la impossible in the case of buildings ranging from ten to fifty stories, platforms are suspended from the steel girders above. On these swinging platforms the bricklayers wof and the scaffold is raised as the work progresses. RECEIPT THAT CURES WEAK MEN FREE SEXU KANE AMD ADDRESS TODAY YOU CA HAVE IT FHER AXD BE 8TRO.MJ A BSD VIGOROr. I have In my possession a prescription for nervous debility, lack af vigor, weakened manhood, failing memory and lame back, brought on by eicessea. unnatural drains or the follies of youth, that has cured ao many worn and nervous men right In their own homes without any additional help or medicine that I think every man. who wishes to regain his manly power and virility, quickly and quietly, should have a ropy. So. I have determined t send a copy of the prescription, free of charge, in a plain, ordinary sealed envelope, to any man who will write ma for it. - This prescription comes from a physician who has made a special atudy ef men. and I am convinced It Is the aur-est-acting combination for the cur of deficient manhood and vigor-failure ever put together. I think I owe It to my fellow man to send them a copy In confidence, ao that . any man. anywhere who la weak and discouraged with repeated falluree may atop drugging himself with harmful f latent medicines, secure what, I brieve. Is the quickest-acting, restorative, upbuilding. SPOT-TOrCHIXO remedy ever devised, and so. cure hintself at home quietly and quickly. Just drop me a line ltke this: Mr. A. E. Robinson. 3607 Luck Bldg.. ix-troit. Mich.. and I will send you at ropy of thla splendid receipt, in a plain ordinary sealed envelope, free of charge. A DAPPY nl7 YEAEL A year of boundless opportunities. Don't ever believe the He that you have had all the opportunities. Man's birthright is boundless opportunity. This new year of holds much, for you alL There's an opportunity to buy good coal at D. C C3enc! 6 Sea 529 Sc3 5Q SL SCHEDULES CtrJess, CldU & UhvUIe Dsilrcsd Ctzzfsay la Effect Novcm IS. IMS. Cast id CMcags)Claciasatf 1 Daily! Dally S Daily STATIONS Lv Chicago . . . Ar Peru ... .. Lv Peru Lv Marlon ... Lv Muncle . . . l-v Richmond. Lv Ct Orove.. Ar Cincinnati. S.lSam!19.45pmj 1.13pm! 2 13am! 1.23pm' S.tJamj am 2.15pm 3 1 dm 7.00am 3.01pm 4.10am1 iiHiii 4.20pm 5 21am 9.2Zra 4.53pm! ESanij . .50pm 7.;0amt i- daclnatl-CIH easju
a 4 i STATIONS pgfjy pany! Dally
Lv Cincinnati 8. 1 3am' 10. 0 pm! Lv Ct Orove. .55am:n.4ptnl Lv Ricbmoad.no.30am 12.0am 7.00pm Lv Muncle ..HI 50am 1.22am 30pti 2.14am 30pm 2 13am'l0.30pa 3.23am 7.35ami Lv Marion Ar Peru . Lv Pen . . 12.50pm 1.63pm z.oxpm 5.40pm Ar Chicag-o (12th 8t Station) All traina run daily. Sunday aervtce aatna aa on week days. Through Vestlbuled Trains between Chicago and Cincinnati. Double dally service. Through sleepers on train' Noa. 3 and between Chicago and Cincinnati, - Fine Buffet service on trains I and 2 For train connections and other information call C. A. BLAIR. F. & T. A. ;
