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There is a fertile stretch of flat lands in Indiana where unagrarian
Eastern travellers, glancing from car-s, shudder and return their
eyes to interior upholstery, preferring even the swaying caparisons of a
Pullman to the monotony without The landscape lies interminably level:
bleak in winter, a desolate plain of mud and snow; hot and dusty in
summer, in its flat lonesomeness, miles on miles with not one cool hill
slope away frons of man
in this sad expanse perceives a reckless amount of rail fence; at
intervals a large barn; and, here and there,up from the fields apathetically as the Limited
flies by Widely separated from each other are small fraht, which indicates that
somewhere behind the adjacent woods a few shanties and thin cottages are
grouped about a couple of brick stores
On the station platfor-
boxes, apparently marked for travel, but they are sacred from disturbance
and reht train never co They serve to enthrone a few station loafers, who look out from
under their hat-briuid
scorn a permanent fixture always has for a transient, and the pity an
A who does not live in his town Now and
then the train passes a town built scatteringly about a court-house, with
anear the tracks This is a county-seat, and the
inhabitants and the local papers refer to it confidently as "our city"