Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 May 1894 — Page 4

THE BANNER TIMES. GREENCASTLE. INDIANA. THURSDAY, MAY 10, 1894.

B. F. JOSblN Handle tb«‘ IIIk’Iioh! Grade* Bru/.il BIo« k

L.tMb IN VtKbt.

COAL

mmm And the* Be at l*lttabtir»rh and Anthracite. r«»a yard opposite Vandalla freight office.

ELEPHANTS CARHI) I0R. If you have a houae for sale or rent, and It is proving an “elephant on your hands, ” let us look alter it. We’ll sell it or let it, as you wlah. 11 there's possible oustomer town. Kivet that fact in your mind, th<*n call and we’H clinch it. J. + M. f HURL13Y, Insurance, Real Estate, and Loan. . . • Sfcond Floor, First National Hank ItulUlInK

Mrs. Hlokson

MASONIC. EASTERN STAR.

W. M

Sec

Mrs. Dr. Hawkins., i First W.slm-aday nialit of eaeli mouth. OHEENrASTIjBCHAPTER It. A. M. NO *S.

H. s. It,-nick

M. S. Beall , , Bec Seconil Wednesday nlRlit ot each month.

Bt.UR UIDOE P. AND A. M.

tessc Itlehardson "fir' ^Thlrd Wednesday nlirht of eaeh month.

COMMANDKHY. i

iv. H. H Cullen 1 ' I. Mi ll Hays 8 ® p Fourth Wednesday nitrht of eaeh month.

ROOAN LODOE. NO. Ifl. P. * A. M.

a. I.. Bryan • w ^~

Me’eis aeeond and fourth i’oesdays. white i.ii.v CHAPTER, NO.3. O.E. s.

Mrs. M. Florence Miles M M Mrs. M. A.Telster ... Sec

Meets sii'Olld and fourth Mondays

KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS. EAOI.E UIDOE NO. 18.

wnr.. M Browa ' ' It. S Heals ■ . 4 Kvery Friday night on 3rd ti«M,r over Ilins.

Ahratns store.

OKKENCAST1.E DIVISION C. It. IV. R. Starr * d. M.Sinllli. •••• ><••• First Monday night of eaeh month.

A.O.U.W.

COI.I.EOP. CITY I.ODflK NO. 9. '.'mi Denton ••• " A. B.Phillips. • •••• Second and *th Thursdays ot eaeh month. DEO REE OP HONOR. Mrs.lt I. Hlgert . UllliP Black .. . .. See First and third Fridays ot eaeh month. Hall »n 3rd floor City Hall Block.

BED MEN.

OTOE THIIIE NO. 1-MI.

laeoh Kiefer Sachem rh«»K. Sage . ^<*1/ F.very Monday night. Hall on 3rd lluor

L'tty Hull llloek.

KOYAb AKCANI'M. 1.0TITS COUNCM.NO. IC.1I.

IV. G. Overstreet • ’has. I.andes

It

S<‘e

Andes , . Isis d and f"urth Thursdays of each month

<1. A. It. Hall.

KNIGHTS tIF HONMII. MYSTIC TIE I .ODOR, NO. Kill. \v l. Howe Dictator .1 |i. Johnson Reporter Kvery Friday night.

G. A. H.

C.KKF.NCASTI.K POST NO. 11. \ m . Ma «nn. C I. I’, i ha pin 'Jt Wm. H. Burke Q M Every Monday evening at !:3<l o'clock. Hall corner' Vine and Washington streets. 2nd

floor.

WOMAN S REI.IEP CORPS. Alice H < hauin l'n*H I . m 11 si • .faooiM* Mectlnifs i*vcr\ s<*<*nncl auu tourtli Moiuiay at “ p, in. i*. A. R. Mall. FIRE ALARMS. •j—1 (College ave and Liberty st. .i—1 Indiana and Hanna 4—1 Jaekwm and Daggy. fy—\ Madison and Libert>. a—1 Madiaon and Walnut. j Hanna and Grown. 4 *2 Itlooiningtnn and Anderann. •» 2 Seminary and Arlington, a 2 Wanhington, eant of Durham. 7 2 Wasliington and LoeuHt. 2 d Howard and Crown 4 :i Ohio and Main. V :i College av»*. and DeMotte alley, r.- :i Locust and Sycamore. 1- 2 -1 Fire out. The police eall la one tap then a patiae ami then follow the box numoci COl NTY OFFICKHS. M. Black. Auditor F. M. Glidewell. Bbcriff G<*o. Hught* Tr<*a8tirer Daniel T. Darnell Gicrk Daniel B. Hurst Rev order ,. K. (I'Brlon. Sen vej "» F. M. Lyon. Bcnool Superintendent t W. ll tNefl i orotu i Wm. BroadHtreet. AKHenaor G. W. Bence, M. 1).. See. Board of Health J. I). Hart. ) Samuel Farmer / CommiBsioners. John $. NewReut)

Lov# Tour Neighbor. “I>ove your neigiilKir as yourself," 80 the parson preaches; lint’s one-lialf the decalogue* JKo the prayer tiook teaches. Half my duty I can do With but little lal>or. For with all my heart and soul . — I do love my neighbor. And I’ve preached the word, I know. For it was my duty To convert the stubborn heart Of the little beauty. Once again success has crowned Missionary labor. For her sweet eyes own that shs Also loves her neighbor. —George A. Baker, Jr.

CITY DIRECTORY. < TIT OFFICERS. Mayor. Charles B. ('«»<• ■ Treasurer Frank L. liundes (*U.ik James M Hurley Marshall William K.8tarr Engineer Arthur Throop Attorney 1 Thomas T. Moore Sec. Board of Health. ..Eugene Hawkins M. D COtTNCIbMKN 1st Ward... Thomas Abrams, J L Handel 2nd *’ Oc*o. E. Blake, James Bridges :ird ” John Kiley. John H. Miller Street Commissioner J. D.rutler Fire Chief Gc*o. li. Cooper , A. Brockway. ) Mrs. Mary Birch, [ School Trustees. I). L. Andcraon, ) H. A. (tgg. Superintendent of city schools. FOREST HIM. CEMETERY HOARD OF DIRECT-

ORS.

J. S. MvOlary „ Pr,K John < .Browning ' J. K. I .angilm, _ !< « - H.8. Rvnli-k Trea* i J Hines Daggy .Supt E. K. Black. A. O. l,i«-ki lilgc Meeting llrst Wctin.-wlay niglit each mnntli at J.S. MeClary’s otfloc. 8ECRKT S0CIKT1ES. 1.0.0. F. OIIEENCASTI.E IklDtlE NO 348. Kmoe Frailer ® I L. M Hanna... .."f 0 Meeting nlglitH, every \\ eilnesiluy. Hull. In Jerome Alleti'a Block. 3rd floor. PUTNAM 1.0DDE NO. 45. John A Michael " ° j.;. p.Chaffee Meeting nlglits. every Tuesday. Hall in Central National Hank block,3rd floor. CAHTI.E CANTON NO. ^kl. P. M. J. A. Michael C 2 P ' Chas Melkel , "*« First and third Monday nlglits ot each month. . DHEENUA8TI.R ENCAMPMENT NO. J John < ook .... 1 • ■ Chas. H Melkel. 'crihe First and thlfd Thursdays. D. OP R. NO. 108. i Mrs. IT. II. Morrison N. G D E. Badger. ^ f,< ' Meeting nights, every 2nd and 4th Monday < f each month, Hull in central Nat. Hank building, 3rd floor. DHP.KNCABTI.E l/UIDE J123 O. U. O. op o. F. Wm.llartwood —v, - '* H. U Bryan .1 . > Meets ttrst and third Mondays.

To a College Teapot. Framed ot coarse and common ileif. Bruised and battered as myself, Naught rould win tliee from tby shelf— Not the wealth of nations. Cracked thy lid, thy handle bent. Yet I love each dimpling dent. Every flaw is eloquent Of old associations. Thou recall’st the merry quips. Cheery voices, laughing lips. Muttered epigrams from gyps ’* After the teamaking. **’ Once again, as oft of yore, '. 1 can lu-ar outside my door. Pitched in cnplioard or on floor. Sounds of china breaking. In thy rugged urn I trace Many an old familiar face— F riends now gone, to whom life’s rare Was but a merry canter. Pass before my eager view. As when we drar.k tbj nect’rous dew, Flappy. heedless, theip- eheu (Junm tempora muinnturl Each dear friend of other days Smiles niKin me through the hay.w Thru be fun- my wistful ga/.e Fades, but not forever. 1 have thee my lot U> share. Thou canst bid them here repair— Friendly, faithful earthenware, Death only us shall sever! —Fall Mall Gazette.

The Coming Day. A better day is coming, girls. Just wait a little longer. Its morning breeze now sweeps the trees. Its light is growing stronger. The cur of progress rushes on. Fresh snoils of conquest bringing. And on toe higher planes of life The birds of hope are singing. Hark! On the zephyrs of the west A strong, new sound is swelling! Of equal rights and juster laws Its stirring notes arc telling. Blind prejudice and hoary wrongs Are swiftly disappearing. And woman, pleading for her own. Commands resjieclful hearing. Through storms of ridicule and scorn They bore their cause undaunted Till through the land, from shore to shore. Its burning truths arc planted. Their light is shining brightly, girls. Each year ‘tis growing stronger. / Truth most prevail and error fail! Just wait a little longer. — Woman's Journal.

In a I.ifetime. Thou shall have sun and shower from heaven above. Thou shall have flower and thorn from earth below. Thine shall be foe to bate and friend to love. Pleasures that others gain, the ills they know— And all in a lifetime. Hast thou a golden day. a starlit night, Mirth and music and love without alloy! Leave no drop undrunken of thy delight; borrow ami shadow follow on thy Joy. 'Tis all in a lifetime. What if the battle end and thou has lost? Others have lost battles thou hast won. Haste thee, bind thy wounds nor count the

cost;

Over the held will rise tomorrow's sun. 'Tis all in a lifetime. Laugh at the braggart sneer, the open scorn— 'Ware of the secret stab, the slanderous lie. For seventy years of turmoil thou wast born; . Bitter and sweet are thine till these go by. ’Tis all in a lifetime. Reckon thy voyage well and spread the sail; Wind and cairn and current shall warp thy

way;

Compass shall set thee false and chart shall

fail;

Ever the waves will use thee for tb*lr play. 'Tie all in a lifetime. Thousands of years agone were change and change; Thousands of ages hence the same shall be. Naught of thy joy ami grief is new or strange; Gather apace the good that falls to thee! 'Tis all in a lifetime. ^E. C. Stedman. The Knowtlakes' Power. "They deem us frail and tiny and of but little worth. * We’ll show the people differently that live down on the earlh." Thus said ihe queen of snowflakes in their convention hr.ll. When they resolved, their might to prove, all from on high to fall. They came in great battalions; they fell for days two, three; They mantled all the hilltops and shrouded dale and lea, And then they rudely frolicked with northern wind so bold. Who roughly tumbled, drifting high in every track ami wold. ’Twas thus the mighty steam horse, upon his iron track, Could not Ms burden pull ahead or even push It back. The fragile, tiny snowflakes thus proved their might and power By stopping traffic’s iron horse for many a dreary hour. —New York Observer,

A Ifream of Ctopia. Of better days that mortals sing— When all were happy as the spring; When none knew want or discontent; No back by selfishness was bent: When hearts were pure ami heads were sound; When not a grumbler could be found— if folk were wiser, better then. Fray tell us where it was and when. ir brighter days let mortals sigh ml hope for fortune by and by— Prosperity to fill the land With plenty, strewn on every hand; When all men shall tie wise and good, Bound up in one grand brotherhood— But point out now some of the men Who are to lie contenteil then. ’Tis in the future or in the past Ambitious man must live at last. He looks beldnd or hopes before. Despising all Ids present store; Forgets the blessings of today And follows fancy far away. What man has not he magnifies, And pleasure with possession dies. The ItiHows. They come and go. Their shadows pass Beyond the bound w here blue and brine Kiss and the orient clouds amass White piles above tbe horizon's line. —Youth’s Companion. Youth no less becomes The light and careless livery that it wears Than settled age his sables and his weeds. Importing health and graveness. —Slittkesueare.

SIMPLE AND BEAUTIFUL. Design f ,r an Urgant Home For Family nf Moderate Means. [Copyright, 1W4. by Palliser, Palliser At Co., Architects, 34 East 42d st., N. Y.J Tills design has many points of excellence to recommend it to the homeseeker. It is ornate, has two Imy windows, and its effii-t is artistic. It is often the rase thatpeople will examine a plan anti will say that it is just what they want, with auch

PERSPECTIVE VIEW. and such changes, and when the necessary changes are made to suit their ideas there is nothing left by which one can recognize anything of the first, plan. The roofs are all slated, which is decidedly the liest and cheapMt—when we take everything into account—method of roofing, besides being elegant, and in favorable localities can is; laid for |8 per Klfl square feet of surface. For a person of moderate means wishing an elegant home, with the interior comforts and conveniences it contains, we can with confldenee recommend this design. It is suitable for any part of the country except the extreme south, and the owner of sueh a liouso will find that its money value is far aliove that of a square box of the same rapacity, and it costs but a trifle more than the ugly packing boxes thatsome people seem hound to erect In opposition to all artistic ideas, which are constantly developing In this country. In some instances we have known houses of nice design, properly managed, erected for

X

AhMY Pugilism. Recently Acquitted Lieutenant Manee CaiiHCM Another Sensation. Chicago, May 10.—Lieutenant James Maney, recently acquitted of the charge of murdering Captain Hedberg. has furnished Fort Sheridan with another sensation. The story current last night was that since the shooting of Hedberg there has been much ill feeling between Maney and Major Baldwin of the Seventh cavalry. Maney at List called at Major Baldwin's quarters for an explanation. "I have called to see you, major," he said, ”in regard to certain remarks I have heard you have made about me in relation to the Hedberg affair." ’•Yes?” said the major, interrogatively. | “Yes, sir," continued the lieutenant. | •*1 understand you have expressed the opinion that ihe killing of Hedberg was a coldblooded murder and to have advised my ostracism by the officers of the J post. Is that true?" j “Every word of it.” was Major Bald- j win's prompt reply, “"nd now that yon are here. I'll just tell you to your face that I think you were in big luck when you were acquitted.” Maney. some versions say. reached for Us hip pocket. In any event there was a vigorous blow landed by Baldwin, which was followed by many others ' The tight was desperate, but finally Maney was overcome anti thrown out doors and has since been in close communion with raw beefsteak. Colonel Crofton and Major Baldwin declare that there has been no such encounter. Mrs. Lcaitt* Seriously 111. Kansas City, Kan., May 10.—Mrs. Mary E. Lease is ill at the home of a friend here, suffering from nervous prostration. She is in a serious condition and there ere strong symptoms of typhoid fever. She is in a state of extreme terror over the receipt of a letter from a Minnesota crank telling of his divine mission to kill her.

A VIRGINIA HOME. Tasteful anil Harmonious Design Fop a Country Resilience. fOonvr'clit. is'.d. by I'a'liser, Palliser & Co., Architects. 34 East 43.1 st., N. V.j There arc many things to lie taken into consideration in the designing of housi-s for different parts of the country. This cottage Is of a form that Ucompact and in every Why available. The rooms are large, have high ceilings and at the same time afford every convenience In their arrangement, making them desirable for a family of rcllned tastes and moderate means. It is built of wood, tRough in favorable local

“Simplest and Best.” THE FRANKLI!

TYPEWRITER.

PRICE, •60.00.

-i

FIRST SToRV. less money than these square boxes giving hut the same amount of accommodation, and which a great many pinple seem to think it is necessary to build if they would do so cheaply. 1’sually too little attention has boon paid to roofs and chimneys of houses, and they apiicnr to have been treated as necessary evils instead of their being made, as th\- should lie. Imth useful and ornamental. A flat roof for this climate can hardly he railed useful, as the action of the heat and cold on it will Ik. more than likely to open the seams of the flat roof, and the force of 11 sudden shower will find its way through, sadly to the detriment of the interior decoration ns well as to the comfort and theconuiwndable equability of tcnqicr nf the inmates. In our northern climate we should have steep roofs, so ns to readily shed the heavy rains and snows, and we think this cottage is well protected In this respis-t. The floor plans, we think, need very little explanation, as they fully explain themselves.

SECOND STORV. Simple things become beautiful and attractive by an art inspiration. Interiors and exteriors retain their old forms substantially, but they put on new faces when touched by the real artist, who sees his work completed in his mind when he tiegins to plan, and so is enabled to produce harmony throughout.

Household Hints. Denim continues to be a favorite material in house decorations. Chloride of lime in the proportion of six ounces to the gallon of water is a good disinfectant for wooden vessels. Sheets folded across, bringing the wide and narrow hems together, then folded again, then ironed across both sides, are finished quickly and look as well as if more time was spent on them. Clothes when brought in should be separated and folded at once. If allowed to lie together, many wrinkles accumulate. An iron weighing seven pounds does better work by |»assing it over the clothes once with a firm, steady pressure than a lighter iron hurriedly passed over the clothes two or three times.

WaHliing Away the Farms. St. Anna »e la Parade, t^ue., May H). —The scene of the recent landslide con- I tinues to be a place of great anxiety, j The farms and houses all about are gradually but surely disappearing a number of buildings having been^wept away yesterday. At some points lain is being carried off at the rate of an acre an hour. Assurance to ^liners. PnTsru'RO, May 10.—President John ’ McBride and Secretary-Treasurer Patrick McBryde of the I'nited Mine Workers’ association have assured the opera tors of this district that if a uniform rate is established at the Cleveland con- | vention it will Vie maintained and enforced by the miners throughout the district. Seiavil art Iniimiral Literature. Montreal, May 10.—A case full of pamphlets entitled the "Eye Opener." and aimed against the Roman Catholic) church, has been seized by the customs officers on the ground that it is immoral literature. TEACH ALL CHILDREN MUSIC. Lot It Be h Tart In the Kegular School System. The idea seems generally to prevail ihat music is an accomplishment that | is to be acquired only by a special course of study and by certain methods that ;ire not, as a rule, employed in teaching j other branches of education. The Etude says: It would seem to go without saying that a child should leant music as it learns its A B C’s. If a child can read, it ought to know the letters on the scale and the keyboard of an instrument. There is no reason why a child should not read music as readily ! as it reads print. Music should never bo wn accomplish- j raent and should never be taught as j such. It should be as much a part of the regular training of every youngster ( as reading and spelling. No matter how long people live they are never out i of the range of music and its possibili-

j ties.

Every church service, every entertain- j j ment, even nature herself, is full of mu- j sic, and those who are taught from childhood to comprehend and assist in creating this most delightful accompaniment to everyday life have very nfuch to be thankful for. When a child can read its primer, it should lie thoroughly drilled in the elements of music, and as it advances should study this branch in conunon with others. If this were the case, we would hear a great deal of very much better music than we are treated to, and those who hear it would be much more able to appreciate it In addition to this there is nothing so comforting to persons of fine temperament as the harmony of good music, and no greater delight in leisure hours or times when one is somewhat under the weather than to be able j intelligently to appreciate or render the j fine works of classic and more ordinary 1 composers. As almost every house in the land has a musical instrument of some sort it seems strange that every schoolhonso has not its musical chart and itssimple and comprehensive course of musical study. The child who learns music with the elementary branches is so ingrained with it that it is never for-

gotten.

Music is always elevating in its tendencies and puts people in better humor under almost all circumstances. It is a solace to the weary, and it breaks the strain of cure, puts the whole being in better condition and is often quite as valuable to distracted spirits as a doctor’s medicine. It would lie well worth while to in- 1 corporate a thorough musical training ; into the public school system, and some day, when jieople come to realize more ' clearly the advantages of it, we shall j see this delightful element made a part of all courses of study.

PERSPECTIVE VIEW.

ities it would be bettor still of stone or brick, and if suitably surrounded with tasteful landscape eniliellishmenta will make a snug, pretty and attractive home. One can, by the exercise of appropriate taste, produce the right kind of an impression in a house of this character. Itshould become a part of and belong to the acres which surround it. It should bean indispcnsnblc accessory to the place itself, and the grounds should Ih‘ laid out and embellished in suc h a nmnuer that the whole combination impresses one with harmonious beauty, and not, as is too often the case, seek to make up for the deficiencies in the grounds by elaborate expenditure tnd display alxnit the house. A true appreciation of a country or suburban home will not tolerate slovenly, ill kept grounds, and no house exhibits its

QIMPI Cl Has fewer parts by ht^ OimriLl and weighs less by 1 than any other type-bar niachial Standard Keyboard—forty keys, pning eighty-ono characters. Alignin' perfect and permanent. Work .sight as soon as written, and so 1 mains. Interchangeable parts. Cop DURABLE: ra quality, and by the most skills workmen. Unequaled for manifo, and mimeograph work. Carriage loc^ at end of line, insuring neatnes Type cleaned in five seconds, with j soiling the Ungers. Handsome in a-, pearanco and character CDC EflV of work. Speed limited OILlUT only by the skill of the operate: A#"Sfnd for Catalogue and specimen of work,! FRANKLIN EDUCATIONAL CO. 250 A 252 Wabash Ave. CHICAGO Local Time Gard,

/.» «-"• Ijf c

Bill FOl’R. GOING EAST.

No C Indianapolis Accommodation HAtj No IS’ Southwestern Limited i v ,, No 8* Mail No 10’ t lurlmiati Night Express..

GOING WEST.

)

No »• Mail S;451

13:44;

No IT" southwestern Limited

Dig 1

PV\Io*\ ;' / 'A7W

MUST STOKY.

No 3t .Mattoon Accommodation H:34p2H

So V st 1 and ( m N Igbt Kxpress No. 2 connects throimJi to Cincinnati, (lev I

land. Dayton and Benton Harbor. No. E

coaches to Buffalo, sleepers to New \ rk Washington, D. C. Xo. 8connects throug Wabash and ( inclnnati. No. 10, eortcliis :

Cleveland and < incinnati, sleepers to < Ini I

nati and New York.

Daily t Kxcept Sunday

I*. ilUESTis. Went

MffHON ROUTE

-g>) touitvillt MtwAlBAStl CHICAtO Rr

sme value unless there is a harmony in its surroundings. If this l>c attended to, a Mgh degree of effect can lx- produced in Imuaes of very moderate cost—houses that shall lie roomy, warm, substantial and in every way agreeable to their occupants. The glass throughout is common sheet without coloi, but the dividing up of the tipper sashes gives character to the whole. The plain treatment of the exterior is more than made up by the ’lonuty of the Internal arrangements, which the plans

fully explain

Architecture is young in this country, and we have to look tothe mother country for many of our ideas, but bocause we do this we need not follow their custom in building our small houses, but we must meet the requirements of climate and habits. Therefore the arrangement of rooms

In effect Sunday, Nov. IS, isto. NOKTH BOUND. Nil *■ i hleago Mall No H’ “ Express L:(ft p39 No 441 Local L&ffip, SOUTH BOUND. Nu 8* Louisville Mall Nd 5* 81 nit hern Express No 4:1* Local . * Dally, t Except Sunday.

VANDALIA LINE. Trains leave Greencustle, Ind., In effect Va

ih. isn.

POR THE WEST.

No 5 Kx. sun.... 8:56 a m, for M. Louis No T Daily 12:20 a m, for st. Leiiis No 1 Daily 12:58 p m, for st. Louis I No 21 Daily 1:52 p m, for st. Louis No 3 Ex. Sun 5:2s ji m, for Terre llautt

FOR THE EAST.

No 4 Ex. sun .. 8:34 a m, for Indianttpolii U No 20 Daily 1:52 p tn, •" No 8 Dally ... 3:35 p in, No 2 Kx. sun 8:80pm, "* •• No 12 Daily 2:28 a tn, “ No 8 Daily 8:32 am “ I’EOltl A IUVisit IN l.eave Terre Haute. No 75 Kx. sun 7:05 a m. lor I’eori*. I NO.. •• " ... 3:25 p in, for Decatur b tor complete time card, glv.ng all tralri 1 and stations, and for full information us t rates, through curs, etc., address , ,, J.S. Dow UNO, Agent, •E M.' HK8BROUOH. (.reemustk I Asst. Uen’l I’liss. Agt. St. Uniis, Mo

»

Three i ,-t.. There was one 1 dearly loved whose heart Seemed to mine a counterpart. The notes were false, nr my ear was wrong, And so an ending of that song. There was one who loved me well whose son) Fitted to mine as oar to thole. A gale sprang up, as a gale well may, And tomorrow was turned to yesterday. There was one 1 loved w hose radiant fare Made me run a perilous race. There is one I love and one loves me With a love that spells eternity. —Waiter Herries PnllorV

SECOND STORY. is entirely different, and we add veranilas. which are valuable appendagea on account of their rendering it pleasant to sit out of

doors.

This house is substantially built and contains the modern conveniences. There is no water closet, but an iurth closet is provhV'd in connection with the bathroom, which is preferable. TTiiiign Every Woman Wants to Know. The belts of skirts to wear with blazers are quite plain and straight, or else they are covered with a soft bias belt called a crush belt A card sent to a reception is exactly the same as if you attended in person. Many of the silk petticoats are now lined with a very light quality of cashmere. This adds very little to their •weight and makes them wear much longer. The colors of evening dresses are very soft and pretty, few bright tones being favored at present Yellow is in much demand, especially iu conjunction with white. The basque part of the new waists may be a ruffle, or it may lie finished in box plaits or “ripped” like the seamless collars and capes on the jackets. Colored straws will be much worn. A curious fashion in scarf and hat pins consists in having as the pinhead a large pearl, either pink, gray, white or black, with a tiny diamond snake curled slantingly around it The collet capes seem to hold their

own.

Crape is worn six months for a sister iuid black without crape another six months. Then black and white with lace trimming, also lavender and gray, are suitable. Silver jewelry may be worn after one year of mourning dress. In the lost six months of the year concerts and musicales art; attended, but dances are considered too gay.

CHICAGO & EASTERX IIXINOB To and from Terre Haute, in eflect November 12, 18H3. V ... ... ARRIVE FROM THE NORTH. No .j 11-rrc lluute & Kvnuftvlllc Kx tiAOur: No , NaahvUle Special sKinpa No D Terrellaiite At Evansville Mull I VI im ! No5 I liicago \ Nashville Limited liMtlpm

NOKTH ROUND.

No fi" Chicago A Nashville Limited LVDun go •• Mail 12:10pn No 4" “ Express 11:16pn No 8 ( hiengo special ifctjftpn

, * Daily. + Except Sunday

1 rains J and 4 carry Dullinati sleeping iru*. between < hiengo and Evansville TralM > and 9 carry I'ullinan palace Hlfcpinir curs day coaches and run solid between t hk»*a

and Nashville. ( HAS. I>. STONE.

Gen’l Pass.and T'kt Agt. Chicago.

These (Coupons Gooj tor any Back Nu inters.

Two

MAY 10,1891.

DOUBLE

NUMBER 1

1

Sitepp's World’s Fait

PHOTOGRAPHED.

Klip three eouponr like this, of I different dates, and hrlng or semi _ with JO cents in stamps or coin, to f The Banner Times, and ANY £ TWO BA( K Portfolios will be de -g livered or ninilcd. Write your S name and address plainly and don't S fail to enclose 3 coupons and '-id ■? cents for two parte stating what i 3

parts are wanted.

These Coupons Good for any Two Back Numbers.

VANDALIA LINK KXCl'KSIONS To South, Southeast and Southwest will run on various dates from now until June 5th. 18114, iDelusive. One Fare Hound Trip. Call on or address any Vandal iu Line Agent and ask for information contained in Circular So. .127 of January 20th, 1804. d77-w5tf

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