Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 15 January 1895 — Page 3

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ONE NIGHT ONLY

A Mammoth Production of

SATURDAY, "i JANUARY -1 C?

SEE

The Arabian Dance. The Saw Mill Scene. The Railroad Train. The Brooklyn Bridge. The Boiler Explosion.

These scenes will positively be given on this stage or your money will be refunded.

Carry two sets of scenery, pne large and one small, and ean give the production

stage,

110

011

All kin j,'o bareioot.

Scz hi: jlst wish lie wus Ther buy 'cross thor street, 'eauso lie don't wear his hair in curl An look jisi like a "sissy nirl," All tint hoy has a ball ail bat All wears a nice broad rim hat

AJI kin go barefoot.

S(7, he jlst wish

any

matter how small.

50c, 35c.' Children. 25c.

Seats now on Sale at Harry Strickland's.

Music, Music.

Tlios. .f Orr} the old reliable music dealer, has put in a stock of

New and Second-hand Oro-ans,

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1855. T. C. 1893

HUGHES' BANK,

GREENFIELD, IND.

Transact a general bonking fcus?uess, receive deposits, --ufe drafts, negotiate loans, buy g,vod notes aii«) insure property. We also have a special fire-proo* safe for the safe keeping of notes deeds and valuable papers for the use of our customers fi'ee of charge.

Money safe guarded by time loekh and all modern improvements. "We make a specialty of mortgage loans on long time at lowest market rat" 'interest, ana can furnish good investments in that kind of paper a4 anytime.

Bank. No. 29. West Main Street

The Uoy Across the Way. Bud KC7. in: Jlst Vl.-.ll hi: WUH Ther boy 'ero.-« tinr way, 'oau.se Hi: is brown nn strong an li^ A11 don't li.ivc to wear a ]-\nt'leroy rijj, But jist a "sure r.uif" hickory .shirt. Tatter'd an pawdi'd en covered with uil't

WUH

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her boy 'cross tii He Uiii :n an she An don't h.-v to All km play the i.. An has .sure nu

Tor bareiuot.

THOUSANDS IN NEED.

Suffering In the Hocking and Sunday Creek Valleys

A HELPING HAND EXTENDED.

There HUH Been a Liberal Response to the Appeal For Assistance—Commissaries Opened at Several Points—There Is destitution at Oakdale, Hollister and Several

Other Places. Nklsoxvillk, O., Jan. 15.—At last reports as to the needy in this district, including the Hocking and Sunday Creek valleys, there were about 2,000 I families in need. Cincinnati has very liberally responded. There were two cars received from there yesterday. They have received some very liberal donations from individual parties. General C. H. Grosvenor donated $200, C. C. Waite $100, Hoster Brewing company of Columbus £200, besides several others.

Glouster will be made a distributing point for the Sunday Creek valley. A carload wa3 shipped there from Columbus yesterday. Adjutant General John C. Howe arrived yesterday from Columbus. He will remain here several days to look after the commissary work at the different points, ^e states that Governor Mclvinley is •veil pleased as to the systematic way in which the work has been conducted. The citizens' commissary was opened yesterday, from which the Nelsonville needy will be supplied. The Xelsonville citizens will keep their needy pvr for the present, and it is thought w.ey will be able to tide their own over until better times.

IN THE VALLEY.

Great Stifle ring* at Onkdalc, Ilolllster and Other Points. Glol'stku, O., Jan. 15.—There is no actual starvation here, but there is much suffering in the Sunday Creek valley since the suspension of work last summer. Many only about met living expenses up to December, and not half had any work in December. Many honest and industrious men can not keep their families and pay rents. While in Glouster proper there is not much suffering, in and about Oakdale, Hollistei and outlying points there is destitution. Many families are without clothing to keep them warm, or sufficient food to make tlieiu strong enough to work. A committee was appointed Saturday to wait on the governor also a committee to receive and distribute supplies. Sunday a telegram announced their coming yesterday. The lu:lp is anxiously awaited, and will be carefully distributed by the comm ttre.

THE

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jcAnu want x'ople desiring any kind of an iiistru-

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ment to call and see li

Money saved sure.

THOMAS J. ORR.

West Main St., Greentteid.

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ev street, 'cause in an play .•: .i Lis hands every iy .....a organ an .ee N.li'.-wses to his ai t.s K..-eI«Kit. ............Vij'

An km go

Bud silie jist wish lie wus Th.-r boy 'cross tie. trei t, 'eauso Hi: e.ui a:i tor the crick an swim, .jr iish x* ha hue an ..Id tree lini', Ail loiK.s ain't 'ir he 11 i'.dl in, An they or t.-ll niia it'rf a ureadful sin

.Kansas (Jity Star.

Taylor's lioml-OM.'ii Ue»l.

CuicAfiD, .Jan. J.').-—A secret conference of the bondsmen of W. \V. Taylor, the doiaui!ing treasurer of South Dakota, was hem here Monday. L.v Governor Mellei to of South Uaicota, ,J. T. MoChesnoy of New York, William Taylor jf Lafayette, incl., and C. ii. Vinton and ('. 'J'. Howard of Jtedliold, South Dakota were in the city, the two former being registered at the Great Northern hotel. Tho conference of tho bondsmen was a mysterious one. it was rumored that 'l ay!or was in the city and was to meet his bondsmen, but this was emphatically denied. All the interested parties made every effort to escape newspaper reporters and professed dense ignorance regarding tho proposed meeting.

Foolish 31 an.

Pakkkuhuuku, W. Va., Jan. 15.—At

night, with tho thermometer 10 degrees below zero, Brady Taylor ran a foot face out St. Mary's road, a mile and a half on a wagor, barefooted. He won, bat is now in a dangerous condition.

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THIRD JAPANESE ARMY

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l'i Lain! in Two Places on ths Shan tuny Promontory.

Hoxu-Koxu, Jan. Jo.—A letter has been received from Kobe, Japan, dated Jan. 8, bringing news which the Japanese telegraph ollicials refused to transmit. The letter states th transports are reported to Ujina with a portion of the third army The embarkation of this army was expected to he completed by Jan. 11. The emperor gave an audience 011 Jan. (i to the commanding officers. The transports will rendezvous at the islands near Chemulpo, Corea. The arniv is expected to hurl at two places on the Shantung promontory, soatn of Wei-Hai-Wei.

John Hull Will Watch.

Hoxtr-Koxw, Jail. 15.—Tiie British fleet, with Admiral l-'reemamie in command, has gone to Japan, pres.imauiy to follow llie Japanese movements. The British warship i'ylades, bound for Australia, has been ordered to proceed to China.

Aired FIII"MO:- Fro/.eil.

AKKOX, O., Jan. 15.—August X. Warner, il, a farmer, while driving to Akron was overcome by cold when near the city, ami fell from the seat to the ground. He was dead when picked up.

t:

MARKETS

llev:e\v ol tho Grain siml Cattle iUurkutrt For January 14.

iiostoii.

Wool—Oliie and IVnnsylvania XXX 19c, XX and

ADOVC

Hljutlbc, 17c, Xo. 1

IYU£

Xu. 1'.),! -'^ie. line uuvvaslied, 1.5c, nniiK rcn.intauie l14c Ohio combing, Xo. 1 %'mA Lj-'nluod :3t)(t"ic, Xo. ^-bluuii 2(J«'y2c. Uhio delaine iSut^Oc Micnigan, and abevt-lac^Kic, Xo. 1 lb^lHc, Xo. 2 life, line unwashed ll(U. 12e, uiniieieiiaiitable 12c. Michigan coinhiag Xo 1 %{',%' bloeil .wtJc, Xo. 2 J.^-blood 2U(gj22c, Michigan delaine lTj-ft'c. Jven Lucky, Iniliana and Montana coitibiug, %-blooil lti)^(«,lSc, doj^blood 10)-2i(iJSc, do braid 10(ctrl7o, clutiiing, %-!)lood ioitt lTc clothing, blood 15c^l7c elothinir coarse 15-.

Pit {nIhii'jj.

Cattle—Prime, tU 2."(t5 5U f^ood, $4 75@ "j WJ: .eUod butchers', 5*4 20(£4 GO rougli lal, -V3 DO lair, light steers, s'lj 4U(6Q a 60 llgllt sloekers, 80(&U lac cowsand iieifers.-r'-i 40 bulls, stags and cows. UUuio 75 lresn cows and springers, Slii-^Sfh Hogs i'liiiadelphiaa, £4 'JOio.5 l«J 1 jest .nixed, s'4 S5ji4 55 Yorkers, #4 70«j| 4 pijzs, $4 40(40 Oil roughs, $3 ()i) (!i4 Sheep—Ext ra, (in good, ~0uc~ i'0 lair, $1 80«t"-J (JO common, J^tct 13-a yearlings, :i0 best, lamb.-, §4 l.r)(^4 50 common and fair lambs, W 50a',.i tiO veal calves, .! 00(/,( 25.

ISuilHio.

Wheat,—Xo. 2 red, 5'Jc Xo. red, 57j-£c. I Corn—Xo. :l yellow, -17'c Xo.

'6

yellow,

4'-i,c Xo. 2 corn, -Hie Xo. 3 corn, 45^'c. Oats—Xo. white, y.'^i'e Xo. while. I :jfc Xo. 2 mixed, iiii^'c. Cuttle—Best I heavy shipping steers, ?4 S5(K5 :.i5 good medium, £4

G0k',4 SO

light to lair, £4 :j5i(5

4 50 springers and cows, 00(^8 00. Hogs—Pigs, §1 S5/t,4 90 mixed and mediuins, .$4 Miict-I 85, choice heavy, $4 'JO($ 5 (in. Shee|) and ianib.s—Choice native, •i 4 ti5u/5 nil lair to good, 5J5(n 1 00 export sii.ep, 75c'. 1 liglit. wetners, fj 50 jj, 75 mixed siie.-p, ?:i 75uj/A 25. I

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Wheat («55J.ic. Corn 4'JJ

i!«i4-le.

Cattle—Select hatchers, ^*1 ir«(4 50: fair to good, 40(rt,4 10 common, $2 25(«/:J 35. ilogs—Selected and prime butchers, $4 55 (0,4 i5 packing, $4 4')((«,4 50 common to roilulis, 70'f' 15. Siieep £1 (cjlJ 75. Lambs—5U(«,3 75.

Chicago.

Hogs Select butchers,$4 55fr4 70 mixed, I $4 25(^4 50. tJilttle—Prime steers, $5 35 (a/ 75 others, S2 75(a-4 25 cows and bulls, $1 50(e,4 oo. Sheep— §1 50($3 75 lambs, $2 26(U/4 50.

N«w York.

Cuttle-$1 4«/.,? 35. Sheep— OO&ii 75 lambs. $3 oOui.4 75.

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MS

WOMAN'S AVORLD.

2

I

A GOWN THAT WILL MAKE THE AVER­

AGE WOMAN'S MOUTH WATER.

Fair Play For Lady Somerset—Mrs. Cleveland's Hat and Others'—A Thoughtful Bride—Woman Suffrage Convention—A

Southern Need—Black Tresses Now.

This pretty gown is composed of exquisitely rich gray silk. The immensely wide skirt is ornamented with Russian blue ribbon round the hem, which is dotted here and there with rosettes of a lighter shade of blue, while in the center is a large bow, fastened in the middle by a fancy stone buckle. The pretty

bebe waist is cut square and thickly ruc'lied over tho shoulders with fine lace. Encircling the waist and crossed over in the front aro ribbons of the bluo velvet, the upper ones being brought to a point and terminated in a large bow of the lighter blue and a buckle similar to tlTat on the skirt. Tho full looped up sleeves are made of soft spotted silk. Tho gloves aro a delicate gray and the feather fan pale blue.

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Fair Play For Lady Somerset. Tho Boston Transcript says editorially:

It stands to reason that newspapers to whom "Gaiety Girls" aro the true and only interesting tvpo of womanhood are finding tho amiable Lady Henry Somerset, brilliant as she is, something of an ogre and bore. It is a saddening test of tho tasto and character controlling American journalists today in our cities. Miss Willard says that tho current paragraphs about this bravo and brilliant English woman's so called "crusado" in this country are very nearly cruel to a woman who came to this country avow-

at several cdly to study quietly our customs and have left politics, and with no intention to instruct a whole country or to attack anything. When tiie New York reporters flocked about Lady Henry Somerset, on her arrival and quizzed her, she spoke of tho recent crusades in London against flagrant indecencies in low class theaters, and expressed her hearty wish that all such evils might bo abated on both sides tif tho sea. At once it was said, and it has been ceaselessly repeated, that

Lady Henry camo hero to organize a crusade, to cultivate a fad, and so forth. She is certainly deeply and practicallv interested in all that has any relation to highest cultivation and freedom of humanity, and she is daily found in good works, now at a convention, now at a meeting at Mrs. Lull's house, and sho speaks on suffrage whenovor she can bo of service to tho cause that she and Aliss Willard have at heart. Titles are, howover, a sort of natural romantic bait to our democracy, and a fiercer light than ever beat upon a native born reformer like Miss Willard inevitably falls upon the lady who is associated with her. The American press has long ago accepted and honored the exceptional and in­

3Irs. Cleveland's Hat and Others'. Mrs. Cleveland, in a box at Albaugh's, woro a dainty confection (isn't that Parisian for bonnet?) in black, which was not more than an inch in height at the summit and there were no pompons or other flubdubs on it. If tho first lady in tho land can wear that kind of a bonnet, what's tho matter with tho second and third doing likewise? In somo instances the hats were at least 18 inches in breadth and woro from 4 to inches in elovation. One woman had a bunch of rod artificial roses on her headpiece that was big enough for a floral

tellectual ability and rare devotion to jiiedical profession. A colored woman public ends of Miss Willard, and it is with pleasure that in her name we ask of it fair play and gentler courtesy for that most interesting aud admirable example of tho "new woman, in tho best sense of that abused term, Lady Henry Somerset.

1

tribute to a popular star from a millionaire admirer. Another wore a black volvet layout as big as a building lot on ono of tho subdivisions, with a bunch of ostrich feathers surmounting it, which must liavo caused the parent bird intense suffering when they were rude- I ly abstracted from it. I

Then there were bows of ribbon in impossiblo places, and bunches of all kinds of flowers, and piles of dry goods like remnant counter displays, and such a

it#

1

collection of styles and sizes that the senses were contused and the eye made weary. In pleasing contrast to this were the heads of tho men. On them only hair, and even the hair was gone from tho manly heads of many. Now, why I do women do this? Is it because they have only one hat each that is fit to bo worn? Or is it that they are utterly regardless of tho comfort and rights of others who pay their money to see tho performance? Or is it the}' aro so vain that they will wear what they think is most becoming to them? If it is this specics of vanity, they might far better go bareheaded, for tho prettiest woman in tho world in a high hat at the thea-

wwirr-«»ff»i 1-w i'H "Tlf' I" ^'"JK »yw

ter is an object to produce any other feelings than those of admiration.—Washington Star.

A Thoughtful Bride.

A pretty story is told of a recent New Orleans bride, a social belle, who, on account of her rare beauty and grace, is known among her friends by the name of Venus. Now all brides have to purchase their trousseaus, but it is not every bride that would have thought out the graceful deed that this bride did. Her purchases were made at a leading store, and in all, counting the various departments that were called upon to contribute their beautiful stocks to the trousseaus, 15 young ladios served the bonny bride elect.

Sho managed in some way to get tho names of each 0110, and when her wedding invitations were issued each of these 15 young saleswomen received a dainty bidding to the church. Nay, more! At 6 p. m., tho hour at which the bridal cortege, flushed with excitement from the beautiful church ceremony, entered tho homo of the bride, these 15 young women, busily at work behind the store counters, were summoned by their employers to the roar of the establishment. There they found a sumptuous repast spread, with all manner of dainty cakes and confections. Accompanying the fine bridal supper was a letter which the employer read to tho assembled girls. It was from the beautiful girl bride whom they had served so amiably, and it told them how sho could not be happy on this day without letting them feel aglow of the happiness that had como to her.—Detroit Free Press. ,a.s. .,!

Wouiaii Suffrage Convention. The twenty-seventh annual convention of .no National American Woman Suffrage association will bo held in Atlanta in Do Give's Opera House Jan. 81 to Feb.

5.

While Colorado's full enfranchisement of women in 1803 is encouraging, tho defeat of tho suffrage amendments in New York and Kansas in 1894 shows how largely men still fail when called upon to put in practico the principles they enunciate.

Though 2(i states liavo granted some slight concessions to women citizens, in no states of tho Union, save Wyoming and Colorado, aro women yet admitted to tho dignity of equal rights in citizenship. In only six states of the Union aro mothers conceded to bo legal owners of their own children.

Such being tho sad ah\ shameful stato of affairs, it behooves all lovers of jnstice to rally at the call to speed the next step in human progress—tho full dovelopment of tho mother of tho race, tho greatest factor in tho coming civilization. ...... ...

A Southern Need.

"If you will agitato it sufficiently, before a year is over you will have tho movement on foot, said a new member at tho club the other night. "What movement?" asked half a dozen voices, and to their astonishment they wcro told, "Why, to have a woman's medical college in Louisiana." Tho speaker, a new comer in New Orleans, went nn to explain the needs of such an institution in the south. "Why should the women of this state, Texas, Mississippi aud other southern states have to go across tho Ohio river to be instructed in medicine? Your state grants a license to practice to a woman physician that will come from abroad, but in no way provides for tho entrance of her own women into this profession. It seems to me, continued tho speaker, "that you women would hate mightily to see a negress the first Louisiana woman to enter tho

will graduate in medicino in a very short time at tho New Orleans univer sity, and so will enjoy the privilege of earning a living in a profession which is virtually closed to whito women."

This protest occasioned some earnest talk of making an attempt to raiso funds for a medical college for southern women.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.

Black Tresses Now.

That black is tho latest fashionable tint for "choveux teints" is the last word from Paris. A noted American beauty who seoms to possess the secret of eternal youth and good looks—and who, since tho days when her childish head was crowned with the curly brown locks with which naturo endowed her 1ms been successively a blondo doree, a blonde cendree, and a Titian beauty— has now the blue black tresses that in a pure Irish typo of beauty is so effectivo with bluo eyes and a fair skin. It is a most refined looking conjunction if tho hair is arranged simply and withoutro fined "crimps. It may be either worn light and loose, liko a dusky cloud, or drawn back smoothly from tho forehead, where, however, it should in such a case grow low aud in those becoming points on tho temples which form such an undoubted beauty.

Where the face can stand it tho coif- 1 fure a lingenue is tho favorite stylo of hairdressing in Paris. This moans brushing the hair straight back from tho face all around. It should then bo slightly rippled and loosely twisted into an artistic knot a la Grecque.—New York Tribune.

lEclva l^ockwood Interviewed. "Of course, Mrs. Lockwood, you are still interested in woman's rights?" inquired an interviewer of BelvaA. Lockwood, whom ho met on a train passing through Cincinnati.

"Certainly. It is only a matter of timo until tho women will boon the same plane with tho men at the ballot box, as they are in everything else.

&

They are taking high rank in all the professions, and the change in public sentiment in their favor is gradually going on." "Pt »ve you any further presidential aspirations?" "No, replied the lady, laughing. "I didn't do anything to get the nomination twice before, but simply wrote a letter of acceptance. There is no law against my running for president whenever I choose. When I was in Brussels last year attending the peace congress, the court papers had quite a sketch of me, saying that I was a candidate for president of the United States against Cleveland and Harrison. This shows how what is considered a joke will trav-

t'1-"

Tho official call for tho con-

veil tion says: The object of theso conventions is to educate women into a knowledge of their rights and duties as citizens of a republic, and through them to arouse the nation to a sense of the national wrong perpetrated by tho disfranchisement of half the people of tho United States in opposition to tho principles of government declared by our laws and constitutions.

Women on School Boards.

Miss Graco Dodge, at a recent meeting of one of the Good Government clubs in New York city, expressed her conviction that women were needed on the school board for many reasons, and especially because women can visit the schools during tho hours when they aro in session, which business men cannot do, and which politicians will not take the trouble to do. Miss Dodge also said that women teachers were sometimes victimized by immoral school trustees, and that in her experience as school commissioner sho had come across several such cases. This last statement, coming from a woman of Miss Dodge's high character and standing, has made a sensation. Some of tho teachers profess to bo indignant. But prominent women, who liavo been interviewed by tho New YTork papers, express strongly tho conviction that there ought to be women on tho board.

Prayed For Her In Public.

I Miss Tessa L. Kelso, librarian of tho public library of Los Angeles, has sued tho Rev. J. W. Campbell of that city for praying for her in public. Sho is a most worthy young woman, but recently incurred tho enmity of a few people by advising tho purchase of certain books for the library. The offensive prayer was offered at public, service in tho church of which Mr. Campbell is pastor, and was as follows: "O Lord, vouchsafo thy saving grace to the librarian of the

Los Angeles City library, and cleanse her from all sin, and make her worthy of her office." Tho prayer stirred up a terrific commotion, and Miss Kelso's friends declared it to be slanderous. So sho demands $5,000 for tho defamation of her character in public.—Los Angeles Dispatch.

N

For Widow Brides.

What is the correct wedding dress for a widow bride? asks Lady Violet Gx-e-ville, a literary belle of London. Shall sho compete with her virgin sisters md wear white, or must she e'en take refuge in cool gray, soft lilac or cerulean blue? Hitherto white has been tabooed as the color of innocence, to which the widow, guileful as she is supposed to be, dares no longer pretend. Now, however, wo have changed all that. A fashionable woman, marrying for the second time, wore white satin trimmed with sablo at her wedding the other da}'. The charm is broken, and the other brides will follow suit.—New York Dispatch.-

Sirs. Lease's Views.

Mrs. Lease, who is to fettle down on a farm at Fresno, CaL, as soon as her term of office expires, speaks thus on the woman question: "I think our (.'mancipation is merely a question of time, but I will candidly admit that women aro not prepared for it. Women are cruel to women, are they not? Men aro more just to women than women are to each other. We liavo many things to learn before wo are fit to exercise the full right of tho suffrage.

Pink Lined Veils.

Simplicity in veils isdecidedlypasse. Most of tho new ones aro trimmed with either lace, ribbon or jet—somo in plain net have a ruffle of lace about '.j inches wide, headed with rows of narrow ribbon, not unlike those used in our mothers' flirtation days. Again, coarse net veils are lined with pink chiffon, thereby lending tho tints of youth to an otherwise ordinary complexion.—New York Journal.

What Paris Says.

The nation's law givers, with regard to fashion—that nation being, of course, Paris—liavo formally decreed that tho flower to bo worn on ladies' hats and headdress during tho winter is a "purple violet" rose, one on each side of tho hair or hat, after tho fashion of tho time of Louis XV. From tho roses "purple violet" velvet ribbons fall on tho shoulders. ....

Omaha Woman's Club.

The growth of tho Omaha Woman's club is phenomenal. Organized in May, 18U8, at the end of the first year it had over 350 members, and has now over 450, with applications constantly pouring in. Mrs. Frances M. Ford is its brilliant and inspiring president.

Representatives of all tho women's clubs in Chicago have organized a new charity, which promises to becomo ono of the important eleemosynary institutions in the city. It is called the Model Lodging IIouso and Workshop For Destitute Women.

No set wooden rule governs tho dressmaker in the exact shaping and adjusting of her pattern skirts, for they aro individualized for oacli wearer quito as much as an individual style of dressing tho hair is followed.

Tho Australians have coined tho word "stateswoinan" and find no lack of candidates deserving it. Women seem to bo "getting there" fastest on tho other sido of tho planet.

The Kansas State grange passed strong resolutions at its rocent annual meeting in favor of woman suffrage aud elected women to six of its 13 oflicos.

Boston women to the number of 11,200 registered in 1894, again of over 104 over the registration for 1893.

The Ladies Rule.

Duplicate whist is the rage among tho ladies of Buffalo, and Tho Commercial of that city says that whist invitatiwjg now take this form: "Duplicate whist at 8 two tables individual scores. Husbands may be ordered at 11."

i£Cic!iESii(tai«I. ('entrovtllr(ierinantown I 'aniliridne City.. iHlbliii .'it rawns Lewisville.. iMmreiih Kniglitstown Chariot tsville Cleveland I ee.'ilield Philadelphia miioerland. Irvmijt.on 3 injf.iinna|oSIs nr.

Which

moves the cynical Rochester Express to remark: "Tho breezy frankness of this is delicious, and one can imagine Buffalo husbands rushing about in desperate haste each evening at 11. Doubtless they n«.-ot on the doorsteps of the horses where the symposia are held and chat and jest together over the charms and whims of their ladies, just as their own coachmen used to do in the simple and good old days when husbands and wife went to balls together, or played 'hearts/ each with the other for partner. But those evenings aro long past. The ladies rule, and tho only comfort that the docile but freezing Buffalo husbands have now is the remembranco that in those same old dsys ladies sometimes fell in love with coachmen, and so may yet smile with affection upon husbands!"

Admitted to tiie 15ar.

Miss Cora A. Benneson lias been admitted to the Massachusetts bar. Tho application for her admission was made by Lawyer Hemenway. A number of well known persons attended court on this occasion, including Miss Agnes Irwin, dean of ltadcliffo college. Miss Benneson is a graduate of tho law school of Michigan univ "-"ify, and has already been admitted to practico before tho supreme courts of Illinois and Michigan. She speaks in the highest terms of tho kindness and courtesy with which she was treated by all her fellow law students at Michigan university. The day following Miss Brnneson's admission, Miss Amy Acton was also admitted, with 35 other students from tho Boston University law school. They all stood up together in the supremo judicial courtroom in this city and took the oath oncert.

The SU'oncst

Th. like

miser wlio finds his wealth is shaken rose, The mother who hears her son, her only yoll, is dead, Each knows—erieli know.-' a ijrief, t- not so darkly knows

AH the wee. ed hand tnat hmis the heart is still unwed.

I I I

I5E COLUMBIA PAP CALENDAR

Need

A Desk Calendar is a necessity most convenient kind of storehouse for memoranda. The CoIumbiaDcsk Calendar is brightest and handsomest of all—-fall of dainty silhouettes and pen sketches and entertaining thoughts on outdoor exercise and sionally reminds you of juality of Columbia Bicycles and of your need of one. You won't object to that, of course. The Calendar will be mailed for five 2-cent stamps.

thoughts on sjiort. Occasi the superb qui

•Jtp rvrle*: nnrl nf

Address Calendar Department

POPE MFG, CO,,

Mention this paper.

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Slos. Hand IS0 connect at Columbus for Pittsburgh and the Mas], and al Kieliiuond lor I )a vton, Xetiiitand Sprin^tield, and No. for Cincinnati.

Trains leave Cambridge City at 17 05 «. m. met fO 00 I'. ni. f"i' Kushv'ill e, Shelby ville, 'olunibns and mteniiedi.ile stations. Airlvo Cambridge City 112 3D and i(j 35 JOSEPH WOOD, E A. OUl,

Goner.il Manaijnr, (io:i :r.il riwnRer igilit,

I1-3C-94-I1 Prrrsmraoir, PI-NN'A. Kor time cards, rates of faro,

thmiMjli

IiaKKiiKO checks and further

ticket*,

information

re­

garding tho itinniiw of trains apply to any of the Pennsylvania Llu«a.