Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 22 November 1895 — Page 4

FOR LITTLE FOLKS.

BICYCLING WITHOUT LEGS.

*.ii Pedals With Stumps and Can Off a Mile Under Five Minntes. Hver since wheeling became a craze iha lumian race, big and little, high £ud low, powerful and weak,has thought at no dishonor to be found in scanty attire, pushing pedals. There seems to be jio limit to the fad, and the result has teen

110

end of freaks and freaking. however, the greatest of all freaks ynafcwi its appearance. It is a bicycle •whose rider has no legs and only one dm

The rider is Arthur Roadhouse, a boy resident of DeKalb, Ills. He is 18 years old, bright and as active as his physical

imperfections, which came from birth, will allow. Like most cripples, his mind is precocious. The bicycling craze left him in body more hopeless and helpless than ever. A neighboring bicycle manufacturer agreed to make a wheel which the boy could ride, and he did so. His one hand guides the handlebar and bars of steel lead up from the pedals to the short stuiitrps which he has known as legs. Strange to say, he experienced little trouble in balancing the machine.

He began riding about six weeks ago, arl after three or four hours' instruction and practice he made a half mile on a track in less than three minutes. He can now do a mile in less than five minutes, and expects to reduce this time to four minutes. Ko has already made a half mile in 2 minutes 10 seconds. Ho has le:r.-ned to dismount, and can handle his wheel readily without assistance. He lias to be assisted, though, when he mounts, but he expects soon to lie «ble to do this alone.—New York World.

His Aggravating Nickname. The disadvantage of having a nickapplied in early youth was never bet rer illustrated than by the experience of the boy who was known in the White House six or seven years ago as Baby Mc Mee. He is now a resident of New York city and is a stout youngster of nearly 12, with a great, fondness for baseball and other athletic sports. His lifo would be as pleasant as that of any other boy of that age were it not for the infantile nickname which clings to him like an incubus. On all occasions his playmates use it, and even his elders sometimes hail him with the hated appellation. ]$ by far the most, galling part of the business is that the people all over the country ignore the flight of time and sending him gifts only fitted for •inrsery. Dolls, rattles, rubber rings and high chairs are among the things that oaneo positive tor euro to the grandFCjI of the ex-president, and it is hinted that he handles them any way but gently in his wrath. It is not impossible that- the name will cling to him until maii'iood, and all because newspaper wriirrs chose to saddle him with a nic3: ame.—Exchange.

ioi the

A Generous Little Prince.

Ih'.i Independence Beige tells a pleasant siory of the, crown prince of (Germany, who, with his brother, was recently with their tutor at the hotel of the Chutes du Rhin. When the tutor paid the bill, he offered a money present, to the chambermaid, who, however, refused the gift, pointing to a notice that tips were forbidden.

Tho tutor explained the situation to his eldest pupil, who thereupon went out with his brother and bought a very prettv brooch. This he gave to the maid, saying that "as it was not money she could not refuso it." As the young princes wore staying at tho hotel incognito the maul did not know that the donor of tho brooch will probably be emperor of Germany some day.

T5fisnl:ill

In Africa.

I |(otlGo\feily illf/i— ir

^rV -nMl I

|0'0N

v'Allni,

I'Ad^O

Rhinoceros—Come on, Gi, let's buy tickets. Giraffe—Why waste your money:— 8t. Nicholas.

Little King Alfonso.

Tlio little King Alfonso XIII of Spain Is jealous of his rights. Ono of his youthful friends said to him recently: "f»'Midl I am going to England. "i*)W is that?" asked Alfonso. "My papa has been made embassador in Iiondon by Canovas de Castillo," was the answer.

Then said the miniature ruler, mindful of his place, "It is unheard of that I was not consulted about this I"

Why She Was Disappointed.

A little girl who had mastered her catechism confessed herself disappointed, "because," she said, "though I obey -the fifth commandment, and honor my papa and mamma, yet my days are not a bit longer in the land, because I am pat to bed at 7 o'clock.''—Our Dumb Jknixnals.

CLARA DOTY BATES.

She Loved Children, Thoneh Childless Herself, and Wrote Mnch For Them.

The papers have announced the death of Clara Doty Bates of Chicago, the writer for children, and hundreds of thousands have idly read the paragraph, not realizing how much that death has meant to those who knew her well. She was a Michigan woman of a fine family and married to a Michigan man, Morgan Bates, a newspaper man and a writer of plays. For many years she had lived in Chicago and had written for Wide Awake, St. Nicholas, Harper's Young People, The Youth's Companion and other periodicals for children. During the World's fair she had charge of that part of the authors' congress which was devoted to writers for children and also of the library of children's literature. She was not yet 50 years of age and was mentally never more virile than during the last year of her life, although her physical lassitude was such that she could not set herself to the task of writing.

These facts seem common enough. But the woman herself was most uncommon. Her face had a rugged calmness and homeliness that resembled that of Abraham Lincoln in its general character. Her heart was serenely true, her inclination for the purest things of earth —children, flowers, birds and all the happy little animals of the summer time. She loved to write poems concerning the beetles, the "red hipped humblebees," the crickets. Such gay little songs "sang themselves," as she used to say, and her pleasure in writing them lay in fancying how the children would enjoy them. She never wrote at the children she wrote from them. She could be one of them, and she looked at the world from their point of view when she wrote for them. In fact, in spite of her very well stored mind and her experience, she was singularly like a child in her simplicity and candor. True, she had the tact of a woman of fine social training, but it was the tact that came from kindness and not from convention. For children she entertained a love which was profound. She turned upon them such a loving scrutiny that she saw in them possibilities and charms which even those who knew them best had failed to discover. Nothing amused her more than the unconscious witticism of a little child, and she remembered these much better than did the mothers of the children and would repeat them with affectionate zest.

Iier whole life was one of exquisite refinement. No one could talk with her without being conscious of a delicate elevation of sentiment. One involuntarily selected the most beautiful subjects with which one was acquainted in talking to her. Her life was full of the happiness that comes to a woman who is perfectly mated, and who gives her husband unfaltering love, receiving, in return, the utmost consideration, appreciation and devotion. But for all of that she was in some ways a sad woman—that is to say, she was sad because her sensibilities were so keen. The war of the world roared in on her and disturbed her peace. The sorrows of others rested on her spiiit. Her hunger for a child of her own was never appeased. And having a delight in nature, a love for home—home meaning to her tli8 elms and birds as well as tho walls and furnishings—she was destined to live in the dirtiest ami most material city on this continent, in apartments, surrounded by nomads of the sort which give the boarding house an excuse for being.

Yet, however hurried the street on which her window looked, however bustling the fashionable apartment house in which she lived, in her rooms there were always quiet, peace and an air of indescribable placidity. Ferns bloomed in her windows, pictures of little children hung on her walls, fresh flowers, tho gifts of friends, were at hand, and, by her side, as she sewed, was a block of paper, on which the "songs sang themselves."

Though a woman of the simplest tastes, she dressed richly, for she had an idea that, being so tall and gaunt, she looked well only in rich fabrics. As she was swarthy she usually chose rich wine tints, and tho colors camo to be characteristic of her. Nothing could be more charming than when walkiug among tho sellish and nervous crowd of tho Chicago streets to come across this strong and serene face, with tho deep eyes beaming with spirituality and kindliness. Never a street so crowded that she could not. see tho children and smilo upon them never a day so dismal that slio would not pause before the florist's window7 never a time so dull that, her spirit could no sing.

It is impossible to make those who did not know her understand how strong and simple, how lofty and sinpore. .°ho was. Hans Christian Andersen must have been snmlar.—Elia W. Poattio in Omaha World-Herald.

Klizubetli I.

Hacon.

Mrs. Elizabeth D. Bacon has been 1 elected to tho high school committee of Hartford. She was nominated by tho

Democrats, and ran ahead of her ticket, many Republicans also voting for her. I Tho nomination was entirely unsought.

Mrs. Bacon is president of the Hartford Equal Rights club, and sister of Mrs. I Ellen M. Bolles of Rhode Island. Her father, Solomon D. Kenyon, was a member of the Society of Friends and an active antislavery man. She was a teacher in the public schools in Providence for threo years after her graduation from tho high school in that city. She has been a resident of Hartford since 1807.

A Galaxy of Ilridesmaids.

A recent very young and much indulged New York bride at her wedding had 20 bridesmaids to attend her. Not all stood at the altar, ten occupying front pews, but the procession of young women preceded her entrance, and 10 surrounded her through the ceremony.

Miss Frances E. Willard has been reelected president of the National W. C. T. U., receiving 801 votes out of 875.

#ttm

THE VARIETY S+AGE.

A New Fhaae of the Business—Statistics of Appreciation. [Special Correspondence.]

NEW YORK, Nov. •».—Every night from 10 o'clock until a few minutes before midnight a score or more of "variety people," as vaudeville artists are called, do their "turns" before an audience composed exclusively of members of the Manhattan Athletic club and their invited guests. They come from other theaters, where they are temporarily employod, and these club performances mean extra work and extra pay.

It is an English idea, this thing of actors and actresses giving two and some times three performances the same night on different stages. The London music halls originated the plan, and it works admirably both for tho audiences and the players. The scheme has become remarkably popular in New York, as it enables the managers to give very much bettor performances than they otherwise would be able to do with the money that they have at their disposal. "I heard that this was the worst house to play to in the country, but it isn't." That is what tho "banjo virtuoso" said to me last night while he was waiting for his time behind the scenes. And what he said was Interesting, because at the present time the statistics of appreciation as measured by popular applause have not been written. "I had a splendid reception tho first night I was here," he continued. "There were about 150 men in the house, and 15 of them applauded. If there had been a mixed audience of 1,500 persons thero, do you think that 150 would havo applauded? There wouldn't have been £0. One in fifty is a remarkable average. It is nearer 1 in 100, as a rule. "It makes a wonderful difference whether you get a hand or not when you are doing your turn. It pays a man to study his houses so that he will know how to take them. Now, the frostiest houses in the world ar9 in tho rouf gardens in the summer. It's the same in the west and east as it is here. You see, people go up there to drink and smoke and listen. They don't go to applaud, and it takes a ruling favorite to get a hand. Last summer on tho Madison Square roof there was a packed house ono night. Every chair was taken. Ono of the artists was a comedian who was filling another man's turn. He had never worked on a roof before. Ho was one of the'Two Johns,' I think. Ko had a very catchy act, and he was proud of it. 'I'll warm 'em up,' ho said before he went on. 'I'll bring down tho house. I always do.' "The rest, of us smiled, but we said nothing. Presently he went on with a slam bang rush and a yell, and ho was funny for sure. The act caught on, too, but there wasn't more than a ripple of applause. It couldn't be heard back of the stage. The big fellow got through his act somehow and staggered back of the scenes with the white showing through the paint on his face, he was that taken back. After ho had rested a few minutes the stage manager told him to go out for an encore. 'But there ain't no encore,' ho gasped. 'Go on. You've made a big hit. You didn't see any of them get up and go out, did you? I tell you, you've hit 'em hard. Go on and do it again.' "If a man doesn' know his house, he is going to get awfully fooled. It's the same way with ladies' days at clubs. You set?, the ladies all wear gloves and they can't applaud, and so a man thinks he's getting a frost when he may bo making tho greatest hit of his life."

And this brings up another interesting fact regarding variety people. Three of the young women who appeared last evening were accompanied by their mothers. By a singular co.incider.ce tho mother of the young woman who sang the catchiest song of all—a merry ditty depicting lu-r love for a small hot bird and a small cold bottle after the show—had the biggest mother of the lot. She was tall, handsome woman of the New England type, and I heard her tell another parent that she had never missed a night taking her daughter to and from the theater since she had been in the business and hat was going on four years.

Even the very pretty girl with real golden curls who frolicked so friskily around her partner—a tall man made up like an old darky mammy—was protected better, if possible, than the others from all the temptations which story writers aro pleased to throw around the lives of players. The old darky is her father, and a very ablebodicd, athletic, 0 feet father ho is, with a muscular development whicn would excite the envy of most of the gymnasium classes in tho club. "You see," says another variety artist, "I have been working this line of business for 1(1 years, and I tell you that, it is the light, stuff that takes. My song, 'A Hoy's Best Friend Is His Mother,' knocks 'em silly I don't care whoro I sing it." "I have always been in straight opera until this year," rejoins the other. "This is my first variety business." "Drop your opera, old man, and you'll be all right. There ain't nothing in it. Now I get $100 a week singing light hoiig*, and it takes with the crowd."

And so it goes on until the last aiti.has finished his turn and the gasman, wi.o is really not a gasman at all, but an expert electrician, has turned down tiie. lights. BENJAMIN NOUTHKOP.

A French Detective's Museum.

M. C-Jnron, formerly head of the council investigation department, is the owner of a strange museum. During his long connection with the prefecture lie collected many growsomo objects, which servo to form a veritable chamber of horrors in his residence. Among tho sinister souvenirs of criminals may be seen tho girdle by moans of which tho murderer Eyraud strangled Gouffe, tho process server, with tho aid of Gabriello Bompard tho veil of tho latter, who is now in prison under a lifo sentence tho knife used by Pranzini to butcher his three victims a vory rare portrait of Cartouche, the king of thieves, and a host of articles used by persons whose bad deeds attained less publicity than those of tho delinquents just mentioned.

M. Goron has also collected somo relics connected with tho dynamite explosions, such as 5-franc piecos skillfully coined by Ravaohol, who was a "smasher" as well as an anarchist, and tho box in which Lliorot, the waiter at Vory's restaurant, kept his tips before he was nearly blown up with tho establishment, in which ho assisted his brother-in-law, tho proprietor. Among foreign objects forming part of the collection are a real Jack Ketch rope from England, batons or truncheons of London constables, with handcuffs and general polioe appurtenances from all the countries in Europe. Another article not to be forgotten is an exact reproduction of the modern {IMlotine as used by M. Delbler, tho headsman of France.—Paris Cor. London Telegraph.

A Yellowstone Park Trip

Will do more to over come that feeling of lassitude or laziness which ever you prefer to call it than all the medicine in the apothecary's shop. Get out of the harness for a while take a lay off and Jgo to the park and become renewed in body and mind. See the geysers play, hear the paint pots pop, the cataracts roar, climb about tbe canyon walls, catch trout in the Yellowstone lake, take on a new life. Send Chas. S. Fee, General Passenger Agent, Northern Pacific railroad, six cents for the new and Illustrated Tourist book. 34t6&d.

KXCUKSIONS SOUTH.

Lower Bates to Atlanta via Ferrrylvania .Lines.

Three forms of excursion tickets to Atlanta account tbe Cotton States Ex] ition are for sale via Pennsylvania Lints. One ticket is good returning twenty da\s from date of sale, brother is good for return trip until Jan. 7, 1&96, ax-d a tLiid good returning ten days. Twtnty day tickets? and those good to return until Jan. 7 may be obtained any time during the exposition. The ten day tickets will be sold only on Oct 26, Nov. 5, 15, and 25, and Dec. 5 and 10, at special low rates. The fare is exceptionally cheap. For details apply to nearest ticktt agent of Pennsylvania Lines d&wtf

FS BUTCHERED~~BY "SPANIARDS.

Women ami Children Ruthlessly Killed by Melino's Soldiers.

TAMPA, Fla., Nov. 22.—Colonel Fernando Figuer Edo, the Cuban leader of this city, is in receipt of a letter from Havana, giving details of atrocities which -were committed by Spaniards in Matanza's province. Colonel Melino, who commands a Spanish regiment, recently encountered the advance guard of Gomez's army in Matauzas and was defeated. While soldiers under Melino •were in retreat met a group of women and children. As the soldiers passed one of the women made a sneering remark about the Spaniards.

The remark was overheard by the soldiers, and so enraged them that they fell upon the women and children and butchered every one of them. There were 10 women and about a dozen children in the group. The letter says that the Spaniards after shooting down their victims, stabbed them with bayonets, inflicting the most horrible wounds. One baby was killed at its mother's breast, and the bullet that passed through the infant also passed through the mother.

Colonel Melino made no report of the butchery, but it happened that two of the women murdered were wives of Spaniards engaged in the sawmill business in Matanzas. When the husbands learned how their loved ones had been slaughtered they wrote to Martinez de Campos, informing him of the horrible affair aud demanding that Colonel Melino be punished. It is said that De Campos has ordered that Melino be eourtmartialed, and it is thoTurht the butcher will be sentenced to death, as the massacre is condemned as bitterly by Spaniards as by Cubans.

TO SMYRNA

The C'ruisor A! i:incapslis Is Sent to Protec American Missionaries.

BOSTON, NOV. 22.—The announcement that the United States cruiser Minneapolis has boon ordered to Smyrna is taken by the American board as an indication that the United States intends to fra-nish ample protection to Americans in western Turkey, among whom are many missionaries of the board.

As a station for missionary work Smyrna has been prominent from the earliest times. The interest attending the place is being the home of Polycarp, and the only remaining one of the seven cthurches addressed by the Apostle John, rendered it a satisfactory mission station, but it was even more probably due to the fact that at the commencement of the present, century it was the only city of Turkey that was really open to missionaries, and also the only one with which there was direct communication from European and American seaports, that led to its choice as a mission center.

BOYS BURIED.

Two Killed and Two Injured While Wiggins? a Cave in Louisville.

LOITISVILLK, Nov. 22.—Six boys who were, digging a cave at Twenty-eighth and Grayson street, last evening, were buried by a cave-in of the bank. Two were dead when reached, two orhers were badly injured and two escaped unhurt. The dead are:

Howard Ramage. Louis Snow. Tho injured: Will Ramage, legs broken Walter Gambel, arm broken. Otto Brood and Fred Baker escaped m-j-prv. The boys had been at work several clays in a steep embankment in Grayson street, and were just completing their playhouse when the earth gave way, burying all of them.

,7ournul isl Selected.

KANSAS CITY, Nov. 22.—John L. Peak, tho newly appointed minister to Switzerland, has, according to a local paper, practie -ily decided to make William R. Here] oi-d, a New York newspaper man, formerly of Kansas City, his private secretary.

Gardener \aux Drowned.

NEW YORK, NOV. 22.—Tho body of Calvert Vaux, the landscape gardener who disappeared from tho homo of his son at Bensonlmrst, Tuesday night, was found in the bay near that place. Mr. Vaux had been suffering for somo tinw from nervous prostration.

JEWELRY CONCEITS.

Tho opal is employed as a central stone in scarfpius. Patrons aro now called upon to admire colonial designs in jewelry.

Miniatures are invading everything from diamond brooches to cracker jars. Atomizers of rock 'crystal and choice faionoe are mounted with silver or gold.

Blue and green meet in rings set with turquoise and olirysoprase. Round brooches In gold scrollwork have diamond centers.

The collar form of nocklace continues to please, and tho riviore must bo no longer than the exact sizo of tho throat it enci*

1895 November. 1895

Su. Mo. Tu. We. Th. Fr. Sa.

1! 1 2

3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30

"BIG FOUR"

ROTJTE TO

ATLANTA.

Cotton States and International Exposition.

Travelers to the South during the fall and the early part of the winter season will have an unusual opportunity of see ing the South at its best advantage. The Atlanta Exposition is the largest exposi tion of its kind in this country, with tbe exception of the world's fair at Chicago.

IIOW TO

REACH

ATLANTA

From Chicago, Peoria, Indianapolis, Terre Haute, LaFayette, Benton Harbor and intermediate points, the North and Northwest, the "Big Four" route offers the choice of the two great gaitways to the South—Cincinnati and Louisville. Solid trains with parlor cars, magnificent sleeping cars aud dining cars run daily from Chicago and Indianapolis to Cincinnati and Louisville.

From New York, Boston Buffalo, Cleveland. Columbus, Springfield, Sandusky, Dayton and intermediate points, maguiti cent through trains run daily into Cincinnati. All trains of the "Big Four" arrive at Central Union Station, Cincinnati, making direct connections with through trains of the Que & Crescent rout a to Atlanta. Through sleeping cars via the Q. & C. route run directly to Chattanooga, thence via Southern railway to Atlanta. Many points of historical interest as well as beautiful scenery may be enjoyed enroute. Of these Ctiickamanga Nfitienal Park. and.Lookout Mountain at Chattanooga are foremost, and should be visited bv everyone on the way ta Atlanta.

For full information as to rates, routes, time »f trains, etc., call on or address any agent Big Four Route.

The publishers of The Youth's Companion are now sending to their subscribers free, an art. calendar which will be highly appreciated. Four elegant water-color paintings are reproduced in all the beauty of color and design of the originals, aLd of such size, 7x10 inches, that they may bo framed with fine effect.

The first two pictures offer a striking contrast, a blustering Maich day in a s:.u ar orchard, and a peaceful scene in midsummer. Then follows the noonday rest in the harvest field, a charming bit of colar with a foreground of goldenrod and brilliant autumn foliage. The winter walk to church over tho snow covered fields is the last of the series.

To all new subscribers to the paper who send their name aud address and $1.75 at once, the publishers offer to send free this handsome calendar,"lithographed in. nine colors, the retail price of which is^flfty cents, The Companion free every week until. January 1, 1S96, including Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Yrear's double numbers, and The ^Youth's Companion fifty-two1 weeks, a full year to Jauuary 1, 1897. Address,

THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, 195 Columbus Avenue, Boston.

The publishers of the Youth's Companion are sending ii/ee to the subtcribeis to the paper, a handsome four-page calendar, 7x10 inches lithographed in nine colors. It is made, up of four charming pictures, each pleasing in design, under each of which are the monthly calendar for the year 1890. The retail price of this calendar is 50 cents.

New subscribers to the Companion will receive this beauiilul calendar free and besides the Companion free every week until January 1, IB'JO. A!.-o the Thanks giving, Christmas and New Year's double, numbers tree, [and the Companion fifty-two weeks, a full»year jto January 1, 1897. Address,

THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, 195 Columbus Avenue, Boston.

The Historic Route,

The Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway, the model railroad of the Soufh in equipment, roadway and service is also the greatest in historical interest, more than fifty famous battlefields and five national cemeteries being located on the various lines of this system. This is the preferred route to Atlanta for the Cotton State and International exposition, open from September 18, to December 31, 1895, for which very low excursion rates have been made. Through sleeping car service from St. Louis to Atlanta via Evansville, Nashville and Chattanooga. This is the route of the famous "Dixie Flyer" through sleeping car line which runs the year round between Nashville and Jacksonville, Fla. Forj further information address R. C. Cowardin, Western Passenger Agent, Railway Exchange Building, St. Louis, Missouri, or v, sW. L. DANLEY, G. P. & T. A.,

COTTON STAT KM EXPOSITION.

j," Atlanta, Ga.

Sept.l8,Xee

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Gen'l Pass. & Ticket Agt.

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The schedule printed below is a com^ prehensive guide to the shortest a*4 quickest route to Atlanta from the Nort* and Northwest, Chicago, Indianapolis, Terre Haute and Evansville,

Palace Day Coaches and Pullman Sleeping Cars are attached to all trains shown in this schedule.

Extremely low rates have been mane to AtlanS and return, via the Nashville, Chattanooga and St* Louis Railway. All trains rnn solid between Nashville and Atlanta. The train in last column,? which leaves Cincinnati at 4:dU r. M..H

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ror lurtlier lUlUiUittllUUttUuiccciuiiaiu: F. Hill, Northern Passenger Agent, 328: Marquette Building, Chicago, 111. R. C. Cowardin, Western Passenger Agent, 405= Ry.

Exchange Building, St. Louis, Mo. or D. J. Mullaney, Eastern Passenger: A Kent, 59 W. Fourth St., Cincinnati, O.

W. L. DANLEY",

G. P. & T. A. Nashville, Tenn.

Oct. 31-d&w-tf

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$500.00 &Of\Rf\NTEE. ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS. Will not injure hands or fabric.

No Washboard needed, Can use hard

Covington... I 5 10: (.Jfi tyslmr!? I

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same as soft. Full Directions on every package. A( 8-oz. package for 5 ct.. or 6for 25 cts, Sold by retail t-roccrs everywhere.

t"Wlien the Hour !-innd Feints to Nine, Have Vour Washing on the Lins."

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Indianapolis Division,,

IE.

Schedule of Passenger Tpains-Central 1

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]VH. 3. O, 8 ami 20 connect at Colmnfons for* Pit!and 1 in hast, and at Richmond lor lV'Vton, Xcma and Spruuiluild, and Xo.201'or Miicmnal 1.

Trams leave (,'ambridpre City at,+7 05 a. ni. 'iiul to 00 1 in lor Unsiivillo, Mieltiyvillc, Co-. !umtris and nilcrincdiato si:turns. Arrive v'amiiridno Cil.v t12 30 anil 16 35 P-

JOSKPII WOOD, E A. FORD, Ganoral Manager, General Passenger Agsnl 10-20-95-Ii PITTSBURGH, PENN'A.

For time cards, rates of faro, through tickets, baggage checks and further information regarding the running of trains apply to any Agent of tho Pennsylvania Lines.

The ltocky Mountains.

Along the line of the Northern Paciflo Raflroad abound in large game. Moose, deer, bear, elk, montain lions, etc., can yet be found there. The true sportsman is willing to go there for them. A little book called "Natural Game Preserves," published by the Northern Pacific Railroad, will be sent upon receipt of four cents in stamps by Charles S. Fee. Gen'l Pass. Agent, St. Paul, Minn. 15tf