Richmond Palladium (Daily), 12 September 1901 — Page 7

SHOUTING OF M'KINLEY Accounts of the Tragedy Related by Eyewitnesses.

THE PRESIDENT EEAVE A5D COOL. Hetee-tlie Ireland. Lo Caught the Aaaaaaln. Telia How the Mioia vrrc Fired Ulliren.it.a on I'rrahlrnl'a ttbra Struck Iluttan Muu r JlcKioIef I'rayrJ Ibal .turn. is. It. Ireland, the secret service man trho arrested the assassin who President -M' Kiulf.v at I'utTalo. made this statement of the tragedy, says tut? .New V( rk Sua: "It is incorrect, as lias leen stated, that the least lear of un assault v.;u t-ritertaiued by the presidential patty. Since the Spanish war the preside.... las travtk'd ail over the country an.J has met people ev ery where. In C'auton he walks to church an ! ilmvn town without the sign of a secr-t service man or any kind of nil escort. In Wa .-hins-'tou lie walks ai.uut ihe White House arouuds. drives out freely and l.as euj-.ytJ much freedom from the I'lt'st'i.te of detct lives. "It Las been my custom to stand Pack :!' the president and just to l is left, to that 1 coiil -1 e the riuht hand of cverr person cpproHcliing. Put that day Secretary c'crteiycu rei'iested that I stand opposite the president, so that JMr. Mlibura could stand to his left and Introduce the people who approached. In that way I w as unable to get a good look at tvtry cue's right hand. i "A few moments before Czolgosz ap- i preached a man had coiue along with three tinkers of his riht hand tied in a bandage, and lie had shaken hands ; with his left. When Czolgosz came up, j I noticed that he was a boyish looking fellow with an innocent face, perfectly ' calm, and I also noticed that his right haud was wrapped in what appeared to be a bandage. I watched him close- i ly. but was interrupted by the man iu ! front of him, who held oa to the presi- j ieiit's hand an unusually long time. This man, who appeared to be au Italiau and who had a short cropped, j heavy black mustache, was persistent. : and It was necessary for me to push ; hita along so that the others could i reach the president. j 'Just as he released the president's j Land and as the president was reach- j ing for the hand of the assassin there ; were two quick shots. Startled, I lookel and saw the president draw his ; right hand up under his coat, straight- , ea up and, pressing his lips together, give Czolgosz the most scornful and contemptuous look possible to Imagine. At the same time 1 reached for the : young man and caught his left arm. '. The big negro, standing just back of Liui and who would have been nest to take the precedent's hand, struck the ; young man in the neck with one hand ; r. nil with trie otlier readied for the re- i volver, which had been discharged through the handkerchief and the shols from which had set tire to the linen. "Immediately a dozen men fell upon : the assassin, and he was borne to the , floor. While on the Boor Czolgosz again tried to discharge the revolver, but before he could get it to the president it was knocked from his hand by the ne- j gro. As it went across the floor one of the artillerymen picked it up and put it In his pocket. On the way down j to the police station Czolgosz would i not say a word, but seemed greatly agitated." j Detective Sergeant Geary was stand- j lug next to the president when the , shots were lired. lie caught the presi- i dent Iu his arms Immediately after- ! v. ard and led him to a seat as letec- j live Ireland jumped for the assassin, j According to Geary's story, the presi- j de::t was not aware at tirst that the bullets l.r.d entered his body. He said -T.s the detective caught him. "I wonder if I am shot." "1 am afraid you are. sir," said Gea-ry-The president threw open his wnist-C-.it. There were two holes in his shirt oue over the abdomen and the other a little above. Fdood soaked the w hite linen. "You are shot, sir," said Detective Geary. "Yes. I guess I am." replied the president very coolly as he sank Into a chair. George Foster, one of the secret service men detailed to guard the president, said: "It was after we were la the ambulance that he displayed the greatest fortitude. We were on our way to the hospital. I had one arm under him. with his head resting on my shoulder. He felt his breast and said quietly. rcster, Coes not that feel like a bullet'' I put my hand to his breast and felt something hard and oblong under the skin. " Yes. it does. Mr. President, I repi., d. " 'Well, we have got one of them anyway. he said, and, smiling faintly, he closed his eyes." Concerning the president's first spoken word of anxiety for his wife alter he was shot, a gentleman who was standing only a few feet away said that to his dying d?.y he never would forget the expression on President MeKinley's face when the assassin's bullets struck hici. "I have tried several time to see if I could Mad words in the English language to describe that awful expression In Mr. MeKinley's face." he said. "I lit I am utterly at av loss. I never saw so much, never Imagined so much could be conveyed !a a look as blazed : cut from the president's fuce in that oce terrible instant of time. It seemed to run through the entire gamut of human sentiment and to involve all hades with two sicjle exceptions.

1 here was ui ? w) n, . a r.K-- . hint of &uy tltiut; appioachii:g tear or anger in it. I sho'-ld say that the f motion perhaps that -eiued to pre dominate was that of sorrow or p'-r Lup a kind of pityiLg aiiiase.-i-ctit end inquiry. Put Into words. poss.PP the ii. -a i "St that would :o:ri.j to intet pretiiig the expression strongest in t'..president' face would be: "Yen rn . unhappy fellow." What is v.tm,.''What ha happened to you? Why it that yen are murdering me?' "Hut it is no ue. I have tried an i tried again, just by way of experimt ut. to say iu words the thinvs that tin president's expression said at that u:m i;t, but I never shall succeed un;. mere than I shall ever forget the picture of it all. If the beast wh tired the shots were human which, of course, he is not I should thin'.; the m i.iory ..f that !i.k as bis victim sank Pack into Mr. Cortelyou s arms would drie him raving mad. "I'ersonaiiy I did not hear the president say not to hurt tne man. 1 heard him say. I tru t Mrs. McKinh-y will it iit ar of t:iis' and then a ldc-d, "or if she does that it will net be eiuggera? ed." Those Were the trst words lie s !.'r:e. and ! In ard them distinctly. 1 ilisu hi ard 1 i:n say iu leply t the '.; lean mitiist.-r's excited it;-p:iry if inwas shot. -Yes. 1 think that 1 ni.i." This I heard also. Hut if I did Lear his reipn-st that the ms-:is b. not injured it by no means proves riii lie did not say it. In that moiueut l terrible exeiteineut it is easy euni.g!, to believe that I did not hear eeiy thing, uthl 1 think it very probable he did say it, for if I ever saw et muiiseratioii for another in a man's face it was in I 'resident MeKinley's face as he turned that indescribable look upon his would be murderer."

"I was within Ave feet of President McKinley when he was shot the other afternoon." said Charles J. 1'. I.ueas of Cambridge to a reporter of the NewYork Times. "The scene that followed the shooting was one of pandemonium, and the horror of the attempt to murder the nation's chief was something I do not care to go through again." Mr. Lucas is a prominent athlete of Cambridge and was in liuitalo competing in the international events at the exposition grounds. He went to the Temple of Music to meet the president and was only four persons behind Czolgosz, the assassin, in the line. Mr. Lucas readied home at noon today. "The secret service men," he continued, "seemed to have their eyes on a certain man in the line several feet ahead of Czolgosz. He was a rather hard looking individual, a foreigner in appearance, with unkempt hair and beard and a hard look on his face. Secret Service Man Foster moved very close to the man and followed him along, holding his arm in such a manner as would lead one to believe that he was going to grab the man. Nothing happened, however, i a 1 after a hearty 'handshake on the part of the president the man passed on. "Next came a woman holding a little girl by the hand. President McKinley shook hands with the woman, but his eyes were riveted upon the light haired child, who seemed to have caught his eye. lie stooped over in a kindly mantier and, grasping the hand of the little miss, asked her name, but her answer was inaudible. "All this time a man with his ham', tied up iu a handkerchief, resembling a bandage that appeared to be the work of a surgeon, followed. When he came within one person of the president, one of the secret service men looked him over and also glanced at the man's right hand, which was held near the region of the diaphragm. No ends were open in the bandage, the hand being done up In a manner that would ' lead one to think that It was attached to a splint. "President McKinley slowly raised Lis hand, as if tired, to grasp that of the would be assassin. As he took the hand of the foreigner he raised it to the ordinary height in handshaking, and as he did so the man, pressing his el bow oh to his side, turned the muz zle of tiie gun toward the president's breast and. without the slightest sign of auythiug unusual, fired two shots in quick succession. "( rapidly was the deed committed that the police, detectives, soldiers and every oue stood still without moving a muscle. The crowd did not Lave the opportunity of venting its feelings, however, as the marines and cavalrymeu surrounded the man. As the president sank into a chair, to which he was half carried, he was heard to say by those within several feet of Lim. "May God forgive him." After the shooting I stood near the president for several minutes. He bore his suTerings with fortitude." Gradually the exact truth as to what Mr. McKinley said immediately after he was shot is coming out, says a special dispatch from Buffalo to "the Philadelphia Press. After expressing Lis anxiety about Sirs. McKinley he noticed Czolgosz on the fioor. with the men fiercely beating Lim in their fury. He said to his secretary. Mr. Corteiyou: Ton't let them harm that boy." It is interesting to those who like coincidences that immediately before Czolgosz shot Mr. McK:::'ey the orchestra was playing the song "Cursed P.e These Bullets." from the scene in Weber's "Dor Freisehutz." where they are casting the bullets in the forest. Ireland a Senalble Ciitarrtte Care. The cigarette smoking mania has lately broken out w ith excessive virulence amur.g boys and girls in Iceland. A proposal to cope with the nuisance !? being considered by the municipal authorities of IlL-ikiavik, says the London News. It w ill. if adopted, empower any male er female adult to box the tars cf a juverU'e off?nder. annex his cr her we- d in.pound the slock of : cUarettcs.

ItK'IIMDXI) DAILY rAI.T.ADIU?f, Tliriisn.W, SKlTEMIlEn 12, 1901

LINES OF THE FACE. THEIH RELATION TO THE BEARD AND THE MUSTACHE. A KnoHlrilsr of l)ranln on th 1'nrt f Mrm, Sa Woman Artlt. Wusld Hair ilir liJefl 1:hUmoclM.(u!lur l.uutl Lwuki. "A knowledge of drawing on the ran of nun would have the effect of increasing their good looks." said a lady teacher of that art recently, "and it would make presentable many a man whose uj pcarauce is not calculated to excise admiration. It sounds an odil ccLibinaniou. drawing and beauty, does it not? Nevertheless it is a fact." To the natural request for an explanation she replied: "The tirst principles of drawing are geometrical lines and curves. These lines and curves occur iu everything. A letter in criticising an ugly shaped jug will most probably tell you that its 'lines' are bad. Most of those who dabble in drawing and gain et-rt.ticates merely learn to make these lines and curves wi'.huUt acquiring the slightest knowledge of their t f.'cct. "IP re is an example. .Mist take this pencil and draw a J'a-.-e. h, anything will dyi But be sine t make two straight tines ever the yes for eyebrows. That". it. See how s rk.us that expression is? Now rub out those straight Hues and in their places make two curves wit'i the ends upward. That face has an expression of inn u so. surprise, hasn't it? If you had made curved eyebrows with the ends down in the tirst instance, the difference between the two would have been more striking. "Well, the human face has Its -lines.'. and by studying them our men could improve their appearanee. The most elementary expedient is to adapt the mustache and board to the lines of the face, and I must here tell you that lines' in technical language include both straights and curves. Such an expedient is within the reach of all, and there is no need for me to remind you that the whiskers make a tremendous difference in a man's appearance. 1 "Take a man with an aquiline nose, clear cut features and broad brow, then imagine this individual with a long, drooping mustache: why, it accentuates the whole 'droop' of the face , and spoils it. Such a man should have a small pointed beard and a mustache with ends pointing slightly upward. i "The exact opposite is also frequently met with. A man with features that have a distinct upward tendency will wear a mustache with ends that are turned up and so long that they seem ' to be thinking of joining the eyebrows. Men with mustaches that display an inclination to grow long ends think that these ends should be cruiitted to grow and that they must be trained upward. That strikes them as the only proper way. But to suit the lines of the face those ends should in many cases be cut off. and iu others they ought to he trained downward. "Whiskers, again, are allowed to grow whether they suit the face or not. Ufteu a fine, vigorous, manly face is contradicted by an insipid little mustache worn over a firm, clear cut mouth, the expression of which it does much to alter. It is quite a pity to see such fine lines spoilt iu that way. The wearer cultivates the hirsute appendage merely because it Is the fashion for men to have a mustache. You talk alout women being slaves to Dame Fashion, but in the matter of your whiskers you men are worse slaves than we are to dress' "Now don't run away with the notion that I advocate general shaving. Some men who are dean shaved ought Hot to be. The lines of their faces simply demand that of which they are depriving their countenance every morning. It requires a strong, very intellectual face to do without beard or mustache. The latter is an absolute necessity for hiding the bad lines of some mouths that would if left totally uncovered spoil the whole face. "Women as a rule are more careful of j their lines and choose hats and other things to m.. h. Men also study their dress more than the hair on their faces, but a knowledge of drawing would correct many mistakes in hats, collars and other masculine accessories. "In the matter of color we rather pass from the domain of drawdng and more 'lines' and tresoass into the realm of painting, but I cannot resist saying that both men and women, especially the former, would be all. the better looking if they knew more about the Mending of colors, because they would not then choose hues w hich do not harmonize with their complexions. I have known a man with red hair to wear a red tie because red ties were fashionaable! "We are all going in for art and the beautiful nowadays, and you men are not handsome as a body. Y'ou could make yourselves more handsome by attending to such easily managed details as I have pointed out. See that your sons learn drawing." rearsoa's Weekly. Applled Ctariat ianltr. Tommy had been quiet for fully five minutes. He seemed to be eugageJ with some deep rroblcm. -Papa." ae sa:J. wear " To unto others as you would have others do unto yor.' that's the golden rule, isn't it, papa?" "Yes. my son." -And it's puSckly right to follow the ; golden rule, isn't it, papa'" "Yes. indeed." Tommy rose, went to the cupboard and returned with a knife and a large ' apple pie. The latter he placed before h.s astonished sire with great solemnity. "Eat it. rpa!' be said. Saa Fraa- : Cisco Bullatia.

Nerve Slavery

It is prcstnt-daT conditions heaping bcrdens cf work upon the nervous system that teKs the story premature breaking cp of health. It teKs why so ca-r men and women, who so far as aSe is concerned, should be in the prime cf health, find themselves letir.g go cf the strength, the power, the vitality theyonce possessed. It is because that great motor power of the body, nerre farce, is impaired. Neither will the heart, the brain, the hyer, the kidneys, the stomach act right without their ' proper nerve force supply. Let any organ be lackiog ia this essential aad trouble beg-in some cf them are: Throbbing, paipiiaua aeart. S.wp.ess nigsa. Moroiny iacuor. I-ratn lg. Iriabiiity to work or think. . - FUi?i;:? appeuie. , ' riigrstion s.ow. J Food heavy. ' Easiiy eic::rd, nerroir, irrit'. Strength fa.li. Loss cf flesh tnuscn.Ar power. Scuied aciuchuiu. The abore is the jrenaine package of Dr. A. V Chase's Nerve I'tlls. are sold by dealers or Ir. A. W. Chase lieUiciac Company, EuSalo. Y. AN EXPLANATION. If you' I! make a dugnciis when vou're fceii&ff Bad and ir.urv. As you wnuij --,th any everyday disease; If you'll simply qvitsticB science s to why you're glum and weary And every! hintf f- rr? dull ani ill at eae. Perhaps y.u will discover, after devious calculation?. The cai.ie f all thrse symptoms w hich appall. And you'll s-T-ile as you refiitt, in spite te d v.nou.; irritaTit ns. That it's nothing but the weather after all. Yott'U flni! a sigh denoting ceither sorrow noi contrition A tear drop's net indicative of care. They are produit. of the meteorological comr. tion. Of extra moisture that is in the air. So perhaps r t in rtaon rrtune's chance t Kt? revilir.aT Or tu vw Ii.c's t"-re of h-apriness ia small, For wiien the s:in cuiT.es cut aaiu be sii ilinx; ,-4in we wii. It'a noti.ni-fj Lut tr.e weaiher after ail. Washington Star, SPIRIT SLATE WRITING Ilovr the yi y nleriuos Sentence Are rrt'ared 1 u Advance. Sjiritualit!o slate writing, if clevirJ doue, always ainkes a marked iiupressiou 011 a magician's audience because it uueru laiiieo tixUr eitoits to tlvt.et the trick. They see a small cabinet suspended above the staj.-e by means of cords or ribbons. It has an open front and is empty. The magician turns it around so that every part ol it may be seen and taps it inside and out with his wand to show that it is hollow. Un a stand near by he ha a small : easel, a common school slate, a bottle of india ink with a iuill pen in it and a tew bheets cf ordinary white writing paper. All these he passes around amons the audience for examination, Ihen he fixes a sheet of the paper tc the shite by means of wafers, places tie slate on the easel and the easel in the cabinet, together with the bottle of ink. the latter bavin? the pen still in it. Ilnvinu allowed the audience f. Si'C the articles thus arranged in the cabinet, ne throws a targe silk handkt r - chief over it. Mysterious sounds are immediately heard, and the cabinet ana the cabinet shakes as if seme living thing had entend it. When the sounds and the sulimuv; cease, tie removes ine nanukerehief. showing a:i inscription written in bold black letters on the paper and the pen not in the ink bottle, but lying on the bottom of the cabinet. He then removes the paper from the slate and passes it around for examination, when the writing is immediately recognized as having been done with India ink. The explanation of the trick is simpie. 1 he writing was done in advance by the performer, the fluid used bein a solutiou of sulphuric acid of the purest ouiility. To make the solution 50 drops of tiie concentrated acid are added to one ounce of filtered water. Writing done with this solution is invisible until exposed to heat. When so exposed, it comes out perfectly black, Iookins exactly like dried India ink. The heat is applied by means of an electric current running over wire with which the slate Is wound. The cords t-y w hich the cabinet is suspended conceal copper wires, which conduct the current to the slate. Black silk threads suitably attached enable the performer to make the sounds in the cabinet, to cause the cabinet to shake and to jerk the pen out of the ink bottle. Several sheets of paper are prepared in a1 vane, each with a different incr. ..n. the performer telling one inscription from another by seeretiv markc d pin pricks. New York Herald. The Mean Thlcit. Miss Passay I dread to think of my fortieth birthday. Miss Pert Why? Did something oapleasant happen then. Tit-Bits. In a ton cf Dea i sea water there are 1ST pounds cf salt, lied sea 93. Mediterranean S.j. Atlantic M. Eas.'isn channel 72. Elaek sta 2;, Baltic IS and Caspian sea 11.

&k M'M

g. a. r s.

Yon Are Mistaken U You Think That You Cdn t Co via the C. R. i M. Ry. to Cleveland For the ce.vt eatEpineiat on September S L to 12th. You can to vi the C. R. A M. and muiie eonm ctiOKs with the Ma Four at Mjncie ai.d travel by The Head quarter Tra u which carries the ofrl-t-ers. the Woman's Relief Corps and Ladies of the G. A. R. circle. Ar-racg-emei Ts have been wade by the RiiT Four to carry C. R. M. passensfvrs on this train. You can !-ave Richmond between 10 and 11a. m either on regular or orticial train and arrive in Cleveland at b' p. m. Details of exact leaving time pub ' lished later. R. M. Rmueks. G P. A. C A. Blaiu. City Ticket Agent. Telephone 44. tf A Nightol Terror. "Awful anxiety was fc'.t 'or the widow of the brave Genera! Burn Lara of M.u-bias. Me. , when the doctors said .-he would die of pneumonia before morning" writes Mrs. S. II. Lincoln, who at tended her that fearful nit'Lt. but -be lugged for Ir King's X-nv Di.-covery, wl.ieh bad 1 more than or.ee saved ber life, and cured ber of consumption. After taking, -he slept all night. Further ; u-e entirely cared her. " This mar- j veiious menicine is guaranteed to j cure ail throat, chest and lung dis- j eases. Only 50c and l.oo. Trial! oot ties free at A. G. L ukon & Co. druggists. 55, i BIG TIJIK AT ni'FFALO. ; Railroad Dai At ilie IanAiutrkau Ixposltloti. ' The second Saturday in Seotember, the 14th, will be Railroad day at i t u u.tnt.au e. pOall 1 n. It ! promises to be one of the most interPsting daVS of the great show at i Ltirialo. t-laborote arrangements j have been eompleted for an interesti ing and novel demonstration. The , grand parade on the exposition j grounds that day will be extremely . unique and interesting. It will illus ; trate the different methods of trans portation in use since Adam and Eve moved out of the Garden i of Eden. There will be manyi striking novelties in the way of special ft at ures. Hon. Chauncey Depew will be one of the distinguished orators. The night illuminations and fireworks will be on a magnificent scale. Ihe day and night festivities j ; wiH be highly enjoyable for Pan-' . American Kxposit-ioi vi.-itors. Spec-i ial low fares in ert'ect over the Akron j route will permit everybody to at- j tend at small expense. " For particu- j iars aooui me cost ol tickets, through llme toiiUtluIo, etc., ajiply to C. W. Elver. Passenger and Ticket Agent. A wedding in a cage of twenty-five ilOnS is one Of thf r.nvfl events hcinr arranged for Jiailroad Day at the Pan-American Exposition, Sept. 14 A gilded cage of strong steel is to hp i placed in the center of the Esplanade and will contain the twenty-five lions The wedding party.including ushers.' will be driven to the ca'e and enter I ; the same in the presence of the! crowd. After the ceremony a wed-; : rlimr snnner n.-;i! 1. .- V,..! f-i " i r-' v ' ov o-c. i iu in. tutcage in the rnidat of the lions. It , will be a romantic affair. ; going to UuiTalo on Pan-Arrerican : Excursion tiek-ets tn'.i cit 1,L f,: Excursion tickets sold at lov fare ; via the Akron Route. Further in- ' formation about them may be oi-! tained from tickets agents. TO BUFFALO BY BOAT. Steamer Trip via Cleveland In Connec-! nectlon with Akron Route I Through Service. I In aii-Jitinn in tlio tfimiKrTx i'rr,i ' and through car service to Buffalo ! nver tV,t. AL-r-nr, T,.,, i - w . .v, a- v ViJ j the Pan-American Exposition may be made via Cleveland and steamer ; by taking trains running over the ; C, A. & C. link of the Akron Route j to Cleveland, where they connectwith the bat line. Tickets to Buf- j falo and return via Cleveland over I the C, A. & C. may be obtained giving the purchaser the option of boat or ran between Cleveland and Buf-, UiO. r or particulars arr.Iv to For particulars apply to C. . Elmer, Pass, and Ticket Agent, Richmond, Ind. Preble County Fair Excursions to Eaton via Pennsylvania Lines. Excursion tickets to Eaton for the Pre bit; county fail will be sold Sep 'ember Ibth to 20th. inclusive, frorr from ; Hamilton. Richmond and intermedi ate tic-Ket stations on the Pennsjlrania -ires. For particulars see local agents. . . . . A SliocUing: Calamity. 'Lately befell a railroad laborer," : writes Dr. A. iveiiett of -WTUiford. rx. "His foot was badly crashed, but Ducklen's Arnica Salve quickiv ' cured mm. Its sirnD.v wonderful for burns, boils, piiis and all skin eruptions. It's the world's champion hea'.er. Cure guaranteed. 25c. Sold bv A. G. Lukes & Co., dru"-! gists. -

Pennsylvania Lines

TIME TABLE. la Effect Sunday, June , liJl Xrwts mo hj cvntrml vjit!rd llm. CiaaiBkatt Ida. lVeprt Ant f Hamilton ft Ct&ctxmari ... ... 4 45 a m 10 53 m nn::r.i CI Accotiamttoa , gxom f w , . H.mitun Si Cl.iuiLn .... 400pm 11 x p K. A 4 M eij Ace. 4 03 p m 11109 a 'Cm. at Ma, it M al fix. 4 t 4 m 9 Jj p m Indianapolla Llaa. orfc St l.ouis Mail j 1 a .oSaai tSia 8 4X p 4 l 4, Op 4. I0 09 4B 1 a r sta ae s at 4 15a 9 00 a at j 53 a at "t Lmui umitcu 4 4 . . afc 3 4c p lriU4IULilOtlS ACC. . . . ft jo 4 n ew York jk St stoui MaU io 15 a m New V.m 4k Si I -tii K j, p 10 p St noiiu Uiuuccd M41I .. 4 SS p m Saw Ychi a it n. t ut Mil.. i x, p m Chloaga L!n. hoginarart Aec ... 7051m "Chicaa r lit Mail A kjcp 1 1 00 a at Ctnnnri.ti A i-ogan4port Acc 7 35 p at Cta & Ctucxo Niht riap 41 14 p at Dayton 4 Xaaia Una. Xenia Sr'flwi. A Cola. Acc. jnta Oatto4i etua a Columbqtt 10 03 4, m laytLa Pitta. A- New York 1005 a at Coi. Pill. A New Vo(k 4 35 p ax tHtrhai A Xetua C joatm 'New V or. LtautaU . S 53 p at 5 00 p m to ia aaa to to 4 at it o$ c at Swpa 4 40 a at Ploua. Uraana A Columbua t-laa. "St Loun a New Y ork Mail 5 I5 a at 4 54 a a lQdvU A Cola. A.x ........ to xjam topat Pitta A rtt Mail A Fjp, 74Spa loita "St nouta Lamitad Mail..,.. 4 50 p a Grand Rapid A Indiana Hy. t't. W.,vl K. & l'tt;cy hx.... ; 340pm - ranii Kapids A Mack MtuI 11 to d m icooiv N jfthjui Kareaa i . p m 4 3u a a Daily All olhet train, dally eit-eot SuiiJaa. J- A. Gcrmoti, Statioa Ma.totC. W. Elmw. Ticket Aaut. Cincinnati, Richmond & Muncie R. R. Passenger Sohedule in Effeo! Mondaf. August 12, 1901. EAST AN I' SOt.'TH. L;ut to tin. -HiuRti, Hnniliti-E. fia t dout:.'-cru Ptj.nt STATIONS , ft c a C K ti. hummi ... S Ki'fima d ' Hostua ni Kiu'hcl! t't i;c ru e Ar v.C Hisl) H-mtU'ti " Cincinnati .... j 55 pm 3 40 pm a-, ib 4 ao pm 4 35 P 5 ao pm 6 00 pm 5 40 pm B 30 pm 6 05 pea 613 pm 6 a 5 pm 7 00 pm 7 45 P" 10 rpj atn 'i 55 am iu 03 am to 1$ am 10 57 am 1 1 35 am WKST AM) NKTB. Mgik i. , CIi'VelSDti, Kutld'o hJ the Ea-st Lin t-

STATIONS s l" c it c x e 15 a l.v Kichnn.inl iu 35 aJii 5 45 pin 9 35 pm W ilUani'.b'g 1 1 oS am i3 pm 10 08 pm Kcoiioniy 11 23 am 6 33 pm id 33 pra I.Oi-intville M si 45 un 6 55 pm 10 45 pm l'.ountsviilc.. it 55 am 7 05 pm 10 55 pa " Meti!(ri 11 07 pm 717 pm 11 07 pra Ar Murii ie. M ia 20 pm 7 30 pm zt ao pra " t .nsion 13 50 pm 8 00 pm 11 50 am toicrton 1 10 pm 8 20 pm i 10 an

f" Stop fr Passengers. Ai Miinci" No. 3 tinti,'t with t.i Bi4 Koui Kiu kt-i Ux kt r tp-i iHl. C. A. BLAIR, City Ti. ket A-eoL Cincinnati Northern R. R. Trains pais West Manchester dlly except Sunday S fallows : North Bound. South Boanaf. No. 3. .........0 :05 m No. 1........ 4:i9pa No. a. No. 4 . ..10:30 a m . . 7 :aa p m Nos. j and 4 run only between Clnciiuurl and Vaa Wert. Noa. t and a run through between Cincinnati and Jack ton. T. C. M. Sohlndlar. 8. P. A. TOLBDO, O. Richmond and Dayton L.- fu-hmond PCC4 St L , KyCt-- , -. iora tZ?.tTS am Arrl,ie,a'fton mooam etcbino. iton . i-ayttm & We-t-rn Traction Co am 4:10 pm 4 40 pm 6:00 pa 10: w am 0:00 pm 12 nooa 10: pm 12:i pm L-ave Eatou T: P C C A St L ' Arri Rirr,mnd ipco St t-fjCo io-.se am . pm 11.00 pm BATE- OF MM. i Roiin-t tri. Richmond an t Eaton, ria P. O. C. St. Hi .Of Roiiti l trip, Kh-.od and . i..u, i D. & W Trw ti'on Co .7g : Round tr;p, Rict.mon-1 and Dsyton ... fl-flf 30th Big Fair -AT Portland, Ind SEPT. 0, OCT. 1, 2, a and 4, 1001. Grand Special Attraction FREE KAflH flAV -Grand Cake Walk and Other SPECIAL FEATURES Excursion Rates on all Railroads. Speed Department Bigger and Better Than Ever. Take the Popular C. R. & M. Route To Buffalo via Muncie and Big 4. "Coach Excursion" leaving every Tuesday limit six days. Tickets good returning until midnight on the following Sunday through coaches to Burfalo. Grandest combination excur;oc ever arranged, only cent per ci.e to liut:a.o where t Pan-American Exposition is beic, icg he. d. Steamer ride on Lake Erie bet ween Cleveland and Buffalo at optioa of passengers SiA) round trip. C. A. BhAta, City Ticket Agent.

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