Richmond Palladium (Daily), 31 October 1901 — Page 7
BICnMOXD DAILY PALLADIUM, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31. 1901
TEACHERS IN PHILIPPINES. Manx of Them Acting aa Corrnpoadata of Home Papers. "I suppose we have atatione.1 local newspaper correspondents In the Philippines. remarked an army officer to the Washington correspondent of the New York Post as he digested a letter from a "Yankee schootaia'aui In the archipelago published In the Lewlstoij Jle.) Journal. The publication at home of letters from the Philippine teachers is one of the effects of the educational movement which had apparently not been Anticipated. A body of persons containing the elements of venturesomeness and philanthropy which the teachrs represent are likely to be InterestUS chroniclers of Philippine affairs and In their several home neighborhoods will be readily accepted as authorities. Heretofore most first hand information l.as come from army and navy officers, and. although they are well equipped uien. the peculiar interests of their prolession could not but color their observations. War department officers assume that this Lewiston letter is but the beginning of a series and that from all parts of the United States they will le compelled to meet similar reports. Thus far the teachers have made the Impression here of finding a good deal of fault. They have not liked the settlements to which they have been assigned In many instances, and in selecting food they have been compelled to choose between rice and fish at reasonable prices and such things as they were accustomed to eat at exorbitant figures. When one reflects that the schoolteacher is often the only person in a Philippine community calling for articles of diet familiar to us. the difficulties in the way of getting a suitable supply become manifest. The teachers perhaps lack the self sacrificing Bpirit of foreign missionaries and so are not prepared to tolerate in the name of duty all the conditions which seem to be Incident to their service.
In Memory of Qin Victoria. An immense and elaborately built obelisk In memory of Queen Victoria, says Truth of London, is to be placed next year In the grounds at Italinora ly the tenantry of the royal estates on iJeeside. The obelisk, which will be over thirty feet high, is to be constructed of stone from a quarry in Balmoral forest. The site selected for the memorial, of which the king has signified his approval. Is In the so called Monument park, between the bronze statue of the prince consort and the Jubilee statue of Queen Victoria, which last was erected in 1887 by the tenantry. A Very Coaaldrrate Pastor. North Carolina pastors, says the Raleigh (N. C News, are noticeably considerate. The Ilex. Jesse II. Page, while preaching at Morgantown a recent hut summer evening, dropped his voice shiiost to a whlsier. saying: "I hope the brethren in the rear will ex---e me if they do not hear. If I talk louder. 1 will awaken those in the front pews." flobiai Play at Btlas Dead. One morning a well known naturalisi was greatly, surprised to see a robii lying on his back evidently dead, beinf rapidly pulled round and round by an other bird of the same species. The naturalist at once came to th conclusion that he had come In tim to witness the end of a deadly en counter, and that the live robin was Indulging In the cruel triumph of drag ging his victim's lifeless body over th stoues. Hut he was mis'taken. for suddenlj the live bird weut down upon his back Ills wings and legs were stiffened, anc he gave every appearance of beiuj dead, while the other robin who hat been shamming death bopped on hit legs and proceeded to serve his com paniou in the same way as he hat done him. Finally the two birds flew away together to a neighboring tree. Wen Preserved Women often, astonish new acquaintances, who are introduced to a large family of strong boys and healthy girls, who call this young looking woman mother. It is popularly supposed that Biaicrmiy is me ioe of beauty, and the worn and faded face of many a mother seems to warrant the belief. But it is hard i believe that nature should compel a woman to sacrifice the rightful dower of her j beauty in order 'to carry out a natural function of her being. And nature does not. The pains and sufferings incident to motherhood are, to a large extent, unnatural. This is proved by the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, which prevents and cures nausea, tranquiiizes the nerves, encourages the appetite, induces refreshing sleep, and makes the baby's advent practically painless. Mr. Orrin Stiles, of Dowo:nsr. Paon Co.. Wis, write : I bat been intending to write to vou evtr since my baby was born in regard to what vour Favorite Prescription ' has done for me. 1 cannot r ratse it enough, for I have not been a well for five years as t am cow. la Julv last I had a ha by boy. weicht tt lb., and I was on: v sick a short time, and since I got up have not had one sick day. I have not had any nteriue trouble since I (rot up- X was not onlv surprised mvself but all my friends bene are surprised to ee me so well.' Favorite Prescription has the testimony of thousands of women to its complete cure of womanly diseases. Do not accept an unknown and unproved substitute in its place. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets clear the complexion and sweeten the breath.
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SOME YALE OUTGIVINGS
Productions In Connection With Late Celebration. NOTABLE 0EATI0N ASD POEM. Justice Brewer Discusses the Problem of Popular Government. ToarbI n K I pom the Prevailing Tendency Toward Consolidation and Concentration Steduan'a CoramrnioraMir Ode to Tale. Among the most notable productions at the recent bicentennial celebration of Yale university were the comniemarative address by Justice Urewer of the supreme court of the United States and the poem by Edmund Clarence Stedman entitled "Mater Coronata." Touching upon the problem of popular government. Justice Urewer said: "The structure of popular government In this republic towers above the horizon cf the world great and strong, and yet the question of its permanence Is not settled. Its possibilities of good are greater than ever before; yet it lives under new conditions and faces new dangers. "These various causes are operating In our midst to produce wealth, consolidation, centralization. The rapidity and multitude of mercantile transactions are seen in colossal fortunes, in gigantic undertakings, in enormous financial consolidations and corresponding organizations of labor. Local self control is giving way before the pressure for centralized power. The town meeting Is supplanted by the state legislature, while the latter in its turn Is yielding to the expanding power of congress. Political parties are largely under the management of bosses, and the whole great forces of industry, business and politics seem passing under the dominance of single central control. "Is this centralizing tendency antagonistic or helpful to the republic? Is It consistent with popular government? Apparently it Is antagonistic" against the republican thought of equality of right; each man a ruler and equally sharing the responsibilities and powers of government. Forms may not be changed. Power seldom cares about forms; It seeks the substance of control. Many and insidious are the temptations which attend the efforts of power to centralize and establish itself; wealth and Its offer of luxuries, sweetness of otflceholding, popular applause, even though manufactured and purchased. lie who stands in the center has these and a thousand other strings reaching to every side of the surrounding circle. "You caunot stay this movement toward consolidation and centralization. It is a natural evolution. The commerc.'al spirit is taking advantage of tue wonderful facilities given by steam and electricity. Injunction against strikers will not stop it; legislation against trusts will not. Attempting to stay the movement of its cbariot wheels by injunction or statute Is lunacy compared with which Dame Partington's effort to stop the Atlantic with a mop was supreme wisdom. Appeal must be taken to the great court of public opinion, whose decrees are Irresistible. In that court every man Is counsel and every man Is judge. That court may not stay the movement, but will control it. It can make the movement with all the wonderful things attending It subserve the higher thought of ennobling the Individual. "Who shall lead and guide in that court? Not the demagogue, appealing for selfish purposes to Ignorance and prejudice. In the opening hours of the French revolution Mirabeau roused the rabble in Paris, and the roused rabble whirled social order Into chaos, provoking Mine. Roland's 'dying words. "O Liberty, what crimes are done in thy name!' We want no Mirabeau here. We turn to the educated lover of his country, the one who believes in her Institutions; who would not destroy, but keep pure and is filled evermore with the thought that true service of the public is the greatest glory of mau. We look to him in that court for the preservation of the liberty of the individual against the threatened dominance of wealth and organization, to Invigorate the so called generalities of the Declaration of Independence and to fill the land with such a spirit of independence and liberty as shall give new emphasis to the grand old song, America, the Land of the Free.' We look to him in that court to exterminate the assassin and to put an end to anarchism, so that nevermore in the history of this republic shall the sad story be told that during forty years out of seven men elected to its highest office three perished by the hand of the assassin. "Here, then, is my answer to the leader of the organization. The organization may need only one traiued in Its workings an always reliable cog in the machine but the republic needs something larger, stronger, grander: something more than a cog. It needs tbe educated man and that educated man to whom organizations and Individuals are simply instruments to subserve tbe higher interests and glory of the republic. So it is that in these days of tremendous material ec tivi;ies there is as never !efore the need for educational institutions tilled with tbe spirit of devotion to tte public s rv See." Edmund Clarence S ted roam's Poem. The following is the text of Mr. Stedruan's poem: All tbinzs cn earth thst are accOOTted great Are deiii-ated to cociict at first breath. Nature herself knows grandly to await The masterful estate Which for her secret germ Time eonjureth. n elements that bufwt iran decree His i'-4..Ljci .-rivalling to the end;
The tree air foreordain aim to be tree; Their stern persistency Tbe ages to hia resolute spirit lend. So rose our academe since that far day W hen reverently the grave tTp(thers ram la council by the ioal ancestral bay. To speak the word, to pray. To found the enduring shrine without a name. Te. at the witchery of whose golden wand Sew duUters rise to splendor to a Bight, Find here your model 1 IK-re the turners stand That w-rr not made to hand. That have the puiseance Time confers aright. Born with the exit of that iron ase When Nova Anclia to New Knslacd crew. Learning's new child put up a bermiiase. Whereof no godly make As trout a mount the bountlaries foreknew; No oracle betokened the obscure Grim yesrs encountering winc h the elders bowed. Yet knew not tumeric nor discomfiture. But set the buttress sure That should upstay tiiese tabernacles proud. These fasws that bred their pa'riot to Tie In steadfastness, erect of thought to lire. Or when the country bade undauntedly Without lament to die Save that he bad but one young life to give. Twice, thrice, and yet a;rain that sovereign call Rani not in vain, nor from this ancient grove Hjth ceased to broaden, as the days befall. The famed processional Of the mind's workmen who to greatness move. Xo feebling she that reared them, no forlorn And wrinkled mother lingering in the gray; Fadeless the smiles to see her shield upborne; It is ber morn, her morn! The past, but twilight ushering in her day. Stronar mother, thou who from the doorways old Ot housed anew in beauty renovate, Ilasl spread thine heritage a hundredfold. Hast wrought us to thy mold Whether the bread of ease or toil we ate; Thou who hast made thy sons coequal all. The least one of thy progeny a peer Weering for worth, not birth, bia coronal; The watchman on thy wall Ws proud this sundawn of thy cyclic yearl The lusters of a new won firmament, Spanned from the height thine upmost turre's crown, Belume the course whereon thy thoughts sr bent. Whereto the words are sent That bid thy children pass the lineage down. Ere yet that rainbowed dome thou seest complete. Mankind, be sure, shall earth more nobly shares Xo churl his measure shall unduly mete. And where are set thy feet Life shall be counted lordlier and more fair. Science shall yield new spells for man to know And bid tbee consecrate to mortal weal All that her henchmen in thy gatea bestow. Nor lofty then nor low. Save to bis race each miiiistrant Is leal. TMne be it still the undying antique speech. The grove's high thought, the wing'd Hellenic lyre, Cnvtxed of soul thy acolytes to teach. So shall they also reach Their lamps and light them at a quenchless fire! And wield the trebly welded English tongue, Their vantage by inheritance divine, Ir.vir.cible the laureled lists among Wherein the bards have sung Or sages deathless made tbe lettered line, Till now, for that sure Pentecost to come, Tbe globe's four winds are winnowing apace Fresh harvestings of speech, in one to sum A world's curriculum When east and west forgatber face to face. Thus first imbued, thy coming host the clews To broad achievement shall descry tbe more; What thou hast taught them shall in statecraft use Greatly, nor can they choose Hut follow where the omens blaze before! Even as our Platonist's exultant soul That westward course of empire viaioned far, Xow round the sheen, to Asia and the pole. Time charts upon our scroll The empearted pathways of an orient star. There the swart Malay's juster league begun Takes from our hanrfs the tables of the law; The mild Hawaiian raises to the sun The folds himself had won Ere the Antilles their deliverance saw. Time's drama speeds, albeit, alas, its chief Protagonist, aufrmentor of the state. Fell as the prompter turned that unread leaf. And, oh, what tragic grief Just when consummate towered tbe action great! To strong, brave hands the rule, the large intent. Have passed; nor tears aVme that some tar plan Keouired the master's lifebTood interblent, 1o point his monument And leave once more the likeness of a man. But we, Yale's living multitude rebrought From farthest outposts of the pin and palm. We know her battlements ot iron wrought. Her captains fearing naught. Her voice ot welcome rising like a psalm. We know the still indissoluble chain Wherewith the sons are to the mother bound; Kor unto any shall she call in vain Who in her heart have lain And trod the memoried precinct of ber ground. God dower her endowering her brood With knowledge, beauty, valor, from her breast. Ingathering from the peopled town, the wood. The island solitude. The land's most loyal and its manfullest! Goc! keep her! Yea, that Soul her soul endue. That Spirit of tbe interstellar void. That mightiur Presence than the fathers knew, the source of light where through Heaven's planets shine in joy and strength deployed. That Power even that which doth impart a share And semblance of divinity to our kind Pold thee, dear mother, here and everywhere. Thee and thy sons, in care Through centuries yet still loftier use to find!
LEOPOLD'S REPARTEE. Tbe Retort of Brlglam's Kins; to I'ensnnt Woman. King Leopold of Belgium, who, it is said, contemplates paying a visit to this country, figured in an amusing incident the other day. Lie was driving near Brussels In his automobile, accompanied b a gentleman with whom he was conversing in English, which tongue the monarch speaks fluently. They stopped at the farmhouse of one of his subjects to get a drink of milk. King Leopold continued bis conversation in English, and the farmer's wife, not recognizing him. remarked to her husband: "I wonder what the long nosed Englishman will give us for that bowl of aailk?' "The long nosed Englishman will give you his portrait." said the king, addressing her in her native tongue as he handed her a live franc piece. Then he drove off. leaving the astonished woman gazing alternately after him and at the effigy on the coin. Rooster's Crow Identified Thief. August Cockard and Charles Lawrence are neighbors in Dickson City. Fa. Lawrence possessed a remarkably fine game rooster. One night the bird disappeared, and Lawrence went over to Bockard's chicken coop and crowed. From tbe interior cacae answering crows which. Lawrence says, he recosnized. Then he swore out a warrant for Bockard ' arrest.
HINTS FOR FARMERS Vainest of Clover and Tlmothf. It la said that timothy of good quality contains a little more than a half pound, or fount, n-twenty-fifths of a pound, cf n,tr,geuous matter in twenty-five pounds. (Jood clover has two pounds in twenty, or two and one-half In twenty-five, and lucerne has two and one-fifth in twenty pound, says Amercian Cultivator. This explains why clover is so much lietter for milk production or for fattening stock than timothy hay. Sir. J. S. Woodward claims that barley straw is better than timothy for feeding to sheep, but he probably means barley cut, as all grains should be while yet in the "dough." or soft enough to be crushed up between the thumb and finger. We do not put a very high value on straw, corn stover or hay of any kind that has been allowed to stand until the seed is fully ripe before it is cut. Chemists may tell us that only the water has dried out of it, but the natural juice of a plant is not the same thing as the water frm the well or brook. We never saw the chemist who could make a slice of good apple or peach by adding water to the evaporated fruit, although we own that the fruit dried quickly In the evaporator does not undergo the same change as it used to under the old process of drying In the sun. And dried beef will not make a good beefsteak by soaking it in water.
Fattening Torkrys. By all means fatten your turkeys. Do not send them to market half fat, as so many do, says J. C. Clipp In National Stockman. You can have your turkeys in fine market condition with but little extra trouble. Get them up about ten days before you expect to market them and confine them to a small yard. To fatten them quickly we find no better ration than sweet potatoes and cornmeaL One can use the small and unsalable potatoes in this way to great advantage. Cook them and just before removing them from the fire add the cornmeal, feeding the mess when it Is cold, two pounds of meal to one peck of potatoes. If the mess is mixed with sklmmilk, instead of water, It will produce a superior flavor. Io not fail to give plenty of fresh water and feed four times per day. Grit should always be placed where the turkeys can have free access to It. Potash Fertilisers, Waldo F. Brown writes for The Weekly Gazette, Cincinnati, that the office of potash as plant food is to help form the starch, and such crops as corn and potatoes, which contain large amount of starch, need more potash than those that have but little starch. Light, sandy and peaty soils need It more than clayey soils. The muriate gives a good quality of potatoes on light soils, but on heavy clay the sulphate produces the better quality. If used freely on garden crops, It should not come in direct contact with the peed, as it may prove too caustic, but tbe amount in the fertilizers usually sown with wheat will do no damage. Hot Shortare Next Tear. There will probably be a shortage of hogs next year, resulting from a shortage of feed, says Farm and Ranch. Trices are and have been good for some time, but next year must be much better, because of the scarcity. Production waits upon feed, and scarcity of feed has compelled swine growers to reduce their stock. He is fortunate who has enough ingenuity to pull through without reducing. No doubt this can be done In many cases where It Is not done. There will be money In hogs next year or we are no prophet. Care of Cider. Cider barreled and kept bunged may be racked off and bottled, corking tightly and wiring. Unless clear it should be filtered through felt. The addition of salicyclic acid or other preservatives, while preventing further fermentation, is not an attractive addition to the human system when apple juice is wanted as a beverage. Well kept cider will find quick sale during spring. Careful handling, with cleanliness, are better for all stomach supplies than carelessness and artificial preservatives. The Ben Davis Apple. J. H. Hale, tbe great fruit grower of Connecticut and Georgia, when told that Ben Davis apple trees were well loaded and the fruit was bringing a good price this year, replied, "Yes, and I can show you a whole lot of places where one can make money by keeping a saloon, but a man won't do his fellow man much good by keeping a saloon or raising Ben Davis apples. He has set a number of fair sized orchards in Connecticut, and they are nearly all Baldwin. To Get a Good Potato Crop. Plow a piece of sod early in the fall, drag it right down until it is in good condition, let it lie until spring, then draw on manure and plow again, says a correspondent of Farm and Home. Then take 2o0 pounds of phosphate. 100 pounds of plaster and 100 pounds of wheat middlings to the acre. Mix all together and apply. You will get a bountiful crop of potatoes. Diversity of Crops. Every farmer should have more than one string to h's bow. The fellow who gets let down on some one crop woo has four or five other sources of revenue is the man in the main who gets tbe most out of bis farm. Where Silasce Is Valuable. Silage is not much of a hog feed and contains too much water for feeding freely to horses. It is of Erst Importance for dairy cows and very good for young growing stock and fattening cattle.
AIRS! healthful kitr food, rntctfw m youthful color to gray and tnTsdcd haur. Remove dUniralf Inl stop uihnc sad breaking or the hair I not m tty and EAITH th scalp, ha&vds clothing . and aw caaikM be detected LARftE $Oc. B TTI.ES AT Lkt t SHOPS. IF YOU MNT Tbe Big 4 Knickerbocker ;SpeclaI to Bunalo. Boston and New York; Take the C. R. & M. via. Muncle. The C R. & M. train leaves Rich mond at 5:45 p. m every day except aunday, makes close connection with tbe magnificent Big 4 Knickerbocker special from St. Louis to New York. This train has in addition to Buffet t sleeping cars, library and smoking cars and dining cars. Train reaches Buffalo at 6:15 a. m. after a night s ride and lands passengers at Grand Central station, New York City, 42nd street acd 4th avenue at 6 p. m., 23 Lours from Richmond. Headachps, dizzy spells, bad blood, rheumatism, indigestion, constipation, aosoiutely cured if you take Rocky Mountain Tea made by Madison Medicine Co. 35c Ask your druggist. Convince yourself that Ely's Cream Balm deserves all that has been said of it as a means of quick relief and final cure in obstinate cases of nasal catarrh and hay fever. A trial size costs but ten cents. Full size, 50 cents. Sold by druc-gists or mailed by Ely Bros., 5b Warren street, New York. Mt. Olive, Ark.. May 17, 1901. Messks. Ely Bros : Please send me one bottle of Cream Balm, family size. I think it is the best medicine for catarrh in the world. Very respectfully. J. M. Sciioltz. Inspires one to nobler and better deeds; ut locks the gates of happiness; pours glowing vitality into your system. That's what Rocky Mountain Tea will do. 35c Ask your druggist. Stepped Into Live Coals. "When a child I burned mv foot frightfully." writes W. H. Eads, of Jonesville, Va., "which caused horrible leg sores for 30 years, but Bucklen's Arnica Salve wholly cured me after everything else failed." Infallible for Burns, Scalds, Cuts,Sores, Bruises and Piles. Sold by A. G. Luken & Co. 25c. "A beacon light to the sick and afliicte-d. A life ericourager. Take counsel with yourself and nse Rocky Mountain. Tea tomorrow. Peace and com'oit follow its use. Ask your druggist. Tot Causes Nijstit Alarm. "One night - my brother's baby was taken with croup," writes Mrs. J. C. Sriider, of Crittenden, Ky., "it seemed it would strangle before we could get a doctor, so we gave it Dr. King's New Discovery, which gave quick relief and permanently cured it. We always keep it in the house to protect our children from croup and whooping cough. It cured me of chronic bronchial trouble that no other remedy would relieve." Infallible for coughs, colds, throat and lung troubles. 50c aLd $1. Trial bottles free at A. G. Luken & Co.'s drug store. Energy all gone? Headache? Stom ach out of order? Simply a case of torpid liver. Burdock Blood Bitters will make a new man or woman of you. :-lursTtR'S ENGLISH ENftYRQYAL PILLS -'V". Original and 4ny (Aesalne, t3S- In Ktl il .!.! mmllte bona. mM buj of f r Lirucgial. w o4 4. la to- Partlralr. TcatlMaalala t Mrs Mali. l,0uTwilwfliba. Sold t, mil DrMjiw. Ill,klar( k.all rM.IIU.. Stun, Mila. ri. DRUNKENNESS and V The the Keeley TtM-1ie have nw TaSaStl ID eOflSUsflt B t"T tt fears. In tuat time m -re than pjO.uue met and wmen have 3em eiirtr. hy tb-m. We are stit in bQne-s a s tue nm is rrtantiT im-retisi'iir. w(.4i:i "fcse tninr 1 tvue if w torIndianapolis ornccs Piainfiflrf ELEQTRIG PILL Ber. e fit is Immediate and Permanent Reores tbe P-vxer intended a!! n.?n should bare if it has been wasted and destroyed by fcscesses Abuse. Indiscrirt-.OD of Vomica or Overwork ; doe away wiih thii Tired. Weary. Restless and Meta" choly feei.ng. Nervous and Sleepless N lnts.W. Back and Lack o? Air.biucn. Makes you feel . Tresiied, young erain, and life worth It 'in, Capiet:" rej-ui.as txie Nervccs Systeci. One bo is scSrient to cure most cases, ad enough to pivve its worth to tne most severe, .i.ooper box, or foil guaranteed core of s boxes for f 5.00. Yc take no chances, as we gruarmntee 6 boxes to cure in 30 days or refund your mowy, whica is proof taat we must cure cue majority of oar patrons, fej fna. in plain wrappei cu receipt of price ELECTRIC PILL COMPANY T5 WCST JACKSON STB I IT. CHICAGO ILLA. ii. Luken & Co., G30 Main St. Charles L. Magaw, 201 Ft. Wayne Ave,
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Pennsylvania Linoo TIME TABLE. In Effect Sunpay, Sept. 29, 1901,
Trains rum bj sirai standard Usasv iMlMsrti UM. Depart Hamllsoa ft rs-4.. , 4451a saajsai Ciacmnad ww.4.im., fsoaas ysapas 'H'"1" . j . r- si as pas O. R. I. Cki. Acc. 4 05 p aa as p a Cin. Mack. Mail an4 IVx . 4:101a 9:05 m ss Indiana pat la Una. New York & St Louis Mail oe a as t OS s SB S Louis 1 445 am Ijcpa ln1ianspolls Acc .. 6 so a aa Nw Y ork & S HoiU Mail. New York . St Louia tap.. ..so is a as aopaa nasi -453PBB 7 U .. I II P H ISSSI "at uoula LotiMd atait.. siaw Vara at S L. Fast Malt Maaga Una. Lonaavort Acc. . ,,, l o) l a Canpn Cacao Fast Mail ft lap . is oa a SB 4 15 s as Clinnnn a Ijapuispart Arc 7 33 p m fossa Cul at Chicago Nigni Bjro 11 15 p sa 3 SS as Dajrtoa A Xaala Una. Xania Spsftd. Cola. Acc 5 to a as Soap a iayt Xc&ia a ColutnbaMM.so 05 a aa sa so ass Daytoa Pttta. Now Yotfcsoo a as m so aas Coia. Puts, ft New York.. , 4 55 p as as of p as Dayaoa 4k Xania Soots S 00 p SB Nw York 1 4m 1 tort . fsjpsa 4aoaaa Plata. UrssM A Calaranaa Usmv. St Louis a New York Mail - J Is a at 4 54 a at Ind pis. St Cola. A,yr n 15 a at s 05 p aa Pitts A fast Mail A tap... 45 p at so pat St Looia Linutod Mail 4 5a p at Brand Raalsta A lasUaaa Ry. Ft. W., O R. & Petoskcv Kx 5 :o a at ):topa Crand Rapids A Mack Mail n jo p a so so a at Northland S-Kyrta . . 11 10 p at a 55 a a Bally. All other trains daily aaoaol J. A. Gomtoa, Station Masanr. C W. Efanor. Tick at Afad. Cincinnati Northern R. R. Trains pass West M dally aacapt Sunday s follows; Marth Bauasl. Saath BaaasU No. a.. N0.4... ...10:30 a m No. 3. .0:05 a 1 ....?:aapat No, 1...... .. :ipa Nos. 3 and 4 run only between Cincinnati sad Vast Wert. Nos. 1 and a run thr nigh between Ondauast and Jackson. T. O. M. tpahladlap, 8. I. A. ToLsno, O. Richmond and Dayton Leare Richmond Tia PCC 8t L Kt Co 9:10 am 4:10 pes Leave Eaton via Day ton A Western Traction Co 9:50 am 4:4H pa Arrive Dayton... 11 uo am B-iX pan KBTCBJflNa Leave fwyton via Dayton A Western Traction Co 8:00 am lfc am 6:00 pro B:u0 am Leave Eatou Tin P O C A St L By Co 10:28 sm U eooa o il pm lu. pnt Arrive Richmond Tin POO St L Ry Oo 10:56 am liSO pm 7:) pm U.U0 pm . aaras op rial. Round trip, Richmond and Eaton, via P. O. C. ABuKy M Round irip, Katon and Dayton, via D. A W. Traction Co .71 Round trip, Richmond and Dayton 1-BS Cincinnati, Richmond & Muncie R. R. Passenger Sohedule la Effaet alcatlaw Ootober 7, 190f. EAST AND SOUTH. Line to Cincinnati, Hamilton and Southern Points
3 6 5 e'Sa d S3 za zas as 5 9 30 am 3 55 pm 5 40 pm 9 35 am 400 pm 5 45 pat 1 54 am i5pm 601 pas to 03 am 4 S3 pm 6 tt pm 10 ij ant 4 35 pm 6 sj pm 1057 am 5 so pm 7 00 pm 1135 am 600 pm 7 45 pm
STATIONS Richmond ... " S. Richmo'd " Boston " Wts KitcheU C't'ee Grove ArviaC H& D Has ilt'n . Cincinnati No. 2 connects at Cincinnati with the C. OAr Ashland.. :i:4 pm Ar Charleston 5:24 pm White Sulohur . 9-47 im washinirton :47 am Philadelphia 10:15 am Baltimore 7:S7 am New York .1:00 pm Via B. a O A rr:ve C'hilltcothe 8:18 pm Wathicirton :4I ;m Philadelphia. ..10:15 am Arrive pRrkemburg.. 6:00 pm Baltimore. 7 50 pm NenYork 12:35 pm No. t connects at Cincinnati with Q. A C Arrive Arrive Lexingrton 10:20 pm f hatianofgo 0:06am Kirmingham':'5 am Meridian ...:Ai pm New Orleans -8;1J pm WE9T AND NORTH. Line to Muncie, Cleveland, BuflaJo and tbe East
m it 2 STATIONS -jk Jwf 3,.c 5 c'S 0 0 S3 Z3 y.Z S Zir.5 Lv Richmond to 35 am 545 pm 035 pm " WiiUamsb'g- 1059 am 6 it pm 100 pas " Economy . 11 11 am 6 94 pm so 16 pm " LoaautviHe - 11 a6 am 640 pm 1033 pm " rHountsvtUe 1135 am 650 pm 1043 pm ' Mc!:trd . 1148am 705pm 1059pm Aril undeM. is oa pm 7 ao pm ts 15 pm OAstonM wn 11 1; pm 744 pm st 40 pm 14 Fowlerton 13 40 pm S so pm 1 1 50 pm Jonesboro . jissspmf 890 pm I ta so am
No. 3"ontiects at Muncie with the B Fonr Knickerbocker Special Arrive Arrive Elwood "8:31 jm Tipton .. 8:55 pm Lafaye te 10:40 p m No 1 connects at Mocri with L. E. A W. Arrive Airive keikey. 3 50 pm Port and 4 11 pm I elma E:' pm Limn . 601pm F"ind!avT 0S pm ros oria 7:89 pm Sandusky 9 A pm F Stop for Passengers. At Muncie No. 8 connects with the B Font Kij-kt:rtr;k-r bp"iai. C. A. BLAIR, City Tk-ket A lent Notice to the Public On acd after October 1, 1901, street car tickets will cot be hold by conductors and Eiotormeti, but may be had during business hours at Ross' drug store, near eighth and Main ptrf ets, at the present rate of six for 25 cents. Richmond Street and Intercrbah Railroad Co. 23-tf
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