Richmond Palladium (Daily), 29 November 1901 — Page 7
THE SON of ABULFEDA How He Provided Hk Palace With Statue. In the last rears of the eigbtb century there reigned In Bagdad the Calipb Abulfeda. Into tbe coffers of bis predecessors tbe wealth of tbe east bad been poured with a most unsparing hand. The magnificent "City of the Enchantress" was not only tbe "Abode of Ftace," but a splendid Jewel In the empire of the faltbfuL Of all the caliphs of this wonderful city fcince Alniansor. its founder, no two Lad blessed or cursed the world with the same Idea of what it was necessary that man should do to enjoy life in this world and at death to be vortLy of a place among the dark eyed damsela and beautiful youths of tbe .gardens of paradise. The magnificent Almamoun scattered tils inestimable wealth in tbe greatest contrast with tbe abstemiousness and frugality of the mighty Omar, asj the liaroun-al-Raschid of Bagdad is vastly different from the Akban. whose fanatic advance only tbe heaving waves of tbe Atlantic were able to binder. Tbe Calipb Abulfeda bad succeeded bis father, whose desire to gather the gold of the then known world Into Bagdad without expending it for any purpose bad put tbe youthful prince to many disadvantages and fostered In him the desire to do otherwise when be would succeed to the mautle of tbe prophet. Therefore when bis own sons were choosing their ends or pleasures the Caliph Abulfeda was always ready to forward or Indulge them. Among the youngest of his many children was Ali. For years he bad brooded over and planned on the Idea f a wonderful editice that lie hoped in time to construct. Of all the magniti cent structures it had been bis privllece as a son of tbe commander of the faithful to see none was in an tnings the perfection of which the young prince dreamed; therefore on the death of his father the prince began the building of the long deferred happiness. In time there arose on the banks of the river the most wonderful architectural dream that eveji that magic age and that wonderful city had produced. Yet to tbe prince it was unfinished; something was yet lacking to make It tbe abode of perfect pleasure. One evening the prince was sauntering along one of tbe most magnificent of the curiously carved arcades of the palace when a voice called bis name: "Prince All. son of Abulfeda! Prince Ali. son of Abulfeda:" Tbe young prince glanced quickly around on nil sides, but beheld no one except tbe sileut sentinels on guard around the palace and tbe picturesque horsemen that at a little distance rode slowly back and forth as safeguards against approaching danger. Again came tbe voice: "Prince Ali. sou of Abulfeda! Prince All. son of AbuTeda!" Quick as a flash the prince drew tbe splendidly ornamented and equally uplendidly temjered blade at bis side and stood ready to face any opponent. But it was unnecessary. Before him stood an old man. bowed and whitened by tbe sorrows and trials of many enrs. His dress and manner also dis tinguishod him as belonging to some other period. "Prince Ali. son of Abulfeda!" he began "1 am." assented Prince AH. scarcely knowing whether to tower up to his full height and auswer with the pride be felt in his noble name or acknowlnlge his Inferiority before a higher !over. "I know you. I know yon." answered the aged man. "I knew your honored father and your father's father, and" a supernatural ex presslon spreading SNAKE CHARMING .la not a popular occupation. Most women shrink from the sight of a snake and would faint at the touch of one. But these same women run greater risks than the snake charmer. How many women allow disease to fasten on them and slowly to crush out their strength. Womanly- diseases should never te allowed to un--d ermine the health. Female weakness, bearingdown pains, inflammation, nicerat ion, backache, headache, nervousness, and other womanly ailments, -curable by medicine, are promptly and permanently cured br the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. 1 1 makes weak women strong and sick women we'll. " I eftt it mv V.- ! wnu-a V.r '-.-:'- M.v.vn, tf x:T.!. On.Ev.i5e Co .. N C 'K-r: "to.t- I i-:, !t t l" . ' " - ' 4: : . t ... -. of t.-ir vitc:i sac t: :-.; :'ou- -t , Ir. I' t - - I . : : t ;v , ' iV.V. .1 . .l Mtfviiv-l I 'i'SC .Y . V I- 11;! C-i" iv i ant i'-iU," a -o ' L x; VzhU ;:nd ou box of ' Antt-tpuc n-X KesZag Suppositories.' I ; em cured ." I Favorite ITescnpuon " Decause l its remarkable cares of other women, do not accept a substitute. The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser, a book containing iooS pages, is given away. Send 21 one-cent stamps , the expense of mailing iMt.'y, for the book in paper covers, or 31 stamps for the volume bound in cloth. Address Dr. K. V. Pierce, BuSaIo, N. Y.
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sine with tbe prophet himself in many a dearly won fight with tbe enemies of the only true belief. But I wronged him. I did him an injustice, and therefore is my slumber In the toutb dis turbed. When the commander of the faithful or one of Ota children has an earnest louging or desirv. I or some other who Las wronged the prpbet is called from bis tomb in auswer to their prayers. "Prince Ali. son of Abulfeda, what is tby desire?" Tbe prince thereupon began at tbe birth of bis hope for the possession of an architectural wonder and related all until Its completion. I understand! I understand!" cried tbe old man. slowly beckoning the prince to silence. "You have exhausted your wordly knowled;e In attempting to succeed to happiness. In gratifying your desire, and have failed. Is it not as I say?" "It is." answered the prlne "and I now yearn for something beyond the power of man to accomplish or understand." "Be It then as yon desire," answered tbe aged father. "Behold tbis staff. Ask not from whence It came nor discover tbe mystery to any living man until 1 return for Its possession." Tbe prince took tbe staff and looked It curiously over, bat nothing extraordinary occurred. Searing bis expectancy, tbe aged man continued: "The followers of tbe good man Jesus, whom tbe Christians believe and the worshipers of the stars and moon and tbe elements and other works and doings of tbe one and only God for there Is but one God, and Mohammed Is bis prophet have Images beautiful to behold, yet far from the handiwork of tbe Creator. To us is forbidden such Images. Would yon fill tbe structure you have built with more wonderful images, beyond the construction or understanding of mankind?" "I would. I would!" exclaimed the prince, delighted with the expectation. "The power is in your band." answered tbe strange visitor and va" lshed. For several minutes the prince stood as if awakened from a dream, but not long, for just at that moment a young girl, a favorite with the prince, came on tiptoe behind him. Noiselessly as the soft breeze that scarce moved the dark hair that fell uncontrolled over her white shoulders she crept up and was about to clasp her small hands over his eyes when the prince, seeing the shadow and excited by the strange visitor who had just left him. wheeled suddenly around and In doing so touched tbe laughing girl with his staff. As a statue of the whitest marble she stood before him. As the prince stood wondering at the magic power of the apparently commonplace 6taff a courier approached in all baste with a message from a distant province governed by a very dear friend of Prince Ali. The breathless messenger fell on his face before the prince, and after salaaming after the manner of the day and recovering breath enough to speak he begged the pardon of the prince for first exacting a promise of secrecy In regard to the matter upon which he had been sent. It being his master's Bpecial order. , In his anxiety the prince raised the band that held the staff and placed It on the shoulder of the exhausted messenger, and he, too, was marble. As the days went by the palace filled with strange Images, and the possessor of the wonderful staff began to long for the supernatural donor. The possession of his gift began to be a weight, and each image added to tbe palace was a weight added to the burden of Its ruler. Still the longed for visitor came not. At last, when the prince was almost driven to madness, his strange visitor again appeared.. Before he conld ask a question of the descendant of the great Mahmoud the staff was thrust into his bands, and he was prayed by the memory of the great leader to restore to life the silent images that, instead of adorning, cast a gloom over tbe palace. "Is that not beautiful?" asked the strange visitor, pointing to the figure of the mischievous girl favorite. "Look at the grace, the smile almost bursting Into laughter." "It Is beautiful, most beautiful." answered the prince, "but her laugh would be to me more beautiful than all." "And that!" exclaimed the aged man. "Look how natural that courier Is about to relate bis message!" "Most natural, most natural. sighed the prince, "but tbe unspoken message is locked in that marble breast." To several others the strange visitor drew tbe shrinking prince and commented on the peculiar beauty of each. But the prince could not be diverted from tbe melancholy that possessed him. "Take them away! Take them away!" exclaimed tbe prince. "Leave my palace as it was. and I will be happy, perfectly happy!" "Bo it :is you say." answered the acvU man, "and profit by the lesson." There w:i a s; IT..I it tvistle is the; o-r.rt of t!:e pslatv. and when it pass- ; c-i i-.:i v::s as it ,-,j N.rs. Hvon thf Ti-t- J .::!.-.. pf.Vzl-.H-s X's of U. 2td;d st tu-,-5 its it -::s revted. exorpt : it-n ov r tin- ;:i entra ih-: ali. son o- r.ri rrr-. t Tin: pnix.-;: ; Th.--? is r . a- .r w ...:r : : j -r n- s of x ; fei.L.w cr3r.i:r- is "fnanjrrv. nor is i.:ere !:.ve;;ioss :r. an' ri..:-.c w .: r- t' ce is either a-:.!;rur to or taaucj iron) iae haifeiiwors; ot Iht Uosl fciigii God. Berlin. Nov. 29. The Vossische Zcitung says it l?arns upon reliable authority that the crown prince and Princes of Roumania have mutually agreed upon a divorce, and that the crown prince intends to renounce his succession to the throne.
RICHMOND DAILY PAIXAD1UM, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER
IF INTERESTED If interested in children you are interested in Scott's Emulsion. As a remedy for consumption and other forms of lung and throat diseases Scott's Emulsion has won such fame that its value as a children's medicine is sometimes forgotten. It is worth remembering There is-nothing like Scott's Emulsion for bringing strength and health to drooping children. It always has this general action. But notice! that for rickets, scrofula, tubercular disease, whooping cough, St. Vitus's dance, coughs and colds Scott's Emulsion has a direct effect. Food and medicine all in the same dose. We'll scad you a little to try, if you like. SCOTT & BOWSE, 409 Pearl street, New York. TYPICAL BATTLESHIP. CoBitrnrtor H. S. Gillmor Orilfai Oac From Many rrl. The annual meeting of the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers held in the auditorium of the American Society of Mechanical Englgeers ended the other day. says the New York Journal. Perhaps the most Interesting and Important paper read, which provoked much discussion, was that by Naval Constructor II. U. Gillmor. U. S. N.. on "A Brief Comparison of IW-ent Battleship Designs." Constructor Gillmor chose for consideration the uewest types of battleships the Duncan. Great Britain: the Wittelsbach. Germany; the Borodino. Russia; the Vittorlo Enimanuele. Italy; the Mikasa. Japan, and the Virginia. United States. From these he built up a typical battleship "a type design." be called it. He said: "To establish a basis for the present comparison It Is proposed to assume a vessel whose dimensions are those of the largest vessel under consideration In which the features of armament, protection, speed and coal supply embodied are the minima of these several features, which may be found among tbe designs under discussion. Sucb a vessel would represent the extreme limit to which, as Judged from current practice, it is thought possible to reduce the several elements and will be designated a type design.' "This 'type design will, then, be a vessel of about 435 feet In length and 76 feet in breadth, about the extreme dimensions of the Virginia class, having a speed of IS knots, the speed of the Mikasa and Borodino, with a normal coal supply of G50 tons, that of the Wittelsbach; a battery of four 9.4 Inch guns, the first caliber battery of the Wittelsbach. and twelve 6 Inch guns, twelve 12 pounder and six 3 pounder guns, the second caliber guns and secondary battery of the Duncan; two torpedo tubes, as in the Virginia; a water line belt seven inches thick and seven feet wide, extending from tbe after barbette for two-thirds of the length of tbe vessel, with two Inch glckel steel plating carried from the forward end of this belt to the stem, the water line protection of the Duncan, surmounted by a shorter belt six inches in thickness; Inclosed buckheada at Ita ends of the same thickness extending up to tbe top of the gun deck to form a protected battery, as on the Wittelsbach: the 9.4 Inch guns and ammunition supply protected by barbettes and ammunition tubes carrying armor eight Inches in thickness, the protection of the first caliber guns of the Vittorio Emmanuele, and tbe 6 inch guns and ammunition supply protected by six Inch armor, the protection of the second caliber gnns provided In all of the resigns under consideration." Those. Unearthly Whistles. Washington, Nov. 26. Two American express passenger locomotives which have been In use for nearly nine months in Bavaria, have proved entirely satisfactory, except as to their whistles, whode sound is pronounced unearthly. Cures Rheumatism or Catarrh Through the Blood -Costs Nothing to Try. Would you like to jret rid of that chronic rheumatism or offensive catarrh forever? Then take a bottle of Botariic Blood Balm, whiqh has! cured t nou sands of hopeless caes ' th it had resisted doctors and patent medicine treatment. Botanic Blood : Balm i!. B B) cure thro'K-h the : ; si.-;;.. --'r b'a a o'icV:. rfti.en ir.a'.c.-. Ii-wki vr't;r,. ' a.i orear, .rr;,;.ired hri:' ,'V-tc!' rr..i!ir:sr ajvr:, vt cure. Bot::r-'o R-! i.n2 thor-ustrh'.y tested for 3d vears. -Composed of pure Botanic Druj-s I Perfectly safe to take hv old a"nd ; youaz. Drapri?ts. 1. Trial treat-! ment free bf writing Blood Balm; Co.. Atlanta. Ga. Describe trouble; and free medical advice given untii! cured. Don't give up hope, but try I B. B. B., which makes the blood pure and rich and builds up the "all run I down," tired body. B. B. B. makes "he blood red, triyinj? the skin the rich glow of perfect health. 1
BUGS EATING UP A CHURCH Caatly Stoae Edllrr la Ofcl Alaaoat Dnlriiyrd bj Rrrl Ira. Buss are eating up the hundred thousand dollar Iresl.ytvrian church in Mlddletown. O.. one of tbe haudsoni est stone edifices there, writes a special correspomh nt of the CUicaso Inter Ocean. The walls on both Main ami Fourth streets are made unsightly by the many holes bored by the insects, and esn-cially around the Fourth street entrance, where the sun shines all day. there are myriads of holes, many ot which are lar?e enough to iusert a lead pencil in. The stone abot:t the holes crumbles readily to dust, and tbe wort of destruction seenis almost complete. While each stone penetrated by the bugs is irreparably ruined, it does not follow that the handsome structure is in any immediate danger of collapse, and it may last for some years. The tower seems to have been first attacked by the insects, as it has suffered tbe most. Viewed from Main street below Fourth with a pair of opera glasses. It Is seen to be literally a mass of boles. One stone near the top of the tower about six Inches thick and two feet long is in sucb a bad state that it has almost fallen to pieces. Holes to tbe number of thirty-six were counted in this one stone. The corner stone has three deep holes that penetrate It for the length of a lead pencil. Tbe bugs that are doing tbe mischief are a sort of beetle that is common in tbe sandstone region, but has never been troublesome In that section before. They are black in color, about an inch and a half long and have powerful mandibles, with which they easily cut their way Into the soft stone. They are very strong for their size. Their mandibles are about a quarter of an inch long and are as hard as Ivory. The bugs have been examined by Trofessor J. E. McKean of the public school board, who says they are the most destructive insects he ever saw. They can run very fast. They have four legs and also have long, black wings. Their eyes are like glass and about as large as a pin bead.
MRS. GARDNER'S PALACE. The Owner Work a N'rarly Elabt Uara at Oay OTmla( Workmen. Of the women who are well known In Boston soe'ety there probably Is not one who works so bard as Mrs. Jack Gardner, says the New York Sun. For more than a year now carpenters and masons have been busily engaged in satisfying Mrs. Gardner's latest desire, the erection of a building which bus come to be called a "Venetian palace." The palace is a very mysterious structure. No one outside tbe owner and several of ber Intimate friends, with the exception of the men doing the work, has ever seen the Interior of tha structure. Those who ride daily through the Fens and up Huntington avenue have a fleeting glimpse of the palace, and while it is said to faithfully represent the architecture of the Venetians one newspaper has cruelly called It "a cross between a hospital and a stable." Much time and money are being expended in finishing up the Interior, and the decorations are said to surpass anything of the kind In any building In New England. No one has ever been able to describe tbe work that Is now going on except the men and Mrs. Gardner. The employees are sworn to secrecy, and the owner refuses to talk about her palace to any one. Every morning about 8 o'clock except Sunday Mrs." Gardner's carriage drives up to her door 00 Beacon street and she is taken to her new house In the Fens. She usually remains there until Mie noon hour and then goes home for her luncheon. Sometimes she has ber luncheon sent to the house, so engrossed is she in her work of superIntending the decorating of the walls and ceilings, and It Is often 5 o'clock in the afternoon before she leaves for the day. The painters, frescoers and varnishers are busily engaged at present, and Mrs Gardner hardly allows a stroke of the brush to be taken without her seeing it done. The high wall about the outside of the building is nearly completed, and Mrs. Gardner hopes to move In early next year. Oeeoratlna tke Chrtatmaa Table. Decorate the table with a German Christmas tree, one of the toy ones, and pile around Its foot a quantity of presents tied with red ribbons. These should be only what a college man would call "grinds" perhaps a tiny tin piano for a would be performer, a lantern for the one the points of whose Jokes are difficult to see. a plaid paper golf bag for tbe enthusiastic player, and so on. each with a rhyme or quotation, says Harper's Bazar. If one considers a goose a somewhat undignified bird, ducks may be exchanged for it either the domestic fowl or the more expensive canvasback or redhead. Fried celery Is very good with duck, tbe crispest pieces dropped In batter and then cooked In deep fat But the apple sauce croquettes should not be omitted even with this. For this In- ! formal dinner there is a very good and s lunoevona drink to s.-rve" with the f hvy tuurs" sweet cider, spiced nvA s::Tr?re.j to trwte, cooked ten minutes ' 't-fkyarCi H-trr:c. sr ca?e of r;.-'...-. iiyteria ct ?: t : V(iy l-T. Hcch T. rii.-i.-k. srr-s --rk World. Tue paiiett 1.A is t 1V the .Ww Mrs. J::i e tiec;r. wbo. with her t!U band, came from Colorado a few days j eso. TLey recently visi'.t-d the stock j yarcs and wre escorted through one of the packing houses. Mrs. Becker aeeuied horred at tie slbt. and when tbey reached the place where boss were bein- killed she collapsed. cryIns and screaming. In her husband's arms. She was at once brought back to the city and taken to the hospital
29. 1901
la snauSe ftrm i ana Ddrt mcaicitcd destroys 1 1 SOAP Lsco5C terms, keeps the pores rpca and oukea the k-.B soli and velvety. Cures cimDle. blotches, etc l'ueciie) for the hath.nu"rrT harr and crmp?c rm . ytlVTVCll Til rmti "J njun nwibin l (a4c4 bau la u featatai a FLORIDA SPECIAL. Through Service Will Be Given Every Day by Pennsylvania. Announcement has been made by General Passenger Ajjent E. A. Ford of the Pennsylvania lines that the Chicago and Florida special through service between Chicago and Jacksonville and St. Augustine, and between Pittsburg acd Florida points via Cincincati will be resumed this winter. The schedule now being prepared will go into effect about January 4, 1902. Last winter the through service was run only two days a week. The new schedule for this season calls for through service every week day. OABTOIIXA. Bam tlw TIb Kind Yob Haw Alwats Bought Signatu of Great Luck ot An Editor. "For two years all efforts to cure Eczema in the palm 3 of my hands failed," writes Editor H. N. Lester of Syracuse, Kan. 'then I was wholly cured by Uucklen's Arnica Salve. r' It's the world's best for eruptions, sores 8Dd all skin diseases. Only 25c at A. G. Luken & Co. 's. Thanksgiving Rates via the C. R. & M. The C Ii. & M. will sell round trip licktts to all points on their line at rcta of fate and one-third. Selling dates November 27th and 2Sth. Good returning November 2Sth. C. A. Blair, Tel. 4.4 City Ticket Agent. Sundav Rates to all Points On the C. R. & 91. The C. R. & M. made a Sunday rate to all points on their line one fare for the round trip. Tickets good returning same day only. Sunday rates to Cincinnati $1.95 for the round trip. Trains leave here 9:30 a. m. returning leave Cincinnati 7:30 p. m. arriving at Richmond 9:35 p. m. C. A. Blair, City Ticket Agent. Phone 44. FIRE AfAR.BI BOXES. FIRST DISTRICT. South of Main, West of Seventh Stree 12, First and south C, Piano factory 13, Second and south B 14, Fourth and south D 15, Fifth and south B 16, Fifth and south H 18, Seventh and south C SECOND DISTRICT, fouth of Main, between 7th and HUsts 21, Eighth and Main 23 Eighth and south E 24, Seventh and south G 25, Ninth and south A 26, Tenth and south C 27, Eleventh and Main 28, Eleventh and south J THIRD DISTRICT. Ponth of Main, East of Eleventh Stree 31, Twelfth and south B 82. Twelfth and south E 34, Fourteenth and Main 85, Fourteenth and south C 86 Eighteenth and south A 87. Twentieth and Main FOURTH DISTRICT. North of Main, West of 10th St. to River 41, Third and Main, Robinson's shop. 42, Third and north C 43, City Building, Fire Headquarters 45, Gaar, Scott & Co 46, No. 1 hose house, north 8th street 47, Champion Mills 48, Tenth and north I FIFTH DISTRICT. West Richmond and Sevastopol. ' 5. West Third and Chestnut 61, West Third and National road,' 62, West Third and Kinsey 63, West Third and Richmond avenue 54, Earlham College 55, State and Boyer 56, Grant and Ridge 57, Hnnt acd Maple 69, Grant and Sheridan 59, Bridge avenue. Paper Mill SIXTH DISTRICT. North cf D Street, East o rnth Stre 61, H.-ilroad Shops 'i, Kr.tton's Coian Factory 6-5, H .i t .-r I.'trLU Works H, Wavic Agricultural Worka .". T-; -.:::; City MiU Works ), e.-trt.'tt Carriage Co t7, Vb.r'i.th iid north H itVtfcTH 1 STRICT. 3etv.ee r, Mais and North D 6ts,;E10tl 7, Ninth rd north A 71, Eleventh and north B 72, Fourteenth and north C 73, No. 3 hose house, east end 74, Eighteenth and north C 75, Twenty -econd and north H SPECIAL SICRALS2- 2-2 Patrol call 1-8-1 Fire out 1 3-3-8 Fire pressure 3 Fire pre are eg 10-10-10 Natural gas ofl i (10 Natural aaa on 1
7I MM
Pennsylvania Lines TIME TABLB. In Effect Sunday, Nov. 24, 1901,
Trains raa fey atnl HaaUhoat It Ckdnaai Cfaaoaaad Accoaaodal Haaultoa C U. K. a L Cta. Ace. laaHaaawalte Um. Nw York ft St Looia Mall 4 a a a StLouia 1 4 4)ia i it a I $ Indian apoaa Acc imib i Vorfc & St Bouia Mfl mo 15 a m Naw Y01 V ft St Loiua 'p,,.., 1 .5 a at m St Louta lUnuwd Mjl ), i vv s. U Faat Mail !- Bradford & IndpU Acc 2 1 15 a m 3 OBI oa m SS 9 Bl SP $" ajat iS9' Locaaawert Acc C&acaco Fast Mail A Eap 11 S a Cincinnati ft I-mnaport Atr u P Cia. ft Cfcicaco Nat Kap it S a Dajtaa S nsala Lisa Xaoia Spt'ad. ft CoU. Acc s it DayM Xaaaa a Cofcunba. n oj a Daytoa Pitta. Maw Voaa o 05 a Cola. Pitta, ft Naw York 4 UP Dayaoa ft Xamia arr 00 a Maw York Uaaiaaa 9 oa p Plej . Urfc 4. Sslaiean St Louia a Nta York Mail tjt Indpl. A Cola. Acc it Pitta ft Eaat Mail ft Eap St Unit Uamtaad Mail at S 5 5JI at as ai ssn at 7" a ' a. lutlt at uradtora ncc .. 3 55 p m it 30 a a raw! RaaMa Ry. FtW.,0 R. ft Petoaker Ea. 5:40a m j:o B a rad Kapida A Mack Mail a joa tooaaa Northlaad Iimwi ,.,., , 11 f a a 35 J Dairy. AO ochor tralaa aaHy J Cincinnati, Richmond 4 Muncle R. R. rasaagi Seltaaala la Effaat Hei Oetabar 7, ISOI. EAST AND SOUTH. Line to Cincinnati, Hamilton and Southern Potato
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STATIONS Richmond ... M S. Kichmo'd " Boston " Witts " KitcheU CVge Grove ArviaC H & D Haa iltn ' Cincinnati M No. 2 connects at Cincinnati with the C. A 0 Ar Ashland. ...:t:.S4 nm Ar Cbarlet ton 6:23 1 Pa White Sulphur :i7 pm Baltimore 7:67 am New York ...J:00 pm Via B. a O. Arrive Chillicothe.8:18 pm Washington b:4l pm Philadelphla...l0:15 am washinc-ton 6:47 1 Philadelphia 10OS 1 Arrive Parkeraburf .. 8:00 Baltimore .. 7 60 New York 11: at No. connects at Cincinnati with Arrive Arrive 4V C km Lexin(fton....l(h J0 pm t'hatianoofo .. 6 :06 Hirmingham:K5 am Meridian -Ji:a0 New Orleanaa:lu pm WEST AND NORTH. Line to Muncie, Cleveland, Buffalo and tha
a l2 a, STATIONS -a. aJ zl &t ill Lv Richmond 10 33 am 5 43 pm a 13 pa Wiiluunab'g 1059 am 611pm leoapa ' Economy 11 11 am 684 pm IO 4 paa 44 liuntville m 11 a6 am 640 pm ta 3J Baa M Blountsville 1135 am 630 pm 4) paa Med lord .. 1148 am 703 pm leaapa Ar W anci.. ia oa pm 7 ao pm Bits pa finaton is 5 pm 7 44 pm 11 40 paa " Fowlerton M is 40 pm a ao pm 11 99 paa Joneboro ... 12 35pm I 8 ao pm is ao am
No. 3 connect at Muncie with the Biz Knickerbocker Special. Arrive Arrive Elwood 8:31 pm Tipton . JaBB Lafayeit 10:40 p m No. 1 connect at Muncie with la. B. A W. Arrive Arrive Redkey. Celina Kind) ay 8anduaky .. .3:50 pm Portland . :0 pm Lima....... 7 08 pm fpaioria . :UU pm .4:11 F Stop for Passengers. At Muncie No. S connects with tha Bis; Feast Knickerbocker tJpecial. C. A. BLAIR, City Ticket Ageat. Cincinnati Northern R. R Trains pass Watt Maasheatat dally aacapt s follows : Mart BsMtael. SsMrtJi No. t.. ..: t a W. i.....ftii No. . :pa No. 1 a: a Sat No. 3 aad 4 run only befaca Clxkciuaad eaat Ta Wert. No, t and a raa rhroush batwaea Ckacaaaaa T. 0. M. Salila.ler, S. I. A. Totaoo. O. Richmond and Daytoa Leave Richmond via P V C ft Bt L . Ry Co this am :Ifl Leave atoa via Daytoa A Westers Traction Co ajOam r.0l Arrive Daytoa. . ll:0Sam Saaff BBTUBJiiae. Leave Daytoa via Dayton ft Western Traction Co 8:00 am lfeOSl 6 00 pm tsj I Leave Eatoo via P O C ft Bt L By Co Ir am IS aa 6 47 pm Arrive Richmond yta P O O A St L By Co 10 56 am 7:aVpm 11 bstss or raaa. Round trip, Bicbmoad and Eaton, via P. C C ftbLBy Round trip, i.joon and Dayton, via D. ft W. Traction Co . , Rcuad trip, Richmond acd Dayton . -!- ED. F. DALBEY -BBWafc O II-0 1-liOOK .tVOl! K A SPEtlALIV GEOUPS PICNICS St PARTIES GATHrKlSG?. I
4S N. EIOIITII ST. r N t ti tint Hi
