Richmond Palladium (Daily), 2 December 1901 — Page 7

RICHMOND DAILY PAIiLADIUM, MOXDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1901

CARE OF THE TEETH. Cow to Bem-flfr Pntnr Tkea Ff Deri). Without good teeth there cannot be good mastication. Without tuoroush mastication there ccnnot be perfect digestion, and poor bealtb result;". Hence the paramount importance of sound teeth. Clean teeth do not decay. The importance of a sound first set f teeth is aa grat to the child as a sound second set is to the adult. Children should be taught to use the toothbrush early. Food left on the teeth ferments, and the acid formed produces decay. Decay leads in time to pain and the total destruction of the tooth. The substance of the following rules should therefore be impressed upon all children: The teeth should be cleansed at least nee daily. The beat time to clean the teeth U after the last meal. A small toothbrush with stiff bristles should be used, brushing up and down and across and Inside and outside and in between the teeth. A simple tooth powder or a little soap and some precipitated chalk taken up on the brush may be used if the teeth are dirty or stained. It is a good practice to rinse the mouth out after every meal. All rough usage of the teeth, such as cracking nuts, biting thread, etc.. should be avoided, but the proper use of the teeth in chewing is good for them. When decay occurs. It should be attended to long before any pain results. It is stopping of a small cavity that la of the greatest service.

How to Care Insomnia. Let sleepless people court the sun. The very worst soporific is laudanum, and the very best is sunshine. Therefore it Is very easily understood that poor sleepers siiould pass as many hours in the sunshine as possible. Many women are martyrs and do not know it. They shut the sunshine out of their liouses, they wear veils, they carry sunshades, they do all that is possible to keep off the subtlest and yet most potent influence which is intended to give them strength and tauty and cheerfulness. Is it not time to change all this. and so get roses and color in your pale hecks, strength in your weak backs? The sunlight would be a potent Intlu suce In the transformation. How to Tell Slaehroonttt. This is one rule given by a well known authority on mushrooms never touch a mushroom whose lower gills are white. Another tells us that you cannot skin a toadstool and an attempt will cause It to break off in fragments. while the covering of the nonpoisouous, on tt contrary, will peel off without the slightest dirtieulty. There Is anoth er test called the oulou test. Take half an onion, in-el off the dry outside skin and boil it with the mushrooms. If the color of the onion changes to a bluish or Mack tinge, it will indicate that poison ous fungi are present, while if the onion preserves it color there Is no danKer. Old SI oa Competition. The old man brought in the mail matter and then stopped to make some remarks: "Wuz you-alls up ter de opery bouse las' niter Xo. What was going on?" "Well, yo' orter ben dar. !ey had l:ot goins-on ober dis heah kompetishun quesohun; "What did they make out of it?" "Nigh as I cud make out dere's anudder guess er comiu 'bout dat. But whedder we gits hit er not we kno's now whut hit ar." "And what is it?" "Why, de kompetishnn whut we's gt is er matter ob how much n korporaslmn on top kin git outer de Ifoplean' how little de people khi keep for derselbs an dere ciiildlun s chimin 1'at's how hit struck me'." Despondency Is often only a sympton of dyspepsia. In dyspepsia there is a loss of nutrition which is felt by brain as well as body; the mind grows morbid as the body loses vigor. Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical trJ Discovery cures jVeSN dyspepsia and oth er diseases 01 me stomach and associated organs of digestion and nutrition. It enables the proper nutriition of the body 'and restores mental cheerfulness as well as physical strength. For about two years I suffered from a very obstinate case of dyspepsia," writes R. K. Sfcord. E.q., of 13 Eastern Ave., Toronto, Ontario. "I tried a treat number of remedies without anccess. I nnallv lost faith in them all. I was 90 far Kmc that I could not 'ar anv solid food on mv stomach for a lonir time; felt mulantkalv and drmsr. Could not sleep nor follow mv occupation. Some four months ao a friend recommended jrour -Golden Medical bisenrerr.' ASer a week's treatment I bad derived so mnch benefit that I continued the medicine. I have taken three bottles and am convinced it has in my case ac complished a permanent cure. I can cooscentoaSTiwnnewl it to the thousands of dyspeptics Uuoufnout the land.9 Accept no substitute for "Golden Medical Discovery." There is nothing "just M good" for diseases of the stomach. . Mood, sad lungs. . Dr. Pierce s Pleasant Pellets gtimulste tlliyer. - --

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WASHINGTON LETTER

Ineeial Correepoadesea. A decree has been handed down by the court of appea'.s of the District of Columbia to the effect that Washing touians can pl.sy croquet to their bean's content. They can play all night if they want to. In fact, it is the question of night playing that Is the burden of the decision. The verdict is the final decree In a suit brought In July. 10OO. It is too hot to play cro quet during the daytime in Washing ton in July, so some devotees of the game indulged In the pastime after the sun had gone down. The wickets were set out In a lot near the residence of William M. Marsh In Huntington place. One night a particularly spirit ed contest between James O. Akers and Margaret Lacy kept Mr. and Mrs. Marsh awake, and the husband and wife, after discussing the Ineonven lence which they were made to suffer, filed a bill In the district court prayin for an injunction on the ground that the croquet players were committing a nuisance. The district court In granting this prayer rendered a de cision which practically prohibited games of croquet where It was neces sary to use artificial light. The cro quet enthusiasts appealed to the su preme court of the district. The ques tion was most earnestly considered by the able Jurists composing that body, and a second decision was forthcoming to the effect that croquet was croquet until 10 o'clock at night, but after that hour It was a nuisance and should be suppressed. Mr. Akers and Miss Lacy. however, were dissatisfied with this decision, and the case was carried to the court of appeals, which, after reviewing the decisions of the other two courts, decided that croquet could be played legally In Washington all night long if the participants In the game so desired. Aa American -Skansen." Washington is to have a duplicate of the famous "Skansen." the national park and Northern museum of Stock holm. Sweden. It will form a part of the plans devised by the federal com mittee appointed for the embellish ment and beautifying of the capital. William W. Thomas. Jr.. United States minister to Sweden and Nor way, has forwarded to Secretary Hay detailed information, with plans and sketches, of this world famous institu tion. It was commenced In 1ST2 by the late Dr. Hazelius and became a na tional property in 1S80, over $2,000,000 having been expended in its establish ment. Skansen and Its annex, the Northern museum, has received the un stinted praise of visitors from every foreign country as something unique and as a historical exhibit without an equal In the world. It is an open air museum, showing the culture of ancient Scandinavia, in cluding the three Scandinavian coun tries, with Finland and Iceland. The locat?Rn of Skansen Is In the beautiful suburb of Stockholm known as the Deergarden Park. Skansen itself con tains hundreds of acres of ground, with picturesque dwellings representing ev ery Swedish province. The Interiors of the bouses show the furniture, orna ments. articles of domestic use and the provincial dresses of each period of Scandinavian history, while the build ings are surrounded by the plants and animals of each period. Revival of Honebaek Rldlaar. The bridle path around the White House lot. through the monument grounds and over the Smithsonian way and back again, laid out by the officials In charge of public grounds, is no Ion ger scorned by horsemen who lore a lively mount, for in his daily explora tions about the town Kermit Roosevelt has discovered it. and one of his favor ite pastimes now Is a tide equal unto that cf John Gilpin over the once neg lected path. Horseback riding has been revived since the advent of the president's fam ily, and the society girls of Washing ton as well as the young matrons are looking to their mounts with greater care than ever before. The boys, too, have the horseback fever, and every boy at the capital who owns a pony spends every minute possible out of school riding horseback. Milk For Wash tnirtoniana. The District chemist. Professor nird. has spent a great deal of time within the past few months in making analyses of samples of milk, and this activity has had the much to be desired effect of greatly Improving the milk supply of Washington. Perhaps less adulteration of lacteal fluid sold to the consumers bere now goes on than ever before. The guilty dairyman who adulterates bis milk with coloring matter or preservatives knows only too well that a sample of it examined by the District chemist will mean a severe penalty for the dealer in police court. Senator at Roane. While there are eighty-eight sena tors, with their families, in Washington during the season, less than twenty enter into the social life of the capital to any appreciable degree Among those who occupy prominent homes here to which they have returned are Senators Elkins of West Virginia, Hanna and Foraker of Ohio. Wet mo re of Rhode IslaDd. Hawley of Connecticut. McMtllaD of Michigan. Bale of Maine. Fairbanks of Indiana. Jones of Nevada. Quay of Pennsylvania and I-cxine of Massachusetts. Mrs. Rnoeevelf In Charity (Valid. Mrs. Roosevelt has become a member of the Needlework guild, a charity or ganized for the purpose of providing the poor with sufficient and proper clothing. To become a member of the guild an annual contribution of two new articles of clothing made of good warm material is necessary. These ar ticles may be the product of the labor of the donor or they may be purchased. a may be preferred. 1 T . f- Cam. ScHoraxs.

KING'S EVIL" Those old English Kings made history. Those old English Kings were fast livers. Those old English Kings got sick. One disease became so common to them as to be called " King's evil " a royal disease. It is now among us the well known scrofula. Those old English Kings handed it down, spread it through the nations, and here it is. Too bad Scott's Emulsion was not made in time for those Kings. Scott's Emulsion is a positive cure for King's evil or scrofula. It heals the sores, adds strength and flesh and brings good health. We'll send you a little to try. if you like. SCOTT & BOWSE, 409 Pearl street. New York.

"SHE BURNS GREEN." The DlaeoTerr of Borax la Death Valley by Aaron Winters. The greatest discovery of borax In the United States was made In the ter ribly hot region known as Death valley and in a most romantic way. The Chicago Record tells the story. In 1S80 Aaron Winters lived with his wife, Rosie. In a gulch known as Ash Meadows, not far from the mouth of Death valley. He was so fond of his wife that he would not allow her to be long absent from him, although their little hut on the side of the mountain was a hundred miles from the nearest neighbor, in a wild, rugged forsaken country. One day a desert tramp came along and spent the night at the Winters home. He told the hunter about the borax deposits of Nevada. When he went away. Winters thought that he had seen deposits of the same kind on his explorations into Death valley. Accordingly he and his wife wen together to make the search, having previously provided themselves with certain test chemicals, which when combined with borsx and ignited would produce a green flame. Having procured a piece of the substance which he believed to be borax. Winters and his wife waited for nightfall to make the test. Bow would It burn? For years thev had lived like Flutes on the desert, entirely without luxuries and often wanting for the very necessities of life. Would the match change all that? Winters held the blaze to the substance with a trembling band, then shouted at the top of his voice: "She burns green, Rosie! We're rich! We're -icb" They had found borax. The mine was sold for $20,000. and Winters took his Rosie to a ranch in Nevada. How to Waab, Velveteen. To wash velveteen prepare a lather with soap and warm water in which three-quarters of a teaspoonful of borax has been dissolved. Turn the gar ment Inside out and dip it In and out of the water. If very dirty, so:y on the wrong side and rub with the hand, being careful not to press the pile flat. Rinse in clear, softened water. If the color runs, put a tablespoonful of salt in rinsing water and if the color has run much rinse again in more water to which has been added a teaspoonful of vinegar. It will restore the color. Hang out dripping, not squeezing or wring ing at all. How to Cook Pork Fillet. Take pork tenderloin split lengthwise on the side, place the two cut parts together, tilling with bread stuffinz. ISind with thread to keep together. Flace in baking pan on bed of vegeta bles and spices. Including one-half car rot, one-half onion, allspice and cloves. Cover the meat with fat pork or bacon, place In hot even top rail for ten minutes. Return to lower oven, cook throequarters of aB hour or until done. Baste frequently with a little butter and water and garnish with stewed apples and cress. How to Make Stose Cement. To make a lining for stoves or fire places, take six parts In bulk of common potter's clay, one part of plaster of paris and one part wood ashes. Mis this together with water to form a thick cement, which must be spread thickly and smoothly In the place where the lining is needed. Fire mayf be made in the stove in a few hours. If i in a day or two cracks appear, fill them J up with fresh cement made in the same! way. and you will have a perfectly hard j and durable lining. ! Row to Make Grnpe Catennp. Six pounds of ripe grapes (Concord preferred i. two pounds of sngar. half a pint of cider vinegar, one teaspoonful each of ground cinnamon, allspice, cloves and white or black pepper, half a teaspoonful of salt. Crush the grapes with a potato masher, add half a pint of water and boil until tender. Strain and add the other Ingredients. Boil until it thickens a little. Bottle and seal. How to Clean Gilt Fmraltare. Clean eilt furniture with a sifted waiting made into a cream with alcoaoL Cover a smalj space at a time and

rUO oil 1- 1. .,, us. if spot sticks, touch it wry lightly with clear alcohol If tbrH i-j niu-b dirt or deep tarnish, wash ju;,-k!y v.itu borax soapsuds. wip- dry. tlj-n cover with the wet whiting and U-t it dry.

So Word lor Late. In ocmp.-ms!ii with the English tongue foreign tonsjuvs s-era parsimo nlous in som- ways of expression and wasteful in others For instance, it is impossible to -kick" a man in French. You must give him a -blow with tiie foot." The Portuguese do not "wiuk at one; they "close and open the eyes." In the languages of the American Indians there Is no word with which to convey the idea of -stealing." perhaps because the Idea of property Is so vague. It is related of one of the early missionaries that in attempting to translate the Bible into Algonquin he could find no word to express "love" and was compelled to Invent It. A Spelling: Bee. Some of you who think you are well np In spelling Just try to spell the words In this little sentence: "It is agreeable to witness the unparalleled ecstasy of two harassed peddlers endeavoring to gauge the symmetry of two peeled pears. Read it over to your friends and see how many of tbem can spell every word correctly. The sentence contains many of the real puzzlers of the spelltug book. London Tlt-Blts. nia Everyday Salt. Dixon 1 don't believe young ShortIelgh Is half as extravagant as people say he la. Hixon Perhaps not. but Ive noticed that he has a suit of clothes for every day of the week. Dixon Is that so? Why, be has always had the same suit on every time I met him. Hixon Well, that's the one. No Climbing-. "Ah. my friend." sighed old Skinflynt, who was dying, "I'm going a long, long Journey." "Never mind." replied the friend, who knew him. "It's all down hill.' Philadelphia Record. A Wicked Inalnnntlon. Miss Sere'.eaf Fashion seems to tend toward costumes of the last century. Miss May Budd How nice! Some people will be able to make over their old dresses. Town and Country. A hypocrite is like the letter p the first in pity and the last hi help. Chicago News. ..ev--Mtf Thry Knew Him. "Tlore's another story about the oldest inhabitant, " he remarked, looking up from his paper. "Who Is he?" she asked, although without displaying much interest. "I know," broke in the bright little girl.""" """"" "So do I," asserted the smart little boy. "You know who the oldest Inhabitant is," repeated the father in surprise. "Well, who is it. Ethel?" "It's the man who dies so often," answered the bright little girl. "You're always reading about him in the paper?" "Huh! ejaculated the smart little boy scornfully, "I guess you don't know what you're talking alvouL It't the fellow that's always remembering about cold winters and hot summers when the weather's bad." POINTED PARAGRAPHS. Some men who have dollars lack sense. What they need is change. There is plenty of space to let In the immense room for Improvement. Love may not Ik? blind at the start, but it is never able to see its finish. Lots of worry and trouble is brought on by advice that is supposed to prevent it. Sometimes it is a man's dinner that disagrees with him and sometimes it's his wife. When two women are bitter enemies there is always some man at the bottom of it. Few men have enousrh self-confidence to enable them to ignore their own mistakes. Lots of people are about half-way between what you think they are and what they pretend to be. Any summer girl is willing to compromise by returning the young man's heart and keeping the ring. The claro has a larger mouth in proportion to his size than a man. yet the clam never talks about his neighbors. Chicago Daily News. Harry' Declaration. She Oh. Harry, it is awful! Papa has fi.tbiddn you the house! He That's all right. It Isn't th bouse I am after; It's you. darling. Boston Transcript. BEST FOR THE BOWELS If yon b'Ten t a rmlkr, h rait by moremfnt of th bowvU ry day. you're ill or will be. ivp youi bo ovn, an! tn well. Fore. It the shape f ! lent pa we or pul pot-on. Is dan?vrtu. The snoottkest,uijt, most perfect way of Jteepinff Um oowfIi tieax an3 cteftUK is to t-nke CANDY CATHARTIC EAT 'EM LIKE CANDY n It. PmlataM. Pntant. Taste Good. PoOno never aiczra. hum. or Gripe. M. av un per box. .Write tor tre aaaipte. and boofclet -a Bealtb. Audi tea 633 TanaTaa uxdt coarasr. cntMt nf tobk. KEEP YOUB BLOOO CLEAT

it 1 .'V .lae-i'i-.w No Time (o Lose You cannot afford to disregard the warnings of a weak and diseased heart and put off taking the prescription of the world's greatest authority on heart and nervous disorders Miles' Heart Cure. If your heart palpitates, nutters, or you are short of breath, have smothering spells, pain in left side, shoulder or arm, you have heart trouble and are liable to drop dead any moment. Maior J. W. Woodvy-k, one of the beit known Oil operators In the country dropped dead from heart disease recently, at hit. home tn Portland. Ind bil mowing hia lawn. The Prt. Mrs. M. A. BirdsalL Watkins, N. Y, whose portrait heads this advertisement, says: "I write this through gratitude for benefits 1 received from Dr. Miles' Heart Cure. 1 had palpitation of the heart, severe pains under the left shoulder, and my general health was miserable. A few Dottles of Dr. Miles'lle&rt Cure cured me entirely. Sold by nil Drulata. Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. FLORIDA SPECIAL. Through Service Will Be Given Every Day by Pennsylvania. Announcement has been made by General Passenger Apent 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 and Florida points via Cincinnati will be resumed this winter. The schedule now being prepared will go into effect about January 4, 11102. 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. PEKKYROYAL PILLS T IHItHhMKK'S KN(,LISII aSf .t. ' ItKIt ml .oM DMIle boar. aiM tlsih. ttuy of yvmr lrwjit. or wart 4. im i irtl-Mlr-. TeatlBsalala M "Keller for l.air,"f k(ur, by r. lurk H.U. lfl.OliAlMu.uui, H. .4 rpw- axtlra nur. rHIUU 11! FIRE AI.ARKJ BOXES, FIRST DISTRICT. South of Main, West of Seventh Stne 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. t-'outh of Main, between 7th and.lltht 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. Pouth of Main, East Lof Eleventh Stree 81, Twelfth and south B 32, Twelfth and south E 84, Fourteenth and Main 8a, 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 Headquartera 45, Gaar, Scott & Co 46, No. 1 hose house, north 8th street 47, Champion Mills 43, Tenth and north I FIFTH DISTRICT. West Richmond and Sevastopol. ' 6. West Third and Chestnut 61, West Third and National road; 62, West Third and Kinsey 63, West Third arid Richmond avenne 64, Earlham College 65, State and Boyer 56, Grant and Ridge 67, Hunt and Mapie 68, Grant and Sheridan 69, Bridge avenue, Paper Mill SIXTH DIITRICT. North of D Street, East o rnth Stre 61, Railroad Shops 62, Hutton's Coffin Factory 63, Hoosier Drill Works 64, Wayne Agricultural Works 65, Richmond City Mill Works rVi, 'Westcott Carnage Co 67, Thirteenth and north H SEVENTH DISTRICT. Between Main and North D ta,'B10tfe 7, Ninth and north A TL, Eleventh and north B 72, Fourteenth and north C 71, No. 3 hone honae, east ead 74, Eighteenth and north C 7a, Twenty second and north H PCSIAI, SMMALS S-S-S Patrol call 1-S-l Fire out t Fire preaa-re o9 10-10-10 Natural gmm off tlO Nataral araa oa

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Ponnsvlvania Lines TUfB TABLE. Iu Effect Sunday, Nov. 24, 1901. TrIaa ma Try aaatral ataadard Mat,

HaaJiaa CWfcaaan - rtarnwiait Arrwandartnaa is a at 1 a i S ;o aai yaaax . 6 at ItMf i 3 : p at aajaai Haauhna ClnHanan., U. K L Cav. Acc. New York ft S Loan) i StLoata lanhan ,, - 4!ta iilti - 5 P iaia ! .oa is a aa p New York ft S gowia New York St Loaia a5ai nan St Lotus Limited Matt. it inn V - L. Fact l.. area1 . . i Bradford & Ind jus Act .1115 am 3 5P" Utm.wl Ace ima )) CStcaaw Fast Matt II Tan 11 151a as a 1 Cadsud ft Iaaapart acr 3Saa S 41 a 1 Us. ft fttrago Mlcat as -nupa sssai Xaala Spg'ad. Cote. Aoc Darasa Xaala Dayton Pitta. A New Yoak Cola. rata, ft Haw Hark Dartaa ft Xaa New York Laa UrfcftM St Loaia a New York Mail ... sti .7ai ladnta. Cote. Acc 10 is a Pwtaft East Mail ft Ea ,, . yS P at lam 1 lain in all , . , a ladpU ft Bradfora Acc... 3 55 P at saa 1 joa Ft. W..G R. ft Petoakry B 5:40a ai j: opt titutiusuiaaictam.il jopa so Niaihlsinl f nneaa ... 11 it p a a Cincinnati, Richmond A M uncle R. R. aaaaagoe Sotaoslal ! E front Ootokar 7, ISOl. EAST AND SOUTH. , Line to Cincinnati, Hamilton and Southern Poiata u 5 STATIONS o 5 2. a Richmond . " S. Rtchmo'd Boston " itu " Kitcbell " C'f ge Grova Ar viaC H & D Han ilt'n ......... Cincinnati 9 30 am 9 35 am ,S4 am 10 03 am so 15 am 10 57 am ti 35 am S 55 pat 4 00 pm j'Sl43 p 4 35 pm 5 ao pm 6 00 pm S eO 5 45f 6 oa 1 ill 6 as 1 T 00 1 T4S1 No. 2 connects at Cincinnati with the C. ft Ar Ashland a:M pm Ar Charleston 5:2.4 WMte Sulphur .9:47 pm Baltimore...- 7:67 am New York 1:U0 pm Via B. a O. Arrive Chillicothe8:18 pm Washington b;4l fm PhilaUelphia...lO: 15 am Yt ahii.rton tt:4T Philadelphia 10-.U Arrive Purkersbura;- 6:00 Baltimore 7 SO NewYork IfcaS No. 4 connect at Cincinnati Arrive Arrive with Q. Lexington.10:'30 pm ("hattanooao 6:06 HirminK ham.i:5 am Meridian 2 :B0 Mew Orleansa :10 pm . WEST AND NORTH. Line to Mnncie, Cleveland, Buffalo and the STATIONS 6? at Lv Richmond " Willmmsb'g Economy M Losantvilie M " BlounUviUe- " Med lord Ar M imrm , ,,. " Gastoa. " Fowlertoa Jonesboro w 1035 am 10 59 am zi 11 am 11 so am 11 35 am 11 48 am is os pm ta as pm is 40 pm 5 4$ pat 6 11 pm 6 4 pm 6 40 pm 50 pat 705 pm 7 so pm 744 pas I ao pat I so pm 9151 Mas 1 to t a S3 1 "431 OJ9I it IS I "! MI a 55PDI I No. SfdObBcU al Muhcie with the Bift VoaT Knickerbocker Special Arrive Arrive El wood 8:81 pm Tipton tM asm Lafayette 10:40 p m No. 1 connect at M unci with LLIW, Arrive Arrive Kedkey.3.50 pm Portland Celina 6:0" pm Ima 4:11 Findlar 7,-Qg pm Fos:oria . ,,,,,,,, 7-af pea Sandu8ky.u0 pm F Step tor Passengers. At Muncie No. connects with the Big Foaw Knickerbocker Special. C. A. BLAIR, Cltv Tk-tet Agent. Cincinnati Northern R. D' Trains pass West Manohestar dafi afoUowt: Hartal Baao.. Sa-tpj No. a ..10:301a No. 4........ y:sa p m No. 3 9:05 a 1 No. 1 4:ipi Nos. 3 and 4 run only between flnrlnaarl aa4 Ti wen. ioa. 1 ana a run tbroueh and Jackson. T. C. M. Sahlawiftr. . .A. TOUBDO, O. Richmond and Dayton Leave Richmond via FUC St L . Ry Co f.it ana fcia 1 Leave Eaton via Laytoa a Weatera Traction Co 9 50 an 44t Arrive Dayton 11 U am KB-TCnniao. Leave Ijavton via Ifayton ft Weatera Traction Co 8;00 ana HMt 1 00 pea tag 1 Leave Eaton via P C C ft St L By Co . 10-26 aen IS aa 8:47 I Arrive Richmond via P O O A St L Ry Co le-wi 7:U htm or raaa. Rocsd trip, Richmond and Eaton, via I. C ft tt. Br ! Bound trip, .aton and Ifayton, via D. ft 1 XT CUC B t0 .. Bocad trip, Richmond and Dayton . ED. F. DALBEY 4 9 f. EIGHTH ST. Photographer oi't-of-door;woek a specialty IAST)SCAPES I AXIMAISJ GBOUPS PICS Id PABTIKS 6 ATHEBIX G 9

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