Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 16, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 October 1892 — Page 6

:he

lOloaks, Mantles Magnificent-

fn.t

ills

Traps

WeVcGoIrij? to Wear TM# JVbWr —Some Re?pal Parte Production*--Tho New Shapes end Lvagtba—

Opera and Carriage Cloaks.

IcoPVRicnT. 1852.)

Yes. crpsscs are bright and brilliant mud gay *and so are hats. startlingly so: ind so are gloves—the brightest-colored gloves you ever saw are worn these days on the streets but the wraps and cloaks dfoT this .coming season far excel in magnificence, richness and brilliancy all the handsome dress goods and gowns, all the beautiful headgear yet displayed. They're positively overawing, these rich brocades and ctotlis, with their beading and fringes and linings and trimmings. We cant quite tell whether wc like them or not we're only wonderfully impressed by ihcra just at present.

Are they very different from last year's styles? Well, the mantles are a little longer some of them fall a trifle beyond the old three-quarter length, Borne of them go down to the ground. Of course almost everything has a boxplait somewhere in its composition, unless it's just oi plain, loose box cut. A great many arc open at the nes'c. but there are still more that have yokes coming closely together. Just yet plain garments for ordinary wear are in the background, and these magnificent creations claim all attention.

One most gorgeous wrap Is of dark •green tnelvet shot with dull red- It is trimmed at the edge and collar with very full feather trimming of the two colors combined. There is a great deal of gold on the wraps—bands in front, Bleeve pieces and collar trimming of it.

A dark fawn wrap which touches the aground has a regular overwork design

FOIt AUTUMN WEAR.

in black passementerie and braiding •which deflnes a jacket on the long garment. Over each high shoulder hangs long fringes, also in black.

Another fawn is double breasted, and has a row of immense buttons down each side, nearer the back.

A rich bright green cloth has a turnback collar of black Astrakhan, with rovers so short and broad that they seem to form a yoke then the astrakhan is continued narrowly down the front, and also in bands from under the arms.

One very peculiar garment has a front of soft brown cloth, which hangs like the box, straight from the shoulders. No buttons or fastenings arc visible, but after close examination 3'ou discover that it is confined at the side under two small plaits that have been taken in the cloth. Tho back is the same box shape, but is made of brown velvet. On both back and front is laid a richly erabroidered yoke of beading in many colors, and there aro also sleeve bands of it. The wrap is thickly wadded and lined with old rose satin.

Still another cloak has a tight-fitting, short-waisted jacket, completely covered with delicate braiding. From the jacket hangs the skirt of the garment, long and plain in front, but in the back made of two box plaits. Over the skirt,

THK I.KOI'AKD AS I) SCARLKT CLOAK.

almost completely covering it, falls a deep fringe of silk and beads. Another wrap, of three-quarter length, is striped with alternate bands of black plush and rich brocade. A black stripe strikes the middle of the back, and upon it is laid a row of immense jet buttons.

A beautiful short coat, that is, comparatively short, is made of black bengal inc. Astrakhan of beautiful quality forms a turn down collar, a yoke back and front, and a narrow front which runs down straight to the edge of the coat. At each side of the astrakhan front, starting at the yoke, fall bos plaits of the bengaline. At the back the only adornment is one large double plait. It is very dressy, and yet more quiet than any of the others.

Such a funny one I saw that I aknott laughed, and wondered how anyone could ever get into iu First, at the top* cut, "but very tight fit,

The box cut ran down and then there a fall skfa&af

lawiai, covered vfith fringes. flic oiver portion looked move "like a ruffle 'than anything el^i3ft w&s such a iu S ridiculous looking cloak

Jthat

I should

(think no woman would ever wear it but then, it was one of the very latest from Paris, you know.

I also looked at two exquisite opera cloaks, both of which touched the groumt One was of white brocade, with delicate gold thread and yellow silk pattern all over, ahd trimmed profusely with white fur. The other was pale yellow, also in brocade, and was

nrs jrarw •cajPR.

trimmed with swansdown. They were so soft and warm-looking, and lined sc prettily, that I don't vwonder they had so many admirers.

Velvet sleeves are 'worn again with cloth wraps and cloaks to considerable extent. They very often transform a coat that is really perfectly good, but has been worn so much that its owner is tired of it.

All coats, for the most part, have bosplaited backs. They look most grotesque, but what would you? One must follow Paris, and Paris has decreed it.

A magnificent carriage cloak is of pearl gray velveteen, and falls from a deep rounding yoke of sage green plush in two box plaits in front, and two likewise in back. Pearl gray passementerie bands with silk tassel ends fall from the sage yoke over on the plaits. The sleeves have a top puff of sage, and a tight puff of gray below.

There's another that is just as pretty as can possibly be not a bit gorgeous, only truly original and pleasing. The material is vigogne, the color is bright leopard, that pretty shade which goes so well with a bright scarlet The cloak is cut loosely, falling more than a three-quarter length. It stands apart a little at the throat, and then the looseness is gathered together at the belt, so that there is a narrow open down the front. There is a little pointed fancy belt catching the looseness. Over the cloak fall two capes, lined with dainty scarlet silk. One is quite long, falling to the waist, the other is vciy short, just reaching the shoulders. It is put on full, this secondjpne, in regular deep waves. The cap® and the cloak proper are all trimmed with a single row of scarlet silk braid. The high standing collar has three rows of it. Now this cloak is designed to wear with a dress, finely striped in exactly the same shades as those of the coatleopard and scarlet. And when the dress and the cloak were laid together side by side I almost envied tho girl who was to wear it

All the new capes have decidedly no puff. They fall over the shoulders perfectly plain, many in the old triple style. Scarcely anyone would call them pretty, except, perhaps, the single ones, rery short, that just come together at the neck and then slope off to either side. A great velvet niche, which runs all around, adds character to these, and broad velvet ribbons tie the capo at the neck. Eva A. Schubekt.

A POOR

HITCHING POST.

The Strunjro

Chicago

Mlsfortuno cf Washerwoman.

While the sun was trying to shine yesterday afternoon a woman came out of a little houso that stands almost under the shadow of the Clark street viaduct, jammed up against the warehouses, the railroad tracks and the limpid river. She was a woman of girth and puffed aloud as she carried a basket of damp washing that bumped on hoi knees.

Setting the basket down she lifted coil of rope and looked about for moment, as if selecting something tc lasso. One end of the rope she fastened to a nail in the corner &/ hci dinirv kitchen. The other end she twisted about, a telegraph pole thirty feet away. Then she strung the line with sopping flannels and a few whits articles that'dripped with indigo.

When the line was crowded full the basket was not empty. There were no more telegraph poles. The slack of the line would not roach back to the house. On the sidetrack stood the freight cars that had been there since Saturday evening. The woman unloosened the rope from the telegraph pole and found that it would reach the end of the ear. She tied it there. After filling her mouth with clothespins she decorated the new section with some white shirts and other things that waved phantom gestures in the smoky air. This being accomplished, she took a small bucket and went in the general direction of Kinzie street.

No sooner had she disappear^! than a freight engine came backing down and cautiously approached the two cars. A brakemao waved his arms and there was a bump. The festoon of domestic wear dropped until the pillow cases dragged in the cinders. The brakeman waved his arms again, the cars snored, the lino lifted itself, tightened, and just as- the woman came around the corner there was a snap. The rope with its fluttering attachments waved like the tail of a kite as the cars rolled away. The woman was asthmatic, and gave up the chase after a few hundred yard*. As -for the brakeman and engineer, they did not know what had happened until they took an inventory way station.—Chicago News Reo»

1E

THE SHUT-IN SOCIETY

UNIQUE AND HELPFUL ORGANa IZATION FOR INVALIDS.

& Remarkable Work That Is Being Done by Unfortunates, Most of Whom Are Women, to Aid One Another—Variotis

Branches of the Good Work

Fifteen years ago Miss Jennie M. Drinkyater, now Mrs. Conklin, of Madison, k7

J., was shut in her room by along and serious illness. Time hung heavily on her hands, and she conceived an idea so simple, and yet so obviously full of common sense, that the wonder is that some one had not thought of it long before. She entered into a correspondence with another invalid personally unknown to her, in order that they might be mutually cheered and entertained. This was the origin of that remarkable organization of invalids known as the Shut-In society, which has a membership of many thousands in every country of the civilized world.

The correspondence so modestly begun proved so pleasant that it was extended to other invalids, until in 1884 the correspondents 'organized themselves into the ShtitIn society, and the next year the society was incorporated under the laws of the state of New York, with Mrs. Conklin as president. Of course the primary qualification for admission is illness. "To be a sufferer shut in from the outside world constitutes one a prpper candidate for membership in this society," says the constitution. But there is a character qualification also, and all applicants for membership must "send with their application, if possible, the name of their pastor or their physician, or of some associate member of the society, as an introduction."

The associate members are not invalids, but "being in tender sympathy with the suffering, volunteer in this ministry of love." Each associate member volunteers to correspond with members in a certain assigned district and is expected to subscribe at least one dollar a year.

The society is managed by an advisory board composed of associate members. As might naturally be expected, the society is largely composed of women. There is a man's department, however, under the direction of Mr. Will S. Mather, of Chicago. There is a flourishing children's department, the members of which are popularly known as the "sunshine makers." It is under the direction of Miss G. L. Lewis, of Boston, and Miss Josie A. Jones and Miss Abbie A. Miller, of Dorchester, Mass.

There is also a department of children associate members, which have formed themselves into a band called the Little Cup Bearers to the King. It is composed of boys and girls from six to nineteen years of age, who pledge themselves to carry sympathy and comfort to some little sufferer. It is found that children enter into this work with great enthusiasm, and the little cup bearers have helped many a poor and weary sufferer to become a sunshine maker.

Another department of the society is the wheelchair committee, of which Miss 0. Ross, of Newark, N. J., -i« the active manager. Its object is to alleviate the con dition of the shut in members by furnishing them, when possible, with a wheel, chair. When a wheelffhair invalid diea, a little silver plate is fastened oil the back of the chair inscribed, "To the memory of and it is sent back to the committee, to be used by some other member. The King's Daughters are interested in the wheelchair work, and in fact a number of circles of King's Daughters have been formed among members of the Shutin society. Many of the members themselves work for the wheelchair committee.

The library of the society is one of its important features. Books, magazines and papers aro freely sent to invalids in every state in the Union, as well as to many foreign countries. In Philadelphia a Pass It-Along club has been formed, which circulates periodicals among invalids. The Open Window is the name of the excellent monthly publication issued by the society.

It is an interesting fact that a missionary spirit has been developed in this society, although its members might well be excused if they thought only of themselves. There is an "Invalid's auxiliary," which is now supporting a native nurse iu the Margaret Williamson hospital at Shanghai, China, and is also raising a fund to endow a bed in the same hospital, to be known as the "Shut-In society's bed." Another branch of missionary work done by the society is the writing of letters to prisoners. About 1,700 letters have been sent to Siug Sing alone. They are sent unaddressed to the chaplain, who addresses them personally to the convicts. The name and address of the writer are not, however, given to the convict. It is the testimony of the chaplain that these letters have done much good.

The letters written by invalids to other invalids have resulted in many warm friendships, and the term "letter friend" has become a recognized phrase in the society. The organization of tho society has brought out the fact that a surpris ingly large number of invalids have hem. "shut iu" for a long term of years, man} for twenty-live or thirty years. One men ber of the society, who died last year, had been confined to her bed for sixty years

The condition of such long term patiehU is apt to become very desolate, as theti early friends die or drop away and thej are made to feel that they are a burden oa those who are charged with their care. To imxeh invalids the society comes as a blessed boon, for it not only puts them in direct communication with many fellow sufferers and sympathetic friends, but the various interests of the secicty give them something to think of, and thus break the dreary monotony of their lives.

One of the best known members of the society is Miss Jennie Casseday, of Louisville, who has been confined to her room for twenty-five years. She has acquired a widespread reputation as the founder and national president of the Flower mission. —New York Tribune.

Mothers* Debts to Their Daughters. Were it not for their daughters thou sands of mothers would scarcely ever be able to go outside the hocse for an evening's pleasure or change of scene. Mothers are under great and many obligations to their girls, many of which are entirely overlooked and remembered only when their daughters belong to some one else.

The average girl returns from school almost as neat and prim as she left, home. As a rule she does not climb trees, tumble Into rivers, play truant or give her mother hours of work repairing injured garments on the contrary, she is a distinct help to ber mother. There is the baby tojmind, the^ things to iron, antimacassars, stockings and a host of other articles to make

-*S

iSiil

SATURDAY EVENING'. A Tfi

CHILDREN'S COLUMN.'

~r *wr"" t. Three Little Princes. Three very winsome children are the little princelings Gustavus Adolphus, William and Erik, sons of the crown prince of Sweden and Norway. Their father, duke of Gatland, is the oldest son of King Os-, car of Swede, and Norway.

Although tie young princes live much, of their time at Tullyarn, a castle.by the seaside, they, like other children, are fond of visiting their grandfather. When they come to see him the king takes great pleasure in giving them military drill, and they go through their exercises on the lawn, where the people of the neighborhood can stand outside and watch them. Prince Erik tries to do like his elder broth-

•ers, and his going through the military •drill is very cunning. The king tells them to present arms to the people, which they •do amid loud cheers.

There have been some famous kings named Gustavus, so the Swedish people love the name. Should this little prince ever become king he will be known as •Gustavus Adolphus VI. When he grows to be a man he is to be a soldier, and if he is as brave and good as his grandfather and father he will be a great man. Before him are heavy responsibilities, and although his military drill is now play, his future work will be very hard.

1

His brother. Prince William, is to be a sailor. The boys go boating and fishing, and are fair swimmers. They can read and write, and have taken up many other studies. They have many things to learn and must be at their work early.

Their mother was Princess Victoria of Baden, granddaughter of the late Kaiser Wilhelm I. She is a sweet, lovely woman, and she devotes herself with fond pride to her little princelings. Their grandfather is not only a king, but a poet, a soldier and a renowned writer. His family were raised from simple, obscure burghers to the rulers of the finest kingdom in Europe.— New York Mail and Express.

That Owl.

Did you ever see an owl? Well, I have seen one of tho very biggest ones in the world.

Owls can't see much when the sun shines, but they can bito just as well then as any other time. I found that out down to Uncle Frank's last summer.

He caught a great one in a trap the next night after I got there, and he thought he would try and tame that owl for a pet. Humph! I shouldn't want to pet him much.

He put a little chain around one leg and hitched him upon the top of a big pine stump across the road from his store. He keeps the postoffice, and almost everybody stopped to see that owl, for they had never seen one so largo before.

Uncle Frank kept him on the stump in the daytime, but he turned him loose in the store chamber in the night to catch mice. He grow fat and shiny, but the better we fed him the uglier he was. One day a lot of us boys were standing around him, brushing his feathers a little to see him snap at us, for he couldn't see where to hit us very well. It was fun for us, but I s'pose io wasn't so much fun for tho owl, and it wasn't for me, either, before I got done with it.

Joe Braddock said I didn't dare to put my finger on the owl's beak, and I did it. It made him awful mad, but it was fun for us boys and we didn't care. Somehow boys don't care until—afterward.

I kept putting my finger on his beak and he caught it at last. Oh! but didn't he squeezel I guess he would have taken it off if Uncle Frank hadn't run out and made him let go.

One thing is certain, us boys let that owl alone after that, and I don't care if I never see another as long as I live.—Youth's Companion.

Tliis Hoy Did Not Even Laugh. A New York boy who rejoices in the Christian name which the Father of his Country has made immortal is making his annual visit to the home of an aunt. The faithful domestic who yearly welcomes the terror and delight of her existence in bis person undertook an extra compliment to him recently in the shape of a birthday cake. The goody was secretly made and proudly brought on at supper with his name sweetly but incorrectly spelled out in spotless icing.

The tact of the small boy hr* been estimated as an unknown quantity, but George did not betray by so much as a twinkle of the eye the roaring merriment that consumed him when confronted by the sugared and uncompromising "Gorge" —which must be set down to his everlasting credit.—Her Point of View in New York Times.

Naughty Tommy.

Tommy is a naughty kitten. He doesn't want to go to school with his sister but his mother has just come to the door, and

and mend, to say nothing about messages Tommy is a little bit afraid he will get a to run and numerous other ways at reliev- whipping, and so he has concluded to go. log her mother of household duties.—Lon-

See bow he l» pouting, with one littl» paw in his month.

Miserly. Kot Eicon

bvero me across our

How many of us whei house or our wardrobe many little things utter eyes at the present momenfc. yet. which are put carefully away, thinking tliat they may come ir good some time? This programme is carried out spring and fall, year in and year out, until after awhile the closets are littered up with useless, half worn garments, and the storeroom looks like a genuine hotel des invalides for crippled chairs and sofas, unhung pictures and faded draperies. Now dear, careful souls, there is not one bit of economy in hoarding up all those things unless, being of a philanthropic turn of mind, you desire to give the poor little innocent moths a good square meal.

Suppose you do put all these odds and ends by for future use, do you believe you can ever put your hands on them when you want them? True economy is of a very different type from this, and the spirit of the miser is not the one that leads to wealth. Be careful and prudent. If a dollar can be saved by making over an old gown save it If the summer's bonnet can be trimmed with last winter's feathers use them, but do not save a great lot of accumulated dress goods, millinery, odds and ends and feeble furniture just because ten years from now you might have occasion for a solferino button, a gray tip or an antiquated hassock. Give them to those who can make present use of them, but do not accumulate a lot of worthless stuff just because you think at some distant period -it may come in good.—Philadelphia Times.

Renovating Carpets.

It sometimes happens, even when a carpet has been taken away and thoroughly beaten, that its surface is soiled with grease, etc., or in the case of a light ground it is really in want of a good wash. Supposing the carpet to be tacked down after beating, the mode of procedure is as follows: Obtain a round ball of carpet soapprice twopence halfpenny, I believe—from the oil shop. Take two towels—one wet, the other dry—and a pan of warm water and begin upon a section of your carpet. Damp it with a towel wrung out of the hot water, but do not make it thoroughly wet. Rub the soap dry all over the surface thus damped, and then use a fairly wet cloth vigorously over the soaped part. A lather is thus produced which must be washed away in turn with the towel wrung out of tho water again. Finish by drying as far as possible with the dry cloth. Each section of the carpet must be thus treated until the whole surface is thoroughly clean, and I am quite sure the result will lx* found equal to the trouble thus expended. —Practical Housekeeping.

What Womanly Woman May Do. The womanly woman with her noble ambitions, her pure views of life and hqr sunny nature can spur a man on to higher and better work and let him see in her eyes the first glimpse of heaven. Such a one makes a true wife and model mother, and the life of a man blessed in this way is enriched by a treasure absolutely priceless. With more noble, upright and true women in this world there would be fewer dissolute, unprincipled men. A good woman can almost always make a good man, unless indeed he is beyond redemption when she takes him in hand.—Philadelphia Times.

It is not unusual for colds contracted in the fall to hang on all winter. In such cases catarrh or chronic bronchitis are almost sure to result. A fifty cent bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy will cure any cold. Can you afford to risk so much for so small an amount? This remedy is intended especially for bad colds and croup and can always bo depended upon. For sale by drnggists. ___________ ^ct'

Are you nervous? Use Dr. Miles' Nervine.

Coughing Leads to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once.

Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable

Is a Harrftloos, Positive Cur© for the worst form of Female Complaints, all Ovarian troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling and Displacements, also Spinal Weakness and Lcucorrhcea.

It will dissolve and expel tumors from the uterus in an early stage of development, and checks the tendency to cancerous humors.

It removes faintness, flatulency, weakness of the stomach, cures Bloating, Headache, Nervous Prostration*,

General Debility, Sleep­

lessness, Depression and Indigestion, also that feeling of Bearing down, causing pain, weight, and backache.

It acts in harmony with the laws t$at govern the female system under all circumstancc9. For Kidney Complaints of either sex this Compound unsurpassed. Correspondence freely answered. Address in confidence LYDIA E. PINKHAM MED.CO., LYNN, Mas*

THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AMD NEW AND MY COMPLEXION 18 BETTER. Mr doctors&r* it sets gently on the atoniacb, ift« tiMllIIIUHJM. •nil lii nlf iMtif lurttre. Thli drink

Simadetornbcrt*,aadtsjwpireri torn*m eaUly Mlem. Itucalled

MEDICIHE

Mil It at fife, cad $1X0

mmst

yiice supposed to bo the

\nichK»£ royalWf To-day, many grateful •people know thauhe "sovereign remedy" is Ayer's SarsaparilV This powerful alterative extirpates "the evil" by thoroughly eliminating all the staumous poison from the blood. Consumption,Yatarrh, and various other physical as well\s mental maladies,, have their origin in

SCROF\

When hereditary, this disease, manifests itself in childhood by glandular swellings, running sores, swollen joints, tad general feebleness of body. Administer Ayer's

Sarsa-

parilla on appearance of the first sjnipt "My little girl was troubled with ay, scrofulous swelling under one of her/ The physician being unable to effect £cur I gave her one bottle of

Ayer's

Sarsaparilla, and the swelling disappeared." —W. F. Kennedy, McFarland's, Va. "I was cured of scrofula by the use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla."—J. C. Berry, Deerfleld, Mo.

I was troubled with a sore hand for over two years. Being assured the case was, scrofula, I took six bottles of Ayer's

Sarsaparilla

and was cured."—H. Hinkins, Riverton, Neb.

Prepared bv Dr. J. C. Aver & Co., Lowell, Mnss. Bola by nil Druggists. Price $1 Bix bottles*

Cures others, will cur© you

UC MI Med IiU Opportunity! DON'T Mia* lib Tours, Render. The mnjority neglect their opportunitloa, and from tlmt cn\i»o live in povovty nuil (lie in obscurity I llarrowinj? despair is tho lot of mnny, ix.i they look back on lost, forovorlost, opportnnity. T.lftel*|tn*sIntt! Roach out. Be up and doine. Improvoyour opportunity, nndsocuroprospoi'lty. prominenco. poaco. It was said by a philosophor, that "the Goddess of Fortuno offers golden opportunity to each person at somo period of llfoj ombraco the chance, and sheponrsotit her riches fail to do so and alio departs, tiertr to return." How ahull you find tho GOLDKX opportunity! Investigate every chBiice thai appears worthy, and of fair promise that Is what all successful mon do. Hero is an opportunity, such as is not often within tho reach ot laboring pooplo, Improvod, it will glv^ at least, a grand start in life. The GOI.PKN opportunity fon many Is horo. Money to be mado rapidly and honorably, by any indnstrlous person ofolther sex. All agos. \on can,do the work and llvo at homo, wherovor von aro. Even bo* glnners aro oa*lly earning from to SlO por day. Yoo, can do as woU if you will work, not too hard, uut industriously and yon can increase your Income as yon goon. Yoo can give sparo time only, or all your time to tho work. Easy to learn. Capital not required. Wo start you. All l» comparatively now and really wonderful. We Instruct ana. •how vou how, IVoc. Failure unknown among our workers. So room to explain horo. Write and learn all free, by return mall, unwlso to dolay. Addross at once, lm« IXnUetl its Co., Box tjSO, Portland, Maine,

It Cures Concha, Oolda, Sore Throat, Oronp,'Whooping Cough, Bronchitis anl Aetbma. A emnin curc fo» Consumption In Crst stagen, and a sure relief In ftdvanoed stages. XHe at onat. Ycu viill ooe tho csocUcnt effect ftftor taking tho first dose. Bold by fi«»l«» otetywhetft Lares SottlM, CO cenu and 61,00. it Cures Influenza.

I CAN

fcGENCW

A pamphlet of information and ab-/ \stractof tho laws, showing llow to/ ^Obtain Patents, Caveats, Trade/ ^Marks, Copyrights, sent free./ lAddrOOS MIINN St OO.y ^361 IJrondway,

New York.

WHERE DOLLARS ARE MADE

Tlif linpof IhetQUKKN A CRFXC'KNT ROUTE tbrouali KENTUCKY. TENNEHSKK, ALABAM A, MISSISSIPPI, nnl IvOUIKJANA OFFERS GREATER OPPORTTNIT1KS TO

SETTLERS, MANUFACTURERS &GENERAL BUSINESS ENTERPRISE

than any other part of the U.S., vent bodies ot

Coal, Iron, Timber & Farm Lands

Mm THOUSANDS of ACRE8 of U)S(i LEAF YELLOW PINE for Rale cheap. This road ran* through the thriving town* of Lexington, Danville, and Somerset, Ky. Rockwood,H»rrImftn, and Chatanoojtfl,

Tenn

Ft, Payne, Attalla, Birmingham, and Tuacalooaa. Ala.: Meridian, HnHle*bnrg, JackROn and Vlcksburg, Ml**. New Orleanx, Delhi, ti

Monroe, and Shreveport, Ln Some of the new towns *rl)l donate money and land to locate manufacturing enterprlHe*.

The R. R. Co. will make low rate* for Paaxengero and Freight, and afford Investors eveiy opportunity to examine the different locafitle*. If necMgary, win *end a repre(tentative with the party.

Fall particular*, and any required in forma* tion.'WlU be sent by mail on application to D. G/EDWARDS, G. P. A T. AgL,

J1SC.1

Q. AC.'.Route, Cl! 'CiNNATI, a,