Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 26, Number 15, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 5 October 1895 — Page 6
fc
THE MAiL
(Jayettegirl
If
RE* THE
A PAPEK
uAb,"
PEOPLE.
BAB'S LETTER.
W,''1
V:i
-t
|r Copyright, 1896,]
NEW YOBK, 6ot. 2,11
Too trraoh bicycle, too many bloomers and a little too much of tbe almost masculine is going to result, and we ought to be thankful lor it, in a return to tbe purely feminine. Tbe stiff sbirt has grown limper and limper, until only its collars and cuffs have any backbone^ the cloth gown has had a frill put here and a trimming there, and tbe result will be that lace frills, soft, pretty frocks and dainty looking gowns will take the place of the hideous frock that lately lias been known as tailor made. Women are beginning to think that it isn't so desirable to be up in all tbe slang of tbe day, to perfectly understand the last divorce case and to be able to talk about the latest scandal, and they are oom xnenclng to understand that in ceasing to be purely feminine they chance oeasing to be at all. Who wants to have anything to do with a woman who can stop a street car with a whistle? Fancy weeping out the greatest sorrow of your life on a tailor-made girl Fancy asking for some advice, advice about an important question, of a girl whose tie Is just I V" like yours, whose sbirt collar is as masculine as possible, and who assumes a pair of bloomers when she rides her metal horse! Awful! I think they are worse than awful. I think they are— t-"- there is only one word to exprest* it— damnable.
THE WOMAN ON A WHEEL.
A woman looks like anything but a woman on a bicycle, and I don't believe that going out on a bicyle is going to make them a bit more healthy than if tbey walked, nor is it going to make them a bit more womanly, nor a bit more loveable. Up jumps Miss Pert and asks me If I want women to be fools. No, I don't; but I think a good many of the fools are on the bicycles.
says Miss Pert, "you regard wo
men as inferior to men?" Well, yes, in some respects. But there are women who are so far superior to men that mas Ci culine eyes can nevei reach up to them
Then there are women who are decidedly inferior. And then there are other women who are delightful, and desirable and companionable.
WOMEN "WHO ARE ON THE LEVEL.
I believe in women cultivating their brains why shouldn't they? But I think f^that, no matter how muoh the brain cul^"Vtlvatlon may go on, it must always be T' confessed by the people who are willing to tell the truth that the average man's brain is one-third larger, and, I believe, one third stronger, than the average woman's. But, women are nice—some woen. And, oh, can't they endure pain and privation and encourage some man for whom they care!
A BRAVE QIRIi IN THE FAB WEST.
f: Think of a girl, a very fashionable girl at that, who bad a fine wedding with satin and orange blossoms, and diamonds and pearls, and all the wonderful things that usually appear at weddings when people have plenty of money, think of this girl going with her husband way out to the far, far west and living, not in a comfortable little cottage, but in a hut.
She and an Irish laundress were the only women there, and when the men were ordered out, she stood in front of that hut and waved the flag until tbe last soldier was out of sight, and then she oried. And after an awful battle her husband was brought home to ber frozen. I don't mean frost bitten, but I mean "•with fingers froten so stiff that one had to be out off, and for days and days she nursed him until one day she oould nurse him no longer, and he was
with her baby in her arms. A superb was flying around the country, grv but it didn't get there until six months afterwards, and that little baby's clothes ft were made of its mother's. There's a brave woman for you I And to-day?
Well, to-day tbe hard times have gone I, by, and she Is as bright and happy and loving as only a gentlewoman can be, and tbe beautiful diamond bands on her hands, those tiny little hands that did such good service, each tell of the time when she smiled the regiment off and bravely waited for them to come back.
juBt
able to sit up in bed witb a blanket pinned around him, and smile down at the brave at his side as she lay there
And the one that glitters the brightest glows because of ber bravery during that terrible time at Pine Ridge. You see It isn't the women who are anxious to be different from all the other women who oati endure, as only women and angels I, can, and it is not tbe new woman, but it is that woman who has lived through the centuries, always Imitating those who were last at tbe croes and earliest at the grave.
WHAT A MISERABLE, MEAN GOVERNMENT
we have got. The army is, to a degree, our aristocracy. We want the men who go from West Point to be a credit to us, and to be spoken of wherever they may to, as American gentlemen. And what do we do? (When I say ••WeM I mean the government.) Expect them to live well, entertain well, dress well, and for this they areglven—well, not the amount li of money that a good mechanic would earn. It is a disgrace. And I will tell you something else tbat is a disgrace, loo. And that Is tbe average army story.
In it, nine times out of ten, tbe women are represented as malicious gossips. Kow I don't pretend to say that the wogL men of tbe army are saints, but I think
they are a little more careful abont goe8^ aiplng than other women, because, If for no other reason, they are all thrown so closely together that It would be very bad policy to be on unpleasant terms
urn
wltlTeabh otfeerT" Then, too, when they are stationed way off hundreds of miles from civilisation they are more than generous with each other, gladly sharing the good things that come, and always ready to give a helping hand to the wo man who needs It. But the government does pay them so poorly! Our politicians get up and talk about this being the greatest country in the world, give their opinion of the army and navy, comfortably fill their own pockets and expeot the gentlemen who represent the United States to represent It well on petty in comes. We are rloh enough, and big enough and quite old enough by this time to take a oertaln pride in our army and I am oertaln no other oountry in the world acts as meanly to it as we do. have got nobody in it, so lam not asking anything for myself. I am simply stating a fact, and faots are tolerably bard things to faoe. Why, we even don't give the army a chanoe to steal, a privilege that every two-penny ha'penny contractor has.
OUT-OF-TOWN SIGHTSEERS.
New York, just now, is overflowing with our cousins from out of town, and what surprises the New York woman is the immense amount of energy that she who comes to see the sights displays. Nine o'clock In the morning finds her at Cleopatra's Needle, and half past 10 at the Battery, while she has done a little shopping in between. At 12 o'olook she is at Delmonlco's, eating lobster salad, ice cream and tea, and the whole afternoon is planned for to a minute, while the evening sees her at the theater. Tbat chestnut about the out-of-town girl having such a good time because she has been to the Bible House and had her eyeglasses refitted is a libel. The girl from out of town knows more about New York in one week than the people who have lived there all their lives, and tbe remarkable part is that she never gets lost, and always sees what she wants. Shfe has a lovely feminine fearlessness as to asking questions, and, acoording to her, everybody is so polite. Bless ber heart, it is a case of reflection, and from the man who opens the safe and shows her tbe hundred thousand dollar diamond to the policeman who escorts ber across the street they are all her slaves, especially if they happen to notice that she has lost her r's some plaoe and has a oomplexion suggestive of the magnolias SHE WAS PROUD, ROMANTIC AND REPEN
TANT.
Not long ago I drifted into an old Frenoh ohurcbyard. All around it are great, high buildings, and only on one side street is the iron gate of entrance visible. Few people are buried there nowadays, and the tombstones are sunk and discolored, and one almost has to trace a name with one's fingers to discover who is the sleeper underneath. A cross of gray stone, muoh discolored, bent over, and certainly very, very old, is in a far corner, and was the one for which we were searching. The letters were cut so deep that they were quite plain, but all the curious could discover was this "Madame Camille, died January 12, 1832." It was not told who Mme. Camille was of her father or mother, or whether she had any family name at all, but tbe friend with me knew her story, and this was it: Many, many years ago, when the fashionable world was a small one, and gentility rather than ducats gave one a position, there was an old French family named Du Clere, who had, besides several bandsome sons, a beautiful daughter, named Camille. Tail, stately, she counted among her admirers most of the fashionable men of tbe city but her pride was so great that she laughed at the idea of marrying an American, and said, "Only a man of nobility need ask for my band." One day
THERE CAME A OAT FRENCH GALLANT,
whose title was a good one, and who brought letters to all of the fashionable people of tbe city. He was entertained at tbe Du Clere house, and in a very little while it was told tbat the proud Camille was going to marry the young Frenchman, and sail away to a country where life was more in accordance with her ideas, and where she felt she would be appreciated.
Tbe wedding day oame, and there never was a more beautiful nor a more haughty looking bride. People thought the bridegroom looked nervous, and he was chaffed by his men friends because they said ho seemed frightened. In those days newly married couples didn't exploit their happiness in great hotels, but went off quietly by themselves, and tbe stately coach, with driver and footman decorated with wedding favors, took tbe bride and bridgegroom to tbe oountry house of the Du Clere's, about twenty miles from the city. In tbe middle of the night, the neighborhood wa* awakened by aloud knocking at tbe Du Clere house, and after much conversation from out the window, Monsieur Du Clere came down and let in the strange visitor. Nobody knew just what he told, but with tbe morning sun tbe stranger and the bride's father started for the country plaoe. The gay Frenchman was never nee again. Camille was brought home, and for, months she was never seen, even at church.
The servants told that tbey had been instructed to ad drees her as "Madame Camille" and nothing else. They whispered that the messenger who oame in tbe night told that the Frenchman was a scoundrel, and tbat he had left a wife and children in the sunny land of France.
AS THE TSARS WENT ON,
Madame Camille grew oolder and prouder but there walked by her side a beautiful boy who called
ber
mother, and who tore
with tbe Christian name of Ravel tbat of Du Clere. When he was 17 he was sent to Paris, and It was understood tbat he was to 11 vo there. People grew used to seeing Madame Camille, haughty as ever, and the story of her marriage was almost
6 TBRRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, OCTOBER 5, 1895.
forgotten, when word came that her son wished herpermisslon towed. This mes sage was brought by a cousin, and in letter to follow them was to be told the name of the girl he loved, and with it would come her miniature. Then tbe proud woman broke down. By some bor rible fate, be had met and loved and told his love to his father's daugher! How did it all end? I do not know what became of the girl, but Madame Camille aleeps in the old Frenoh churchyard, and the son she loved so dearly died before he was SO in a Jesuit monastery. Yet people say that fiction is stranger than real life. I don't believe it. Ithinkthat every day there are great tragedies played out before us, and we are too blind to see them. Possibly we recognize tbe oom edy, but there is an inclination nowadays to put down the strong feelings and to count emotions as of no worth. But do you think you can enjoy if you don't suffer? My friend, it Is just the difference between blaok and white. It all goes by comparison. We oan make tbe best of it, we oan get the best from it. Tbat is what we want to do, for then, and then only, is life really worth living, on the honor of BAB.
"Bees*That Make Bad Honey.
"Lovers of the product of the busy bee will find it a wise precaution to have their honey tested as to its purity before tbey eat it or use it in a culinary way." Professor Remington gave a warning something like this at a recent meeting of pharmacists, and at the saiile time told of a Gorman who was extensively engaged in bee culture, and who had his apiary close to a sugar refinery. A lot of rank molasses was accessible to the bees, and they gorged themselves on it. The result was their honey was equally rank, and unfit for use. On another occasion the bees fed on blooming digitalis, and their honey proved to be poisonous. Natural honey therefore is liable to vary very muoh, and occasionally, when it looks best and is sweetest, it may be loaded with poison. Unscrupulous bee farmers are acoustomed to foroing their bees to increase their outputs by feeding them sweetened water. The honey of course is scarcely for use,^H Philadelphia Record,
Dore's Memory.
Dore educated his memory by observing things as he walked with the intend tion of remembering all he could of them. He dissected subjects by division and subdivision, on a system of his own, so as to lay them by in good order, to be found when he wanted them in their right places. Hamerton (quoted by Jerrold) related that "by long practice" of this kind he could carry away a wonderful quantity of faots and had even tested his memory in a contest with a photographic apparatus, a friend of his protographing a cathedral, Dore looking at it and drawing it afterward at his home, while his friend developed his photograph. On comparing the two, drawing and photograph, it appeared, muoh to the astonishment of the photographer* that Dore had omitted no detail of importance, a few minor inaccuracies be ing alone discoverable.—Joseph Hatton in Idler.
A Mighty Desert Win
Evolution of
a
An
Name.
amusing account is given'of the evolution of a name. A man named Halfpenny lived in Dublin at the end of the last century. Having been very successful in business, his children persuaded him to change his name to a more dignified one, which he did by dropping the last letter.
In the course of time the orthography was also changed, and when the man died he was buried as Mr. Halpen. The fortunes of the family increased still further, and the son soon dropped the H.
Tbe next transition was an equally easy one, and he who had run the streets as little Kenny Halfpenny came out as Kenneth MacAlpin, the descendant of a hundred kings.—-Boston Traveller.
Reception to Mr*. Hei
The committee of five ladies appointed by the Massachusetts State Federation at Clubs to arrange some fonn of reception to Mrs. Ellen M. Henrotin, president of the National Federation of Clubs, have at last secured a date for tbe occasion. Mrs. Henrotin has named Oct. 17, and the affair will be a luncheon in honor of the lady who endeared herself to so many during her last visit to our state. Mrs. Henrotin will address the ladies after the luncheon.—Boston Ladies' Journal.
1 78
That Tir*d Feeling
Is a common complaint and it is a dangerous symptom. It means that the system Is debilitated because of impure blood, and in this condition it is especially liable to attacks of disease. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the remedy for this condition, and also for that weakness which prevails at the change of season,climate or life.
Hood's Pills act easily, yet promptly and efficiently on the bowels and liver. 3So.
A
aousfiilea-
The samiel is a hotrnoxious, trioal wind, which passes over the sandy deserts of Arabia and Africa. It moves with the quickness of lightning and passes in narrow currents for a few minutes at a time. It deals instant death to every man or beast happening to face it, and it is said that it so decomposes them that their limbs fall asunder. The approaoh of it is indicated by thiok haze in the horizon, and travelers, if they have time, throw themselves on their faces, with their feet toward it, till it has passed. The sirooco is another blighting wind, which prevails in Italy and adjoining districts, about April. The West Indian hurricanes are of a totally different description, being simply vortexes of great force, and they have been know to blow heavy cannon out of a battery and carry a man over a ten foot wall.—Brooklyn Eagle. f\
Good College Oatlonk.
There is just ubout 25 per cent increase in attendance over uuy other year promised for the women's colleges that Are beginning to open their doors for the terms of 1895 and 1800. At Vnspar, Wellesley, Bryn Mawr. «nd Smith the problem as to how they can lodge several hundred more young women than the dining rooms and dormitories were built to shelter has robbed the trustees of half their pleasure during the summer vacation. "Last year six of the leading universities in the eastern states believed that they had touched their high water mark in attendance but, as severe as we make the examinations," remarked a hot and wearied secretary, sorting a gigantic heap of mail at her desk in one of these temples of feminine eduoation, "still they come. One reason of the great increase in applications," she oontinued, pausing in her preparation of a big matriculation book in which is the registry of names, "is owing to the discovery girls have made in the last few years that they can earn the money to carry them through the nine months of study by working hard during the three of vacation."
Favor Woman Suffrage.
Those
AVIIO
are in favor of woman's
suffrage i]l be gratified to learn that there aio in the new British parliament no less than 240 members pledged to female enfranchisement. And, what is more, (hoy fur the most part belong to the Conservative and Unionist side of the house and include several members of the cabinet, among others Mr. Arthur Balfour, the leader of the house and first lord of the treasury, and Sir John Gorst, the minister of education. Incidentally it may be mentioned that in olden times ladies who were great landowners enjoyed the right of voting at parliamentary elections, and there are several cases on record, notably one in 1572, when a Lady Dorothy Patington, by reason of her proprietorship of the land, enjoyed the exclusive right of electing the member of parliament for Aylesbury. In times still more remote all the voiuen freeholders of the city of London were inscribed on the list of registered voters This shows once more that there is nothing new under the sun.—New York Tribune.
She Beat the Experts.^ J,
Topeka has a young woman, aged l7, Adele Pollock by name, who for amusement learned to turn a horseshoe in her father's blacksmith shop. At a receiw entertainment for the benefit of a church Miss /.f.ole appeared in a match against two of the most expert blacksmiths in the city. Thrco portable forges were placed upon the stage. Each of the contestants was allowed a helper to blow the bellows. She appeared in a very workmanlike garb—a corduroy skirt and leather apron. Her competitors smiled indulgently at her when time was called, but became anxious, then alarmed and finally discomfited when she turned and cast a perfect horseshoe before the judges in less than four minutes. The curtain dropped on the pretty picture of the flaming forgo, and a few minutes later Miss Pollock appeared among her friends daintily clad in white, and charmed all by her graceful manner.
First Book Printed on Shorthand.-
The first work printed on shorthand writing was by Dr. Timothy Bright of Cambridge in 1598, who dedicated it to Queen Elizabeth under the title of "An Act of Short, Swift and Secret Writing by Character."
& A Miracle In $
mmmi—Missonri.
CRIPPLED AND BENT FOR TEN YEARS WITH RHEUMATISM.
Thi Case Happened In Panama, Mo., and to tbe Wonder of
Um
State*
pi (From On Earuat OUy Timet.) For yerira one of the best known men in Bates and Vernon counties has been Mark M. Woodson, now postmaster at Panama, and brother of ex-State Inspector of Mines, C. C. Woodson, of this city. The people of Rich Hill, where he formerly resided, and of his present home, remember well the bent form, misshapen almost from the semblance of man, which has painfully bowed its head half to earth and labored snail-like across the walks season after season, and when one day last month it straightened to its full height, threw away the heavy butt of cane which for years had been its only support from total helplessness, and walked erect, firmly, unhesitatingly abont the two cities, people looked and wondered. The story of the remarkable case has became the marvel of the two counties. Exactly as Mr. Woodson told it to a Timet reporter, it is hers published:
In '84 the rheumatism started in my right knee, and after a lingering illness it settled generally in my joints. I was finally able to arise, but for the past five years could only walk with the aid of crutches, and my body was bent half toward the ground. I went to the best dispensary in Kansas City, where I was treated for six weeks, and without the slightest good. I then tried a strong galvanic battery, with the same result. I then went to the City Hospital at St. Louis, where the best physicians treated me—(including Drs. Kale and Mudd)—but without result, and I came home, weak, doubled with pain and despondent. "Abont this tit time my attention was Milled to the account of a remarkable cure by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People of locomotor ataxia, rheumatism and paralysis. I ordered some of the pills as an experiment. When I began to take them, tbe rheumatism had developed into a phase of paralysis: my leg from the thigh down was cold all the lime and could not be kept warm. In a short time I was able to attend to my office duties, and I could enioy a sound and restful nighfs sleep, something I had not known for ten years. I firmly believe.
for ten years. To-day am practically and i, permanently cured of my deiao trade
terrible'and i^oniang ailment No magician of the Far &st ever wrought the miracle with his wand that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills did for me.
TO verify the story beyond all question of doubt Mr. Woodson made affidavit to the "^abscribed and sworn to before me this 3d day of March, 18M.
Joait D. MOOBB,
MODEL 41 COLUMBIA
STREET
Jfbtarv Puttie.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain all the element* necessary to give new life and rich* ness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are for sale by all drugeistx. or may be had by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N, Y., tar We. per fox, or aik box** for flM.
A GREAT COUGH REMEDY.
Perhaps you may think that Scott's Emulsion is only useful to fatten babies, to round up the angles and make comely and attractive, lean and angular women. and fill out the hollow cheeks and stop the wasting of the consumptive, and enrich and vitalize the blood of the scrofulous and anaemic persons It will do all this —but it will do more. It will cure a
Hard, Stubborn Cough
when the ordinary cough syrups and specifics entirelyfail. The cough that lingers after the Grip and Pneumonia will be softened and cured by the balsamic healing and strengthening influences of this beneficent food-medicine, namely, Scott's Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil and Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda.
Refuse substitutes. ^They are never as "good. Scott & Bowne, New York. AH Druggists. 50c. and SI.
MODEL 41 COLUMBIA
Columbia Bicyclcs.
Model 42 Columbia has been especially designed for the many ladies who prefer to ./ear knicker« bockers rather than cumbersome skirts.
Ladies' wheels also in Hartford Bicycles at lower prices—$80, $60, $50.
4
TREET IMPROVEMENT FIN4 MATE.
STREET
J. FRED PROBST,
ri Agent for the Columbia and Hartforc! Bicycles, „Vi 64? Wabash Avenue, Terre Haute.
EoTI-
Notlce is hereby given that the final estimate report of the cost of the improvement of alley between Wabash avenue and Cherry street from the west boundary line of Ninth street to west line of north and south alley between Seventh and Eighth streets, was on the 18th day of September, 1893, referred to the committee on streets and alleys, and any person aggrieved by such estimate may appear before said committee on the 14th day of October, 1895, at the office of the city civil engineer in said city and make objections thereto, which objections will be reported by said committee to the common council of the city of Terre Haute at the next regular neeting of said council after the said committee shall conclude the hearing upon paid objections, at which time objectors and all persons interested may be heard in reference to such objections before the council.
CHAHLES H. GOODWIN, City Clerk.
IMPROVEMENT FINAL ESTIMATE.
Notice is hereby given that the final estimate report of the cost of the improvement of Thirteenth and one-half street from south curb line of Locust street to north right of way line of Vandalia railroad was on the 19th day of September, 1895, referred to the committee on streets and alleys, and any person aggrieved by such estimate may appear besald committee on the 14th day of October, 1895, at the office of the city civil engineer in said city, and make objections thereto, which objections will be reported by said committee to the common council of the city of Terre Haute at the next regular meeting of said council alter the said committee shall conclude the hearing upon said objections, at which time objectors and all persons Interested may be heard In reference to such objections before the council. a iw CHA8. H. GOODWIN, cltyClerk-
IMPROVEMENT FINAL ESTIMATE.
NotSce Is hereby given that the final estimate report of the cost of the improvement of sidewalks on Sixth and one-half street from south curb line of Demlng street to north curb line of College avenue, was on the 25th day of September, 1895, referred to the committee on streets and alleys, and any UUUiUUI ICC vU DUCOim "I person aggrieved by such estimate may ap pear before said committee on the 14th day ol October, 1895, at the office of the city civil engineer, in said city and make objections therel.V.v.
.Mill Ky
Ktr aoM
KlilvVri oalU vivj nuu iuaAv to, which objections will be reported by said committee to the common council of the city of Terre Haute at the next regular meeting of said council after the said committee shall conclude the hearing upon said objections,at which time objectors and all persons Interested may be heard in reference to such objections before the council.
CHAS. H. GOODWIN. City Clerk.
M. C. Hamlll, Attorney.-•
1
528}j Wabash Avenue.
TTACHMBNT NOTICE.
No. 8848. Before A. B. Felsenthal. J. P., Harrison township, Vigo countj?, Indiana. Robert B. Mllllken, Augustus H. Cisie and Charles Werbla vs. Alexander Hearst and William
W.
DlsbifiO* Whereas It appears by the affidavit of the plaint,iffR. that the said defendant* are non-r» sldents of tbe state of Indiana, and whereas also It appears from the return of the constable to the summons herein iiwued, that the said defendants were not found in his bailiwick It Is therefore ordered, that due notice of the pendency of this aci Ion be given to the said defendants by publlcatlon in a newspaper of general circulation published
Said non-re*ident defendants are therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said action ags Inst them and that the name will stand for trial on the 2lst day of October, 1896, at 2 o'clock p. at my office, 116 south Third
•'Ktll.SrS^SiSS'SSS u.l. «b day o.
MfeMMTHAL,J.p. [seal.1
Thiirman Coal and Mining Co. BILL OF FARE TODAY. Brazil Block, per ton.-. $2.80 Brazil Block nut donble eoreoned—. 2.28 Brazil Block nut single screened— 1.28 Otter Creek Lnmp 2.00 Double Screened Nnt................—— 1.78
Office. 334 north Eighth. Phone, 188. GKO. R. THtJRMAN, Manager.
DB. R. W. VAN VALZAH,
ZDZEHSTTIEST Office, No. S South Fifth Street,
COLUMBIA!—Xfcey almost fly.
Bicycling
to
Physicians recommend bicycling. Dame Fashion says it is "good form." Two new models for women's uso In ?.
'Wo1iih
POPE MFG. CO.
•BSI
1
•OSTON NEW YORK OMIOAOO •AN FKANOISOO PnOVIDKNOB BUFFALO
G*qeral Office* mad Factories, &k HARTFORD, Conn.
Send for Catalogue.
Free at any
Columbia Agency, or by mail for two ••cent stamps.
Six handsome Taper Holla,
Show*
ing ladies' bicyclo costumes by noted designers, mailed for five a-oent atampa.
THE ATLANTA -EXPOSITION
A WILL BE HELD
Dh
J8 to
3i, 1895.
On ground traversed by rifle pits, ovef which Sherman threw the first shell intoAtlanta 31 years ago, the Exposition ia fast taking shape. The excellent railway facilities of the great
CRESCENT
ROUTE
And its connections to Atlanta, together with low railway rates, will enable the people to make a delightful trip at but small expense.
The Queen and Crescent runs superb vestibuled trains with through sleepers and carrying Parlor, Cafe and Observation Cars, from Cincinnati direct to Atlanta. More than 100 miles shortest line. Special low reduced rates to the Expo* sition. Do you want to know something about it in detail?
WRITE TO
P. W. ZELL, D. P. A., CIBCIHHATI, OHIO.
For free information and printed matter.
W. C. RINEARS0N, 0. P. A., CINCINNATI.
iSifei
Dunn. In attachment and gar
^±'G\$18.60 I
On sale dally from September 15 until furtber notice: good for return passage 20days from date of sale.
Atlanta,Ga.COR QR and Return
On sale September 15 and daily thereafter ntil further notice. Good for return passage until until January 7th, 1896. „TT,_IT
If you want to go SOUTH, see SOUTH, the solid SOUTH, at Big Four city tlcfc et office, for all points SOUTH. Our route
SOUTH via
Cincinnati or Louisville. E. E. SOUTH, Gen. Agent.
GACG'S ART STORE,:
Artists' Supplies. Flower Material. A Vr Picture Framing a Specialty.
648 Wabash Ave, North Side.
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
N. HICKMAN & BRO. !g| UNDERTAKERS^^
306 MAIN STREET,
All calls will receive tbe most careful attention. Open day and night. H. a HICKMAN, Funeral Director.
•ife'
