Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 26, Number 27, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 December 1895 — Page 7
I
WOMAN'S WORLD.
THE CHAIRMAN OF PRESS COMMITTEE OF THE ATLANTA EXPOSITION.
W«m*n Who Work at Bnlldlmr Roads—An Xntorpriiiog Booth Georgia Woman. Women In the I'ulplt—Persecuting:
Woman—Glaus
Dwmm
and Curtain*.
The woman editor may be, and probably is, indigenous to the north, bat tbo confines were extended when Maude Andrews Ohl took charge of the "better half" of the Atlanta Constitution. That event happened several years ago, while she was still a straggling, ambitions girl and before ber marriage to Mr. Joe Ohl, one of the editors of that paper.
In person Maud© Andrews Ohl is a most charming woman, a graoions hostess and a pleasing guest. In fact, she is a troe "daughter of Dixie" and just one's ideal of a sunny southern sister.
Her home is situated on one of Atlanta's prettiest residence streets, and its hospitable doors have welcomed many a guest who still holds dear the sweet remembrance of a delightful entertainment Mrs. Ohl is proud of the fact that she is an excellent cook, and I doubt not that this accomplishment gives her friends quite as much satisfaction as it brings to herself.
She is always exquisitely gowned, and ber dresses are of her own designing and selection.
It is to her bouse that all the young people flock when they want help in 'arranging some gayety or crave a sym-|
Ak
Vj
fa
MAUDS ANDREWS OOL.
pathetio ear in which to whisper their heart's troubles and delights. Her pretty home is furnished in the luxurious fashion of the orient, a style for which Mrs. Ohl has a strong partiality, which may be accounted for in the strange mingling of blood that flows in her veins. "The ruddy tide from the olden dukes of Buckingham crosses the redder blood of passionate Persia the chill pulse of Danish nobility thrills with the beatings of Gall': vivaoity."
Mrs. Ohl is just now brought prominently before the public eye of the publio im thG.presidanfenf the pros* committee of the Atlanta exposition. She has been one of its hardest workers from the beginning. The interior decorations of the prossroom in tbo Woman's building are entirely of hor selection and arrangement, and everywhere in this much frequented spot the touch of the orient predominates. When in the pressroom, she is ever ready to greet 4fll out of town newspaper women who may accept the kind invitation that is tacked outside the door to bid them enter and "make this their business headquarters during their sojourn in Atlanta. "—New York Recorder. ______
Women Who Work at Building Road*. Margherita Arlina Hamrn says in the Now York Mail and Express:
Tbo new treaty ratified between China and Japan may not give satisfaction to all the great powers, but it will undoubtedly bell blessing in disguise to the women of Vladivostok. They are, without exception, the most polyglot combination of feniales ever brought together upon the faoe of the globe. The Russian government, in oolonizing Siberia, has sent out from the home country every few months in the past ten years a shipload of people from the agicnltmral provinces, where there were more people than the soil could easily sustain. Among these assisted emigrants have been Russians, Poles, Fins, Swedes, Germans, Lithuanians and Crimean s. This is a suffioiei&ly mixed up orowd in itself, but when they arrived at Siberia they upon the ground Japanese, Koreans, vSinese, Mongolians and Mantchurians.
The women work there as well as the men and may be seen in the fields and on the roads tiro-patience which is necessary, above all things, in roadmaking. A Chinese woman, and in faot, a woman of almost every one of the races named will sit all day long breaking stones with a small hammer or, in default of a hammer, with two larger stones, and be perfectly satisfied if at the end of 13 hours' work she #ts 4 or 5 cents. In Hongkong the English government has utilised this fact, and in this manner has produced what it probably the best paved city In the world.
I remember a road along which I passed frequently, and which one morning, to my surprise, was Lined with women and little piles of stone. They, worked hard for two or throe weeks and then went away. The next time I passed the bed for a quarter of a mile was a beautiful macadamised street, so neat and trim that yoa could almost have sat down upon it without soiling your olothes. I made inquiry and found that it represented the labor of about 50 women and 100 children, of whom the former reoeived 5 cents a day and the latter 1, ft and 8, according to their age. The entire labor bill per diem for this •mail regiment of humanity was about
Am latwprMai tostt Qsiiigte WesMNfc Titan have been stories upon stories Written about the saw woman, hat this mm tram Pierce ooonty, down on the
in
liiil*
kK§
Okefiiokee swamp, introduces a new phase of woman's achievement Miss Lydia E. Smith, the heroine at this story, resides at Fort Mudge, on the Waycross Short Line to Jacksonville. She lives by herself on her own farm, and with the help of a hired man cnltivates, harvests and markets her crop*.
Miss Smith is about 6 feet 0 inches high and of slender form. She is about 85 years old, one would judge from her looks, although on this point she was reticent when questioned recently by The Morning News correspondent Miss Smith has a 20 acre farm. She harvested more than 150 bushels of oorn and 8 bales of cotton this year. I "Do you raise sugar oane?" asked the I correspondent-
Yes," said she, "and I raised on one I acre t*)is year enough oane to make 480 gallQ of sirup, besides $80 worth of cane that I sold. "A woman riding a bicycle is a sight that I saw for the first time today in I Waycross," said Miss Smith, "and it is a downright shame." 1 "Is it true that you are an expert with the rifle and that you have killed several bears?" asked the newspaper man. "lam a good shot with the rifle," I said she, "but I have never been on bear hunts, and so never had the privilege of getting a shot at bruin. Somebody has circulated that report on me because I am a woman that looks after my farm and have to ride horseback over the place with my rifle on my I shoulder. I carry my rifle sometimes to kill hawks and crows. I often come across a covey of quails or partridges, and in such an event I rarely fail to kill a few of them. Don't let on to the paper that I have passed sweet sixteen," said Miss Smith as she took leave of the correspondent—Savannah News.
Women In the Palplt.
The admission of women into the theological eeminary and the pulpit has become so common a faot as to no longer excite notice. Such of them as Rev. Phebe C. Hanaford, Anna Howard Shaw, Ada C. Bowles and Ida C. Hultin have made a national reputation for eloqnenco, scholarship and evangelical ability. Nearly all of them have been more than successful in the sacred oalling. Not one has ever spotted the white robe of ber calling. Rev. Ada Bowles has studied the subject carefully and gives the following interesting statistics as to the number of women ministers. Among the Friends there are 850 the Universalists, 54 the Free Baptists, 54 (estimated) the Disciples, 8 Congregationalists, 20 Unitarians, 24 Protestant Methodists, 7 Jewish, 1, making a total of 518.
This does not inolude 50 of the smaller sects and denominations. Neithor does it include regular missionaries, home and foreign, nor the evangelists and organizers of organizations like the Woman's Christian Temperance union. These have been estimated at 800, 850 and 400. The grand total exceeds 800, which is a very flattering number for a profession which amounted to almost nothing in the memory of many who read these lines. l)r. Bowles calls attention to the fact that the opposition to women in the pulpit is steadily decreasing. and that the facilities for her theological education are on the inorease. In 1800 no seminary was open to woman. Today at least 15 institutions of learning offer ber theological instruction.
Persecuting Woman
Mrs. Eli B. Getz of St Louis is in danger of losing her means of livelihood because she has followed it too successfully. Her husband was a solicitor for the insurance firm of F. D. Hirshberg Ss Bra He is said to have been one of the most popular insurance men in the city. His contraot with his employers contained a clause that in case of his death his wife was to be allowed to take his place if she proved competent. About a year ago Mr. Getz*died. The widow took up his work and thereby supported her two young children. But she was remarkably successful, and the men in the same business complained that they could not oorn pete with her. They estreated Hirshberg & Bra to dismiss her in vain. Then they laid their complaint before the board of fire underwriters. The board took their part
Hirshberg & Bra asked that Mrs. Getz be either admitted to the board as a member or registered as a regular solicitor. The board instead adopted a resolution that its membership consisted only of men and voted to expel the firm of Hirshberg & Bra, "one.af the most reputable firms in the country," according to the St Louis Post-Dispatch. Mr. Hirshberg says: "Of ennrsa there is no recourse for us. We have been expelled iixrjui the board and will have to take our medietas. But we will continue Mrs. Getz in our service as long as she will."
Glass Presses and Curtain*.
Articles of dress are now being extensively made of glass. A Venetian manufacturer is turning out bonnets by the thousand, the gloss cloth of which they are composed having the same shimmer and brilliancy of color as silk, and, what is a great advantage, being Impervious to water. In Russia there has for a long time existed a tissue manufactured from the fiber of a peculiar filamentous stone from the Siberian mines, which by some secret process is shredded and spun into a fabric which, although soft to the touch and pliable in the extreme, is of so durable a nature that it never wears out This is probably what has given an enterprising firm the idea of producing spun glass dress lengths.
The Muscovite staff is thrown into the fire when dirty, like asbestos, by which it is made absolutely clean again, bat the span glass silk is simply brushed with a hard brush and soap and water and is none the worse for being either •tatned or soiled. Hie material Is to be had in white, green, lilac, pink and yellow and bids fair to beoome very fashionable for evening dresses. An Austrian la the inventor of this novel fabrta,
which is rather costly. Tablecloths, napkins and window curtains are also made of it It has also been discovered that glass is capable of being turned into a fine oloth, which can be worn next the akin without the slightest disoomfort*—Chambers' Journal.
Sane,
1
»vvafJ. An 2£ngllsh Estimate.
TERRE TTAUTfi SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, DECEMBER 28,1895i
The Word ••Obey."
Mrs, Emma Jackson at Chicago has been investigating a much discussed subject with results acceptable to the mass of women. She says "J was told that you oould not get married unless you promised to obey your husband. The thing was said so often that finally I oame to believe it In the past year the old stray has oame up again and again. I got tired of it finally and looked into the matter. To my surprise, I find that there is no authority for it whatever. In the early Christian church the
astor merely put the question, Do you, take this man for your husband?* and, 'Do you, John, take this woman for your wife?' That's all there was to it The great Roman Catholic church, the Greek, Coptic and Armenian have followed the same practice. The church of England in the time of Henry Viii and one or more of the German churches introduced the word 'obey,' and that's where it comes from. I hardly fancy that that monarch is a good man to pattern after. There area number of sects, German, Scandinavian and, I believe, English, whioh make both husband and wife promise to obey the other."
How to Wear the Collet.
The collet, simple as it looks, must have a certain air to be a sucoess, writes Isabel A. Mallon in Ladies' Home Journal. It does not want to stand up high on the shoulders, but it should go out in a very broad fashion so that the waist below it looks,very small by comparison. Then the frills must be very full, and whatever is used must be at once harmonious and chio.. If there are ribbons, they must be very long. RosetteB are more like cabbage roses than ever before, and chiffon frills are in fullness like unto the drops of water in the ocean. Give to your evening bonnet and collet that intangible air which, for want of something better, we call style, for then and then only will it be a success. And then and then only will yon look well in it and will it be an absolute success on you. ^nd it is only when one's gowns and one's belongings are successes thas the general woman feels comfortable and really enjoys herself.
|v? Domestic Service In Minnesota, Throughout the farming and small town sections of Minnesota the question of domestic service is a peculiar one. There are few girls who make a business of housework. Very few indeed need to work out The girl that seeks a position comes from a farm, and her people are able to provide for her without her working out She goes into the village to work simply to get some ideas of good housekeeping, so that she can manage a home of her1own in better shape, or earn better wages in the cities later. She is independent, for she knows that if she onoe learns to be a good housekeeper she can take care of herself, even if she doesn't get married, and in her case getting married generally means that she must become a drudge, raising a family of several children and rolling up her sleeves for a life of hard work.—Minneapolis Journal
There will be an influx of "lady journalists" to these shores very soon if the readers of the London Queen all believe the following bit of misinformation put in the mouth of an American newspaper woman: "I think, too, that larger salaries are earned in the States. Several women make £5,000 a year, and £1,000 is by no means an unoommon income. Nearly every paper of importance has a woman on its staff, who is not, as a rule, restricted to 'woman's department,' but writes upon every subject and is expected to do her work hi the office like the men."
The painful publioity of doing work "in the office like a man" would be well compensated for, we should think, by salary enough to wear Felix frocks and have a charming "digging" crew in New York.—New York Press.
1
aria Mitchell.
The Boston Transoript says that Maria Mitchell is the only American woman's name found among the hundreds of names of great writers, artists, scientists, eta, on the external memorial tablets of the new Boston pnblio library. The names of Sappho, George Sand, De Stael, George Eliot, Bronte, Austeu, Edgeworth and Soinerville are the other names of women on the building. Thus Greece, France and England contribute of the centuries' glory eight times as much feminine weight as the United States. But it is significant that the American woman was one who "hitched her wagon to a star."
Doors and furniture easily become finger marked. Try rubbing thm with chamois leather moistened with cold water and then polish with a mixture composed of two parts of sweet oil and (toe part of turpentine.
A glove notion of the moment in Paris is the wearing for dressy occasions of a superlatively thin kid. A glove to be oomme il faut must show the imprint and outline of the finger nail through its verydelicate texture.
The Wellesley girls voted recently an woman suffrage. The result was 810 votes for suffrage and 149 against it Three hundred and twenty-eight young ladies did not vote at all
Mm F. D. Hotchkiss of Rochester took up her husband's insurance business when he died. She has three comand makes a comfortable living.
After the athfeticexhibition at Vasrar let no one say that a young woman will aot Jump at something else besides* to set a husband.
SHE'S AT THE FRONT.
Daw Banna K. Croasdale Oeenplee a H%h Position Among Physician*. Dr. Hanna BL Oroasdale was gradoatfd from the Woman's Medical college of Pennsylvania in 1870 and since then has had a soooesa in all lines tit her profession, which is the merited reward of patient and self sacrificing effort.
Dr. Oroasdale was born at Bennett Square, Chester oounty, was educated there, and there she was married. To
her there were born four children, and at her husband's death the care of them devolved upon her, and she began to think of ways and means. With many misgivings and with a full appreciation of the "responsibility of such a course, she decided to study medicihe. Her friends and relatives encouraged the idea, and for four years she patiently studied amid many trials and discouragements, never relaxing her care in the children's education, never failing in her attendance upon their daily needs.
Early in the seventies she was appointed member of the attending board in the gynecological and obstetrical de partments of the Woman's hospital, Twenty-second and North College avenue, a position whioh she now holds. She is also one of the clinical lecturers in the hospital during the college terms.
In the West Philadelphia Hospital For Women at Forty-first and Parrisb streets she is one of the consultants. She is on the consulting staff of the Nomstown Hospital For the Insane. At these hospitals she performs operations of the gravest character, and she has established her reputation as an able and skillful surgeon.
In the Woman's Medioal oollege of Pennsylvania Dr. Oroasdale has for several years occupied the chair of gynecology, which was endowed by the late Joseph Jeans, who at the time of its endowment requested that he be allowed to suggest her name as incupibent—r Philadelphia Press. y\s
Not an Impossibility.
The first woman lawyer who ever pleaded a case in a New Jersey court reoeived a warm welcome the other day from the bar of Union county, all men. The judge upon the bench also was exceedingly courteous to her during the progress of the case and listened closely to her argument. She gained her case, too, though it was the first she had ever argued.
We are pleased with the conduct of the man bar toward the woman bar of New Jersey. It might be supposed that the former would turn green at the advent of the latter, as there is not too much praotioe for it in the courts and as dower right oases are sometimes profitable to the lawyer engaged in them. But there was no sign of anything of the kind. The chivalry of Judge McCormick was deserving of the admiration which it commanded.
Now that the woman bar of Jersey has oome into existenoe, we may expect that it Will soon be crowded, and we would smile if it were to push the man bar to one side.
Next, the woman bench I—New York Sun.
I
a
Mrs. Cleveland's Letter*.
Mrs. Cleveland possibly pens more "billets doux" in the course of a year than any other 'prominent woman of Washington. Gracious in all things and considerate always of the thoughts and courtesies due others, she takes time to reply personally, and within a short time, to the various notes and requests which come to her. Mrs. Cleveland is partial to a delicate blue in stationery, not so deep as the Russian blue, but a very decided color. Of course there are various dies stamped in the center at the top of the sheet of paper. In Washington the stationery Mrs. Cleveland uses is stamped in modest letters with "Executive Mansion" or "Woodley" when out at the country place. Mrs. Cleveland writes a stylish hand, with a graceful individuality, ber signature never varying. —Detroit Free Press.
Vigorous Polioe Matrons.
Mrs. Essinger and Mrs. Garfield, the two police matrons of Cleveland, lately krrested an intoxicated man named Cuff. When he was arraigned in the police eourt, he pleaded not guilty, and as he did so he rubbed his arms. "What is the matter with your arms?" asked Judge Fiedler. "Them women pinched them domed hard, and it hurts," replied Cuff.
Since "the matrons have not the legal power to make arrests," as a Cleveland daily expressed it, Cuff was discharged, no papers having been sworn out in his case. The Mrs. Garfield who took part in this affair is a distant connection of the murdered president
Rer. Helen O. Potssm.
Rev. Helen G. Putnam recently died at Fargo, N. D. She had been seriously ill, and with characteristic devotion die began to take up hear work before she was oat of the sickroom. The Christian Register says: "Miss Putnam won warm friends in Boston when die was at the bead of The Country Week here, and she has increased the number by ber self sacrificing efforts for humanity ever since. Her genial presence and ooarftfad words will be sorely missed in many ihome."
Mile. Jeanne Benabea.
Mile. Jeanne Benaben, a young Frenchwoman, is in some respects the most remarkable person of her sex in Europe. She is now bat 18 years old, yet two years ago she received the degree of bachelor of arts from one of the most famous colleges in France. She then became professor of philosophy in a woman's college at Lyons and this year was a candidate at the Sorbonne for the important degree of licentiate in philosophy. She emerged from an extraordinarily severe examination third out of 200 candidates. She amazed the examiners by her erudition ahd serene composure throughout the frying ordeaL
Combs of High Degree For This Season. From the little, unobtrusive inch and a half oombs that used to plaster back refractory bangs during the Madonna craze, the side oornb has developed into a five or six inch implement, encircling half .the head and variously ornamented and filigreed. The teeth are fine and far apart to suit soft or coarse hair and variously graded, being perhaps only half an inch deep on one end and two inches on the other. In the matter of coiffure, sweet simplicity has been relegated to the background, and authorities predict that feminine heads this winter will be works of. art.
Henrietta Torner.*
Mrs. Henrietta Turner, who recently died at Mount Vernon, N. Y., was the last survivor of the "flower girls" who met Lafayette at Woodbridge, N. J., on his last visit to this country in 1824. Mrs. Turner was then Henrietta Pryor. She was less than 8 years old, and was the youngest of the 16 girls who, attired in costumes of flowers, formed the words, "Welcome, Lafayette." She represented the lastE in Lafayette's name, and was clad in marigolds.
.*•
Mr*. Mary Binlelty Frederika, Iowa.
Goitre 31 Years
Tenacious ChronloCase Give® Way to Hood's
8arsaparllla.
"Thirty-one years ago, after dangerous Illness, my neck began to swell. It did not give me any trouble, except the deformity, for many years. About ten years ago it commenced to pain me and if ltOOk sold I would have
Terrible Choking Spells.
Even my people thought my last hour had come. 1 read of a lady in Kalamazoo, Mich., who had been cured of goitre by Brood's Sarsaparilla and immediately began to take this medicine, using several bottles. My neck measured 21 inohss last
Hood's
1 1
Sarta-
wttt
Hood's puis
partita
May against 16 inches |*AC now. It is a wonder and astonishment to my friends and neighbors, for I was growing worse all the time and no ene thought I oould live through the winter. All thought a eure lmpoeaible as I am 04 years sf age." line. Mait Hikxwdt, Fred•rika, Iowa. Take only Hood's.
isxsszsst'isr*
GRATEFUL—COMFORTING.
EPPS'S' COCOA.
BREAKFAST—SUPPER.
"By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well-selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided for our breakfast and supperadelicately flavored.beverage which may save us many heavy doctors' blur It is by the Judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to atr tack wherever there is a weak point. We l*t«l aKn#* K«f Iraanlnff
Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. Bold only in half-pound tins, by grocers, labelled thus: JAMES EPPS A CO., Ltd., Homoeopathic
Chemists, Loudon. England.
PINEOLA COUGH BALSAM
SALESMEN WANTED
Pushing, trustworthy men to represent us In the sale of onr Choice N ornery Stock. Specialties oonirofled by us. Highest Salary or Commission paid weekly. Steady cmploymeni the year mund- Outfit free explosive territory: experience not a ceasary big pay_asci rod work era special inducement* to begin* net*. Write at once for particulars to
ALLEN NURSERY CO.
KOCHK8TKB. IT. Y.
Mker
iv «a Utfi tmtfM.
Railroad Time Tables.
Trains marked thus (P) have Parlor Gars Trains marked thus (8V have Sleeping Car*. Trains marked thus (B) have Buflfbt Car. Trains mar kea thus (V) have Vestibule
THE FIRST OP AMERICAN NEWSPAPERS
it
is excellent for all throat Inflammations and for asthma. Consumptives .will invaribly deIrive benefit from lt»use,asltqulckly abates the cough, renders expectoration easy, assisting nature In restoring wasted tlftsues. Tb« re Is a large per centage of those who suppose their caxefl to b« non-
sumption who are only suftering from a chronic cold or deen seated cough, often aggravated by catarrh. For catarrh use Ely's craim Balm. Both remedies are p!ea«fint to use. Cream Balm. 60c per bottle Plneola Balsam. 25c at l^ruggist*. In quantities of fiSi' will deliver on wcelptof amount. EL* BUOTHEH8,55 Warren 8t, iew York.
SS.TS5!
"""•ftffiSSK
Car*.
Trains marked (D) have Dining Car. Trains marked thus (t) run Sundays only. Trains marked thus («i run dally. All other train* run daily, Sundays excepted.
X.iuntIE-
main LINE.
ABHTVa TOOK THJK BAST.
No. 7 Western Express (V8) 1.30 am No. 15 St. Louis Mall* 10.00 a No. 21
St. Louis Ex* (PDV8) .... 2.28 pm No. S Mali and Accommodation 6.45 No. 11 Fast Mail* 9.00 No. 5 St. Louis Limited" (MVSD). .10.00 a m.
UEAVE FOR TH*
S0.21St.
o. 16 St. Louis Mall* ........ 10.15 am Louis Ex* (PDVS) .... 2.33 pm No. 18 Ell. Acc 4.06 pm No. 11 Fast Mail* 8.04 No. 5 St. Louis Llmlted*(MVSD). 10.05 a
AKR1VX FROM THE WJE3T.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express (S) ... 1.20 a No. 8 New York Express *(VB) .*. 8.28 a No. 14 Effingham Ac 9.80 a No. 20 Atlantic Express (DPV8). 12.32 No. 8 Fast Line 2.05 No. 2 N. Y. Limited*(DVS) 5.05
LKAVK FOB TKK EAST.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express (S) ... l.dO a mC No. 8 New York Express *(V8) ... 8.30 am No. 4 Mail and Accommodation 7,90 am No.20 Atlantic Express*(DPVS). 12.37pm No. 8 Fast Line*. 2.40 pm No. 2 N. Y. Limlted*(DVS) 5.10 pm
MICHIGAN DIVISION.
IaKAVE VOK THE NORTH.
No.623t»Joseph Mail #.20am No. 54 South Bend Express 4.'*) ARRIVE FROM THK NORTH. No. 51 Terre Haute Express 10 55 a No. S3 Terre Haute Mail 7.00
PEORIA DIVISION.
LKAVK FOR NORTHWEST.
No. 75 Peoria Mall 7.05 am No. 77 Decatur Accommodation 8.55 ARRIVE FROM NORTHWEST. No. 78 Decatur Accommodation 11.00 am No. 76 Peoria Mall 7.00
MM O- 33- x.
LEAVE FOR NORTH.
No. 6 A N Lim*(DVAS) 2.49 am No. 2TH&ChEx U.UOam No. 10 Local Passenger 6.10 No. 4 Ev Ex*(8) 11
1
VST.
No. 7 Western Kx*(V8) 1.40 am
S» 1
ARRIVE FROM NORTH. A
No. 3 Ch A Ev Ex*(S) 5.20 am No. 9 Local Passenger 20 am No. 1 Ch A Ev Ex £.00 pm No. 6 A N Lim*(D ,'&8) 1.16 a
33- & T. -El.
NASHVILLE LINE.
LEAVE FOR SOUTH.
No. 8 Ch 4 Ev Ex* (SAP) 5.28 a No. 1 Ev. A Ind Mall* 8.15 m. No, 5 Ch A N Llm* (VAS) 1.21 a No. 7 Ev Accommodation .... ,.s .10.20 am
ARRIVE FRO& SOtJTH.g^l
No. 8 Ch A Nash Llm* (VAS) 2 44am No. 2 A East Ex* 11.15 a No. 4 Ch A Ind Ex* (8AP) 11.10 No. 80 Mixed Accommodation 4.45 to
E 2 &
LEAVE FOB SOUTH.
9.00 am
ARRIVE FROM SOUTH.
No. 48 Mixed No. 82 Mail A Ex
10.15 a 8.15 pm
C. C- O. &I.—BIG-
GOING EAST
No. 86 N. Y., Boston ACin. Ex.daily 1.82 am No. 4 T. H., Ind. A Cin. Ex 8.00 a No. 8 Day Express A Mall* 8.06 pm No. 18 Knickerbocker Special* 4.81
GOING -WEST.
No. 85 St. Louis Express* 1.82 a No. 9 Day Express A Mall* H».08 a No. 11 Southwestern Llm(ted*8DPV. 1.88 No. 6 Mat'-oon Accommodation 7.06
The Sun
A. OtHA, Editor
THE AMERICAN CONSTITUTION, THE AMERICAN IDEA, 'V." ^. THE AMERICAN SPIRIT. These first, last and all the time, fore^ DAILY, by mail, 16 a year. DAILY AND SUNDAY, by mall |8 a year,
^Sunday Sun
18 THE GREATEST SUNDAY NEWSPAPER5 IN E W O Price 5c a coj/y. By mail, 12 a year, Address: THE SUN, New York.
FITS CURED
CFrom, U, & Journal of Medicine.)
ProtW.H.Pecke,who makes a specialty of Epilepsy* has without doubt treated and en red more cases than anyliving Physician bis success is sstonishing. We have heard of cases of 20 yeara'standing cured by him* He publishes a vsln&ble work on this disease which ha sends with a large bottle of bis absolnte core, free to. any sufferer who may send their P.O. and Express address. We advlic anyone wishing a cure to address, Prof. W. n. PEEKS, F. D., 4 Cedar St., New York.
ONC-HAL* SIZE Of 80X
POZZONI'S COMPLEXION POWDER
has been the standard for forty years and la moTs popular to-day than ever before. POZZONI'S Is the ideal complexion powder—beautifying, refreshing, cleanly, healthful andJumaless. AdSUeate, invisible protection 'to me face. WfttoeV«*ybo*ofPOMOSri*»nd^r' •ISMnt SeoTili's OOLD PUKF
BOXIs glTen free of charge. AT DRUGGISTS in FANCY 8TOR&8
