Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 26, Number 28, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 January 1896 — Page 7
tef
"WOMAN'S WORLD.
s.1
PTHE ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL 1% OF MONTANA.
HIm Anthony And the New Bible—EnflUh 1 Women In Medicine Eqnal Pay *"or
Eqnal Work Hn. Terbush's JCoWe "Work—The Newest Skirt.
Mrs. Ella Knowles Haskell is a modest mannered, quiet, womanly •woman medium height. She is not of the agjjfressive, assertive type that one would naturally expect to find in the successful ffeminine lawyer. She is mild, genile, womanly, though full of determination, courage and energy. Her career as lawyer, as well as her earlier history, proves her fearlessness and determination. ,r, Less than 85 years old, she,has won .greater success at the bar than 10 per cent of the lawyers of her age who have
MRS. ELLA KKOWLTS HASKELL.
tjeen in the practice 15 years. She has been engaged in practice less than six jrears, and she commenced and fonght Jhetr way against the odds of prejudice, lack of acquaintance and lack of sympa thy. The people were not disposed to /give her a sympathetic hearing, but the remarkable fact stands out that wherever she has been heard she has* conquered. i,
Mrs. Haskell is a New Hampshire girl. She was Miss Ella Knowles, and l.£) when a young girl she exhibited marked genius. She wanted a college education, but her father opposed the idea.
She was' determined, however, and through her own efforts she went through Bates college at .Lewiston, Me., and wat jHuated. Her father greatly disapptrvetl of her course, and she went west to teach sobooL She had heard wonderful stories of the great state of Montana and went there. She taught school very successfully for a time, but in 1890 she drifted into the practice of law. She was admitted to the practice at Helena.
Miss Knowles was alone in the great state of Montana, but she found friends. Her pluck and her energy won her the way to the hearts of the people by whom she was immediately surrounded. Sh3 had a good practice almoHt from the .start. Her friends put their lawsuits in her hands, trusting implicitly to her ability and capacity to handle them. She has had wonderful success in the management of oases, having won a large percentage of those she has handled. She has tried all sorts of cases, both civil and criminal, and has been remarkably successful in all that she has attempted.
Mrs. Haskell tells in the most interesting manner of her nomination and race for attorney general of the state of Montana. "It was a total surprise to me," said she. "I was in my office in the Masonic building in Helena one day when I received a telegram signed by three names that 'I had never heard before. The telegram was dated Butte, Mon., and asked 8e if I would accept the nomination of the Populist party for attorney general •of the state. I made up my mind to run, and run to the very best of my ability. entered the race with all the energy of jpy nature. 1! "I made 60 speeches in the state. I never had a disrespectful word spoken to me during the time I was canvassing the state. I spoke to miners as well as xqerchnnts and professional men. I want tp say that more chivalrous men do not •«pst than the hardworking miners and ranchmen of my state. I want to pay a tribute to them. 1 did my best in the campaign,and altogether it wasn't bad." fl Miss Knowles came marvelously near ing elected. So close was the issue of le election that .it required three weeks settle the question, and at last it was |nouncod that Mr. Haskell, the baohattorney general, had been re-elect-by a narrow margin of votes.
Miss Knowles accepted the decision of ."'the ballots with philosophical resignation and went back to her lucrative praotioe, all the better known for the experience which she had gained. A few weeks later she was notified by letter that she had been appointed assistant attorney general of the state. The appointment, coming unsolicited, was a great surprise to her. However, she accepted, and has performed the dutiesj|| her office since doing so.
Her appointment had a sequel in a delightful romance, which, related in Mrs. Haskell's naive way, is exceedingly interesting. While performing the prosaic duties of assistant attorney gen oral Miss Knowles was thrown in a most constant contact with Attorney General Haskell. The two former opponents became the warmest of friends and after becoming friends, lovers. They were married last May, the event attracting the attention of the entire state. —Atlanta Constitution., ^gs.
MIm Anthony and the S«iw Bible. Miss Susan B. Anthony was asked if the had written any of the new woman's Bible. She replied: "No, I did not contribute to it, though knew of its preparation and the reason for it My own relations to or ideas of the Bible have always been peculiar, owing to my Quaker training, but I don't know that I can explain just what I mean. The Quakers oonsider the book MI historical, made np of traditions hand
ed down from agesof the past, bnt not as inspired by God. Of course, people say these women are impious, presumptuous and all sorts of things for daring to interpret the Bible as they themselves see it. But I think the women have just as good aright to translate and twist the Bible to their own advantage as the men have to twist and turn it to their advantage, as they have done always, JBjnt now that these women have dare^ to do what the men have done, they q£e oalled impious. "Originally th&jjrthodox omen were to write their
VMS?PS
Now, those
and translations
also, but when tb*f time euQe they did not put in an appfearanca^ jf&ao only the opinions of tmiadiQ&gitJlS^were published. The&^^atwira. Stanton or any other of tie womenVexpeoted t/ translate or write anew Biblrvfor wo." en's use is absurd. They havesifnply taken the Pentateuch and revised suoh passages as refer to women and written their commentaries upon them. "And why have they not as good a right to do this as have a body of men to do the same thing? In 1888 the Bible Was revised, and it is from this revised edition that the women have taken their texts. I, myself, am not a student or investigator, nor do I philosophize. Ideal only in facts and work for the freedom of women. The Bible is written by men, and therefore its reference to women takes on the oolor of the manner in which they were regarded in those days. In the same way the history of the restoration was written by men, and very little is said of the noble deeds of the women of the Revolution, though we know how they stood by and helped the great work, and it is the same with his-
English Women In Medicine.
There are now several doors through wihch women may enter the medical profession, and some 150 legally qualified and recognized lady physicians and surgeons already exist, with as muoh right and power to kill us scientifically and bury us unquestioned by the coroner as any of the male practitioners possess. But still there is no ordinary examination open for the fledgeling lady doctors in London. The M. D. degree of the University of London they can and do yearly take.
On several occasions—notably in the case of Dr. Mary Scharlieb and Dr. Helen Prideaux—they have carried off the gold medals as the head of all students of both sexes in the examinations, but this degree does not meet the case of all would be doctors. It is an extremely difficult one. not only in the professional examinations, but in the preliminary and extraneous subjects that have to be got up. For the ordinary practitioner of the male sex a more simple examination —a more exclusively professional one— is provided by the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons. The women students whc want to take an equivalent degree to this have to travel to 4o so. They have to go to Edinburgh or to Dublin and to meet the .expense arid bear the.discomfort of living in lodgings in those towns while they pass their successive examinations.
examinations' are^of S
same value in every way as the London colleges are, and so the London colleges can only in£ict expense and discomfort on the lady students by refusing to admit them to the London examinations. If the "powers that be" at these colleges could have kept out the women practitioners altogether by refusing to allow them to sit in London, suoh refusal would have been comprehensible, but as the utmost that they can do is to throw on them the extjra fatigue and cost of a journey it
is
surely rather
small to continue the exclusion. This, however, has been done. Both colleges in London have debased the matter and have resolved to continue their refusal to allow the women students to
Bit.
As
usual the leading men were all on the ladies'side, but the smaller men were the more numerous.—Illustrated London News.
Equal Pay For Equal Werk. "And what salaries do you pay your women teachers?" I asked the Rer. Elson Rexfoxd, rector of the Montreal high school. "H'm—well, I must confess we are not yet educated up to paying our masters and our women teaehers equal amounts for equal work," he replied. "In California this discrimination is not made, I believe." "No," I answered, With a thrill of pride in my adopted state "it is on? of the laws of the land that not a mill's difference shall be made in the remuneration accorded men arid women for equal school work. When I entered the Los Angeles schools, $ 80 was the lowest salary paid. This was to beginners, men and women alike. It was my first taste of justice in my chosen work, and it was really refreshing."
The good rector smiled. "Eighty dollars for men, $40 for like work for women, was more like what you were accustomed to, I presume?" he said after a pause. "But some people seem to think that if the salaries w|gpWiiade equal for men and women scandals and all sorts of dire results wonld follow. Is it so in California?" "Emphatically no," I replied. "At least there has never been anything of the kind there that I have heard of, ai»(J without exception, California has tlie finest schools I was ever in. They are the pride and boost of the "Does this equality of salaries extend to other vocations?"-' "Yes, to a greater or lesR extent. For instance, I remember that the highest salary paid to a bank cashier in Los Angeles while I was there was to a woman and was something like $200 a month." "A little leaven leaveneth the whole lump," he murmured. "It is even so," I replied.—EL R. in Woman's Journal ..
Mrs. Terboah'a Noble Work.
There is an aged and noble woman in the state of Michigan named Elizabeth O. J. Terbush. She lives on a small, rich
EsrWR!
farm near Btay City. During her married life she has adopted and raised 90 chil dren, fltt jpg them for honorable places ii life, besides caring for two daughters of her tiwn. She has had no motive in all thl^ save one of motherliness. It is the form her benevolenoe has taken. Nearly all the children adopted by her are living today. They correspond with her faithfully, as many of them as can come home on holidays, and all of them look upon her as their mother, Her girls, with three or four exceptions, are married. Ope of,her boys was killed in the war, '^|pr^-^r^pe o^of the engage--L boy has become a suo-
t'S
The Newest'Skirt.
The latest skirt shown by Frenoh designers requires ten yards of 22 inoh silk for a skirt 40 inohes long, writes Emma M. Hooper in The Ladies' Home Journal. It is cut in nine gores, with the straight center of each breadth being in the center of the gore. Make the sides slightly bias, which will give them a handsome flare. Be sure that a bias seam comes at the center baok and that the lining is cut just like the outside.
With wider goods twogores can come out of the same width. The skirt is fiye yards wide and should be interlined stiffly ten inchfes deep all around. The front and sides should be slightly gath ered to the belt and the :teck j^d in three narrow box .jjijai Jhe^top. Skirts should fie xfiade ~to
4- A Charming Authoress. 1
She wasn't down on the programme?' but for all that the inost interesting woman at a Sorosis meeting recently was the author of "Some Emotions and a Moral." She sat upon the platform,1 and she didn't look a bit like a woman who would choose "John Oliver Hobbes" as a pen name. She was of medium height, plump in figure and possessed a pair of bright, rather restless brown eyes. Her hair was also brown and her complexion brilliant. When complimented upon her clever stories, slip replied "Oh, you ate very kind, bnt I don't feel one bit clever over herq. Everything's so clever. Why, I haven't meta sttapid woman since I landed? in America." Mrs. Craigie expressed herself as especially delighted with Sorosis. —New York Evening Sun.
Poster Artists.
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, JANUARY 4,1895.
rer in Canada. Most have trades and are qtanoes. Several ba-
pyright jiute parents died,
re not^P&mep among the 20 she
Even now, o\d as she is, and dited as her modeat property is, she young orphans with her—girls —one 10 and one 17 years of age.
She says she never had any intention' of devoting her life to work of this sort. But it was impossible for her to hear of a homeless ohild or one who had loBt its parents or who Was ill treated without feeling that she could easily make room for it in her home. She liked to have a tableful of children and enjoyed the amusement they brought in the housa She even enjoyed providing for them and looking after their olothes. —Omah^ Herald.
Jopen
at the
left of the back rather than made to lap the center Of the back. A pocket can be put on the right side in the seam next to the back one. if dresses are interlined throughout n0w,by,.any one understanding ^irtoakan^. iThe flare effect, however, requires*' the' stiff interlining from 1,0 to 15 inches deei all around. If a skirt is made with two double box plaits in the baok, they must lap slightly attho top or ali of- the fullness Will fall toward the sides instead of the center back. Made over skirts may be lengthened by -a bias band of velvet, velveteen, silk, plaid, etc., but trimmings on skirts are only used when necessity requires. Abroad braid bordered with loops or trefoils of a narrower braid is sometimes seen on the edge of a skirt
'i
Only four or five, women so far have been able to catch the peculiar artistio quality needed to produce a successful poster of the sort which modern advertising demands. Miss Ethel Reed of Boston, Miss Geraldine Evans of Philadelphia and-Miss Blanche McManus, Miss Abby Underwood and Miss Myra Burr Edson of this city are names which, attached to these gay creations, starid for distinction and vogue.—NeW York Letter. -,
Cooking In Schools
Miss Harrison, the government Inspector of elementary schools in England, reports that the cooking lessons which have been recently introduced are almost universally popular among the school girls and are no less appreciated by their parents. These lessons were first regarded rather in the light of i)h experiment, but their success is likely to render them permanent.
Mary Cowden Clarke.
Mary Cowden Clarke, the author bf the Concordance to Shakespeare, will in June next be 86 years old. Douglas Jerrold once complimented her in this way "On your first arrival in paradise, madam, you must expect a kiss from Shakespeare, even though your husband should happen to be there."
Umbrellas of Changeable Silk.
If she is an up to date young woman, lays a New York writer, the umbrella she carries must be of changeable silk. The colors are dark, and the handle is a twisted affair in wood. Black, shoeing shades of claret, green and black and bine and black are among the favorite color combinations.
The Daughters of the American Revolution are interested in organizing a society of Children of the American Revolution. From this society the members are to enter the similar older organizations so soon as they reach their majority. v____
Miss Coririna Shattuck. the America:: lady who has shown great hcrofsm a? Oorfa during the recent Turkish massacres, is a native of Louisville.
Get out your grandmother's finery. It is essentially up to date now.
FOR LITTLE FOLKS.
rikKr
A
Pint of PeanQti,
Many playthings can be made for baby from peanuts and wood toothpicks. A tiny ohioken is made from a very small peanut. Make eyes with ink or penoil at the beak shaped end, and p?t in two toothpick legs.
Next a squirrel. Take a nut like that In the picture. The pointed end makes the head. Draw the two eyes. Stioktwo
I
short pieces of toothpick firmly in the peanut, near the bottom, for hind feet, so the squirrel can stand up stick in two farther up, for fore feet. Last, out a little strip of paper and clip it like fringe fold it and fasten it to the lower end of the peanut with a pin for a bushy tail.
To make two boats split a peanut and use each half shell Cut out paper sails, like those in the piotures, and gum them on toothpick masts, letting the sharp ends stick out. Cut from a cork two little cubes and gum to the bottom of the boats, inside. Press the masts into the corks, and the boats will sail in a washbowl sea.—Marion Beatty in Denver News. ______
Games For Parties.
These should always be arranged long before the visitors arrive. When you have invited friends, you should make sure of pleasing them as well as feeding them. Some of the old games are still the best. Do you know rumor? It is played in this way: Let the company be seated in a semicircle. A person at the end whispers into the ear of one sitting on his left a short story, which is set down in writing for future reference. The second whispers it to the third, the third to the fourth, and so on to the last, who relates it out loud, after which the original is read, to the great amusement of the company, for the two versions are generally very different.
If you hav.e friends who are good at rhyming, the game erf poetry is excellent. Here is a genuine impromptu rhyme composed by a boy only 9 years old, who was playing the game with a large company. The words given to him Were Russia, Prussia and armchair, and, after the time limit—five minutes—was up he read this ... First I'd go to Russia
Arid! sit in an armchair, And then I'd go to Prussia And do similarly there.
The same game may be played by putting three words into a sentence without requiring rhymes.—Brooklyn Eagle.
1
The Blind Children.
It was the general hour for recess at the great New York Asylum For Blind Children. Down the bare wooden stairs a troop of eager boys clattered with so much of the usual bustle and push that one could hardly believe were it not for now and then a pair of oautious hands extended that all those restless, bright eyes were sightless. Out through the open doors to a small, barren playground they rushed. The feet of a foremost boy felt under them the joy of ice. There was a scream of pleasure. The two or three visitors standing near smiled at one another. It was merely a tiny, contracted patch of frozen drippings from the eaves that boys who krioW whole rivers and ponds of winter pleasure would have passed unnojaoefi, E}ut, lq, this little afflicted one,! whom we had been pitying as having lost most of life's pleasures, had found the key to that most precious of all earthly possessions—contentment He threw up his happy little arms in a transport of pleasure "Come on, boys!" he shouted, sliding down the narrow confines. "Come on 1 Come on 1 Here's a lake of ice. New Yorl|jLetter. ...r
$
A bundle of old letters was found not long ago in England which turned out to be valuable because the letters were written by Charles Lamb. Very few of you children are too young to enjoy this great' author's essay on "Roast Pig," with his funny account of the way the delicious dish was discovered. When you area few years older, it is to be hoped that you will not be satisfied until yon have read every essay he wrote. Indeed a taste for Charles Lamb is considered a sort of touchstone—that is, if a person likes to read his works, he is considered by that alone to be cultivated and intelligent. Miss Agnes Bepplier declares that readers of Lamb are all so fond of him that they area little jealous when they find any other admirer. You must read bis letters, too, and the story of his life and see what a noble* man he was in his devotion to his family and his self sacrifice. Yet he said once that he would like to meet some great man of the times, "because I never saw a real hero." And all the time he was a hero himself and didn't know it.—New York Times- _______
Murgfm
Kitten.
Margy has a kitten which she calls Amber, isn't that a pretty and appropriate name for a yellow cat? She said proudly the other day: "My new cat is a very nice one. She hasn't scratched mo once since I've had her One of her aunts, to whom she was talking, inqu ir ed, "And when did you get her, Margy?" She answered, "Yesterday."—Exchange.
Nervous
realise that the only
•n
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Hood's
Sarsaparilla
a 'And therefore it is the only true and reliable medicine for nervous peeple. It makes the blood pure and healthy, and thus oures nervousness, makes the nerves firm and strong, gives sweet sleep, mental vigor, a good appetite, perfect digestion. It does all this, and cures Scrofula, Eczema, or Salt Bheum and all other blood diseases, because it
Makes
Pure Blood
Results prove every word we have said. Thousands'of voluntary testimonials fully establish the fact that
'g Sanapariila
J-|ood
(lures
Be Sure
to Get Hood's
MI
can eat better, sleep better and
{[ood's
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Hood's
Pills cure all ltver ills, constipa
tion, biliousness. sick headache. Indigestion. 26c
Tho
Columbia'
Bicycle
Pad Calendar
For 1896
YOU NEED IT.
A Desk. Calendar is a necessity—most convenient kind of storehouse for memoranda. Tbck Columbia Desk Calendar is brightest md handsomest of all—fall of dainty pen sketches and entertaining thoughts on outdoor exercise and sport, occasionally reiiiitids yotf of tauperb quality of Columbia Bicycles ana of your need of one. You won't object to that, 6f course.' The Calendar will be mailed-for fire 2-cent stamps.
Address Calendar Department,
POPE MANUFACTURING CO.,
HARTFORD, CONN.
GRATEFUL-COMFORTING.
EPPS'S COCOA.
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a properly nourished frame/'—Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold 6niy in half-pound tins, by grocers, labelled tb us: JAMES ftPPS & CO., Lt&, Homoeopathic
Chemists, London, England.
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CREAM BALH.
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PWBAl*
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p^ COLD N HEAD
and In-
V-P
VandaliaPennsylvanial
Holiday Excursions.
On Decern rife*- 21th. 25(Ii aud 31st, 18&5, and January 1st, JS96. the Vandal la Line will set! tickets to all points on its own iineand many connecting lines, good to return luciudioK January 2d, I8IJ6,. tone and one- third fare for the round trip.
Low rate'excurslons io ATLANTA,Ga,and points In tl Honth and Southwest. For further Information, v*ll at City Ticket Office, ifiS Wnbai«h ave.,or Union depot
GEO. E. FARRISGTOS, General Agent.
JpELSENTHAL, A. Justice of the Peace and Attorney at La#, 28 southard street. Terre Haute, Ind.
Railroad Time Tables.
Trains marked thus (P) have Parlor Oa» Trains marked thus (SV have sleeping Car** Trains marked fchus (B) have Buffet Car. TraJnsmarked thus (V) have Vestibule Cars. Trains marked (D) have Dining Car. Trains marked thus (t) run Sundays only. Train* marked thus run daily. Ail other train* run daily, Sundays excepted.
*V^2STX)-A.XJX^. LIUS.
MAIN LINE.
ABBIVK
TOOM
THB BAST.
No. 7 Western Express (VS) 1.30 a at No. 16 St Louis Mail* 10.00 am No. 21 St. Louis Ex* (PDVS) .... 2.28 n. No. 8 Mail and Accommodation. 8.45 put No. 11 Fast Mall* 9.00 pm No. 5 St. Louis Llmited*(MVSD). lftOOasa
MCAVE FOB TH* WIST.
No. 7 Western Ex*(VS) L40 ana No. 15 St Louis Mail* 10.15 a aaNo. 21 St Louis Ex* (PDVS) .... 2.88 pna No. 18 Eff. Acc 4.06 No. 1) Fast Mall* 9.04 No. 5 St Louis Llmited*(MVSD). 10.05 a
ABBTVX IP BOM THB WJE8T.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express (S) 1.20 a n. fell No. 6 New York Express *(VS). 3.25 am No. 14 Effingham Ac 9.80 a xv ptm No.20 Atlantic Express* (DPVS). .12.82 pm No. 8 Fast Line* 2.05pm* No. 2 N. Y. Limited*(DVS) ..... 5.06 pm
LKAVTE FOK THK XAflT.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express (S) 1.30 am No. 6 New York Express (VS) 3.30 am. No. 4 Mall and Accommodation 7.30 a as
No. 20 Atlantio Express (DPVS). 1&37 Afc No. 8 Fast Line 2.40 nat No. 2 N. Y. Llmited«(DV8) 5.10 11 1
MICHIGAN DIVISION.
LKAVK FOB THK NORTH.
O. SC 353. X.
AJKBIYK FBOM SOUTH.
Ch A Nash Lim* (VAS) ... 2.44 a »^H AEMtE*» H.15am No. 4
*.
Ihd Ex* (HAF) ..... 11.10 nib
No. 80 S| fed Accommodation 4.45 pm
IE. &c X.
MEAYB FOB SOUTH.
No. 83 Mall A Ex 9jG0am No. 49 Worth'n Mixed 3.90 •BBXVX FROM SOUTH. No. 48 Mixed 10.15 a No. 82 Mail A Ex 8.15 pne
O. O. O. So I-BIG 4,
GOING BAJST
No. 86 N. Y., Boston A Cin. Ex. dally LR2 am No. 4 T. H., Ind. A Cin. Ex 8.00 am No. 8 Day Express A Mall 8.05 No. 18Knickerbocker Special* ... illlpia
GOING WHBX.
No. 35 St Louis Express* L82a No. 9 Day Express A Mail* 10X8 am. No. 11 Southwestern Limited*SDPV. 1.88 No. 5 Mat'.oon Accommodation 7.05
The Sun
THE FIRST OF AMERICAN NEWSPAPERS
CHARLES A. DANA, Editor
THE AMERICAN CONSTITUTION, THE AMERICAN IDEA, THE AMERICAN SPIRIT. These first, last and all the time, forever.
DAILY, by mall, 16 a year. DAILY AND SUNDAY, by mail $8 a year.
The Sunday Sun
IS THE GREATEST SUNDAY NEWSPAPER IN THE WORLD *.
Price 5c a copy. By mall, $2 a year.
Address: THE SUN, New York.
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ONE-HALF 8IZH OF BOX.
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No. 52 St Joseph Mail &20am 1 No. 54 South Bend Express 4.00 iim ABRIVK FBOM TBJ6 NORTH. No. 51 Terre Haute Express 10.55 a m$. No. 53 Terre Haute Mall 7.00 pli ipj,
PEORIA DIVISION. S ^fl IiBAVK FOB NOJt'l'HW Ml'.
No. 75 Peoria Mail 7j06a» *sH No. 77 Decatur Accommodation 3.55 na ABBIVXFBOXNOBTbtinKT. No. 78 Decatur Accommodation 1L00 a aa. No.76Peoria Mall 1 ....... 7.00pm*
1
rff.
UUVX FOB NOHTH.
No. 6C AN Llm*(DVAS) ...... 2.49am, No. 2 HA Ch Ex U.S0 ak»: No. 10 Local Passenger 5A0pm- vsm No. 4 Ev ACBx*(8) 11:20pat
ABBTVB FROM NORTH.
No. 3 Ch A Ev Ex*(S) ...... 5.20 am No. 9 Local Passenger U29am No. IChAEvEx 8.00 pm No. SCAN Lim*(D AS) 1.16 a
mi. &c T. 2EL_
NASHVILLE LINE.
XJCAVK FOR SOip^.
No. 3 Ch A KVEX*(BAP) 6.28 a T0. 1 Kv. A Ind Mail* f, Ji ..8.15pm 5 Ch AN Lim* (VAS) 1.21 a z» 7 Ev Accommodation 10.20 am
hartalesa..
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face.
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