Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, September 26, 1886, Image 3

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DAILY ENQUIRER - SUN, COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 26, 1SSG. 11 AM) Facts and Fancies for the Ladies to Pon der Over. Mrs. Cleveland's Intimate Friend—I>lNcuii«lm{ the Political Program of Woman—lion to Mike Things Last-Other Notes About Women. PHARAOH'S HOUSE IN TAPHANHES. ! t'nlm-ky Friday. Water bury American. Because the present year of grace came in on a Friday, will end on u Friday, and has tllty-threo Fridays, people given to superstition have all along feared and still apprehend dire calamities, us Fri day is so generally regarded as an unlucky glance at the historical past, how- Mrs. Cleveland’s most intimate friend is Helen Bancroft, granddaughter of the his- torian. Mrs. Cleveland saw Miss Bancroft for the first time at the reception, and ‘‘fell in love” with her at sight—as girls do fall in love with each other. She took occasion before the evening was over to get Miss Bancroft in a corner, and had quite a long chat with her, and got her promise to come to the white house next day. The love seems to have been mu tual, for Miss Bancroft is now the most earnest admirer the president’s wife has in Washington, while Mrs. Cleveland speaks of the dark, dreamy-eyed girl as ‘‘the sweetest creature in the world.” Those of them who know her well say that she is the most brilliant girl at the capital intellectually. Not only is sho conversant with our own and the German literature, but she is a deep student of Ger man philosophy. Whenever she anybody who shows a disposition to rgu the theories of the advanced G ma thinkers she is delighted, as these tl ori have beeu her favorite study for ear She has written numerous essays o, pa theism and the other “isms” that d ig the university people of Germany. S r has in her a vein of poetry, too. A ma volume of poems in German from hr p is frequently shown by her grand:! th to literary friends. One of the poems an j ode to Goethe—received very high praise ' from the North German Gazette, which is ] an authority on literary matters in Ger- ! many. ' ! Miss Bancroft has gone into society sel- 1 donr of late. She likes books better than 1 social chit-chat and would rather read to her grandfather and help him in his work than figure in the gay throng. The old historian is fairly wrapped up in her. She I is the solace of his declining years, and no daughter was ever more devoted. Just what it is that draws together this studious dreamy girl and the gay, giddy mistress of the white house it is impossible to say; but certain it is that the two have become such devoted friends as only girls can be come in their susceptible boarding school days. The Cincinnati Commercial editorially says of woman’s political progress: “Unsound arguments are the bane of wo man’s cause. They are incessantly belit tling that which in itself is great. One of these is that she is created equal with ninn and would be the same if reared t he same way. But they are not created equal, physically, mentally or any other way. They are radically different by nature. Men 1 and women of the same blood differ more from each other than man differs from man in all the varieties of race and civili zation. Woman may be superior, but at any rate they are not created equal, and cannot be made so. Their rights do not depend on equality. As the obverse or reverse of man, and as by nature at enmity with him, they would have the same right to the suffrage, and the argument for it would be much stronger. The reality is that they need the suffrage because they are not equal with man, and because when they shall have in their hands the means to maintain their rights the natural state will be conflict with man. Another belit tling argument is that women who have property are taxed, and that the insepa- bnityo' rability of representation and taxation is an eternal principle. But this argument abandons ail who have no property. It abandons the suffrage as a natural right. And if anything were in this so-called principle, it would give to the owner n representation in proportion to his prop erty. That would be a nice state of t hings. But in reality there is nothing in this principle. Women should not muddle their cause with such stuff. A very dam aging argument is that of woman’s supe rior moral purity, and that she will dump this into our impure politics and leaven the whole mass. But this fetches the swift answer that she lias this purity because of her exclusion and seclusion,and that if she plunges into the mass she will lose it, and that the leaven of purity has not the same power in a mass of active corruption that the housewife’s leaven has in a hatch of innocent dough. The argument is thus turned against woman suffrage. Besides, it adds a new qualfica- tion to the suffrage. But the most ad vanced women are discarding the idea that they must be morally better than men in order to have political rights, and are asserting their free and equal Iriglit to be as bad as the Bitter Creekers,” Every housekeeper knows bow careful treatment keeps table linen and household furniture. Girls do not always know or remember that great care of their own little possessions will often enable them to dress nicely on very little money. A lady says: “When I was a girl there was one of my young friends who was distinguished for ‘making things last.’ Her dress, hats, gloves and ribbons were a marvel of dura bility. I used to wonder how she man aged to make them last so without their looking shabby, but I ceased to do so after I had visited her at her own home. The reason why her clothes wore so long was that she took such good care of them. Her dresses were brushed and folded away carefully, and the slightest spot on them was removed as soon as it was discovered. Her hat was wrapped in an old pocket handkerchief, and put away in a box as soon as done with, the strings and laces being straightened and rolled out most symmetrically each time. Her gloves were never folded together, but were pulled out straight and laid flat in a box, one upon the other, each time they were used, the tiniest hole being mended almost before it had time to show itself. But the thing that impressed me most was the cure she bestowed on her ribbons. When making up bows she used to line the upper part of the ribbon with white paper, and this not only prevented the ribbon from becoming limp and creased, but kept it clean, so that when the bow was soiled on one side she could turn the ribbon, and the part that had been cov ered came out looking new and fresh. That girl married and brought up a large family. Her husband had to fight lus way and did so bravely, and was unusually successful, for he became wealthy. But ms prosperity was due quite as much to nis wife’s care and economy in saving money as it was to his in making it. I.KMON ELIXIR. From the Liinil of Lemons. n old citizen of my town and an old -gist said to me to-day that he had long a looking for a liver medicine that ild take the place of calomel,producing ts good effects and none oi ds ‘'‘V1' lu " ms constitutional effects. A■ r a ■ough trial he had found it in Ur. Moz- 3 Lemon Elixir. I have sold, as you w, large lots of the Elixir since last ng, and never solid a liver medicine loi nisness, constipation and diseases re- ing from these causes that pleased tne pie as much as Lemon Elixir. Bend me j 3 dozen at once. T. Albert JenMNGs. Druggist, Jasper, Fla. i a Dr. H. Mozley, Atlanta, Ga. >ld by druggists. 50c and ft per bottle, pared by H. Mozley, M. 15., Atlanta, 1 sepo sel in | Hip CHHtlr oflbj* Jen's llanirlitcr— Itrcpnt Explo rations anil Discoveries. Flinders Petrie, who carries on the work of the Egyptian exploration fund, has lately made a discovery which will interest not only the students of Egyptolo gy, but all Bible readers, too. Tills dis covery is nothing less than the “Pharaoh’s house in laphauhes.” mentioned at least four times In Holy Writ, and more partic ularly in Jeremiah xliii. In the 89thchup- ter of Jeremiah it will be found that Neb uchadnezzar, king of Babylon, had taken Jerusalem, made Zedeklah, the king, cap- tivej put out his eyes, killed his sons, burnt tne city, and carried off the mass of the people as prisoners to Babylon. A num ber who were left, among whom were men andl women, the “king's daughters,” and Jeremiah, the prophet, gathered under Johanan and took shelter in Egypt. The place they came to is called Taphanhes, one of the strongholds guarding the Egyp tian frontier on the side towards Palestine." Tne Taphauhesof the Hebrews was known to the Greeks as Daphnes, and, according to Herodotus, it was a place of note in the time of Rameses II., the Sesostris of the Greeks, for on his return from one of his wars in Syria, he met his brother who had g overned in his absence at Daphna;. The rother;invitcd Sesostris and his family to a feast, and endeavored to burn the houso and its occupants, but Sesostris escaped, with great difficulty, two of his sous be ing burned to death in the effort. This was some five or six centuries before the time of Jeremiuh; but tile story related by Herodotus will show the antiquity and historical interest belonging to the spot which Mr. Petrie has just explored. In the 43d .chapter of Jeremiah will be found some curious details about “Pha raoh’s house in Taphanhes.” The prophet was commanded to act us follows: “Take great stones in thine hand and hide them in the clay in the brick-kiln, which is at the entry of Pharaoh’s house in Taphanhes in the sight oi the men of Judah, and say unto them, Tlius suitti the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel: ‘Behold I will send and take Nebuchadnezzar, the king of Baby lon, my servant, mid will set his throne upon these stones that I have hid, and be shall spread his royal pavilion over them. And when he cometh, he shall smite the land of Egypt and deliver such as are for death to death; and such as are for captiv ity in captivity, and such ns are for the sword to the sword.’ ” The wonderful discovery made by Mr. Petrie does not rest at the house of Pha raoh in Taphanhes. He has discovered “an area of continuous brick work, resting on sand, about 100 feet by 60 feet,facing the entrance to the latter buildings at the east corner.” To this description the ex plorer adds: “It is curious how exactly this answers to the brick area, ‘at the en try of Pharaoh’s house in Taphanhes,’ and it would be exactly the place where Nebu chadnezzar would spread’his royal pavil ion.” Mr. Petrie naturally dug into this square platform, and he found there some rough “unhewn stones,” but unfortunately they have no inscriptions on them. Under the circumstances these stones must have, attached to them a strange uncertainty as to whether they are or are not those which were placed there by the divine command. The old mimes of the place are still re tained in the slightly altered form of Tel Defeiineh; the Arabic is thus so close in its following of the Hebrew and Greek that it leaves no room to allow of a doubt as to the identity of the site. It was in the evening, Sir. Petrie says, after a weary day’s march, that he arrived and saw the large mound with the light of the setting sun upon it. Such an experienced explorer had no doubt been reading up the author ities on the subject, and with Jeremiah’s references impressed on his mind, he was startled as the Arabs escorting him pointed to the heap and,ealled it the Gnstle of the Jew’s Daughter. There before him were the remains of Pharaoh’s house in Tap- hauhes, and the words of the people on the spot told him that the story of the royal princess from Jerusalem still clung to the ruin. Brick foundations, small fragments of stone, and rubbish heaps scattered over a considerable space mark the site of this ancient town, but at a considerable elevation stands the mound which was once the residence of Jeremi ill and the royal lsraelitish refugees. From Mr. Petrie’s description this mound must be about 150 feet in height. The ex plorations have shown tiiat the tower had been ransacked, destroyed and probably plundered; before being set on fire. This tower was square and high; it had many stories, which, in its present, condition, cannot now be exactly determined; but tiie lower wails being still intact, it was found that there were sixteen rooms in each floor. That tiie place h id been de stroyed at no very distant period after Jeremiah's visit, seems to be a likely enough theory, for among tiie royal names found on objects, there are only those of Psammetictnis, Die Pharaoh Hophra of dcripturc. and his immediate successors. Mr. Petrie not only explored the Castle of the Jew’s Daughter, but he also turned up the soil over a large por tion of the town, and the result has given a good archieological harvest of objects of considerable interest, among which are articles in gold, silver and precious stones. Why Women Dross. San Francisco Chronicle. For years I have puzzled over the phe nomena of a matinee at the theatres. I wonder what women dress for anyway. It was originally from modesty, but I don’t think it is now. It is not to shield their sensitive organism from cold, for if a wo man has a beautiful wrap that has cost somebody a lot of money and is of the lightest and most delicate texture she’ll wear it in a snow-storm. It is not for coin-, fort, because a woman always gives you a distinct impression that sho must be un comfortable. If she has any shape a faint mark below the shoulders tells you that delicate anatomy is braced in a frame, and even the loveliest shape only inspires a fellow to wisli it were genuine. If you shake hands with her she proceeds imme diately to pull up her glove; if you dance with her she takes advantage of a pause in the music to straighten herself some how; if you brush accidentally against her you throw something out of gear, and when she has nothing else to do she’il re arrange her bang. Woman’s a kind of nuisance anyway. \ou walk up the street behind nil < legant figure dressed in a tight- fitting dress and your ej;e falls on a piece about a sixteenth of an inch long where a thread has broken; you don’t know whether really you ought to tell her or not and vou get fascinated with that break, i until you think it’s growing bigger, and a strange desire takes possession of you to follow her home just to see if she won’t | go to pieces before she gets there. You see before you a badly dressed woman, and if you’ve got any taste you cannot help an impulse to give her a piece of ad vice and tell her to take the garment in there and let it out here. You are admir ing the beauty of the bustle in front of you, when a little wriggle throws it out of gear, and you see a piece of paper peeping out with G. A. R. in big black letters. LI am told that it ought not to be possible, unless through great carelessness; but it was so.] And you know she’s so patriotic that she carries a record of the encamp ment for a day about her person. I think women dress just as an Indian paints or a savage tattoos himself, from a natural con tempt for the taste displayed in the orig inal creation. Cicgvman overtaking two members of his congregation on their wav to church: Won't you and vour friend get in and drive with me to church, Miss Blanche? Miss Blanche innocently—Oh, no, I thank vou; we only go for the walk. - Life. day. A ever, will show that Friday ' has been America’s lucky day, many of the most important events in our annals having oc curred on that day. Itwasou Friday, the 3d of August, 1492, that Christopher Co lumbus seD'Snil from the port of Palos on his voyage of discovery. On Friday the 12th of October, of the same year, he sighted land. On Friday, the 4th of Janu ary, 1493, he set out for Spain to nunounce his glorious discovery. He landed in An dalusia on Friday, the 15th of March, 1493. On Friday, June 13, 1494, he discovered the continent of America, On Friday, MareliS, 1499, Henry VII., king of Eng land, sent Jean Cabot on a mission which led to tiie discovery of North America. On Friday, November 10, 1566, Melendez founded St. Augustine, the oldest city in the United States. On Friday, November 10. 1620, the Mayflower landed the Pilgrim fathers at the ond of Cape Cod where Prinoetown now stands. On Friday, De cember 21,1620, the immigrants reached Plymouth Rock. On Friday, February 22, Washington was born. On Friday, June 17, Bunker Hill was captured. On Friday, October 8, 1781, Saratoga surrendered. Ar nold’s treason plot was discovered on Fri day, September 23, 1769. Yorktown sur rendered one Friday in October, 1781. Tartly, it wns on Friday, June 7, 1781, that Richard Henry Lee read in congress the declaration of independence of tiie United States. Fur ii'mt'sn Huisc Tlielr Out) Trout. American '’armer. It is much easier, says Seth Green, to stock a stream than to raise fish in ponds, I because the young fish will take care of I themselves much better than any one can ! take care of them, and if they are prnteut- j ed irom danger until they are about forty- five days old—which is about the time tho fish culturist takes charge of them—until they are ready to feed, they are then tol- I ora.fiy able to look out. for themselves. In stocking a stream with trout, the young i fish should be taken to its headwaters, or put into the springs and little rivulets • which empty into it. As they grow larger, they will gradually settle down I stream, and run up again to the head- , waters in the fall and winter to spawn. I When putting fish into a stream, ao not i put them suddenly into water much 'warmer than that of the vessel in which ! they have been transported. They will I not be so likely to be injured by putting I them in water a few degrees colder; but ! try to avoid all sudden changes, and grad- I unlly raise or lower the temperature of the i water in which you bring them, until it is ■ even with that of the stream in which ] they are to he placed. Perhaps, in no : branch of fish culture, are the results more ' immediate, or more apparent, than ill rc- i stocking streams. MOST PERFECT MADE Prepared with strict regard to Purity, Strength, and Healthf illness. Ur. Price's Baking Powder contains no Ammonia,Lime.Alum or Phosphates. Dr.Brice's Extracts, Vanilla, Lemon, etc., llavor deliciously. flp/ce BAKING POWDER CO. Cmcann. and Sr Lnu/a. {Copy.) Chicago, Aprii. 21st, it*>o. This is to certify, that the Illinois Trust and Savings Bank has this day received from the Union Cigar Company of Chicago, to be held as a Special Deposit, U. S. 4°lo Coupon Bonds, as follows : No. 22028 D. 9500. •» Market Value of which Is $1012. no. ..u.n ii. \ * “ 41204 100. I •» 41205 100. I •• casio loo. 1 9800. / l 9800. / (S.) 7as. S. Gibbs, Cash. We offer the above as a FORFEIT, if our “ FANCY GROCER” docs not prove to be a genuine Havana-fillerCigar.-Union Cigar Co. ^fioc£P Our LA LOMA 10c. Cigar is strictly Hand made. Elegant quality. Superior workmanhip. Sold by all Grocers. UNION CICAli COMPANY, 55 N. Clinton St, - CUICA60. Retail Oil l. D. HUNT. Columbus, Ga ie24 dly rn IN And SILKS all open Monday, si vo Novel I ii Nothing like Extreme Novelties! Exelu- Itiem ever shown in Coliun- .iYLTID TieilE] —I3ST- MANUFACTURED BY M, D, HOOD & C0„ IS WRITTEN ESPECIALLY For the Ladies BLAHCHARD,lODTH & HOFF'S ANNOUNCEMENT FOR MONDAY. DRESS GOODS bus. We are displaying a line of Dress Goods far ahead of any of our previous efforts. You are cordially invited to come and look lliein through, whether you wish to buy or not. Remember that we are always glad to show you the goods. Don * I liesilate to come and iisk to he shown through tliis magnificent stock. You will agree with us in saying that il is grand. Mothers, Mark This! You will soon need Stockings for the little fellows. We are offering unheard-of bargains in Hosiery. 5,000 Pairs children's lull regular made Ribbed Hose, blacks and colors, ai 25c—nothing as good heretofore for 40c. 5,000 Pairs Misses' solid colored Hose, extra lengths, at 15c. 1,000 Pairs Misses’ solid colored Ribbed Hose at 33.1 c; they were sold Iasi season in lliis market as a big bargain at 50e. A perfect world of children’s Hosiery at 10.: per pair, plain goods, ribbed goods and stripes. LADIES’ HOSIERY. Don't forget (o ask for our 15u and 2Tx* LADIES’ HOSE. They art* two items about which we have some pride. 1,000 Pairs dents’ full regular made unbleached Half Hose at lttgu ; 25c is the standard price of these goods. Our Hosiery stock is too large to give any idea of its extent here. We wish simply to remind you of tho department. You will be shown the goods cheerfully. OH!? JERSEYS HAVE JUST COME. All style, all kinds. They are cheap. KID GLOVES! KID GLOVES! Ask to see our 76c Kid Glove. Ask to see our 5-button Embroidered Back Kid Glove at #1.00. And don’t forget our line of DOLLAR CORSETS. DOMESTICS! DOMESTIC’S! Full line of 10-1 Sheetings, P. C. Cottons. Bleached Cottons, etc., at the lowest possible prices. Housekeepers who have Table Linens, Towels, Napkins and Lace Curtains to buy should examine our stock without fail. Don’t wait on Lace Curtains until all the good patterns are gone. They are going. Everybody who reads this is cordially invited to visit our stores this week and avail herself of the many bargains that will.be offered. Blanchard, Booth & Huff. Columbus, Ga. HOODS EUREKA LIVER MEDICINE Tho faultless family remedy. For biliousneMs torpid liver, indigestion, constipation, and all th# common ills of life it is simply perfect and can* not be improved. Don’t be without u bottle. Jordan's Joyous Julep The infallible remedy for Neuralgia. It wili cure the worst case of Neuralgia, however sever*- and long standing the case. JUVANTIA! A specific for Sick Headache. A dose taken when s\ nip to ms appear will prevent the wor»V Hick Headache. It cures nothing else. TIiomnsN Gcrmiiii Cologne, a Perfumtr* most delightftil and refreshing. Extract* »f I,onion anil Vanilla, tbf finest flavoring extracts known—something su perior and elegant. dtf . RICE, For 15 years at 37 Court Place, now at \ roffuWrlv ertuentod un<l legally i|unlilH-‘l physician nn-1 tfcff . „t Hu'veWiil, ni his praottoo will provo. Cures all forms of PRIVATE, CHRONIC and SEXUAL DISl EASES. , . - SpormatorrUoa and Impolcncy* .« t’.c of Hcir-nhmo in youth, ■i , *unl excesses In m*. mi or vourn, or other onus'’*, nml producing some o f llm fot* I..WUV Hrect-: Set vousiiujh. Bu-mlnui Kmltwlons, (night «ml»- nl.,1,1 i,y (Iremns). lUimivo «>r Sigh*. Defective Memory. i*hy .,i III) euy, I’imploom Fftco, Aversion to Society of Ftnmle*, Coufu.don of Mem, l.os» of Boxuul l’owoc. Ac., rendering- marriage improper or unhappy, aro thoroughly and perm*. lifiiitlv I’lired. SYPHlL IS cured “ ud ea ' tlrelv orndloatej f ro - - ** 1 **“ GLEET, Htri< It D Gonorrhea, ro, Orchitis, Hernia, (ur ltupluie), ilbuMuicn quickly cured. If-evlduut that n pliy Hlelnn who payn special attention . privutoly RETURNED, „ Imuaandi i ally,”iieuuiriw great akiil. Phyaidanii knowing thR fact oftott recommend person* to my care. When It ** * *“ vi.it the city for treatment, niedlolima can kDl Rifely by mull or e*[n-ean anywhere. Cures Guaranteed In all Cate# undertaken. Charged i euaouablo und oorn^ixihdciioo b * PRIVATE COUNSIXOR Mf KfK) png' *. M-'i't to liny nddrrma, wourely annlcd, for thutj-i 11)1 r. m i ipitild |K) road hv all. AddroHa a« ahovo MfU. u dubiiA. M. toqP M. Suudava. 3 to 4 P. * '~>S)KE Biliousness; Sick Kou'rrho In Fourlmurs. One dost? r?!lcvos Nci.rr. 1 ; !". They cure and prevent Chills / Fever. SVur Stomach .i‘- Bad noth. Clear i!-j PI-in. 7u..o tho l'* rves, pni fllvc ile Vigor to the system. J> »so: ONM VJ'AN, V them onco urn you whi npvrr vUhr \ • *.,:n .‘rice, 2li cents p:r hotelu. Sold bjlo-ug* lodicino Dealers gr-ncral'v. Sor.f ** ; «i. . . p. ico In stempfc. postpaid, to any acidrosiV d.F.s>irnL? >. v Manufacturers a.u 3:ie Frcp IT. LOUIS, MO. Car Load Lots Our Buyer Has Excelled all Previous Efforts In bis piii’cllasf’K. Exporiunco makes us proficient. All are invited lo call and inspect our Novelties in Dress Hoods. J. A. KIRVEN & CO. Crab Orchard -WATER. THE 1.1 VICK, -me KiDPiicvs. , [the ntojiach. THE IIOWEL8. A POSITIVE CUKE Foil 3 DYSPEPSIA. 45 Constipation. ^ Sick Headache. SJ Ii.ikf :—Onn to two teftflpopnfuiB. Onulnn Chau Ohciiaiiu Salts in Hcnlocl purkiuiuB at loc. mm ZOc. Iau K'-nuluo Salt. »u!9 lu bulk. Crab Orchard Water Co., Prop’rt. S. N. JONHS, Mmairer. l.nulsville, Ky. eg f n x 5 s K :l5 ~k X 3 J IMa, UjLj “CHtCKSSl Ert’a ENGLISH.* r iu* O’-iitir.*: **•»<! Only Griiiline. • a.!:.' ... l-'i.r M return mall MAMF PAP -J- , . • ^ ( litnilcul 4't*., ••* U'Hl-ni f*hiiadtt., P* EDUCATES BUSINESS i Ills School is the best in America. The most practical course of in- ntructioh and the most eminent faculty. En dorsed by business houses. For circulars and specimens of Pen manship, address K5S3A2T J. 30LB3HITB, Mobile & Girarc c ^ vN and after this date Trains will run as follows: J F jLUMbl F S, DA., Sc 3. Co. ptember 19, 1886. WEST BOUND TRAINS. No. 1. Pass’ger | No. 3. Accom. No. 5. Accom. Leave Columbus Union Depot “ Columbus Broad Street Depot Arrive Union Springs i I.eave Union Springs 2 30 p m 2 46 p m 5 37 p m 6 46 p m 10 25 p m 10 35 p m 1 45 a m j 2 00 am 5 05 a m 5 15 a m 9 06 a m 9 55 a m f “ Montgomery, M. & E. R. U “ Eufauk, M. <fc K. R. R EAST BOUND TRAINS. 7 23 p m 10 33 p m No. 2. Past’ger 4 50 a m 1 No. 4. Accom. 10 50 am No. 6. Accom. ADVERTISERS Can learn the exact cost of any proposed line of advertising in American Papers by addressing Newspaper* Advertising Bureau, lO Spruce St., New York. Send lOcts for lOO-oaue Damohleh Arrive Union Springs Leave Union Sgrings Arrive Montgomery, M. A: E. K K. “ Columbus •ipa. Trains Nos. 1 and 2 .Mail daily. Nos. 3 and 1 Macon and Montgomery Accommodation jdaily except Sunday. No. 5 and G Way Freight and Ace ceptcept Sunday. No-. 9 and 10 'Passenger; Sundays only. W. L. CLARK, Sup’t. 4 D. E. WILLIAMS, O. P. A. The College of Letters, Musicand Art. Sixteen professors and teachers; five in music, with the Misses Cox, directors, Misses Reichenan and Records, both graduates of Leipsic, and Miss Deaderick, a thoroughly trained vocalist; full apparatus with mounted telescope. For cuta- ogues address I. F. COX, Pres’t. Jyn <J&w2m