Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 December 1889 — Page 3

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K' WOMAN'S LITERARY CAREER

Ella Wheeler Wilcox Writes About the Life of An Author.

WHA.T THE OUTLOOK IS FOR A YOUNG WOMAN.

What Mak63 a JSensation—Fame at a Distance And as a Possession.

|Copyright, 1889, by the Bok Syndicate Press. MY DEAR MISS MVKIAD You wrote me that you are about to enter upon*a literary career, and you ask me for a letter of general advice and

COUDBel.

You thank me in advance for any suggestions I may offer which will better enable you to win the ear of the public, the good favor of the critics, and the gold of the publishers. You inquire the best method to get the newspapers talking about you, as an introduction to the public, and you end by telling me that you are engaged upan a work which you believe will create a sensation in literary circles, and that you are bracing yourself to meet the mingled storm of condemnation and praise sure to be called forth by your boid, daring, but honest .utterances. [Q the first place, my dear Miss Myriad, let me disabuse your mind of the idea that the newspapers can make or unmake your fame. They might write you "up" for fifty years every day, and the pulse of the people would never throb at the sight or sound of your name unless your character and genius made themselves felt independently of newspaper articles.

Tiiey might write you "down" for just us many years, and if your character was strong and noble, and your genius grfeat, you would still be loved and appreciated by the public heart. It is the merest folly to talk about newspaper articles helping or harming an artist. All She correspondents, paragrapheas and editors in the world cannot make you great or ignoble, and whichever you are, that part of the world capable of understanding, will eventually discover if you keep oil in your career.

Character is indestructible, and it is upon character that any worthy and lasting result in art must depend. With character and talent, though all the pens of all the critics turned into swords and were lifted against you, still would you stand. With geniuB alone, the blow of a quill may help to hasten the fall whiub, however, would be sure to come without it.

The first thing necessary for you to do, is to find out your own motive in choosing a literary career. If you write as the young birds sings, you need no advice from me. For the great cause is back of your thoughts, and will force them to find their way out as natural springs forces their way through rocks, and nothing can hinder you.

But if you have merely a well-defined literary ability and taste, you would do well to consider this step.

What is your attitude toward humanity? The author should be ab^e to instruct, entertain, guide, or amuse his readers. Otherwise, he has no rigbt to expect their attention, time or money. If he writes merely for amusement, let him keep his manuscripts out of the printers' hands. He who publishes proclaims his desire to be appreciated, and you had best discover at once what your object is in demanding public appreciation and attention.

If it is merely money, you would be wise to wait until you fall heir to a comfortable income sufficient to maintain life during the first ten years of literary pursuits. Save in solitary cases of remarkable genius, literature requires ten years of apprenticeship, at least, before yielding the support of its follower.

If your object is fame, and you desire to be happy as well as famous, then case yourself in steel armor, till your ears with lead, and avoid reading all current periodicals, that you may not feel, hear or

Bee

the ital assaults forever dealt to the am,

ful.

Otherwise, you wili

die ten iuv...-Jud deaths before your laurel wreath is firmly settled on your brows.

Seen from a distance, fame may seem to a wo nan like sea bathed in tropical suns whereon she longs to sail. Let fame once be hers, she finds it a prairie tire, consuming or scorching all that is dearest in life to her. Be careful, my dear Miss Myriad, before you light these tires with your own hands.

If, however, you feel great with thoughts, and your object is to benefit humanity, even at the cost of some suffering to yourself, if you regard fame as an incident, and money an object you are willing to wait and labor for, then I bid you God speed, and congratulate you on "having been chosen by higher forces as one of the mental Mother Marys to give forth your divine braia offspring to help humanity.

Allot earthly happiness that is to be found outside of loving and being loved, you will find in your profession. You will have the rapture that comes from creat ion, the ecstasy of expression, the satisfaction of achievement. You cannot be poor, for the riches of expression will be yours. You may be your own maid, yet queens shall bow to you as greater queen in the higher realm of thought.

But with all these joys you must accept and endure the mortification of beiug patronized by tho3e who would more fitly serve you as meniale,criticised by your inferiors, misunderstood by the the stupid, and misconstrued by the envious. A curious, if admiring, public will invade your most sacred privacy, and if you submit gracefully you wili hear the coBrse accusations of the leas fortunate branding you as a"seekerafter notoriety," "a manipulator of the press."

If, on the contrary, you shut your doors on the inquisitive public and resent its intrusion,you will hear yourself called selfish, ill-bred and unworthy the

honors conferred upon you. You must hear your individual traits ridiculed by those' who at the same time strive to imitate you, and you will be lied about by those who are anxious to walk in your shadow.

You will hear your most original work called a plagarism, and your choicest gems of thought p'atitudes, and your loudest detractors will be those who have never read a line you w.-otf.

But all this will not discourage, though it may sadden you if_ you are worthy of your calling you will go on and find happiness and contentment in it, and you will not be hindered or delayed by the babble of the ignorant, the sneers of the jealous, or the falsehoods of the malicious.

As success comes to you—the success of reaching human hearts—one tearstained letter from some stranger, who writes to you to thank you for something you have said that helped her bear her burdeu, will more than recompense you for twenty wounds received from that army of pigmy men and women who hide behind paragraphs to assail those struggling up the heights to fatue. And the critic who consigns you to oblivion in a sentenc?, and the sweet sister author who shudderingly declares that she would not have your notoriety for a million dollars, will only cause you a sad smile, as you read again the stranger's blurred letter.

But, my dear Miss Myriad, the work you are now engaged upon will not create a sensation. The authors who stir the hearts and fire the heads of their readers, and galvanize the inanimate brains of critics into ghastly contortions o* terror, are the authors ?,'ho never expect or desire such a result.

Work which affects the world like this must first seethe in the heart and then sieze on the brain and compel expression, and so absorb and permeate its creator's mind that no thought of the public can enter until the work is done. You can no more sit down and deliberately think up a romance or a poem which will electrify the reader, than you can argue yourself into a grand passion which shall render your name historic like that of Heloise and A'oalard. These must come of their own force, and burn their way out into the light, with no thought of the audience awaiting them.

Of course jou can sit down in cold blood and write shocking, vulgar or absurd things, which will startle your readers for the moment, and draw attention to you as a decollete dress would startle Broadway at high noon, or a hatless man who ran shouting down the street would cause people to put their heads out of their windows. We have had some illustrations of this method in literature, but it never pays, and it causes, at best, no more sensation than the unexpected popping of a torpedo.

When genius is stirred by powerful emotion it produces a eensation of a brilliant matoor, the glow of a star on fire, the splendor of a tropical sunset and it is not granted human brains t.o go about this deliberately. You must feel strongly before you can express vividly. If this genius is your dower—and I doubt it, Miss Myriad, or you would never have appealed to any one for advice—and you find yourself forced from within to utterance, the world will listen to you weeping, laughing, questioning, understanding, cheering, hissing, praising, maligning—all according to its mental and moral status and ability to comprehend you—and this will be fame.

But your happiness will have been in the work, not in what the world says of it, for you will realizs that each opinion is but individual, and the satisfactory approvol muat come from within, not from without.

ELLA. WHEK:

CR

WII.COX.

HERE'S A GENTLE

That Ii.trhers May Take Willi Profit to Themselves and to Xlielr Victims. "Man, the American man," said the newly shaven citizan, ns he buttoned his coat, "is a patient animal—away from home. Nowhere does he exercise this patience so much as in a barber shop." "TTow is that?" asked the man who was next, says a reporter of the Philadelphia Inquirer. "Just as soon as you're scraped the barber slaps a lot of chalk on your face. You don't want it but you don't kick. It's the custom. Some barber in the year 1 conceived the crazy idea that chalk was the proper thing after a shave, and chalk it's been ever since. After the chalk comes grease. Grease, abaut the consistency of frozen mucilage, is daubed in your hair, which is then flattened down with a muscular vigor that leaves dents in your skull. DJ you protest? Not much you don't. The other victims go through the ordeal, and you don't want to appear odd or be set down as a crank. Then a tallow candie, done up in colored paper, is rubbed in your mustache until it glistens, and jou make your escape looking like a dummy in a wigmaker's window and smelling like a soap factory." "But you needn't have these things unless you want to," put in the baldheaded man. "But you do have them when you don't want to," retorted the shaven one. "If you go to the one barber for forty years and tell him twice a week that you want a clean jol without any grease, the forty-one hundred and s'xty-tirst time you sit down he'll go through the whole performance, chalk, mucilage, candle and all. We are progressing every day—except the barbers. There's money for the man who will throw his stock of cosmetics out of the back window aod serve his customers without their

Bid."

"Why don't you go into the business?" asked 'the bcsa barber, winking at £he wash boy. "Because I have a conscience."

Uow to Get There.

Party with Fashionable Cane—Aw say, me boy, can you tell me how aw can get to Commonwealth avenue?

Street Bay—If yer drop that club, yer can get there by walking' but if yer take the stick along, I guess yer'll have ter get an express wagon.—[Boston Transcript.

A Restitution,

A lawyer at Colmar has bequeathed 100,000 francs to the lunatic asylum in that town. "I made the money," he says in his will, "out of those people who spend all their lives in going to law—it is a simple act of restitution."—[Almanach Lunatique.

-A-*1

,--.

SANTA CLAUS' DOMAIN.

A Grand Array of Handsome Toy*—Wonderful Mechanical Marvels. "These are the pretty things that Santa Clau8 brings to good little boys, dear!" explained a mother while strolling about a toy bazaar. The little boy's eyes were as bright as new dimes as the little folks' fairyland burst upon him. He drew in along breath and exclaimed with the procociousness of a 5 yearsold: "Say, mamma, Santa Claus is a dandy, isn't he?"

At no previous Christmas has such an array of toys been put forth to tempt the pocketbooks of the rich and poor. There is an old Chinese proverb, which literally translated is: "A rich man's pocketbook wiil stretch a foot before it will tear an inch." Not eo, however, with a poor man's pocketbook, but this season, for the first time, are elegant toys within reach of the poor man, while new inventions are fitted for the rich man's more voluminous bank account.

There is no toy store in New York where

th9

A cunning contrivance is the animal band, composed of a bear which plays the bass fiddle, a dog which plays a triangle and a monkey who draws a bow across a violin. They keep excellent time to the music by nodding their heads, and their movements are natural as life. It costs 810 to possess this toy.

A musical clown, who plays the guitar and makes faces at the moon in a frame opposite, is comical, especially' 6 he man in the moon rolls his eyes in grotesque manner and opens and shuts his jaws with a snap periodically.

A handsomely dressed young lady standing on a rock, fisbpole in hand, catches, fish to the tune of "We're Out on the Ocean Sailing." This toy is worth $25, and is more of a mantel ornament than-a plaything for the destroying angels of the household.

A rooster, dressed as a troubadour, emitting a musical crow and playing a mandolin, is a novelty. It stands three feet high and costs $35.

A Chinese mandarin, standing under the shade of his big parasol, nods his head sedately and grins comically at occasional intervals, and is well worth $10.

The toy which caught the children, however, was Mary's little lamb, which, when wound up and placed upon the floor, walked about, bleated sadly for Mary and wagged its head dolefully because Mary couldn't find it. The lamb was worth $7, a little more than a genuine one is worth to a butcher.

The walking baa-, with wagging head and surly growls, was next in the hearts of the little ones, while a pig, shut up in its pen and liberated by the farmer upon touching a spring, jumped out and about the floor very naturally.

The country and city dude are new this season and are extremely camical. The Eiffel tower puzzle, made of cardboard, four feet high, is a cheap and amusing toy. It comes in' sections and will worry many a curly little head to erect it. It costs only $2.

The dolls are innumerable, from the 5 cent rag baby to the SoQ one from Paris. They come in all sizes and colors. A funny style is a $2 one, which cries and winks its eyes, and can be made to sleep by pressing a button in its chest. To further make these dolls valuable to the little ones there are dresses and toilet articles which make the life of a doll and a child happy.

There are wagon loads of magic lantern?, costing from $2 to $100 great flocks of sheep and lamb?, horses, dogs, cats and camels, which cost from fifty cents to $15.

For the boys are car loads of truck', wagons, mail carts and express wagons loaded with bundles. In the game de partment are several new games, among which the following are amusing: The target game, which consists of a board with holes in it, through which a ball must be thrown. A box of assorted games is cheap Bnd consists of lotto, checkers chess, domiuoes, jackstraws and a few puzzles.

There are new magic trick boxes and cabinets, toy tennis and rapid shuttlecock, which is the old-time shuttlecock with the exception that the feathered dart is fired out of a blunderbuss by a spring. The big' ball tennis game consists of throwing a big ball and catching it in a hoop stick instead of a racquet.

The Sailor Boy game is new. By drawing cards the sailor before the mast is advanced from that position to commodore of his fleet. The Wild West is another, showing the cowboys, wild animals, etc., and quite instructive. The Attack is another and is meant to show the evolutions of the battlefield.

There are dolle' houses, all complete, costing from $5 to $23 kitchen, stable3, grocery, drug and meat stores, parlor and bed-room sets, theaters, Punch and Judy shows, doll carriages and cradles galore.

For older children are hundreds o{ tricycles and velocipedes costing from 62 to $15, while the array of eleds is probably more than ever will be bought in New York. Over three hundred sets .of infantry, cavalry, artillery, pontoon trains, camps and battles are offered for sale by one toy firm, and they are going off like hot cakes.

How De Wolf Hopper'* Courtship Began. De Wolf Hopper threatens to star next season. Have you c-ver heard the story how Da Wolf first happened to notice the charming lady who is his wife? Colonel McCaull, it appears, was not satisfied with the gloomy expression on the countenance of his chorus girls

$•

n\

GLITTERING GEMS! c,

I have secured, the assistance of Mr. H. P. SCHMIDT, who will bs glad to give liis personal-] attention to his many ft friends' that may favor him with a oall.

-27 SOUTH FOUI^H STREET.

ttr

«S*

pocketbook cannot be accom­

modated. The poor mother buys a wax doll for SI at the same counter where her richer sister, wrapped in sables and sealskins, pays $30 for a Jumeau doll dressed in the latest style and which cries "mamma" and "papa" with a plaintiveness that is somewhi.t Lu i:rous. The_train of the inventor has been busy since Santa Claus drove over the housetops a year ago, and some of the mechanical toys evoluted since then are quite startling in their naturalness.

The milkmaid driving her cow home from the pasture is acute pi ce of work. It is fitted with clock work and when wound up runs in a circle. There is a music box concealed ia the body of the cow, and as the journey home is made the music plays, the cow wags her head from side to side and "moos" while the milkmaid opens and shuts her mouth and eyes, at the SBme time laying the whip with a good will upon the back of her bovine friend. This toy costs §12.

THE TEfSltE HAUTE EXPRESS SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 15, 1889.

one day at rehearsal, and told them that they mast face his audiences with $150-a-week kind of smile every time. "Will nothing enliven you?" he hotly asked. "What would you do, for in stance, if I raised your salaries?"

All the girls feebly smiled at the idee, but one chorus girl boldly spoke up and said: "Drop dead, colonel!"

Da Wolf Hopper overheard-the apt reply, and later that witty chorus girl became his wife.—[Black Cat.

What He Overheard.

Tommie—Mamma, I think papa might take me with him as well as other boys, Mother—Your papa does not take other boys. What put such an idea into your head?

Tommie—Yes, he does, mamma, for I heard him tell Mr. Brown that he was out with the boys last night.—[Boston Budget,

The Teacher

Who advised lier pupils to strengthen their minds by the use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla, appreciated the truth that bodily health is essential to mental vigor. For persons of delicate and feeble constitution, whether young or old, this medicine is remarkably beneficial. Be sure you get Ayer's Sarsaparilla.

Every spring and fall I take a number of bottles of Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and am greatly benefited."-—Mrs. James H. Eastman, Stoneham, Mass.

I have taken Ayer's Sarsaparilla with great benefit to my general health." Miss Thirza L. Crerar, Palmyra, Md. "My daughter, twelve years of age, has suffered for the past year from

General Debility.

5

A few weeks since, we began to give lier Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Her health lias greatly improved."—Mrs. Harriet H. Battles, South Chelmsford, Mass. "About a year ago I began using Ayer's Sarsaparilla as a remedy for debility and neuralgia resulting from malarial exposure in the army. I was in a very bad condition, but six bottles of the Sarsaparilla, with occasional doses of Ayer's l'ills, have greatly improved my health. I am now able to work, and feel that I cannot say too much for your excellent remedies." F. A. Piukham, South Moluncus, Me. "My daughter, sixteen years old, is using Ayer's Sarsaparilla with good effect."—"Rev. S. J. Graham, United Brethren Church, Buckhannon, W. Va. "J suffered from

Nervous Prostration,

with lame hack and headache, and have been much benefited by tlie use of Aver's Sarsaparilla. I am now 80 years of age, and am satisfied that my present health and prolonged life are due to the use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla." Lucy Moflitt, Killingly, Conn.

Mrs. Ann H. Farnswortli, a lady 79 years old, So. Woodstock, Vt., writes "After several weeks' suffering from nervous prostration, I procured a bottle of Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and before I had taken half of it my usual health returned."

Ayer's Sarsaparilla,

PREPARED BY

Or. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Price $1 nix bottles, $5. Woi th $S a bottle.

Satisfaction Positively Guaranteed

We feel confluent in saying that

NO Purer or Better Baking Powder

Is sold. All we ask is a fair trial.

Sold, by all Grocers!

1-pound cans for 40t), and ft-pound cans for 20c.

KIRK'S

AMERICAN FAMILY

SOAP

LEAVES SKIN SOFT

AJJj

Corner

AND

5CENTS

***,,

•**•$

i*

1

Ninth

SMOOTH.

CLEANS AND POLISHES ALL METALS AND WOOD WORK

WITHOUT SCRATCHING. ACAKE. ASK YOUR GROCER

The MODOC TRIPOLI MINING C0..CiDCinnatl,0.

.***

666 Wabash Avenne, Terre Haute, In (J. REPRESENTING Commercial Union, of London

FAIR BANK'S SANTA CLAUS SOAP..

ftdiSPe^bJe plated faflijy

for aJI t\ou$ek°ld *nd

Fisher Bankrupt Stock of

BOOTS & SHOES

Now is Your Chance to Buy in Your Footwear at

Bankrupt Prices.

327 Main Street.

VILLltWJ'tTy*. LI If. C. CUft

CLIFF & CO.,

JUMOTACTDBKBS OK

BOILERS, SMOKESTACKS, TANKS, Etc,

or

KU»DS

(Successor to

REPAIRING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.

Shop oil First between 'Walnut ana Poplar TERRE HAUTE, IND.

S. L. PENNER

FKNNKR A LITTLK)wanta

CLIFT & WILLIAMS (§.

MANUFACTURERS OF

Sash, Doors, Blinds, Etc.

AND DEALERS IK

Rates reasonable. Losses adjusted and paid promptly.

$500 Reward

rWE will pay the above reward for any case of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia. Sick Headache. Indigestion. Constipation or Costlveness we cannot cure with Wesrs Vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are

§ugar

IS THE ONLY COMBINED

SOAP GLEANER tP POLISHER

urely vegetable and never fall to give satisfaction, Coated. Large boxes, containing 30 Pills. 26 cents. For sale by all Druggists. Beware of counterfeits and imitations. The genuine manufactured only br JOHN C. WEST JE CO., "The Pill Makers," 862 W. Madison street. Chicago. Free trial package sent by mall, prepaid, op re celpt of a 3-cent stamp. Sold by J. & C. Baur, Druggists, southeast corner Seventh street and Wabash avenve, Terre Haute, Ind.

TO WEAK HEN

Buffering from the effects of youthful errors, early dcctT, vutisff vfiikucss, lost manhood, 6tc.»Iwill •end a valuable treatise (sealed) containing full particulars for homo cure, FREE0' charge. A splendid medical work should De read by every ptn rho la nervous and debilitate^jLddress,

Trot. F. C. FOWLEK, Moodui, Conn.

.**

Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Glass, Paints, Oils and Builders Hardware, •,

and Mulberry Streets.

FIRE INSURANCE!

ALLEN, KELLET & CO,

Michigan F. & M.,of Detroit London & Lancashire, of Liverpool Lancashire, of Manchester

British America, of Toronto

WAstern Assurance, of Toronto Union Insurance Co., of California-, Traders'Insurance Co., of Chicago

Sun Insurance Co., of California Manufacturers', of Indinnapolis.

Besides the above reliable lire companies we represent the largest company in the United States dolntr an Accident, Plate Glass, Steam Boiler and Employers' Liability business,

THE FIDELITY AJD CASUALTY OF NEW YORK. Also the best and largest Live Stock Insurance company In the United States, the IIDIAIA LIVE STOCK CO.. OF CBAWFORDSVILLE This company has paid $130,000.00 for dead stock since organization In 18c6. TOTAL ASSETTS EEPEFSEJTED OVER $153,000,000.

Opera Glasses, Lockets, Bronze Clocks, Zlar Rings, Charms,- Silver Spoons, Silverwear, Napkin Rings, Silk Umbrellas,: Seal Rings, Gold Head Canes, Bracelets, Onyx Clocks, Gold Spectacles, J. Gold Pens, -v. Gold Toothpicks.

Everything new, latest designs, finest quality. All goods warranted exactly as represented. My holiday stock is now complete and ready for inspection. Prices guaranteed to be the lowest.

~~x

Lwtidfy

,.V r- Remember the .*

CLOSING:OUT SALE!

OF THE-

purfcojej.

by N.K. FAIRBANKS CO. CHICAGO.

every one to know that be does only

1200 MAIN STREET.

Established 1861. Incorporated 1888

J. WILLI AM3, President. J.5M. CLIFT, Secretary and Treasurer.

TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.

Health is Wealth.

AV

AAUs

it

TREATMENT

DR. E. C. WKST'S NKKVK AND BRAIN TRKATMRNT, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizziness, Convulsions, Kits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prostration, caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental Depression, Softening of the Brain, resulting In Insanity and leading to misery, decay and death Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Power in either sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermatorrhoea, caused by over-exertion of the brain, self-abuse or over-Indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. $1 a Dox, or six boxes for $6, sent by mall prepaid on receipt of price.

WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES

To cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied with $5, we will send the purchaser our written guarantee to refund the money If the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees Issued only by J. & C. Baur, Druggists, sole agents, southeast corner Seventh Btreet and Wabash avenue, Terre Haute, Ind.

NEW MOVE! NEW MKDICLNEI OASTO'S COUGH SYRUP. At your gricers'. Price 20c and 50c. Ham pie free.

Positively guaranteed or money refunded.

1 fcbcGHSrt^iir

•jyuoj- IJf' CU?L-S

For Catarrh, Hay Kever, Headache and Cold In the Head this remedy hint no eiual. By diluting with water and ualnz a* awash It will quickly cure the worst case of catarrh. For s»le by all grocers. Made only by DB. J. C. CASTO, 210 MalD.

*****i

1

PROFESSIONAL CARDS.

DRS. ELDER

A

Groce

BAKER,

Homoepathic Physicians and Surgeons.

Office, 103 South Sixth Street.

Night calls at the office will receive prompt at tentlon. Telephone No. 136.

W. B. KAIL.

-"5

L, K. BAKTBOLQJUrW.

DRS. MAIL & BARTHOLOMEW

Dentists,

(Successors to Bartholomew A HALL 629f Ohio St. Terre Haute, Ind.

LRC, BOTBJL M. B. SHIt KM A3.

ROYSE A SHERMAN,

Attorneys at Law,

NO. 617 OHIO STREET.

DR. C. O. LINCOLN,

DENTIST.

All work warranted as represented. Office and residence 810 North Thirteenth street. Ten* Haute, Ind.

^K%e

vouRf

Y*^

THS^V-

"PEERLESS

IN NAME

QUALITY Ik!

TIN /TV* ITDL

fFLAVOR/m.

C.H.PEARSON &C2.vBALTI MORE. MD.

TIME" TABLE.

Trains marked thus (P) denote Parlor Car at tached. Trains marked thus (S) denote Sleeping Cars attached dally.

Trains

marked thus (B) de­

note Buffet Cars attached. Trains marked thus ran dally. All othet trains ran dally Holidays excepted.

VANDALIA LIKE.

T. H. 4 I. DIVISION. L*AV» FOR TH» WEST.

No. 9 Western Express (SAY) l.« a. m. No. fi Mall Train 10.21 a. m. No. 1 Fast Lice (PAV).. t.

m-

No. 21 3.10 p. m. No. 7 Kast Mall DIM i. m. LKAVX FOB THJC KAST. No. 12 Cincinnati Express (8) 1.30 a. ni. No. 6 New York Express (9AV) 1.51 a. ni. No.

4

Mall and Accommodation 7.15 a. m. No. *1 Atlantic Express (P4V) ia.«7 p. m. No. «Fait Line*

No. 2

X£D. m,

5-°°

I'-

ABHXVK FKOH TIIK KAST.

Nc.0 Western Express (SAY) I.S0 a. m. Nr. Mill Train 10-15 a. m. No. 1F .st Line (PAV) 2.m p. m. No. 8.05 p.m. No. 8 Mall and Aooommodatlon 8.16 p. m. No. 7 Vast Mall 9-00 p. m.

ARRrVK FROM THK WKBT.

No. 12 Cincinnati Express (S) 1.20 a. m. No. 6 New Ysrk Express (S&V) 1.42 a. ni. No. 20 Atlantic Expross (PAV) ltt.12 p. m. No. Fast Line* 2!" p.m.. No. 2 6.00p.m.

T. H. A L. DIVISION.

LKAVB FOR TH* HORTU.

No. 52 South Bend Mall WJa. m. No. South Bend Expross 4.00 p. m. ABHIVK FROM TUX ttOHTH No. 51 Terre Haute Express 12.00 noon No. 68 South Bend Mall 7.80 p.

TIME TABLE.

SIXTH STREET DEPOT.

CLEVELAND, CINCINNATI, CHICAGO & ST. LOUIS UAILWAY

BIS DDE ROOK.

On an after October 10th, 1889, traina will arrive and depart from Sixth street depot aa follows:

GOING EAST

No. 12 N. Y. and Boston Express S... 1.20 a. ni. No. 2 Indianapolis a' '"land 8.02 a.m..., No. lrt N. Y. and Boston PSCV 1 02 p. m., No. 8 Day Express and ton 3.47 p. in.

GOING WEST

No. 6 Southwestern Express SV 1.20 a.m. No. Day Kxuresi and Mall 10 09 a. m. No. 19Southwestern Limited PSCV.. 12.55 p. m. No. 3 Mattoon Express 7.27 p. m.

Trains marked thus (P) Parlor Car. Trains marked thus (S) Sleeping Car.

Trains marked thus (C) CafeCar. Trains marked thus (V) Vestibule Cars..

Trains marked thus run Dally. All other trains Dally. Sunday excepted. Train No. 18, the Vestlbuled Limited, has through Sleepers for New York and Boston and Cafe Dining Car.

No. 12 has through Sleepers to New York, also Combination Sleeper and Parlor Car for Cincinnati

No. 5 has Sleepers and Parlor Car for St. Louis. No. 19 has Sleepers, Parlor Car and Cafe Car for St. Louis.

E. E. SOUTH, Agent.

FRESH NEW TOEK AND BALTIMORE OYSTERS

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E. W. Johnson's

610 MAIN STREET.

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