People's Pilot, Volume 4, Number 7, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 August 1894 — One Fare Excursions South Vla C.& E.I.R.R. [ARTICLE]
One Fare Excursions South Vla C.& E.I.R.R.
Round trip tickets will be sold from all stations on the Chicago & Eastern Illinois R. R. on July sth, August 7th, Sept 4th, Oct. 2d, Nov. 6th and Dec. 4th, 1894, at one fare, to points in Kentucky, Tennessee, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Florida. Tickets good to return for twenty days from date of sale. Stopover allowed on going or returning journey. For further particulars apply to any C. & E. I. R. R. agent or Chas. W. Humphrey, northern passenger agent, 170 E. Third street, St. Paul, Chicago city ticket office 230 Clark street, or to Charles L. Stone, G. P. & T. A.. Chicago, 111. Life in Pizen Creek.—Barber—“Somehow my razor doesn't seem to cut well this morning.” Col. Whipsaw (of the Rattlesnake Ranch] “Use my Bowie, podner; You’ll find that all O. K. I tried the edge on Bill Chaparejo last night when he said I was er liar!”—Texas Siftings. “Useful Information” is the title of a pamphlet just received from the Prickly Ash Bitters C0.,0f St. Louis, Mo. An exuminatior will show it to be all its name implies. It it full of “Useful Information.” The chapterson “What to Do in Case of Accidents,’ “Antidotes for Poisons,” “Health Hints,’’ etc., are most valuable and are written in r plain English, common-sense manner, avoid Ing medical terms as much as possible, Il also contains “Useful Information foi Farmers,Housewives,” etc. Itis a book that should be In every house in the land. Write the firm above named for a copy, and when you get it read it attentively and keep it where it can easily be found in time of need. “I’ve got a cold or something in my ’cad,” was what the simple little chappie mild. The summer girl, with roguishness demure, replied: “Oh! it must be a cold, I’m sure.” —Boston Journal.
