Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 21, Number 25, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 13 December 1890 — Page 7
MISERERE.
Deep la a ehnrehyard green, rr!th spring's freak
1 bear tho strokes that mark tbo noontide twwr Darfc yew urees stand in hniaeaioria] aadaem.
And Iry ginla the gray oil Norman lower.
And white the !&rk aboro is never weary. Outpouring -!car Mi mi ids/ ecsta*/. Sy eyes arc Jx »t upon the "Jlwenm**" *i bet from a time worn stone kotos up ct ma. No word but litis: -yi a (alnt mgxmtUo
Ot man or w«m cr cf jaaj or old: Yet there bsyond all doubt and a» Atiao Some tragic *fco*y to iho *«il unuAl Vain all the itilisd'.- conjectures awl Mirmbiea
Before til i-"i epi&ipa r.s ihU And yrt Use tfc'Hirrat r»siAtkmly ariiwa Of faith forsworn and porjurtd lyre"* abysa.
Of long heart iul JHilf imsnoistiopj In way* where triitl cni wo(ih*1«1 feet rnutf wend. Of crwl trial and supreme unaf/tati-jo
And Ujfn ttMj cn*hro*Jdi j? darkness of the wxl.
Tbu# to a wanderer doth tbi» motirnful "Pity** Plead mutel? or the «irjrx-jrif.-4 dead Oh, may Uus «oul haw reached that peacpfui city
Where ne'er a "Miserere" need ba said: —Ciintosi Hcollard.
A POSTBOY'S BRAVERY.
Ahont a milt from tbo Pennsylvania village where I liv*l when boy wag the oM north and south turnpike, the main artery of travel in those days ucross tho tiorthcanteni tier of counties.
Down thi.H ro i«l cam? rolling every afternoon. tho hi/ four horso stage coach, bringing passengers and mail from tho south bound for the county town.
Tho mail b«i for our pontofiice wui thrown off from the coach at the point •where our village road joined tho turnpike, and bh my father was postmaster it was my ^bity to carry it from the pi to ii to
I had tho choice of two routes for my -daily journey: one by the pnblic road and a much (shorter one which cut through the woodj that bounded the vil lagoon that idt\ and it was along that path that 1 usually carried the mail.
We Wf n- at that time in the midst of the civil war. and the mails were filled with tidir (ami tho soldiers at the front. it:: I ot infrequently contained package: of
IHOIK-Y
and valuables sent
in UncleS -III'M care to those at home. Hut the particular afternoon of which 1 write, thnhtage. for
Homo
reason which
1 cannot now remember, was very late. I watched thu mm a* it went down behind the wooded hills to the west, and I saw the twilight come creeping in across tho eastern field. I sat quietly upon a roadside bank wishing for tho coming of tho hi age, and calling to mind tho probable appearance of the impatient and anxious group at the postofHce.
Out the twilight grow deep, and actual darkness fell around uh before the far off rumbling of wheel.* announced the ap]earanee of the lelated conveyance. 1 had been debuting for some time whether had not Ijettor go homo without tho mail, for I waa naturally timid, and tho prospect of the night journey alone through the wood, oven though it was but a short distance, had terrors for me which I could not subdue. But I had been reluctant to start on account of tho ridicule which I knew wotdd follow me from one end of tho mute, and tho disappointment which would meet mo at tho other, and now tho stage was here.
The horses were drawn sharply up, the clatter of the wheels censed, a cloud of dust moved forward and enveloped the roach, and out from tho door in tho midst of the dust stepped two men. They parleyed for a few minutes with the driver about the fare, and then disappeared in tho darkness. I had a good view of their faces as I went up close to the forward wheel, and I saw'that both of them, though well drepffcd, were evil looking in tho extreme, "Is that you, Harmon?" asked the driver, tiering down at mo through tho shadow* It,'fore throwing the mail ponch into my lunula, "Yes," I replied, complniniugly, "and I've Iwen waiting for you just two hours." "Well, it won't take you long to get home now," ho Mid, cheerily then, Wnding down still further and beckoning me to come still closer, ho added iu a low voice: "You want to ban,v* on to that mail bag tight to-night, Harmon. It's got"— A sudden starting of tho horses interrupted him, ho swung back into his seal, and finding that he could not readily quiet the impatient animals, lu* cracked hi* lorn whip ov.-r their heads, shouted out "good night!" to mo, and the next minute conch, horses and driver were far down the road, swallowed tip ill the darkness, "An1 vt 'frnid to go down alone?*" naked tho farmer who had come out to See tho stage go by. "Til beta cookie he is!" exclaimed tho farmer's boy. "No, I ain't afraid." I said stoutly, dreading ridicule mow than robbers. "Then* won't anything catch me tonight," I added, flinging the ponch across my -shoulder and starting rapidly down the mad toward home.
For a little way the nvul wound through fields, and this portion of my route I traversed with a stout heart- But just ahead lay the woods, a long stretch of unbroken forest, and I Rpproached them with a dread and premonition such as, I think, I had never before nor have ever Hi nee known, 1 plunged into them. how* ever, with out baiting or hesitation, knowing that thei:iS55t he but. instead of jHvring alvmt fordatv-^rs in the darkn I kept my eyes turned to the Ifbbcn of f*arbt «ky sK»ve the top« of tbe tall tn^s that Iwkwl the
When I l.d the js^tnt when? the
footpath st for a motnlake the *bor by the the latter co the nanv lacing tr mmts. thr u. offset its n. aud the jnj»
Sttd.:.
whether
I should
I me av .v-. that two with «. i-* "s had xtue up ?•--**&•
ttWJO were side of uu. ltt»Uy thai I their apiw-s
young Mend," raid tho one cat my right, "what's tliat yoar arcarryia^f "It's tho mail bag," said I. etoppxng uid standing still in surprise and fear. "Is that so?" he exclaimed- "I've often wanted to lift a mail bag. D» it very heavy?* "Hot very," 3 replied, actually hand ing it to him in my bewilderment.
He took it. held it np by tho end strap as high as his bead and shook it gently as if to make test of its contents. "I believe there's a letter in there for me, Bill," he said to his companion, "and if there is it's necessary that I should have it at once. Delays are dangerous. "The only way to find ont for certain,
K?plied
the other man gruffly, "is to
open the bag." "True," responded the first speaker, "but we must not open it on the public highway some evil minded passer by might seek to appropriate the contents thereof, which would be a crime against the government, indeed an unpardonable offense. Suppose we retire to some secluded woodland dell, and there study the situation. Young man," he added, addressing me, "you are cordially invited to accompany us "I—I'd rather not go," I Teplied, beginning for the first time to fully realize my position. "If it's all the same to you," I added, "I'll go on home. "Well, my dear young friend and fellow worker," began the man, but his gruff voiced companion interrupted him: "Oh, let up on that, Andy! We ain't got any time to lose. Come along, young fellow
And before I had time to protest I was seized by one arm, hurried to the roadside, across the ditch and in among the trees. I believe I began to cry and beg it would have been strange if I had not done so but, in language more forceful than elegant, I was ordered to hold my peace. In the mean time the first robber was threading his way carefully through the thin underbrush among the hemlocks in thick darkness, and we were following him. It seemed to mo a eery long timo that we journeyed thus. In reality it must havo been only a few minutes. When we stopped the leader fctid: "Here's a kind of an open place let's hold up here. Bill, where's that canile?"
Presently I heard tho snapping of a match, and saw Bill lighting a piece of candle which ho had unrolled from a bit of newspaper. Looking aronnd me, by Lite light of this candle I was not slow to recognize the place. We were in th. path of which I havo spoken, on a little plateau just above the brook. Indeed the soft ripple of waters could be heard at no great distance from us.
I now for tho first time rccognized the two men as thosu whom I had seen step from the rtnge coach at tho crossing, and I knew instinctively that they had followed me for tho very purpose of robbing the mail. Tho ono addressed as Andy had already laid tho mail pouch flat on tho ground, and with au open jackknife poised in ono hand was passing the thumb and forefinger of tho other hand carefully along the leather surface, as if considering the proper point for the blade to penetrate. I had seen butchers do the same thing beforo cutting up a side of beef, and tho similarity of movement now was very suggestive. "Hem goes!" lio said finally, pushing tho knife point firmly into the leather then, with a strong, iloxtorous sweep, he drew tlKj blade down lengthwise of the bag. and laid it open nearly from top to bottom. "Give the catiillo to tho boy, Bill," he said, "and you help mo sort this stuff over. Here, you," ho added, addressing me, "hold it hero, hero where I can see. If you move it an inch I'll—I'll excommunicate you!"
With trembling hand, teeth chattering in my head and too greatly overcome with astonishment and fear to speak, I wit and held tho flaring candle while he spread wide the gap in tho ruined mail bag and poured tho contents of it to the ground. The packages of papers were quickly east aside and the bundle of letters taken up.
In those days each separate bunch of letters was carefully folded in brown pajx-r. and the postoffice address placed on the outside before intrusting it to tho mail bag. These wrappers were pulled hastily off by the robbers, and the letters inclosed in them wen? looked over rapidly. many of them being torn open before they were thrown down. Nearly the entire contents of the mail bag were gone over in thiii way before any money was found, and both men began to look disap|x»inted aud angry. At last Andy came njwn a thick envelope of brown manila paper, with a seal in ml wax on the back. "Hen it isl" he said, holding it np triumphantly for Bill to see. "I knew I couldn't lie mistaken about its being here- Bob told me, you know, and Bob always tells the truth."
He had risen to his feet in the meantime, scattering the remainder of the letters from him disdainfully, had opened his coat, and was about to pot the package into an inner breast pocket, "Hold on!" exclaimed his companion, rising also. "Open it up. Andy let*s see how much they is in it, anyway." "Oh. that's all rightr was the reply. "I know how umch there is in it. Well open it when* we get to a safer place. Cn««\ let's fix the boy aud get ont o' this."
I trctabled tvil the caadte nearly d.npped ram hand. What did he mean by fixing the boy?
should havt began to cry m4 beg again
in. at the left* I *topj*4 had Bill. $fkrnnpmym®wb%£ threat-
eniiigly
1 cut or follow o» around "Look hen?, AaOyl TfcaT* the trick I quickly dwfe1*4 upon l«y 1Imttim*. Too i*cfcdl«d The short dta»oe of I *w*g an" held off m' apesit it* till it, winding ttsJ-sU'i teU-T* t'ir« «*. o. tl -wn *t-v .v8ib»nk-1 fair
v:w vLirV' '.v was no tiie br,vx..U r, U. Msr •nr. «f l.ttiST. rvKUe by
'rvt gpl nrc piayed -»K Aod I was'
ft dsv" t, At v. W
thiis^ if repim.1 Bill, fret to a kmc* to
I 4 hnaunl r« I of h. evtwrc. my
'i.vf my
vraat
•j sr." .s mi note
ur fair share 'I jfxmt in Now, doa
tf CTtTf' 'tr»-ren."* htt1 be a fool,
put the package in his pocket, but before he could do so Bill had seized Ms ana. "Divider he exclaimed gruffly. "I nay divide, an* do it now."
Even by the dim light of the flaring eaudle I could see the red and white passion glowing in Andy's face. "Hands off, you dog!" he cried, "hands off, or ni hurt youf
Bht the other enly tightened his grip •aid muttered tho one word: "Divide!"
For a moment there was silence. The two men stood there glaring into each other's eyes, and I, with the candle tipping in my hand and the melted tallow burning my fingers, stared at them in stupid fright. Suddenly there was whirling fist, tho sound of a sharp blow, and the next instant the two men were writhing in each other's arms.
The package over which they fought was hurled from Andy's grasp, struck the candle in my hand, and both package and candle fell at my feet. Involuntarily I stooped and picked the treasure up, and even as I did so the candle spluttered on the. damp ground and went out. The darkness was intense.
But the fight went on. Curses, blows, the tearing of garments, all sounds of a hand-to-hand contest told that the men were still fiercely engaged.
In that moment I gathered my wits together long enough to plan my escape. Starting out along the path, crawling on my hands and knees, feeling my way, I moved rapidly down the hill
After a little I gained sufficient courage to rise and walk, and presently I found myself at the bank of the stream. Here I dropped again upon my hands snd crept across the log that spanned the brook. On the other side I stopped for a moment and listened. The fight was still in progress. I could hear the curses, the thrashing of the leaves, the cries of rage and pain, then the sharp report of a pistol, and after that silence. But in a minute some one appeared to be coming down tho path as I had come. I thought they were giving chase to me, and I turned and scrambled up the hill.
The way was long and steep, but the ivoods on this side of the brook were not so heavy, and my eyes, accustomed again to the darkness, were of much service to me. But 1 imagined that the robbers were still following me. I thought heard the crashing of the underbrush, and onco I was sure they called out to ine to stop.
Familiar with every foot of the path, and clambering rapidly as I was up the steep hillside, it still seemed to me that Twas going at a snail's pace. I had had the presence of mind to cling to the package, and I now thrust it into the pocket of my coat that I might use both hands in climbing, grasping roots, twigs, sod, anything to accelerate my progress.
Finally I reached the top of the hill, and soon afterward the end of the path where it met tho highway. From here on tho road was level, and I ran. Behind me I heard shouting, calling, a confusion of noises, but I never turned. Down through tho village street I sped, past tho light in tho hguses, in at tho open door of the postoffice, and stumbling at tho door sill, fell headlong upon the floor. "They've robbed tho mail!" I cried to tho astonished assemblage. "They've robbed tho mail—they're after me—1 saved tho money." And drawing the package frota my pocket 1 placed it in tho hands of tho clerk and sank exhausted in a chair. For a few moments the excitement ran high. Everybody questioned me at tho samo time, but I managed to make enough of my story understood to give them clew to the situation, and in a very short time a party started out in search of tho robbers.
Not fifty yards from tho door they met my father and a neighbor, who hud gone out half an hour earlier to meet me, and between them they supported the drooping form of a man. It was Bill. Ho was covered with wounds and exhausted from tho loss of blood. It seems that my father and his companion had gone out to the turnpike by the public road, and then finding that I was already on my way home they had come back by the path, hoping to overtake me. Near tho foot of tho hill they had come suddenly on the wonnded robber, the cut mail bag and the scattered letters. Though greatly, alarmed for my safety, my father waited to gather np the mail and to help the wonnded robber along but I shall never forget his look of relief when bo saw me sitting safe but exhausted in the big chair at home, in the midst of an admiring and sympathizing circle.
Bill recovered from his wounds, and served a term of years in prison for his offense, but Andy was never captured, and even his identity was never known.
The mail package contained $5»)0 in crisp, new government bills.—Homer Green in Philadelphia Press.
Indian Carrer.cy.
J. A Smitbers says: A good deal of Indian wampum, or money, is occasionally found in the southeastern pa?ta of this state, and a curious feature of it to the fact that it exactly resembles that found in the Indian graves of New England and Canada, showing that the same kind of currency mu»t have been in circulation among the Indians all over this continent. Thesis
CUPS
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MALL
two kinds found
everywhere in America—the white and the purple, the former being common and cheap, the latter scarce and costly. Tbo purpl** was made from theeyeof the clam rbdh the white from the stem
I presume 11 of the periwinWo shell. The «xm of the
wamjmm makers seems to have been to have the beads uniform, smooth and highly poisshM,- thoogh by what' means they bored a hole through so hard a mbiteeimifjsowft. Tbekbcs-expended on the mc»t have been (mormons, ttd UClf the tbsc f'ocr wUch the wampum w*a he I, —Si. ilk ^i3WBOcs»t»
It wan fortaerfy *app«s& tiasfe elay was for foe ssalEi»^ bdci^i Bat now xatcM BiSicfal
t'.se n5mey. rn* wheu we1 trmahed therefinmn, «nd day hsolr* l*oo yooll get what be- *n will
Ho txiad« agar.', as if tola# sroaimsxiz.
mm
bs :e
WOMAN'S GREAT NEED.
WPORTANCE TO THE RACE OF SOUND BODIES AMONG WIVES.
f«tae ef Good Health to Mothers asd
Daochtm—How to Gain the Deotrvd Sad—Women Suffer la Silence—Girla Should Be Carcfiil to Grow Strong.
While ou every hand moral work, intellectual work, social work awaits every woman, young or old, whose life is so rich and fall that it overflows into the world 'rom the home, I am glad to see that there seems to be a growing appreciation of the importance of hygienic work as underlying all work of soul or brain. Whether for ourselves or tor others, the first work toward enlarging and dignifying life is a work for the body—that body which is too often as unlike the temple in which God meant the human soul to dwell as the sonl itself is unlike what he meant the dweller to be.
All of us who have sought to inspire the very wretched classes with love of knowl edge or with aspirations after better morals, have already found that our first battle would have to be on another field, that we needed to conquer outposts held by filth, by foul air, by bad food, by dark and dirty dwellings, beforo we could approach the citadel of the soul. We have-tried chapels and prayer meetings and Sunday schools and house to house visiting, and tracts, and have found that before these could begia their work we must send the plumberraad teach the religion of the scrubbing brush and the broom, and of light and air and food, and must drive out the multiform demons of dirt.
VALUE OF HEALTH.
Turning from the sufferers in the lower to those in the higher classes of life we find no less the hamperintc influence of disease. Could the women of tho land, alive, us they are coming to be, to every mode of development and phase of progress, become thoroughly aroused to tho fact that all progress along every line stops and the backward course begins, both for the indi vidual and for the race, as soon as disease or feebleness of body sets in, they would have struck v.t last, the lowest strata of reform, and we could hope for the future of the race. The foundation of all culture and of all development must be laid here, and women's bands are the ones to lay it. Build we ever so fair a structure on the basis of intelligence and goodness, and soon or late, if the hygienic conditions are wrong, it is undermined and falls.
Without health the beautiful woman ceases to be beautiful, and of little avail are all our years of training and education if the posses&or of their results is to pass her life a helpless victim of pain. Could we take out from among the young mothers of the land those who are too feeble to give their little children mother care, all tho older women whose health has been broken before they have reached their prime, all the young girls who are too feeble to study and too delicate to work, the number would startle us all.
We do not half know the truth about this, for three fourths of the sufferers do not like to tell. They have learned by experience that their households do not find pleasant diversion in the recital of a woman's aches and pains. If every feeblo woman made as much demand upon the family time and care and sympathy as a sick man under the same circumstances woulfrmake, we should feel the world had gone into a hospital, and the millennium for the doctors and undertakers bad come. But for every hysterical woman who makes everybody about her feel and carry her pain, there area dozen who drag their own dumbly and bravely till it carries them into their graves.
TO SfcCURE HEALTH.
But it is something more than outspoken family selfishness that makes the uncomplaining invalid woman dumtx The suffering she cannot overcome or hide depresses tbo mental atmosphere of the aouse. There is a protest against illness in the very air. Disease is an unnatural and abnormal thing, and health resists it as long as it can. It takes the spring out of the steps and the ring out of the laugh, and hushes the voices of the little ones. And to a great extent it docs this whether the invalid is patient and sileut or not. The thing that is, Is felt: we influence by what we are, not by the much or the little we may say. Sickness is a blight which no woman should permit to come over her home, if she can by any possibility-cure it :r keep it away. And women, we must admit, in all ages have been earnest seekers after and patrons of cures.
And the result of all experience and observation convinces that if half the time and vitality spent in necking a cure and in learning bow to endure could have been turned toward prevention it would bave given us another race. We need to become possessed by tbe truth that health is the great possession. Dr. Bartol opens his sermon on the mind cure by the statement that sickness and sin are twin born, and Emerson says that in varying health we have a searching preacher of self control.
How to secure good health, therefore, is one of tbe first problems for this generation of women. This is tbe demand their subjects will make of those they are crowning as queens of the hearth and tbe home. Give us bright, fresh, kindly hearted sisters, say the lads and the little brothers in the homes. Give us happy, healthy faces over our cradies, plead the babes, who Sad their heaven in mother's eyes.
Give us cheer and laughter and a little fun, say the fathers, turning wearily toward their firesides at the end of a day of toil Give us a bright word and a helping hand and your dainty touch on household ways, say the mothers who would give their lives any day to see their daughters well and strong and giad. Give us health is tbe cry from all tbe world to its women. Give us girts with a physique that will spare t» the morbid brooding of discontent, the hysterical tantrum, the nervous collapse, the look of gloom from the dear wells of yon eye*
Hits la, as I have said, tbe problem of today. f* not our purpose now ami here to sttpt h?w best It can be solved. To the true seeker it will open its intricacies e. r- Kule single hygienic lair ,• d. of dress or exercae, the taaad simplest that you know, obeyed,
Hbeworkisf on. Knowing the next to do is ^.t important until yon bave done the next thing yen know.— Mm*f bam* in Hater's Baser.
RnatJk*.
Wet tobacco wtii relieve bee or
.,r mmm »sya li«le jwia»ded fc*o« tk r." r~*y -i &** radbdi and
'4 *. ,:*estea hsCom tmsikfasc is
*^"'i96eime®t f*|,^*ytiiMly far cMi-
WfeHtt fr rj o«e»tssis»sd and ftr [a kgtfanrima! sjlaiu.
Catarrh In the head Is a constitutional Disease, and requires A constitutional remedy Like Hood's Sarsaparilla, Which purifies the blood. Makes the weak strong, Restores health. Tiy it now
A Wonder Worker.
Mr. Frank Huffman, a young man of Burlington, Obio, states that he had been under the care of two prominent physicians, and used tlseir treatment until be was not able to get around They pronounced bis case to be Consumption and incurable. He was per suaded to try Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs aud Colds and at that time was not able to walk across the street without resting. He found before he bad used half of a dollar bottle, that he was much better he continued to use it and is to-day enjoying trood health. If you have any Throat, Lung or Chest Trouble try it. We guarantee satisfaction. Trial bottle 10 cents at J. d: C. Baur's drug store. 5
Advice to the Aged.
Afc brine* infirm it tea, such a* slug* riM kawcw, weak, kidneys and blaa* aer Mid torpid liver.
Tilt's Pills
ba*e a ipecifle effect on these orjca ns, BtiMalatiac Ike bowels, giving- nni nr» al diatharfM without, straining or |ripiaf, and
IMPARTING- VIGOR
to ihe kidneys, bladder and livesw Tliey are adapted to old or young $OJLL JEVJSKYWUIilUS.
Used successfully 15 years. l)r. Jos. Haas' Hog and Poultry Remedy arrests disease, prevents disease. Increases tho flesh and
tens
Ask
has
maturity. Price 82.50,81.25.50c per pack age*
for testimonials. ttend'J-centstamp
for "Hogology" to Jos. Haas, V. 8., Indianapolls, Ind. SOLK
AGENT,
JACOB BAUE, Druggist,
S. E. cor. 7th and Wabash Ave, Torre Haute, ind.
Throwing a Switch
tough work in itormy weather, and the switchman cannot be too well protected if he wuhct to preserve hit health. Every railroad man'* hie i« full of hardship and expo»ure. The only garment that will fully protect the man who*e bustneaa calls him ont in stormy weather is the Fish Brand Slicker." They are lieht, but strong aa iron, handmade throughout, and good for years of service. They are worth ten times their cost, and will save you many a sickness. No other article of clothing will stand the wear and tear. Rubber is frail, will rip, tear, and let in the wet. Therefore get the right sort of coat. The Fish Brand Slicker" the only one for your purpose. Beware of worthless imitations, every garment stamped with the u...j Tn^ MarV rvin't accept any
Fish Brand" Trade "Mark. Don't accept an inferior coat when you can have the Slicker delivered without extra cost. Particulars and illustrated catalogue free.
Ftsh Btand
A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mass.
CURE
Sick Xfatdaeha and relieve all tbo troubles
dent to a bilious
stato
Sirlo, tto.
xematkaUe socceaa baa
f{ng to
lathe
baae of
no
SMALL PILL. SMALL WISE, SHALL PRICE
SURE CURE FOR CATARRH
FOR OVER FIFTY TEARS
this old Sovereign Remedy h*s stood the tesUsod stands to-day tb« best Ibiown remedy for CaUrrh, Cold In tbe Head and Headache. Persist In its nee, sod it wilt effect ft cure, so matter of how long standing the case outjr be.
For sale by druggists.
MAtfOOH
WtJ5*m
6€«?L€MUI S *!£«&.
twri «rf«w *3*% iMifiaaats. ttai arrSiiaji«»a *tw*4 I u*4+*r«- Jh #n? *4tttt ai.aa. W*"li re tmu. taamiiirr «SM». r--f sat^aft: OUUCK 4 CO Qm&m. TERHt HAUTE, IND.
Railroad Time Tables.
Train rked thus (F) denote Parlor Oars attached. Trains marked thus (8) denote Heeping Cars attached daily. Trains markod thus iBj denote Bufltet Cars attached. Trains marked tl run daily.
thus run dally. All other trains y, Sundays accepted.
"VuA.3Sr3D_A.XilA. XiI3STE. T. H. A I. DIVISION.
JLKAVK FOR TUB WRST.
No. 9 Western Express fS&V) No. 5 Mail Train
mm
incS»
of tho system, such aa
IMsdaes*. Hauaoa, Drowstoeas, Distress after eating,
tain
la tbo
whllo their moat
boen
shown la
curing
SICK
Seadanbo, yet Garter's Little Liver Pitts
equally varaabloin Constipation,
MS
enrtngaad
pre*
vesting tbia annoying coupUlnt. whllo theraUo correc tall dlsord ursoflUo* toma- ti ,*U rati Uio tha Jiv* and regniaio liio bowala. Evan
it
they only
HEAD
AcJio they would bo alnaostprtoilcwi to tboeawbO •offer from thisdiafaxmrtngcomplaint tmtfortoEately their coodaoes does aotead bcra^uid tboas who ones try Uwm will find these Jiltlo pill* vala» able Jn many ways that Uey will
not
bo w».
do without them. Hut after atlelck
hae4
ACHE
many lives that berslswhsm
wemakeourgnsatboaat. Oar piUacara it while others do oot, Carter's Little Liver PtUa are very small1 and very ea*y to take. Ono or two r-itla laakea dosa. They are stxtetly vegetable and do »©t gripa or
by dragsiaU •«*'*»f CARTER fitCDTCfMC CO., New Yorlt.
pnFF
1.42 am 10.21 am 2.10 pm $.10 pm 9.04 pm
0
No. 1 Fast blue (PAV) No. 21 £*o. 7 Fast Mall
LEAVE FOR THE KAST.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express *(S) No. 6 New York Express (tktV). No. -I Mail and Accommodation No. 30 Atlantic Express (PAV). N 8 a in No. 2
1.30 am 1.51am 7.1& a ta 12.47 2.90 pm 5.06 pm
ARRIVE FROM TUX BAST.
No. 9 Western Express (SAV). No. 5 Mail Train ..." No. 1 Fast Line (PAV) No-2l No. SMall and Accommodation No. 7 Fast Mall
1.30 am 10.15 a 2.ti0 5.05 8.45 9.00
AR1UVK FROM THK WRST.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express (S) No. 6 New York Express (srcV). No. 20 Atlantic Express (PAV) No. 8 Fast Line No. 2
1.20 am 1.42 am 12.42 2.10 5.00 pm
T.H.AL DIVISION.
LKAVK FOR THK NORTH.
No. 52 South Bend Mail No. 54 South Bend Express ARRIVE FROM THE NORTH. No. 51 Terre Haute Express No. 58 South Bend Mai
ft.00am 4.00 pm
press
12.00 7.30 pm
CLStL&C
liyl
THK POPVUR ROUTE BKTWKKM
CINCINNATI, INDIANAPOLIS TERRE HAUTE
ST. LOUIS, LAFAYETTE, and CHICAGO.
The Entire Trains run through With oot change, between Cincinnati and Chicago, Pu I limn Sleepers and elCKant Reclining Chair Cars on night trains. Magnificent. Parlor (Jars on Day Trains.
Trains of Vandalla Line (T. II. A I* DlvJ makes close connection at Colfax with G. St. L. A C. Ry trainh for Lafayette A Chicago
Pullman and Wagner Sleeping Cars ana Coaches are run through without change between St. Loula, Terre llauU- and Cincinnati Indianapolis via Bee Lino and Big 4.
Five Trains each way, dally except Sunday three trains each way on Sunday, between ludlanapolisand Cincinnati. 'Plio AiiKr 1 in«Whlch makes Clncin1
lie Ulliy
94
MILLS
ijlIlPnnti Its Great Objeo-
tlvopoint for the distribution of Southern and Eastern Traffic. The fact that It connects In the Central Union Depot, In Cincinnati, with the trains of the C. W. A B. It. It., IB. A O.J N. Y. P. A O. U. It., [Erie,] and the C. C. tX A I. R'y, [Bee Line] for the East, as well as with the trains of the C. N. O. A T. P. h*y, [Cincinnati Southern,] for the South, South, east and Southwest, gives It an advantage over all Its competitors, for no route from Chicago, Lafayette or Inalanapoltn ram make these connections without compelling pa*. Mongers to submit to a long and disagreeable Omnlqus transfer for boil) pasoengerH
and
rough Tickets and Baggage Cheeks to all Principal Points can bo obtained at an* Ticket office, C. I. St. L. A C. Hy, also via tbia line at all Coupon Ticket Ofllces throughout tho country. J. H. MAHTIN, JOHN EUAN,
Dlst. Pass. Agt. Gen. Pass. A Tkt. Agt. corner wash I ngton CI ucl natl, O and Meridian st. Ind'nls.
ACKS0NV1
04 Miles tbe Shorteai and tb* Quickest.
CINCINNATI to NEW ORLEANS
Entire Train, Ba«ga«e Car. Day Coaches and Sleeping Car* through Without Change. Direct connections at New Orleans and shrcvetn rt. for Texas, Mexico and California. IK Miles the Shortest, 3 hour* tbe quickest froni CINCINNATI to JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
Time 27 hours. Solid train# and throi.** Sleepers without change for any class of passengers. The Short Line between Cincinnati
AtfuVlllCf *v« vf» MHiCf i# noiim, Chattanooga, Tenn.. time, 11 hour* Atlanta, Ga., time, boui* Blrminibatn, Alay time 10 hour*. Three Kxpr««* Trains Daily, Pullman Boudoir Sleeping Cars.
Trains leave Central Union Depot, Cincinnati crossing the Famous High bridge of Kentucky and rounding tbe base of l»okout Mountain, .. .,
Over one million acres of land In Alabama, the future great State of the South, subject to pre-emption. Unsurpassed climate.
For rates, maps, etc., address Nisi i»C.
K***»
Trav. Pass. Agt,, No. #4 W. Fourth street. a°Clnn""-%.O. EUWARIW. O. P.4T. A & HAftVBY. Vlee l*r«,ldeoL
Ojrci!*jaTi u.
FREE
DO TOD WAIT
OKX or
SPALDIHG'S
$1.00
OFFICIAL
kgffUIIB LRAGUi BASE BALLS
FREE?
If so, send
$4.00
to us for a
year's subscription tF THE SPORTING LIFE, the largest and best base ball and general sporting paper pnblish^d, nnd we will send yon, post paid, rnie of Spalding's genuine League base balls. If you wo^jld prefer seeing a copy first, dr*p a postal. Address THE SPORTING LIFE
Pan. Co.,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
