Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 22, Number 1, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 27 June 1891 — Page 7

CENTRIFUGAL FORCE.

A Simple bat Interestine Feat Which IUa*trat«a Crest Natural r*«w.

You may often nee at the circus or elsewhere a juggler place a glasa of water in a hoop and whirl it rapidly ronnd and round till it make* you giddy to look at it, with•oat a drop of the water escaping. The feat is based, a* most people are aware, on the •action of centrifugal force.

Here

In

a method of performing a similar

feat, not leas startling, with the k1&& of Water alone, no other apparatus being employed. The glass standing before you oh the table, you are to take it in your hand to •describe with it, at arm's length, a complete circle in the air and to replace it on the table without having spilled a single drop of the liquid.

A CLEVEIt THICK.

The secret lies mainly in the manner of holding the glass. Instead of grasping it as if you were about to drink, take it with the palm outward and upward (as shown In the diagram at the upper corner). Swing the arm boldly around and describe a circle withonb'a pause, but without excessive haste, in the direction shown by the arrows in the illustration. The glass will be found when it has completed the circle to be held in the hand in the manner represented by the remaining figure of the cut. This is the position in which it is to be replaced on the table. By beginning with the glass half lllled with water and increasing the quantity as skill improves, one will le able after a little practice to perform the experiment easily. It is desirable to make the lirst attempts in the open air. An important point to observe is that there should be no hesitation or unevenness in the circular motion.

Ttie Life of Submarine Cablet.

A hard and fast law as to the life of a ©able cannot be laid down, for the duration of the sheathing wires is governed by more than one element. The quality of the galvanizing, the presence or absence of such protection as compound tapes, or hemp, and the physical and chemical nature of the bottom, are considerations which must be taken into account. Submarine cables may have a life of more than ten years. They can be successfully repaired at even a considerably greater age. There are now in existence and in working order about 44,000 knotaJ of cables, having a life of fifteen years and over of this amount some 21,000 knots are twenty years (and over) of age. Thero are several Instances of cables now working over twenty-five years old, but these are principally lines of unimportant lengths, and lying In shallow water. The cables we have cited, siiys The Electrical Rovlew, are laid In nil portions of the globe, and submerged in all sorts of depths •and although the companies owuing them have spent, and are prepared to expend," tsonsldcrrable sums in repairs, we do not think that the complete renewal of each section every ten years has entered into their calculation. Present experience would lead us to allot to submarine cables laid \)nder favorable conditions an average life of from thirty to forty years, but, as before stated, no hard and fast figure can be given.

When

a Uelt

Jump* Off Pulley.

It does make a tremendous racket, to say iiothing of destruction of property and itanger to life, when a belt Jumps off a /pulley and proceeds to wind itself down I around the shaft, A belt has no business to jump off the pulley, and will not do it if properly proportioned for the load It is to carry, well taken care of and not over loaded. Still, these conditions are hard to be met, and where a supply of prevention has become exhausted a few pounds of cure must be used. A tin tube running loose upon a shaft will do no harm except to make a little noise. When a belt jumps off on such a tube there is no chance for It to wind up. A Kood deal more noise is the result, and less danger aud damages, according to the Manufacturers' Gnuctto.

Tnrquiilie In New Mexico »nd Arlson*.

Among unique specimens of jewelry that have been collected from the Indians of New Mexico and Ariitona, the turquoise— a phosphate of alumina colored blue by copper—play# a prominent part* These specimens are interesting, says Popular Science News, from which the accompanying illustration is reproduced, as indicating that this beautiful mineral was prised as a gem by the aboriginal inhabitants of this country, as well as by vhose natives of oriental lands who discovered it Independently.

IX MAX JKWiiLKT.

Fig. 1 represents a neck lace of perforated beads of turquoise, with a rude pendant of tbe same material. fit 3 is an object of muarkable Interact"** small image of a prairie dog, earwd firotil white marble, with eyes of turquoise met into the stone. Its neck is encircled by collar, to which is attached apiece of motherof-peart This object was an aadtattt fetich of the Pueblo Indian*, and was supposed to have the power of causing tain. fS%3 1* a silver ring set with turquoise, and Fig. 4 a heartshaped piece ot the swine mineral, engraved with a figure of two erased arrow*, a»d provided with a eih*r ring by which it out be suspended. rtslt of Otftmt Ctolor*.

Divers in the clear waters of the tropical •ens find that flah of different colors when frightened do not all dart in the sama direction, hut that each different kind take* •heller in that portion of the aubmarin* growth nearest In color to thai of the fish.

msi

LANGUAGE STATISTICS.

Interestine Fact* Regarding the English French and German Tongues.

The language in which Shakespeare and Milton wrote was the language of less than 6,000,000 human beings, and when Washington was president less than 16,000, 000 of people used the English tongue. At tbe same time (time of our first president), French was the mother tongue of at least 30,000,000 of people, and by some writers it is said that 50,000,000 of French speaking people were bring at the time of the Revolution of 1789. Between forty and fifty years ago tbe English language equaled the German in tbe number of these who spoke it, and now the latter is left far behind in tbe race.

Now*, says the Chicago Times, German Is spoken by 10,000,000 persons in the AustroHungarian empire, by 46,000,000 in tbe Ger man empire, by 40,000 in Belgium, and by about 2,000,000 in the little Alpine country in Switzerland. Besides the countries men tioned, in which German is usually classed as tbe native tongue, it is spoken by about 2,000,000 persons in the United States and Canada, giving a total of about 60,000,000 who use the German language.

With French the case is much the same. That language is now spoken by the 88,000, 000 inhabitants of France, by 2,500,000 people in Belgium, by 200,000 in Alsace-Lor-raine, by 600,000 in Switzerland, by 1,500,000 in tne United States and Canada, by 600,000 in Hayti, and by 1,500,000 in Algiers, India, the West Indies and Africa total, 45,000,000.

English is spoken by all but less than 1,000,000 of the 38,000,000 in the British isles, by probably 57,000,000 of tbe 60,000,000 in habitants now believed to be in this country, by 4,000,000 persons in Canada, by3,000, 000 in Australia, by 8,700,000 West Indians, and perhaps by 1,000,000 in India and other British colonies, bringing tbe total to ovei 100,000,000.

Peraona Who Sneeze.

The custom of giving thanks forsneezing originated loug before the Christian era, says Harper's Bazar, authority for the fol lowing:

In the Twelfth century lived Eustathius, a man "profoundly versed in ancient classic lore." He too yielded to absolute belief in this old time superstition.

In his most valuable legacy to the world of letters, a commentary on Homer's "Iliad" and "Odyssey," we find: .r

Telemachus then sneezed aloud Constrained, his nostrils echoed through the crowd Thesmilingqucen the happy omen blessed— So may these impious fall, by fate opprest.

Odyssey, Book XVIII

And Homer lived hundreds of years before the Christian eral It is said that when the king of Mesopotamia sneezes, acclamations are made in all parts of his dominion.

In Slam "long life" is wished to persons who sneeze, and among Persians, if often repeated, is regarded as a most auspicious event.

The year 750 A. D. is usually reckoned the era of the custom of saying to one who happened to sneeze, "God bless you."

In a Seventeenth century work may be found these lines: It is an order when you sneeze.

Good men will pray for you Mark him that doth so, for I thinko lie is your friend most true.

Scientific Cranks.

Every time we. strike a match, says The Aluminum Age, we are indebted to the men who have studied science for the mere love of it The men that worked away at coal tar "just to see what waa in it" made the whole world their debtors by discovering alizarin, the coloring principle of mad der. And to those men the world is indebted also for aniline, antipyrineand more than 100 other coal Uir products. Scientists, wondering what waa in crude petroleum, found paraftlne and vaseline. Pasteur wondered what caused fomentation, lie found out and brought anew era to wine making. The singing and dancing of the teakettle attracted the attention of brain, and we have as a consequence all the applications of steam. The swinging of a chandelier in an Italian cathedral before the eyes of young Galileo was the beginning of a train of thought that resulted in the invention of the pendulum, and through it to the perfecting of the measurement of time, and thus its application aud use in navigation, astronomic observations, and in a thousand ways we now pass by unnoted, has been of such practical value that the debt to scientific thought, even in this one instance, can never bo known.

Wages In Ynrlou* Part* of the Country.

In these days of strikes among workingmen it'ls strange, says Rural New Yorker, that there should be such a wide difference in their wages in various parts of the country. Brick masons are paid *11 cent* an hour in Atlanta, while they get 42 cents in St. Ixuls. tn Lexington,Va,, a carpenter gets 1$ cents an hour, while his brother in New York gets 88 cents. A plumber gets 23 cents in Vlcksburgand 40cents* in Chicago, while a [winter gets 23^' cents in New Orleans, 85 in Memphis, 51 in Kansas City and 53 in New York. Again, a roofer gets 19 cents an hour In Atlanta, 34 in New York, 3S in Brooklyn and 38 in Santa Fe. Unskilled labor gets only 7& centian bour In Atlanta, while it gets 90 cents in Galveston. St. Lou la pays the highest price to masons Xow York to carpenters San Francisco to painters Chicago to plumbers Santa Fe to roofers, and Galveston to common laborers.

Lord Byron's "Don Jn*o." The book, which made on its publication a great stir, bore no name, and being therefore not copyright, was republished in cheap editions by tbe pirates. Application had consequently to be made for an injunction, and for a time it was seriously questioned whether the court of chancery would afford protection to the book. However, the injunction was duly obtained but Lord Byron strenuously refused to mak» any alterations in the poem as suggested by Mr. Murray, the publisher. Byron died it* \SU his "Memoirs," which had been sold ia M& to Murray, being burnt at the family's request a few months afterward. It was thought that portions them were too groes for publkatloau

r«uiny Ways of C«t*jng»URg Yeriw. Children have funny ways of conjugating their verb*, as was illustrated by a little boy of a writer's acquaintance told about la Wide Awaka. Tfete.Utti* man had been out with his sled aadcamttia saving "Oh, mammal I have bets out with my sled and I alnd dear to tbe foot of the hiiC ie Johnny Laurence only alod'half way. such good faxt toattdef*

MM '-ic~

liiStl

GIANT SOLDIERS.

llepbMto in India Bear tbe Baggage the Army and Xrag the Heavy Cannon.

The very biggest of the British soldiersare in the East Indian army. They are eight or ten feet tall. They weigh five or six tons apiece. These giant soldiers are not men, however. They go on four feet instead of two. In

fact,

they are elephants.

Strange to say, the first elephants ever seen by Europeans, centuries ago, were sol dlers too. The Europeans had to fight them, as well as men, in the great wars-of the east. In those days, elephants went into battle clad in armor. Sometimes they bore towers on their backs, filled with warriors. Some of those old soldier elephants were trained to cut and thrust with huge scimiters, which they carried with tbeir trunks. An elephant can lift half a ton with bis trnnk. Think, then, what a tremendous weapon such a swordsnufa could swing.

A RAW KKCKOTT.

Now the Europeans employ elephants in their armies in the East. The British soldier elephants in India today, however, are not fighters. They are workers they bear the baggage and drag the heavy cannon.

Not long ago seventeen "raw recruit*" were shipped from Rangoon to Madras. Most of them were newly captured animals purchased for the government of India up In the country of British Burmah. One by one these huge animals were hoisted from the wharf in a great sling and lowered into tbe hold of the ship, as shown in the accompanying picture from Little Men and Women, which gives its readers the interesting facts here quoted. The elephants did not like going to sea in that way at all. They struggled .mightily. They roared. They grabbed at the rigging with their trunks as they were slung up in midair. And then down in the hold they were so furious that it was more difficult to get them out of tbe sling than it had been to get them in.

S Keep the Passions in Check An old man was once walking witn a little boy. They came across four shrubs. The old man said to his youthful companion: "Pull up the least one."

He obeyed with ease. "Now the next." He obeyed, butjt did not come so easily. "And the third." It took all his strength to move its roots, but he succeeded. "Now the fourth."

In vain the lad put forth all his strength. He only mado the leaves tremble he eould not move the roots. They had gonestrongly into the earth, and no effort could dislodge them.

Then the wise old man said to the ardent youth: "This, my s6T5, is just what happens with our passions. When they are young and weak, one may, by a little watchfulness over self and the help of a little self denial, easily tear them up but if we let them cast their roots deep into our souls, there is no human power can uproot them. For this reason, my child, watch well over the first movements of your soul, and study, by acts of virtue, to keep your passions well in check."—Golden Days.

The Spice Islands..

The Moluccas or Spice islands area numerous group in the Eastern archipelago none of them are large the surface of the whole group is mountainous, several peaks attaining to tbe height of 8,000 feet. They are volcanic in structure, some of the islands containing active volcanoes and numerous hot springs, white earthquakes are of frequent occurrence. Some of the mountains present a beautiful appearance, being wooded to the summit the soil is rich, tbe climate warm and very moist, but owing to the smallness of the islands and the prevalence of the monsoons the heat is seldom excessive. As the climate is quite unsulted for corn, the natives depend for food on tbe sago palm, the bread fruit tree and the epeoannt. Spice is the article of produce most important to Europeans, cloves, nutmegs and mace being exported in large quantities. Sandal wood ia obtained here: and small quantities of gold, coral and mother of pearl are found, whilesome trade is carried on with China in edible birds' nests and that other peculiar delicacy, the fins of sharks. The Portuguese, Spanish and Dutch have alternately struggled for ire-eminence on these valuable islands. Tb«y were captured by, the British in the beginning of the present century, but were Anally restored to the Dutch by the treaty of Paris in 1814.

Butllad of Clarinthia Jane Loalta. This is Qwiothla Jane Louisa, Holding her brother as»s^|ggs Here he sits on the post to please her.

Happy little two! mrnmm&m

BS SJEIS THE POST TO t»L&A*fc R£«.

Dog cam by with a gnmt aad a erasable. Made Gfauffatfefo start aisd xtamMce Poor Ebeoeeer got ttu&ble.

Boo. boo, boo. boa. bow?. ,~aL

attthDay evening maj

MORE

SoseiwUflc Advlee to Tftntft Soul* Whe Tremble at the nought of "Germs.**

"Save us from the microbes! It has been discovered by someone that hail is infested by microbes, and we consequently earnestly urge our readers to always seek shelter in a hail storm as a precautionary measure. This is bad enough, but now along comes some other scientific- chap, wbo tells us that Tichy water, which an ignorant and guileless world has been drinking for centuries, is loaded to the muzzle with 'germs!' Presumably all other bottled waters are in the same dangerous state, and the water furnished to all of our cities is more or less condemned by these men as being in the same category. What are we to do? Science is a dabster at pointing out horrible perils that surround us on all sides, but always gets shaky wheft it tries to prescribe remedies. It is well for the timid, who tremble at the presence of the microbe, to think no more about him to eat and drink as usual, and should an ill assail let the indicated remedy remove it." The Homeopathic Envoy, which is authority for the foregoing, admits that its advice is not scientific, but affirms that it will promote happiness and prolong life if followed,

Health By Bale.

The following programme for the preservation of health is laid down by Hall's Journal:

Rise early and never sit up late.

1

Wash the whole body every morning by means of a large sponge, and rub it dry with a rough towel.

Drink water. Avoid spirits and fermented liquors of every kind.

Keep the head cool, and sleep in an airy apartment. Eat no more than enough and let the food be plain.

Let your supper be light. ......- The Average Age. Anybody about to choose his or her life's vocation will naturally feel more or less interested in the following: In Germany It is found tbe average age of professionals and tradesmen are as follows: Speculative sciences, 71 years beautiful sciences, 70.9 years abstruse sciences, 70.2 years public affairs, 68.18 years natural sciences, 68.7 years fine arts, 67.6 years school teachers, gardeners and butchers, 56 years tradesmen, 56 years lawyers and financiers, 54 years doctors, 53 years bakers, 51 years Bhoemakers, 47 years smithies, 46 years tailors, 45 years stone breakers, printers, etc., 40 years. ______

One Thing and Another.

Excessive moisture of the hands is a disagreeable trouble for which the following is said to be a remedy: Tincture of belladonna, half an ounce eau de cologne, four ounces. Rub it upon the hands several times daily.

It is stated that there are 27,000,000 pores on the surface of our bodies, which, if placed in a line, would extend twenty-eight miles in length, and that we lose two poitttds of water in the twenty-four hours by perspiration.

Good deodorizers for the sick room: Coffee pounded in a mortar and roasted on an iron plate, sugar burned on hot coals and vinegar boiled with myrrh and sprinkled on the floor and furniture.

According to a medical man horseradish is exceedingly irritating to the stomach and should be used with much care.

Freshly powdered charcoal is an excellent absortont of foul gases.

Women Wanted!

Between tbe ages of fifteen and fortyfive. Must have pal#, sallow complexons, no appetite, and be hardly able to get about. All answering this description will please apply for a bottle of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription take it regularly, according to directions, and then note the generally improved condition. By a thorough course of self treatment with this valuable remedy, tbe extreme cases of nervous prostration and debility peculiar to women, are radically cured. A written guarantee to this ena accompanies every bottle.

I They Sort the Type.

Only One Weeks More!

1

S" "ft

You Have a Good Chanee of Getting the Twenty-Dollar Bill.

On the 6th of July the Mail will be twenty-tfro years old, and on that date will give away a twenty-dollar bill, which is now in a sealed case in The Mail office, to the person who will send to this office the first correct or nearest gness, if no correct gness is received, of the number of the bill, said number being between 50,000 and 100.000.

The result will be announced on Saturday, July 11,1891. CONDITIONS. This blank will appear weekly until July 4th, inclusive. Any reader may compete by filling out a blank or blanks cut from the paper, and sending them to the Manager of The Mail, Terre Haute, Ind

lAbout twenty-five women now have pleasant, lucrative employment on daily newspapers in New York as "distributors" —that is, they are employed during the day, at the same rate paid for night work, to distribute type for compositors who thus prefer to reduce their working hours. The 'lady distributor-' is comparatively a recent innovation, but all think that she is a mostagreeable one. Her earnings depend upon the amount of work she receives, but will average about fifty cents for every hour employed. I have known soma women to thus earu tweuty dollars per week,, from about 10 a. m. until 5 p. m. These positions, however, are in the main greyly prised and eagerly sought after by women. While there is no reasou why men should not perform this work under the same circumstances, it has by tacit consent become the undisputed privilege of women.—Charles J. Dtumar in Ladies' Home Journal.

Matrons as Heroines In Fiction.

If the married woman is to be the heroine of the coining novel it must turn on something besideslove making. It must be tbe story of her career of her professional or political success of her painful accession through toilsome decades to the front rank of the doctors of the money she made and what she did with it. American women are very much alive in these days. There is no special difficulty about writing interesting books about them without using men at all except as puppets or lay figures. —Scribner's.

Horsfords Acid Phosphate .For Sunstroke.

It relieves the prostrationaml nervous derangement.

Good Look*.

Good looks are more than skin deep, depending upon a bealtby oondition of all the vital organs. If the liver be inactive, you have a Bilious Look, if youi stomach be disordered you have a dyspeptic Look and if your Kidneys be affected you have a Pinched look. Secure good health and you will have good looks. Electric bitters is the great alterative and Tonic acts directly on these vital organs. Cures Pimples, Blotches, Boils and gives a good complexion. Sold at any Drugstore, 50c. per bottle. 4

Miles' Nerve and Liver Pills. Act on anew principle—regulating the liver stomach and bowels

through the ne ties.

VIGOR OF PEN

Easily, Quickly, PermanentlyRestored. Weaknew, Kerraainen, Debility, and all the train of evils from early erronor later excesses, the results of overwork* sickness, worry, ete.

A pamphlet of Information andaby \stractof the laws, showing How to/

If no correct guess is received, the nearest guess will get the $20.00

ISIS

My guess of the number on the TwentyDollar Bill injjJThe Mail's Anniversary Gu

SilllSS

Obtain Patents, Caveats, Trade/ .Marks, Copyrights, tmti

^Addt~ MUNN ivSOl Broadway, Hew Yerk.^

Prof. I. HUBERT'S

For Beautifying the Ccmplexkm.

Removes snFrsekles, Tan,Bunbam, Pimple*. Ltrai Moles, and other imperfection*.

Not ^^P.butrmo*

-1? anil nOTminr*"" tilA MM

her imperfections, got cowwg, pu^

tnom11

blemishes,

"«!»«»•Sf'Si'.

plaxion to its original mm". gist, or sent postpaid onreoeiptot

Prof. I. HUBERT. TOLEDO* OHIO.

MO

enn our hiK»Vl!n«ofwork. m.W

ln.iiMmbljr. by

^DtSltC

m.

ttioxs of

(•titc? vt, v«mitr ur oiu,at»1 In ttirir on ii lxuilUit*v« iier*r«r tl«*y A iiy rtn# do tM work. Kaajr to letrn.

W« oVrrvihfnjr. yon. No rttk. You your #p*r« or nil your llm« to the work. Itili an (tntlrrly ti«'W !cmt,/ini bring* omlcrftit

mhtcim

Baffin r*r» vafiiittff fro

to fverv worker.

MI

tf'JA to *50 pwr vre*k

and m«»ro *tf'*r a Units run furnUh you lk« •m» triovmrut ami truth

yr,n

ItKK. No

to

i»*pt*!n liar*. Full

mformatlon rilKk. Acdtm, MAI9E.

What Od« It Mean

"100 Doses One D®Bar" means simply that Hood's Sarsiiparill» is

tb«most

i., proprietors, Spencer, at oy mall upon receipt (O. Kelss, druggist, corner

Co., sent Geo. Kelss, druggist, streets, Terre Haute, lnd.

$3000:

A

new discovery. Dr. Miles' Pills speedily care billousuess. bad taste, torpid liver, piles, constipation. Un equaled for men, women aud children. Smallest, mildest, surest! 50 doses, 80 eta. Samples Free at nil druggists.

Full

strength, development, and tone given to every organ and portion of the body.

Simple,

natural

methods. Immediate Improvement seen. Failure impossible. 3,000 references. Book, explanations and proofs mailed (sealed) free. Address

IK* MEDIOAL CO., BUFFALO, N.

economical

medicine to buy, becanse It gives more for the money than any other preparation. Each bottle contains 100 doses and will average to last a month, while other preparations, taken according to directions, are gone In a week. Therefore, be sure to get Hooa's Sarsaparllla, the best blood purifier.

of ilie present cencration. It ft* for its cure and its attendants, Sick Head* seht, Constipation and Wlos, that

futt's Pills

have become so famous. They act speedily and gently on he diareattve organs, giving: them tone and ugorto Mslmilutcfood. Ko griping or nausea.

Sold Everywhere.

Office, 39 & 41 Park Place, N, IT.

TLSIOJLM!

Agents Wanted! Circulars Fxkb.

1,XK

BreTatert Safely Rein HoMms lven away to Introduce

Umib.

Every

ore* owner buy* (Tom I to 6. Usee never undertones' feet. SendSSeeola In stamp* to pay and mcktw| for Nickel Plated Sample that eta. Bsaaater Xffc. C«., Holly, Hick.

LADIBSj TBT

Dr. DeLuc's Periodical Pills,

FROM PARIS, FRANCE.

Acts only on the menstrual system and positively cures suppression of the menaus from colds, shock, etc. A safe reliable month* lv medicine, warranted to relieve price 93, three for 15, The American Pill and Medicine

Iowa. Bold and of price, and by Third and Main

A TEAR I under»*ke to brieflf teach any fairly InMHpi'iit prnon of eltb«r ten, who c«n rend thd wrlta, »nd who, nftor li»lructlon,wiU work lndtutriotuljr, bow to turn Three TbnniMd DolUn

«ar In their own localities, wherer*r they llw.I will aluo farnloh the tltuatlon or employment,*! which

you

No money for me

can earn that amount.

uhmm

ancceufkil ai abort. Kiuily and qulcfct*

leant *d. I deilre bat one worker from each dUtrlct or county. I have already taught and provided with employment a lari kiar

nave already tauptt ana provtacu with employment a line number, who irtoelilif onr MOOO

a

II part

year each, It'» ATKvIr

JB. C, AL1JBK, box MO, Augusta, Maine.

and MOliflK Vttlt particular! PURE. Addmaatonc^

Sniiir little fbrtnnei hare been made

at

work fur u», by Ann* rage. Auxin, Teian, nm! .Iiio. lloml, Toledo, Ohio. .See cut, Otlioniaredolngatwell. Why not you? Some earn over $100.00

a

uoiitlt. Von ran do the work and lite home, wlirrrver yon are. fcven beInner* «n entlly eamlnjt from aft to Jlla day. All *tf*. Weill"w you h6w and otart vnn. Can work tn uparvtlme or nil Hie time.

Mr

money nir work­

er*. Failure unknown among them. NHW and wonderftil. Particular* free,

n.llnlleltits 'o.,Ilox H801*ortl»ii«l,Maine

ABSOLUTELY

No Change of Cars

-FROM-

ST. LOUIS, TERRE HAUTE INDIANAPOLIS, CINCINNATI,

DAYTON, SPRINGFIELD,

-TO-

New York, Boston

JLDKTX) THE EAST ... VIA THE POPULAR

Big4,

Lake Shore and New York Central

ROUTES.

THE

Shortest & Quickest Line

BETWEEN

EAST WEST

All trainis arrive Sixtb Street Depot,

and Depart from

Berths in Sleeping Cars

HBOUBKD TltKOUOH TO

NEW YORK & BOSTON

E. E. SOUTH, Gen. Agt., 710 WABASH AVENUE

samma

94 Miles tbe Shortest and tbe Quickest.

CINCINNATI to NEW ORLEANS

Entire Train, BaggageCar. Day Coacbe*anfl Sleeping Cant through Without Chang* Direct conn*ition# at Kew Orlenn* and fibre-report for Texa*. Mexico and California. 110 Mile* tbe Shorten, 3 hour* tbe qulckect from

CINCINNATI to JACKSONVILLE, FlA. Time 27 hour*. Solid train* and ttaroagh HJeepeni without chao«« for any cla*» of paa*

Tbe Short Liue between Cincinnati

Lexington, Ky., time, 2M bourn KnoxvWe, Ten a., time, 12 hour* Anhvlilc, N. JL time, 17 boors ChaUaokfA, Tenn., time, 11 bonrx Atlanta, Gift., time, 15 hour*

Blnningbatn, aJjl, Umc 16 hour*, exprow Trait

Three Kxprow Train* Dally. Pnllmaa Bondolr&ieepinff Can. Train* lure Central Union nati crossing the Famous Higt Kentucky and rounding tbe bone of Lookoat Mountain.

Depot, Cincinnati Bridge of

Over one million acrrau of land in Alabama, tbe future great State of the South, eub* iect to pre-emption.

Uumrptumed

climate.

For rates, map*,etc.,address*Neir,V.

Kk&h,

Trav. Pam. Agt., No, W W. Fourth itnrt. Cincinnati, O.

KDWARD^ 0

p, r.

(X C. HARVEY. Vice Preaident,

A

ft

Slitfl

im

St®