Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 40, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 April 1893 — Page 2

WOMAN AND HOME..

CURB THE CHILDREN'S TEMPER AND SET THEM GOOD EXAMPLES.

a

Daintiness In DreMins Bicycling For Tonne Children—Wedded to tlie Pen. Them A ro Few Women of Leisure—Note#

FOP Iloniemakers AND Mothers. A great deal has been said in recent years about the physical training of children and the datj of parents to provide their little ones with abundant fresh air and wholesome exercise, while comparatively little is said concerning tha necessity for a cheerful and equable social atmosphere about the home. A praat many children who are born in luxury never feel the refining influence of a gentle, cultured home. The moral atmosphere about them is poisoned by the evil temper and want of restraint vl parents who little realize how often they shock the detfeato sensibilities of little one* whose fine nervous or^aniems have not become accustomed to these changes in the home atmosphere.

The nervous system of a little child is peculiarly delicate and sympathetic. The rnoKt serious disturbance to its health must i-cHult from the continual shock of domestic broils and rude explosions of temper. And it i* well known that such disturbances leave a permanent mark upon the physical as well as upon the moral nature of the child- The wisest physicians of children consider the English system of the nursery a most wholesome and wise one. By this system the children are left to grow up in a world of their own, away from the jars and ckcitenicnt of more mature life, the anxieties of

which

they very often share

sympathetically, though they do not understand them and are not brought up by the experience and wisdom which only comes with mature years. Suffering to a child's mind is an eternity while it lasts. Me does not see beyoml it.

There is a spirit of righteous indignation which no one should be without. For "anger," says a '.»e writer, "is a sinew of the soul, and he who wants it hath a maimed mind." It is not to this anger that we refer, but to the uncontrollable temper of purely selflsh persons, who make the atmosphere of their homes miserable with their rude outbursts, who seem to exhibit their temper merely for the purpose of showing their power or because of some fancied and foolish grievance. For the individual with an ntigovornablo temper is usually a weak person, who takesthis miserable manner of asserting his dignity.

Tho wretchcd suffering of a little child brought tip in a household where the mother is of uncertain temper, liable to frighten tho helpless child by her sudden spasms of coarse anger, can hardly be conceived. Almost as wretched is a gentle, refined wife whoso lot it is to live with a husband who is a confirmed grumbler and whoso temper is so continually at a white heat that ho can hardly be looked upon us reasonable being. It is above all things the duty of parents to curb tho temper their little ones in childhood anil to teach them that suclf a display of anger is coarse and disgraceful.—Now York Tribune.

Daintiness In Dressing.

The art of dressing well—that is, with a dash of attractiveness and much neatnessmay bo cultivated. But the largest degree of such cultivation always lacks the delicate tono In which tho woman gets herself up who is a bom artist in garmenting.

With tho woman who is a natural genius at robes and in tho way of wearing them this "well dressing" is not dependent upon tho cost of material, a wide variety or much of it Without special thought, she makca tho best of her material. With the most inexpensive fabrics and the least space of time sho will appear as exquisitely dressed •as others make out who aro unlimited in resources.

Further, the veriest dowdy toilets may tiavo lavished money, time and thought upon her personal deckings. It is not af all her fault 1 hat sho Is a glaring error in good form and a distortion of delicate taste. She hasn't tho perception and the knack necessary for the success of a pretty cos tumo.

But sho usually feols happy, for she seldom realizes that sho is a "curious sight" and a "question of ludicrous rootles and colors."

Tho natural genius at dressing* has the tact somehow of getting things on in the right way, of slipping thom deftly and securely into placo and making them stay there.

Who of us docs not known somo woman whoso dainty way of wearing a cheap print gown and a shilling hat hns made her the prettiest picture in all tho world? And who Las not envied her that fine instinct in her lingers that taught her how to give just the touch of genius to It all that makes the dif feronce between being exquisitely dressed and ill, dressedN~New York Commercial Advertiser.

Bicycling For Young Children. The average mother of the average small child yields without question, if her purse permits it, to his request for a bicycle, tricycle or velocipede. That in so doing she sometimes does the boy or girl a serious wrong is attested by the harmful results which often follow. An English surgeon lays down the rule that, given the usual de velopment of six years, that Is the earliest age to permit a child to cycle, and the cau tion is added that this in many cases is too early.

Great care should betaken in choosing and fitting the machine. It should be light of course, the gearing low enough to admit of a short crank throw (four inches is gen erally ample for a Child of 6 or 7) and the saddle and spring properly adapted to tho weight and sm of the rider, but most important of all is the length of reach. This should bo quit© short. Tho child should be able easily to touch tl pedal at its lowest point with the heel. Nothing is more Injurious than a reach so long that the unfortunate boy appears as if riding on a rail, just touching the pedals with the tips of Ms toes.

Then, the position must, be earfully studied. Young growing tissues are easily distorted, and a saddle too far back and handles too far forward would certainly cause a carved spine and a pennauent camel's hump. The peak of the saddle two inches behind the crank axle and handles so brought round and back that the child can sit perfectly upright on tic machine are two thing* that must be insisted on in buying either a bicycle or a tricycle for a young rider.—Bicycling Nows.

Wrddwl to the Pen,

1 was talking to a very bright literary woman intfew York a few evenings ago. and in the course of conversation she said: "It is very Rtrangc to me that so many sirb wtiousi to write rH be known a* authors *.nce there is not .g that to keep wwaca from marrying much as "llSLrr J*™ to "f -iMrill something t*#xx% a Htemy enreer tkeey

Look over a casual U*i of women who bare

jlMI

a

mnr?A literary successes, and for the most part they are unmarried-. There Is Maxy Wilkins, a woman who would have made the dearest little wife for some man, but she told me the other day that she was so wedded to her pen that she had no tune to think of marrying. Now, such a thing is a pity. Clever Marguerite Merington practically told me the same thing. Look at the long list of others: Gail Hamilton, Grace King, Mary Murfree, Maria Parloa, Sarah Orna Jewett, Lucy Larcom, Constance Fenimorc Cooper,.Edith M. Thomas, Nora Perry, Elizabeth Marbury, Louise Stockton, Juliet Corson, Octave Thanet, Caroline B. Le Row, Kate Field, and doubtless there are others I cannot recall now at the moment. I don't know what there is about the pen, but its steel point certainly seems to penetrate the feminine heart."

And my delightful friend, herself a literary woman of repute and a maiden lady, sighed, which spoke louder than had her words.—Philadelphia Times. ..

There Are Few Women of leisure. "You businesswomen are all wrong in calling us women of leisure,'' said Mrs. Emma Webb Haskett. "Women of leisure indeed, as if matrimony was not a demanding and difficult profession. The fact tliat it is not regarded as such causes a large proportion of all the trouble there is in the world. No woman has a right, as an honest, Christian human being, to expect to get something for nothing. Now, you are very busy, having almost no leisure at your command, and it takes about all that you can make to live, doesn't it?" The notebook woman was constrained to admit that this was a truthful statement "Now, I have," said Mrs. Haskett, continuing, "something more this— not much, truly, but something—and do you suppose that I am not obliged to give value received? Most certainly I am, and my task is in its way no less arduous and exacting than yours. And it is proper and fitting that it should be so "Matrimony is no one sided bargain. It «s not like an account book, with all the gain on one side and the loss on the other. If I had my way, there should be added to schools classes which should teach the dignity of matrimony and its demands. There is much which both men and women should seriously consider which they never think of in this connection. I am of course speaking of* matrimony from a business standpoint, and the truth is that the more business there is in it the more happiness .as a general rule"—Chicago Post.

::Whcre

Mothers Often Err.

Of -course every mother's baby is the sweetest, the brightest and the prettiest baby in the whole wide world that is full of lovely, sweet babies, and every mother expects everybody else to have the samt opinion that sho herself holds on this particular matter. It is in the nature of things that this should be so, for it is apart of the great mother love that is awakened by the first feeble wail of the tiny bit of humanity that comes into the world to be loved and cared for in its perfect helplessness. But there aro people who are kind hearted

hearing

JUMI

sunny, who love children and would do anything in the world for them, but who grow tired of

about the wonderful things

they say and do. Isn't it a little bit strange that mothers forget this and confine themself to conversation relating to baby and devote their whole time to the children?

It is in part a mother's duty to devote herself to her children and do everything she can for their good. But some mothers forget that there are other duties she owes to herself, her children and her friends as well. She forgets that it is her duty to keep In touch with the world and with people outside her own fireside circle, so that when the boys and girls grow up mother won'f be a bit behind the ago because she devoted the best days of her life solely to looking after their comfort.—Buffalo News. t-

f: Women Wago Karners. .'i When this country had a population of 5,000,000, an idle woman was almost unknown. Women Worked on tho farms, spun, wove, braided straw and carried their half, if not more, in the concerns of industry.

Now, when we have a population of 65,000,000, and our industries have grown immense, the figures of female employment look formidable. But the question which no statistics of employment permit us to answer is whether the percentage of women who live in comparative idleness and luxury has not increased much faster than the percentage of women who are engaged in useful employments.

This is a question that the statisticians seem anxious to get at, but the figures do not furnish the necessary data. Certain i* is that the number of women employed in housekeeping, as compared with the number who geek employment in other channels, is constantly growing less.

All efforts to ennoble the vocation of housekeeping, along with other seductive channels of employment for women, arc most timely. Much of the old time drudgery involved in It has been removed through the introduction of modern conveniences. That it should grow into disrepute simply on tho basis of mistaken pride Is a great misfortune.—Helen Campbell in Arena..

A Plea For Color In JOrcss.

"I wish all the girls," said complainant., "would not wear black so unanimously in tho evenings. I called in at a house the other evening and went into the drawing room. You've no notion how bright and pleasant it looked. On© of the girls had a red silk gown on with hangings of black crochet Another was In some soft maize colored stuff, with a shiny belt. One girl wore black, but it was livened up and done off with bunches of green and pink ribbons. Cant you all manage to fix yourselves up like that?" There is certainly something in this complaint, for black is such very convenient wear for dinner and is so pleasantly undatable that it Is universally popular. White and pale colors soil so readily with gas and dust from coal fires that only those who enjoy very liberal dress allowances can indulge in many gowns of these festive tints.

Red la a capital wearing color, but it does not suit everybody. It nearly always, however, sets off the gray haired to advantage. Why middle aged women do not more frequently wear it it is difficult to surmise. Ths?y enshroud themselves in black when thcir sons and daughters would ever so much prefer to sec them in colors, to say nothing of their husbands.-—Chicago Her-

alL

frvj

Mutton Snet as a HonsefcoH Remedy. It Is very vrxing and annoying indeed to have otse's lips break out with cold sorts: but-, like the lew, it is far better t© strike out thai in. A drop of warm mutton sssct i. iied to tbamres at night just before retiring will soon c-u se them to disappear.

This is an radiant remedy for parched lip® and chiipjK-d hands. It should be applied to the soTfcs at night la the liquid state and well rubbed and liented in before a brisk Sire, which ofWn a. .-es« smarting .* tf- rrrsshu* of hands by this be restored to /v

ini

IsssisssM

their natural condition by one application. If every one could but know the healing properties of so simple a thing as a little mtftton suet, no housekeeper would ever be without it. Get si little from your butcher, try it

out

yourself, run into small cakes

and put away ready for use. For cuts and braises it is almost indispensable, and where there aro children there are always plenty of cuts and bruises. Many a deep gash that would have frightened most women i^tp sending for a physician at once I have healed with no other remedies than a. little mutton stiet and plenty of good Castile soag.—St. Louis Republic.

Pare tittle Children:

When I speak of children, I mean little children—tho little creatures whom Christ so loved—before contact with the world has brushed the heavenly bloom from their pure hearts, before the sweet unconscioj^ness of infancy has been destroyed and t^e gates of that beautiful garden where tbfey wander, and where they let us wander with them if we will, have been closed forever.

The mother who deliberately or thoughtlessly gives her little ones into the entire charge of hired servants, no matter how trustworthy, does herself and them a grievous wrong. She little knows what a price? less treasure of delightful and elevating companionship she Is depriving iierself 6f to bestow upon indifferent and uncomprehending persons.

This close, constant, loving association with little children is one of the most potent and valuable of formative influences, and no mother can afford for her own sake to relinquish it. The loss to the child can never be estimated.

There is no study more fascinating than that of the unfolding of human character at the earliest period. The glimpses one geta into the pearly recesses of the child's soul!—Washington Star. e\

ss

Two Boston Charities.

A valuable work is being carried on by women in Boston. Notices in English, French, German and Swedish are hung in the waiting rooms of the railway stations and pier sheds warning young girls against strangers and stating at what hour a matron, who will be recognizable by her described'badge, maybe found to give all needed information and advice.

In the same city, which is peculiarly the home and originating place of practical charities, a second copiable scheme is that of the Young Travelers' Aid society. Under its auspices matrons meet the chief trains, both incoming and outgoing, and aid by suggestion or information the traveler who needs it.. A country girl", a for: eigner, a mother wrestling with an unwieldy family of slippery children, particularly if she Is a stranger in a strange land— these and similar helpless and distracted wayfarers are righted, relieved and sent on their way rejoicing.—New York Times

Zy

'Shaking Up a Boom

A writer refers to the passage in Fannie Kemble's "Recollections of a Girlhood," where she tePs of a habit her mother had of changing effocts in her living rooms. Instead of allowing sofas and chairs to retain undisturbed possession of the places to which they had been first assigned, tljis good matron frequently introduced new combinations and new effects.

Try it, if you are in a state of discouragement. Pull your parlor to pieces. Bring the piano out from the corner where it has been standing for a year or more. Contrive corners by the judicious use of screensmmd drapery. Lot the little rocker ani lounge hobnob sociably. Introduce ing plant or two if none has been fore, and if the light is favorable. Do with the monotony. You will find a real advantage in the effort to change effects.

"the High Office of Cook.

The function of the cook is a very important one. The proper preparation of food is a question of health and life itself, particularly in cities, where occupations are such as to restrict most persons to a minimum of exercise in invigorating outdoor air. Wholesome food, taken in proper quantities, means well being, cheerfulness and useful activity, while ill cooked, dirty, badly seasoned and badly served dishes produce dyspepsia, pessimism and doctors' bills. Too large a proportion of so called cooks are without training, Careless, indifferent, unwilling to learn and ungrateful for the pains taken in instracting them.— Baltimore Sun.

Woman's Fart In Civilization.

1^

Woman has become a very important fat^ tor of our modern' civilisation. Without her urging and enthusiastic presence half the wheels of progress would come to. a standstill and the other half would probably begin to 'urn the wrong way. Sfee is the inspiring impulse which keeps our various charities motion she has a place in the management of every hospital she is the chief dependence of our clergy in all mission work. Without her our churches would be disintegrated and public worship change to public indifference.—New York Heraldry it/ Vsjlolng For Cake.

An icing for cake that is popular among French and German cooks and that is economical because it calls for no eggs is mad from a half pound of powdered sugar, a tablespoonful of boiling water, the grated yellow rind of an orange and enough orange juice to moisten it. Put the sugar in a bowl, then add the rind, next the water and lastly the juice and use at once.

A Cantlon About Weirlftg It in "Don't wear your rings under your gloves unless you member to have them thoroughly examined twice a year," is the advice given by a jeweler. The constant friction wears out the tiny gold points that hold the stones in place, and unless strict attention is paid to them they become loose in a very sh^rt time,—Buffalo News.

Marie AnC^^nette Was the originator of many fashions in ladies' dress, including the milkmaid and shepherdess costumes, of which the {esthetic forms of our own day are in great measure a reproduction and development

The Countess of Aberdeen, who has many friends In this country, is one of the fondest of mothers, as well as a practical philanthropist and intelligent patron of all sen able reforms.

Workbasketa have the honor of an everlasting popularity. Just as long as there are stockings to darn and rips and tears to be pewed up the workbasket will be in demand.

Charlotte Youge, the English writer, has a large income from her works, and she expends It on missionary and other benevolences with the most generous liberality.

Clear, black coffee, diluted with water and containing a little ammonia, will cleanse and restore black clothes.

To be a sister is to hold a sweet place Is the heart of home. It is to minister in a holy office,

THE NATIONAL BIRD. $

Thing* to Enow

Housekeepers Ought About Him.

The manner in which the turkey is killed and dressed for the market materially affects the flavor of the flesh. In order to be in prime condition it should be kept without food 12 hours before it is killed. It should then have its head cut off, rather than have its neck wrung. It should then be hung up by the feet order that the body shall be properly drained of blood. When it has hung for six or eight hours, it may be picked.

It ia hardly necessary in these days of sanitary intelligence to call attention to the superiority of the dry picked fowl over the scalded one. The bird which has been sw led out by the use of boiling water and has a full crop looks better in the market stalls to the ignorant buyer than the turkey which has been properly starved, killed and dry picked. But this is the only advantage, except the slight one that the feathers come off rather easier fro^. a scalded bkd%an from a dry one.

Retail market buyers, the New York Tribune says, are becoming so intelligent in the matter of purcliases that the dry picked, properly killed turkey will now command a higher price than the scalded one, with its full crop. The time may not be far off when all our market poultry will be properly drawn before they are Bent to market. All birds of whatever kind'should be drawn as soon as they are cold. If the turkey has been properly fed, killed, drawn and dressed,f it may still bo spoiled by tho carelessness of the cook.

A mistake which great many ignorant cooks make is to leave the fat of the turkey in the body when it is roasted. Every portico of fat which can be reached is removed from a turkey when it is properly prepared for roasting. The fatter the bird the better and sweeter will be the flesh, but if this fat is left in it imparts a coarse, rank flavor to the entire bird. A great deal of fat is always found over the crop around the breast. This may be removed by turning back the skin after the bird is drawn. Large layers of fat may also be reinoved from the breast near the thirhs. It is a great'improvement to the turkey also to draw the sinews out of the drumsticks. This converts the flesh of the drumsticks into delicate meat which is coarse and tough if it is omitted.

The Now Kerchief Blouse.

The new kerchief blouse promises to be a great success for sash silk blouses and all kinds of thin soft material. The demure Victorian folded pelerine or fichu idea is tho bass of it, and it is made with a slightly full back and plainly fitted

it

IT

ti

'/.rf/

NEW STYLE BLOUSE.

lining. Into the shoulders and the fronts of the arm sizes are fullecl on each side & width of material, which is left to hang in two long scarfs. When the lining is hooked, these scarfs tire crossed over the bust and passed around to the back of the waist, where they may tie like a sash or be simply crossed again with the ends tucked under. The open space left in front is filled in with a of embroidery or of lace, or, with a gathered bit of the material for day wear. The style is especially becoming to slender women and may be utilized as well for young girl's wash dresses.

Nice TFhItS Hands.

A

If nice, clean, white hands are desired, the following suggestions will be found useful: When through with the day's work, partially fill a basin with suds of warm soft water and castile soap and scrub the hands in it gently with a firm but soft finger brush until no vestige of dirt is visible, even in those telltale places, "the lines of the hand." Rinse them well afterward in clear water and dry thoroughly with a soft towel, pushing back at the same time the scarf skin from around the base of each nail. Then rub them briskly with each other for five minutes, not forgetting to draw each finger several times, through the tightly closed fingers of the other hand, but not so hard aa to make the joints crack. That enlarges them. Perseverance in this will not only help one to retain tapering fingers, but will much improve the shape of stubby ones. It will restore in a great measure the symmetry of finger tips blunted by misuse or constart pressure against some hard substance.,

PURELY' VEGETABLE— Dr. Pierce's Pleaaant Pellets. They're a compound of refined and concentrated botanical extrncts. These tiny, sugar-coated pallets —the smallest and 'y the easfesfc to take absolutrfy and permanently core

ConsSjpatkwi, Indi­

gestion, Sick and Bilious Headache!*, Dizziness, Bilious Attacks, and oil derangements of the liver, stomach, and bowels.

Tber cure permanently* bsceose they act naturally. They doa*t sLoek and *[eaken the like huge, old: fasfeio^d

ajmstxan.

And thejy'remore eflsecuve. Une prffa* f«* a correctsve or laxative— flaw teTfi cathartic.

They're the cheapest pfllsymi c&n boy, for they're guaranteed to give satisfaction, or your money is ratoarned.

Yoo p*y only for the good you got.

It is very poor eoonomy to endeavor to relieve a cold by neglecting it, when a bottle of Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup will cure it at once.

"Women In Life Insurance.

There is no kind of business for which women display more natural fitness than that of insurance. For several years the large companies have employed them an agents with very satisfactory results. Miss M. M. Gill of New York city, who is now manager of the west side and upper Third avenue branches of the London and Lancaster Fire Insurance entered the office of' an insurance company as clerk at the age of 16. Through her natural ability and strict attention to business she gradually worked herself up to her present responsi ble position.—^American "Woman's Journal.

Gelatin*

Gelatin is the animal jelly obtained by boiling cracked bones, gristle and: meat. The extract is then clarified and evaporated till it dries in the shape we obtain it for culinary use. Isinglass is made from the sounds and other parts of

Here itis, and il fills the bill muoh better than anything we could suy: "It gives me the greatest pleasure to write you in regard to Chamberlain'^ Cough "Remedy, During the past winter have sold more of it than any other kind,- and have yet to find anyone but what

WHS

benefitted by taking it. I hare

never had any medicine in my store tl^at gave such univeral satisfaction."— J. M. RONEY, Druggists, Gueda Springs, Kaus»p. 50 cent bottles for sale by nil druijgUts. April.

kV Mr. William Osbom '.•» Gibson City, 111.

:Pmfiy Marvellous

Misery With Diarrhoea. ..

Chronic

Perfect Cure by HOOD'S. "About 38 years ago I got overheated while at \%ork in the harvest field, and was sick abed for three months. When I got on my feet again I found that I had a bad kidney trouble and chronic diarrhosa, which has drawn on mo for over 85 years.

Just Think of My Misery. I dared not eat anything more than would barely keep me alive. For years I felt that my stay on earth would be short. I liavo times withoutnumber been in such distressful pain and aching that I could not turn myself in bed, and I would have to ask my

Hood's Cures

wife to take hold of my hands and turn me. In all these years I employed the best physicians but nothing gave me permanent relief. I had an iron constitution, or I could not have stood the drain upon me. "In the fall of 18871 was so weak I could not work. I concluded I would try I-Iood's Sarsaparilla. To my surprise and great joy I soon found that it was doing me good and when I had used 7 bottles I was perfectly cured. It is now 4 years and the Cure was Perfect and Permanent.

For the past four years I have enjoyed life and felt better and younger than in any of the 35 years preceding. I endured everything a human being could and live, and I wiu recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla long as I live." WM. OSBORN, Gibson City, 111.

HOOD'8 PlLLS cure liver ills, constipation, biliousness, jaundice, sick headache, indigestion.

Best aid to the Amateur, the Artist, and to those fond of a beautiful Home. 36 oredPictures given with a year's subscription for only $4.00. Complete instructions and designs given for

IRTERCHAMGE

iinKllMw mttm «*l

•fefb Cipa, iiKtailm ratarat (toes j) tnl* *t» I'urt

tion. & home is complete without this beautifully illustrated CTide. Everyone who sends && direct to our office for one year's subscription will get Free, a* a Premium, a copy of oar exquisite water-color simile The Tnralinsr Placet size 27x23 inches-— which has never been sold for than $1G, and makes a most beautiful

Ewhich

Catalogae Free.

Magarine^wtth S

Colored Picture#, sent

2«c.

uu

THE AST INTERCHANGE CO., 9 Dasbro Si.,

wp^stofpeofree

I SSB ifsrettnu tnccr}3.

1 S W'NERVERCSTOaEII «£rBltAW*N«*WS DtSBASEJ

jfefTAXMOf' IX/TA r/yc

Cleanse Th# Vitiated Blood When you see Its impurities Bursting through^ The Skin In

Pimples,

Blotches And Sores.

Rely on Sulphur Bitters and Health will follow.

is* if it Send 3 2-cent stamps to A. P. Ordway & Co., Boston* Mass., for best medical work published

Railroad Time Tables.

Train rked thus (P) denote Parlor Car# attached. Trains marked thus (8) denote sleeping Cars attached daily. Trains marked thus (B) denote Bufl'et Cars attached. Train* marked thus run dally. All other trains run daily, Sundays accepted.

ILHSTZE.

T. H. & I. DI VISION.

LKAVR FOK THK WEST.

No. 11 Western Express (8&V). 1. 35a No. 5 Mall Train 10.48 8 No. 1 Fast Line (PAV) 2.15 No. 21 2.85 No. 7 FrbI Mall 9.04 No. 18 Effingham Aco 4.05

LBAVB FOR THK KAST. :,

No. 12 Cincinnati Express (S) 1.20 am No. 6 New York Express (SiteV). 2.20 am No! 4 Mall and Accommodation 7,15 am No. 20 Atlantic Express (PAY). 12.47 am No. 8 Fast Line 2.80 No. -2 5.05

AKH1VS FROM TUB BAST.

No. 11 Western Express (S&V). 1.20 am No. 5 Mail Train 10.40 am No. 1 Fast Line (P&V) 2.00 No. 21 2.80 pm No. 8 Mail and Accommodation 0.45 pm No. 7 Fast Mail 9.00

ARRIVE FROM TUB WEST.

No. 12 Cincinnati Express ""(B) 1.10 a tn No. 0 New York Express (tWcV). 2.10 am No. 20 Atlantic Express (P&V). ^tifi,42 No. 8 Fast Line flW

No. 14 Effingham Ac. ..... am

T. H. & L. DIVIHION^p^ LBAVB FOR THB NORTH.^

No. 52 South Bend Mall ..... 6.20 am No. 54 South Bend Express 4.00 pm No. 56 St. Joseph Special 1.00 pm

ARRIVE FROM THB NORTH.

No. 51 Terre Haute Express*..\ .1I,4§ am No. 58 South Beud Mall ...... 7.80 No. 55 Southern Ex H.45,p

ARRIVE FROM BOUTO.

No. 6 Nash & C. Ex* (S B) 5.00 am No. a T. H. & East Ex 11.50 am No. 4 Ch & Ind Ex* (S) 10.80 pm No. 60 5.00 pm

LEAVE FOR SOUTH, if

2

1

No. 8 Ch & Ev Ex-(S) ^, 6.00 am No. 1 Ev & Ind Mall 8.15=p No. 5 Ch & N Ex#(S&B) 10.00 No. 7 10.42 a in

JE. &TL.

ARRIVE FROM SOUTH.

No. 50 Worth Mixed 10.80 am No. 32 Mall & Ex 4.25 pm LEAVE FOR SOUTH, No. 88 Mall & Ex 8.50 am No. 49 Worth'n Mixed 4.25 No. 18 New Pittsburg accomodation. 0:45 am

O. &c ZE3. I.

ARRIVE FROM SOUTH.

No. 8 Ch & Fash Ex*(8) 6.45 am No. 49 Ace 10.25 am No. 1 & Kv Ex 8.10 No. 6Ua^F Ex*(8&B) 9.50

LEAVE FOR WORTH.

No. 8 N fc Ex*(H&B) 5.10 am No.

& Ch Ex 12.10

No. 50 Watseka Acc 8.20 pm No. 4 Nash & Kx»(S) 10.45 pro

RJ?.

UHL. 5C 3?-

ARRIVE FROM NORTHWEST.

No. 4 Pass Ex 11.20 am No. 2 Pass Mail fe Ex 7.10 pin LBAVB FOR NORTHWEST. No. 1 Pass Mail & Ex 7.10 am No. 8 Pass Ex 8.20 pm

O. n. C. &c I.-BIG-

OOING BAST

No. 12 Boston ANY Ex* 1.22 am No. 0 New York and Boston *S. 2.29 am No. 2 Cleveland Acc 7.25 am No. 18 Southwestern Limited* .... 12.56 Hi No. 8 Mall train* 8.48 pn|

GOING WEST.

No* 5 St. Louis Express ..... 12.17 am No. 7 St. Louis Ex* 1.41 a ra No. 17 Limited* 1,58 pm No. 3 Accommodation ....... 7.58 pm No. 9 Mall Train* 10.08 am

jiMthethingT

This Is an expression the traveling public generally use when they find something that is exactly what they want. This expression applies directly to the WISCOIIHIU Central Lines, which is now admitted by all to be "The Route" from Chicago to

St. Paul, Min­

neapolis, Ashland. Dolutb and all points In the z^orthwest. "Their double dally service and fine equipmentofler*Inducement which cannot be surpassed. ,,

This Is the only line running both through Pullman First Class and Tourist Sleepers from Chicago to Pacific Coast Points without change.

For full information address your nearest ticket agent or JAS.C. PONP.

Oen. Pass, and Tfct, Agt., Chicago, III. 28tf.

r? CURE FOR CATARRH

a

FOB OYER FIFTY YEARS this old SovereignRemedy has stood the test, and stands to-day the best known remedy for Catarrh, Cold in the Head and Headache. Persist In Its use, and it will effect a cure* no matter

oi

long standing the case may be. ^or sale by drnjranstK, j?kVv.