Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 24, Number 1, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 July 1893 — Page 6
US*
W
yl'
Prizes
a®
llSi!
for
How to ftet Twenty-five Hundred dollars tor Notliiiu.
The Winner has a Clear Gift of a Small Fortune, and the Losers Have Patent* that may
Bring them in Still More.
Would yo"u like to make twenty-five hundred dollars*? If you would, read carefully what follows and you may see a way to do it.
The Picas Claims Company do votes much attention to patents. It baa handled thousands of applications for invention**, but It would like to handle thousand* more. There is plenty of inventive talent at large in thia country, needing nothing but encouragemeut to produce practical resuits. That encouragement the Presa Claims Company proposes to give. not so hard as it seems.
A patent strikes most people as an appallingly formidable thing. The ideals that au luveutor must be a natural genius, like Edison or Bell that he must devote years to delving complicated mechanical problems and that he must spend a fortune on delicate experiments before he can get« new device to a patentable degree of perfection. This delu
sion
tun company desires to dispel. It desires to get into the head of the public a clear comprehension of the fact that it is not the
gr«ttf
Kit says that the proiits he has re eelved from the patents on all his mar yelou* inventions have not been suffi clent to pay th* cost of his experiment* But the man who conceived the idea of fastening a bit of rubber cord to a child's ball, so that It would come back to the hand when thrown, made a fortune out of his Hcheme. Tha modern sewingmachine is a miracle of ingenuity—the product of the toll of hundreds of busy brains through a hundred and tifty yoars, but the whole brilliant result rests upon the simple device of putting the eye of the needle at the point Instead of at "the other end. tiik i.rrrLi: things tiik most valuable.
Comparatively few people rogard themselves as Inventors, but almost everybody has been struck, at one time or another, with ideas that seoined calculated to reduce some of t'.e little frictions oMifo. Usually such ideas are dismissed without further thought. "Why don't the railroad company make its car windows so that they can' be slid up and down without breaking the passongers' backs?" exclaims the travelor. "if I wore running the road I would make them in such a way." "What was the man that made this saucepan thinking of?" grumbles the oook. "Me never had to work over a stove, or ho would have known how it ought lo have boon fixed." '•Hang such a collar button!" growls the vii who is lato for breakfast. "If I were in the business I'd make buttons that wouldn't slip out, or break off, or gouge out the back of my neok."
And thon the various sufferers forget about tholr grievances and begin to think of something else. If they would sit down at the next convenient opportunity, put tholr kleas about car windows, saucopans, and collar buttons Into practical shape, and thou apply for patonts, they might ffnd themselves as Independently wealthy as the man who invented the iron umbrella ring, or tho one who paten tod the fifteen puzzle.
A TEMPTING OFFER.
To Induco people to keep track of tholr bright Ideas and soo what there is In them, the Press Claims company has resolved to offer a prizo.
To tho person who submits to It the slmplost and most promising invention, from a commercial point or view, the company will gtvo twenty-five hundred dollars In cash, In addition to refunding tho feos for soourlng the patent.
It will also advertise tho invention free of charge. This offer Is subject to the following conditions:
Kvory competitor must obtain a patent for his Invention through the company. He must first aoply for a preliminary search, tho cost of which will be five dollars. Should this search show his invention to bo unpatentable, he can with draw without further expanse. Otherwise ho will be oxpooted to complete his application and take out a patent in the regular way. Tho total expense, Including Government and' Bureau fees, will be seventy dollars. For this, whether he secures the prize or not, the Inventor will have a patent that ought to bo valuable property to him. The prl«a will be awarded by a jury conslstng of three reputable patent attorneys of Washington. Intending competitors should fill out the following blank, aud forward it with their application: \m. "I submit the within described Invention in competition for the Twenty-five hundred Dollar Prisse offered by the Piohh Claims Company.$
SO tU.ANKS IS THIS POMVRTtTON, this is a competition of rather au unusual nature. It is common to offer prlsjs for the best story, or picture, or architectural plan, all the competitors risking the loss of their labor and tho successful one merely selling his for the amount of the prists, But the Press Claims Company otter Is something entirely different. Each person Is asked merly to help himself, and the one who helps himself to the best advantage is to be rewarded lor doing ft. The prisee is only a stimulus to do something that would be well worth doing without It. The architect whose competitive plan for a club house on a certain corner is not accepted has spent his labor on something of very little use to him. Bit the person who patents a simple and useful device in the Press Claims Company's competition, need not worry if he rail I© secure the prist®. He has substantial result to show for hi# work-one that will command Its value itt the! market at sny Utn©.
The plain man who uses any article In bin daily work ought to fenow better how to improve It than the mechanical exptni who studies it enly frm» thatheorsttcai point of view. Get tld of thei idea thai an h*proven
rtnt
1B®S§
Patents.
complex, mid expensive
invention* that bring the best returns to their author*", but the little, simple, and cheap otiett—! he ihitiK* tf*t surdly trivial that the average citizen would feel somewhat ashamed of bringing thetn to the attention of the patent ofllcf*
nil bft too
slmp'f to be wnrih patenting:. Theslm-j pier the bn:«r. The p»r*m who faceeeds io vni hSning sluif I Id If amis popularity, will r*i the Press Claims tympanytwtny4w .bsttdnd dot lit*.
The responsibility of this company may b« judged from the fact that its to I he a iv of the leading newspapers of the United Status* I
Address the tV*s* Claim* Comiwmy.'
John WodtUrburo, attorn«y, 618 street* Sf. W., Washington, D. C.
FIGHT TO THE DEATH
MAN AND PANTHER IN A BATTLE-
TERRIBIE
LIFE
BATTLE IN THE MTJItlETA FOOTHILLS.
Crouching at Its Lair the Furious Beast Sprang Cprm Its Victim. Barylnj lt« Claws and Teeth -Deep ii» His
Flesh.
HE MOST THRIIiling story of a fight to the death between a man aBd a panther, told this season, comes from ,-S Murieta, a 1 if or/J/y nia. Tom Tower, a ranchman and the hero of the encounter, will all his life wear the marks of his fight to the death. A few morn
ings ago Tower and a companion left Murieta for a forenoon's hunt in the foothills. Before an hour had passed they became separated and meet ng with poor success Towel's companion returned to the ranch. His companion continued his hunt into the t°°y hills and at noon entered a little clearing some miles distant from Murieta. As he came into the opening a huge panther arose from its lair with a growl that told of a ravenous desire for a. meal of human flesh. Tower gazed for an instant utterly paralyzed with fright. Then he rapidly took sto of his situation, keeping his eyes on the huge beast that was crouching with its yellow belly to the ground, lashing the short sage with its long, flexible tail, its short ears flattened to its head, snarling, showing its terrible long, white fangs, and the long body swaying preparatory for a resistless leap. There was no way for Tower to escape. The brute would be on him in another moment, and there was no possible help within miles. There was nothing to do but light. His •weapons consisted of a doable-barreled shotgun loaded with fine shot, a short, stout-bladed knife, two good arms, a
strong,
athletic frame
and an abundance of clear, true But what of his antagonist that would be upon him in another instant? A sinewy, supple, powerful body, paws that could crush the skull of an ox, jaws that could bite through his thigh with one crunch, and a thick, tawny hide that would afford successful resistance to those pitifully small shot. While taking this inventory tTower never removed iiis gaze from those_ great yellow eyes glaring at him from the ground, not five yards distant. His only hope Cvas to blind the brute with the shot. He had been standing mo-
«,-*
mW us
I
TUK STRUGGLE FOR LIFE.
tlonless, fearing that the slightest movement might precipitate that terriblo leap. But now the silence was broken by the sharp click of the cocked gun. and, with a quick downward movement of his left hand loosened the knife in his beltf, then braced himself for the catapult. It was not long delayed. With the first movement by Tower the panther had crouched lower, its body trembling mor«* violently, and now it sprang into the air wkih a cry between roar and a scream. As it left the ground Tower fired the right barrel into the beast's front and then jumped nimbly to one side. The brute screamed again while yet in the air, and as it struck the ground, tore at its head with Its paws nnd bit at that sharp stinging pain in its breast. Tower had only time to step back three or four pacos when the maddened animal sprang again, and again met the full force of the second load of shot fired by that steady hand, and again did Tower leap to one side, at the same time throwing open the breech of his gun and reaching to his belt for more cartridges. But the panther did not delay the th ri leap. It had hardly touched the ground when it was up, and this time reached its victim, striking Tower full in the breast and sinking its fangs with a crunching snarl deep into his left shoulder. Down thev went, locked in a deadly embrace In a fight for life in that secluded spot on the side of a lonely mountain, and witnessed only by the robins sitting motionless in mute surprise on the bushes.
As the two went down Tower grasped his short knife, and as the fangs of his antagonist met in his shoulder, drove it to the haft in the animal's side. With a scream of pain the panther released its hold, only to seize him again. Over and over they rolled, the panther tearing at Tower's limbs and vita with its crucl el&ws and crushing his arm and shoulder with its powerful jaws. Tower managed to keep his right arm free* and plied it rapidly- Again and again did he drive the knife to the hilt
in the animals neck and side, the hot blood gushing over him at every stroke. as the afternoon waned and Tower did not return, his friend at the a .eh became anxious and, with three -he men. started on a search for his absent commde. Going' first to the place where they had separated, the searchers .took u» the trail and had no diflBcufty in following it, his footprints being plainly ngntshed In the soiL
After a tr of two hoars they forced their way through a thicket and found in a little opening an explanation of their tnencTs absence. There he lay, face downward in the dirt, hit clotlin£ almost torn from hh bodv or
pasted to the Jiesh by great clots ol dried blood that had poured from deep, gaping woands. A few feet away, on plot of blood-soaked ground, lay a fall-grown panther, dead, with a short-bladed knife driven to the haft behind the left foreshoulder:
Taking in the situation in an instant, the Rescuers ran to Tower, supposing, of course, that he was dead. but they were overjoyed to find that there was still enough blood left in his veins to create a pulse. It took those men of the mountains but a few moments to construct a litter of mauzauita boughs and placing Tower's almost lifeless body upon it, they carried him down the mountain to the ranch, where he soon showed signs of recovery.
A slice of flesh almost an inch square was .torn from the calf of the leg. Several policemen and a dozen of citizens were soon at work with grappling hooks trying to capture the creature that wounded the boy, but nothing was found. The pond has been full of big catfish. It is thought that the boy was bitten by a snapping turtle.
SHE WAS INSANE.
Terrible Crime of a Woman In Virginia Town.
The second trial of Sylvester Howe, charged with murder in the first degree, ended at West Union, Ohio, the other day. Howe's crime was the murder of Jas.Shnw on lower Twin Creek, in
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, JULY 1, 1893.
im
BITTEN, BY WHAT? &.*>
While In Swimming a Small Boy Has an Adventure.
An animal of some kind inflicted a serious wound on little Willie'Costello while he was swimming with a number of companions in one of the ponds near Murtha's brick works, Nicetown, Pa., the other day.
The little fellow's screams for help attracted the attention of Policemen Betzold and Wray, and when they arrived lo-vear-old Peter J. Connelly, Edward P. Donnelly of 4244 Germantown Avenue, Willie Enders aud Frank Johnson of Nice street were pulling young Costello up on the bank of tne pond. Costello had been enjoying his swim, when he gave a scream that startled the others and caused all of them to flee from pond, excepting those who assisted him from the water. The animal which bit'him first seized him by the right foot and immediately afterwards by the calf of the left leg and clung to him for about a rain and only let go after he had kicked and struggled desperately to free himself.
West
One of the most sensational tragedies that have ever occurred in West Virginia took place liist week at Pleasant HilL Mis. Phillip Ivrech, wife of a well-to-do-farmer, while in a temporary fit of insanity, killed four of her children and then attempted to murder the rest of the family, eight in all. Then she committed suicide by drowning. The children were drowned and poisoned. Before putting her children out of the way Mrs. Ivrech went to her eldest daughter, Mollie, and told her that she, the mother, thought she would die, and (lid not \yij.pt to leave her children. She further informed her daughter that she had given poison to two of her young sons. "Now, we* will all jump into the well," exclaimed the esponden mother.
Mollie followed her to the front of the house just time to see her pick up the 10-months-old baby and dash it into the well, which had in it eight feet of water. She then picked up a 3-year-old child and threw it into the well al*o. Then the crazy woman took another of her children, a boy 8 yeirs old, but Mollie rescued him from the mother's gnsp. She tried to throw Mollie into the cistern, but after a desperate struggle the girl succeeded in escaping. By this time the two children who were in the well were dead. The two boys to whom she had given poison died on the floor. The other children, with the exception of Mollie, had run to an uncle for help. Then Mrs. Krech, seeing that she could destroy no more of her children, jumped into the well herself. Mollie saw her and exerted her utmost strength to save her mother byi seizing her by her clothing as she hung over the edge of the well, but at last the desperate woman freed herself from her daughter's hands and plunged to her death.
MRS. KRECIL
Townsnip, on .Tuly 8, 1892,and the jury in Pleas Court convicted him of murder in the first degree at the January term and he was sentenced to hang
STLVKSTER howe and the Circuit
Court in April heard the case on error and gave Howe a new trial. At the
Howe a new
second trial the jury reported that they could not agree. When the jury returned to their room, and before taking any action on the case, an earnest prayer was offered by one of the jurors that their deliberations might be marked by wisdom. The ballot of the jurv stood from first to last, eleven for conviction of murder in the first degree. one for any lower srvade of criroft ,.
Her Lung* Bare." fTf
A remarkable case of vitality is attracting the attention of the medical profession of Louisville. It is that of Agnes Kuffncr, of Sinton, I11M a private patient at the City Hospital, who is sufferimr from a cancer. The left aide has been eaten akr. st entirely away, lea1 5:g V,.- 'nuj and ribs* Tho'hpr—* 4* oa\ pre ly a thin membr •?. and its bt *1. can «-n-Hy be seen. .'f from Sat Bife.'-
Mrs. 3. T. Ford died at her home, one*, let of 1- ond. Mo., the othet bio sonin,r ~aused by a ra- it go. t-" wa$ the mo1 of the notorious Bob and Charley i- ord. who killed Jesse James at St Joseph, Ma. under a contract with the then Governor (now ConsulGeneral to Mexico) Crittenden. ,,
3S®
Pretiy Evening Bodice.
The evening bodice here shown "is full of possibilities. Its newest and most attractive feature, the collar, may be re-
Df CREAM COLORED CHINA KTT.1T,
moved at will. The sleeves are also tem porary affairs, which can be taken out on short notice and, like the collar, used in another bodice or gown. The material is cream colored china silk, the collar being of heavy lace and the belt of black velvet, finished with wide gold buckles.
IialSy Blanftet.
An exceptionally beautiful baby blanket is made of squares of white flannel worked with clover in the pale green and dull pinks of the flower. The border is long and short stitch in white floss.
Eleven Years in Charge
Of the package department, Boston Main Depot. Boston, Mass. Miss Helen Jones fays: I was a sufferer from general debility! biliousness and water brash for several years, and life seemed almost a burden to me. After using almost everything, Sulphur Bitters cured me.
Fashion Fancies.
Accordion plaited skirts of surah or india, with plaited waists in sailor fashion, are rather new and effective.
The pretty French silks are now rivaled by the English fabrics called Bradford silks, which are especially serviceable and desirable for summer street costumes.
The new hats for children are large flats of fancy straw and chip. They will be trimmed with ribbons and flowers in a simple, childish manner. Where an elaborate hat is required white leghorns promise to be popular, trimmed with flowers or white tips.
Both black satin and muscovite repped silk are used for the long coats that are now so fashionable. They are very full in tho back below the waist line and have enormous sleeves. The broad reverg, and collarette are edged with ecru guipure insertion.
The return of the shawl is prophesied. A French combination is watercress green and turquoise blue.
Jackets the Fad.-
Eton Russia and zouave jacket effects are still a marked feature of new waists that open over shirred', plaited or folded vests, the fronts very full and girdled. Lapped front, opening over silk or chiffon inserted plastrons, remain in great favor, and the corselet bodice, with guimpe of lace, net or other delicate fabric, will be in high vogue for months to come. ':,/•
The Captain
Of good Ship Storm King says: For the pant live years I have usfd Sulphur Mrtus on board my vessel, and have uot 1 st a man. They area Mire preventive of all contagious fevers so incident to warm climates. Please hend me at once two drzon bottles, and oblige J. Stakkkt.
Cleaning.
With the warm days open the doors and windows and let the fresh air and sunshine pour in and drive out all impurities and stale odors. Especially must the cellar be well aired and ventilated, the walls whitewashed and dark, damp corners sweetened with chloride of lime. This year of all others we should diligently attend to these matters, lest there should be truth in the predictions of cholera. Take down all heavy draperies from doors and windows, and after thoroughly ailing and cleaning fold thsm away, being mindful to carefully wrap them in heavy paper lest the moths make them their abiding place.
Next take up the carpets, clean and store away as you have the draperies, in heavy paper. Then scrub the floors and oil or stain them. A rug here and there will be all the covering that is necessary to relieve the bareness. After cleaning of windows and floors, attend to what papering is necessary, selecting papers that are bright and cheerful, especially for the north rooms, and ones of a softer, cooler tint for rooms with a southern exposure.
Potato Balls.
Moisten 2 cupfuls of cold mashed potatoes with a half cupful of hot milk, and when softened stir in 2 salted, well beaten eggs. Drop carefully from a spoon into flour or egg and crumb them. The mixture should be very soft. Brown either in hot butter or boiling fat.
fe If* dr
SOMETHING UNUSUAL, as a medicine, is Dr. Pierce's Golden
IS -i by it. It par1:.-® wed t. every orgar •tores rtjwc hslh Seals a
Sf
a
For Nervous Prostration Use Horsford's Acid Phosphate. Dr. A. G. Bisjsell, 'East Saginaw, Mich., says:
U1
have frequently pte
scribed it for indigestion and nervous prostration, and in nearly all cases with success. In the latter especially it seems to produce marked improvement in a short time."
STITCHING AND EMBROIDERY.
Har.v to Avoid H&d Effects From the Constant I'so of the Xeeille.
There is so much in the way of stitching mid embroidering which cannot be accomplished by oi Vr than a skilled hand that interest must naturally attach to the effect which may be manifested in ttie worker, jjjroin S to 10 and even 12 hours grading fine needle through new fabrics, some resisting as much as pasteboard, requires considerable force of pressure. While this is not as great as would be necessary to move a table or apiece of furniture, it is a constant drain on muscular energy, and at the same time carries with it a pressure on a very limited part of the finger.
Now, all the time that this is going ou the eye is on a constant strain, the head is inclined forward, and there is general muscular tension all over the body. The lower limbs get cramped from long hours in a sitting posture, and there is a tendency toward congestion of certain parts of the body.
Felons affecting the thimble finger, soreness of the wrist, pain and stiffening of the neck, congested and sensitive eyes, burning headaches, hemorrhoids and cold extremities are among the ailments resulting. Back of these are some serious spinal complaints, which, it is fortunate, are extremely rare.
To prevent these ailments is much easier than to cure them, and here are some suggestions for the first—the preventive. Have a little wristlet of chamois skin not more than an inch in width, which you can buckle about your working wrist after, say, two hours of work. Thia will give comfort and sut*ort. Educate two fingers to use the Nimble, so that one may relieve the other. If you are right handed, place jmrself in such a position that your rigiit shoulder is supported. This will relieve a great deal of the strain upon your neck. At night when you are at home is an important time. Bathe hands, wrists, arms and neck in warm water, then rub them thoroughly with a rough towel and stretch them a little by way of exercise. Relax your muscles at every opportunity.
A Simple Breakfast. Fruit.
Crackcd Wheat. Sugar and Cream. Codfish Balls. Mayonnaise Dressing.
Stewed Potatoes.
Orumucts. ____________ Coffee. Cankerous Affections of the mouth may be speedily cured by use of isOZOPONT. It never failed to remove the cause, and restore the mouth and tc-etb to beauty and health. It iujuros none, and cures all. It is most pleasant to the taste, and conservativoof good looks.
Spaulcing's Glue,
Co., Boston, Mass.
Medical Diasrvpty. Ahd, becaw of tha®,. tlrtrc-'s sofciethitig tmuatzal ia the way of selling it. Where every vrfher Eu=didne of kind only yrimr this is guartm*
I If it ever
ear yew have your jr. .-aery
r«n. -"„r ra:.:
•I.
most
.- for ex fry "'.worirr*
id Scare
,,, -U
---***»,
i* as sa» cured
hm the blood, raitti '-.1 act- n*. Z. la MS} fit
r*tia. cany, gicraf-
nJoos chiilneo, or mr^ate teak braoe tbe «|»tau after "Gh-ippe," yaiwniw thla, fSrsrs, and oiiier prortratin^ acute diteosai, ctsmal Hm "iMatmry*
Mr. Joseph Ecmmerich
An old soldier, camo out of tho War greatly enfeebled by Typkoid Fever,
,,JI
and after being
in various hospitals tho doctors discharged him as incurable v/lth Consumption. He hat been in poor health since, until ho began to tak«
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Immediately his cotish grew looser, night sweats ceascd, and ha regained good general health. II0 cordially recommends Flood's Sarsaparilla. csrwcfc!!" 0 comrades In the O. A. B.
HOOD'3 PlLLO car© nafeitcai ConailpaMon by re#torlng pcristaUfc actloa of tlia fulme&tary canal.
TZTOTEL lUCHMOxND I-J- EUROPEAN.
E. A. FrtOST, Propr
Formerly manager Sherwood Kouw, Fvnnnville, Ind., Inte Mangr. Hotel Grncc. Chicago Boon* 7Ac, $1.00, $1.50 Per liny.
Steam Heat, Centrally Lrwftied, two block* from P. O. and Auditorium, opp. the ne* Lester Building. H, ff. Cor State aud Van Burr HICAGO
STOPPED FREE
Mifwiiw tucfttt. I wen* fttvm Hertart*, Dr.2LEfE'8 GS55A?
ERVER^STO.tEfl NERVE
Vr ACBXAW & vwr nvtfer AW Af: -t »*,{, lK7AiLI*i« it *, A "/«{*. Tr---tv*- .. ,i8saattDn KVn r. uy|»trmi. £StFAK I
0Jf*Vr£ f'.r, ft 'el" tors out .9%.
CURE FOR CATARRH
nm OYER FIFTY YEAH8 this old SovcreigoBemedy baa stood the
test, and standbTto-day tho best known remedy for Catarrh, (Jold in tbe Head and Headache. Persist in its use, and
it will effect a cure, DO matter of
nn
Will cure The worst cases Of Skin Disease From a I Common Pimple£
On the Face To that awful Disease Scrofula. Try a bottle To-day.
1
4
like tho shirt of
Nessus, cannot bo pulled off. July,
Coughing Lends to Consumpt ion.
Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once,--Cure Yourself
Don't pay large doctor's Lulls. The best medical book published, one hundred pages, elegant colored [dates, will be sent you on receipt of three 2 cent stamps to pay postage. Address A. P.
Ohpway
&.
Send 3 2-ccnt stamps to A. P. Ordwny & Co., ikKStoii, Mass., for best medical work published
EPILEPSY OR FITS
Can this disease be cured? Most physicians say No—/ say, Tee all forms and the worst cases. After 80 years study and experiment I have found tho remedy.—Epilepsy is cured by it wr«f, not subdued by opiates—the old, treacherous, quack treatment. Do not despair. Forget past impositions on your purse, past outrages on your confidence, past failures. Look forward, not backward. My remedy is of tnlay. Valuable work on tho eubjectt and large bottle of tho remedy—sent free for trial. Mention Post-Office and Express address. Prof. W. H. PEEKE, F. D.. Cedar St., Now York.
Railroad Time Tables.
Train rked tbus(P) denote Parlor Carn attached. Trains marked thus do noteHeeping Cars attached dailj'. Trnlnhji.prkeCs thus (Bj denote Buffet Cars attached, 'ns' marked thus ruu daily. All other tj irun dally, Sundays nccepted.
LIHSriEL
A IN I.ISE.
iiKAVR t'OK THE WEST.
No. 7 Western Ax* (V) Hum. JNo. 6St louis.Vtall ilt.il »m No. 1 Fast Line^iP). ....... 2i0pm No. 21 St. Louis Ex" (DAV) .... 8 10 N®. ldEff. Acc .... 4.03 ia
I.KAVE FOR THK BAST.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express (S) 1.20 a i» No. 6 Now York Express (SJtV). 2.20 am No. 4 Mall and Accommodation 7,15 am No. 20 Atlantic Express (DP&V). 12.47 am No. 8 Fnst Li lie 2.35 in, No. 2 Indianapolis Acc 5.05pna
AlUUVK FROM TJ1E BAST.
No. 7 Western Express (V) 1.20 am. No. 5 St. Louis Mail* .10.(6 am No. 1 Fast Line (P) 2.0o No. 21 St. Louts Ex* (D&V) 8.05 No. ft Mail and Accommodation 6.45 pm No. 11 Fast Mall 9.00 tu
AKRIVK FROM THK WEST.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express (8) 1.10 am No. 6 New York Express (S&V). 2.10 a ra. No. 14 Effingham Ac D.Soam No. 20 Atlantic Express "(V&V). 12.42 pm» No. 8 Fast Line0 2.20 pm. No. 2 Indianapolis Ace 6.00 pm.
T. H. & L. DIVISION. LEAVK FOR THK NOKTH.
No. 52 South Bend Mail No. 60 Michigan Flyer No. 54 South Bend Express
fi.Sn a in 1,00 rn 4
Mi lu
ARRIVE FROM THK NORTH.
No. 61 Terro Haute Express. No. 53 South Bend Ma!
Ivxp: tail
11.45 a T.ijo
PEORrA DIVISION.
ARRIVK FROM NORTHWEST.
No. 4 Pass Ex 11.05 a ra No. 2 Pass Mail A Ex 7.15 I.EAVE FOR NORTHWEST, No. 1 Palis Mail A Ex ........ 7.05 a rn No. 8 Pans Ex .*.... 8.00
33. & rr. n. AUK1VK FROM SOUTH.
No. Na«h & C. Ex" (H & B) 5.03 am No. 2 T. H. & East Ex 11.50 a in No. 00 Accommodation ....... ".*1 ni No. 4 Ch & ind Es^S) 10.61 No. 8 World's Fair Special* -V 4-8
X.KAVK FOR SOUTH.
No. 8 Ch & Ev Ex*(S) 4,3J a No- 7 World's Fair Special* lo.jo am No. 1 Ev fc ind Mail. ........ 8,15 pm No. 5 Ch & N Kx«-(SfeB) 10.00
J53. &c X.
ARRIVK FROM SOUTH.
N 4 8 W or ix 1.01 am No Mail & Ex ... 4.1.0 pm l/BAVK FOR SOUTH. No. Mdll A Kx V-M a No. 4i Worlh'n Mixed ..... S.V0 ra o- "tP akkivk rmu xoerK. No. »fh
Av'i«h
K'x*(8) ....... 4.15 a
No. 7 World Fai rSpecipi*, .... 9.55 m. No. 1 Ch A Ev Ex W No. SIxKsalPaas IU0 pro No. 5C4NF Ex^lDAV) ...... 9.5 0
X.EAVE FOB KOUTH.
No. 8N&CEx*(MV) 5.10am No. 10 Local Pass ........... 7.30 a in No. 2 & Cli Ex 12.10 ra No. 8 World's Fair Special0 4.85 pm No. 4 Nnsh A Ex«(S). ,11.45pm
C. O,C.&C I.-BIG-OOIHO F.AST No. J2 Boston ANY Ex*. N 2 el an A No. 18
l.iCiaao ~3h a. V3M
Southwestern Limited^.
N 8 a a in
aotvo wiasr.
No. 7 8t. Ixrai* Ex* No. 17 Limited6 No. 'AAccommfxJatlon .... No. 8 Mali Train*
WEOOERBURN,
80LDIER8?K'ra
s«iv
long standing tbe case may be. 4 Yor sale by druggist#, V,
IMota IM 7 SB 10.00 ft
ff r09 W«fT WF0RJMT10S ABOUT
PBKM
coMPArr, vx?'
^WIDOWS,
PEOCCItED
CHILDREN, PARENT8. .Alto, for 8oklfer» StJIon dta»ble»J IdUkjtiseof
ttrinrMorii, wmw OMIy for new UwjlSo tiurgc tot
ttt'? war,
to
liH3, and tedclaiso* Jfotoa
