Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 24, Number 10, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 September 1893 — Page 2
WAEING'S PERIL.
Continued on Ihird Page.
Kim, but he ain't, sub/' chuckled Anfixed it all right wid de £yahd dis raawnin, sub. Dey won' tell •bout his cuttin' np la®" nififbt. He'd forgot de whole fing, snh he allays does he never does know what's happened de night befo'. He wouldn't 'a* known about dis, but I told his boy Jim to tell him 'bout it ahter stables. I told Jim to sweah dat dey*d repohtcd it to de cunnle.M "Very well, Ananias very well, sir you're a credit to your name. Now go and carry out my orders. Don't forget Capt. Cram's wagon- Tell Jeffersto be here with it on time.'* And the lieutenant returned to his bath without waiting for reply. "Ye-as, snh." was the subordinate answer, as Ananias promptly turned, and, whistling cheerily, went banging out upon the gallery and clattering down the.open stairway to the brickpaved eourtbelow. Here he as promptly turned, and, noiseless aa a cat, shot up the stairway, tiptoed baclt into the sit-ting-room, kicked off his low-heeled slippers, and rapidly, but with hardly an audible sound, resumed the work on which he "had been engaged—the arrangement of his master's kit.
Already, faultlessly brushed, folded and hanging over the back of a chair dose by the chamber door were the bright blue scarlet-welted battery trousers then in vi^srue, very snug at the knee, very springy over the foot.
Underneath them, spread over the! square back of the chair, a dark-blue,-, single-breasted frock-coat, hanging, nearly to the flow, its shoulders decked! with huge epaulettes, to the right one! of 'Which were attached the braid and! loops of a heavy gilt aiguillette whosej glistening pendants were hung tem-j porarily on the upper button. On the, •eat of the chair was folded abroad soft sash of red dfik net, its tassels carefully spread. Beside it lay a pair of long buff gauntlets, new and spotHess. At the door, brilliantly polished, stood a pair of buttoned gaiter boots, the heels decorated with small glistening brass spurs. In the corner, close jat hand, leaned a long, curved saber, its gold sword-knot, its triple-guarded hilt, its steel soabbard and plated bands and rings, as well as the swivels and buckle of the black sword-belt, showing the perfection of finish in manufacture and care Hi keeping. From around leather box Ananias now extracted anew gold-wire fourragere, which he softly wiped with a silk handkerchief, dandled lovingly an instant the glistening tassels, coiled it carefully upon the sash, then producing from the same box a long scarlet horsehair plume ho first brushed it into shimmering freedom from the •faintest knot or kink, then set it firmly through its socket into the front of goid-braided shako whose black front was decked with the embroidered cross cannon of tho regiment, surmounted,by the arms of the United Status. This he noiselessly placed upon the edge of the mantle, stepped back to complacently view his work, flickpd off aposaible speck of dust on the sleeve of the coat, touched with a chtwnols-sldn the gold eresoent of the nearest epaulette, then softly, noiselessly as before, vanished through the door-way, tiptoed to the adjoining window, and poeked in. Mr. Doyle had thrown himself into Pierce's armchair, and was trying to read the morning paper. )*Wunnor what Mars'er Pierce will say when ho gits back from breakfast," was Ananias' comment, as he sped softly down the stairs, a broad grin on his black face, a grin that almost instantly gave £lace to preternatural solemnity and rospcct as, turning sharply on the sidewalk at the loot of the stairs, ho came faoe to face with the battery commander. Ananias would have passed with a low obeisance, but the captain halted him short. •"'i*Where's Mr. Waring, sir?" |x "Dressin' fo* inspection, captain." "lie is? just hoard in the mesa* room that he didn't propose attending —that he had an engagement to breakfast aod was going in town."
uVe«aa,
suh, yo-as, suh, Gen. Itosaeau,
cuh, expects de lieutenant in to breakfast^ but tho moment he hyuhd twas review he ohdered me to git everything ready, suh. I'» goin' for de bay «olt now. Beg pahdon, captain, de lieutenant says is de captain goln* to wear gauntlets or gloves dis mavrain'? He wants to do just as de captain does, *uh."
What a merciful interposition of Divine Providence it is that the African cannot blush! Capt. Cram looked suapieioualy at the earnest, unwinking black face before him. Some memory of old college days flitted through his mind at the moment. "O Kanopeer ("thou dog-faced onef*) he cwoght himself muttering, but negro diplomacy was too mneH for him, and the innooenoe in the faee of Ananias would ton baffled a man far more suspicious. Cram was afellow who kwed his battery hia profession as few men loved be* faro. lie was full of big Ideas in one ww aod little oddltfc* in another. On* ability had been at the bot» torn of his aeleetloo over the head of amMQf a (senior to command ooe of the light betteries wfeen the general dismounting took place In 1*4. Uuudual attractions of person had won for him a wife with a fortune only a little later. The fortune had warranted a short leave abroad this very year. (He would not have taken a day over sixty, for fear of losing hi* light battery). Be had been a stickler for gauntlets on all mounted duly when he wai awav. and he came home converted to whl%& wa Vleather because the jitiiiA urtlUery wore no other, "aftS wttUieatiathe woM IfecoaMi 'h-AteVfiHiadM ftef wrs.vj not ame with eu*.•.v. for bat- rv ?.«(% and -peit«*Uy at with Wajping, «.» haw (AVra^ntkMk. lie delighted la it tam who imk pride !r«§ft and
v-tr.!f*me»V
rejoiced in Waring, who, more than any subaltern ever attached to "X," was the very glass of soldier fashion and mold of soldier form. He had dropped in at the bachelor mess just in time to hear some gabbling youngster blurt out a bet that Sam Waring would cut review and keep his tryst in town, and he had known him many a time to overpersuade his superiors into excusing, him from duty on pretext of social and more than onee into pardoning deliberate absence. But he nrH the post commander had deemed it high time to block all that nonsense in future, and had so in formed ^him, and were nonplussed at Waring's cheery acceptance of the implied rebuke and most airy, graceful and immediate change of the subject. The whole garrison was chuckling over it by night, "Why, certainly, colonel," said he, "I have been most derelict of late during the visit of ail these charming people from the north and that reminds me, some of them are going to drive out here to hear the band this afternoon and take a bite at my quarters. I was just on my way to beg Mrs. Braxton and Mrs. Cram to receive for me, when your orderly came. And, colonel, I want your advice about the champagne. Of course I needn't say I hope you both will honor me with your presence." Old Brax loved champagne and salad better than anything his profession afforded, and was disarmed at once. As for Cram, what could he say when the post commander dropped the matter? With all hia Aarinfr disregard of orders and established customs, with all his consummate sang-froid and what some called impudence and others "cheek," every superior under whom he had ever served had sooner or later become actually fond of Sam Waring—even stern old Bounds—"old Double Bounds" the boys' called him, one of the martinets of the service, whose first experience with the fellow was as memorable as it was unexpected, and who wound up, after a vehement scoring of some two minutes' duration, during which Waring had stood patiently at attention with an expression of the liveliest sympathy and interest on his handsome face, by asking impressively: "Now, sir, what have you to say for yourself?" X* •"'^To which, with inimitable mixture of suavity and concern, Sam. replied: "Nothing whatever, sir. I doubt if anything more oould be said. I had
A HEAVY TOP BOO*
no"adequate idea of the extent of my misdoing. Have I your permission to sit down, sir, and think it over?"
Bounds actually didn't know what to think, and still less what to say. Had he believed for an Instant* that the young gentleman was insincere, he would have had him in close arrest in the twinkling of an eye but Waring's tone and words and manner were those of contrition itself. It was not possible that one of the boys should dare to be guying him, the implacable Rounds, "Old Grand Bounds" of the8ixth corps, old Double Rounds of the horse artillery of the Peninsula days. Mrs. Rounds had her suspicions when told of the affair, but was silent, for of all the offioers stationed in and around the old southern city Sam Waring was by long oddsvthe most graceful and accomplished dkhoer and german leader, the best informed on all manner of interesting matters—social, musical, dramatic, fashionable—the prime mover in garrison hops Mid parties, the connecting link between the families of the general and staff offioers in town and the linesmen at the surrounding posts, the man whose dictum as to a dinner or luncheon Mid whose judgment as to a woman's toilet were most quoted and least questioned, the man whose word oould almost make or mar an army girl's suc^sas and good old Lady Rounds had two such encumbrances the first winter of their sojourn in the south, and two army girls among so many axe subjects of not a little thonghtand care. If Mr. Waring had not led the seooed german with Margaret Bounds the mother's heart would have been well-nigh crushed. It was fear of some such catastrophe that kept her s&ent on the eoore of Waring's reply to her irate lord, for if Sam did mean to be tn^erttaent, as he tmqueattonabfy oould be, the colonel she knew would be mereOem in his discipline and social amenities would be at instant end. Waring had covered her with maternal triumph and Mfcrgaret with bliss unutterable by leading the ante-Lenten german with the elder daughter and making her brief stay a month of infinite joy. The Rounds were ordered on to Texas, and MargareVa brief wawanee waa speedily and properly forgotten in the devotions of a more solid if less fascinating fellow. To do Waring justice, he had paid the girl no more marked attention than alB&wed to anyone else. He would have led the next german with 3eae^ie*e had 'there hmn another to lead, ju«i as be had left affair* with oth«* dames #«ddamsels. 1% was o&eot tfe£ nteetir-ulne artk-les*f his social faith
ssis
that* a girl should have a good time her first season, just as it was another that a bride should have a lovely wedding, a belle at least one offer a month, a married woman aa much attention at an army ball as oould be lavished on a bud. He prided himself on the fact that
no
woman at the army parties
given that winter had remained a wallflower. Among such a host of officers as was there assembled during the years that followed on the heels of tho war it was no difficult matter, to bo sure, to find partners for the thirty or forty ladies who honored those occasions with their presence. Of local belles there were none. It was far too soon after the bitter strife to hope for bliss so great as that. There were hardly
any
WHIZZ 1ST O PAST.
guage to wlilch Waring had been ac-( customed from earliest boyhood. His people were southertiers, yet, not being slave owners, had stood firm for the union, and were exiled from the ofd home as a natural consequence in a war in which the south held all against who were not for her. Appointed a cadet »"-d sent to the military academy in recognition of the loyalty of his immediate relatives, he was not graduated until the war was practically over, and then, gazetted to an infantry regiment, he was stationed for a: time w-mnng the scones of his boyhood, ostracized by his former friends and unable to associate with most of the war-worn ofitoers among whom his lot was cast. It was a year of misery, that ended in long and dangerous illness, his final shipment to Washington on Bi*&-lea*e, and then a winter of keen delight, a social campaign to which he won fame, honors, Mends at court, and a transfer to the artillery and then, joining his new regiment, ha plunged with eagerness into the gayeties of city life. The blues were left behind with the oold facings of b!s former corps, and hope, life, duty, were all Mended in hoes as roseate as his new straps were red. It wasat month before all the best felkrits in the batteries swore by Sam Waring and ail the others at him, so that where there were five who liked there were at feast twenty who didn't, and these made up In quantity what they lac'^sd in qtMtiKp.
To mm up the situation, Lieut. DoyWs otjsfrwfcw Was perhaps the most oompnshensWe, as giving the viewa at
the gientma^fority: "Xflweore
his & O. andthls crowd the ooovt, he'd been kicked oat of the aervioe SMnttMMgJX*
And yet, enebertstodng or axpieeslzig so ht-tflit an C4 the lieutenant, Mr. Doyle did not hesitate to aeek his societyonmany an oooasion when he want wanted, and to solace himself at Waring*® sideboard at any hoar of the day car night, far Waring kept what was known a« "open house* to 411 comers, and thte vtay men who wondered how he oould afford it and who predSeted hie speedy swamping in a mire of debt and disgrace were the very who were most frequently to be found loafing about his gallery, smoking bis tobacco and swigging his whisky, a pretty sure sign that the occupant of the quarters, however, waa "'absent. With none of their number had he ever had open quarrel. Remarks maile afc his expense and reported to him in moments of bihuloua confidence he tinted with gay disdain, often to the, manifest djb^ppokstment
EKRE HAtJTE SATTJRI)Af lBVENING MAIL, SEPTEMBER 2-1893.
but army women to provide
for, and even the bulkiest and least attractive of the lot was led out for the dance. Waring would go to any length to see them on the floor but that of being himself the partner. There the line was drawn irrevocably. The best dancer among the men, he simply would not danoe except with the best dancers among the women. As to personal appearance and traits, it may be said first that Waring was a man of slender, graceful physique, with singularly well-shaped hands and feet and a head face that were almost too good-looking to be manly- Dark hazel eyes, dark brown hair, eyebrows, fftghps, and a very heavy, drooping mustache, a straight nose, a soft, sensitive mouth with even white teeth that were, however, rarely visible, a clear cut chin, and with it all a soft, almost languid southern intonation, musical,. even ultra-refined, and he nhrtvnU WTA a woman from a ooarse Word or the utterance of an impure thought. He was a man whom many women admired, of whom some were afraid, whom many liked and trusted, for he could not be bribed to say a thing about one of their number, though he would sometimes be satirical to her very face. It was amnng the men that Sam Waring waa hated or loved—loved, laughed over, indulged, even spoiled, perhaps, to any and every extent, by the chosen few who were his chums and intimates— and absolutely hated by a very considerable element that was prominent is EKA army in those queer old "days—the4 array of officers, who, by reason of' birth, antecedents, lack of education! or of social opportunities, were want-, ing in those graces of manner and lan-'
of his informant. In his presence even the most reckless of their number were oonadoua of a certain restraint. Waring, aa has been said, detested foul language, and had a very quiet but effective way of suppressing it, often without so much as uttering a word. These were thorough daysof the army, the very roughest it ever knew, the days that intervened between the incessant strain and tension of the four years' battling and the slow gradual resumption of good order and military IdiscipUne. The rude speech and manners of the camp permeated every garrison. The bulk of the commissioned force was made up of hard fighters, brave soldiers and loyal servants of the nation, to be sure, but as a class they had known no other life or language since the day of their musterin.. Of the line officers, stationed in and around this southern city in the lovely spring-tide of ISC—, of a force aggregating twenty companies of infantry and cavalry, there were fifty captains and lieutenants appointed from the volunteers, the ranks, or civil life, to one graduated from West Point. The predominance was in favor of exsergeants, corporals or company clerks —-good men and true when they wore
Continued on Third Page.
Woman's Real Power.-V
I am somewhat younger and less experienced than I am supposed to be, but having observed some, traveled some, met several people and made a trifle of a fight for existence "it must go" when I assert that the intuitive perception of ,, woman transcends the precision of man|M€ £||4
Never have I mot the woman who would claim this. They are read of in the press dispatches, they are encountered now and again in novels, but the real woman holds herself in reserve and never overplays her hand.
She is great because she is conscious of her real power. She does not waste'her nervous strength on sympathy for her own sex.
This fact, I am aware, has been charged to her discredit but, in my humble masculine judgment, this adds to the score of her prescience and stamps the hall mark of pure femiuinity upon her.
The struggle fur existence is unknown to most women, but when they have to make it how gallantly brave they are!
The wreck of manhood is contemptuous: the despair of womanhood is pathetic, beyond all the powers of rhetoric to describe. —Julius Chambers in New York Recorder.
Spanish Courtesy.
In Spain a person who seats himself at a table 6here there are others seated salutes them on sitting down and rising. Even when seating himself in a park or garden, near to others, he lifts his hat and repeats the courtesy when he leaves.—Kate Field's Washington.
I* ft Safe
To neglect yourself if troubled with auj disease of the kidneys? No, it is danger ous and if you are so afflicted, attend to yourself now. Do not wait, but use'Sulphur Bitters at once. They cured me when I was given up to die by several physicians.—JONATHAN HAM, Boston.
One Woman's Opinion.
There was never anything worn by woman more comfortable or healthful than the small hoopskirt. With suspenders at the belt, a few hoops at the top to keep the skarts from heating the back, and a few at tha bottom keeping the dress from the siMet, it was a perfection of a skirt supjjjrter. While they were in vogue we did nov need to wear so many skirts nor have them so full, so that there was not half the backache that the present style of dress entails. If a woman was too thin, the hoopskirt amplified and improved her figure if too stout, it concealed her tendency.
There is little comfort anJ no beauty in the present style of dress unless it be the train, and the men are wild to shorten that. Imagine the present style cut off at the ankles! I do think that our legislator^ for the preservation of their own dignity, if nothing else, ought to pretend at least to have business of more importance than the consideration of women's hoopskirta. Cor. Housekeeper.
1
I1
Be Your Own Doctor.
It won't cost you one half as much. Do not delay. Send three 2 cent stamps for postage, and we will send you Dr. Kaufmanu's great work, fine colored plates from lire, on disease, its causes and home cure. Address A. P. Ordway & Vo Boston, Mass.
Train Up a Child.
"Now, dear, don't do that. Mother's darling mustn't do that it's naughty." And the little one is caught up in a perfect furore of affection and hugged and kissed in the most enthusiastic manner.
Of course "mother's darling" thinks that it must be very nice and cunning to do things and then get cuddled for them and straightway proceeds to do it again, and the habit is formed that some day makes seriouff trouble for the little one and a great deal more for parents, for some day these habits must be broken up and obedience must be enforced. After years of willfulness and stubborn determination to have bis own way, it comes very hard for the child to conform to rules snd regulations and aUde by fixed laws. It would seem as though it must be easier never to allow such mischievous habits to be formed. Certainly judidous training and reasonable affection would dictate that the child be spared the pain and mortification of punishment and discipline when it involves disgrace and often restraint that is the only thing available under the circumstances.—New York Ledger.
MAKE3 ITSELF FXLT
—flie gtmtf griping, old-fsshloned piJL Not only when you take It, but uapleasant, from first to last, and it only gites you a little temporary good.
The things to take its place are Dr. Picr©e% Pleasant Pellets. One of these at a dose will rtymlate the whole system perfectly. They're tiny, sugar-coated granules, pearoefy larger than mustard seeds. They act in Nature's own way. No reaction afterward. Their help laxU and they do permanent good. Oonfftipa&m, Iftdtafstfosu Attacks. Sick or Biuoas Headaches, and all dersngement3 0l Ifcrer. stomach, and bowels are pretexted, asferfdj sad coned.
They're Hie for they're mta*united to give «atM»!tfcin or moncyis tetorned. Nothing be just as good."
Por Nervousness and Dyspepsia. U« Hortford'* Add Fkosphate. Dr. C, GRAHAM, Chicago, 111., says: "1 have nsed it for years in cases of nervous exhaustion, Insomnia and certain kinds of dyspepsia, and would be at a loss to find in the whole materia mediea anything which would take its place and give us satisfactory results in the above mentioned disorders."
A Pass That Wu Honored.
Senator Stanford once had in his employ an old servant named Jane Wallace, After being with his family a number of years she bad-saved some money and went back to her old home in New York. But the climate did not agree with her. The doctors told her that if she came back to California she would get well. So she wrote to her old employer and asked him to furnish her with transportation. Without thinking much about it, but ready to oblige his old servant, he wrote on a sheet of note paper "Please pass Jane from New York to San Francisco," signed it and sent it to her.
Jane never stopped to think of the peculiar form' of the pass or, that it might not be recognized by some of the railways over which she was to travel. She knew that her old' master owned two or three railroads, and she had an -idea that he owned one all the way to New York. So she got on the train, and when the conductor came round handed out the slip of paper. He looked at it, then at her, and didn't know what to do. There was Leland Stanford's signature, and he didn't like to dishonor that. So be telegraphed for instructions, and his superiors told him to send the woman right through, and she came.—San Francisco Examiner.
Nobody Knows
What 1 suffered for years with those terrible racking sick headaches. Life was only a torment to me if you are so troubled, I would advise you to use Sulphur Bitters, for they cured me.—CLARA BELLE.
A Koyal Mother-in-law.
It is a popular idea that in the hands of the czar of Russia lies the fate of Europe. Not in the hands and at the will of this powerful monarch lies the peace of Europe. It rests between the gentle, frail hands of a woman, the czar's mother-in-law. According to M. de Blowita, but for the queen of Denmark Europe would be a battleground, and the civilized world would resound with groans of the wounded and the cries of the women and children wh% are bereft. The queen of Denmark loves the young Emperor William, whom she affectionately calls "my angel." The czar loves the mother of his wife. It is her gentle diplomacy that brought about the meeting of reconciliation between the two emperors at Kiel. It is to gratify the kindly affection and not to grieve the affectionate heart of a Woman in her declining years that these two proud young turkey cocks of emperors are forbearing to slay one another's subjects and drench Europe in blood.
Surely the power of affection and the influence of woman was never shown In a more interesting manner. But what is best worth remarking is that tho destiny of Europe is in the keeping of a mother-in-law.— MoClure's Magazine.
The SI/.o of "Fashionable" Andirons. Andirons, says a trade journal, for country houses are now made of bright, polished brass, and the tendency is to have them of gigantic size. The bright, polished brass bears the fire well, looks honest and has returned to favor for these reasons. In places where the andiron is never intended for use they are gilded, and this cheat is on a par with the gas log—the latter in addition being a trifle unwholesome. Black icons are used with colonial mantels. Old brass and oxodized brass are passing out of date. aO
According'to a statement lat^Iy put forward at the London Mansion House, the city of London drinks every year 45,000,000 gallons of malt liquor, 8.000,000 gallons of wine and 4,500,000 gallons of spirits.
No House Complete
1
without its bottle of SOZOD0NT. A9 a mouth wash it is most sanative as a toilet article a luxury, and its regular use from early youth to old age, would tend to secure and maintain beautiful and healthy teeth. It is also most economical, as a few drops on a brush is all that is needed for efficacy and pleasure.
A few drops of SPAOLDING'S GLUK on a brush, properly applied, holds like a vise. 4^
Cenghlng Lends to Consumption^' Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at onoe.
Cure Yourself.
Don't pay large doctor's bills. The best medicsl book publiMhed* one hundred pages, elegant colored plates, will be sent you on receipt of three 2-cent stamps to pay postage. Address A. P. ORDWAY & Co., Boston, Mass.
Bon, Dexter Curtis
Of Madtoon, "Wis., a reliable business man, states that be had a bad cough for two years. After the Crip. Xgota bottle of Hood's BarsaparUJ* and It gave me relief at 03CC. I have ta&ett six battles a*rJ
Hood's*#
1
Cures
know I aw much belter in every wsy." Hood's PiUS cure all liver ffit, biliousness, aondSce, tDd&esttoo,, sick taadaebe. 25e.
THE BEST
IBLOOD PURIFIER
IN THE WORLD.
WHY SUFFER with that ahronic disease? Do you want to die? Sulf] pliur Bitters will cure you as it has thousands.
Wot do you suffer with that
FOUL, OFFEN8IVE BREATH?
7ou need not if you use Sulphur Bitters. They never fail to cure. Operatives who are closely confined in the mills and workshops clerks) who do not have sufficient exercise, ami all who are confined indoors, $ should use Sulphur Bitters. They will not then be
WEAK AND SICKLY. Is your Breath impure. Yourl Stomach is out of order. Sulphur Bitters is the best medicine to take.
Sulphur Bitters will build you up and make you
STRONG AND HEALTHY.
At the dawn of womanhood, Sulphur Bitters should be used. fcPlUWP IP UP P'IJ
Send 3 2-cent stamps to A P. Ordway & Co., Boston,Mass., for bestmedlcalworkpublishod
CONSUMPTION
SURELY CURED.
To XHS EDITOB—Please inform your read* en that I have a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless eases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedyfree to any of your readers who have consumption if they will
Railroad Time Tables.
Trains marked thus (P) denote Parlor Ot a attached. Trains marked thus (B) denote Hleeplng Cars attached daily. Trains marked thus (Bf denote Buflet Cars attached. Trains marked thus run dally. All other trains run dally, Sundays excepted.
•V-A.3ST3D-A-X.I-Au HHSTIE.
MAIN LINE.
LEAVE roil TUK WK8T.
No. 7 Western &x*(V)...... No. 5 St l.ouls Mall No. 1 Fast Llne*P). No. 21
.'l.35a 10.11 am 2.20 pm 6,10 pm 4.05 i, 0.04
St. Louis Ex* (D&V) '.
No. 18 Eff. Aej ... No. 11 Fast Mall* XJEAVJC FOR THX BAST. No. 12 Cincinnati Express "(S) No. New York Express (SfflV). No. 4 Mall and Accommodation No. 20 Atlantlo Express (DPAV). No. 8 Fast Line *. No. 2 Indianapolis Acc. ...
1.20 am 2.20 am 7.15 am 12.47 am 2.85 pm 5.05 pm
ARRIVK FROM TltK KABT.
No. 7 Western Express •.(V) No. 6 St. Louis Mall* ....... No. 1 Fast Line (P) No. 21 St, Louis K*« (DAV) No. 8. Mail and Accommodation No. 11 Fast Mail *. ...
1.20 am 10.06 am 2.05 pm 3.0.5 o,45pm 9.u0
ARBIV* *KOM TUB WKBT.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express (8) No. 6 New York Express (uAV) No. 14 Effingham Ac. ... No. 20 Atlantic Express (P&V). No. 8 Fast Line*. No. ~2 Indianapolis Acc *.*
1.10 am 2.10 am 0.80 am 12.42 2.20 6.00
T. H. & Lw DIVISION. m: I.BAVB FOB THE NORTH.
No. 52 South Bend Mall^. 6.20 am No. 66 Michigan Flyer 1.00 No. 54 South Bend Express 4.00 pm
AR8IVK FROM THK NORTH.
No. 51 Terre Haute Express 11.45 a ra No. 58 South Bend Mall ...... 7.80 pm No. 55 Southern Ex. v. 0.45 pm
PEORIA DIVISION.
ARRIVE FROM NOKTHWH9T.
No. 78 Pass Ex ........... 11.00 am No. 70 Pass Mall & Ex ... 7.00 pm LEAVE FOR KORTHWEST. No. W Pass Mall A Ex ........ No. 77 Pass Ex. .... .8.25 pm
m. & T. AABIVS FROM SOUTH.
No. fl Nash £"C. Llm* (V). .4.80 am No. 2T. H. &KastEx*. .11,50am No, 60 Accommodation* 6.00 No. 4 Ch A Ind Ex* (S
St
P) 10.50
No. 8 World's Fair Special*. .,4.20 pm X.KAVE FOB SOUTH. No. 8 Ch A Ev Ex« (8&P1 .5.Wam No. 7 World's Fair Special*..... 11.56 & No. lEvAlndMall. ...... No. 5ChANLlm* ........ .10.00pm
33- & X.
ABBIVX FROM SptrrH.
No. 48 Worth Mixed 1LOO am No. 82 Mall A Ex 4.30 tiKAVC FOR SOUTH. No. 88 Mall A Ex ..... JMaa Na 40 Worth'n Mixed 8J»pm
G.&e 333. X-
ABBIVB FROM WOBTM.
No. 8 Ch A rwh Ex*(8) .... S.00 am No. 7 World's Fair Special*- (PAB). MM am No. I ChAEvBx .......... ».10 No. 9 Local Pass 0.10 No. SCAN Llm (DAV) 10.06 pm
LXAVC FOR XOBTH.
No. 6 CAN Llm (DAV) .iV 435 am No. 10 Local Pass -i 7.30 am No. 2THAChEx. ........ 12.10om No. S World's Fair Special* (PAB) .4.27 pm No. 4 Nash A Ex^)..... IL15
O. O- O. &c I.~Bia 4. OOIKOKAST No. 12 Boston ANY Ex*. ...... Lf8»» No. 2Cleveland Aoc. ...... J^»m No. 18 Houthweewrn Limited*. lfSflpm No. I Mall train* 4.06 pm oonto WKST. No. 7 St. Louis Ex* No. 17 Limited* No. S Accommodation No. Mall Train*
YOUNG PEOPLE
CO TO
Where a thorough business education is given ail students. Rookb*eping, Shorthand, Telegraphy and Typewriting thoroughly taught by experts. The TERRE HAulE C0MF MERCIAL COLLffif oae of: tfce oldest ana largest in the. West National jn jts character. Students enter at any time. Both sexes. Terms low. Fine illustrated catalogue, free.
Mdtt* w. C. I38ELL, President, TERRE HAUTE, IND^
»%L8Sam I 10.00 am
TERRE HAUTE,
