Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 24, Number 14, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 30 September 1893 — Page 2

S#r.'

"Take a

1

There was no signature whatever. "Who wrote this rot?" asked Reynolds. "It seems to me I've seen that hand before." "So have I, and pitched the trash into the fire, as I do everything anonymous that comes my way. But Brax says that this ia tho second or third, and he's worried about it, and thinks there may bo truth in the story." "As to the duel, or as to tho devotions to madome?" asked Reynolds, calmly. "We-ll, both, and wo thought you would bo most apt to know whether a tig-lit was on. Waring promised to return to the post on taps lost night. Instead of that, he is gone—God knows where—and the old man, the reputed challenger, lies dead at his home. Isn't that ugly?"

Reynold's face grew very grave. "Who last saw Waring, that you know of?" "My man Jeffers left him on Canal street just after dark last night. He was then going to dine with friends at the St. Charles." "The A Her tons?" "Yes." "Then wait till I sec the chief, and I'll go with you. Say nothing about this matter yet"

Waring's Peril

the disgust and mystification of all the

I

handsome and distinguished, he had served throughout the war as a volunteer, doing no end of good work, and getting many a word of praise, but, as all his service was as a staff officer, it was his general who reaped the reward of his labors. He had risen, of course, to the rank of major in the staff in the volunteers, and everybody had prophesied that he would be appointed a major in the adjutant or inspector

a daintily-written note in the aid-de-camp's hand. It was brief but explicit: "Cou niiA.vroN: Twice have I warned you that the attentions of your Lieut Waring to Mine. Losocllcs meant mischief. This mornI tig, under prcttrco of vis I thin her mother. she left tbo house Jn a cab, but in half an hour was scon driving with Mr. Waring. This has been, as I have reason to know, promptly carried to M. Lascclles by people whom he had employed for the purpose. 1 could have told you last night that M. Lascelles' friends had notified Lieut Waring that a duel would be exacted should ho bo soon wit, mttdamc an&in, and now it will certainly corau. You havo seen fit to scorn my warnings hitherto, the result is on your head."

Reynolds was gone but a moment. A little later Cram and the aid were at the St. Charles rotunda, their cards sent up to the Allertons' rooms. Presently down came the bell-boy. Would the gentlemen walk up to the parlor? This was awkward. They wanted to see Allerton himself, and Cram felt morally confident that Miss Flora Gwendolen would be on hand to welcome and chat with

By Capt. Chas. King, U.S.Army.

V**," [Copj righted, iWi, by J. B. Llpptncott A Co., and published by special arrangement]

11

f^ [Continued from Last Week.2&£?$& the ladies* entrance last evening-, Half atJ hour later Cram astonished What did he want of him? the aHs-da-camp and other bored! Jeffers turned a greenish yellow. staff officials by appearing at the gen- Hkevery impulse waste he. eral loafing: room at headquarters. To

the chorus of inquiry as to what}

to

ar^L

distinguished a

looking fellow as Reynolds. There was no help for its however. It would be possible to draw off the head of the family after a brief call upon the ladies. Just as they were leaving the marble-floored rotunda, a short* swarthy man in "pepper-and-salt" business suit touched Cram on the arm, begged a word, and handed him a card. "A deteettre-Hahr^adyt^ asked Craaa, in surprise. "I was with the chief when Lieut, Pierce caxoe in to report tin, matter,1* was the brief response

4*and

I came

here to see your man. He is reluctant to tell what he knows without your consent* Could you have him leave the horses with your orderly below and come up here a moment?" "Why. certainly, If you wish but I can't see why," said Oram, surprised. "Yon will see, sir. In a moment,*' |".

And then Jeficm with white, troubled face, appeared, and twisted his wet hat-brim in nervous worriment* ... "2iow, what do you want of him?" ttj&iw} (Wm* "Ask him, sir, who the man who slipped a greenback into his hand at

detective saw it.'

You

brought hira up in such a storm he very quietly. "It will do no good. I r/ made brief reply, and then asked im- saw the men. lean tell your master mediately to speak with the adjutant who one of them was, and possibly lay general and Lieut, Reynolds, and, to

my

general's department in the permanent suddenly entered the little hallway establishment. But there were not

ro°™-

enough places by any means, and the The grave, troubled faces caught his few vacancies went to men who knew ®y®

need not lie, Jeffers, hesaid,

hands on the ^second when he is

wanted

others, he disappeared with these into explain what that greenback meant, an adjoining room. There he briefly j'"Then Jeffers broke downand merely told the former of the murder, and blubbered. then asked for a word with the junior, "Hi meant no arttt, sir. Hi never

Reynolds was a character. Tall, dreamed there was hanything wrong.

fPn.Tftc

but I want you to tell andto

Mt* Ta^AIIAC HIT. *R RAld 6

Twas Mr. Lascelles, sir. 'E said 'e came to thank me for 'elping 'is lady, sir. Then 'e wanted to see Mr.Warink, sir." "Why didn't you tell me of this before?" demanded the captain, sternly. "You know what happened this morning." "Hi didn't want to 'ave Mr. Warink suspected, sir," was poor offers' halftearful explanation, as Mr. Allerton

once*

better how to work for themselves. I "lfi anything wrong?V he inquired,

lieutenancy now, and we will anxiously. "I hope Waring is all right. fix you by and by," was the suggestion, anri'so it resulted that here he was three years after the war wearing the "modest strap of a second lieutenant, doing the duties and accepting the responsibilities of a far higher grade, and being patronized by seniors who were as nfach his inferiors in rank as they were in ability during the war days. Everybody said it was a shame, and nobody helped to better his lot. He was a man whose counsel was valuable on all manner of subjects. Among other things, he was well versed in all that pertained to the code of honor as it existed in the ante-bellum days,— had himself been "out," and, as was well known, had but recently officiated as second for an officer who had need of his services. He and Waring were friends from the start, and Cram counted on tidings of his absent subaltern in appealing to him. Great, therefore, was his consternation when in reply to his inquiry Reynolds promptly answered that he had neither seen nor heard from Waring in over forty-eight hours. This was a facer. "What's wrong, Cram?" "Read that," said the captain, placing

I tried to induce him not to start, but he said he had promised and must go." "What time did he leave you, Mr. Allerto^?" asked Cram, controling as much as possible the tremor of his voice. "Soon after the storm broke,—about nine-thirty. I should say. He tried to get a cab earlier, but the drivers wouldn't agree to go down for anything less than a small fortune. Luckily, his Creole friends had a carriage." "His what?" "His friends from near the barracks. They were here when we came down into the rotunda ^to smoke after dinner."

Cram felt his legs ancl feet grow cold and a chill run up his spine. „.

And all day. the storm beat

From this congress the better element of the commissioned force was absent, the names, nationalities and idiomatic peculiar! Uesof speech of the Individual members being identical in most instances with those of their comrades in arms in the ranks. "Brax" had summoned Minor, Lawrence, Kinsey and Dryden to hear what the post surgeon had to say on his return, but cautioned them to keep quiet. As a result of this precaution, the mystery of the situation became redoubled by one o'clock, and was intensified by two, when it was announced that Private Dawson had attempted to break away out of the hospital after a visit from the same doctor in his professional capacity. TVople were tempted out on their galleries in the driving storm, and colored servants flitted from kitfthen to kitchen to gather or d&~ pfe&fMt new raiaorv but nobody knew what to make of it when, soon after two, aa orderly rode in from town dripping with mud and wet* delivered a note to the colonel and took one from him to Mr, Ferry, now sole representative of the offiacrsof Battery "X"* present

fear

duty. Ferry in return seat

the bedraggled horseman on to the battery quarters with an order to the first sergeant, and Is about fifteen minutes a sergeant and two men* mounted and each leading a spare

horse, appeared under Ferry's gallery, and that officer proceeded to occupy one of the vacant saddles and, followed by his party, went clattering out of the sally-port and splashing over to the levee. Stable call sounded as usual at four o'clock, and, for the first time in the record of that disciplined organization since the devastating hand of yellow jack was laid upon it the previous year, no officer appeared to supervise the grooming and feeding. Two of them were at the posit, however. Mr. Doyle, in arrest on charge of absence without leave, was escorted to his quarters about four-fifteen, and was promptly visited, by sympathizing and inquisitive comrades from the Hotel Finkbein, while Mr. Ferry, who had effected the arrest, was detained making his report to the post commander. Night came on apace, the wind began to die away with the going down of the sun, the rain ceased to fall, a pallid moon began peering at odd intervals through rifts in the cloudy veil, when Cram rode plashing back into barracks, Worn with anxiety and care, at eleven o'clock, and stopping only for. a moment to take his wife in his arms and VIRQ her anxious face and shake his head in response to her eager query for news of Waring, he hurried downstairs again and over to Doyle's quarters. All was darkness there, but he never hesitated. Tramping loudly over the gallery, he banged at the door, then, turning the .knob, intending to burst right in, as was the way in the rough old days, was surprised to find the bolt set. "Doyle, open. I want to see you at once.

AU silence within. "Doyle, open, or, if you are too drunk to get up, I'll kick in the door."

A groan, a whispered colloquy, then the rattle of bolts and chain. The door opened about an inch, and an oily Irish voice inquired: "Hwat's wanted, capt'in?" I.. v* "You here?" exclaimed Cram, in disgust. "What business have you in. this garrison? If the colonel knew it you'd be driven out at the point of the bayonet." "Sure, where should wife be but at her husband's side whin he's sick and sufferin'? Didn't they root him out of bed and comfort this day and ride him down like a felon in all the storm? Sure it was the doughboys' orders,

TO TELL THE STORY I GIVK YE.*'

they? Did you catch

"Who wore their names?" "Only one. I was !ntroduceda& they were about to drive away. A little old fellow with elaborate manners—a M. Lascelles." *4 "And Waring drove away with him?" "Yes, with him and one other. Seemed to be a friend of Lascelles. Drove off in a closed carriage with a driver all done up in rubber and oilskin, who said he perfectly knew the road. Why, what's gone amiss?"

upon the substantial buildings of tho "Och! thin wait till I'm dressed, for old barracks and flooded the low ground about the sheds and stables. Drills for the infantry were necessarily suspended, several gentries even being taken off their posts. The men clustered in the squad-rooms and listened with more or less credulity to the theories and confirmatory statements of fact as related by the imaginative or loquacious of their number. The majority of the officers gathered under the flaring lamp-lights at the sutler's store and occupied themselves pretty much as did their inferiors in grade, though poker and punch—specialties of Mr. Finkbein, the sutler—lent additional color to the stories in circulation.

sir. I told Doyle the capt'in never would have—" "Oh, be quiet I must see Doyle, and^ at once." "Sure, he's not able, capt'in. You know how it is widhim he that sinsi'tive he couldn't bear to talk of the disgrace he's bringing on the capt'in and the batthery, and I knowed he'd been dhrinkin', sir, and I came back to look for him, but he'd got started, capt'n, and it's—" "Stop this talk! He wasn't drinking at all until you came back here to hound him. Open that door, or a file of guard will." v',

dacency's sake, capt'in. Sure I'll thry and wake him." And then more whispering, the click of glass, maudlin protestation in Doyle's thick tones. Cram banged at the door and demanded instant obedience. Admitted at last, he strode to the side of an ordinary hospital cot, over which the mosquito bar was now ostentatiously drawn, and upon which was stretched the bulky frame of the big Irishman, his red, blear-eyed, bloated face half covered in his arms. The close air reeked with the fumes of whisky. In her distress lest Jim should take too much, the claimant of his name and protection had evidently been sequestrating a large share for herself. "How on earth did yon get here? Your house was flooded all day," angrily asked Cram. "Sure we made a raft, sir—'Louette and me—and poled over to the levee, and I walked every fut of the way down to follow me husband, as I swore I would whin we was married! I'd come irt Anatole's boat, sir, but 'twas gone—gone since last night. Did ye know that, capt'in?"

A groan and a feverish toss from the occupant of the narrow bed interrupted her, "Hush. Jim darlin'! Here's the capt'in to see you and tell you he's come hack to have you roighted. Sure how could a poor fellow be expected to come home in all that awful storm this morning, capt'in? lis for not comin' the colonel had him under arrest but I tell him the capt'in 11 see him through."*

But Cram poshed her aside as she still interposed between him and the bed. "Doyle, look up and answer. Doyle, I sayr vehement protestations, now an outburst of tears and pleading*, from the woman. "Oh, be can't understand you, captln. Ah, doal be hard on him. Only this mcrnin* i» was say*n* bow

1

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING- MAIL, SEPTEMBER 30, 1893.

the capt'in reminded him of the ould foine days whin the officers was all gintlemen and soldiers. He's truer to ye than all the rest of thim, sir. D'ye moind that, capt'in? Ye wouldn't belave it, mabby, but there's them that can tell ye Loot*nant Waring was no friend of yours, sir, and worse than that, if ould Lascelles could spake now —but there's thim left that can, glory be to God!" "Oh, for God's sake shut up," spoke Cram roughly, goaded beyond all patience. "Doyle, answer me!" And he shook him hard. "You were at the Pelican last night, and you saw Mr. Waring and spoke with him? What did he want of you? Where did he go? Who were with him? Was there any quarrel? Answer, I say! Do you know?" But maudlin moaning and incoherences were all that Cram could extract from the prostrate man. Again the woman interposed, eager, tearful. "Sure he was there, capt'in, he was there he told me of it whin I fetched

Continued on Third Page,

A. Horse That Didn't Like tho Whip.

Mrs. William H. Crane, the wife of the comedian, tells a funny story about a little horse she recently purchased. As soon as she reached Cohasset, after the season's campaign, she noticed in a livery stables a very nice and fat little horse.

She took a fancy to the animal and purchased him. "Ho is very gentle," said the liveryman, "and a good worker. Any one can drive him, and he has no bad habits. I must warn, ycu, however, never to, strike him with a whip." "What, will he run away?" asked Mrs. Crane in alarm. "No," answered the man hesitatingly, "but it would be dangerous."

The next day Mrs. Crane had the horse hitched up to a cart and with another lady proceeded to take a drive. The horse was very gentle. Ho had a certain choppy gait very slow, and he never varied it. At first Mrs. Crane wrs as delighted as a child with a toy, but after awhile the slowness of the little animal became monotonous. Mrs. Craae tried to con.x him to "gee tip," but he wouldn't "ree."- Finally she got tired. "Hero goes," said she as she took tight hold on the reins and braced hersdlf well in the cart. "Hold yourself, because I am going to strike him with the whip whatever be tho consequence."

With a prreat deal of fear she raised the whip, feeling that as soon as it descended the pesky animal would pick up liis legs and run as fast as he could. But he did no such thing. The instant the whip struck him he stood stock still and wouldn't move. "That horso wouldn't budge," said Mrs. Crane the other day, "and we had to walk home and pay a boy to drive him whenever he

took

ml

it into his head to move."—Cincin­

nati Commercial Gazette.

If Your

Skin

IH rough, and pimply or Covered with blotches and sores, and you want a clean, smooth skin and fair complexion, use Sulphur Bitters. The best medicine-in such ca«es I oversold.—0. E SCHEFFLKR fc Co., Druggists, Lawrence, MAHS.

How It Feels to Go'Barefoot,

If you wish to know the essence of comfort when yachting, burn your corsets and return your shoes and stockings to your trunk until you enter a civilized port.

For four years I have worn neither except in public. Consequently I run no risk of a chill from cold or damp feet,

It certainly requires a little training before you are oble to walk over rough ground with the unnatural, soft soles of the shoe bound foot, but it is more easily and quickly done than you would imagine.

After years of being swathed and bound and tied and cased in whalebone, it gives a delicious sense of freedom to be clad in nothing but a sauze woolen shirt, a mumti and a holaku.

There is not anywhere a band or string to check the blood in your veins, and as you stand on the deck of your ship, all your body conscious of the rhythmical, elastic roll of the sea and tho fresh, clean trades sweetly blowing, you feel like a bird on the win^.—Mrs. Robert Louis Stevenson.

A Possible Origin of an Expression.

The origin of the familiar expression "acknowledge the corn" possibly arose from this amusing incident: A raw countryman went to New "Orleans with flatboats, the one laden with corn, the other with

potftr

toes. He visited a gambling house, and betting lost his money, corn and potatoes. Returning, he found the boat containing the corn sunk, all a total loss. He lay down and dreamed of "jackpots," corn and potatoes, and about sunrise the "child of chance" who had won his corn and potatoes came to take them. Rubbing his eyes the countryman said, "Stranger, I acknowledge the corn—take 'em but the potatoes you can't have, by thunderl"—Boston Herald.

Be Tour Own Doctor.

It won't cost vou one half as macb. Do not delay. Send three 2 cent stamps

and home cure.' Address A. P. Ordway A CO., Boston, Mara.

Woman Writers Live Xxng.

The longevity of literary men and women is above the average. Amelia Opie, Miss Edgeworth, Caroline Herschel, Mary Somerville, Maria Mitchell, George Eliot, George Sand, Harriet Martineau, Harriet Bcechcr Stowe, Frances Power Cobbe, Charlotte Cushman, Fanny Kemble, Mrs. Emma Willard, Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and many other noted writers and thinkers have lived and worked far up into theaiities, seventies and eighties.

fofPkanceVPIeaaaatprevent

BWR Livma,

if you keep a* ft, Is apt to upon the liver. The things to this are Dr. Pellets. Taka ono tfaess Bflfla Pellet* for a corrective or gentle laxative-three for a cathartic. They're the smallest, cosfect to take, pkesantest and moat natural In the «ay they act. They do permanent gcwl Constipe&Kt, Indigestion, Bakes Attacks, Sk& cr Bilkra Headache, and afi derangements of the liver, stomach, and bowels are prevented, nBevadt, and cared.

They're guarmUtd to &** *&+

faction in eveqr cue, your moosy Is

The worst caves of Chronic Catarrh the Head, yield to Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy So certain is it thafcits makeri offer §300 reward for at incurable ease.

Horsford's Acid Phosphate For ImjMtlred Vitality and wakened energy, is wonderfully successful.

j. Evening Goxriift.

In evening gowns the mode is a conglomeration of all the styles that ever graced ballroom beauties since the days of the early Greeks and Romans. You cannot get out of the fashion if you trj\

A GOWN WHICH ATTAINED DISTINCTION, providing your bodice be cut low enough on the shoulder and the skirt full enough at the foot, says the New York Sun. Because of this great diversity of frills and furbelows, that gown which attains distinction is of necessity the one which is most simply fashioned. Such a gown is reproduced here that it may serve as a basis upon which a great variety of receiving gowns may be created by the manipulation of the aforesaid frills and by daring and close harmonies in color.

The gown illustrated was of white satin thickly studded with silver paillettes, the skirt, beautifully sloped out and just "touching the ground at the back. The sleeves and drapery across the bust were of pale pink tulle. The silk of the bodice, laid in loose plaits over the bust, was fitted smoothly in at the bottom, where a silver snake encircled and emphasized the slenderness of the waist. Not many women are pretty enough to wear well this sort of gown. Not many pretty ones, alas! are wise enough to see how well its severity frames their charms. Foi the rest of us, we have only to flounce it and cross it with insertings and ornaments as profusely as we desire.

Screens In Fashion

Screens, so long out of fashion, are again in high vogue, and Frenchwomen amuse themselves with hunting from old chests and drawers odd pieces of old silk and having frames made to fib them, from which results new forms in screcus, by which haphazard means, however, are likely to be discovered no new form of beauty, Itisthe latest amusement. Japanese lacquered and embroidered screens are in much favor here, but tho Japanese gilded leather screens, to which the English are partial, seem to be not to French taste. Cheap Japanese screens are not, as a rule, desirable, as they are apt to bo so raw in color that they disorganize the whole color scheme of a room. More desirable are bamboo screens, with panels of Zanzibar matting.—New York Commercial Advertiser.

Cashier

Wm. E. Durgin of the Boston Loan Co., 275 Washington street, says: I recommend Sulphur Bitters as the very best medicine I have ever used. There is nothing like them to give an appetite, tonc up the system, ana do away wiih that languid feeling which is so fre­

quent

among those confined indoors.

*.

Pineapple Preserve.

Peel the fruit, take out the eyes and dhred it down to the core. Put it in an earthen cjish in layers of sugar and fruit, allowing three-fourths of a pound of sugar to a pound of fruit, and let it stand over night. Next morning drain the juice into a preserving kettle, let it boil and skim thoroughly. Then add the pineapple, and let it reach the boiling point and can immediately. This makes a delicious preserve.

Xo Hottue Complete

without its bottle SOZODONT. As a mouth wash it is most Min«nve as a toilet article a luxury, ami us regular use from early youth to old age, would tend to secure and mafiitsin beautiful and healthy' teeth. It is also most eeonomicil, as a few dropa a brush is all that is needed for efficacy and pleasure.

A few drops of SPAtTLDiNO's Gmjb on a brush, properly applied, holds like a vise.

Coaghlng Lcsdi to Consumption.

Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once. Cure Yourself.

Don't pay large doctor's bi Us. The best medical book published, one hundred psges, elegant colored pistes, will be sent you on receipt of three 2-cent stamps to pay postage. Address A. P. ORDWAY A Co., Boston, Mass.

Dama Momtt

In Danger of Consumption "I was Kick sad discouraged wbea I called ostim vfflase doctor. Hs totteated l$ad coottanptkna^jdwcaldDoittreloBS. 1 decided to

Hood's^Cures

take Hood's Ssrsaparffla and! am now well and besitr MOM PAXA Komrrr, Bos 73, AshUL Be stirs to get Hood's*

Mood's Pm* actaasiir. yat ptaa&Jr and afsetfvely. ooxfts liver and howeK 36c.

BLOOD PURIFIER

KNOWN,

This Great German Medicine is the CHEAPEST and best. 12S doses Of Sulphur Bitters for $1.00, less than one cent a dose. It will cure the worst ever kind of skm disease, oi up from acommonpim*PILLS,

S

talvG BLUE

pie on tli face to that awfu'i disease, SCROFULA. In all cases or such

stubborn, deep seated diseases, Sulphur Bitters is the best medicine to use. Don'twaituntil tomorrow, trv a bottle TO-DAY.

or

mcrcury,they /are deadly. Put your trust in Sulphur Bitters, the purest and best medicine ever made. Is your TONGUE COATED with a yellow, sticky substancoP Is your Breath foul and offensive? Your Stomach is OUT OF ORDER.

Use Sulphur Bitters immediately. If you are sick, no matter what ails you, use Sulphur Bitters.

Don't wait until you are unable to walk, or are flat on your back, but get some AT ONCE it will cure you. Sulphur Bitters is

THE INVALID'S FRIEND.

Send 8 2-cent stamps to A. P. Ordway & Co., Bwton, Mass., for best medical work published

CONSUMPTION

SURELY CURED.

To THE EDITOR—Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall bo glad to send two bottles of my remedy free to any of your readers who have consumption if they will send me their express and post office address. Respectfully, T. A. Sfocuni, M.G.,

No. 183 Pearl Street, New York.

Railroad-Time Tables.

Trains marked thus (P) denote

Par'nr

car*

attached. Trains marked thus (S) tt»jote sleeping Cars attached daily. Trnlns marked thus (B) denote Bullet Cars attached. Trau» marked thus run dally. All other trnlin run dally, Sundays excepted.

VAIiJ'DAlLlA JLTSsT-fel.

JIImain LiyE.f^#tX LKAVK FOK TLIK Vi KHT.

N 7 WeBtern (V). ...... l.:»«m No. 5 St L.ouis iwair ... UM IH I No. lFa8t*l,ltie»iPl. j.'.20|.iu No. 21 Ht- Louis Ex* (DA.V),. 3.10pno No. 18 KIT. Acc No. 11 hast Mall* ... ^.01

LKAVE FOR THE KAST, I ^Y?

No. 12 Cincinnati Express (8) 1.20 No. 6 New York Express V) 2 No. 4 Mall and Accommodation 7» No. 20 Atlantic Express (DP&V). 12.47 am N 8 as N 2 In an a is A

AHKJTVB KROM THK KABT.

No. 7 Western Express (V) l"&jana No. 5 St. Louis Mall41 .10.05 am No. 1 Fast Line (P) 2.05 No. 21

St. Louin Ex* (D&V) ... 8,0a No. 8 Mall and Accommodation «.4o No. 11 Fast Mall

AKltlVK KItOM THK WKST.

No. 12 Cincinnati Express (8) .' 1.1(1 n~m No. 8 NewS ork Express i.10 am No. 14 Effingham Ao ».»' am No. 20 Atlantic Express (P&V). 12.42 No. 8 Fast. Line ......... 2.20 No, 2Jndlanapolis Acc ... 6,uupm

T-H''fcL-DlvIaIOJii

LEA VK FOK THK NOliTM.

No. 52 South Bend Mall #.»' No. 50 Michigan Fiver. ... 1,00 pm No. 64 South Bend Express ..... _,4.w ini,

AKRIVK FKOM THK WORTH. 5®

No. 51 Terre Haute Express ll.f& am No. 53South Bend Mall 7.:.' No. 65 Southern Ex ......... 9 4flp

FE0R1A

11V1810N-

ABKIVK FKOM KORTHWEHT.

No.78Pass Ex ..11.01)am No. 7(1 Pass Mall & Ex 7.(Wpm LEAVE Ton NORTHWEST, No. 7 Pass Mail & Ex .... No. 77 Pass Ex 8.25^ at

USD. Sc T. lET. AIIIUVB raou SOUTH.

No. 0 Nash & C. Lini" (V) fe i, 4J»am No- 2 T. H. A Ea*t Ex* U.50 am No. 60 Accommodation* 5.00 no No. 4 ai & Ind E*»(84PI 10/j0 No. 8 World's Fair Special* 4.20

I.KAVE FOK BOUTH. *$

No. 3 Cli fc Ev Ex* (SAP) 6.10 a Mf No. 7 World's Fair Special*..... 11-56 am No. 1 Ev A Ind Mall ii.16 No. 5 Ch & N Llm* 10.00

DEL & l7~ ~"p AKltlVK

VtiOU

SOUTH.

No. 48 Worth Mixed ll-») a a

a

No. 32 Mali A Ex 4^0 T.KAVK FOR SOUTH. No. 88 Mail A Ex 8J0amf No. 49 Worth'n Mixed 3.20 pm

Q. Sc DEI. X. I AKR1VE

FHOX

IfOKTH,

No. 8Ch AywhExna) 5.00 a No. 7 World's Fair Special* (PAB). 11.60 am No. IChABvEx H2PmNo. 9 Local Pass ,f-)0 No. SCAN Llm (DAV) 10.05

LEAVE FOB WOKTH.

No. 6 AN Lira (DAV) i-f a No. 10 Local Pass 7.30 am No. 2TH ACh Ex. .. .12.10 0m No. 8 World's

Fair Special* (PAJJ) 4.27 tat

No. 4 Nash ACBx^ja) 11.16 prj

C. a. Q. &X.—BIG-4. OOIKOKASr I No, 12 Boston AN YEs* lfam1 No. 2Cleveland Acc 7.23am No. 18 Southwestern Limited*.... 12M tr No. 8Mall train*. ..... 4.05pn.

OOHtOWKST.

No. 7f*t- Louis Ex* IM aW Ni#. 17 Limited* JJ50pm| No. 3 Accommodation ....... 7M ml No. SMailTrala* 1000an|i

T^E.H- 0. MEDCEAFT,^

d*

3DE5DSTTISTI^

Office—McKeen's Block, northwest come Seventh street and Wabash avenue.

S» *. HUffTOlt. A. 3* DtJjr»IGAlM HUSTON & DUNN1GAN,

ATTORNEYS-AT-LA^

AND NOTARIES PUBLIC.

Special attention given to probate busl net/ Linton Balidln#, Sfflf Ohio street. 4