Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 25, Number 3, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 14 July 1894 — Page 2

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TO A SENSIBLE GIRL.

Hsr pood, hard tense—In. that I'd find A charm of person aud of mind If there were none. But in her face

There i.s thr.t wonarmw winning grace Which painters, tl»Ow»h they miijht be blind, By wwue of some? hiny undefined. Appealing to tin4 soul niul mi rut,

Coald, happily, its bt-auty trace. i,'"]%

i1-

H«r good, hard sense

V1-^

Is oft hat rarer, richer kind 1 •Which is \v ith tjentleness combined So drEtiy a-i ioudd agrace

To every charm of form and face. "yVould ihat to me fate hiul a&sisned Her good, hard sense. —Detroit Free Press.

SHADOWED.

Mr. Portinan Dibbs was a prosperous elderly gentleman of quiet ways and fixed habits. A small circle of familiar friends supplied all his social needs. Ho concerned himself little with the rest of* humanity, belonging to the class who can live side by side In the same street with a fellow creature all their lives without so much as knowing him by sight.

Among Mr. Dibbs' fixed habits was a yearly tour. But be did not take it, like inost people, in tbo summer months, but in tho early spring. in 18—, when March came round, he made the usual preparations for his yearly tour in his customary way. On the evening before his departure an old city friend, Mr. Goldsmith, dined with him at his honsc la Ninth street. When about to leave, Goldsmith drew a small case from his pocket. '•'I brought this with me on the chance that you were going to Pittsburg. You wll do me a great favor by giving it into my brother's bands there. It contains a brilliant of such rare value that I could intrust it to few. It will give you no trouble, being so small—there is no risk, as no one will know you have such a thing with you." 'Anything to oblige a friend," said Dibbs lightly. "I would tako the Kohinoor as a traveling companion under the same circumstances."

The two men Were standing at tho study window, tho blind of which happened to bo up. While in the act of placing tho caso in his pocket Dibbs' eyes wandered to the street. At that moment tho light from a lamp in front of tho door struck on tho face of a mun who was passing—or had ho lcen standing there? —a peculiar, dark face, with straight, black whiskers.

Tho ifian moved on Dibbs drew back hastily. "None of your people know that you were giving ine this commission?" he inquired of Goldsmith. "Not a soul, my dear fellow. The matter is entirely between you and mo. My head clerk alono knows of the existence of tho brilliant." "What is ho like?" "Liko you—like mo. Respectability itself 1 What are you thinking of?" "Has ho blank whiskers?" "Gray as a badger's—white even. But, bless my soul, what is *ho matter? What do you mean? Have you seen any one?" •'A man was standing there by tho lamppost as you handed mo tho jewel case. Bo was apparently looking at us and might have beard what was said." "Thon he must bo in tho street still," Bald Goldsmith, throwing up tho window

T.i

Ma hoiMl 'M*

•'A' neighbor or a neighbor's butler. Ho has gono into somo house." Goldsmith withdrew from tl* window. "'In any oaso, no one could have heard, nor, I should think, have seen us."

Portman Dibbs set out next morning for Pittsburg via ^Philadelphia, staying a few days at Philadelphia on the way. Ho took his place in tho undcniablo comfort of a Pullman coach in tho oxpross to Philadelphia, with a mind as freo from care and uneasiness as elderly gentleman ever possessed.

Nearly an hour had passed beforo Dibbs laid down his paper and glancod round tho oar. He was thinking of tho story he had been reading, and not at all of his fellow travelers, when on a sudden his eye caught that of tho man opposite curiously fixed on him. Each becoming awaro of the other's glance withdrew his at once, not, however, beforo Dibbs' attention had been engaged. Was the man a complete stranger, as ho had supposed? Had ho not seen tho face before? Aud when? Where? Tho ftice was peculiar, with straight, block whiskers. With tho suddenness of a flash Dibbs' memory was illumined. Tho man opposite was the same who had stood in tho lamplight outside the window in Ninth street. There was no doubt of it, no mistaking the unusual faco ai*8 remarkable whiskers. On a sudden impulse Dibbs put up his hand to feel thojowol case hi his breast pocket. As ho did so his eyes met thaso of tho strangor fixed on Vim with a peculiar expression.

By a chain of reasoning, of which ho folt half ashamed, Dibbs, beforo reaching Philadelphia, decided on changing his usual hotel, the Bingham, for the Continental. Sotting out for tho latter, ho lost sight of his fellow traveler on the crowded platform of the .station.

Fixity of habit as a creed cannot be lightly renounced. Dibbs was miserable at tho Continental simply because it was not the accustomed Bingham. Discontent! with himself and everything else was the result. "What an ass I have made of rnypolf abofct that man who came in tho oar!" was the bunion of his thoughts while smoking his after dinner cigar.

As Dibbs loft the room he passed at tho door a late guest being ushered Into a solitary dinner. With a certain revulsion of feeling, he recognised his fellow traveler —the object of his thoughts!

The earliest train for Pittsburg next morning saw Dibbs* departure from Philadelphia—an alteration in his tumal programme, which always Included a day or two In the city. The closest scrutiny of the train did not discover his bugbear There was no sign of him at Altoona.

A tranquil night in his accustomed hotel there restored Dibbs' mental bal* anocw

In the pleasant ooolness of a moonlit sight he sat on the veranda of the hotel. His mind was undisturbed the peaceful •oane around. Suddenly he became aware of the presence of another man c.a the veaanda, and to Dibbs' eyes were abruptly sweated the face and figure of the man with tb« black whiskers'

The shock was tremendous. Its sudden

was too much far All the clear reasoning oy which he had •onvinoed himself of the groundlessness and folly of his alarm at Philadelphia was now overthrown and swept out e* right. Ha was shadowed by the man below That

was beyond a doubt. Whoever he was, the secret of the diamond was known to him. Either chance or design had made him acquainted with it on that night in Ninth street.

The success of his maneuver in leaving Philadelphia made him repeat it, and besides he was in a perfect fever to get to the end of his journey and rid himself of the charge of the diamond. His spirits rose considerably as the hour of the train's departure drew near without any appearance of the -'shadower" in the station. Dibbs remained on tho platform until the last xndmcnt then, with a fervent sigh of relief, he entered the car. The train was just moving off, when the door was suddenly opened, and a breathless porter dashed in a handbag, followed by a still more breathless traveler. The door was shut the engine shrieked the last departing signal the train moved from the station. In one corner of the car sat Dibbs in another—the farthest on the opposite side—sat the man with the black whiskers!

A long journey lay before them, and they were the sole occupants of the car, and Dibbs was unarmed. At this review of the situation his heart sank he drew back instinctively into the corner. His eyes suddenly met those of the other man a deep flush suffused his face, which seemed to find a reflection in the other's. Dibbs hastily took up a book and affected to read the man opposite simultaneously did the same.

The tension was terrible, to remain inactive almost impossible. Dibbs had an inspiration, as a man in extremity sometimes has. Though he was not armed, he would pretend to be. That might do something produce hesitation or delay, at least. Accordingly he deliberately assumed a bold, even threatening demeanor. Casting a truculent glanoe across the car, he plunged his hand into his pocket, affecting to grasp an imaginary revolver. To his intense delight the ruse took immediate effect. The man opposite gave an unmistakable start and shrank back into bis corner. So far so good. But how to keep up the pretense? What to do next? At this crisis tho whistling of the engine suddenly distracted Dibbs. Good heavens! He had forge-ten tho long tunnel! They were coming to it now! His eyes, with a quick, involuntary movoment, sought the lamp. It was not lighted!

Entrapped! Doomed! The wildest thoughts rushed confusedly to his brain. With a shriek, the train plunged noisily into the tunnel, into darkness. Every railway murder of which Dibbs had ever read flashed beforo him with all the ghastly details. Absolute panic seized upon him. Hardly knowing what he was doing, ho tried softly to open the door. It was locked, however. His movements must have been heard. There was a stir at tho other end of the car. The fatal moment had come the assassin was advancing to the attack. In the extremity of his terror Dibbs sank swiftly on the floor and crawled under the seat.

For what longth of time he crouohcd there, half stifled and scarcely daring to breathe, Dibits knew not. Agony cannot measure time. A sudden and extraordinary rush of air made his heart first stand still and then sent the blood coursing wftflly through his veins. The far door was swinging open! Something had hapdencd! And what?

His straining ears detected no sound but tho outside rattle and roar of the train through the tunnel. Within all was si lence: He remained listening in intense

bomd miraculously—why and how he knew not! The tunnel was' coming to an end Light began to stream into the oar. Cautiously and slowly Dibbs peeped from under the seat. Ho was quite alone. The man had disappeared.

At the station, just outside the tunnel, Dibbs—alighting almost bofore the train had stopped—changed his place for one in a passenger coach. A few, hours later the brillant was safely transferred from his oharge into that of Goldsmith's brother at Pittsburg.

Dibbs' adventure made quite a sensation on his return to New York. He was the hero of the hour in his circle. Whether or not he related the circumstances exactly as here set forth need not be mentioned. His friend Bodkin, among others, gave a dinner party in his honor. Dibbs, with bis usual punctuality, was the first of the guest® to arrive. "By the way," Bodkin said chaffingly to him as tho two stood chatting together on tho hearthrug, ''you must look to your laurels tonight, Dibbs. Do you know Loroy, your neighbor in Ninth street?" "Novor saw the man in my life. What's the joke?" "A rival adventure! In Pennsylvania, too, and culminating in a tunnel." "Dear me! What an extraordinary coinoidonce!"

,lIn

uHla

be­

ing in the train was a mere coincidence, lie probably has never cast a thought about me. I must walk this nonsense out of my brain."

his oaso it was a lunatic, not a robber. Ho was shadowed at hotels and in trains. You must hear the story from his own lips he's dining here tonight The climax is terrific. Shut in a railway carriage alono with a lunatic, aforesaid luna tio armed with a revolver. Along tunnel, an extinguished lamp, tho lunatic crawl ing in the darkness to tho attack, an cs cape by the skin of the teeth. Leroy had sufficient presence of mind to open the door and protend to get out, in reality crawling under the seat instead. The ruse saved his life. He supposes that he fainted In tho stifling air, for when he was next conscious the train had left the station and ho was alone in the car, from which all traoes of the luna tio had disappeared."

Bodkin was so engrossed in telling the story he did not remark its curious and startling effect on Dibbs. Jnst then the door was thrown open, and the footman announced, "Mr. Lenjy."

Bodkin, springing forward with effusion to greet the newoomer, led him gushingly up to Dibbs. ''You two mast know each other," he

And they did. The recognition was instantaneous on both sides. With a gasp, Dibbs stared in speechless wonder on the man with the black whiskers, while Leroy started back aghast on encountering the of the lunatic.—vtmhunfj*

Cold Baths.

Cold bathing in the early morning is beneficial only to those persons who have sufficient vital energy, and nervous force to insure good reaction, with no subsequent languor or lassitude. Many persons who are greatly refreshed by their morning hath feel tired or languid two or three hours after it. When this occurs, it is conclusive evidence against the practice —Popular Magasine. ,,

XCtrth.

HaxmlaM mirth is the best4 c&nllia] the consumption of the spirit. Jesting Is not unlawful, if it taespwurseth not in quantity, quality or ssa•on.—.Fuller.

llilllb me

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY

REALISM.

0 -writers realistic, Won't i, jnst to please a friend. Be not so pessimistic

In the way your stones end? And ran*, yoa now and then contrive To let the lovers wed, Nor have the heroisia arrive

To flnd the hero dead? |pg

Jdf

The fair appearing things of life5 Are not forever bad, And even in this vale of strife

Are moments that are glad. Oh, can't you to your world of doubt Admit a little flash Of sunshine now imri then without

It'sgoing ail to iraash?

Quit blasting every happy bud, Quit clouding every hour, Quit plastering our gods with maa,

Quit making sweet things sour. We're tired of repiners who &S imbitter every cup.

Ring off, ye bilious whiners do

TED BRADY'S SHOT.

Among the families that crossed the Alleghanies for settlement in western Pennsylvania a few years ago before the outbreak of the famous Pontiac war was one of the name of Brady.

The head of the little household was a stalwart Irishman, a man absolutely without fear, and it was but natural that his only child, a son, should possess the same bravery.

Ted Brady from the first was a fearless young rover of the woods, and, gun in hand, he was often to be seen in the forest, either in search of game or setting traps for the smaller animals that abounded in the locality. ..

During one of thes^ excursions into the woods the boy had the fortune to capture a very small bear cub, which he carried home without trouble. He raised the cub by hand and had a great deal of fun with him as he grew older. At last he became the pet of the household, and often he would follow Ted into tho forest.

At the approach of night, no matter where Jack was, he would turn his face toward the bin, and in one corner of it was sure„to lind a sleeping place till morn-

With the'' uprising of the Indians, led by Pontiac, the Ottawa chief, one of the bravest and most relentless Indians of his day, the whole frontier passed from the sunshine of peace into the shadow of war.

Post after post fell before the strategy of this red king of the forest, and at last not one of the many forts along the lakes, with the single exception of Detroit, flew tho Britith flag.

In consequence of the war the frontier of Pennsylvania was in danger of the tomahawk, and the borders of Virginia and Maryland were threatened.

The Bradys heard of the coming storm some time before it reached them. It was reported that Indian spies were abroad in the land, spying Out the weaknesses of the settlements preparatory to swoop upon them, and one day several

Brady

part the animal went where he pleased, and Ted did not see much of him. Michael Brady, the father, thought that the whole frontier should be made acquainted with the true situation regarding the Indian uprising, and as he had picked up a good deal of reliable information he deemed it his duty to spread the news. Therefore he Ret out on his mission one day, intending to be gone nearly a week. ''Watch tho house well," said the Celt. "Know everything that approaches it, and on no occasion open the door to anybody but Jack." "That's pretty sweeping, father," said Ted, looking up from the trap he was mending on the floor.

I know it is, and I want my instructions carried out to the letter. These Indians are the most cunning fellows on earth, and they will play all sorts of tricks on the whites to carry out their designs. Jack is all right, and so are the near neighbors, but don't open the door to any one you do not know."

For three days after tho settler's departure nothing ocourred to break the monotony of forest life. i'

Now and then rumord came to the settlement of Indian battles, but these were reported to have taken place so far away that tho people began to laugh at the stories and to donclude that perhaps the Pontiac uprising had been greatly exaggerated.

Ted attended to his traps as usual, and Jack, after roaming about the forest, would come home at sundown, and Mrs. Brady, if Ted was not in, would open the door to him.

One evening the boy went out to his traps. He had that morning carricd them to anew trapping ground, and he thought best to take another look before leaving them for the night.

The night promised to have the light of the full moon. The. sky was perfectly clear, and the crisp leaves that littered the ground gave forth musical sounds as they crackled underneath the boy's feet.

That very day Ted had taken the rifle apart to give it a thorough overhauling, and every part had been inspected and oil ed. With theweapon slung over his shoulder the Irish boy tramped through the woods, found tho traps all right, and aft er seeing that the triggers were well set turned and began the homeward trip.

By this time the sun had gone down, and the long shadows of dusk were falling be tween the trees. But over the hill on his right rose the fall orbed moon, and more than once Ted stopped and watched it in its stately ascent.

But he was expected home by his moth er before night came fairly on, and think Ing of the Indians be quickened his gait and ran nimbly over the trail-

He had reached a little stream near the cabin and had set his feet on the footing for the purpose of crossing it when he caught sight of something moving toward the cabin.

He oould see the house through an opening In the forest. The moonlight fell wound It, revealing it in the little clearing with uncommon distinctness. "It Is Jack going home, said Ted, with a smile, when he had watched the moving object a little while. "He's been off on another excursion and Is jnst getting la."

Then he thought of surprising the hajw with one of hfs shrill whistles and plaoed his Angers to his mouth to sound it when h» suddenly stopped.

The bear had stopped Not only this, but

UMtoo.

.„i .i ,i n.*« 1111*4),

SVENESTG MATT,, JULY 14, 1894.

Brady'B heart took a leap into his throat, for the animal ruse on its hind feet near a tree and remainod standing a full minute as straight as an Indian.

While Jack was capable of doing a great many tricks and could walk on his hind feet with considerable dexterity, Ted had never seen him get up with such grace of movement.

The bear appeared to be looking straight toward the house from the tree where he stood, and Ted, who jumped down from tho log and sprang to a tree near by, looked on with a boy's keen curiosity. "Maybe it's another bear," rushed through Ted's mind. "And what if it isn't a bear at all?"

The boy's own thought startled him. He was not close enough to get a very good look at the animal, and in order to do so he crawled along the ground to another tree, from behind which he took another look.

By this time the bear had dropped to the ground again, and all at once Ted saw that it had a cut ear, which was just what Jack had had for three years.

Once more Ted was in the act of. whistling to his pet when the animal started toward the house on all fours, running over the ground in a manner not exactly in accordance with the usual locomotion of bears, but not very unlike either. "I never saw Jack run that way before," cried the boy as he bounded on. "Ho is heading for home and will beat me there if I don't make better time. Maybe Jack has been wounded. The boys down on the creek shot at him twice last summer, and"

Ted stopped, for once more the bear had checked his course and was moving across the clearing toward the little cabin, in one of whose little windows,. Mrs. Brady had set a light.

wero seen in the vicinity of the cabin. Ted had been trapping along a little stream near home for sometime. The boy, who was stout and quick for his 16 years, though not very large, had become an expert in trapping the fur bearing animals young marksman would have upon him of forest and stream, and his. stock of furs

was known to be the best and most valu aiuxig--wn^- nxln,1-bxrc^TOf tfir lfiSsE

h„

Ted watched the bear moving over the stumpy clearing, with his head pointing toward the shanty, but all at once he saw more than this.

That which he saw was epough to thrill him as he had never been thrilled beforo. It was nothing less than a moccasin where one of the hind feet of the supposed bear should have been, and the more he looked the surer he was of this.

All was plain now. Tho skin before hifa was Jaoks, but an Indian was inside it, and, of course, for some diabolical purpose.

Well did tho red man know that he could never get beyond the door of tho Brady cabin in his own dress. Therefore, probably knowing something about the boy settler's pet, he had killed Jack in tho forest and had undertaken this stratagem to carry out his evil designs.

Ted knew that if his mother should see the supposed Jack in the clearing 6he would hasten to open the door to him without suspecting anything wrong, and when he thought of the peril that menaced her he could hardly suppress a cry,

Meantime the Indian must have been congratulating himself on the sucoess of his trick

He had not seen the boy in his rear, and now, with but a few yards between him and his victims, he looked upon his victo ry as ccrtain

Tho Irish boy had roaohed the fringe of the clearing and in the brilliant moon light saw the object that moved across it.

Not a moment was to be lost. Yet a shot must tell, for if thrown away the

one 0j

the dread scourges of the frontier,

shoulder the cabin door openod, and he oaught sight of his mother. She had openod the door for Jack, and the redskin had only to spring up and with abound carry himself beyond the threshold.

Controlling his nerves with the coolness of an old. marksman, Ted covered tho shaggy head and fired.

At the sharp report a dark object seemed to spring into the air, and the next instant it lay on the ground, while the white faced woman in the doorway gazed across the clearing too frightened for moment to stir.

Ted ran forward so as to be seen in an Instant, and as he cleared the ground be tween the scene of his shot and the cabin he was recognized, and his mother cried out: "It is Jack you have killed, boy! Didn't you know the old fellow?"

Ted met his mother at the door, and for a moment, looking up into her face, he oould not answer her, but after glancing at the silent figure among the stumps he made reply: "Jack never wore moccasins,"m6ther. The bear out there happens^to be ,au In dian."

Dead ill the moonlight lay*the scarlet trickster of the frontier, and when Ted pulled the bearskin from him he saw the painted face and the weapons of the warpath that he carried in his belt.

After awhile mother and son dragged the body to a secluded spot behind the cabin. There a grave was made, and In it they placed the corpse of one Indian who would never return to follow Pontiac across the frontiers.

Tho bearskin was removed to the cabin, and when Ted's father came back, as he did a few days later, he was ehown Jack's bullet Mred hide, while he listened to the story of his boy's remarkable shot.

If the Indian had companions in tho neighborhood, they retreated without seeking to avenge the death of their spy, and when the tide of war flowed into that region the Bradys had taken refuge in one of the more eastern forts, where they remained till the uprising had been put down.

Ted Brady grew to manhood near the scene of his adventure. He became noted for his marksmanship, but he always called his best shot the one which saved his mother from the tomahawk of the Indian in Jack's skin.—T. C. Harbaugh in Inter Ocean.

mm

next moment Ted

V#

A

cult Is China.

A colt in china and a craze for china are not synonymous, but they can lay claim to have the same foundation, and both have

antiquity

and very good people

to back them—yes, and to refer to as having withstood the jests and caricatures of wits and artists ever since the Egyptians burnt tiles on the Nile.

Hogarth, Charles lamb, Sydney Smith and Balzac have all made their mark with brash or pen on this fascinating fad of fashionable women, and, to the writer's credit be it said, they have each shown a well considered acquaintance with the matter, and the china has always been benefited by their interest.

Charles Lamb was not ashamed to con»to an "almost feminine partiality for old china," and he didn't mind admitting that when he visited any great boose he inquired first for the china closet and next for the picture gallery. China jars and •anoezs have a way of kodaking themes uponray memory, and their features, yes, and their histories, interest me as they "Gowitt Pons."—Jewelers' Circular.

ITALY

RAIL ROBBERIES

Revival of the Outrages Which Were Suppressed Three Years Ago. Three years ago the Italian government, yielding

to urgent

from

representations

nearly every cor-iitry in Europe, made a vigorous effort to stop tho systematic robberies on railroads, which had attained the dimensions of a national scandal. The depredations were traced to an organized gang composed mainly of railroad servants well equipped with false keys of every known pattern. The robbers were duly tried and sentenced. For a couple of years after that travelers were able to move about Italy with no more than normal risks, but last autumn the systematic thefts of baggage in transit recommenced and have now readied a scale equal to

that

of 1890 1

The members of the new gang ard carrying on their operations in the most impudent manner. Trunks are opened en route, rifled of their more valuable contents and carefully reloclcecL Occasionally they are taken out of the cars at intermediate stations in order that they may be examined at greater leisure by the confederates. Until recently the thieves had kept their felonious hands ofE the mails, but they are now stealing registered letters by wholesale, and this daring development will probably prove to be their undoing, for complaints are pouring into Rome from foreign postoffices, and the government is bound to effective action.—Rome Letter.

"Bissell" Postoffices.

There is now a "Bissell" postoffice in nearly every state in the Union. When Mr. Bissell was appointed postmaster general, not a single postoffice in the country was honored by the name of 'Bissell." Mr. Bissell has since corrected this singular omission on the part of former postmaster generals, and when The Postal Guide was printed last December had already added an even dozen "Bissells'' to the postoffice nomenclature of the country. He has been steadily progressing ever since, and there are now probably between 20 and 25 postoffices so designated. In some oases the naming of a postoffice after tho postmaster general is pure sycophantry. Oftener, however, the name is suggested by the department in cases where there is any difficulty over the selection of a proper title for an office. In The Postal Guide printed last December there art? 29 "Clevelands" and 19 "Grovers." The "Bissell" offices will eventually outnumbor all others.—Indianapolis Journal.,

For Nervousness and DySpepsIa^ Use Horsford's Acid Phosphate. Dr. U. GRAHAM, Chicago, 111., says: "I have used it for years in oases of nervous exhaustion, insomnia and certain kinds of d.vnpepsia, and would be at a loss to find in the whole materia medica anything which would take its place and give as satisfactory results in the above mentioned disorders.''

OOD!S

sarsapariUa Is carefully

asrgaparllla Is carefully prepared by experienced pharmacists from Sars» pari 11a, Dandelion, Mandrake, Dock,Pip8lssewa,

Juniper Berries, and other well known I

Cures Scrofula, Salt Rheum, Sores, Bolls, Pimples and all other affections caused by Impure blood Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Sick Headache, Indigestion, Debility, Catarrh, Rheumatism, Kidney and Liver Complaints. It is Not What we Say, but what Hood's

fell

"V-A.3rX)^LX.X^

vegetable remedies. The Combination, Pro- No. Day Express A Mall* 10.00 a portion wd Process .rePecrttortoHood'. I gS No. 8 arrives from Indianapolis 8.15 pm SarsapariUa, giving It strength and curative power Peculiar to Itself, notpoe* sessed by other medicines. Hood's

arsaparilla

SarsapariUa Does, that Tells the Story—Hood'e SarsapariUa

URES

Hood's Pills

are gentle, mild and effective.

FOR OTS.

In Postage, we will send A Sample Envelope, of cither WHITE, FLESH or BRUNETTE

OZZONIS OWDER.

You have seen it advertised for many years, bat have you ever tried it?—If not,—yoa do not know what an Ideal Complexion Powder i*.

beeidea beta? tm acknowledged beantlfler, -ofre^hlnm uses, prevents cbaf-

hu inuwrrc ,murtmr

irn, wind-tan,}cw»eri»persp) ration,

etc.j in factltbittmostdelicateamldeitraMe protection to tbo face dartntf hotwoslber. It la Sold Everywhere..

For sample, address s?v

M.A. POZZONI CO. 8t. Louis, Mo, MENTIOSf THIS PAPER.

J)R. L. H. BARTHOLOMEW,

DENTIST.

Ppmoved to #71 Main it Terrc Haute,

JSAAO BALL,

J)R. H. MEDCRAFT,

*3

FUNERAL DIRECTORS^

Cor. Third «nd Cherry SUu, Terre Hante, lad. prepared to execute all orders ix» his lies with neatness and dlspatc) a Specialty.

3DS3STTX8T.

Office—SfeKeen* Btoek, northwest corner Seventh street and Wabash aveana.

1

Railroad Time Tables.]

Traiiis marked thus(P) have Parlor Oa Trains marked thus (S) have sleeping Car Tmins iuar» ed thus (B) have Buftet Car, Tra»ns inarkea thus (V) have Vestibule Cars. Trains marked (D) have Dining Car. lrams I marked thus (t) ruu Sundays only. Trains marked thus run daily. All other trau run dally, Sundays txctiied.

VI

ZDIHSTIE!.

MAIN LINE.

LKAVK KOK THE

WKST.

No. 7 Western Ex*(VSS) .... .* JNo. 5 St. Louis Mail No. I Fast Line* (P) .... No. 21 St. Louis Ex* (DV&S) No. 18 Eff. Aec ,Np. li Fast Mall*

1.40 am lu.ll a 2.'20 3.10 4 9.04

A I E O W S

No. 12 Cincinnati Express (S) No. 6 New York Express* (VJkS). No, 14 Ettlngham Ac No. 20 Atlantic Express (DPV&S)

1.20 a m. 2.10 a mv 9.80 am 12.42

No. 8 Fast Line* 2.05pm No. 2Indianapolis Acc iuupin LKAVK KOK TUB KAST. No. 12 Cincinnati Express (S) 1.30 a No. 6 New York Express (V&8). 2.20 am No. 4 Mail and Accommodation 7.15 am No. 20 Atlantic Express (DPV&S) 12.47 No. 8 Fast Line 2.20 pm No. 2 Indianapolis Acc 5.0a

ARKIVE FROM THK KAST.

No. 7 Western Express (V&S)... 1.30 am No. 5 St. Louis Mail* 10-05 am No. 1 Fast Line *tn No. 21 St- Louis Ex* (DVAS) ... 8.05 pm No. 8 Mail and Accommodation 6.45 No. 11 Fast Mail* 9.00 pm

MICHIGAN DIVISION.

LKAYB FOR THK NORTH.

No. 52 St. Joseph Mall 8.20 am No.60SUJoseph Express* 1.00pm No. &4 St. Joseph Express .• 4.00

ARRIVE FROM THK NORTH.

No. 51 South Bend Express 11.45 a No. 53 St. Joseph Mail 7.80

PEORIA DIVISION.

LEAVE FOR NORTHWEST.

No. 75 Peoria Mail ......... No. 77 Decatur Accommodation

7.05 am 8.25 pm

ARRIVE FROM NORTHWEST.

No. 78 Decatur Accommodation 11.00 a No. 76JPeoria Mail 7.00

33- & T. NASHVILLE LINE JUKAVE FOR SOUTH.

NO. 8 Ch fe Ev Ex* (SAP) 3.0? a Nc, 1 Ev. fe Ind. Mall* ...••• No. 5 Ch & N Lim*VfcS No. 7 Ev. Accommodation

3.15 10.05 10.20 a

ARRIVE FROM 80UTH.

No. 6 C. Nash Lim* (V&S) No. 2 T. H. & East Ex* ..... No. 4 Ch & Ind Ex* (8 P) 11.15 pm No. 80 Mixed Accommodation 4.45

4.45 a 11.16 a:

IE. & I-

LKAVE FOR SOUTH.

No. 88 Mail A Ex No. 49 Worth'n Mixed 8.30 ARRIVE FROM SOUTH. No. 48 Mixed 10.15 a No. 32 Mall & Ex 4.20 pm

C. &C IE3. X.

LEAVE FOR NORTH.

No. 0C AN Lim*(DVAS). ... No. 2 HA Ch Ex a No. 8 Local Pas&enger

A JO

No. 4KvACEx*iS) 11.15 pm ARRIVE FROM NORTH. NO. 3 Ch A Ev Ex*(8) No. 7 Local Passenger No. 1 Ch A Ev Kx l*4? No. 5 AN Llm»(DVAS) 10.00

uu a. X3XO' tc.

GOING KAST

No. 10 Cincinnati AWash Ex'SP 1.82 am No. 2 Indianapolis A Cincinnati 7.10 am No. 18 Southwestern LI rented* SDP V.12.68 No. 8 Day Express A Mail 8.42 No. 4 arrives from Mattoon 0.80 am

GOING WEST,

No. 7 Ht„ Louis Flyer'SP. 1.82 a na

THE BEST LINE TO

CINCINNATI

AMD THE

SOUTH.

THE DIRECT LINE TO

I MICHIGAN RESORTS.

CH&D

4MICHIGAN

TRAINS EVERY

RESORTS.

LOW RATE ROUND-TRIP TICKETS TO Mackinaw, Petoskey, Omena, Bay Port, Alt. Clemens, Alma, Huronla Beach, Sauft St. Marie,

St. Clair Springs, The Mettawas.

ALSO TO

Niagara Falls, Montreal, Toronto, Thousand Islands.

For full Information call on any C. H. & D. Agent D. G. EDWARDS, Oenerai Passenger Agont,

Omrew BilUlif,

Cincinnati.

O.

DR. R. W. VAN VALZAH, DElsTTIST

Office, No. 5 South Fifth Street.

JAMES A. N IS BET.

UNDERTAKER,

29 UTOttTH FOURTH HTRKET, All calls will receive the most careful attention. Open day and night

JAMBS L. PKX

E,

A tiorney at

JAIOMH. CALDWSXJL,

Imw

and Collector and

Notary Public. Real Estate Broker-

PMCE& CALDWELL,

Boom 2 Pattern's Block,

408 Ohio St., Terre Hante, Ind.

De:

GEO. MARBACH, ORO0XD FLOOR DENTAL PARLOUS.

jgANT

124 Sooth Sixth Street.

davisT

a

Attorney-at-Law,

429%

Wabash Ave., in McLeaa'sBalldhig. TXRSX HAUTE, IXJX