Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 25, Number 11, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 September 1894 — Page 2
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ROCKING BABY.
Rocking eoftly to and fro, Baby is white as the new white snow,*"^ Baby is sweet as the rose pink dawn, Fair AS the land where the summers have (tone.
Droop the eyelids slow, so slow, Baby rocking to and fro. ,,,
Rocklny softly to and fro, Baby will sleep and the baby will grow. Dear little finger tips day by day Learning of mischief and loving to play. Eager and reetless and frolicsome feet Tramping the farm lands and treading the street.
Oh, how fast does baby grow Rocking, rocking, to and fro.
Rocking softly to and fro. Love would defend you and fill you so That the days of the years that are all to be From sinning and shame should stand sweet and free.
Oh, if love could make it so Rocking baby to and fro.
-Aurilla Furber in Minneapolis Housekeeper.
MISS NAN.
Slender, but not thin, with soft, hazel eyes and long lashes, pale complexion, light brown hair, with here and there a strand of gray, not pretty, but attractive looking, simple in manner, speech and dress—that was Miss Nan.
That she was an old maid was beyond dispute. Her most intimate friend would not have denied it if he oould. Though ior the matter of that he oould not, belonging, as be did, to the feline species and not being blessed with the power of speech. She was "turned" 85 if she was a day, and the most hopeful of that social ecourge known as matchmakers had long since scratched her name off their list of •possibilities.
Miss Nan lived In her own cottage, and the lawn in front of it was the neatest in Tiffin, as the little parlor inside was the tidiest. The three cats that monopolized the hearth rug in the parlor of evenings •were as sleek as could be and exceptionally well behaved for cats. The furniture was of a quaint pattern, but the easy chairs were oomfortable in the extreme, and if the little earthenware teapot was half as good a brewer as it was a singer I don't blame her for Indulging in its contents rather freely.
That Miss Nan had a good heart and a kind one I can vouch for, and so could many a barefooted urchin and many an •overworked factory girl. There was no Sunday school teacher in Tiffin as beloved by her scholars, and they all know the flavor of her famous cookies. I was not surprised to hear one day that Miss Nan tiud had a bit of romance in her life, so long ago that the younger generation had never heard of it and the older generation had long since forgotten it.
There had been a certain handsome young man who had courted her in the old days, and not unsuccessfully. Ho had been practicing law for three or four yoars, and his prospects were unusually bright. He was genial in his way, but proud to a fault. Ho had never been a lady's man, and despite flho fact that many jaunty caps had been set for him ho had almost been set down for a young bachelor confirmed in his waywardness until he met Miss Nan at a church festival. From that evening the predictions toppled over like cardhouses, for, though she did not apparently reciprocate at fltrst, he was a determined wooer, with youth, good looks and a winning tongue to back him. So at last she melted—of course sho did, for what else was that woman's heart of hers ere4»to«2P and tlu* gasiiips •o irviidor when the day would be set and to surmise among themselves that it had been set end was still a secret. But whether it really had or had not been Silas Grantley iknew and Miss Nan knew, but the gossips never did find out.
Of the matrimonially inclined young ladies who had set their caps for Silas Grantley before the fateful church festival none had set them so artfully, so hopefully as Lizzie Minks. She was a pretty bit of a woman (long since the wife of a henpecked husband), with sparkling black eyes, sharp features and tight llttlo figure that sho was wont to deck out with the gayest ribbons imaginable. Sho had Spanish blood in her veins and was proud of it, and proud of her temper too. Though Silas had never paid her any serious attention, sho had appeared attractive to him until ho met Miss Nan. If it had not boon for that, thcro is no telling what might not have happened. Miss Minks was not a young lady to submit to such a total eclipse calmly, and tho truth was that sho never had any Intention of submitting to it at all. One day about tho time that tho go» sips had settled it satisfactorily among themselves Chat "the day had finally been set,•• sho came to tho conclusion that matters had progressed far enough and mado an afternoon call on her succcssful rival.
Sho left her pretty airs and graces at home with her gay ribbons that morning and was a sad enough flguro when her hostess ushered her Into tho parlor—tho eamo llttlo parlor, though Miss Nan's mother was living then, and it was brighter to her than it was In after years. Lizzie Minks told hor story well and wept bitter toafs over It too. Sho told how Silas had wooed her and won her and had promised •o marry her, and how tho day had been named, mul how he had kept up tho cruel deception even after ho had mot Miss Nan herself, and how heartlessly ho had finally thrown her over and laughed at her Then when she saw that the girl at her side appeared sorely troubled she becarao rensorsoful and vowed that she ought not to have told hor. Then sho grew hysterical and railed against all men and despised herself for an idiot to havo ever trusted one of them. Her auditor was very quiet through it all, but Lizzie Minks know that her shaft had been a straight one and went home ©suiting. After she had gone, Miss Nan did what many another girl In her place would have done. 6he had a hard cry. Sho did not tell her mother. She oould not have told any one. 6hj hated to think that oven Llxzio Minks knew the man she loved in such an altered light. But tho mere fact of thinking of liltn softened her, and sho hoped ftyp, In the loyalty of her heart, sho trusted that 6ilas had txvn misunderstood. There should be no misunderstanding between them. Sho determined to toll him that evening, when ho called, all that she had WrdL T3ut tangled through her trouble was a sore feeling of disappointment that gilas could havo even carelessly trifled with another woman, and a feeling, too, of unconscious jealousy In tho thought that ho had prolonged the farce after he had begun the wooing of herself. It was a fooling akin to rcsentmentagalnst hun, in justice to her own worth
When he entered the parlor a few hours later, ho knew at one© that something was wrong, and Miss Nan did not leave hint long in doubt. She told him the whole story, only withholding the namo of her Informant. She kept back her tears, too, and the effort made her voioe hard.
A
She waited for him to speak when she had finished, and if they had been sitting nearer to each other would have touched his hand. I said that Silas Grantley was proud, and if ever a proud man was humiliated that man was himself. No other proof than her own voice could have made him think that this woman oould havo believed for a moment such a base falsehood against his manhood. The feeling of deep injury and indignation was uppermost in his mind. Without a word he roso and turned to go. At the door he paused an Instant to look at her, but only for an instant. There was a quick, firm stop on the gravel walk the gate shut voisily, and he was gone. Prom that night Miss Nan never saw Silas.Grantley again. Never saw him again? Never saw him again? How many times sho saw him in that doorway, when tlie feline family were purring contentedly and the little earthenware teapot was singing cheerfully on the hearth, only Miss Nan knew. How many times that last reproachful glance looked In upon her on the lonely nights of the long years that followed, when the whole bitter truth was before her, only Miss Nan knew. How utterly dreary the tidy little parlor was at times during the long, long hours, when the thought of that last night c£mc back to her, how often the soft gray eyes wept bitterly when she thought of the wrong that she had done him, and that she never oould undo now, Miss Nan, and only Miss Nan, knew.
And that was the story of her romanoe. A late train west bound carried Silas Grantley away that night—carried him away so completely that Tiffin neither saw nor heard of him again and soon forgot him. She lived her life as be6t she could, and before her little world the thorns in her path were trodden unflinchingly. Wherever a woman's hand was needea, there was Miss Nan whet-ever oharitable duties were th« hardest, in the hardest winters, among the hardest class of people, there was Miss Nan, and though her purse was not a large one it was open constantly. I think It was this constant doing of good, this oonstant healing of minds and hearts and bodies, that kept the hard lines off her face, even when tha early gray strands glistened in her brown hair. If there was one weakness for which she had no compassion, it was the weakness of drunkenness. If there were any mendicants who left her door empty handed, they were those who went theife with the fumes of alcohol on their breath. Truly the drunkard In her eyes was detestable.
And so the summers passed and the wintors passed until the time when my story opens, and Miss Nan had become an old maid beyond question or dispute. New lives came into the little town, and old lives went out. Girls in pinafores and small boys in short trousers grew to be men and women, married and set up for themselves and had children of their own, but to Miss Nan one year was but a repetition of another, and it sometimes seemed to her that she was continually going around in a circle that had long since become monotonous. If Miss Nan ever thought that she might have made her lifo happier, she guarded the thought well, and if the smiling matrons ever occasioned the slightest envy in her breast they oould as easily have learned it from the exterior of the neat cottage as from its prim mistress.
One wintry March morning she started out with a basket on her arm to visit a sick family, wl^a she noticed a small crowd of men and boys a short distance from her gate. The gibes that reached her ears and the incoherent profanity that followed them told her that a drunken man was the center of the group. She knew she would be obllgotf to pass cnem," nut: with the determination not to be deterred from her purpose by such an unworthy cause she held her head a trifle higher, involuntarily drew her skirts closer about her and walked on. As she neared the group sho saw that the man was reeling. He was a wrctched looking creature, with long tangled hair, a dirty beard, a battered remnant of a hat and ragged clothes that hung loosely on the thin shivering figure. She took one glance at him, and: the basket dropped from her arm. She walked straight up to him, laid her hand on his frayed sleeve and led him to her own gate and up tho gravel walk and Into the neat little cottage and into tho tidiest parlor in all Tifiin, How she took on over him, and cried over him, and bathed his face with cold cologne water, and had old Mrs. Young, her ancient maid of all work, cook him tho daintiest breakfast imaginable! Who would have thought it of Miss Nan? And what would Tiffin say? Little cared Miss Nan what Tiffin would say. For all her tears, there was not a lighter heart in tho world that day than Miss Nan's. If t.iero had been one bright spot in her lonely life, it, had been the hope of his return, and ns the empty years came and went she had sometimes felt that she was hoping against hope. And now ho had oome back. What did it matter how ho had come? He had oome, and that was enough for Miss Nan.
At first Silas was dazed and insensible to his surro. ndings, but when tho breakfast was brought In to him ho ate liko a famished do*. Mrs. Young, wise woman that sho was, had brewed some black coffoo, so strong that Its very aroma might havo had a sobering influence, and when Silas had drank two big cups of it, steaming hot, ho began to look around him. Tho llttlo parlor had not changed so very much in all those years, and reinem bering first how ho had tramped into Tiffin the night before it began to dawn on him where he really was. Then his eyes rested on Miss Nan, and he knew it all. He bur led his face in his hands and sobbed. Then a woman's arms were about tho ragged coat, and tho tired head was on her breast, and tho tangled hair was anointed with her tears.
Did they marry? What a question! Of course they did. Silas Grantley reformed, and with reformation came health and success. There never was a better husband, and the happiest wife in Tiffin ls— Miss Nan.—Lewis Vital Bogy In Once a Week. __
ItaMlni.
Rossini was intolerably jealous of all his musical contemporaries, and particularly of Meyerbeer. In 1836 h© heard "The Huguenots," and on listening to the performance froih the beginning to the end he made up his mind that Meyerbeer had excelled him and determined to write no mom He lived until 1868, but produced nothing for the lyric stage. His 82 yoars of retirement were spent in the pleasures of a voluptuary. He was particularly fond of good eating and drinking and assembled about the youngest and gayest society he could attract to his honsq.—St Louis Glob©- Democrat.
A««wntcd Cor.
"I never get angry with a fool," was the cutting remark of a man who wanted to crush a rival. "That accounts for your always being on such good terms with yourself," was tho reply.-—London Tit-Bits.
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, SEPTEMBER 8,1894.
LET NO GUILTY MAN ESCAPE.
A Strong Presentation of the Case Made Against the Carnegto Steel Company. It is rather a general belief in this country that if a man commits a crime he should be punished, and also that th punishment should fit the crime, or, in other words, be commensurate with it
Moreover, we declare that some crimes are much more criminal than others because their consequences are mare far1 aching. If a fellow steals a loaf of bread or a pocketbook, that is one thing, but if be does something which endangers the good name or possibly the safety of our federal government that is a very different thing, and his treatment should be different He is worthy of nothing better than to be despised by every self respecting man in the land and should spend a goodly portion of bis remaining days in that olose seclusion in which he will repent of his sins because that is the only thing which will enable him to pass his time com fortably.
Now, here are the huge steel works of which Mr. Carnegie is at the head. It has been swindling the government for months and has done it deliberately and with malice aforethought. Its guilt has been established beyond a peradventure, and the subcommittee of the naval bouse oommittee has caught it, as it were, red handed. There is no room to doubt that this company has been palming off on the naval department certain armor plates which are unfit to be used on our war vessels and getting for them the price of the very best plates that can be manufactured.
Mr. Cleveland hesitated to believe that charge when it was first made and treated the whole matter with undue leniency of judgment. Congress also hes itated, for it was positively incredible that a firm made up of reputable gentlemen and doing work for a oountry which they have loudly protested to love and honor could by any possibility endanger that country's welfare by the delivery of defective plates. But the facts were so broadly patent and backed by such good authority that the subject had to be investigated. Listen, therefore, to the verdict which these careful experts have rendered. It reads as follows: "The servants of the Carnegie Steel company, whether with or without the knowledge of the company, to increase their gains deliberately continued for many months to commit acts whose natural and probable consequenoe would be the sacrifice of the lives of our seamen in time of war, and with them perhaps the dearest interests of the nation."
Isn't that a terrible arraignment? It stamps every man engaged in this infamous proceeding as a traitor. He has sold his country to the enemy for a few paltry dollars. He has crippled our defenses in time of war and done what be could, and done it for hard cash, to make our defeat possible in a naval conflict. He has endangered the lives of our brave seamem and tsnemj suoh ait advantage over us that no one can reckon the result.
And where is Mr. Carnegie all this while? He has been talking eloquently about his love for his adopted country for many years. And well he may love her, for he has made millions by the opportunities which no other land on the planet could offer in equal abundance. But where is he? If he is not personally to blame, if he is not in collusion with the men engaged in these cowardly misdeeds, why does he not come boldly to the front and do what he oan to remedy the rascality of his subordinates? There is something mysterious and suspicious in the fact that he keeps himself well in the background.
These are the facts. They are stern, and they are hard. Now, in suoh a matter there should be no mercy. The men who are guilty should be found, their guilt should be fastened upon them by due process of law, and then they should be dealt with as every patriotic community deals with traitors.—New York Evening Telegram.
FRANCE AND GERMANY..
There Are Surface Indications That Theoe Countries May Bury the Hatchet.) The latest fad among certain classes of volatile Frrenchmen is the most amazing that can be conceived. The,t have been publicly expressing friendly sentiments toward the people on th other side of the Rhine. Stories hav reached Paris of German and Frenc officers and men drinking together in friendly way, each carefully on his ow side of the frontier, but shaking hand and passing compliments across the fa tal line- Two or three such incidents have been reported before since Sedant but always aroused intense indignatio: and demands for a court martial anion, the French people. Now they are received with open approval in many circle and even some astonishing talk about burying the hatchet has been indulged in, yet the rash peacemakers have kepj a whole skin.
5
Emperor William's sincere express slons of sympathy at the death "of Pre^ ident Carnot and his action in releasia,
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the French spies are the direct cause this almost incredible change of sendment It is now announced, with wla truth it is yet impossible to say, tl at this year's celebration of the anniversary of Sedan will be the last This repkrj has greatly surprised and pleased ht French people, and there are mi signs that they sincerely appreciate hj magnanimity of the German emperor —j Paris Letter.
A Paradox of Civilisation.
One of the paradoxes of modern vj ilization, says the New YorkTelegranj is shown forth in the fact the defena New York harbor is deemed as imp tant as its improvement. While the ernment with one hand is removing b* struct!ons, with the other it is obliget to erect them. Here is a nugget for pe next peace congress.
ENCOURAGING SIGNS.
They Relate to the Business Outlook and Are Seen by the Coal Barons. At the Fifth Avenue hotel yesterday and at the Hamburg-American dock in Hoboken there was a large gathering of Leisenrings, Kemmerers, Wentzes, Bighters and other "coal barons" of the Lehigh valley to say goodby to Mr. E. B. Loisenring, president of the Lehigh Coal Navigation company, whose failing health has at length caused him to lay down the immediate supervision of his vast business interests and go to Europe for recuperation and recreation.
Talking with these ooal barons, I was much interested to find that they are taking a very hopeful view of the business situation and that quite apart from the fact that the great anthracite ooal industry in which they are more specially interested has had more than its share of prosperity during the long season when the bituminous coal regions all over the country were blighted by a strike of most comprehensive proportions.
Mr. M. S. Kemmerer said that the most encouraging sign to his mind was the improvement in the iron industry, a branch of business closely allied to ooal mining, and the two together having much to do with the general prosperity of the country. A day or two ago came an order from Brazil for the manufacture'of 00 locomotives, a big thing in itself, sinoe the building of locomotives has been practically suspended for along while. At the Schenectady works orders from American railroads are coming in for railroad iron. At Bethlehem, where little beyond the manufacture of armor plate for the government has been going on, there, is perceptible activity, and one of the great iron companies has booked more orders within the last six weeks than in thepreoeding six months.—M. P. Handy.
SENATORS AND BASEBALL.
Mr. Hill of New York Tells About the First Time He Met Mr. Gorman. Senator Hill tells an interesting stoiy about the first time he ever saw Senator Gorman. It was long before they both became famous, and the incident was not reoalled until Senator Hill became a fellow senator with the Maryland lead er, and it was found that both were very fond of the national game of baseball. "It was back in the sixties," said Senator Hill, "when everybody was in terested in baseball. There was a oon vention in New York city. The cities along the Atlantic coast attended. I was a delegate from Elmira, representing the Alerts. I remember that the president of the convention knew nothing about parliamentary law, and it was not long before we were in a tangle and with no prospect of being extricated. Then tbty got a little fellow in the chair who knew all about the way to handle a convention, and he soon had things running smoothly. He held them down, I tell you. I forgot who he was and never recalled until after coming to Washington, when I was talking about the meeting with Senator Gorman, and he said he was there and presided. And he was. He represented the old Nationals of Washington."
While there are other senators who enjoy baseball, none are such devotees as Senators Hill and Gorman. The Maryland senator has not found time to indulge his inclination this season, as he has been too busy getting a tariff bill through the senate, which Senator Hill has been trying to defeat. Mr. Hill attends every game played here.-— Washington Letter.
Women and learning.
Statistics collected by the regents of the University of New York shows that in the secondary schools there are 28,556 girls of academic grade and 18,248 boys. Last year more than two-thirds of the 488 honor certificate went to girls. In the colleges thei*d are 2,925 girls and 4,048 in the professional and technical schools. Mar.y other young women are studying law, medicine, painting and music. The United States oensus of 1890-gave the number of women teachers as 288,897. In their report upon these statistics the regents remark, "The remarkable development of woman's higher education is due to widespread recognition that a college course is needed as the best preparation for wifehood, motherhood and home life as much as for a professional life."
If Guilty, Forgiveness Is Awilfed. The mortality among newspapers in the United States during the past 18 months has been something almost unprecedented. In New York state alone 278 newspapers suspended between June, 1898, and June, 1894. For the first time sinoe 1869 the total number catalogued by the newspaper directory in less than for the preoeding year. This is said to be due to hard times caused by the Democratic free trade panic, but this is one of the things for which that party will most assuredly be forgiven. If he who makes two blades of grass to grow where but one grew before is a benefactor of his kind, what shall be said of him who makes but one newspaper to desolate the community where there were three before?—San Francisco Argonaut.
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A Kipling Story.
This capital story some one tells of Kipling as illustrating very clearly the characteristics of the vigorous English boy who was afterward to achieve such widespread fame by bis pen. When a boy of 12, he went on a voyage with his father, who, becoming desperately seasick, retired to his berth, leavi^- young Rudyard to his own devices, rrepently the poor father heard a tremendous commotion over his head, and down the oompanionway dashed the boatswain, three steps at a time and shouting excitedly, "Mr. Kipling, your boy has crawled out on the yardarm, and if he lets go he'll drown sure." "Yes," said Mr. Kipling, falling back on his pillow with a sigh of relief, "but he won't let go."
Therc^ is nothing to prevent anyone concocung a mixture and calling it "sarsaparilla," and there is nothing to prevent anyone spending good money testing the stuff, but prudent people, who wish to be sure of their remedy, take only Ayer's Sarsaparilla and so get cured.
CAPITAL AND CONFIDENCE.
All That Is Needed For the American People to Start Up Again. Everybody who has money is tired of getting 1 per cent or no per oent for it Every business man who has been lying on his oars is crazy to do something or engage in something he understands. Every enterprise which has been dormant is feeling .its way for capital and confidence, ^ibor is everywhere eager for work and employers still more eager to open their works. It only requires the normal machinery of the country to move in a normal way, for consumption to again make demands upon production.
When the history 'of the late panic comes to be written and the troubles incident to it, one of its remarkable features will be the effect upon railway traffic, upon all business of 65,000,000 people, of those who had to and those who had no need to economize, but did so in every possible way. When one family uses the old stove with the cracked lids and pastes paper over the broken pane of glass and does not renew any of the furniture or crockery, when they wear last year's clothes and go from food which might be luxuries to food which simply supports life, the economics are demonstrated which follow a total or partial loss of inoome.
Precisely that process has been going on for two-thirds of a year among 90 per cent of our population. It has made clear the fact that the American people, who are charged, and probably justly, with being the most extravagant people in the world, can live as closely as anybody when it becomes necessary. But the effect upon merchants, middlemen and carriers in the volume of their business and their profits is disastrous beyond any process which has ever affected the business of the country.—Chaunoey M. Depew in New York Tribune.
England and France.
The British political campaign, which for weeks has been too dull to arouse the slightest popular interest, has at length suspended until midwinter. The queen's speech at the prorogation is much more significant than usual. It contains an important intimation regarding the strained relations with the French republic, which caused the greatest alarm in the foreign office a few day^Tixrevious.
French aggression in west Africa had reoently become so threatening that England was almost forced to the conclusion that it was intended to be an open affront The news has at length come that the French troops occupied Kumassi, the capital of Ashanti, last month, and it is believed that the English government possesses information of a still bolder invasion of British territory. Now that parliament has adjourned the country will be deprived of official news of this and other foreign complications during the remainder of the year.—New York Sun's London Letter.
What Senator Hill Said.
With the echo of his defense of President Cleveland still ringing in the ears of his colleagues, Senator Hill walked into the cloakroom and dropped into an easy chair to chat with Senator Smith. Presently a page appeared, carrying a note inclosed in a large square envelope addressed to Senator HilL "Ah P' said Mr. Smith, with a tone of inquiry, "an invitation to dine with the president tonight?"
Senator Kill looked up from the note with a twinkle in his eye. "Not at this stage of the game," said ha—Washington Post.
Wives For Australia.
A government export trade in wives has just been begun for the benefit of western Australia. A consignment of 50 young women, sound, good looking, under 20 and carefully selected, was sent free reoently in order to provide wives for the colonists.
For Nervousness and Dyspepsia Use Horsford's Acid phosphate. Dr. C. GKAHAM, Chicago, 111., says: "I have used 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 medica anything which would take its plane and give as satisfactory results in the above di«ord»r».''
Joseph Is All Right
Since he took Hood's Sarsaparilla, and I think Hood's Sareapariila is the Create** Medlcin* on Esrlh. My bo had Catarrh in the
WM
Head so badly be lost hi* hearing, and medical treatment failed to help him. Then I was advised to try Hood's Sarsaparilla, and be* fore he had taken all of one bottle, he began to break out with boils all over his back and neck. They were not very large, but they discharged freely. Slowly Ms hearing be* gan to come back and
Joseph E. Znber, Red 0»k, low*.
Si
by the time the third bottle had been taken, the
1-1ood's
Sarga-
I partita
ures
bolls had all disappeared and his skin was as elear as a baby's whereas before it was dull ud yellow and dark under the eyes. He can now bear weU and ls taking his fifth bottle." MRS. M. J. ZUBKB, Bed Oak, Iowa.
Hood's Pills
cure Constipation by restoring
the peristaltic action of the alimentary canaL
H. MEDCBAFT,
DENTIST.
Office--McKeen* Block, northwest corner Seventh street and Wabash avenue.
Railroad Time Tables.
Trains marked thus (P) have Parlor Cais Trains marked thus (S) have Mleeping Cars. Trains marked thus (B) have Buffet Car. Trains marked thus (V) have Vestibule Cars. Trains marked (D) have Dining Car. Trains marked thus (f) run Sundays only. Trains marked thus run daily. All other trains run daily, Sundays excepted.
•V.A.:ET:D_A.:DZ_A_ LI^STE.
MAIN LINE.
LKAVK FOR THE WB8T.
No. 7 Western Ex" (V«SS) 1.40 am No. 5 St. Louis Mall 10,11 am No. 1 Fast Line* (P) 2.20 No. 21
St. Louis Ex* (DVkS) .... 3.10 No. 18 Eff. Acc 4.05 no No. 11 Fast Mail 9:04 pm
ARRIVE FROM THE WEST.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express (8) ... 1.20 a No. 6 New York Express (V&8). 2.10 a No. 14 Effingham Ac 9.30 am No. 20 Atlantic Express (DPVAS) 12.42 No. 8 Fast Line*. 2.05 pm No. 2 Indianapolis Acc 5.00
LEAVE FOR THE EAST.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express (S) 1.30 am No. 6 New York Express (V&S). 2.20 am No. 4 Mall and Accommodation 7.15 am No. 20 Atlantic Express (DPV&8) 12.47 No. 8 Fast Line 2.20 No. 2 Indianapolis Acc 5.05
ARRIVE FROM THE EAST.
No. 7 Western Express (V&S)... 1.30 am No. 6 St. Louis Mail* 10.05 a No. 1 Fast Line (P) 2.05 No. 21 St Louis Ex* (DV&Sj .... 3.05 No. 3 Mail and Accommodation 6.45 No. II Fsst Mail 9.00 pm
MICHIGAN DIVISION.
LEAVE FOR THB NORTH.
No. 52 St. Joseph Mall 6.20 am No. 66 St Joseph Express 1.00 No. 54 St Joseph Express 4.00
ARRIVE FROM THE NORTH.
No. 51 South Bend Express 11.45 am No. 63 St. Joseph Mall 7.30 pm No. 55 Southern Ex* (P) .• 9:15 pm
PEORIA DIVISION.
LEAVE FOR NORTHWEST.
No. 75 Peoria Mall 7.05 am No. 77 Decatur Accommodation 3.55 ARRIVE FROM NORTHWEST. No. 78 Decatur Accommodation 11.00 am No. 76 Peoria Mail 7.00
un. Sc T. sr. NASHVILLE LINE. LEAVE FOR SOUTH. ~~R7'
No. 3 Ch & Ev Ex* (SAP) 5.25 am Nt, 1 Ev. & Ind. Mall* 3.15 No. 5Ch&N IJm* VAS 10.05 pm No. 7 ET. Accommodation .... 10.20 am
ARRIVE FROM SOUTH.
No. 6 C. & Nash Lim* (V&S) 4.45 am No. 2 T. H. & East Ex* 11.15 am No. 4 Ch Ind Ex* (S & P) 11.10 No. 80 Mixed Accommodation 4.45
ZET&IE
LEAVE FOR SOUTH.
No. 33 Mail & Ex 8.50 am No. 49 Worth'n Mixed 3.30 ARRIVE FROM SOUTH. No. 48 Mixed 10.15 am No. 32 Mall & Ex 4.20 pm
C. &c ZED- I. LEAVE FOR NORTH.
No. 6 & N Llm'XDVAS)
!.
5.00 am
No. 2 & Ch Ex 11.25 am No. 8 Local Passenger 3.20 No. 4 Ev E.\»(S) 11:20
ARRIVE FROM NORTH.
No. 3 Ch & Ev Ex*(S) 5:20 a rn No. 7 Local Passeugtr 9 30 am No. 1 Ch 4 Ev Kx 2 45 No. 5 & N Lim*(DVSS) 10.00 ID
c. o- c. &i-bia-GOING KA8T No. 10 Cincinnati & Wash Ex»8P 1.32 am No. 2 Indianapolis & Cincinnati 7.10 am No. 18 Southwestern Llrnited*SDPV. 12.58 No. 8Day Express & Mail 8.42 No. 4 arrives from Mattoon 9.30 am
GOING WEST.
No. 7St. LouisFlyerfSP 1^2ana No. 9 Day Express & Mail* 10.00 a No. 17Southwestern Llmited^SDPV. 1.43 No. 5 Mattoon Express ... 6.00_p No. 3 arrives from Indianapolis 8.15 pm
THE BE8T LINE TO CINCINNATI AND THE SOUTH. THE DIRECT LIME TO
MICHIGAN RESORTS.
QMICHIGANRESORTS.
TRAINS EVERY DAY TO *S
LOW RATE ROUND-TRIP TICKETS TO
Mackinaw, Petoskey, Omena, Bay Port, Mt. Clemens, Alma, Huronla Beach, Sauk St. Marie,
St. Clair Springs, The Mettawas.
ALSO TO
Niagara Falls, Montreal, Toronto, Thousand Islands.
For full Information osll on any 0. H. & D. Agent.
D. C. EDWARDS,
General PaeB«ng*r Ag«ot, Carew Bnlldlng* OlsdaBfttl O.
DR. R. VV. VAN VALZA.H,
DEHTIST
Office, No. 5 South Fifth Street.
JAMES A. NISBET.
UNDERTAKER,
29 NORTH FOURTH STREET, All calls will receive the most careful ai» tention. Open day and night.
JAMBS L. PKII K, JAMKS H. CAIDWKL,S Attorney at Law and Collector and Notary Public. I Real Estate Broker.
PKICE& CALDWELL,
Room 2 Pat ton's Block,
408 Obio St, Terre Haute, Ind.
DE
GEO. MARBACH,
GROUND FLOOR DENTAL PARLORS. 124 South 8ixth Street.
BI-CHLOR1DE OF (JOLD CURE For LIQUOR, OPIUM and TOBACCO Habits at 106 aouth Tenth and-a-half street*. A. H. Brown,solicitor,and Dr. J. T. LAUOBEAD,
Medical Director
