Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 25, Number 20, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 10 November 1894 — Page 2
*52
BAB'S LETTER...
SHE IS OPPOSEO TO THE FEMALE BICYCLE RID R.
Fat, I'nrpl? Hud Thin Blcjcle Gays— ScrHwnj Female With Low-C»t Hod ices —"The KckI-Faced Cow Typt"-0re»t-
Or^nd- Mother* Gowned up to Date. (Copyright, ISM.)
It is said just now that all the women are try lug to learn bow to walk, and that this is being done after tbat pretty French fashion which demands that a bright scarlet ribbon be stretched straight across the ttotr, and that it is walked. And by "walked" is meant tbat the toes or heela are never allowed to touch the carpet on either side of it. To me it seems at* if this would give rather a mincing step, but the teacher* of walking inatat that it will make women hold in the abdomen, stretch their shoulders, take good long breaths, and, in addition, walk daintily. Personally. I rather doubt all this being achieved, still, the new method is more or less interesting. Some women walk as if they were afraid to.d anything more than tip on their toes: others come -down on thtir heels as if they thought they would add to their height by doing this, and some others put the whole foot down a if they were treading out a oorntield. There is an inclination on the part of tall women to take funny little steps that make them look as if tbey were on stilts, while a good many short ones seem to knock their feet against the groun^as if they were clicking out a trot.
WOMBS AS MEN IMITATORS.
With the tailor made girl an easy walk came in, a walk that did have a suggestion of a stride, but stilf, as it was swinging, was perfectly feminine and easy. was much prettier than the mincing steps attained by walking the rihbon. By-the bye, it does sseai that while women are talking so much .about their rights, as if they had left very fe'w to men. They have taken his loose, heavy stitched gloves with the big bnuous, th*»y have taken his shirt front, bin tie, his scarf pin, his watch chain, his cigarettes, his coat pockets, and if some of the bicycle riders continue to divide their skirts, tbey will have taken
Ijh trousets. I have tried my very best tn be convinced that a woman looks well on a bicycle. She does not. The attitude is an ungraceful, strained one, and if the rider happens to be a fat •woman her face gets fiercely red, and she does look an object! No matter bow much care may have been given to the get-up, they look pretty much alike, and most of the riders have an untidy look tumbled hair, negligee cap, and well, the general loose get up being far from natty looking. Riding the iron and steel horse may be popular, but certainly it is not prettjf. Of course, some of the fashionaby women have learned to ride tbevyAre continually seeking for some distraction. But -y6a T5&11 tte yery-.that they will ride in private schools, or on their own private grounds, and not through the streets of New York, or in the publio parks They are too wise to make guys of themselves for the benefit o'. the general public. 'Occasionally tbey might do it among their own crowd, but be very, siyo that they are not goit'g to let the hoi polloi see them make fools of themselves.
ABOUT FOOMSlt OI.D I.A'DIKS. I don't, think that Greek word is spelt right, but then I am not very well up In Greek, because I have always been told they weren't quite proper. One thing I should like to know, and that is, what did the Greeks do with their old ladies? When women rescbed, well, say thirty years, did some gentle Greeks chloro' form them? Because, in all the pictures that I have ever seen the Grecian lady is Kitting on a cold, marble bench, in a very light and airy tollot, either listening to a new poem or enjoying the
ESnHL Sarah I. Griffitv.
Only a Scar Remains Scrofula Cured—Blood Purlflod fc| Hood's Sarsaparili*. •ft Mmod a Co., LomD, Mam.:
It la with pleasure that I ttod a tocttnettM mBiumtnf tftat Hood's SarsapariQa baa doai flw my daughter. It mdarfal atdhM ud Icannot r«coaan, uo highly, taralt
Is tovrteea year* old, has *•«& Afflicted With Scrofula «nr ateM ate «m fMr aid.
Hood's^C-fl"!
1tad mr*d bar of *r«p«prta. Sba had feM* ttdvttbilatc: !oe« b«r cure she .*•, ?r wti fa »of H» 8ar*»p#rlHa hs tfc* in****. wmoed n* if to Sarah abmit on* yaat agt, aad It ha* U»« rum-tag sort,
Only a fear Remaining
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bath. They never seemed to change their garnaenta for these two oooaalona, but it la fair to suppose tbat when they were out listening to the work of the gentle amateur, tbat their draperies were dry. I would like to resurrect a few of the Greeks—the gentle ones who d.d the sitting aet, and get them to dispose of a few foolish old women who insist upon appearing in society when the poor old dears ought to be at home, and wearing extremely low out bodices, quite as low as those fancied by the Greeks. Some of these old ladies are so scrawny tbat one wonders their bones do not speak while some of the others are of the red-faced cow type, THAT SUGGEST THE NEED OF SUBDUING.
Some of these old ladies are not quite dainty, and it is wiahed that they might imitate the Greeks, as long as they will live and go out, in their affection for a scrubbing. Now, if one or two of them would be really Greek, and go to the bath, and first get warm, and then get cold, and then have a lot of soap scrubbed on them, and then a cold shower down their backs to give them courage, and then a cold douche aimed at their bodices—well, at least, the part under their bodioes, to develop them, although I suppose all that would be developed now would be the bodice—and then they be rubbed down with alcohol, and then have a brandy and soda, to keep them •from catching cold—I tell you, if this were done, these old guys would come out, If not younger, at least cleaner women, and with more sense. And then, possibly, there would be some hope of their dressing themselves and conducting themselves more in accordance with their years.
A SILLY GRANDMOTHER.
I am one of the advocates of women staying young as long as possible but I don't see anything funny in a greatgrandmother, gowued up to date, with a bodice cut as low as it can be and yet stay ou, smoking cigarettes and telling risque stories. There is one wouann here, a grandmother, whose face is the reddest you ever saw, and who is absolutely learning to ride the bicycle. During her first ride she was fairly purple, and I am tempted to think that she is being encouraged to take lessons by her sons-in law, in the hope tbat the iron steed wiil be too much for her. But it won't. Sbe is .what a district messenger boy would call "tuff."
It is announced positively tKat we must all take to the rouge pot. Tbat the Princess of Wales finds she needs a little color in her face, and tbat she is supplying what nature does not, so that in addition to the many colors on our bodices and hats we are to flame with red on our cheeks. I saw a young woman ou tbe street who had evidently taken tbe command to heart, for from her chin up to her eyes
SHE SIMPLY BURNED,
and a black veil, with large dots upon it, only served to accentuate the redness. Now, this is a vice that men can put down if they will. They can easily say that they won't go out with a girl who paints, and they can let every girl whom they do not invite,every girl with whom they do not dance, realize this is the re a son. The delicate color of the American woman does not compare well with rouge. It is usually beautiful, although, of course, it always* suggests ill health, but sfciil it is a shame to have that shelllike whiteness hidden from view by in artistic dau|s ot red paint. One of the best pnoofa that rouge is being exten sively used, is the fact tbat tbe profession^ face-washer is busier than sbe has been for some time. It seems a bit difficult to get the color, especially if paint is used, thoroughly washed out of the skin, and the woman who wants to look well, when rouge is out of fashion, knows that her face must be well washed or else, in a short time,
SHE WILL HE A WRECK.
It is funny how like peacocks women are. Just now they are wearing tbe most elaborately trimmed bodices imaginable. The huge sleeves are made larger with lace and spangles, while lace is abont the neck, fur below that, and then tbe belt is glittering with a number of spangles and a gorgeous buckle. The high stock is a wonder of loops and ends, and the bonnet matches the bodice. But the skirt! Well, tbe general idea seems to be tbat now is the time to wear out all the* shabby old skirta, and, consequently, below the belt, the feminine world is exactly iike tbe peacock, awkward, sprawling, shabby looking. Fancy a man dressing that way! Fancy a man with a stunning frock coat, immaculate ehlrt and scarf, waistcoat and gloves in good form, and then a shabby, old-fashioned pair of trousers 1 No man would commit such an error, but lovely woman believes that the whole world is so occupied in admiring her face that it observes nothing
el86*
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ak« has bad a running nor* on on® side of bat See. We tried awry ra ly rewmmemied, bin aothlna did her any gx intil w# coroineneea •sing Hood** Sarsaj '11*. married da t« SmaadMto qm i's I saparilla t*
BOYS AS POLITICIANS.
We are having oar nsual intellectual entertainment, known as an election. It is a blissful time when men get op and oall each other jnst what they have been thinking all along, and when we realise tbat really and truly one Is a cipher in society because the vote of a man who is honest, and who thinks, doesn't amount to a bit more than that of the man who la just oat of prison, who has nothing to think with,and who is thoroughly dishonest. It la also the time of the torchlight prooesaion. This 1 is tbe one thing that makes It Joyous.
We are fnrtnnate in living on ft.e street that permit* procer»'"t£». T«* "onsw*quince i* tbat we ir one mL iit for I one side, and one night for the other, our feelings being guided by the num. ber of tunda employ- 7, and by thI of jheir playing** p«**» trssraamgubabOP A&I. -1-^ Kvt I by Imaging oatao English and h* tKtaeaie tbe masses by doing this, for a
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crowd of amall boya collf about ami5 Or U*ira is dfty cents.
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, NOVEMBER 10,1894.
discuss tbe oountry to which it belongs. At the last procession there were *t least five hundred boys under 11 yeara, bring ap tbe rear, and they oheered with a will and walked with an energy that suggested that If the coming oltieen were nothing else, he would «t least be athletic in his tendencies. Iiater on that night theife was a fire, and I think that some five hundred small boys were at it. They helped the firemen, they got under the horses' lega, tbey interfered with the bose and ladder, they oheered whenever they thought it in good taste, and they drank coflee with the firemen when tbe hotel at the corner gave It out, with as much ardor as if they represented tbe caretakers of the town. There is something deliclously Independent about the small boy. He is always all there,
THE WIDE-AWAKE STREET BOY,
He never leaves his intelleot at home, and he works it for all It is worth, whether he is helping a President to get elected, urging on a fire, looking at the animals, or merely standing on thentreet corner and living, he is interested and eager. He wants to know and be generally does. It may take him some time to find out, but you can be prett sure tbat he will discover who has got tbe greatest number of votes, what tbe insurance Is on the building, and exactly the age of the elephant. Wherever he is, he improves his mind. I regret that I cannot say the sam6 thing for his manners. They have tbe freshness with whiclj he started. He is not a respector of persons, and he would guy the red nose of a leader in fashionable society with as much ardor as he would that of the stotat woman who keeps ^j0 ,j|gWHstand.
'Vf
HE IS ALWAYS WITH US.
He doesn't die young or live a pious life. Or grow up noble and handsome. Indeed, I don't know what does become ofhltn:r .Ho disappears, and you have lo till out the rest for yourself. Just tblnk over tbesmall boys that you haveknowu, and see how they worked out. When they were short in size, freckled in looks, fresh of speech, and eager of mind, ibey were interesting. Later do, tbey are awkward aud tiresome, selfconscious and refraining from ever asking because they know it all. Give me the small boy. He is a joy jrever, and he has no more ardent friend than
I Bab.
CAT'3 FALL.
-5--
fNneh Scientists Gravely Inquire Why Puss Always Lands on Her Feet.
The French Academy of Sciences spent almost an entire day last week profoundly disoussing the question, Why do oats fall on their feet? M. Murey read a paper and submitted 60 photographs depioting puss in various attitudes while falling about five feet. The first showed tbe cat with feet in air making a series of desperate appeals for succor then a somefsault was turned with more or less grace finally the feline reached the ground on its four paws, and then, with tail aloft, bolted safe retreat.
rpawa, intAa
There was a great deal of learned oossion as to the cause of the phenomenon. M. Marey thought the problem had been triumphantly solved by puss in til© first three feet of the descent M. Milne Edwards, M. Berfhelot and others maintained that the cat uses the hand or other object causing the fall as a leverage, for turning rouncl, but this did not agree with the early photographs, in •which there is no sign of rotation. M. Marcel Deprez suggested that intestinal movement might account for the phenomenon. M. Marey promised to continue his experiments and to prevent the possibility of leverage by tying the cat and then letting pussy drop.—-Paris Correspondent. ,,
eal
Punitive and Negative.
The Race Question is unsettled. But it is settled that Hood's SarsaparilU loud* ail remedies.
Disease marches through all lands. But good health blesses all who tak« Hood's Sarsaparilla.
Dyspepaia i» a great foe of the human race But Hood's Sarsaparilla puts it to fight
Scrofula is one of the most terrible of diseases. But Hood's Sarsaparilla expels it from the system.
The people of this day, like Job, suffer from boils. But Hood's Sarsaparilla is a sovereign remedy for them.
Catarrh is one of tbe most disagreeable disorders. But Hood's Sarsaparilla is sure to relieve and cure it.
Rheumatism racks the system like a thumbscrew But it retreats before the power of Hood's Sarsaparilla.
Loss of appetite leads to melancholia. But Hood's 8arsaparllla makes tbe plainest repast tickle the palate.
Life is short and time Is fleeting, but Hood's Sarsaparilla will bless humanity as the ages roll on.
Valttabto "Material."
"They are more than mere puppets— they are the material for the social history of a great monarch and not a little of her times also." It would be difficult for an ordinary American citizen to gnew what ia referred to in this sentence, which occurs in an editorial artide recently published* in the London Standard, the principal organ of the Conservative and Unionist parties. The "material for the social history" of Queen Victoria and her times is nothing else than a collection of wooden dolls used by her majesty when she was a child, r-New York Tribune
Honor* Far Bayard.
It is currently reported that both Cambridge and Oxford will soon confer honorary degrees upon Embassador Bayard.
"There I# Danger la Delay. Since 18611 have been a great suSferwrj «nm I Wv**Cream Balm
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CHILDREN'S COLUMN.
A Day With Baby.
The baby I'm acquainted with Knows naught of battle's hang*, Although he's of the Infantry
And often up in arms. He pnta bis grandpa's glasses on, Then imitates his frown, And reads the paper backward while
J2e holds it upside down.
Sometimes he cries, and, oh, so hard^ I think he understood The good old doctor when he said
That it would do him good. With kitty oft upon the rug He hps 11 wrestling match, And kitty, it may he, will win
By Just the merest scratch. Each day nurse wheels himto the park, So in his carriage there A little son and heir may And ittle sun and air.
Ho croons a little song that sounds ,:s Like "Gum, oh, gum with rnel" And as he is a minor he
Selects a minor key. As in his crib he dozes off," With such a funny snore, Wo wish lio'd sloop till eight, instead
Of waking up at four. —Malcolm Douglas in St. Nicholas.
Tune Party.
An amusing entertainment for a company of young people gathered in a parlor is what is called a "tune party."
Each member of the company is supplied With a slip of paper, on which ure 12 or more numbers, beginning at 1 and following in reguiar succession. Each player is also furnished with a pencil. A musical person must nest be seated at the piano and supplied with a list bearing the same numbers as those furnished to the rest of the company, with the difference that opposite each number is the name of some tune made familiar by ago or present popularity.
The person at the piano begins to play, giving enough of the first tune to insure its identification by the quick witted, and then passes with swift modulation and without a pause to Che tune whose name is plaoed opposite the second number, and so on until the list is completed.
The performer may be provided with the list long enough beforehand to allow him to plan the method of joining the tunes one to another, and so prevent hesitation at the time.
The listeners must keep their ears well sharpened and quickly write the name of each tune opposite its number as it is played. The player whose list is most nearly compieto und has the fewest mistakes gains a prize.
Simple as this may appear, it is surprising to find how the name of familiar melody eludes the grasp of recollection and cannot be caught before it has faded away into the notes of the next on the list. Most ludicrous mistakes are made, and "Auld Lang Syne" and the "Last Rose of Summer" have been assigned to wrong plaocs on the lists of old time singers in perfect good faith.
In one summer boarding house where there was no good piano this game was played with great success on rainy evening, the piano being supplanted by the sweet voice of one of tho guests, who sang snatches of tho appointed melodies and wove them into one another in such a Bkiilful way as to elicit great enthusiasm and puzzle her hearers quite as the piano would have dong.—-x^ .«'s Companion.
Orandrua's Visitors.
Grandma bad been ill for a long time and had not been able to seeanyoompany. One pleasant summer day little Mary ran up stairs to grandma's room, saying in an excited tone of voice: f-11",1 "Grandma, there is'lk" very handsome carriage at the door, and a lady and gentleman are sitting in it. They have ooine to see you, and here are their cards." "My littlo darling, I oaunot see visitors. You should have rung the bell for Jane and let her take the cards and tell the callers that I wmld not see any one. You must ring for her now and let me Bend a message to them." *'Oh, grandma, I like them ever so much I Won't you please see them?" "My dear, grandma is not strong enough to see visitors." "Oh, grandma"—and the goldsn head was laid on grandma's shoulder, and the blue eyes filled with tears—"won't you look at the cards before yon oall Jane?" "Certainly I will look at tbe cards, but I cannot seo the company." Grandma took the card and read: *'Mr. Timothy T. Pnssner and Miss Velvet Coat Pusener." "1 think I will break my rule this time," said grandma, smiling. "Ton may Invite Mr. and Miss Pnssner to ooine up •tairs."
Little Mary danced away very happy and aoon returned with the gray kittens sitting demurely in a doll's carriage.
These were grandma's visitor*.—M. A. fiafaqr in Our Little Ones.
Row to Band ft Rn. jjs§
A Boston schoolgirl was asked tbe other day to write a composition on how to bolid a fire, and this la what she wrote: "Fiwt open all the drafts. Then crumple two newspapers and lay on bottom of the grate. Th*n lay soft wood that th« ends oome 01 TH n'»r hard v- tea
and usee pat
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TNAOC MARK.
Every muscle of the lithe and compactly built workman was as taut and rigid as though constructed of iron. One of the workmen who observed his condition got out of the trench and undertook to remove the shovel held by the silent workman. The shovel, though, was clutched with an iron grip, and although he tugged hard he was unable to remove it from the clutches of the possessor. Tho man's feet were firmly planted on the ground as though nailed, and he stood there as rigid and motionless as a piece of statuary. /Physicians were summoned to the scene, and the marvelous sight was witnessed by hundreds of citizens. Several unsuccessful attempts to remove the
Bbovel
Are You Fortified?
"When you are in a low state of health, and on the verge of illness, there is no nourishment in the world like
Scott's Emulsion
Soott & Bowne, N. Y.
LIKE MARBLE, THOUGH ALIVE.:
Attacked by Catalepsy While Standing, He Remained In That Attitude.
One of the most remarkable exhibitions of the power and influence of catalepsy, a form of hysteria that contracts the muscles and divests the subject of tbe sensation of volition, occurred in this city a few days since, in which Thomas Purdy, a laborer, was the subject. In company with several other workmen Purdy was engaged in digging a trench.
He was standing at tbe top of the trench, with a long handled shovel, removing the gravel which a workman below threw to the top, when with the suddenness of an eleotrio flash the man became transfixed in position, as immovable as a piece of statuary. He was in tho act of raising the shovel when attacked. His right hand tightly clutched the shovel handle near its end and the left hand near the middle. His left leg was advanced aud slightly bent at the knee, while the blade of the shovel pointed at an inclination of about 30 degrees. His eyes were closed.
Mrs. Baird's Problems
The reputed best woman chess player, Mrs. Baird, tho wife ot a retired naval surgeon, has compost# several hundreds of problems, some of which have appeared in the London Illustrated News and othev periodicals. Her first problem, isho sayts, took her jufs a hundred hours, but now sho can often turn out one in half an hour.
A Startling Admission.
In New York City, lor five consecutive years, the proportion of Deaths from Consumption has been three in every
Twenty Persons.
'J
Epidemics of Cholera, Yellow Fever and Other diseases of similar character, so terrible in their results, occasion wide spread alarm and receive the most careful consideration for their prevention and cure, while consumption receives scarcely a thought, yet the number of their victims sinks into insignificance when compared with those of consumption. Comparatively few people know wnat to do for their loved ones when they see them gradually lose strength, lose color, manifest feeble vitality and emaciation, or develop a cough, with difficult breathing, or hemorrhage. Cod liver oil was for along time given in all such cases, but the poor success attending its use coupled with its nauseating taste has led many practitioners, aa well as the publicat large, to place their main reliance in Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It deserves early attention and will prove effectual not in every case but in a large percentage of cases, and "bnlieve that fully 98 per cent, of all cas- frmsumption can, lftaken in the arlv of tli" «ii or -ired tt»- Di-i-'-v -y." 1):. JL'i' d'.-r-not 11 ij t» 1* !. ve ntil 11 '»ave tn-
Pt* lit
on a lit*
tleooai "Lc .r lie dra'ts Or -i'so the air c&n eon to l-i n»'l fir fit-I'm :rH It \,» 5« 0 '"j: V. «ti it 1 1 a 1 a %h» cnun.'-e* from fcJtit: to a yt'j.ourtOrWiii it* *uui ta*i
to restore strength. Scott's Emulsion nourishes, strengthens, promotes the making of solid flesh, enriches the blood and tones u^wj the whole sjsfcem,
from his hands were made, when
Police Captain Alaback, assisted by several officers, succeeded in removing it from his grasp, although it seemed that they would surely break off his fingers in so doing. The man's heart beat with the ordinary pulsations, and the lungs were performing their vocation.
After the man had stood in this position for over two hours he was picked up like apiece of marble, placed in tho patrol wagon aud conveyed to a hospital. He remained in substantially tho same condition for two'wholo days, during which time his bedside was almost constantly surrounded by physicians, who were intensely interested in the case. There were indications that the man was conscious of all his surroundinga Although improved in condition, ho has not yet been able to relate bis experience. —Dayton (O.) Dispatch.
®For doughs, Golds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis,. Weak Lungs, Oocsumptioa, Scrofula, Anamia, Loss of Flesh, Thin Babies, Weak Children, and all conditions of Wasting.
Buy only the genuine! It has our trademark on salmon-colored wrapper„ Sendfor pamphlet on SeotVs Emulsion. FREE.
All Druggists. SO cents and $|.
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Railroad Time Tables.
y'.i- ... mi..—-
Trains marked thus (F) have Parlor Oais Trains marked thus (S) have sleeping 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.
VA35TDALIA HI 1ST IE.
MAIN LINE.
LEA VK FOR THE WEST.
No. 7 Western Ex^V&S) 1.40 a No. 5 St. Louis Mail 10.18 a No. 1 Fast Line* (P) 2.20 No. 21 Ht» Louis Ex* (DVA8) .... 2.40 No, 13 Eff. Acc .... 4.05 i.
ARKIVE FROM THE WEST.
No. 12 Cincinnati"terpress*1 (8) 1.20 am No. 8 New York Express
0
(V&S). 2.10 a
No. 14 Effingham Ac ».30 a a No. 20 Atlantic Express (DPVAS) 12. i2 No. 8 Fast L}ne 2.05 No. 2 Indianapolis Acc ...... auopiu
LZAVB FOB TUB KAST.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express* (S) 1.30a in No. 6 New York Express (VA8). 2.20 am No. 4 Mali and Accommodation 7,15 am No. 20 Atlantic Express (DP VA8) 12.37 No. 8 Fast Line* 2J0 pm No. 2 Indianapolis Ace 5.05
AKKIVK KROM. THB KAST.
No. 7 Western Express (V&S). 1.30 am No. 6 St. Louis Mail* 10.07 a No. 1 Fast Line (P) 2.05 No. 21 St. Louis Ex* (DV&S) .... 2.35 No. 3 Mail aud Accommodation 8.45 pm
MICHIGAN DIV1BION.
LEAVE FOR THB NORTH.
No. 32 St. Joseph Mall ........ 6.20 am No. o4 South Bend Express 4.00 ARRIVE FROM THE NORTH. No. 51 Terre Hauto Express 11.45 a in No. 53 Terre Haute Mail 7.0)
PEORIA DIVISION.
LEAVE FOR NORTHWSHT.
No. 75 Peoria Mail 7.05 a na No. 77 Decatur Accommodation 3.55 oo ARRIVE FROM NORTHWEST. No. 78 Decatur Accommodation 11.00 am No. 76 Peprla Mail 7.00 u.
IE. &c T. JHI. NASHVILLfcJ LINE.
LEAVE KOK rtOUTH
No. 3 Ch & Ev Ex* (S&Pj ...... 5.25 am N.. 1 Ev. A Ind. Mail* ai5 No. 5 Ch AN Mm* V«fcS ..... I».05pm No. 7 Er. Accommodation 10.21am
ARRIVE FROM SOUTH,
No. 6 C. & Nash LIm* (V&S) V'¥. 4.45 am No. 2 T. H. A East Ex* 11.15 am No. 4 Ch A 1 nd Ex* (SAP) 11.10 No. 80 Mixed Accommodation 4.45
3ED. 3c X.
LKAVK KOK SOUTH.
No. S3 Mail A Ex 8.50 am No. 49 Worth'n Mixed 3.30 pm ARRIVE FROM SOUTH. No. 48 Mixed 10.15 am No. 32 Mail A Ex .4.20 pm
O- &C Si. I.
LEAVE FOR NORTH.
No. SCAN Lim*(DVAH) 6.00 a No. 2 HA Ch Ex 11.25 a No. 8 Local Passenger ........ 3.20 No. 4 Ev A Ex*(S) 11:20 pm
ARRIVE FROM NORTH.
No.
3
Ch A E Ex*(S) am No. 7 Local Passenger »30am No. 1 Cb A Ev Kx 2.45 No. SCAN Llm*(DVAS) 10.00
C. O- C. & I.-BIG-4. GOING KAST No. 14 New York, Boston A Cin Ex* 1.40 a No. 2 Indianapolis A Cleve Ex. 7.10am No. 18 Southwestern Llmtted'SDPV.12,58 No. 8 Day Express A Mall «... 3.18 No. 10 Knickerbocker Special*. 4.55 No. 4 arrives from Mattoon 9.45 am No. 11 Mall A Express' 2.00 a
GOING WEST.
No. 7 St. Louis Flyer*SP 1J8 a No. 9
Day
Express A Mall* .1(100 am
No. 17 South western Llmited*SDPV. 1.43 No. 5 Mattoon ESxpress 5.20 No. 3 arrives from Indianapolis 7.30
ASSIGNEE'S SALE. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned assignee tor the benefit of the creditors of WUTiam Cliff and Charles N. CI III. partners
rivets, patterns, steam and hand power rolls, ratchets, drills, pipes, sledges, expanders, tube cntters, flange steel, 2nd hand boilers, tool chests, and sundry other articles used in the manufacture of boilers, stacks, etc.
Termsof sale: Cash, or secured notesfor 3, 6.9 and 12 months time, with interest, etc. THOMAS A. NANTZ, 18-4 Assignee.
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doing business under the style of Ulft A Co., will sell at public auction at the south door 1 of the court bouse, in Terre Haute, Vigo county, Indiana, on Wednesday, November 14th. 1894, at lOo'clock a. m., all of the personal property in the hands of the undersigned a* such assignee, and now located at tbe place of business known as 946 Mulberry streeu Terre Haute, Indiana, consisting of Iron anq steel plates, plnchets, hammers, lacks, boiler
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ENERGETIC MEN to sell our choice and complete line of Nursery stock and Seed Potatoes. Highest
salary and commission paid weekly, paying and permanent position guaranteed and •access assured to good men. Special inducement* to beginners, experience not necessary. Exclusive territory and your own choice of same given. Do not delay.
ALLEN NURSERY CO.
Growers & Propagators, ROCHESTER, N.Y
John N. & Geo. Broadliurst,
DKALKRS IN
BITUMINOUS COAL
TKACKftVILLK, IND.
Orders may ne lett at City ScaUs, on North Third street.
DR. R. W. VAN VALZAH,
IDTU^STTIST
»ce, No. 5 South Fifth Street.
a?
