Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 25, Number 25, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 December 1894 — Page 9
WOMAN ANI) HOME.
"A LEARNED DOCTOR OF THE LAW BUT LATELY COME FROM PADUA.*
Childhood'* Uttujruir*--Tli» Bride WiU Iett'riiiluej" 1 miu»lvr«i
l«botiust«H'HlMk
«f Tluie'*—TU« New I£ugta,&d Glrl-lkr Knbk)t Duty.
**A modern Portia," Such w«» the title applhtl by Lard Klmy, \iw chancellor o( th« Roynl university of in land, wlnui lie prescnml Mis# Hehuia Groy tog her doctor's degree, with th« exclamation, •Behold a learned doctor of the law, but lately come from PjMhta," Duly one other woman in Great Britain Is entitled to mid the magic letters LL. D. to her name, and she also is an Irish woman, born in Belfast,
A London pnper nays:
44
Dr. Gray la tt
tall, slender girl, with delicate Irish complexion, long lashed gray eyes, finely marked eyebrows mid shnpely hands very quiet and rim pi® in manner, her soft voice lightly touched with a not uuplena*
KKAXCKS HELENA GRAT.
ant accent. She has nothing of the 'bluestocking' about her and talks ranch more readily of music or tennis or golf or chiffons than of herself and her attainments."
She is the younger daughter of William Gray of Mount Charles, Belfast, who is a member of the Royal Irish academy. Miss Gray was educated at the Methodist college, although she and her parents are members of the Church of Ireland.
As a young girl she manifested great ability, and her first educational achievement was In carrying off the prizes in the junior grade intermediate examination, when she received two gold medals and an exhibition prize of £60, one of the medals being for the highest number of marks in all subjects and the other for the highest marks in drawing. A serious illness supervening, she bad to lay aside her studies for a time and on recovering entered without any special preparation for the middle grade! intermediate examination, wherein she gained a first prize. In the following year she held her place at the senior Intermediate. Having a taste for languages which she desired to cultivate, Miss Gray spent a year studying German in the quaint old town of Trier, and returning home matriculated with honors at the Royal university of Ireland and took the third prize in modern literature at the. ensuing scholarship examination, open to both men and women. In 1887 she took honors in logic, geology and German, won her B. A. degree in 1888 and in 1889 the degree of LL. B. and in 1890 that of LL. D.—Now York Churchman.
Childhood's Dangers.
Most of us have marveled at times that the steps of childhood travel along the pathway of life as safely as they do. Their own inherent and abundant heedlessness and the more culpable unconcern of busy or careless parents render their escape among the accidents of everyday experience little less than miraculous. Their trivial duties, their pastimes, their very toys may and do become the occasions of injury. In nn instance recently published some ohihlrcn were amusing themselves with a model steam engine. While thus occupied one of them was burned to death. Tho letter of a correspondent suggests another and more subtlo source of mischief. Walking in the streets, ho saw a street vender offering for sale toy bagpipes, which ho tested in turn by blowing in tho usual way with his mouth. Naturally enough the suggestion presented itself as to the possih'a consequences wero any of the child public to purchase and use, as doubtless they did, the toys inflated with such questionable breath and perhaps wot with contagious moisture from questionable lips. luch dread as this Is neither morbid visionary. Fresh air will not always suifiee to olennse a breath residue, and an Infected mouthpiece has before now been the origin of grave constitutional trouble. We might, lunvover, multiply cases of a like or of different kinds, each Illustrating the necessity of parental supervision over children, thus surrounded by little suspected pitfalls.
We do not forget that busy people can not be constantly looking after their jo venilo offspring. Nevertheless we are certain that more careful supervision is possible. Were it exercised we should less often hear of children run over, burned, drowned or otherwise lost to their homes for no otiter reason but that they wero left to their own Incapable guidance.— London I^nneet,
The Bride Wm ^Determined. A bride of three months was giving a little tea party when some trifling inadvertence on her part caused her husband to speak to her with quite unnecessary sharpness. With Gashing eyes she instantly rose from the table and said, "Mr. when you apologise to me for your rudeness, I will return to your table and cyt till then."
It was a crucial moment. Fortunately the young husband Instantly regained bis •elf control. "I'll apologize on the spot, my dear," be said laughingly, "if you'll only give me another cup of tea."
The bride sank back into her chair, with red spots on her cheeks and an embarrassed little laugh. -'You have witnessed our first quarrel," the said to the company. Please don't tell of It, for It shall never happen again." •'After all," reinarl^d the came little woman after ten years of an exceptionally happy married life, ''though it was really a shameful thing for me to do at such a time, and I never should have done It If I hadn't been a spoiled child, it did prove an effectual euro for a habit which was best nipped In the bud. Yon see, without really meaning much John's father had
spoken thftt way to John's mother ever since they wero married, and she had taoHly enemi raged hlnv in It by bearing tt without protest. I never dreamed John ecu Id sptmk so to and when he did tho whole dismal future Hushed through tuy mind, and for the iwuneut I totally forgot everything hut the determination that it should uot he allowed to begin. And it wasn't, for it never happened again, John said he didn't want to be pitied
a*a
henpecked husband,"—Phila
delphia Press. .rt Immature Itobutantes, ''There is one senseless epstoro that I should dike to see abolished," remarked
woman of the world the other day,
a
Mand
that Is the Introduction of half educated and undeveloped girls Into society at the obviously Immature age of 1H. I say half educated," she continued, "for whatever the amount of learning and accomplishments crammed into their poor little heads before that time it is impossible that the mind can receive and digest a first class education before 80 or 81, It would not be expected of the cleverest boy, nor would it be advisable, for learning, I take It, should not be bolted' any more than food, but should be absorbed slowly and Inwardly digested to really dovelop the intellect, So why should a girl whose mind is quit** as crude, If not oruder, than her brother's at that ago be supposed to be 'finished* just at the time when she might really study to advantage! Moreover, it is not fair either to nous entrees to force these bread ami butter misses into our social life ami expect that wo: should ask them to our diuners and opera boxes. "It is really dreadful to have a crowd of raw rocrults on tor the ranks of soeloty year after year, expecting recognition and consideration, and mothers mako a great mistake lu introducing their daughters at an ago when they cannot help being at a disadvantage. There is no use of forcing veal upon tho market. People do not like It and never will. Lot these children have their own dancing classes and their own reunions, but for their own sakes, if not for ours, keep them out of general society until they aro SO at least. "—New York Tribune. "Lack of Time."
Women, far more than even tho busiest men, are given to complaining of lock of time. It is true that women do have more to do than men. Their occupations aro more varied and absorbing and unending. But this Is not why they havo no time." The truth, strange as 16 may socrn, is that the busiest peoplo are tho ones who manage to crowd in the most extras, and of those who habitually proclaim a want of time an indefinite continuance of their plight may bo safely predicted.
Tho principal reasons that women leave undone the hundred and one things they wish to do are, first, a lack of system which is considered indispensable in a business career, and the fact that women are subject to incessant trivial interruptions which men would not tolerate for a moment, but from which women lack tho force and tho courage to free themselves. A man who has a casual caller during his business hours does not hesitate to look at his watch and excuse himself, but for nothing short of desperate illness or having to catch a train does a woman consider herself justified in what she and her caller would both consider rudeness. Yet the woman's time may be as valuable to her as the man's to him. She may have had her day's occupation planned, and along sequence of performance may be broken up irretrievably. And her interruptions are Innumerable, though mostly of a social nature, none the less serious on that account.
In consequence of these breaks in her day her duties overlap one another, become confused and tanglod, and much of her effort is rendered ineffectual.—Philadelphia Press.
The New England Girl.
I fancy that even beyond this, and even beyond that divine curiosity whloh is the love of learning, her most distinguishing characteristic is her positive truthfulness, says a writer in tho Boston Herald on the subject of tho New England girl. A temptation to deceit or treachery would glance off from her as an arrow from armor of plate steel. It is this uprightness, this lofty standard of rectitude which gives her an inner prldo that makes coquetry impossible to her. She will not stoop to win by small and detestablo arts. When she loves, It is as' faithfully, as tenderly, as everlastingly as any woman ever born of woman, but Bho demnnds respect before sho will accept love. If she Is often unmarried, it is not because sho has not tho opportunity of marriage, but because men who reach bet Btandard are not plentiful, for her Intellect and her tasto aro cultivated. She has a fine knowledge of art And a deep enthusiasm for music. She paints, she modols, she sings, she sews, sho cooks.
The rough oast winds and sea tonics, strengthening the throat by long selection till they havo made such throats as Nordlca's and Kellogg's, have given her a pleasant voieo, with less of tho nasal twang than belongs to any other section of the country have given her, too, by the same process a robust health that mnkes self support possible and pleasant and often preferable, and sho Is so much a mistress of the science of home that she can happily mako her own. And I speak now neither of he#generatlons that havo gone or aro going, but of that whloh has just coino forward to take hold of the life of tho world, blooming, sparkling, eager for the beautiful and the best.
Her Nobliwt Doty.
The forms of life are subject to law, and a broken law avenges itself by making an end of the law breaker. The new woman will not continue long in tho land. Like other fashions, she Is destined to excite notice, to be admired, criticised and forgotten. The liberty which she invokes will be fatal to her. If on men's election of their mates the future depends—and they are still by force of numbers able to choose—what likelihood is there that an untamed Marcel la, still less the scientific Evadne and the "savage viper" with chloroform on her toilet table, v^l attract either Hercules or Apollof
Who would bind himself to spend his days with the anarchist, the athlete, the bluestocking, the aggressively philanthropic, the political, the surgical woman? And what man would submit to an aliianoe which was terminable, not when be chose, but when his con—de was tired of him? Such are not the li ils to which he has looked up or the qualities that win affections.
The age of chivalry cannot die so long as woman keeps her peculiar grace, which Is neither rngged strength nor ?s of erudition, but a human nature pi kstlned to motherhood. She is called upon in the plain language of Mr. Carpenter
4*to
bear children, to guard them, to teach them, to torn tbem out strong and healthy dtlsena of the great world." And
she has a divine right to all that will fit her fur so noble a 4uty5-rQuarferly view, ., lints Venus Carpets,
A Kitchen Combination.
Michigan is to bo credited with a genius who has designed an ingenious combination of a kitchen tabie and flour bin. Tho table looks like an ordinary kitchen table with two flnps. Tho front clcats arc so adapted as to engage or combino with the front bar of tho tablo, tho front arms having their lower arms pivoted to the end of the bins at or near the center and their upper ends pivoted to tho tablo noar the front thereof. 13y this moans the flour bin can bo moved out and mado ready for uso if necespary or returned under the table and quite hidden from viow when not required.—Housefurnishlng Review.
One of the best sanitary reasotw, My* an authority, for using rugs instead of carpets fastened to the flwr 1* |ha dust loowsned in cleaning them is got rid of outsidu our houses Instead of In, But umnmu our «h»»ph Absolutely not ne ueen ai* oigub or on 7it should bo borne in mind that In crowd-/ your artificial heat otherwise it is ed city neighborhoods this dust on one A„ri »v,« tn ni«nn tide and the other become* a nuisance, perhaps a danger in the season of open windows, and nne longs for an invention whereby each family can consume its own dust, similar to that used for the dis-' npsal of smoke. In getting rid of tho dust of our carpets Inside an English scientific writer reminds us that the dry sweeping only stirs tip the dust to resettle again and bo held most firmly by the roughest surfaces. The wet tea leaves, damp sawdust, coaww salt or moistened fund cause the dust dislodged by tho broom to ding to their moisture, but tho matter used must not be too wot nor of a nature that will stain tho carpet, so finely groined as to sink Into tho fabric nor so eliHglnjl as to resist easy removal by tho broom.
Mr*. May Wright Sewell,
Mrs, May Wright Bewail, the social and intellectual beacon light of Indianapolis, is frequently absent from that city on lecturing tours and on convention matters, so sho maintains In the gracious hallwny^ of her hospitable residence a "visttors'^i book,1" In which guests desirous of so doing may Inscribe- their autogicaphfli to* gether with such messages pf rogret, reproaoh or other plensnnt bndtlingC as may.
Borrow the Bicycle Girl's |gglnga. Tho bloyolo woman has ono article in her outfit that overy woman who is out of doors in damp weather ought to adopt and could do so with groat benefit to herself. It is tho pair of long leather, canvas or cloth leggings sho woars. When thoro is a sale of these, bo suro to fit yourf&lr out with a puir. They will protect your ankles from rain and snow, and afr tho samo tlmo you can raise your dress as high as you llko to escape the mud and not fear every ono on tho blook is turning to gaze after you when passing by. To wmcn wlio have trouble trying. to ljlnd, comfort in boots tho leggings are real frlonds. Wear low shoes as long as possible and on cool windy days bid dcflanco to the elements with the leggings.—New York Nows.
Women In History.
Women in history, strangely enough, seem nlways to import into the chronicle a certain boat of personal feeling, unusual and undesirable in that region of calm. Whether it is that the historian is impatient at finding himself arrested by the troublesomo personalities of a woman, and that a certain resentment colors his appreciation of her, or that her appearance possesses an individuality which breaks the line, it is difficult to tell, but the commonest chronicler becomes a partisan when he treats of Mary and Elizabeth, and noman can name Sarah of Marlborough without a heat of indignation or scorn almost ridioulous as being1 so long after-date.— "Reign of Queen' Anne," by Mrs. 011phant,
Children and Money.
Tho Hangings of a Boom.
A room Is very boautiful whose wnlls are hung with whatever takes the modern place of tapestry. Or an effectfve arrangement is one of those rich and lnyvy wall papers wbloh have the exact semblance of fabric, and with fabric itself hung at the windows on curtains mounted on polos with rings. In ono of the splendid apartments of phe house furnished by the late Mrs. Hobklns-Searle on Nob hill, in San Francisco, the hangings not only for the the windows, but the entire wall, were of point lace.
In hemming linen articles that bile wishes to fold evenly to a thread it is necessary to cut the linen and hem it by a pulled thread, and this is done the more perfectly when the linen is shrunken before the thread is drawn.
To remove stains from the skin or nails use a few drops of oxalic acid in water, making the solution extremely mild. This should be rubbed under and above the nails with a tiny ash stick which comes for the purpose.
5
1
Do not indulge tho habit of giving your children money in an indiscriminate manner to spend as they like. It leads to a great many ills, not the least of which is an Impaired digestion from overeating. A child who has a penny or a nickel every time be asks for it can soon make himself ill eating the cheap candy and cakes put up to look so attractive on the outside, and then you rush off for a doctor and fill the child up with medicine as a result of your own selfishness in giving him money to get rid of his importunities. Then it is apt to mako tho child grow up with extravagant ideas, and stealing is a natural second step when parental Indulgence has worn out.—Chicago Rccord.
1
Here is a way to restore ostrich feathers which is much Basil in Paris: Throw a big handful of salt on the fire and shake the feathers in the heat of the blase, being careful not to singe them.
With all doe respect for brains, I think women cannot be too early taught to respect likewise their own tea fingers.— Dinah Mulock Cralk.
Fruit in glass should be Kept In dark. If you cannot put fruit jars in a dark closet, wrap each in apiece of brawn ptnpf
Grecian ladies counted their age bom tbetr marriage, not their birth. r.
TiCRRE HAUTK SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, DECEMBER 15,1894. 9
Hints About Prow Cleaning. Ten cents' wor|h of naphtha will, If properly applied, thoroughly renovate a wardrobe and save an economical woman a big bill at the cleaners. Thaw are few stains It will not remove, and gloves can be resuscitated to a long life of usefulness when put through the naphtha process. This harmless looking white fluid musl Absolutely not be used at night or any-
Jiannles* as water, And the way to clean
Jt
[loves Is to put on one at a time. Button on neatly, and then, with a bit of cotton batting moistened in naphtha, rub the soiled parts, Rub lightly and evenly, not so as to wet the kid through, but cover the surface well. In order that they show no dividing line between the part that is wet and that which Is dry and unnecessary to eleau, the naphtha must be rubbed down with long, light strokes, Then, when It has all dried, no stalnllke mark Will show, Only clean a small part of tho glove at a time, It dries quickly and must not be put off the hand until tho kid seems quito stiff end clean. Wool, silk and cotton fabrics ell clean perfectly under naphtha. That does not toko out color. The parts to bo cleaned ought to be stretched flat end tight over apiece of fwhitc flannel. If tho liquid Is applied evenly, It will not havo any mark to show where
It was rublKul In, and tho quality of the material la not In the least Injured or elterad, ••Nothing Vemtnr*, Nothing Have."
Rev. John Jlpid, Jr of Oreat Falls, on,, rooommended Ely's Cream Balm {ip
proaoh or oiner picasant- uaouiagv la a positive cure for catarrh if used be evoked by the| oi rep instances, of finding f4
tho mistress of the house away from home.
tor offer interesting reading. On one oo caslon, it is quoted, James Lano Allen wrote, "Indianapolis without Mrs. Bewail is liken charming woman who has lost a front tooth," and to this gallant sentiment Edmund Russell added: "That the tooth could go away from homo proves that It was false."
me, loan emphasize his statement,
dlreoledi.._Hev.
Francis W.Poole,
Pp(W
No doubt the pages of this unique regis- *»»tor Central Pres. Church, Helena,
nhnroh Helena
Pastor Central Mon. „?v* It Is the medicine aftove all others for catarrh, and Is worth its weight in gold. I can use Ely's Cream Balm with safety and It does all that Is claimed for It—B. W. Sperry, Hartford, Conn,
Beach Nut Hains and Beach Nut Breakfast Bacon, the finest in the city, at Hickey & Bresett's.
Ayer's
PRIZE MEDAL .WORLDS
CHERRY
Pectoral
For Colds and Coughs
RECEIVED
MEDAL and DIPLOMA
AT THE
World's
PRIZE MEDAL .WORLD'S
FAIR.
sm
Only a Scar Remains
Scrofula Cured —Blood Purified b) Hood's Saraaparllla. -C Hood ft Go., Lowell, M&is.t
It with pleasure that I send a testimonial Mocernlng what Hood's Carsap&rllla has dons tor my daughter. It is a wonderful medloim •ad I eanaot recommend It too highly. Barafc vfeo Is fourteen years old, hu keen
Afflicted With Scrofula
rrer st&oe she was one year aid. For five yean (be has had a running sore oo one side of hei tacc. Wo tried every remedy recommended, bu] aothlng did her any good until we commenced ealng Hood'sSarsanarilla. My married daughter advised me to use Hood's Sarsapariila hecauss
Hood's^Cures
Nt had oared her of dyspepsia. She had best troubled with that complaint since childhood,! lutd nine* her cure she has never been without a! bottle of Hood's 8ars&p&rlll& la the house. We' •ommenced giving It to Sarah about one year •go, and tt has conquered the running sore,
Only
a
Scar Remaining
a trmee of the dreadfal disease. Previous Is' taking the medicine her eyesight was affected but now she can see perfectly. Ia connection with Hood's Sarsapariila we nave used Hood's vegetable Pills, and find them the best"
•IAJMAGEIM.v,
Xenla, Illinois.
Hood's Pills euro nausea, slek headachy tsdigesUoa, bllktumssa Sold by all druggists.
ORATEKUL—COMFORTING.
EPPS'S COCOA
BREAKFAST— SVPPKR.
"By a tlr rough knowledge of the na»urnl laws which govern the operation# of dipt* tlon and nutrition, and by a careful appllcn lion of the fine properties of well selected Cocoa, Mr. Rpps provided for our br» »k fant and supper a delicately flavored bev«r»ir which may save us many heavy doct/ir* bill*. It is by the Judicious use of *uc,h art! cles of diet that a constitution may be grad ually built up until strong enough t«« re*ir every tendency to disease. Hundreds subtle maladies are Boating around ns re*'** to attack wherever there is a weak point,
COlilGE ENTRANCE
v.
may esope many a fatal shaft by ?*•[. I tt# ourselvea well fortified with pure Mood a properly nourished frame."—Civil Gazette.
Jdarie simply with boiling water or millf. Hold only in half pound tins, by (In belled thus: JAM KM EPP8 A CO., Ltd.. Homwpaflife CbrmUlo, London, Englftod.
J.
A LADY'S TOILET
Is not complete without an ideal
pOMPLEXIOII
Insist upon having the* genuine.
IT IS FOR SALE EVERYWHERE.
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WEBSTER'S INTERNATIONAL
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Coughs and Colds,1
Bore Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Lungs, General Debility and all forms of Emaciation aro
speedily
DICTIONARY
A Grand Educator.
Successor qf the Unabridged."
Standard of the TJ. 8. (Jov't Printing Office, the U.S. Supremo Court and of nearly all the School books.
Warmly commended by every State Superintendent of Schools, and other Educators almost without number.
A College President writesr "Tor ease with which tho eyo finds tho word sought, for accuracy of dcfinl"tion, for effective methods In lndl"catlnff pronunciation, for terso yet comprehensive statements of facto, "and for practical use as a working "dictionary,' "Webster's International' excels any other single volume." The One Great Standard Authority,
So writes Hon. D. Ttreww, Justice U. 8. supreme Court. G. A C. MERRIAM CO., Publishers,
Springfield, Mans., U.S.A. B3Tnd to fho publishers for fi*e pftmphM. »j- Do not Iwy reprint* of ancient edition*.
5 DOLLARS PER DM
20
Easily Riadie,
We want miiny men, women, bovs, aw* work for ns a fcwJiourj dally, right fn f.wi their own homes. The bu«ln-«s i» i*y. j-lfic •trfstly honiwabl*, nnd Wttcrslirn offered agents. You have a dear 1t«lil eompetitloa. Experience *p*c'0' «.'• nwswy. No capital regained. V.'f with everything that ron need, treat w"h od
Help
Afionrr- yuit psacric/u PLATIIKOyWIk,
(toner. femrtrj, »k»-, .. *3 ami .*« w* u»u MM itfti ntlT. ktaurf: w|inan U»U .i i.». gnat hht m)s-t
W. P. HABRtSON ft COvCierfc Not 16, Cednatan, ON*.
von so earn ten tifn»*
Women do as well *4 men, and 1*7*
cured by
Scott's Emulsion
Consumptives always find great relief by taking it, and consumption is often cured. No other nourishment restores strength so quickly and effectively.
Weak Babies and Thin Children
are made strong and robust by Scott's Emulsion when other farms of food seem to do them no good whatever. The only genuine Scott's Emulsion is put up in salmontofored wrapper. Kefuse cheap substitutes!
SfnJJ or pamphlet on Scoffs Emulsion. FREE.
Soott it, Bowne, N. Y. All Druggists. SO cents and $f.
COTOTERRE
Address W. C. ISBELL, President, TERRE HAUTE, IND.
POSITIVE
POWDER, |l
Combines every element of beauty and purity. It is beautifying, soothing, healing, healthful, and harmless, and when rightly used is invisible. A most delicate and desirable protection to the fac? in this climate.
r&tr
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$r'
make gml par. Anr on*, anywhere. •#n d« work. All succeed f«?T mtr end rife ole direction*- Barest will Fm a great deal of monev. Fvf rrfhir.p 1# ne« ft ,d fn gr*at Write for oar r«w)
h?*:
Hrcfiar, and r*- *!l Informafinn. No ham. done If you conclude not to go on with tl business.
GEORGE STINSON&CO.,
Box 488,
PORTLAND, MAINE.
PEOPLE
HAUTE,
Where a thorough business education is given all students. Book-keeping, Shorthand, Telegraphv and Typewriting thoroughly taught by experts. The TERRE HAUTE COW* MERCIAL COLLEGE is one of the oldest ana largest iu tha West. National in its character. Students enter at any time. Both sexes. Terms low. Fine illustrated catalogue, free.
WHEN YOU ORDER YOUR
TABLE BEER
...
-$•
Get the very best, and that is the product of the
TERRE HAUTE BREWING CO. 'I
&TARTO
SFOERJ)
Price 60 eta
Railroad Time Tables,
Trains marked thus (P) have Parlor Oars Trains marked thus (SV have Hleeping C~ Trains marked thus (B) have Buffet Tralnsmarked thus (V) have Vesttbulet Trains marked (D) have Dining Car. marked thus (t) run Sundays only. marked thus run daily. All otht, run dally, Sunday excepted.
•VAIsriDA-X.IA- X,X±. MAIN LINE.
LEAVE FOB THE WB8T.
No. 7 Western Ex»(V&8) 1.40 a m* No. 5 St. Louis Mall 10.13 a &o. 1 Fast Line*(P). £20 No. 21 St. Louis Ex* (DVAS) .... 2.40 No. 18Eff. Ace 4.05 pm
ARRIVE FROM THE WEST.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express »(S) 1.20 am No. 6 New York Express (V&S). 2.10 a No. 14 Effingham Ac 9.8" a No, 20 Atlantic Express (DPV&S) 1.17 No. 8 Fast Line 2.05 pm No. 2 Indiunapolis Aec 6.00 pm
LKAYK FOB THE EAST.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express (S) ... 1.30 a No. 6 New York Express (V&S). 2.20 a No. 4 Mall and Accommodation 7.15 a No. 20 Atlantic Express (DPVAS) 1.22 No. 8 Fast Line 2.20 pm No. 2 Indianapolis Acc 5.05
ARRIVE FROM THE EAST.
No. 7 Western Express (VAS). 1.30 a No. 5 St. Louie Mall* 10.07 a No. 1 Fast Line*(P) 2.05 pm No. 21 St. Louis Ex* (DV&S) .... 2.35 No. 8 Mail and Accommodation 8.45
MICHIGAN DIVISION.
LEAVE FOB THE NORTH.
No. 52 8t. Joseph Mall 6.20 am No. 54 South Bend Express 4.00 pin ARRIVE FROM THE NORTH. No. 61 Terre Haute Express 11.45 a No. 63 Terre Haute Mall 7.03
PEORIA DIVISION.
LEAVE FOR NORTHWEST.
No. 75 Peoria Mail 7.06 am No. 77 Decatur Accommodation 3.55 ARRIVE FROM NORTHWJC8T. No. 78 Decatur Accommodation .11.00 am No. 76 Peoria Mail 7.00 pm
O- &c US- X.
X.1CAVK FOB NORTH.
No. 0 & N Lini*(DVAS) 6.00 a ui No. 2 H'& Ch Ex 11.25 am So. 8 Local Passenger 3.20 No. 4 Ev A Ex»(H) 11—20
ARRIVE FROM NORTH.
No. 3 Ch A Ev Ex*(8) 5 20 am No. 7 Local Passenger wtfOara No. 1 Ch 4 Ev Ex ... 3 00 pm No. 5 AN Llm*(DVAS) 10.12
33. &C T. TH. NABHVILLE LINE.
LEAVE FOR SOUTH.
No. 3Ch A Kvrcx»(HdfcP)
!i
6.25 a
No. 1 Ev. A lud Mall* 8.15 Nf, 5 Ch AN Llm* (VA8) 3,00 No. 7 Ev Accommodation 10.12 a ra
ARRIVE FROM SOUTH.
No. 6 Ch A N/i*h Lira* (VAS) 4.45 am No. 2TH4 EaRt Kx* 11.15 ant No. 4 Ch A Ind K*» (HAP) 10.1(1 No. 80 Mixed Accommodation 4.45 pm
S3. &c X.
LEAVE FOB SOUTH.
No, 33 Mall A Kx 8.Wam N 49 Worth'n Mixed 8.30 ARRIVK FROM SOUTH, No. 48TH Mixed 10.15 am No. 32 Mall A Ex. 4.20 pm
c. o. c.
OOI SO EAST
No. 14 New York, Boston A Cin Ex* 1,40 a No. 2 Indianapolis A Cleve Ex. 7.10am No. is South western LlmitedcSDPV.12.5S No. Day Express A Mall 3.1S No. lo Knickerbocker special* 4.l No. 4 arrives from Mat toon 9.4 a Sio. 11 Mail A Express' 2.00 a ru
OOIWOWEST.
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JpELSENTHAL, A. B. Justice of the Peace and Attorney at Law. 28 south 3rd street. Terre Haute, Ind.,
