Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 27, Number 4, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 18 July 1896 — Page 7

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BEREFT.

Bleep, tweet spring, In tbe storms and gl Of wintry skies j*«t to natter thy lap of blooms.

Dark be thine eyes

Sleep entombed in tbe drifted lea. On frozen earth, Nor stir with the old sweet mystery ,%*

r,

Of life at birth.

Sleep in tbe seeds and scaly hoods V.'- •flft Of bods fast sealed Sleep for aye in tbe naked woods

Die unrepealed.

Die in the firstlings of tbe flock And shivering herds Blight, upon tree and moor and rock,

Tbe love* of birds.

with the spasming frog and fish In crystal cave not, at nature's ardent wish,

The fettered wave.

Sleep In the unborn Pa*cal moon And veil her born Freeze in the bells their holy ton*

For Easter morn.

flhroud the snn as be rises fast To zenith blind Darken his day with garment vast

Of cloud and wind.

Sleep, sweet spring, in tbe purple gloom Of the dawning year, Nor hither come with thy balm and bloom,

Thy smile and tear.

Sleep! She sleeps who with burning brow Longed sore for thee. Possess thy soul in her patience now, And, where she sleeps in the grave, sleep thou,

Eternally.

J' —L. Dougall in Academy.

THE THRESHOLD.

"And this is the very last time," mattered the man as the door opened. "The very last time," he repeated he sat waiting in the pretty, glowing drawing room.

Then she came in, and the room beoame beautiful, because prettiness was not of her.

They sat together and talked, and during a little interval tbe man's heart jogged his elbow in an irritating way and murmured, "This is the v6ry last time." "Yes!" said the man aloud, and she, smiling, asked to what bis affirmative referred.

Then they talked again on various snbju.-ts which related tc the man, for she knew all his past and something of his future. "Why are yon sad today?" she asked after awhile.

The man hesitated. "Because I don't know why I am sad at least I can't tell you." "May I tell you a little story?" asked she. "Please." "Listen, then, but remember my stories are not personal. There was once a man who never was a boy becauso he had been unable to spare the time. Being a boy or even a youth uses up a lot of time at the beginning, when time seems short, uud adds it on to the end, but circumstances and loneliness in strange places made it impossible for the mnn in my story to invest time in thin way. So he skipped boyhood and youth and went straight into manhood in a strange country." "And what effect on him did that havo?" asked he in tho drawing room, who had becomo interested after tho story's first sentence.

She who told tho story smiled and, continuing, said: "It had on him the effect of tropical sun upou vegetable life. It made him premature in all ways, but strong also and glorying in his strength. A great deal was shut oat of his range of vision, and his lifo's limits were nnrrow, but in those limits very intense. To him the world was himself—he and his work, his aims, his strength. Nothing else, yon understand. Having missed youth, enjoyment did not come into bis scheme. He did not look about him for lifo's soft lights and its music and so never saw or heard them. Ho had no time." "Ah!" "Yes, it was a pity. Well, then ones day. by chance, he met Femininity— happened upon her, munching coke and sipping tea. Femininity smiled prettily at the man and offered him cn! nnd tea, which lie took with nerveless fingers, gasping and storing the while in pleased amazement. Then Femininity's rosy, dimpled fingers went tripping daintily up and down the keyboard of a piano and she sang to him, every note in her rippling little balltd twanging a response on one of the man's heartstrings. And he asked himself Well, let me see. He asked himself"— "Why," interrupted he who listened iu the drawing room—"why he had never before known that this was tho world and how he had been led to think that his life was the real life of the world." "Yes, that was what he asked himself. And so dainty little Femininity, smilig all the while, drew aside the lao© rtains, which had hidden from his uigo of vision the Byzantine a«.oy wherein she lived, and he, looking down the alley with her, decided that it was the real world that his world so far lind been a dreary fantasy of his own creation. The man's lights were not wide or deep, bat. very intense, and of I course he laid his heart* new found, reverentially and unreservedly at Feminiuity's feet. Femininity laughingly ac-! eepted the heart, and then"— "Meeting another man at the corner of her alley," ssud the lisfcHier, "throw the heart down, still laughingly, and went back to the piano with her new friend," "Exactly. Well, now the man was in a very sorry plight, because he bad lost his own world—the self created fantasy—and being forsaken in the new world by her to whom •.*. heart had been given he could not find his way. Disillusion blinded his eyes with tears, and. groping about in the Bysantine alley, he"— "He met Frou Fron. Yoa must let me tell this piec*," said the r-tn iu the drawing room. "He met a Froo, who happened to have wandered care* lestly from ant bor Moorish all it to Femininity's domain.

He

looked l:be a

man, so Frou Frco welcomed him with

fascinating, lower Bohemian good fellow ship, and swung aside the rich drapery and heavy perfumed curtain which had hid from his view the world of brighter, flashing lights and dancing srasic in which she lived. Looking into theWorld, the man drew along breath of satisfaction, and, as Fron Fron challenged him with brimming champagne glass upraised, he said, This is undoubtedly reality—the abandon of real life in the actual world—unlike my previous fancies, which were absurd.' And when the very first grayness came and the flashing lights paled in the dawn hour, Frou Frou, being tired and sleepy, carelessly laid open the pages of her frailty's private diary—and the man read. Having read, he knew, and was numbed. So, in the ghostly morning twilight, he groped his way out into the No Man's Land which lies between the alleys of extreme and realized that he had not fought the real world after alL Still, he had lost his own, and when

Well"—

"Nok" said she who listened, "you cannot tell this part. I must, for he did not go into another alley, you know. He wandered into the cloisters of a white marble temple, because, in the brightness of the sunlight which came after dawn, he saw a pure presence—a girl—standing on the threshold. He approached the presence, so he longed for rest, though after his two phases he felt he had no right She was so pure and white the innocence of knowing nothing gleaming on Her forehead. She could not, like the others, conduct him into her world, because she had not yet crossed the threshold of the temple herself and she knew nothing of that which he had lived and seen. Still she was a girl, and his worship pleased her. Very sweetly, though all unknowingly, she helped him to take his stand beside her on the threshold she understanding npthing, and never dreaming but that he, too, had the earliest phases to pass and could enter her temple with her. But when her innocence of ignorance had spread itself round the man for awhile, the crude purity of it—the" 'The nothing knowing, nothing seeing, nothing understanding spotlessness of it all almost choked him," said the man in the drawing zoom. "And he realized that since he had not at the beginning found this world he could not enter it now, or at least not accompanied by the cold whiteness of the 'little maid who hath no breasts. So now, in real despair, he turned away from the classic temple, feeling not only that he had failed to find the real world, but was unlit to be taken into it. Then, as he walked miserably away, an angel from heaven came across his path and laid her cool hand on bis forehead, so that"— "No, dear! A woman—only a woman. But she showed him that he was already in the real world and that she was, too, but that he kept going into little phases of life, and, thinking each was life it self, was almost broken hearted when he found himself unfitted to live in a phase. He was very happy with the woman, because he loved her, and yet, thinking that he must be of some one of the phases—the little phases—hobad seen, not knowing that they were of him merely, he fancied the woman must be apart from him that"— 'This must bo the last time?" "Exactly. But, ah, the woman Understood. She know that he was really of the same life and world as she. She thought—that he loved her, and"— "She loved him?" "Yes, dear!"—A. J. Dawson in St. Louis Republic.

Sailors Victimised at Buenos Ayres. It seems that at many ports abroad great injury is suffered by British ship ping through the crows of vessels being enticed away from their ships, necessitating the obtaining of other and in many cases incompetent hands. In Buenos Ayres this practice is very prevalent, so much so that the attention of the British government has been drawn to it

The supplying of new crews at Bueio? Ayres is left in the hands of certain boarding house keepers, and it invariably happens that no hands can be obtained at all while the vessels are lying iu dock. If they could, the men would be shipped before tho British consul, and then matters would be put right The mode of procedure is to let the steamer leave the dock, and while in the river the sailors and firemen—the now men—are brought off in a small boat, apparently in a state of drunkenness. The master has no choice but to take the men, and the shipping agent or boarding house keeper gets a fee of about 10 shillings for each man.

In the case of one steamer cited it is alleged that the men of the original crew were bribed to leave the ship, and when she was going out the captain found that all the new hands had been drugged before they came on board and were unable to do any work. For 14 hours the steamer had to come to an anchor, and when the men regained their senses they went to the capr nn and told him their signatures to tiwir advance notes had been obtained from them fraudulently. The captain, being anxious to help the men, applied to the British consul, who for some reason was unable to take up the case. The system carried on is one not only of expense to the shipowner, but aho of danger to (he ship.—London Chronicle.

Nat Hard to too.

Triwet—1 made young Goslin look silly last night Dicer—Ob, well, nature had saved you meet of the trouble.—Detroit Free Press.

YWr MtatfioB,

"Does Miss Gushinton's father look with favor on your suit?" "I think

mx

He always lets me pay

for the drinks. "—Detroit Free Fms.

4

Ttaa Katsra of Um

JouM—I ar that Brown has had a ebmuge for the better. Smith—Yea—changed his dodot— BrooWjm

V*. 'v '5 --CS

TIS NOT A SONNET IF IT UMP8.

You build a sonnet on about this plan: Your first line ground out, take the next one—so—

And make it rhyme with this one, just below, Then next you match tbe first line, if you can. Don't hurry the machine. The lines must scan.

With steady motion turn the crank. You know Tis not a sonnet if it limps. Go slow. How find some rhyme for "acan"—for instance. man.

An to the test six lines some latitude May be allowed. Take any word, as "grove." Sow bunt a rhyme for "latitude." Try shrewd. 1Mb tim» must end with dove or love or strove, A«a this witfe mood or prude or crude or dude,

And there's your sonnet. Throw it in the stove. ^m .. —Chicago Tribune.

SUSPENDED IN SPACE.

Sir Robert Ball Speculates Upon the Possibilities of Such Experience. Conceive that a traveler were endowed with some means of soaring aloft for miles and thousands of miles, still up and up, until at length he had attained the awful height of nearly 250,000 miles above the ground, suggests Sir Robert Ball in his 'Story of the Heavens." Glancing down at the surface of that earth, which is at such a stupen dous depth beneath, he would be able to see a wonderful birdseye view.

He would lose, no doubt, the details of towns and villages. The features in such a landscape would be whole continents and whole oceans, in so far as the openings between the clouds would permit the earth's surface to be exposed.

At this stupendous elevation he could try one of the most interesting experiments that was ever in the power of a philosopher. He could test whether the earth's attraction was felt at such a height, and he could measure the amount of that attraction. Take for the experiment a cork, a marble, or any other object, large or small. Hold it between the fingers and let go. Every one knows what would happen in such a case down here, but it required Sir Isaac Newton to tell what would happen in such a case up there. Newton asserts that the power of the earth to attract bodies extends even to this great height, and that the marble will fall. This is the doctrine that we can now test

We are ready for the experiment The marble is released, and lo! our first exclamation is one of wonder. Instead of dropping instantly, the little object appears to remain sdspended. We are on the point of exclaiming that we must have gone beyond the earth's attraction, and that Newton is wrong, when our attention is. arrested. The marble is beginning to move, so slowly that at first we have to watch it closely. But the pace gradually improves, so that the attraction is beyond all doubt, until gradually acquiring more and more velocity the marble speeds on its long journey of 250,000 miles to the earth.

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'K: Ate Mamma's Transfer Ticket. It was on a Summit street trailer, and the young mother was absent minded ly gazing on a far off blue capped heights and carelessly toying with a pink tinted transfer check in her right hand. The baby had asked for the protty ticket, but tbe mother's thoughts were busy elsewhere. She kept on looking out over the landsoape, evidently in a brown study. "Fares, please!" It was the conductor. The mother came back to the present tense with a jump. (t "I paid my fare once." i" "No mam, you didn't, beggin your pardon." "Yes I did. I had a trans"—

Just then baby began to gag and grow black in the face. And not only black, but all about her little mouth were remarkable variegations in shades of pink. The transfer ticket had returned to the pulp from which it was made. The mother scooped out what was left of it from baby's mouth, thumped the little one'B back to aid it in recovering its breath and then turned a very red face toward the conductor in mute inquiry as to what was to be done.\»

The conductor said never a fford. He merely held out his hand. "Weil, won pay again. I—I—I'll walk first"

The conductor gave the gnpman one bell. All the passengers looked their sympathy as the mother and the variegated little one left the car.—Kansas City World. y, *x

TEBBE HAUTE SATTTBDAT EVENING MAIL, JTTLT 18, 1896.

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Tan Spots Over Dog*' Kyes. These spots are believed to afford an example of protective markings perpetuated by natural selection. They seem to have been acquired at a comparatively recent period, when the dog had become semidomesticated. The original dog was red and did not possess these spots. When he slept, he hid himself from possible enemies, but this the semidomesticated dog could not always da Now, when the color changed by domestication and selected breeding, and dogs became pied and black, those which had spots over their eyes would look when asleep as though their eyes were open and Mill on watch. Therefore their enemies would be deceived, and they would be less liable to be killed during sleep than degs which had no such SJ* ts. Thus they survived and transmitted their peculiarity to their offspring. These spots are supposed to be the mo9f, if not the only, permanent markings on dogs.—San Francisco Chronicle.

'..2 Drawing Rom Weaving. A new occupation and fashion among English women is thatof drawing room •weaving upon light house looms. Upon those looms band woven table linen and towels, with and without borders, are made. Though the world is not suffering for those band woven products, they are thought by some to have an artistic value that machine woven fabrics have not, and as we copy English fashions sooner or later, it is predicted that ere long American women, tw\ will perhaps return to a bygone occupation. Item whieh their grandmothers were very thankful to be free.

occur, and many questions are apt to be raised as to the possibility of such phenomena being due to any known degree of concussion or injury of the nervous centers, and not infrequently much doubt is thrown on the bona fides of plaintiffs in such cases. While, however, quite admitting the frequency with which fraud is at the bottom of claims against railway companies, it does not do to forget that something else besides mere physical injury may result from a railway accident If tenor, a sudden and intense horror, or, as some would say, a "mere nervous shock," without any physical injury at all, will produce long lasting changes in the mental and nervous mechanism, it would be strange indeed if such changes were not found in patients who, whatever the nature or extent of their other injuries, have gone through the terrible shock of a serious railway accident From the moment of the first dancing on the rails, through the terrible time when passengers and portmanteaus are being tossed helplessly about, up to the moment when, with a final crunch, all becomes still, may not be along time but, short as it is, it is a spell of the in tensest agony and terror which can be conceived, and it would indeed be passing strange if it did not write deeply on many nervous systems its note of horror.—London HospitaL

Thrifty France. .*

"In Franoe," said Max Schottek, who represents a great American dry goods firm in Paris, 'nearly every man saves something. It doesn't matter how small his income may be, he manages to put by a portion of his earnings. In this respect the thrift of the people stands out in marked contrast to the prodigal ways of the citizens of the United States. Here it seems essential to spend a big sum of money to get much pleasure in tact, the amount of pleasure seems measured by the money expended. But I think it undoubtedly true that the French people get more enjoyment out of life than the Americans. 'I see much to admire in this nation —its wonderful progress, its inventive genius, its unrivaled resources. There is nothing in Europe like your luxurious railways or your fine hotels. But with all that I had rather live in France. Our nation has a bad name, I find, in this country, but the reputation isn't deserved. There is as muoh real religion and pure home life in Franoe as exists in any land. We go to church early Sunday morning and in the afternoon to the picture galleries or for a jaunt into the woods. I think you would be better off over here if you enjoyed Sunday more after the liberal fashion that pre vails across the ocean. "-—Washington

England Wrong, America Bight.

"What is the proper spelling?" asks a correspondent "Should it be 'tire,' or 'tyre?' I answer with fear and trembling, for I know by experience what heated passions are sometimes aroused by questions of this gravity. I find, however, that Dr. Johnson is on thesideof "tire," though he notioes the spelling "tyre," while Webster gives "tire" and ignores "tyre" altogether.

The interchange of "i" and "y" in words of this shape seems to be purely a matter of convention or oaprioe, and one can only be guided by the ruling of the recognized authorities. Webster and Johnson are good enough for me, and I would suggest to the various pneumatic "tyre" companies now advertising themselves that they should remodel their spelling. Somo time back I had a passage at arms with a gentleman over the same question in the spoiling of the word "tiro," and the question was deoided, to my mind, by the authority of Professor Skeat, who pronounces "tyro" a "gross misspelling." So far as I can see, very much the same might be said of tyre.''—London Truth.

D«r Slippers.

"Just slip on your blue worsted slippers, darling, over your white satin ones to wear to the carriage, and leave them in the vestry room when you get to the church."

So said the bride's mother, a prudent woman, who did not wish to see a mud stained shoe protruding beneath the bridal gown as her "darling" came down the aisle from the altar. And the bride followed her advice, at least the first of it But in the excitement of the moment she forgot to remove them in the vestry room, and the congregation was treated to the unusual sight of a satin bedecked wife, shambling along in bedroom slippers.—New York Journal*

Stoned the Raisins*

"There, mamma," said the little girl, exhibiting a cupful of raisin stones, "haven't I been a good girl to stone all them raisins without stopping till I had got them all done?"

Mamma—You are mamma's own little girl. You can throw the stones in the ash barrel But by the way, what did you do with the raisins?

Own Little Girl—Oh, I ate them!— Boston Transcript.

Aaeint Kcnptlaa Cloth.

The cloth of the old Egyptians was ao good that, though it has been used for thousands of years as wrappings of the mummies, the Arabs of today can wear it It is all of linen, the ancient Egyptians considering wool unclean.

The severe itching and smarting produced by being poisoned with ivy oak cr dogwood may be relieved fay washing L.^ parts affected with a solution of saicratos water—S teaspoonfuls to a pint cf water—and then applying cloths wet with extract of witch huel

Ail caveats are drawn up in substantially the same form as applications for Inventions, must contain descriptions and models, and each must be limited to a single discovery

cor

Kervous {fhoek. Tqring Ordeals For Presidents.

Now, we often hear cf obscure nerv- In writing of the pardoning powons derangements with no clear cause ©r invested in the president, Hon. following railway accidents, and of Benjamin Harrison says in The Ladies' strange nervous symptoms complicating Home Journal: "The papers in these such obvious physical injuries as may murder cases are usually voluminous—

imwitiea.

I

a full record or an abstract of the evidence making part If the trial seems to have been fairly conducted and no new exculpatory evidence is produced, and the sentence does not seem to have been unduly severe, the president refuses to interfere. He cannot weigh the evidence as well as the judge and jury. They saw and heard the witnesses, and he has only a writing before him. It happens sometimes that the wife or mother of the condemned man comes in person to plead for mercy, and I know of no more trying ordeal than to hear their tearful and sobbing utteranoes and to feel that a public di/y requires that they be denied their prayer."

Wealthy and Generous.

Mrs. Zabriskie is aNew York woman who gives lavishly of her wealth. She is a parishoner of "the little church around the corner," and this edifice bears testimony of her generosity. The marble reredos, as well as the parish house, are her gifts, the two aggregating a cost of $78,000. She has recently built a memorial church to her mother at Newport the Zabriski Memorial ohurch—at an expenditure of $100,000. 'Women In Church.

When Phillips Brooks was alive and a force in the Episcopal diocesan conventions, woman suffrage for parish meetings was also a live issue. The Maine diocese has just decided that women shall vote, and who's a better right, we should like to know, than the sex which outnumbers the other in church about six to ono?—Boston Transoript

Anna L. Hawkins. I*

Miss Anna L. Hawkins of Baltimore, who was recently graduated from the Maryland Institute School of Design, has chosen architecture as her profession, and her plans for the high school building at Havre de Grace, Md., have just been aocepted. For the last year she has been a pupil of the School^ of Applied Design in New York city. Y\

The muscles of the mocking bird's larynx are larger in proportion to the size of the bird than those of any other creature.

NEVER TOO LATE TO MEND

—the bad habit1* and early vices of young ?\ft men and their dis- K/ft, astrous conseqttences. Young men and old men, those who suffer from nervous debility and exhaustion, the wasting away of the vital strength and power from hidden drains or intemperate habits can readily find relief for body and mind by writing the World's Dispensary Medical Association, of Bufialo, N. Y. They employ a ftill starf of physicians and Specialists, who treat at a distance by correspondence or at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute of Buffalo, all this class of diseases. Those who suffer from low spirits, irritable temper, a "broken-down" nervous system. and such distressing symptoms as backache, dizziness, shooting pains in head or chest and indigestion, sexual excesses or abuses, all the result of exhausting diseases or drains upon the system,—will find a permanent cure after taking the special prescriptions sent them from the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute. This association of medicsQ men have prepared a book written in plain but chaste language, treatit

ing of the nature, symptoms and curability, by home treatment, of World'

—if you suffer from Sick or Bilious Headache, Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, or any derangement of the stomach, liver and bowels—is Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. Mildly and gently, but thoroughly and effectively, they cleanse, renovate and regulate the entire system.

One little "Pellet" for a gentle laxative-** three for a cathartic. They're purely vegetable and perfectly harmless: these tiny, sugar-coatea granules of Dr. Pierce.r

CONSUMPTION

To ttte Editob-—Pleaseinform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy free to any of your readers who have consumption if they will send me their express and post office address Respectfully, T. A. Slocum, M. C.,

V«. 18 Ftarl Strati, Hnr YtrL

Established !88! Incorporated 1886.

Clift & Williams Co.,

Successors to Clift. Williams ft Co.,

3

TP 1

Trains marked thus run daily. Trains marked thus run Sundays only. All other trains run daily. Sundays excepted.

VANDALIA LINE.

MAIN T.I NR.

Arrive from the East.

7 West. Ex*. 1.30 a 15 Mail Ac* 9.5! a ru 5 St. L. Lim* 9.55 a iu 21 St. L. Ex*.. 2.50pm 3 Mall & Ac. 6.30 11 Fast Mail*. 9.00 pin

Arrive from the West.

6 N. Y. Ex*.. 3.20 am 14 Eff. Ac 9.30 a ni 80 Atl'c Ex*.,12.32 8 Fast Line*. 2.05

S N. Y. Lim*. 5.05

j*

such diseases. The

's Dispensary Medical Association, Proprietors of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., will, on receipt of this notice, with to cents (in stamps for postage) mail, sealed in plain envelope, a copy of this useful book. It should be read by every young man, parent and guardian in the land.

The Key to the Situation

...

MAsrtrr&CTCBERS or

P,

Ml.

AKD DEALERS IU

Lumber, Lath, Shingles, (*bi&. Paints. Oils

AND BUILDERS' HARDWARE, Mulberry St., Cor. Ninth. J. H- Wiujaks.President.

J. M. Curt. Sec snd Tress.

SAIESMEN WANTED

PttsNlng, trustworthy men to represent as la thesaleof our Choice Nurwry Stock. Specialties control ted by as. Highest Salary or Commiifbw paid weekly, steady etnekiyroent tbe year rommL Outfit tree cxcltti lire territory: experience not necessary Ms pay sand workers: special inducement* to beginners. Write at once for particulars to ALLEN NURSERY CO.

ROCHESTER, 8. T.

Leave for the W«at.

7 West. Ex*. 1.40 am 5 St. L. Um*. 19.05 am 21 St.. L. Kx*.. .1.1X1 13 Eff. Ac 4.iV) 11 Fast Mall*. iMHpm

Leave for the East.

IS lud Lim'd*11.10 a 6 N. Y. Ex*.. 8.25a 4 Mail & Ac. T.itO am 30 Atl'c Ex*. .l&ttT 8 Fast Line* 2.10 2 N. Y. Lim* 5.10

MICHIGAN DIVISION.

Leave for the North.

Ar. from the North 13T. H. Ex...11.10am SI South'n Ex 3.00 11 T. 13. Mall. 7.00pm

6 St Joe Mail .6.30 am 80 St Joe Spec.1.00 pm 8 S. Bend Ex.4.30

PEORIA DIVISION.

Leave for Northwest.

7 N-W Ex 6.20 am 21 Peoria Ex 3.15

33 Mull & Ex..9.00 am 49 Worth. Mix.3.30

1'2

Ar. from Northwest.

30 At ltc Ex .. 12.15 East'ii Ex. 9.00 pm

EVANSVILLE & TERRE HAUTE. NA9HVILL.R IJ.VK. •Leave for the South. 5 & N Lira*.11.40 3 & Ev Ex*. 5.38 am 7 Ev Ac 10.10 a 1 Ev & I Mail* 3.15

Arrive from South.

6 & N Lim* 4.45 am STHEAs' .11.00am 80 Mixed Ac.. 4.45 pa 4C & IndE.Vll.lOpn

EVANSVILLE & INDIANAPOLIS.

Leave for South.

Arrive from South.

48 TII Mixed. 10.15 am 32 Mall & Ex. U.15 pm

CHICAGO & EASTERN ILLINOIS. Leave for North. 6 & N Lim* 4.50 a ni 2 TII & Ex.11.20 a 8 Local Pass 3.10 4 E & Ex*. 11.35

Arrive from North.

3C& E Ex*...5.30 am 9 Local Pass .9.25 am 1 & Ev Ex.. .3.10 5 & N Lim*. 11.35

C. C. C.*& I.—BIG FOUR. Going East. 36 N Y&ClnEx*1.55 am 2 Ind&CiiiRx 7.00 am 4 TP A Flyor*10.00 am 8 Day Ex*... 3.05 18 Knlckb'r*. 4.31 22 lndAcc?...10.00 am

Going West.

35St Ex*... 1.33am 9 Ex & Mat 1*10.00 am 11 S-W Lim*.. 1.37 pm 5 Matt'n Ac. 5.00 23 Matt'n Act 7.45

TO THE,

SOUTH

,.r ONS WAV TIOKSTS ANS SObtt

At Cents a Mile

from tmb month ovsn tms

LOUISVII.I.B MASHViLi.ll It. M.

To Individuals on the First Tuetds^n^

Tuesday of each month, to nearly all gjlnta in the South and on special antes zcursion Tickets are sold at a little more than One Pare for the round trip.

For full information write to

I. K. RIDflELY, N. W. Pan. Agent, CftiftgD, IU C. P. ATMORE, Qen'l Pass. Aft, Loalsyllie, Ky.

SENT FREE.

Write for Oounty Map of the South to either

4

or toP 1mm:

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has been tbe standard tor forty year* aod is mors popular to-day than ever before.

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it.il Dentist* 971 Main St. Terre Haute. lud.

Mr. 4 Mrs. fiesry Kstteabsch,

Funeral Directors

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asm

a I. I.KM INN. M. VETERINARIAN. Special attention given to diseases of bor«sst, cattle and dojps. Olice

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Main street.