Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 27, Number 5, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 25 July 1896 — Page 2
ft-
PAN.
Bush! Pan ia sleeping In forest deep on leafy bed. Oh, softly tread! Hun lullaby, O drowsy bee! In charmed silence every tree
HLBwatch is keeping.
Oh, softly tread great Pan la sleeping. Hark I Pan is waking. A shiver through the leaves is creeping
Before the breeze.
Oh, see the hamadryads peeping Behind the trees! Their trunks glow ruddy in the son. And, hark! the blackbirds one by one
The ailenoe breaking
With flatelike note, for Pan is waking. —Ethel R. Barker in Academy.
A LITTLE MISTAKE.
That doctors commit mistakes is not generally known, although cases from time to time find their way into the newspapers. Dr. Carpenter, who may be said to have introduced the scientific study of human physiology into England, burned himself to death while attempting to take a Turkish bath in his own room by enveloping himself in a blanket and sitting over a spirit lamp. However, when a man poisons himself it is his own peculiar business which is involved, but when he takes to poisoning others, not with any malicious intent, but simply in error, a natural apprehension may well pervade the public mind. Protection In the matter is extremely simple, as the following narrative will show
About 8 o'clock on a June evening a victoria drawn by a pair of high stepping bay horses drove up to a celebrated chemist's shop in Bond street, and an elegantly dressed lady of about 25 years of age descended from the carriage. She walked hurriedly through the shop into the dispensing department, and, throwing a piece of paper on the counter, said: "Please make up this prescription and send it at once. I would wait and take it myself, but I am just going out to dinner. It is very important."
The assistant bowed, took up the prescription and then seemed to hesitate. "Well," said the lady, who seemed of a highly nervouB, irritable disposition, "well, what is the matter?" "I am afraid, madam," returned the assistant, "that I cannot dispense this prescription." "Oh, nonsense!" replied the lady. *'That is what they said at in Mayfair, so I brotight it on here. I suppose Dr. Blank knows what be prescribes." "Doubtless, madam but, although Dr. Blank is ono of the most eminent of his profession, I dure not make up this prescription, as the strength at which the drug is here ordered is not allowed by the British pharmacopoeia." "Oh, nonsense I" repeated the lady, commencing to patter on the floor with her small foot "This is monstrous. Here is my husband waiting for medicine of the utmost importance to his oondition, and two chemists' assistants think they know better what is good for him than one of the leading men of the College of Physicians. Give mo the proscription, and I will get it prepared •elsewhere." The assistant was loath to part with the paper. "If you will allow me, madam," he said, "I will take a cab to Dr. Blank's, and if ho confirms tho prescription I will then prepare it" "No, I will not" returned the lady, •who was now in a state of extremo irritation. "1 will not My husband is in a serious oondition, and I shall be late for dinner. I have already lost half an hour, and I cannot have further delay." With that she snatched up the prescription and hurried out
The assistant was seriously perturbed. The mistako in the prescription was a grave one—so grave indeed that the administration of a single dose would probably prove fatal within two hours. It was possille that some young or inexperienced assistant at some small chemist's, overawed by the groat name of tho physician and by tho lady's imperious manner and elegant attire and oquipage, would be found to dispense it Then trouble would ensue, which might bo stopped now. Thinking thus, the assistant told his fellow worker in the dispensary that he would go to Dr. Blank's, and, hurrying into Bond street, jumped into the first passing hansom, and in five minutes was ringing the bell of the doctor's house in Harley street The footman who opened the doojc said Dr. Blank was out "Where was he?"
Really the footman did not know. "Very important, was it?" Ah I Well, then, he (the footman) must inquire. This he leisurely proceeded to da And the chemist's assistant, who was of an imaginative turn, amused himself by picturing meanwhile the death of the patient the professional ruin of himself, the Mayfair chemist and the great physician the grief and aelf reproach of the lady, who, despite her wayward, irritable and oaroless demeanor, was evidently fond of her husband. And he had already arrived at the coroner's jury's verdict of manslaughter -when tho footman returned with the intelligence that his master was dining in Maida Vale. The cab soon whirled the errant knight of the pestle and mortar Into tho Edfc«wase road andforew up at one of the large houses which lie on the light hand side of Maida Vale immediately after passing the canal Dinner was evidently in full progress, and the footman showed the assistant into an anteroom with no very good gracm. Her .another wait occurred, which preyed cm the alrimdy irritated nervw of our friend even more than, the previous one i»t Hartey street At last the door opened, and the doctor entered. He was a dapper little man, about 5 fleet 5 in height, with a pale, thin face and hair and mustache the color of tow. His clear, steel blue gray eyrs saved his appearance from being insignificant He looked iaqtrrlnglj at the assistant wbo bowing, said: "I am a dispenser, sir, at Mean.—% At about 8 o'clock this evening a lady, Mr*. presented a areeortBdoe
•igxted by yon in which potassi azsenica was ordered in three dram doses." "Good GcdS" cried the physician. "Is it possible?" ''There can be no doubt of it," replied the assistant, the prescription was refused by another chemist"
The doctor walked hurriedly up and down the room. "Can it have been altered?" he muttered. "I looked carefully for that, but there was not the slightest sign of an erasure. No, sir," continued the assistant "I am afraid it is a little mistake on your part I only fear that it may be made op and administered, and I therefore went at once to your house, and, learning where you were, came oniiere." ''Quite right, quite right, said the doctor Have you a cab waiting? That's welL I'll go with you at once to the patient"
It took but a few minutes for the doctor to make his excuses and return ready for departure, and the cab, once more in motion, turned toward the neighborhood of Eton square. The house at which it now pulled up betokened far greater wealth than either of the other two at which it had stopped since char-* tered in Bond street but an air of quietude peculiar to residences in which lie invalids in a very critical condition pervaded the place. The street door was opened noiselessly by a footman before the occupants of the cab were fairly on the doorstep, and the doctor was shown into a room on the ground floor which answered the purposes of a library as much as such rooms usually do in London houses. "Send me Nurse Moore,"said the doctor. "Nurse Moore is out for exercise," replied the footman. "Nurse Norris is on duty, I happen to know, for she took the new medicine which I carried up not five minutes ago
Dr. Blank was a little man, and little men are usually quick in their motions. But never did man, little or big, fly up the stairs at the same rate as he did before tho last words were out of the footman's mouth. The assistant followed, but had only reached the first floor hen the doctor entered the bedroom on the second. Nurse Norris was standing by the bed measuring a dose of medicine from a bottle. She was a tall, dark young woman of 25, very pleasant looking and apparently pursuing her vocation with care, as she did not even look up when the doctor entered. 'None of that, nurse!" exclaimed the doctor. x, 'I beg pardon, sir?" said the nurse, now aroused to the sense of some incongruity in the physician's manner, which became intensified when a strange young man, very much out of breath, almost fell into the room from the passage. "I should say, How is the patient? A very warm night, and likely to render him unoomfortable," continued the doctor with his soul in his eyes and his eyes on the bottle. "I think I am a little better, doctor," said a weak voice from the bed, on which lay a man of about 80 with the peculiarly emaciated and drawn look which invariably follows a prolonged or very severe illness 'a little easier." "That's right," said tho doctor, feeling the invalid's pulse, 'that's right Yes, a marked improvement" Then, having completed a rather lengthy examination, ho turned to the nurse. "A decided improvement, nurse. For tonight we will discontinue all drugs. Give nothing exoept his usual nourishment until I oome again. Dr. W will return tomorrow, and when we have a looal practitioner once more in attendance you will take your instructions from him. In the meantime give nomedioine. Indeed, I'will take it with
me. And without noticing the hurt and resentful look of the nurse the doctor pounoed on the bottle and transferred it to his coat pocket
On that particular June evening the assistant at Messrs. had been gravely cogitating whether he would be justified in wedding the girl of his choice, who was too delicate to be able to add
lb
Gleanse
the common purse, on a salary
of £100 a year and had decided in the negative. Six months after a quiet but Very happy wedding party returned to a very flourishing chemist's shop in the neighborhood of Cavendish square which bore the name of the assistant over the front as its proprietor. And if .you have ever occasion to consult the great physician, you may be sure that, whatsoever his opinion of your case may be, he will add, as he hands you your prescription: "Be sure you have it made up at a good chemist's. Mr. is an extremely careful dispenser, and in addition personally analyses every drug which goes into his place. Thank you. Good morning!"—Chambers' Journal.
Mmnrlikf
Use a medicine glass with the amount of each spoonful and drop marked upon it Teaspocnfuls and tablespoonfuls are always mentioned, but as these vary in siae it is not safe to rely upon them. Drops, too, cannot be properly measured without a glass.
Keep the medicine glass perfectly dean. It should be washed out after each dose, in readiness fear the next time. It ir desirable that if the patient is to have medicine with a strong smell, tils, eta, to keep a glass specially for them, letting it soak in hot water for half an hour after use to remove all disagreeable odor. It is impossible to
such a glass in a few moments. When the medicine is being poured out, hold the label uppermost, in order that it may not become stained with any drops escaping down the side of the bottle.
PtOitad Tm la Bum
Pickled tea is used in Burma as a •art of sauerkraut The young leaves are boiled, poured into pits about six feet deep lined with plantain leaves and covered with earth, and are kept therefat maim They are then used either to tr-u sea or eaten after being •oaked in oil rith garlic or dried fish.
Noon as Nature's Dining Hoar. Persons who keep close watch on themselves are of the opinion that the hour of noon is the most critical period of life. At that time the human frame undergoes serious changes. The stomach has dispatched the morning meal and sends scouting parties in search of another. The eyes and brain are on the alert, and there is a sort of all goneness pervading the anatomy that sharpens the faoulties and puts anew edge on the teeth. It is nature's dining time, and everything about the healthy man or woman is attuned to the demolition or enjoyment of what is called a 'good square meal. Those who pay heed to the prompting of nature at, this divine hour have their reward in good appetite, good temper and excellent digestion, which is conducive to all the good that flesh is heir to. But those-who, following the imperious dictates of fashion, defer the hour of dining until all natural longings are dead and have to be resurrected by adventitious aids lay a train of evils and disoomforts which sooner or later beoome the plague of their lives. It is a well known fact that the noon diners are healthier and stronger and have better chanoes for long life than others.—-Chicago Chronicle.
His Interpretation.
The disagreeable person was stalking along the street with a companion who had long sinoe given up trying to be genial and conversational They passed a mutual acquaintance, a man who looked ooldly at the disagreeable person, held his head in air and passed on without a sign of recognition. "Don't you know who that is?" "Yes," was the answer. "He is ordinarily a very audacious, loquacious and mendacious individuaL "I thought perhaps you did not see him." "I looked straight at him, as he did at me. "Then he snubbed you." "Snubbed me, sir? Well, perhaps it might be spoken of in that way." ."I call it a downright insolent trick." "Well, that goes to show how differently people Will look at the same thing. When he passed me without stopping to speak, I was giving him credit for the greatest act of consideration, sir, that I had ever known him to show."—Detroit Free Press.
How to Save Yourself From Death, Professor Drum&ond tells in his "Tropical Africa" that on one occasion four of his carriers ran away. There were three of the same tribe in the company, and, though the professor knew nothing of their dialect, he determined, being in danger of losing his life, to teach them a lesson.
Beginning with a few general remarks on the heathen, he briefly sketched the geology of Africa and then broke into an impassioned defense of the British constitution. The three tribesmen trembled like aspen leaves. He concluded his reprimand by solemnly enunciating the forty-seventh proposition of Euclid, and the result of the awful admonition was that the men became the most faithful that he had ever had.— London Answers.
The art of being agreeable frequently miscarries through the ambition which aooompanies it Wit learning, wisdom —what can more effectually conduce to the profit and delight of society? Yet 1 am sensible that a man may be too invariably wise, learned or witty to be agreeable, and I take the reason of this to be that pleasure cannot be bestowed by the simple and unmixed exertion
TERKE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, JULY 25, 1896.
It Costa to Stop Can.
The oost of stopping a train at can has always been a subject of discussion, and it is sometimes worth the inquiry of railroad men. Estimates of the oost have ranged from one-quarter of a cent up to $2 for stopping an ordinary passenger train. The small figure represented only the estimated loss of metal by applying the brake to the wheeL Some of the real considerations that go to make up the oost of a stop are the coal burned while the train is standing still, and in order to resume the former speed—this the Pennsylvania railroad people put at 12 to 16 cents. Then there are the wages of all persons on the train, who, while the train slows down and stops, are paid as if the train were running. This is insignificant in the case of one person, but it amounts to something when the whole forcc is considered besides this, there is the wear of the rails. A rail lasts only a third as long where trains com# to a stop on it as when merely run over. This is the result of the action the brakes. Then, too, more aociden te ?»ccur to engines, to wheels and to axles in coming to a stop or in starting again than with running fcght along.
The Railroad Gazette reported a discussion some years ago on this subject, in whioh the conclusion is reached that the actual oost of stopping an ordinary train is about 30 to 60 cents. An amusing story is told of a trial where experts testify that it oost $2 to stop a train. They established the fact Then the counsel on the other side produced the company's time table, wijth a full list of all the stops, including stations, took the total number of its trains, calculated the total stoppages of all the trains for one year, multiplying the result by $2—the experts' estimate of oost—and demonstrated that the stoppages alone had, if the estimate was right, oost the company three times as much as the entire amount of its operating expenses for the year. This reduction to a solid basis of fact upset the $2 theory.—Philadelphia Item. 'Wf -y,
of
anyone faculty or accomplishment Onmberland
The date «f human life is too short to recompense the cares which attend the most private conditions. Therefore It is that oar goals are made, as it wem too big tor it and extend them* •elves in the prospect of a longer existence.—SteeL
Verbal Inaccuracy Bebuked. One evening recently I chanced to have business with an Alameda official and called at his residence. He habitually clothed his official position with all the pomp it would carry, and occasionally he strained it a little.
He had lately been presented with a big brass piano lamp, with a yellow shade, and it was standing in the very center of the parlor floor. The official had called attention to the new lamp by turning it up and down half a dozen times, but still his son felt that it was not attracting the attention of which such a beautiful lamp was deserving, so he blurted out: "Don't yer think it's the beautifulest lamp yer ever seen?"
The official swelled up with indigna tion, and, soowling fiercely, reproved his son in the sternest manner: "Joe, them words is incorrectP'-r San Francisco Post
Why They Wear Hate.
History does not tell, so far as we know, how it came about that members of the English parliament wear their hats. The custom has descended from an age when its proceedings were not re corded, but one may suspect that thereby hangs a tale of sturdy and victorious revolt against privilege, such as broke out at Versailles, oould it be recovered. Now and again we find antique allusions to the practioe,. When the commons voted that every one should "unoover or stir or move his hat" when the speaker expressed the thanks of the house for any service done by a member. Lord Falkland "stretched both his arms out and clasped his hands together on the crown of his hat and held it down close to his head, that all might see how odi ous that flattery was to him."—Pall Mall Gazette.
A Child's Heart.
Among the bizarre articles offered for salo at the Hotel Druot, Paris, was a child's heart immersed in a jar of spirits, and, although 97 years had passed since the organ was placed in its transparent receptacle, every portion of it—the right and left auricle and ventriole, and even a portion of the aortic arch—was in a perfect state of preserva tion. It was catalogued as the heart of Louis XVII, duke of Normandy, and from the documentary evidence which accompanied it there was little doubt as to its authenticity.—Temple Bar.
Admired by Qneen Victoria, Victoria's newest maid of
honor, Miss Majendie, is said to owe her entrance to royal favor to a curious chance. She happened to be singing in a church choir one day when the queen was present at divine service, and her majesty was so greatly pleased with the fresh sweetness of the girl's face and voice that she invited her to fill the place coveted by the young girls of the English aristocracy. The position was the last thing Miss Majendie herself would ever have expegted.
Against the Corset}"
Anatomists and reformers, who have been dubbed cranks, have long preached of the injuries stays have wrought on stomach, heart lungs, liver and the whole arterial system. All these arguments have seemed ineffective. A hint at red noses, puffed hands and eruptive skins sometimes carried a little more weight with it Now woman is looking at this matter in a more sensible light, and if she has herself begun the reform potent fashion has power to complete it —St Louis Republic. •.
Jf
«The Decisive Test.
i*^"When
reach the climax of her ability?" "When she can send a ten word telegram without adding a postscript"— Detroit Free Press.
Many women have excelled as exec utants in music. No woman has ever been a great or even a mediocre com pOSer.
fygif
Great Oaks from Little Acorns Grown Is a line from the trite old verse we used to recite In our school boy days. It has a forcible application to those small ailments which we are apt to disregard until they reach formidable proportions. A fit of indl stion, a "slight" attack of constipation, it assumed, will soon pass off. but It is very apt to get worse, ana In the meantime is neslectwl until the ailment becomes chronic, and then. If not entirely eradicated. Is a constant annoyahce and menace of worse consequences, for diseases, recollect, beget one another. How much wiser to resort to a course of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters at the outset of the malady than to temporise wltb it at the start, or treat It with violent remedies in its maturity. Be on time with dls ease, or it may "floor" you. Malarious, rheumatic and kidney complaints, dyspepsia, constipation, biliousness and nervousness are all disorders of rapkl growth, and should be "nipped in the bua" by a timely resort to the Bitters. ______________ Inflammatory Rheumatism Cured in 3 Days.
Morton L. Hill, of Lebanon. Ind., says "My wife had inflammatory Rheumatism in ererv muscle and Joint her suffering was terrible and her body and face were swollen beyond recognition had been in bed for six weeks and had eight physicians but received no benefit until sne tried tbe MYSTIC CURE FOR RHEUM ATISM. It gave immediate relief and she was able to walk about In three days, lam sure it saved her life." .Sold by Jacob Baur, Cook. Bell A Black, and all druggists. Terre Haute.
Tour Sunday Dinner.
Spring Lamb, Steer Beef, Sweet Breads, Pig Pork, Ifendertoins, Spare Ribs,
Beef Tenderloins.
C. EL EHRMANN, Fourth and Ohio. Clean Meat Market. Telephone 290.
Save Your JLtfe
By using "Nkw
Great Soctb
London's Oldest Restaurant. Probably the oldest restaurant in London is Crosby Hall, in Bishopsgate street, in the city. This was built more than 500 years ago, was once the palace of Richard HI and afterward the residence of Sir Thomas More. It was in this building that Shakespeare laid the scene of Richard's plots for the murder of the young princes. The structure was injured by fire, fell into decay and in 1838 was restored. One tumbles up the narrow, winding stairs, leaving below the modern restaurant passes through low doorways that show walls 8 feet in thickness and enters the hall, a great room lighted by high windows and a beautiful orieL In the restoration the old features have been retained, and at one end is the minstrel's gallery, looking down on more prosaic scenes it once witnessed. The white capped cook stands at the huge fireplaoe, now converted into a grill, alid the chops and potatoes oome smoking to your table Pretty waitresses wish to know if you don't want a pint of the famous 'arf and 'arf," and the wayfarer wise if be accepts the hint This would seem a fitting place to sit and muse in a Johnsonian fashion on the variety of human life, but there is little seclusion about the spot today, for bankers from Threadneedle street are oontinually discussing trade and securities in this room, which has known the presence of Sir Philip Sidney and Ben Jonson—a room where it requires no very vivid imagination to fancy the Countess of Pembroke reading the famous sonnet that Spencer wrote to her honor. —Home Journal
Went by the Express.
Suburban Resident—See here, sir I You told me that country place I bought of you was only 35 minutes from the city.
City Agent—Yes, sir, 85 minutes by express. You remember, when we went out to look at it the time was 35 minutes exactly. "But, confound it sir, the express trains don't stop there, not one of them, and the accommodation takes about an hour and a half!" "You and I went by express, and it stopped for us, you know." "3?e8, I know but it hasn't stopped since." '1 n' "It will stop if you hire "a' man at your station to buy a through ticket for somewhere. That's the way I did the day we went out"—New York Weekly.
a Contrary Man.
"The most contrary man I ever knew," said Mr. Sizzlington, "was a man who was so contrary that he had to have#his watch made to go backward. I never knew how he told the time by it or how far wrong he could get by it, but it was a satisfaction to know that twioe a day it came right in spite of him."—New York Sun.
WOMAN'S INFLUENCE.
The influence of women upon the civilization of the world, could never be measured. ,, 'K
Because of her, thrones liave Wen established and destroyed. The flash of her eye, the touch of her hand, and we have the marvellous power of women, glorious in the possession of perfect physical health. tydia E. Pinkham, by her wonderful discovery of the
Vegetable Compound," has done much to place this great power in the hands of women.
1
Digestible Food.
A simple test for digestibility given to a class of nurses, by which one can easily determine if a solid food is one which is proper to give a sick person, is to drop a small piece of' it in cold water. If it soaks up the water rapidly, the food is moderately digestible. —New York Post
She has lifted thousands and thousands out of the misery brought by displacement of the womb, and all the evils that follow diseases of the uterus.
i?1
do you think woman
The Vegetable Compound restores natural cheerfulness, destroys despondency, eures backache, strengthens the muscles, restores the womb to its normal condition, and you are changed from a physical wreck to the joy of your home and friends.
By the way—the leading druggists tell us that the demand for Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is simply beyond their power of understanding, and what ia best of all, itdoes the work and cures where the best physicians utterly faiL
DR. R. W. VAN VALZAH,
*vt Dentist,
Office, No. 5 South Fifth Street
CkbkMttr'ii bfiUk PI—mi ftrmm*.
INNYR0YAL PILLS
(Ms(mI
aad
0«lj (tomriae.
urt, liwtft rriiaU*. URit* Mt
DrsctM Sir fSaehttitft
SmUik
Dim-,
vumiBrand is Ktd aad (Ml atSIW mM *101 rt)' Take
:tea, M«tfccr.
Mtftm
rfuft- «rnbMttm-
hotu and imilatUmt. At Trr*&d*t*,or*Km&4M, la
ataOKM
to jMrdcatar*.
CATARRH
ISA
LOCAL DISEASE aad ia tbe result of eoids and sudden climatic changes.
It can be cured by a pleasant remedy which is applied directly into the nostrils.
ELY'S
Aaxatcav
Kibmctnut" This new remedy is a great urpt-i*e on account of Its exceeding promptness to relieving pais in the Kidneys. Bladder and Back in male or female. It relieves
prevent
fatal oooseqaences in almost all case* by Its great alterative and healing powera. Bold GjraUdniglititaTetNBaaia
im»I»iii«I«I»
Laoal Dngftm-
aaS
"Rdief for ky r*«mra MalL I rtffKKt Xmmu Fmptr.
CATARRH
NASAL
CREAM BALM JuftlSSK COLD HEAD
Allay# Pain and Inflammation, lieate the Sore*. Proteeta tlie Membrane from Colds. Restore* tbe Seoae* of Taste and JfonelL. Tbe Balm Is quiekty aborbed and give* relief at once. Price
SO
cents at DrugjrlsU or by nail.
ELY BROTHERS, Warren £t~ New York.
Rich Red
is
Blood is absolutely essential to health.^ It is secured easily and naturally by taking Hood's Sarsa par ilia, but is impossible to get it from so-called nerve tonics," and opiate compounds, absurdly advertised as "blood purifiers." They have temporary, sleeping effect, but do not CURE. To have pure
Blood
I
•w
And good health, take Hood's Sarsaparilla, which has first, last, and*all the time, been advertised as just what it is —the best medicine for the blood ever produced. Its success in curing Scrofula,
Salt Rheum, Rheumatism, Catarrh, Dyspepsia, Nervous Prostration and That Tired Feeling, have made
Sarsaparilla
The One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. |L
_g .t r»jn_ are prroly vocetable. reft OOCl S rlllS liable ami Lieuollcia!. iiSc.
The COAST LINE to MACKINAC TAKE THE
MACKINAC DETROIT PETOSKEY
CHICAGO
2 New Steel Passenger Steamers
The Ore*test Perfection yet attained In Boat Construction Luxurious Equipment, Artistic Furnishing, Decoration and Efficient Scurvies, insuring the highest degree of COnFORT, SPEED AND SAFETY.
Fous
TRIPS PER WIEK BETWEEN
oledo, Detroit Mackinac
PETOSKEY, THE SOO," MARQUETTE, AND DULUTH.
LOW RATB5 to Picturesque Mackinac and Return, including fleals and Berths. Prom Cleveland, Si8 Iron Toledo, $15 frum Detroit,
EVERY EVENING
Between Detroit and Cleveland
Connecting at Cleveland with Earliest Trains for all points East, South and Southwest and at Detroit for all points North and Northwest. Sunday Trips inns, July, August and Scpttmbar Only.
EVERY DAY BETWEEN
Cleveland, Put-iu-Bay Toledo
Send for Illustrated Pamphlet Address A. A. 80HANTZ, «. a.. DHTROIT, Ml6H.
Graham & Morton Transportation Go.
TWICE DAILY STEAMERS TO
CHICAGO
Connecting with Vsodslls Ry. at St. Joseph
Beginning May 25th and continuing until about Sept. J0tli. the stcamnrs of this line will make two trips each way daily (Including Sunday) between St. Joseph and Chicago, on the following schedule:
Leave St. Joseph.. .4:30 pm 10:30pm Leave Chicago—9:30 am 11:30pm
Extra trips on Saturday leave St. Joseph at 8 a. m. and Chicago at 2 p. m. Running time across tho lake 4 hours. Trl-wookly steamers to Milwaukee leave St. Joseph Monday. Wednesday and Friday evenings.
The equipment of this line includes the side
Miiwaukee. (the largest and finest west of Detroit), and the newly rebuilt propeller City of Louisville. Service first-class. Connections with ail Vandalla trains. Tickets on saleatall Vandalla ilnestatlons. Chicago dock foot of Wabash avenue.
J. H. Git AH AM, President, -i Benton Ilnrljnr. Mich.
E.&T. H. R. R.
EXCURSION, SOUTH, Jane 15th, 16th, July 6th, 7th, 20ih 21st
One Fare for Round Trip, Plac $2. Territory whfeb tick (its will be sold Alabama. Florida. Georgia, Kentucky. Mis~^l slssippl. North Carolina, .South Carolina," Tennessee and Virginia. Ticket® good turning 31 days from dat* of sale.
i. B. CONN'KLLV. Gen. Agent.
We want a few men to sell a CH0ICELt#EOf ji i] r»f ry
!UI
We cannot make you rich Jn a month but can give you Steady Employment and will pay you for It. Our price# correspond wltb the times. Write for terms and territory.
THE HAWKS NURSERY CO., Milwaukee, Wit.
SAJN'T C. DAVIS. FRANK J. TI.-RK,
A S
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
42$% Wabash An TERRE HAUTE. INIh
A I
503 OHIO 8TBT: 2L1. Give lflm a call if you have any kind of In-' surance to place. He will write you in as good companies as are represented in the city
tefiART
I
Store
Artlsta* Supplies, Flower ,|. Picture Framing a Special i.. M* WABASH AVE. North Side. 1MII il.alC, I HO.
