Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 27, Number 8, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 August 1896 — Page 2

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A DREAM.

fball a draani of boyhood's Joyful dayi, When tramping o'er the meadows wild free, With not a care or furrow on on* brow

To change a heart beat in the last degree. We scaled the hillside as in younger days And drank from hidden spring a quenching glass that sparkled bright with sunlight's cheerful rays

When o'er this pathway we were wont to

Wo listened to the bleating of the Iambs While skipping round their mothers in their glee, And watched the gopher while be sought fate bole As boasie chewed her end beneath the tree. The rustling leaves played sweetest* dreamy tun eg,

As did they in the lovely Janes gone fcy. The crickets chirped in marshy meadows wide. While nighttime gleamed with phosphorescent fly. We dreamed the clouds were feathery beds of ease.

On which to lay onr weary bodies down, As in the fancy of onr cbiia&ood days. We'd ride the swiftest cloud and wear a crown.

The watT in the brook, so calm ami clea r. As o'lt the pubhles lulling whinjx rx spe.be. That told the stents of its mountain path

While on its qaiet journey to the lake. 2?ow lay we down on green and mossy bank And watched the sportive minnows at their

p,ay'

While nibbling crumbs we scattered tor a feast— A sure return to come some other day. While dreaming thus the spell was sure to break,

Too soon was marred this rapturous, youthful bliss By ringing bells that tolled the hour of seven,

And with their tones we gave good night a kiss. —Minneapolis Tribune.

WITHOUT A HEART.

1

There is really very little in this •tory. Indeed, it would never have been written but for the woman's dearest friend, who, dying alone and uncared for, with a heart full of bitterness toward tlie whole world, begged that pil9 of yellow letters be opened and read after her death. "She would have had me burn them," she said in a trembling voice, "but that I will not grant her. All else I granted her. Nevertheless there was only one other woman whom she wronged more deeply. JjOt us botJabe avenged in the reading of these."

She whom her friend at so late an hour so severely condemned was the wonder of her day and generation. Women have sometimes been heard to soy that they have no hearts, but they do not mean it. This woman did. "Friendship, humanity, religion," she said over and over again, as girls have said before, "these I care for, these understand, for these I will make sacri£oes, but not your idle talk of love, which wrecks men's lives and fills women's hearts with unrest 1 for one render thanksgiving that 1 have no heart" Then those who were older said toher, as elders have said before: "Wait .awhile. You are young yet We shall «ce your heart yield some day." "No," she answered, "you shall not see it yield, beoause it will not and the reason it will not yield is because I have no heart. Nature, more merciful to me than to my sisters, put a little hard piece of ice in its place which keeps me cold to the most passionate pleading which was ever uttered in the name of love."

People predicted that she would become a soured bid maid and regret her lot She did not She grew more beautiful and brilliant and scotniul every day. Lovers came, and she mocked them one and all she mocked them to the end, and to tho end they came. She kept their likenesses, though not for love, for often to her confidential friends she would allude to them with the mtensest bitterness as the men she hated most in •the world. And whon they inquired with surprise, knowing that the rejected suitors had most cause to hate her, •"But wherein have they offended?" she would only laugh in reply, and her laugh had a hard, cold riug in it like tho tiukle of some icebound waterfall. She did incalculable harm. There was a sweet, shy girl to whom she was an oracle, who took timid counsel with her •when a man came and told her that ho •worshiped her and wished to have her for his wife. This girl the woman without a heart earnestly advised not to marry. "But I love him, too," said the girl "Would you persuade me that my affection at least will not Inst? There, is something in loving, even if there is no answer to the cry of one's heart."

At this tho tinkling laugh of the woman without a heart sounded clearer than ever. "Then, dear child, "she said more gravely, "let me tell you positively, it will not last It will not last, because it is only a dream—the madness of a day or an hour bam of youth and beauty and fleeting with them. Look around you and see women by the thousands, dragged down into the mire, crowned with a crown of thorns, crucified on their own affections, because they had hearts and believed in love. Then look at me—free, tranquil and happy—and choose." 8o convincingly did she speak that the young girl, to whom her words were a very gospel of authority, believed her and would not listen to her lover. Thereupon he grieved inoousolately for space of time, then married some one «lse, both of whom were very bitter to the woman who had loved him. This woman afterward became the dearest friend of her with whom this sfceury deals and lived with her until death smote one of them.

can find my heart 4ud age made no perceptible inroads upon her, for beauty and wealth and health and happiness were hers to the end, and even gJary, for she had talent, which wins worship and friendship and success and not the bitter sweet gift of genins. But though everything which life could offer was •wept to her on the tide of the succeeding years, the hour came when she must part with them and with life and with

But the sick woman opened her eyes, and they seemed to look eagerly over the heads of the watchers. "What do you see?" they asked her, thinking it delirium. "Nothing but shadows," she sighed. "I thought—I hoped"— And her voice sank until it was inaudible.

She spoke only once more before the death angel in very reality entered and laid his fingers upon her lips that would mock no more. Then she gazed through the clouds which seemed to surround the familiar objects in the room, pointed to the portraits of her rejected lovers and weakly whispered: "Burn them. I hate them stilL Dear God4 who knowest why, thou dost not tlespise me—thou who inadest me so?" Then her mind wandered, and she murmured, "A munificent reward"— And her lips, which still smiled scorn at life and death as they had smiled at love, grew suddenly cold. When she was buried, the world came, some to weep, all to marvel and exclaim that here, at least was one woman who could live and die independent of love —which is to say independent of nature.

This would have been all were it not for tho old j*ellowed letters which have been mentioned. They were not so old and yellowed when the kinswoman ouncl them the day before she departed or her own home, hidden in an obscure corrnar of a forgotten piece of furniture, and started as she recognized the dead woman's handwriting and signature. "To my dear love"— What was this? No name on the superscription, but. in the letter the fondest terms of endearment, the most passionate expressions of love and trust and womanly clinging. She read the other letters, all written in the name vein, as from a woman who gloried in showing her whole heart to her lover, to whose name and identity there was given, however, no olue. The kinswoman brought them to the writer's friend. 'Here," she said, "look and see the living proof that your woman who said she had no heart was human after all. There are moie of these letters than I can count They are of all dates, remote as woll as recent—one was written the week before she died—and they are all addressed to some man, some lover, of whom no one ever guessed." "There was no such man," positively asserted the woman friend. "I knew all her secrets I saw every one whom she saw I was aware of every letter she wrote or received I was as inseparable as her shadow, and there was no lover to whom she ever listened."

Nevertheless, when she was alone with the letters, she read them, knowing that there was no counterfeiting her friend's handwriting, and as she read her wonder grew, for she read a woman's heart—warm, tender, glowing, poure& out for love's sake on these pages as willingly as the soldier sheds his life blood for his country. And never did heretic recant his errors at the stake more absolutely than she denied her own denials and scpraed the scorn which she had professed for iove. "They believe me when I say I have no heart," she wrote, "but do not care. You know—-you only, and that is enough, for no one will ever see these lines. If I oould not write to you I would sicken and die of hope deferred, or my heart would grow heavy in me and break for lack of anything on which to spend its gold. Dearest, I am saving it for you— I am spending it on you only—you of all the world who know my secret Though, is not my desire that of all women's hearts? "I hate those men, whose likenesses I keep to remind me how different you are. You guess why? It is because they are not you. Of each I hoped he might be you, and when I found he was not I oould not forgive him. I did not wrong them they wronged and defrauded ma''

The reader gave a cry and gased fixedly at the letter, which bore no name. "There was no name," she whispered. "Therewas no lover. .Oh, lonely, lonely woman* to cheat your heart with shadows, as you have cheated minet Had you known, as I have known, the face, the voice, the touch of a flesh and blood lover, you oould not have staid the imperious cravings of your soul with this poor pretense—with letters written to, but never read by, the unfulfilled ideal of yourmnackuow 1 edged dreams!"

The letter written last, before

But the woman without a heart lived to see them grow old and "d ,aad huidino atrkJcen with care and other burdens team of the woman *no m* wooing 7ho^d^hS eonw for her, and b* »P all that would have made

she pitied them unfeigned »y for the hearts they carried in their bosom*, when they said, "What, has no man ever found yours for you yet?" ®be laughed exultantly and aaid: "No, and be never wilL I will give a munificent

avwaft to him who finds the man who hsamr* -Philadelphia Timea.

the body in which, so she asserted, she a sharp crag of overhanging rook. On had for so many years carried a piece of ice in place of a heart. She lay very still, with eyes that did not see, on the bed where they had laid her, while her woman friend and a distant kinswoman who had been called in to nurse her knelt by her and held her hands tightly. "How peacefully she seemtf to look' on death!" whispered the kinswoman. "She was a good woman," answered the friend brokenly.

When the doctor came, she gazed atj river below and the slender rope above,

him piercingly, then closed her eyes and murmured, "I thought you might be— I was looking for him." ''She means the death angel, "said the watchers.

bet

death, was briefer, leas hopeful in its tone, and showed the traces of bodily weakness but between the lines the loving, longing heart of her who wrote it throbbed with almost painful eager neea. "Alas, dear love," it finished, "1 sometimes become weary of writing let* tent and wish you would—come—instead"— The lost page was blurred.

Fresh tear* blurml it Mill more—the

two lives worth living, and who bowed her head upon the letter and echoed her words: "Dear God, then dosi not detpfa» us —thou who hast made women sol Is MX oar desire that of all women's

Bis Kervw Ssnd His Ufa.

Lea Henry, a well known pioneer, relates an adventure that is oat of the usual order. He was traveling on a narrow trail above the raging Grande Bonde river when he came to a landslide about 20 feet across that left no trail or even a niche in the smooth, precipitous rook. The trail was so narrow that the horse could not turn back. He was trapped. Above the 90 foot break in the trail was

ois saddle bow was a strong riata 60 feet long, and Henry is an expert in the ese of it He steadied himself upon the saddle, swung the rope over his head and hurled it high into the air. It settled firmly over the crag. He tried it carefully. It was firm. His saddle was a new and strong one, with doable cinches. Around the horn he wound the rope. He urged the horse on to the edge of the precipice.

The faithful beast stood firm. He would not step over, but the rider drew up the slack and polled with all his power. Inch by inch he drew the straining horse forward till his feet slipped, and he swung over the chasm. The rider held his breath as he looked at the

but be was across the gap. He sprang up the trail and tugged at the reins to aid the horse in gaining his feet He pulled, and the horse lunged up into the trail with the chasm behind.—Anaconda Standard.

Witnesses Who See Through Glass.

"It is curious," says a Maine lawyer, "how prevalent the notion is that a person cannot testify as a witness in court to anything seen through glass. 'What would yon do with all the folks that wear spectacles and see everything through glass?' asked a Maine judge not long ago, referring to this notion. If the glass through which an action or event was seen was wavy, so as to distort the appearance of objects, that fact might nowadays raise a doubt as to the reliability of the evidence, but oould not exclude it The prevailing notion doubtless had its rise in very ancient days, when all the glass in use for windows was very muoh warped and blurred. Such glass may be seen—a single pane of it—in the office of the little hotel in Cambridge village, framed and kept as a relic. Where such material was in use it is little wonder that a witness was prevented from testifying as to what he saw through it It was in common use in England at the time of the settlement of New England, and naturally in the early homes of this continent it was the best that could be had. But such a rule where modern glass is in common use would be nonsense."— Lewistoa Journal.

Lord Pal triers ton and the Turks. In regard to the Turks themselves, may I venture to observe that the genius of their manners and conversation is that of yielding everything at first? They begin by saying, 'Good yes.' But when you come to the matter in question and to its details ju will find all those fine expressions mean nothing. Like all poople in a weak position, they respect you nocording to their opinion of your foroe. If, however, you wish that foroe to have a permanent influence and to be unaccompanied by dislike, you must blend its exercise with justioe and, if you wish to arrive at a quick result through all that ambuscade of intrigues and doubts and fears and prejudices which will be sure to be secretly formed against it, you must tell the Turk what he is to do, why he is to do it, when he is to do it and show him. that you only ask quietly and reasonably what you have a right to demand. In this way, and this way alone* you will, do business with him. If he sees you act thus, he will not only agree with you, but rely upon you.—Lord Palmerston's Letters,

TEBRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MADE,, AXJOtfST 15.^1896.

-fr

inch as the Editor Knew It.

The editor sat in his snug office surrounded by all the conveniences and comforts that hedge editorial state. As he chatted with a visitor his pen idly traced tho words 'pants de suede" with great facility, and his face wore the most beatific expression. "I didn't know you knew French," said the visitor. "Well, I know those three words mighty welL I was once a proofreader on The Morning Breeze, as you know. Bramble Bros, sent in their Sunday Kria announcing an immense sale of 'pants de suede.' Unfortunately an imperfection in the paper turned a dash over the into an i, and the compositor didn't do a thing but set up in flaming type, '100,000 pairs of pants de snide.' AH proofreader I failed to catch the Franco-American joke, and my career trembled in the balance."—Chicago Tribune^

Not a Matter of Arithmetic.

"I hear you're very good at arithmetic, Bobby," said the visitor pleasantly. "Sure," returned Bobby, without f/Miiring up from his play. "Well, if I should tell you when yonr papa and your mamma were born, could you tell me how old they are?" asked the visito*. "I could tell you hew old pap is," answered the boy. "And not how old your mother is?"

The boy shook his head. "Arithmetic hasn't anything to do With that," be said.—Chicago Post

A Jkn of Mind'fMtk

Very good jam can be made by mixing fruits, as raspberries and red currants, raspberries and gooseberries, and so on. Either apples or gooseberries mix nicely with almost *11 other fruit*. Hie best way to use tbecn is to make them into jelly, and add a proportion of this jelly to the other frail while boiling.—Pittsburg Dispatch.

sifter 8 cent piece, ooce familiar

at the Qonattrs of postofBoes, was authorised by act cf congress March 3, 1951. and tts oc*na«8 was begun the same year. lis cot'iage was dtaontinoed FeK IS, 18ft.

and tho Pi imis.

A few months ago I had occasion -.(o enter into a business contract with one of my Druse farmers. When we were about to draw up the agreement, the Druse suggested that, as he could neither read nor write, we should ratify the bargain in the manner customary among his people. This consists of a solemn grasping of hands together in the presence of two car three other Druses as witnesses while the agreement is recited by both parties. Being always on tfie qui vive to gain a practical insight into the manners and customs of the Druses, I readily consented to this form of contract hoping thereby to learn something more of their methods of procedtfre.

Aocordingly the farmer brought three of his neighbors to n^ and the terms Of our contract havingoeen made known to them one of them took the right hand of each of us and joined them together, while he dictated' to us what to say after him. To my great astonishment, the Druse who was- grasping my hand gave me the grip of Master Mason. I immediately returned it, to his equal surprise. He asked me how and where

I now feel morally certain that my theory is correct, tod, speaking as a Freemason and as one. who has also searched somewhat fully into the mystic tenets of the Druse, I can assert that in many particulars, the esoteric teaching of both systems is more or less identical Owing to the extreme secrecy and exclnsiveness of the Druse character it is most difficult to gain an insight into their inner rites and tenets, and it requires many years of intercourse with them and the firm establishment of relations of mutual confidence and trust before one can be in a position to learn anything concerning them. Blacka a in

^4 Sti Peter's, Philadelphia.

The third oldest church in Philadelphia, exceeded in point of years only by Christ church and old Swedes, is St. Peter's, at Third and Pine streets. Tho old ohimes have called many to worship who now calmly repose within the sturdy brick walls of its burial space. Here.lie the remains of George M. Dallas, vice president.of the United States Commodore Stephen Decatur, whose monument bespeaks his illustrious and heroio naval achievements while in his oountiy's service during the Revolution: John R. Scott, boon companion and adviser of Edwin Forrest Benjamin Hall, signer of the Declaration of Independence Benjamin Carr, philanthropist and distinguished professor of music who died in L8S1 and whose monument was erected by the Musical Fund society Charles Wilson Feale, whose tablet tell us was born 1741 and died 1827, and that "he participated in the Revolutionary struggle of our independence^ and as an artist contributed to the history of this country.'' Near him lie comrades whose valor in the days of 1770'established an inheritance for their oountry and progeny. In peaceful slumber also rest such distinguished townsfolk as the Willings, Oraigs, Biddies, Cadwalladers, Donaldsons, Crazers, Ingersolls, Keiths*. Wilcoxes, Wikoffs, Woods and other eminent civilians whose names- are most familiar to old Philadelphia residents.—Philadelphia Record.

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Speedy BeSuwry Sore.

He—£ understand you have been attending. an ambulanoe class. Can you tell me what is the best thing to do for a broken heart?

Sh»—Oh,, yes. Bind up the broken portion with a gold band, bathe with orange blossom water and apjaly plenty of raw rice. Guaranteed to be well in a month.—Boston Traveller, •i

She Will Tell.

7

Lain—We girls are getting up a seoret society of our own. George—Indeed 1 What's the object?

Lain—I don't know yet, but I'll tell you all about it after I'm initiated. Strand Magazine.

The "era of Antioch" was devised by Panodorus of Antioch, who lived in the fifth century. He assumed that the world was created Sept 1, B. C. 5492.

The Shakers arc a Happy Community It is said, but the shaker who shakes because he can't help it is by no means a happy individual. Sosbakes the person troubled wlt^j chills and fever. The quivering and shuddering sensation is followed by no less a plague, namely, burning fever, which is followed by a perspiration bath that leaves the unhappy sufferer "as weak as a cat." a most unfortunate simile, by the way. as the cat, for Its size, is a peculiarly muscular animal. Under the above circumstances vital stamina Is soon used up. What will recuperate It? Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, which eradicates malarial diseases In every form and repairs its terrible ravages upon the system. Derangement of the liver always accompanies malarial disorder. To the relief of this complaint, as well as constipation and dyspepsia, the Bitters Is admirably adapted. Xo less efficacious and thorough is it for.kidnev trouble, nervousness, rheumatism and neuralgia. A wineglassful three tlues^kday.

Inflammatory Rheumatism Coved in a Daya. jtforton L. Hill, of Lebanon, bad., says "My wife had Inflammatory RheiwnaWsm in every muscle and joint her suffering was terrible and her body and fa«« werei swollen hevond recognition had beea in bed for six w»ks and bad eight pby«icia^^ rec^ved no benefit antil she tried the MYSTIC CUBE FOB RHEUM ATI8M. It gavelmmediate relief and she was able to walk aboat igt three days. I am sure it saved her JHe.-* Sold by Jacob Baur. Cook. Bell A Black, and all drogItisM, Terre Haute.

For Tour Sunday Dinner.

Spring Lamb, Steer Beef, Sweet Breads, Pig Pork, Tenderloins, Spare Rlba,

Beef Tenderloin*,

a H. EHRMANN, Fourth and Ohio. Clean Meat Market. Telephone

Save Yonr Life

n. asiiur "New Grut 8octh AacarcA* Kuwrr Cmm." This new remedy is a gteat sarprlae on aeeowa* of tta ratceedlng prowp*in relieving pain la the Kidneys. Bladdtrrw»d Bark la ataleor female. It retention of water, and paia la naastag It al-

SavryoaraelTy»griudng JSSoTJ'SJrS'K

great alterative ud 1M by all dracstafta tn Terre

I Some Things SafWn 8*!L

I had learned their secret sign, and thitr boldness in civil business* What first? set me on the track of further inquiries, Boldness. What second and third? the result of which has been ttv render what was before a very strong belief on my part an absolute conviction.

BaJ6n is not SbakespANte, but he is often at surprisingly modtilS. Sentence after sentence seems writttiff with an eye to current events. Take this, for Instance: "To be master of the sea is an abridgment of a monarchy'' (i. «, a monarchy in miniature). Surely at this day, with us of Sin rope, the vantage of strength at sea (which is one the principal dowries of the kingdom of Great Britain) great, both because most of the kingdoms c£ Europe are not merely inland, bat girt with the sea most part of their compass, and becautthe wealth of both £hdie#geems in grea* part but ai* accessory to the command of the seaa

And here* is our Armt»aiant policy. Among unjustifiable wars Bacon ranks those "made by foreigners? under the pretense of justice or protection to deliver the subject of others from tyranny and oppression

And here is as judgment on the Trans•aal government: "All states that are liberal of naturalization toward strangers are fit for empire.''

Here, too, is om side of the colonial secretary: "WoufSerfal is- tho ease of

Boldness. It doth fascinate audi bind hand and foot therefore wti-see if hath done wonders in {Opular states, and more pvot upon the* first entrance' of hold persons into action," This isj. of course,- th» passage frtam whi«h Danton. stole his *U nous faut-*ie l'audaoe, anoore de l'andace, toujonrs de l'audaoe."

Here is a good criticism on the drink commission: "In choice of oommittees for ripening business for the council, it is better to choaso indifferent person* than to make an indiffexency by putting in those that are strong on both sides. —Ooruhill Magazina

HESITATE NO LONGER

Modesty in women is natural. It i» one of women's chief charms. No one cares for one "who really bkoks this essential to womanliness.-

Women have suffered fearfully because of over-sensitive-nees lit this direction. They could" n't say to the physician what they ought to say to someone.-

Pinkhant' has received the confidence of thousands.

Women' open, their hearts to

he!. She understands their suffering, has the power to relieve and cure. In nearly all cases the source of women's suffering is in the-' womb.

Tn

many oases the sale physician doesnot understand the case and treats the patient for consumption—indigestion —anything but the right thingr. illt is under such circumstances that thousands of* women have turned to. Mrs. Pinkhamy at Lynn, Mass., andopened their heart and lives—womanto woman*—and received her help.-

You ask how she can tell if the doe tor cannot Because no man living ever treated iso many cases and. possesses such vast-experience.

Displacement, inflammation* torpid action, stagnation, sends to all part® of the body tbe pains that crash you.

Lydia EL Pinkham's "Vegetable Compound" is the sure cuse for thia trouble. Ffcr twenty years ithasdone ita grand, work and cured-.thousand*,

^IMPLICATION FOR LICENSE.

The undersigned will apply tolhe board of county commissioners, at thelK next regular session, whlfcb commences on the nr»t Monday In September, 1896, for license tn.retail spirituous, vinous and matt .liquors- in. less quantiUos than a quart- atL a tlmai with the prlvllSg* of allowing the sam# to be drank on.his* premises, ana to carry on said premises the following.additional business: card, tables. My place-of business is located, on. the ground flooirof tho one-story frame building located on .t-bo property described as. follows: The east Ima of the South half of the sout hwest quarter of section No. PL in township No. 13. north range eight west. The same being In Otter Creek

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T,«oOT»,,.y^.n&KiNi>FLL

M?LiCATION FOB LICENSE.

The Btftde.rslgned will Apply io,»he board of laonDty commissioners., at their aext regular 'session, which commences on t#e first alon'day la September. 1898. for lit#rise to retail isp&tfcnoos. vinous aod maJfc l*juors in less quantities than a quart at a *fme. with the privilege of allowing the sane to bo drank oa his premises. My place of business Is located on thegrownd floor*, south rooett. of a two-story brick bulging, located on the property described as follows: Commencing at a point in the center of bbe Lafayette road that Is 30 6-11 rodssouthw««»of a stone that Is 11 chains and aeventy-oltae links south and 8T»-I1 rods east of the aotthwest corner of the southeast quarter of section 35. township 18, range ftrwest, theme north degrees, west 17 3-6 rods, thence southeast 20-25 rods to the center of tfce Lafayette road, thence northeasterly along the center of said road 1 rods to the place of beginning, the same being in Otter Creek township. Vigo county, Indiana. Tike undersigned desli^s also to apply for the right to ran a bowling •SiSSofe r- wotTX.

Htimsoi*. fTtnsO* A Ookdit. Attys for

2^0TK7E TO NOX-RE81DKNT8.

O nlAM proved by tike statements of leadOulCSy fag druggists everywhere, slow ,v that the people have an abiding couflujuce id Hood's Sarsaporflia. Great f^llFPQ proved by the voluntary states ment»of thousands of men anil women slmw that Hood's S»r*iparil|a ac-, dally does possess

W

a

if in

Uww vl picliing and invigorating the blood, upon which no* only health but.llfe^ itselSdepends. The great Q. Stosaparilla In

COS?'curing othew warrants

you In lielieving tliat a fai&ful use of Hoo Sarsaparilla will efcre you If yon suffer from any trou&te caused*by injparc blo^l.

Sarsaparilla

Is th«toe True Bfbod PurlCfr. All dfugglsts: 9-l Prepared only by 0 I. Hood *€o., Lowell, Mass.

«_» ..* are easy to take, easy MOOd S PlliS to operate, 25cents.

The COAST LINE to MACKINAC •V t'TAKC

TTW1CK DAILY JWBAMEK8 TO

Ps ff

gt&teaf Indiana, cou- of Vigo, In the Circuit coort. a*tio«ru' May term. J*W. No. 3.006. Thooas li a. administrate* «f the rstate of James ». Jones, debase-.. «. Mary Jones, widow of deficient, et al. titles to sell land.

Be tt known that on the 13th day of A*ra«& IWk was ordered by the wart the clerk notify by poblication said MatyJones. widow of dteedent. Loalsa F. JWTweU, Charles A. Terrell her. husband. EU H. Jori«9». Washington L. Jtmem. James 2. Joa**.

Jasper

N. Jpnes. Mary H. Jones Armstrong, Kdward A rtnstmag. ber husband. Alice JonesAUen and James L. Allen, bw husbawt Ctjarles E. Jones. William A. Jonas. Thomaa IX Jones as non-mrfdent defendanU of tbe (Msdency of this action against thorn. iiaUl defendants are thero^we hereby m»tlfl«d of the pendency of ncttoagatast, thMB and that the same «H| Stand for trial jj am the Mth day of Septeo^i VM. tbe sawsj halag igept««W twta aiild coort la 0ia|

CHICAGO

CMnectiog with Vkadalla Ry. at Sf. Jdstpfr

Beginning May 25th and contlnaJng until abont Bc'pt. SOtli. t.hf» steamers ot.t his line will make two trtoaeach way dall rtyfoiiltidthg Sunday) lH*twenn:Sfi. Joseph and iCMUcagtvon the following scbtedale:

Leave St. JosepL. .4:30 pm 10:30pm Leave Chicago 9:30 am 11:30

Extra trips or. dMWrday leave Wi JOsoph at S* a. m. and Chicago* at 2 p. m. Haniiing time across the lake 4 tbonra. Trl-woekly,steam-ers to Milwaukee leave St. Josopjhi Minulay, Wednesday andiFHday evenings,:

The eoulpmo.ieof this line InoltUies^Mle side wheel steamer'MCUy of Chicago and-City of Milwaukee, (th0 fctrgest and flnast w/rst of Detroit), and ahe newly rebuHt propeller City of lx)ulsvi)l«t. Service flrsfwoikMft, Connections with all Vandalfa trains. '.Pickets on sale at. nil Vtodalia limitations. Chicago clock foot of Wabash avenue. i. H. GKAIIAM. President,

^H|

MACKINAC DETROIT FETOSKEY

CHIOAGO

2 New Steel Passenger Steamers The Qrea test* Perfection Construction —Lnnriow

Toledo, Detroit ^Mackiaac PETOSKEY, "THE 800,""MARQUETTE,

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NO

DULUTHl

LOW RATB5 to' Pictures^** Mackinac and Return, Including Heals aad Berths. Front Cleveland, $i8 from Tolede, Iks irony Detroit,

$13.50.

EVERT

EVENiNO

Between Detroit and Cleveland'

Connecting at Cleveland witft Barliest Trains for all points Bast So«*th and Seoihwest and at Detroit for all points North and^Korthwest. Sunday Trips Jons, iaijr, Aoeoit antftfepUmter Oisly.

EVERYI-DAV BETWBEN

Cleveland,

Mrs.

Put-in-Bay:^

1

attained In Boat ilpment, Artistic

Furnishing, Decoration and Btfidcot Servlca*. Insuring the highest degreeof COilFORT, SPEED AND SAFETY..

Foun

Trips per Wee*Between:

Toledo-

Send for Illustrated Pamphlet Address 1 A. A. SCHAttTZ, a. p. DSTaoiT, MlOH*

He Detroit ana dievelami stfflniav. £o.

Graham & Morton Transportation Co.

Kenton Harbor. Mich.

E. & T. H, R. R,

EX^mSiON, SOUTH.

Jane 15tVl6tb. Jniy6$il,

2M

20:h

Ontcftre for RoiirMbfrith. Plus 52. Territeay to which t&kot* will be s-jriiuB— sisslppV Jlorth

Alabat lorida. Gfoegib* Kentucky. MJ»rth Carol laa, 9«»*ith Car /Haa. Tennowee and Virginia. Tickets go i: eeturnlfttfcStdays from riato of sale.

K. COXHELLY, Get) A«»«*.

We wans a few men a

HI irnMiirJi CnoicaJLmr.of MUivmuvu Xursenfstock.

Wa-ooanot make yMnrtefe in a mont&hat can #n»yon Steady employment andiwtll pay yoa for it. Onr prices correspond with the tUses. Writ** for !srai» and territeny.

THE HAWKS NURSERY CO.. Milwaakae, Wi*.

9ANTC. DAVIS. FRA3Ufc J. TUKK,.

DAVIS TURK

ATTORNEYS AT LAW,

420%'Wabaa* Arc. TEttC HAUTE, *0.

J. .A. DAILEY, SOS OHIO 8TR.EET. Give-aim a call if /oa hare any kiwi of Insurant* to place. tf»wfilwrlteyou fcaa*goud comfSMtlee as are repreiMmted in tho city.

Xrtlsta* Buppltes. FIo«*r Mat rix, Plctota Praming a Spaetalty.

HW}8a.»0Ql'BT,Ctertl T(fft Hutt, In4«