Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 27, Number 10, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 August 1896 — Page 7
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5
HU8HABY SONG.
Lie «tlll, oh, my baby, and listen and listen To the song of the dream children coming to theel -Par off through the darkness we see their oats glisten
As they row softly over sleep's beautiful sea. They are coming to thee, ,, fjTbey are singing to tbee.?
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Lie still, oh, my baby, and listen and listen I There, hnsh thee, my baby, and, rocking and rocking Par out on the waves of the beautiful sea.
We may bear the dream children talking and talking Of all the sweet things they are bringing to thee.
From over the sea They are coming to thee.
While out on th«* v.-oves we go rocking ana rocking. So rest thee, my baby lie still on thy pillow, The breath of the dream children .blows over thee.
They catch thee, they, kiss thee, on each shining billow As they paddle thy boat over sleep's rosy sea.
I give thee, 1 send tboe. The dream children tend thee.
Thou goest to sea on the sail of thy pillow. —Anne h. liuzzey i% New York. Ban.
A SLUM ANGEL.
Some one was coming up the stairs as the little district visitor was descending. The ascending party struck a vesta, which threw a fitful glare over the damp and filthy walls and the gray gowned form of Hester Moore.|
Dr. Paul Myland stepped aside, flattening his broad shoulders against the baluster rail to admit a wider pMsage for her benefit
During the next two weeks this "slurinniag'* doctor and the soberly dressed little district visitor met about half a dozen times on their separate ways to or from some den in a crowded11 alley, and at the end of a fortnight they actually defied criticism and spoke. It was raining a steady drizzle, and through the mire of a muddy oourt Paul May land saw a familiar form in gray stepping over the puddles without an umbrella. "Please take mine," he said.
But she would only consent to share it "These places are not fit for you," said the doctor later when walking with her homeward. "You are too young, too—too— Indeed it is goarcely safe ~4j for so young a girl tovonture among the criminals that are hidden here.'V, "But I must," sh6 murmured. "Ah, you are 0110 of thOflo brave women willing to J^k anything. I had heard of you long bo fore I had the pleasure 9* lighting you down those rickety stairs two weeks ago." "You have hoard of me?" she asked, -with an abrupt sharpness of tone which lie did not notice. "Yes, froai the poor wretches whom jrou have mude your devoted friends,"
I he explained. "It is more often for you they call in the extremity of their pain I than for mo." "I am glad if I have done any good,'' she Baid, sighing with relief. "Good!" heechoed. "If thodepraved creatures about hero worship anything all, it is the Littlo Gray Lady, as thoy havo numed you."
Dr. Paul Mayland was celebrating his fortieth birthday over a lonely oup of tea. Old Betsy, his housekeeper and one time nurse, had made a doubtful looking cake in honor of the occasion, her affectionate master was sacrifidwg his digestion to please her. ft was not often that he was left to enj«y a meal in peace, and today was not an exoeption to the rule. He was still contemplating a seoond slice of cake when he received a hastjy summons to a case in Lavender oourt "That's just like him," she growled in monologue. "He'll never be rich while he doctors them paupers for nothing. And thoy takes 'vantage of his goodness, they da Now, if Master Jack hadn't turned out a scoundrel"— Here, being a devout Oatholio, she crossed herself and mused mournfully upon the doctor's secret sorrow. "Master Jaok" was Paul Mayland's youngest brother, his junior by 15 years, who had been left as a sacred trust by thoir dying mother to the elder's care. Some seed of depravity, perhaps sown iu long generations past, early developed in young Jaok. After rushing through various vicissitudes of gambling and drfnk he devoted the remaining part of his sodden intellect to the criminal sci•enco of burglary.
His distracted brother for several years grieved for his "sacred trust" as a thing lost to him uutil one night Jack had appeared craving protection from Ithe law. For the sake of his dead mother, Paul had shielded the boy, who, when the danger was over, broke loose again, and in the course of time his ^dexterity earned him, in the criminal
v'
»rld, the sobriquet of "Lightning
At Lavender court, iu the room where his patient lay, Dr. Mayland found the Little Gray Lady kneeling by the truckle bed on which a consumptive child was dying. 'I sent for you," she said. "I knew you would come if you poasibljtoould."
She had puaxlod him from the first— her absolute loneliness and hex reserve. There were moments when be wondered if she were tiring of her charitable work, so obvious to him had been her troubled tuind sometimes. Tonight, wa Iking beside her thrcugt) the busy streets, he abruptly put his fancy into wcards. "Yes, I am very tired," she answered, hato the work. I hate it." "But it isn't compulsory," be ex claimed. "Why do you do it?" "Because I must," she said bitterly.
Paul May]and was not a rapid thinker. and not until tiny had turned into the street where she lived did ho come to some sort of conclusion. Perhaps she wns performing deeds of charity in expiation of some trifling sin, magnified by her tender conscience.
Yes, be loved her. She had gnoss* 1*
long ago. It vaa in that nnuneat when he bad once uoccasciously revealed his secret that her work had bccome suddenly hateful to herself. "Don't go la yet," he
Mid.
"I waBl
to tell you sometifcog. Let us walk back to the end of the street" "I love you, Hester. I love you." ffia ]ow voice penetrated through the traffic of the street "I am not a young man, but my feeling for you is deep and strong enough to last my lifetime, even unto eternity." He caught the sharp sob that was choked in her throat "Hester," he cried, "look at met Oh, my darling, what is it?" '1 am so happy!" she said. "That is •11."
How long they walked up and down that pavement neither knew. They were jerked back to the reality of things by a faint, hoarse voice that seemed to have sprung out of the darkness beside them: "Paul, for God's sake, save me! It is the last time I shall trouble you."' "Go to my house by the back door. I will join you in ten minutes."
And, catching at Hester's hand, he hurried her along. ,, "You are trembling, dearest That man has frightened you. He meant no harm. It is my brother." "Your brother?" she gasped. 'Lightning Jack' your brother?" "What do you know of 'Lightning Jack?' Who are you?" "Oome with me to my lodgings," sh'e said faintly. "I can't tell you here."
Hester Moore sat wi^h her arms_ stretched across the table, her head bowed on them in speechless, tearless misery. The confidence which she had withheld so long had been wrung from her at last
She was no angel of charity, bet a person sent from Scotland Yard to track the burglar "Lightning Jack." "So this is our Little Gray Lady! A human bloodhound paid to hunt down fallen wretohes."
Every word lashed her like a whip. In the distress of that hour he was blind to her pain, blind to justice, blind to his very love for her. "Well, your victim is ready at your hand," he said bitterly to the trembling representative of Scotland Yard Of oourse you will do your duty."
He walked from the room Without a baokward glance. For an instant she remained thus, spiritless and dazed. Then a gradual indignation worked ita way through her clouded brain. V-v 5....
What had, she done to evoke contempt, to forfeit happinees? Born of a detective father, she had been carefully trained by the clever parent in certain intrioaoies of the profession, and since his death the work had been to her a means of livelihood.'
The cheap clock on the mantelpiece struck 11, and she raised her face at last, a wondrous pity looking out of her burning eyes. Why had she considered only horsolf? His seeming cruelty had been but the outcome of fear for the safety of his brother!
When the dawn showed through the chinks of the blind, she threw open the window and leaned out her face in the chilly breeze. "Hester, I have been waiting for you, hoping against hope that you did not go last night to—to Scotland Yard."
It was Paul Mayland standing on the pavement He bent his face close to hers and whispered. "Thank God!" she said, with shaking lips.
Death had spared her a terrible task. "Lightning Jack" had died in delirium in the arms of his brother.
One of the cleverest lady assistants attaohed to Scotland Yard resigned her post a few weeks ago, on the oooasion of her approaching marriage.
The pew openor of the Southwark church was heard to remark that "in all her ken" no man had ever looked so proud of his bride as did the "slumming" doctor who brought back the Littlo Gray Lady to live with them.—Answers.
Animals and Fire.
Sports Afield says that rattlesnakes won't run from fire,, but instead strike till the last at the flames about them. This is true of many animals, especially of horses, who will rush back into a burning barn, apparently blind with rage, striking with their hoofs and switching their tails in great anger.
The flight of wild birds during migrating time against lighthouses is more like the action of the green bicyclist who rides against a trolley car or wagon as if hypnotized by it and in spite of his fears.
Gorillas, it is said, delight in fire, drawing closer to the flames as the fire dies down and at last wading in the redhot ashes, apparently enchanted and not feeling the burning ooals.
A little fire built beneath one of the pear shaped paper wasp nests that are seen hanging from low branches will kill every wasp in it, as the insects fly at it one by one iu their endeavors to save their home and young.
Deer are frequently heard about Adirondack open caiups where the fire flares up from the logs, but a big, hot fire drives the mosquitoes and punkies from the camps as well as smoke.
Frogs leap through the lames of a little bonfire time and time again, as if having the most pleasing of fun. It may be, though, that they think the flickering flames to be some new sort of insect
The ImmnUow Crttte.
Almost the last work that Sir „**iwin Land seer was engaged on was a life sited picture of Nell Gwynn passing through ait archway on a white palfrey. This pictcrv, in which the horse alone was finished, was bought by one of the Rothschild family and given to Sir John Miliais to oomplete. One morning a celebrated art critic called ami was much impressed with this work. "Ah. to be sure!" he said, going np close and examining a deerhound, which almost breathed, in the faregrcmnd of the picture. "How easily one oan recognise Laudator's dogs! Wonderful, isn't it?" "Yes, it is wonderful," remarked Sir John, lighting another pipe. "1 finished painting that dog yesterday and have done the whole of it ngaelt" That eritio wm maybe spoke. Magsiins of Ait
mmms
Violet FerftaiM.
Mttttwna of violeis, "sweeter than the lids of Juno's eyes**" nestle at Grasae and Nice under the gray shadow of the orange groves,'yet the 200,000 pounds of this flower sacrificed every year to the flower press are not sufficient fox the toilet' The perfumer is glad to fall back on the intense violet odor of "Cassie, sweet to smell," for, sickly as its scent is when used alone, it gives the indispensable note to many bouquets and is longer available than the violet, the blossoms of Acacia farnesiana being successive, while those of its better known floral ally are quickly over.
There cannot be. a greater contrast than that existing between the lowly tufts of the Parma violet and the tree' 15 feet high, with its stem thick as a man's wrist and its branches 6 feet long. Yet the blossoms have the same characteristic odor. Cassie, too, the flower .farmer's latest crop, forms a fitting introduction to the .violet harvest occurring^ as the former does, in November and, December, while the purple' shadow of the latter is not seen under the olives till the beginning of February. Both odors are obtained by the characteristic enfleurage system—pure, inodorous lard being placed on sheets of glass and covered with flower petals. Forty or fifty of the trays are then piled on one another, till the lard is charged with their perfume, the flowers being changed from 30 to 40 times before the pomade is considered sufficiently scented.—Chambers' Journal.
"ifcfVjfBatooiufltld'i Silence. In 1875, Lord Beaoonsfield .paid his first and only visit to Longleat, and Lord Bath said afterward that he was "the dullest (the word, writes the canon in a subsequent letter, was the 'most silent') guest he ever had in his house. He hardly ever spoke." Undoubtedly Lord Beaconsfleld oould be most agreeable when in the humor, but he heeded apparently stimulus of congenial companionship or of some end which was worth the effort By all accounts, he was given,to ^flts^of taciturnity, and although he was known in his youth as a voluble and persistent talker it was impossible to watch, his sphinxlike immobility iu tVe house of commons, sitting with foilded'arms and seldom speaking, withoult feeling that silent meditation was more natural to him than speech and the-turmoil of debate. And that* seems to have been his own opinion. One of those who heard Lord Bath's remark on the silence of his distinguished guest was Mi. Richard Doyle (Dicky Doyle.) "I believe," he said, "that talking was always more or less of an effort for Disraeli, and, indeed, he once told me as much. 'Circumstances,' he said, 'have forced mo to taik a great deal, but nature intended me to be a silent man.' "—Contemporary Review.
The man, hearing this, became very angry, and, getting into the bus, called out: «, "I'm the thirteenth, constable I'm the thirteenth!" "In that case," quietly replied the qonstable, "you must get out, as the bus is licensed to carry only 12 inside." And, in spite of the man's remonstrances, he was removed, amid the roars of laughter from the other passengers.—London Standard.
Catherine Sinclair and Scott. There is a pretty little story told in the Dundee Advertiser concerning an aunt of the present archdeacon of London and Sir Walter Scott Catherine Sinclair, the lady in question, was the author of a number of works which at one time were in great request, and one of whifsh, "Holiday House," was recently published by Blackie. In he" earlier years she was a frequent visiter at Abbotsford, and on one of,those ocr sions, before the authorship of the "Waverley Novels" had been publicly avowed, she presented Sir Walter with a small engraving of himself, with a piece of very thin muslin over the face and the inscription underneath, "The Great Unknown."
An Add Proof
If you want a stopper for a bottle of acid or any substance that would naturally call for a gla» stopper because
TEBBE HAUTE SATURDAY yVENPfG- MAIL, AUGUST 29, 1896.
I
,The Thirteenth Weut. ^r
Four ladies going eastward entered a bus near the Bank of England. There were only three vacant seafsr, A .gentle**' man instantly rose to allc^r 'iHei^fourth lady to sit down. An elderly fiveijiressed man sitting close to the door began to complain that the bus was overcrowded and pestered the oonductdr with ill natured remarks.
The conductor, liaving collected all fares from those inside, went to look after the outside passengers. Seeing this, the grumbler got out of the bus to obtain the services of a policeman for the purpose of removing the thirteenth passenger. Presently he returned with an officer of the lawf. The constable carefully counted the passengers and declined to interfere, as the number was not in excess of that allowed.
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the danger that the cork would be eaten np by the contents of the bottle, take the cork anu steep it in vaseline. It will then be impervious to acids of any kind, and no action of chemicals will decay it It will, in fact, be as good for all purposes as a glass stopper.
jc A Vx.ir.aMe Servant. "Didn^ 1 tell yon, Norab. that I ebon Id be at home to no one?" "Yis, ma'am, but the lady has on just the foinest new hat yes iver laid oyee on, au I t'ought it me Christian jooty to hev ye* see it "—Strand Magasine. •V 1
If men cculd learn from history, what lessons it might teach us! But passion .xd party blind our eyes, and tbe Light hich experience gives is a lantern
liie' steijQ yhkh shines only on jraves behfnd u*.—Ooleridge.
In Buffon's experiments be found a Frenchman who oould east! a of 6*4 pounds with his Java
Torpedo boats, however, aze desisted for a wider servioe {ban simply to cany and discharge the frightful weapon from whidh they take their name. T^ey are to the navy what scouts and skirmishers are to a land army. They form tfce cavalry of the sea, of which the cruisers aze the infantry and the battleships and monitors the artillery arm. They must spy out the position of the enemy's fleet, hover about his flanks or. haunt his anchorage to ascertain what he is about and what he means to do next They must act as the pickets of their own fleet, patrolling the neighborhood or waiting and watohing concealed among islands or in inlets and river mouths, ready to hasten away to the admiral with warning of any movement of the enemy.
It is not their business to 'fight (except larely, in the one particular way), but rather to pry and sneak and run. Hence they are as small and sleek and swift as they can be made. When the fleet goes upon a cruise, they are carried on the decks of the big warships, although they are able to get about in really rough wwfv pp*-"^lemselves. A very reoet%,,r,„ .oild them out' of aluminituk would not only'be of great advantage toward ease of transportation, bat would tend toward increased speed by adding buoyancy and elasticity to the structure, which seem» to «lrim along the surfaoe and fairly leap from wave to wave, but it is doubtful whether aluminium is strong enough fot safety and whether it will not be injured by the chemical action of the sea water.—Ernest Ingeraoll in St Nicholas.
The Bcilly Islands.
The climate of the SeiHy—isIands Is the most equable in Great Britain. It ranges, on an average, from 40 degrees to 60 degrees. On the coldest day it is warm and on the hottest it is 000L There are only three seasons in Scilly of four months each—spring, summer and autumn. When the autumn ends, spring commences. There is no great height in the islands. The highest land in Bryher is only 188 .feet above sea level, although the telegraph tower built on St Mary's reaches a height of *158 feet, but the rockeoenery of the entire group of these islands is remarkable. There are rocks fantastic, jagged, peaked, toothed, serrated rooks resembling living creatures, and others suggestive of primeval vastness and unoouthness some grandly eastelated, 'nfchp.ni Hi*1? ?,
0511618
."vid-'WVi,
Like a great lion's cheek teeth. Those on the peninsula of Penninirf— especially if they are seen in misfc— Men a war (pronounced man-of-war), the Maiden Bower, Mincarlo, Shipman's Head, the Haycocks at Annet, and many others, are strikingly grand. The curious resemblance to primeval qnimal forms has. given rise to many of the names of these rooks, and certainly many are £4ke a great sea beast, crawled forth to sun ,5'f Itself, «£hile there are "elephants' tusks,' 4 'monks' cowls," 'pipers' holes,'' "giants' castles," "pulpit rooks," etc. —London Spectator. fh*
When "Fiat Jostitdaf Talks. The irritable person—generally elderly and dyspeptic—who, in fiction, in faroe and in real life is continually announcing his determination to write to the papers is exclusively a product of modern civilization. That the physical and mental exercise of evolving a quarter of a column of prose acts as a real sedative to agitated minds will be admitted by most of us—by more than will readily plead guilty to a recourse to the remedy. When "Paterfamilias," or "Constant Reader," or "Fiat Justitia"remembers —if he ever thinks of the matter at all —that it is only because he lives in these last days that he can indulge himself in his favorite luxury, he may perhaps wonder how on earth our worthy great-grandfathers managed to work off their superfluous anger and zeaL The probability is that they would have used a great deal of language on the subject, in question, a good part of it unprintable, perhaps, and possibly in severe cases might have waxed so warm as tc challenge somebody and get pinked foi their pains. —Temple Bar. ,.
Swim Faneral Customs.'W
The funeral customs among some of the Swiss are most peculiar. At the death of a person the family' inserts a formal, black edged announcement in the papers asking for sympathy and stating that "the mourning urn" will be exhibited ccrtain hours on a special day. In front of the house where the prison died there is placed a little black table, covered with a black cloth, on which stands a black jar. Into this the friends a%i acquaintances of the family drop lit'It black margined visiting, cards, sometimes with a few words pf sympathy on them. The u*n is put out on the table on the day of the funeral. No one except men ever goes to the churchyard, and they generally follow the hearce on foot, though metimee carriages aie used. The horses that draw the hearse have long, black cloaks on, with places cut out for them to see through.—Brooklyn Eagle
Shakespeare Knew the Dollar, It is not generally known that the woid "dollar" appears in Shakespeare's wcxks, being used in "Measure Foi Measure," written in 1608, in act 1, scene 2, "To $8,000 a year in "Macbeth/** written in 1606, act 1, scene 2, where bnria! ia refused to Sweno's men until "fl0,000 to our general use have been paid."—St Louis GlobeDemocrat.
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Um
Maeealwea.
The "era of the Maccabees" began B. CL 164, when Judas Maocabtens as-, sumed the leadership of the Jewsr who had determined to throw off the yoke of Antiochus Kpi phases. The revolt was •eeceetfnl, and the Aiwoooan kin^s ruled Judaea until its conquest by the Botnans. The Jews stykd the Maooabees'era the "era of kings."
iw omristnimlkixl Miiriii 11 has always been a caramon notion that for the first half of the sixteenth century the French, Spanish and Portuguese had the Newfoundland fishery to themselves. Judge Prowse disposes summarily of this idea and brings forward .ample proof not .only that the English fishing fleet was there in great strength, but that for the whole centuryt and most certainly from the accession of Elizabeth, it ruled this heterogeneous floating colony in most masterful fashion. Spain was computed to have 6,000 sailors on the banks at this period. Portugal was not very far behind her, while France was probably more strongly represented than either.
Though no question was made of the right of all these nations to equal share in the trade, the supremacy of the British seamen, chiefly from Devonshire, half fishermen, half pirates, seems never to have been disputed, or .never, at any rate, successfully disputed. The soil of Newfoundland or Terra Nuova, it is true, was then of no moment Its value was merely that of a refuge in stress of weather and a place upon which to dry and pack the spoils of the deep. But upon this seemingly barren foothold the Knglifth adventurers, with that acquisitive instinct which foreign nations and ourselves are just now calling by such different names, kept from the first a firin and jealous giip, while in the floating and, upon the whole, peaceful republic, which spent half of every year between the desert shores of Labrador and the grim headland of Oape Ray, oar countrymen seem to have secured for themselves undisputed sway.—Maomill an's Magazine.
^m
Bating an Blephant.
The "flesh of the elephant is eatehin its entirety by several of the Afrioan tribes. A detail of the prooess of butchering the animal is not pleasant reading. The tools used are the assegai ai hatchets. The rough outer skin is first removed in large sheets. Beneath #his ia a 8ubculiole. a pliable membrane, from which the natives make waterskins.
The elephant yields large quantities of fat, used in cooking their sun dried biltong, or dried strips of the elephant's flesh, and also in the preparation of vegetables. Afrioan explorers of the Caucasian race agree that one part of the elephant's carcass, when properly cooked, is a succulent dish that will regale the most delicate taste. This part, very strangely, is the first joint of the leg below the knee, which one would suppose to be the toughest portion of the animal.
To prepare the joint a hole three feet deep is dug '•n the earth, and the sides of it ore baked hard by means of large live coals. Most of the ooals are tber taken out, and the elephant's foot i: placed in the rude oven. The whole then filled with dirt tightly packed, and a blazire fire is built on top, which is kept replenished foi three hours. 9?he foot is thus evenly baked, and when done, instead of strong, tou^h meat fiber, it is of a gelatinous sisiency that may be eotcfi with a spccC The Kaffirs esteem this their grenleu luxury, and a feast on elephants' feet is the occasion of a tuerrymulriiig th»' ft* gests the possum feasts of slavery days in the south.—St Louis Post-Dispatch.
Free Telegraphing.
In Germany it is the privilege of the kaiser and kaiserin to telegraph as much as they like in their own country free of expense. This privilege also extends to the dowager empress. Foreign telegrams are, however, paid for at the ordinal rate. t"'.
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MAIN LINE.
Arrive from the East. rWest. Ex*. 1.90 am 15 Mall & Ac* 9.45 am 5 St. L. Llm* 9.55 am 21 St. L. Ex*.. 2.45 3 Mail Sc Ac. 0,90 11 Fast Mail*. 8.55 Arrive from the West. 6 N. Y. Ex*.. 3.30 am 14 Eflf. Ac 9.30 am 80 Atl'c Ex*. .12.32 8 Fast Line*. 2.05 2 N. Y. Llm*. 5.05
Leave for the West. 7 West. Ex*. 1.40 am 5 St. L. Llm*. 18.00 a 21 St. L. Ex*.. 2.30 13 Eff. Ac 5.05 11 Fast Mail*. 9.00
Leave for the East. 12 Ind Llm'd^ll.20 a as 6 N. V. Ex*.. 3.25am 4 Mail & Ac. 7.30 am SO Atl'c Ex*. .12.37 8 Fast Line* 2.10 2 N. Y. Llm* 5.10
MICHIGAN DIVISION.
Leave for the North. 0 St Joe Mall.6.30 am 80 St Joe Spec.1.00 8S. Bond Ex.4.30
Ar. from the North 13T. H. Ex...11.10am 21 South'n Ex 2.45 11 T. H. Mall. 7.00 pm
PKORIA DIVISION.
Leave for Northwest. Ar. from Northwest. 7 N-W Ex....0.20 am 21 "Peoria Ex .3.15
80 Atlte Ex .. 12.15 OEast'n Ex. 9.00 pm
EVANSVILLE & TERRE HAUTE.
NASHVILLE LINE.
Leave for the South. 5 & N Llm*.11.40 3 & Ev Ex*. 5.38 am 7 Ev Ac ..10.10 am 1 Ev & I Mall* 3.15 pm
Arrive from South. 6 0 AN Llm* 4.45 a 2THE&X* ,11.00am 80 Mixed Ac.. 4.45 4 & Ind ExMl.10
EVANSVILLE & INDIANAPOLIS. Leave for South. Arrive from South. 33 Mail & Ex..9.00 am 48 Mixed. 10.10 a 49 Worth. Mix.3.30 82 Mall & Ex. 3.15
CHICAGO & EASTERN ILLINOIS. Leave for North. 6 & N Llm* 4.50 am 3 & 0 Ex.11.20 am 8 Local Pass 3.10 4 E & Ex*.11.35
Arrive fn^m North. 3 O & E Ex*.. .5.90 a 9 Local Pass .9.25 a 1 O & Ev Ex.. .3.10 5 0 ft N Llm*.11.35 pm
C. C. C. & I.—BIG FOUR. Going East, 30 N Y*01nEx*1.55 am 2 IndfcUinEx 7.00 am 4 TPAFlyer*10.00 am 8Day Ex*... 3.05pm 18 Knlckb'r*. 4.31 SSI Ind Acct.. 10.00 ft
Going West.
35St Ex*... 1.33 am 9 Ex & MallMO.OO a in 11 8-W Llm*.. 1.37 pm 8 Matt'11 Ac. 5.00 23 Matt'n Act 7.45
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Pass. Agent, in charga
of Immigration, Birmingham, Ala.
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671 Main Sts Terre Haute. led,--
Mr. Mrs. Htsry Ksizesbsch,
Funeral Directors
a I. FLEMIW, M. i». C. VETERINARIAN. Special attention) catue aad dogs.
