Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 27, Number 12, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 12 September 1896 — Page 6
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,.rrHE AGE OF PERFECTION.
cTWcrshlpers of womanhood, No more old shibboleths repeat! (Youthful hyperboles and crude.)
Their fulsome praise is now effete, But with a measured rapture greet Nor indiscriminately strive
To prove all women young &nd sweet— The perfect age is thirty-five. Time waa yon praised the maiden's snood,
Tbe timid eye, the lingering feet, In modest basbfnlneas that stood sa| Where rivulet and river meet.
Now childish grace 1b obsolete. '-V Our modern appetite would thrivo s-'SJ On riper grain, matured wheat-?-The perfect age is thirty-live.
Tall Helen wandering in tbe wood, And gentle Hermia small and nest,Young Rosalind in costume rude.
Girl Juliet in your winding sheet— Tou all, alas, are incomplete. Then pray that time may means contrive
Tour changeless youthfulneas to cheat— The perfect age is thirty-flve. Then woman sober and discreet
11X
(So men may chooee yon when they wive). The moment seize—for time is fleet— The perfect age is thirty-flve! —fit. James Gazette.
A FAIRY OMNIBUS.
I think everybody gets a touch of romance some time in his life. The green glade of olden days is probably replaced by a busy street, your armor olad knight by a city man in a frock ooat and silk hat, yoor distressed damsel Is a practical, level headed, energetic little typewriter, perhaps. The actors are changed, the scene is changed, bat, believe me, the element of romanoe is Just the same as it was in the days of chivalry.
Now, I dare say ycnrwm believe that a bald headed, middle stout old solicitor libs me—^ttijRg ery day more engicipf|i6d in btjsi more and more ap4jp be a trifle in my temper, owln£tto a tiresome liver —was ever sufluently "interesting" to play the part of ateodeni knight
Let me tell you all about itj* and iic&l it ended. It's oomntmiplpOe enoogfe,1 know, and I dare sa£ f&Q0t of ywi BftW gone through something Himilar, but if it does nothing else it may perhaps serve to stir up pleasant memories.
I had nearly completed my articles, and was reading hard for my "final," when one morning the firm told me to go to a client who was ill and take instructions for her will.
She waa an old maiden lady living in Paddington, and our people had transacted all her business for her for something like 40 years.
It was a wet day—one of those days that wo get from time to time in London, when you feel as if you would like to go to bed and not get up again until things have changed.
Hoi born was like a little river, and dhe traffic slopped and splashed along in way that made you feel damp even to watoh.
I stood on the ourbstone waiting for a chance to cross without being smothered with mud, when I noticed a girl standing near me. She, too, was trying to orosi.
It was very funny to see her. She was evidently from the oountry, and didn't at all understand the London trafflo. Three times she started, and three times she turned baok in despair.
I watched her with interest There was an amusing expression of good tempered misery cn licr face. She was pretty—very pretty—and daintily dressed, and—well, I eeizod my opportunity like an articled clerk who is worth his salt is bound to da "Excuse me," I said, raising my hat, "but I think you want to oross the road."
She looked rather startled. "I think I shall get on all right," •he answered, "if you would kindly tell mo when to start." "Supposo we try together? Give me your arm."
She did not give me her arm. I took it, and we started on our pilgrimage. In and out the oabs and omnibuses 1 guided her safely until we got to about the middle of the road, whioh, as you know, is very wide opposite Furnival's inn. Suddenly she limped and gave a funny little hop "I'm very sony," she said, laughing, "but—I'm afraid my shoe has oome off. It stuck in the mud."
I looked around. Sure enough, a few yards behind us was a shoe lying in the mud, looking very lonely and getting horribly wet "Oan you stand here for a moment," I said, "while I fetch it?"
I left her there, standing on one foot with the tip of a little stockinged toe just touching the ground to steady her.
A cab driver who happened to pass (bond the situation amusing and mid so candidly, but I'm proud to say that I managed to keep a grave face. The shoe was such a small one that I marveled how a human being could ever get it on, much less get it off again.
Now a saint from heaven can't put a lady's shoe on for her without seeing her ankle. I didn't try to. I thoroughly enjoyed that little ankle and lingered over the task with becoming solemnity in spite of the weather.
At last we were ready to start again. "It was very kind of you not to laugh at me," she said, with a little blush. "I most have looked very silly, standing there on one foot" 'You looked very charming," 1 said, with a young man's bluntness. 1 landed her safely on the path, and she thanked me.
I asked her if I could be of any further service. She thought not She only wanted to get into a Paddington bos, and then she would be quite safe.
Now I wanted a Paddington boa, but I didn't say As soon as one came up I stopped It, pot ber inside and went on top myself. perhaps you will think me quixotic for going oatsido in such miserable •oattrrr Well, 1 believe you would have done the same thing after ail. You jm. I was afraid she might think I was oattering followed ber jMkte. ItJooied rather like taking advantage ofi trifling and I waaat that jge when a nam wooW rattw*
rheumatic fever than sacrifice the good opinion of a pretty girL Things are different now—I'm a married man.
But, bless your heart, you can't escape destiny by getting outside aa omnibus. I hadn't been up there three minutes, the rain had only just com* menced to soak through the knees of my trousers and trickle down my legs, when the conductor came up with a significant grin on his face. "If you please, sir," faeaaid, "there's a young lady inside wants to speak to
nri ft
&
yon# I climbed down the ladder with which buses in those days were furnished.
There she sat in the corner half smiling, half blushing. There was nobody else inside. "Won't you get wet if you go outside?" she said. "I was afraid you might think I was a nuisance,:' I answered. 2"I guessed as much," she said frankly. "But it would be a very poor return for your kindness if I drove yoa into consumption."
I think that upon the whole that was the most delightful bus drive in my experience. The conversation flowed in a torrent, and I believe we exchanged as many confidences and opinions in half an hour as some people do in a lifetime. It was wonderful. It was like touching by accident the hidden spring of some secret door whioh opened into anew atmosphere, anew fairyland. We were more like old friends than chancc acquaintances, and it seemed as if neither could tell the othsrutoQ innr.h. Points of agreement cuod diiMgneemerit jrere noted .eagerly.* We had read the lame b&ik^^sited ti»%me places, and v?here\*jjr tumed there was new |fBbnnc^4Gp^path]^g« 'V,
Shtf 'fiad only "London a week visited any plaoe of amuaeinetit 2 woxider&l if I oould find a dbarioe ihdro of pushing my advantage And approached the subject with delica$y and ca^xtKifti. point Jtjaeemed that the mutual obrfflSence stopped, for she declined to understand my tactics and remarked that ber time was too fully occupied to go about much.
Only too soon we reached the place where I bad decided to alight We shook hands warmly and thadked each other rather vaguely and nervously, and then I found myself onoe more on a nasty, wet London pavement
I had had a glimpse of fairyland, but it was only a glimpse. I was back again in the praotioal, uncomfortable world, with a living to be earned and a will to make.
The gates of fairyland were closed, for, like a donkey, I had omitted to find out the fairy's name and where she lived.
It seemed impossible to bring one's mind back to the legal subtleties of willmaking, but it had to be done, and I trudged heavily on my way to our olient's house, finding, to my infinite disgust, that I had got out of the omnibus much sooner than I need have done.
Imagine my surprise when, ou reaching the house and being shown into the dining room, I found there tbe heroine of the lost shoe.
That settled it VI felt that heaven had decided I was to marry that young lady, and I formed the pious intention then and there of giving heavon every possible assistance and made such a delightful hash of her aunt's will that it required some six or seven visits to put matters straight
Curiously enough, though, from the moment we met in the bouse her friendliness ceased. Every time I came she was more cold and distant, and I was almost in despair. The conversation which had flowed so merrily in an uncomfortable omnibus seemed impossibk over the dining room fire, and she refused to go beyond tl*a, moefc eommgnplaoe civilities.
She calmly ignored that drive, which I had found so delightful, and treated me with ordinary politeness due to the representative of her aunt's solicitors.
The position grew desperate, beoause I couldn't continue to make blunders over the old lady's will forever. Already the firm had reprimanded me for stupidity, though, to be sure, the old lady herself bore with me with wonderful patience and good temper.
The crisis came.
1"
It was my last visit about the will, whioh was now ready—absolutely oorrcot—and the dear old creature had approved of every word of it
It only required to be executed. She said she would like her niece and me to be the witnesses, and as she was much better s?:d able to get up we assembled solemnly in the library. But she was a funny old character and scouted the idea rf rolemnity, ringing the bell for the wrv. nt to bring up some champagne, so that we might driijk "success to her will»"
I'm thankful to say that, though I was by this time helplessly in love with the niece, I had sufficient presence of mind to say, "Success to the will, and may it never have to be proved!" which pleased her immensely, and before I left I was invited to dinner the following Sunday.
From that moment things went pretty smoothly, though it was only last evening that in talking over our courting days ixi the far away past my wife explained the meaning of her extraordinary coolness to me.
It seems that when, after the drive in what she is pleased to call the "fairy omnibus," I walked into her aunt's dining room, she quite recognised that I must be her destiny, and so, with feminine perversity, she felt called upon to struggle against fate aa much as possible.
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••But you Ought to be very thankful to me for one thing she added. "It was I who—but never mind." "Nonsense!" 1 said. "Go on. We are too old fashioned to be romantic any longer." "Weil, she said, "it waa I who suggested you should be invited to dinner.**
Which just shows what contradictory creatures women are. Household Worda
mniiwjU'i-i»'iiJJSjpyygl^ ^.'^y W'
FOR LITTLE FOLKS.
TBfifiS HATJTE SATURDAY EVKNTSTft MAjfc, SEPTEMBER 12, 1896
LITTLE TRAVELERS.
Tbe Three BtRMW Children Crossed the Allan tie Without Father or Mother.
Lorenz Begasse is a very happy man. Recently he was joined in this oountry by his three children, whom he had not seen for nearly four years. They have been with relatives during that time in Cologne, their birthplace, while the father has been making a home for them in America.
Begasse, widowed, left his little ones to seek fortune here. Having flourished, be wrote to those who had the children in care: "Send Nicola and Anna and Eliza to mft."
So the three were shipped to their either and arrived in New York on the steamer Southward. This traveling party was personally conducted by Nioola who has reached the mature age of 11 years. He is a towheaded, rosy cheeked, bright eyed youngster. He was warmly dressed in rough but serviceable clothes. His sisters are as much like him as three peas—towheaded, rosy oheeked. Anna is 7 years old and Eiioa 0 years.
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Their ourls hang to their neoks, and they wore capes of blue cloth and skirts of stout goods.
It has been said they were "shipped" hither. Seourely tied in a buttonhole of each child's clothes was a tag "Whose wording was varied only by the child's name: "This child, Nioola Begasse, is going to Lorenz Begasse, No. 2 Hall am plaoe, off Harvest avenue, Batavia, New York"
Those tags were the passports that oarried them safely to their destination, although the children's helplessness insured them every kindness and attention. They were the pets of the passengers on the Southwark. The officers on Ellis island took the best oare of them, and one of Uncle Sam's employees in uniform and brass buttons was glad to play nurse and put tbe children in a New York Central train, handing them over to the conductor's oare.
While Nicola appreciated these attentions he did not need them. When seen on Ellis island, he was lugging., to^e boat a huge yalise^-into whi^ki^SFTw of the tiny globe tfotters been tightly packed.—New York
Fanny Locke Mackenzie has a Russian story, "The Little Duchess and the Lion Tamer," in St Nicholas. Here is the tamer's account of one of his pets: "The lioness is Puska," he said, "Leo's wife, and she is a great soold. She growls and worries at Leo all the time. Sometimes she even slaps him with her paw and snarls at him, but to the baby lions Puska is very gentle and kind. She sings to them softly, and lickjB their smooth little heads with her warm tongue, and they snuggle up to her and listen, until they fall fast asleep. Sbealways sings the same ltillaby song.''
He olosed his eyes and dropped, his head lower over his hand. When Kiva, the big snake, swallows the son. Then, oh, my cnbkin, the-long day is done. Yellow and burning, so the day dies, Drowsy lids, drowsy lids, close overdyes.
Sleep, sleep, while mother para, Sleep, sleep, oubkin of hers. Lie tow, coddle and rest,
Sleep, now, mother knows best. "That is Puska'8 song," he said. "Sing it again," begged the little dttobess, her eyelids dropping down over her brown eyes, and Ivan sang: my heart beat for you, small whelp of mine, All of the love in it surely is thine. iJz&u Hear Nana, the night hawk, call as be flies! Drowsy lids, drowsy lids, oloee over eyes.
Sleep, sleep, eto. 'Once more, please," she said dreamily. Her head rested against the white bearskin and her dark lashes touched her cheek. Half under his breath, softly, sleepily, be murmured it When the night falls, oome the stars one by one: Fireflies fled and tbe little mice ran.. As Banna, the beetle, passes he cries," Drowsy lids, drowsy lids, close over eyes.
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Medicine In Terse form.
There are boys and girls who are always borrowing trouble. If there is a storm, they are certain the lightning will strike them, and they worry so much about their lessons that thoy really don't have time to get them. And they are so fretful and full of complaints that it is hard for their friends to get along with them. For such boys and girls a famous German poet has some excellent medicine. It is put np in the form of a neat little stanza, which may be easily carried around. Here it is:
What I don't see
"£s'*£
Don't trouble me, And what I see
k-V Might trouble Did I not know ffVrt That ft must be ». —Chicago Record.
toncrr Than root.
Little fidith was playing in the yard. Suddenly she ran into the house. "Oh, mamma," said she, "I saw a great long snake in the yard." "How long?" exclaimed mamma. "A foot long!" "Oh, longer than that It was a leg long!"— Youth's Cbmpankm.'
African Horrors.
The greatest cause of horrors in west Africa is undoubtedly the belief in witchcraft It is not, as one sees often stated, regarded as being the only cause of men dying there are two other generally accepted death causes, which I will not describe here, but witchcraft is oertainly regarded as being the cause of death in 75 per cent of cases. Toleration means indifference, I believe, with all men, and the west African is not indifferent on this subject If you put yourself in his plaoe I think you will own it is difficult to be so, when you believe you have found out, and got hold of, by—-to your mind—infallible means of detection, a person who has been placing alive crocodile or a catawumpus of some kind into your own or a respectable fellow citizen's inside, so as to eat up valuable viscera.
I will not go into tbe subject of African cruelty any farther than to state the reason for killing prisoners of war which goes on now in nonslaveholding tribes. This is the direct result of the suppression of the slave trade. It is practically impossible, in the present condition of their culture, for them to keep a quantity of vigorous men in their midst, for they have no prison to keep them in, nor have they any more food will suffice to feed their own tribe, and it would be exceedingly impolitio to let loose again men who had given evidence of a desire to kill you and yours.—National Review.
To further illustrate this point we will take bells as an example. Often in the city a dozen church bells are being rung at one time. Either one of these, we will 8ay, can be heard at a distanoe of five miles. This we will admit needs no proof, but who is insane enough to argue that the 12 bells oan be heard 12 times as far as the one bell? If they could so be heard, the combined sound of the 12 could be heard at a distanoe of 60 miles 1 Yet it is just as reasonable that the sound of a dozen or a thousand bells would "mix" and "rend the firmament" as one gigantic whole as it is to believe that a thousand men oould give vent to a yell that oould be heard to a greater distance than a single stentorian scream.
Ten thousand men' might drov^n the sound of a bell or a steam whistle as far as their immediate vicinity was concerned,. yet the bell or whistle would be heard far beyond where no sound of voioes could penetrate.
Purify your blood with Hood's Sarsaparilla, which will give you an appetite, tone your stomach and strengthen your nerves.
tfJie Swedes are punc ii 1 iousiy Iboneet mjdrtrutli&il When asking for places at a theater, for instance, the ticket olerk never fails to inform tio applicant if, owing to th^rowded state of the house, a better position would bo secured with a cheuper ticket than the one asked for.
Again, when parcels are taken out by steamers from Stockholm to oountry places in the neighborhood, they are just thrown on to tbe quay, where they frequently remain half tbe day without being claimed. It never seems to ooour to any one that they oould be possibly taken by any one but their rightful owners.
On a canal trip of any length a little book lies in the saloon of tbe steamer in which each passenger keeps his own account of the number of meals and drinks that he has taken during the Journey. jy?
An Kxample of Impure Air.
1
Sound Wares. ft
We are told by those who have made •ooh matters a life study that sound is the effect produced upon the drum of the ear by any shock or impulse which causes vibration of the air. This being tbe case, it is plain that the sound produced by a thousand voices would not be more altisonant or far sounding than one single impulsive yell because each would set its own waves to vibrating.
K-
A largo jar or stone pot smaller at the top than the -bottom, or covered so as to leave only a small opening, may have a rubber tube dropped into it through which the experimenter may expel his breath for some seconds. After continuing this for a short time, alighted taper may be carefully lowered into the jar. The flame will begin to waver and die down, and will shortly expire, finding not sufficient vitality 1° the air to support it When one compares the size of the stone pot with that of the ordinary room, and realizes that exhaled breath is insufficient to support the flame of a candle, it is not difficult to understand why children and delicate people pine away and die on account of impure atmosphere.—New York Ledger,
Knew Their Plaoe.
An Irish judge tells the following story of one of the juries in the south of Ireland, where be was trying a case: The usher of tbe oourt pioclaimed with due solemnity the usual formula, 'Gentlemen of the jury, take your proper places in the court 1" whereupon seven of tbem» instinctively walked into the dock.—Boston Green Bag.
Lost the Trick.
Waggles—I'm hungry enough to eat a diy ciust, good woman. Good Woman—Sorry 1 have none. Shut the gate when you go out—Detroit Free Press.
A slice of mince pie made of tbe
1
right mince meat Is a lunch In itself—*• epicure's lunch.
NONE SUCH
MINCE MEAT
the right mince meat. Whole-, some, fresh and delicious. For pi«s, frait cake and fruit padding. HoM everywhere. Tmks no siMltntt.
MEB1£LL'S0ULEC&, SYRACUSE,
HPIjPgii
CURED Of PARALYSIS
Carlos F. Shepard, a Member of the Indianapolis Board of Trade, is About Once More.
A Cass of Wslgtif? Interest to Anyone Suffering Wltl
Nervous Complaints, for the Patient was Cured by "Facing" the Nerves This is a New Terai in Medicine.
from Ms Newt, IndianapotU, IncL
One of the best known men about the Indianapolis Board of Trade is Carlos F. Shepard, who for several years has been connected with the house of H. E. Kinney, grain broker. Mr. Shepard is a bluff, hearty, old gentleman of medium height, gray-headed and with a mustache like a French veteran. He is a man of very decided views on all tabjects and is especially orthodox in politics and medicine. Notwithstanding his firmness in his convictions and the vigor with which he maintains them he is a man of many friends for manly men, even though sometimes obstinate in their opinions, have the force of character that' win admiration and friendship.
So a few months ago when the news came to his old associates en the Board of Trade that Mr. Shepard had received a stroke of paralysis and that ths probabilities were that his days of usefulness were over, and that perhaps, his hours were numbered, the deepas* sympathy went out to the smitten msn and his family. It seamed to all his friends almost impossible that this ragged old man, always so wholesomely hearty and cheerful, always a picture of health for HIS CHEEKS WERE LIKE THE ROSE
IN THBSNOW
could have been so suddenly laid low. But it was true and many weeks passed before his well-known form and kindly ftce returned to his former business haunts. His re-appearance was made the occasion of a hearty welcome and the story of his illness and recovery is well worth the telling.
I was taken sick/' said Mr. Shepard. "on the 17th of August, 1895. As I had all along been of the opinion that I was made of iron, you may well believe that it was hard for me to entertain the thought that I was to be laid up for more than a day or two. I am 58 years old, and for 40 years up to the time of this attack, I had not hud a day's sickness. The doctors who diagnosed my ease saw at once that it was something serious. They at first said that it was lumbaeo then sciatic rheumatism. They finally came to the conclusion they did not know what was the matter with me. I experienced no pain, my head was clear, my ap1, but I lost the use of myself from my hips Sown. This was a hard stroke to an active man who has always had an easy going pair of legs. My brother-in-law, who is a physician, came from a neighboring city to see me. He pronounced my affliction to be locomotor ataxia. I am of the opinion that he diagnosed the case correctly for I was absolutely paralysed from the hips down.
Before he came, however, a day or so before I had begun taUacDr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. That was on the 20th day of last October. I read an article in the IndianapoUt JVetct and saw testimonials describing oases oured that were similar to mine. It struck ma that the remedy could not do ma any barm and I began to take the pills.
Before
stir a peg, but to place. I hat. -w. when I felt that deliverance from my enforced infection had oome. Before I finished the second box I waa able to walk alone
We want a few men to sell a ChoiceLink of Nursery stock.
We cannot make you rich in a month but can give you Steaiay KttiplOyrfibnt and will pay you for it. Our prices correspond with the times. Write for terms and territory.
THE HAWKS NURSERY CO.,
4
Milwaukee, Wis.
8ANT O. DAVI8.V FRANK J. TURK.
DAVIS & TURK
attorneys at law,
420 4 Wsbssh Ave. TERRE HAUTE, INO.
J. dailey,
JQ503 OHIO 8TEEBT.
Give him a call if you have any kind of Insurance to place. He will write you in a* good companies as are represented in the city.
Grabam & Morton Transportation Co.
TWICE DAILY STEAMERS TO
CHICAGO
Cossectisf with VssdsIIa Ry. at St. Joseph
Beginning May 25th and continuing until about S*ept. dPlh. the steamers of this line will make two trips each way dailrOm lading Sunday) between ft. Joseph and Cbt« age, on the following schedule: Uaie St lestpb.. .4:20 po 10:30pm Lure Cbicago.. -9:30tm 11:30pm
Extra trips on Saturday ieare St. Joseph at 8 a. m. and Chicago at 2 p. m. Running time across the lake 4 hour*. Trl-weeklr steamers to Milwaukee leave St. Joseph Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenlora.
The equipment of this fine Includes tbe side wheel steamers City of Chleago and City of tt«. nat urniit a#
nections with all Vandaliu trains. Tickets on sale at all Yandalia line stations. Chicago dock toot of Wabash avenue.
J. H. GRAHAM. President, Benton Harbor, Mich.
with the aid of a eane. About home I da not use a cane now but when I come out on the slippery pavements I feel that I need footing sure.
little tuipport to make my footing I am still using Williams' but I have reduced the dose to one each meal. It seems that I have been able to throw some discredit on the predictions of my doctors thanks to the pills. They said I could never walk again hut here I am, and. I think the credit muet be given to the pills.
I am still using Williams' Pink Pills, after
It is said the pills are stimulating, but I canJ not say that they civs me any sensations tha» I am aware of. They merely cure and that is quite enough for me. "Since I have been out I have been ar walking advertisement for Williams' Pink Pills. I suppose I have recommended them to at least a hundred persons. What! You want to print all this? Why, my dear airt I never gave a ation to any pi my life.
II
ro» er-
prietary medicine nips it may not be a bad thing to do so this time if it will help any sufferer to regain health and bodily activity."
Carlos F. Shepard haa been a resident of Indianapolis for over twenty years. He lives at No. 720 East Ohio Street. He has always been an active, enterprising man and his many friends will rqjoice that he has literally been put upon his feet again. He is not only well-known locally but to grain shippers all over Indiana and Illinois.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peopled are an unfailing remedy for all diseases arising from a poor and watery condition of th« blood, such as pale and sallow complexion, %,• neral muscular weakness, loss of appetite,
of the heart, shortness of breath on slight ex* ertion, coldness of hands or feet, swelling of the feet and limbs, pain in the back, nervous
Ji 9
tardy or irregular periods, suppression or menses, hysteria, paralysis, locomotor ataxia, rheumatism, sciatica, all diseases depending on vitiated humors in the blood, causing scrofula, swelled glands, fever sores, rickets^ hip-joint diseases, hunchback, acquired de» formities, decayed bones, chronic erysipelas, catarrh, consumption of the bowels and fungs,, and also for invigorating the blood and system^ when broken down by overwork, worry, die-1 ease, excesses and indiscretions of living, recovery from acute diseases, such as fevers, etc., loss of vital powers, spermatorrhoea, early decay, premature old age. These pills are not a purgative medicine. They contain nothing that could injure the most delicate system^ They act directly on the blood, supplying to* the blood its life-giving qualities by assisting it to absorb oxygen, that great supporter of au organic life. In this way the blood, becoming "built up" and being supplied with its lacking constituents, becomes rich and red, nourishes the various organs, stimulating them to activity in the performance of their functions, and thus to eliminate diseases from the system.
These Pills are manufactured by the Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., and are sold only in boxes bearing the firm'8 trade mark and wrapper, at 50 cents box, or six boxes for 18.60, and are never sold in bulk. They may be bAd of all druggists. mail from Dr, Willfatns* or direct by Medicine Company. ft price at which these pills are sold makes a cotihic of treatr ment inexpensive as oott)pared with otharr remedies.
The COAST LINE to MACKINAC
t-TAKE THE
MACKINAC DETROIT PETOSKEY
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OHIOAGO 1
2 New Steel Passenger Steamers
ThsOrsstest Perfection yet attained In Boat Construction Lazarioos Bqnlr Faralsbiaf, Decoration sad Br insuring the highest degree of COnFORT, SPEED AND SAFETY*
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Tmh
wi Wit*
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Toledo,Detroit /Mackinac
PET08KEY, "THE SOO," MARQUETTE, AND DULUTH. LOW RATES to Ptetarasqa* Maddaae Ketara, inclading fleals mad Berths. Pr Clsvslaatf, f(8 from Toledo, if from I •ij.fo.
EVERY EVENING
Between Detroit and Clevelap*
Connecting at Cleveland with Barliest Triins for all points Bast. South and Southwest and if Detroit for all points North and Northwest. SsaSa Trips Jans, My, Asgsst snd Ssftssiksr tafy. sj EVERY DAY BETWEEN
Cleveland, Put-in-Bay Toledo
Send for Illustrated Pamphlet. Address A. A. aCHANTZ. «.
P.
DBTaOIT, MIOM.
.c».
t! SUNDAY
ake ^pecials
Commend ntt 118
8 •'lay. July lVth, i«se, tb''v. put on. 6.00 a ....... ii oo a 7.00
'•Lake Specials Leave Terre Haute Arrive at Marmont Leave Marmoot Arrive at Terre Haute-
11.55
Rate to and from intermediate stations on fare for tbe round trip, gotnj? and returning on lake special.
Elesant parlor ears on this train, rate for any distance 23 cents. Terre llaute to Lake Maxtnkuckee and return I&09. For tickets, parlor car reservation and reliable Information, call at city ticket office. 839 Wabash avenue, or union ftt&tfOfl*
GEO. E. FAltRINGTON, Gen. Agent.
