Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 27, Number 18, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 October 1896 — Page 7

PLAINT OF THE WILD ROSE.

In lonely spot all wild I grew, .. Palo, though son and rain caressed. When soft one morn, as yet the dew

Sparkled on my

snowy

breast,

A poet came and pressed his lips— Warm and red with life's yoong blood— Upon my*snow white rosebud tipe. ,' And, lo, there surged a crimson flood

Throughout my veins, which dyed my breast As never sun nor rain could do, And soft each morn bis fond lips pressed

My petals till I rosier grew. Bat woe is met One luckless day There passed a plowboy on bi*roan Who plucked me in his sportive play j. And claimed me for bis own.

I faded in bis ruthless grasp. He cast me here alone to die. Oh, love, once more to feel your clasp

And breathe a last (roodby I /—Haley Bainbridge Crist in Womankind.

THE HAUNTED SLOOP.

At one time, not to remote but that the memory of it still lives in the minds Of some of the older river men of New York, there were a great many sloops engaged in trading on the Hudson river between New York and various points on the river, and among these was one that will probably be remembered long .after the others are forgotten.

The Martin Wynkoop was designed to be one of the swiftest of the river fleet, and her builder pat into her construction only the very best material that oonld be procured, while her designer, Oaptain Peter Van Corlear, had modeled her with suoh care that when she was finished she was indeed a thing of beauty, but the zeal of her oommander was responsible for the tragedy which flighted the marriage of the Wynkoop to the Hudson and seemed to pnt an evil spell upon her which followed her throughout her brief career.

On the day set for the launching of the sloop the oaptain was here, there, everywhere, issuing orders and guarding against anything that might occur to mar the beauty of his beloved craft He had kept her name a profound secret, intending to proclaim it as he left the stocks, and had provided a magnum of champagne with which to baptize her as she flew to the embrace of her bridegroom, but unfortunately for the captain fate had decided that he was not to carry out his

planB,

for by some mischance

the sloop started from her resting place 'and slid into the water before the preparations were completed, seeming to choose a moment, too, when her noble oommander was directly in the way, and to the horror of the bystanders he was caught between the vessel and the stocks and crushed to death. Ho was not instantly killed, but lived only long enough to whisper to his mate, "The sloop—Martin Wynkoop," thereby signifying his desire to have that name applied to her, and so she was duly chris1 *|ened.

Captain Morris Bleeker succeeded the 111 fated Van Corlear and fitted the sloop out for her first voyage. When she was ready to sail, she was a ornft that would have caught the eye of any seaman, for she was as buoyant as a cork aud graceful as a swan upon the water. Hor quarter dock, like the poop of a man-of-war, stood high above the main deck, and her imnienKo main boom extended far and clenr beyond her stern.

At last she was finished, and Captain Bleoker took in a cargo for Poughkeepsie, leaving Now York in the afternoon and continuing under way till night, when ho anchored behind Clermont point, not caring to cross the Tappan Zee that night.

Aboutmiduightthecaptain wasarousid by the steady clank, clink, clank of tho windlass, as if some one were getting the anchor. Angry and amazed at this appnreut breach of discipline, he sprang frotu his hunk and ran on deck, to find the crew coming aft in a body. "What is the ineauing of this—mutiny?" ho roared. And he backed up •against the poop bulkhead, determined to fight to the last. "No, sir," answered one of the men, his teeth chattering as he spoke, while his companions crowded about him, pale and j-ilent. "It's ghosts!" "Ghosts?" repeated the captain angrily. "What do you meau?" "Why, sir, wo heerd the windlass goin like some uu was gettin the anchor, and when wo runs on deck to see what tho matter was there was nobody there, and the windlass hadn't been touched."

Tho captain had recovered his wits by this time and saw that he most do something to quiet the frightened men. "Is that all?" hesaid lightly. "Why, that WHS some vessel arouud the point heaving short, and the sound came across the water. It was not aboard of us. Go below and turn in, and I'll look out for the iossel." The men, seeing that the am was not frightened, went below ther, leaving him on deck alone. ly had they got into the forecaswhen there broke on their ears the uud of tho chain rattling and snapping as it paid oat through the hawse pipe, as if the whole cable were coming out of the chain locker.

CJp started at) hands again, and the captain ran swiftly forward to find that nothing had been disturbed and the veasel swung to her moorings just as she had when they anchored her. There was no more sleep for the crew of the Wynkoop that night, for no sooner did they leave the deck than the anchor was apparently either hove up cur let go, and the noise only stopped when the first gray streaks of dawn appeared over the eastern shore. The men were in a state of excitement bordering on mutiny, bat as they could not leave the vessel till she arrived in port they got the anchor and made sail.

That day will live in the memory of the unfortunate mariners on the Wynkoop as the stormiest of their live* Three time* did the oaptain attempt to weather the headland at the base of Book mountain, only to be blown to leeward by the gale and swept around the foot of the cliff. The aloop acted as if she were possisstd of some diabolical spirit, for when running along does hauled on a tack, with everything drawing as tant as a bowstring and the helm hard op, rfe wooid go about so suddenly

Men of highest prominence in this country like Lieut. Governor Thomas of Vermont, (Montpelier, Vt.,) Congressman Andrew Williams of Plattsburg, N. Y., Senator Geo. W. Randall of Waterbury, Vt., Ex-Speaker of House of Representatives, Chas. J. Noyes of Boston, Mass., Hon. Henry Robinson, Mayor of Concord, N. H., Judge Edwin C. White of Hyde Park, Vt., Secretary of the Senate, Hon. Frederick W. Baldwin of Barton, Vt., and many other eminent public men throughout the United States are using, endorsing and publicly recommending the people to use this most wonderful medical discovery of the age, Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and.nerve remedy.

Representative women of our land also are enthusiastic in praise of its marvelous power to cure, among them being VicePres. of the Massachusetts Total Abstinence Society, Mrs.

S. Louise Barton of Bos­

ton, Mass., who was cured by this grand medicine. Now comes a letter from one of the most widely known women in America, Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher, who is loved and honored by everybody, and who thus speaks to the people out of her deep regard for humanity and her earnest desire to see

as to throw everybody to the deck, and the man at the tiller several times narrowly escaped being brained by the heavy boom as it swept across the deck. At last they weathered the point, and from that time made good weather to Poughkeepsie, where ^the crew deserted to a man, all of them declaring that they would rather go to the penitentiary than to make another trip in suoh a craft

Captain Bleeker managed to scrape together a scrub crew, with which he made the return trip to New York, making good time and having no trouble. On the next trip up he carried a crew of old river men, each of whom swore that he was 'not afraid of the devil himself."

This voyage was a great deal worse than the last All day did they tack and ratch about the point, losing on one tack all that they had gained on the previous one, nntil about dusk, when the wind increased to a gale and the oaptain, finding that he oonld not hope to weather the point that night, put her about and ran before the wind, intending to anchor behiild the Bheltei of the hills till morning.

As she scudded along at a terrific rate, yawing and sheering as the seas caught her under the stern, the main boom suddenly gybed. The captuhi was at the tiller when this occurred, and as the boom swung across the deck a bight of the main sheet fell about his neok, and when the sheet tautened it cut the head off the unfortunate man and threw it far out of sight into the heaving waters of the river, while the crew stood pale and horror stricken at the grewsome sight Almost instantly the gale moderated. and the sloop was sailed back to New York without further difficulty.

It was several months before a man could be found to take command of the haunted vessel, for in addition to the other tales that were circulated about her it was rumored that the headless ghost of Captain Bleeker could be seen every night standing on the quarter deck, grasping the tiller in his phantom bands.

At last a man came forward and offered to take the position, and thongh he was a stranger to everybody on the river his offer was accepted, for he seemed to understand his business thoroughly. This man called himself Rudolph Sturdcvant He was a tall, dark, mysterious sort of a person, with a saturnine cast of countenance, and was terribly profane in his speech. Indeed, his blasphemy shocked the wharf rats about the Washington market, and that was no easier task in those days than it is now. Captain Stnrdevant brought his own crew with him, and it was well he did, for there was not a man in New York who would have shipped in the Wynkoop for love or money.

The day which Captain Sturdevant appointed to sail from New York was the 13th of September, and to make matters worse it was on Friday. It was one of those antumn days when the air seems full of vague threatenings, when the glass fails apace and the prudent mariner seeks a good harbor for his craft The loungers about the wharf tried to dissuade the captain from his purpose, telling him of the experience of her former commander and urging as a reason, apart from other considerations, that it was Friday and the thirteenth of the month, which made it little less than suicide to leave port in such a vessel as the Wynkoop bat the captain laughed at their fears and swore with terrible, blood curdling oaths that he would pnt the sloop around the headland of Hook mountain that night or he would land her in hadea. And so be started on his voyage.

Old river men say that never before within the memory of the oldest of them had such a fearful night visited the Hudson river as that memorable 13th of September. The upbound fleet anchored at nightfall behind the sheltering hills near Nyack, and the crews of the different vessels assembled on deck to watch the Wynkoop as she laboriously tacked and filled across the tempo toons Tappan Zee. Night came on, and still In tike inky blackneas she crept along amid the buffeting wind and

The thunder roared and rever­

sstl

MRS. HENRY WARD BEECP

Praises in High Terras.the Grandest Medicines, Dr. Greene's Hum 1

Those Who Are Weak, Tired, NerVous, Out of Health and Suffering, Will Take Renewed Hope and Be Cured by Using This Wonderful Medicine, Dr. Greene's Nervura Blood and Nerve Remedy.

the weak, tired, feeble, nervous and suffering restored again to health and strength. She has personally witnessed the really wonderful effect of Dr. Greene's Nervura in curing several of her friends, and for the good of others, for those who are out of health, she writes to the people what she knows and has herself witnessed of the remarkable beneficial and health-giving effects of Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy.

Mrs. Beecher says:—-"I have given some of Dr. Greene's Nervura to several friends who I thought would be benefited by it. They speak highly of it, and feel they have been much benefited by its use. "These people are very responsible witnesses as to the beneficial character of the medicine, and I am ready to vouch for the honesty of their approval of Dr. Greene's Nervura. "If needed in my own case, I certainly should use it."

Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy is the best medicine and surest restorer of health the world has ever known.

All who are nervous, weak, tired, exhausted in nerve power and physical strength who are sleepless, wake tired and unrefreshed, without strength and

berated among the hills and echoed and re-echoed from the sides of Anthony's Nose and Hook mountain and then went grumbling away across the lowlands on the other side of the river, while the vivid lightning ever and anon played about the toiling sloop as she moved wearily on. The night wore on, and the watchers grew weary at their posts, but still the flashes showed the Wynkoop now on port and now on starboard tfcck, yet never nearer the headland.

Just at midnight there came a flash of lightning which illuminated the heavens like the noonday sun, and at the same instant the thunder boomed as if the universe had split in twain. In that blinding flash of light they saw the Wynkoop standing out bold and clear against the dark background of the eastern shore, and outlined full to their gaze was the form of Cap\ain Sturdevant standing on the quarter deck, his head thrown back and his clinched fist extended upward toward the sky as if he were defying the powers of heaven. The air seemed to glow with a bluish luminosity, and a strong odor of brimstone greeted the nostrils of the amazed watchers, while a wild and thrilling shriek came across the water, sounding loud and clear above the roar of the tempest

When another flash of lightning came, the sloop had vanished, and never to this day has a vestige of either vessel or crew been seen.

No one knew where Captain Sturdevant and his crew came from, but it became a matter of grave discussion among the river men, the general opinion being that they were agents of the foul fiend.

It is currently believed on the river that on every 13 th of September a ghostly craft enveloped in a mist of bluish flame may be seen beating across the Tappan Zee and that at midnight she disappears beneath the waters of the Hudson, while a blood chilling shriek wakes the echoes of the headland.— Charles F. Nash, U. S. R. C. S., in Short Stories.

Mere Force of Habit.

Distinguished Foreigner—I think the voices of English girls very sweet, but they would be still more musical if conversation were carried on in a lower tone.

London Belle—We make a good deal of noise, but you must remember our favorite amusement is concert going, and one gets in the habit of load talking trying to make one's voice heard above the music, yon know-—London Tit-Bits.

A Peculiar Feeling.

The sensation of homesickness has been variously described, but never more graphically than by a little girl who, miles away from home and mamma, sat heavy eyed and silent at a

The child's lip quivered, and she ssid in atone to grieve the heart, "I'm so seasick for home.''—London Tit-Bits.

Lott Hla Head.

Winks—I tell you, there is something about the possession of sovereign power that gives a man confidence. History shows that all monarchs have been calm and self poi«ed.

Jinks—I don't know about that Ton will remember that Charles I of England lost his head at a very important period in his career.—New ^ork Tribune.

Frederick II of Germany was surnamed Barbarossa for the same reason that William of England was surnamed Rufus on account of an enormous red beard.

The first tewing silk was patented by •a American in 1844.

People call It backache and do nothing tor It nntil the doctor is called and he proDooaod it rheumatism. If they had used Salvation Oil in time U»« doctor's bill couid have been saved.

TEREE HAUTE SATUBDAT EVENING MAIL, OCTOBER 2 I, 1896.

energy for the day's work who have poor blood, neuralgia, rheumatism, backache, dyspepsia, indigestion, gas, bloating, faint feelings, loss of appetite, constipation, kidney or liver complaint, should immediately use Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy. It will make you well It gives a splendid complexion, making the cheeks glow and the eyes sparkle with health. No remedy was ever so successful in causing people to gain flesh. By strengthening the digestive functions, promoting assimilation and enriching the blood, it causes the person to gradually increase in weight until the thin and slender parts assume a rounded and beautiful con-

*xmr* 'i *•'?'& Dr. Greene's Nervura is the prescription of the most successful physician in curing nervous and chronic diseases, hence it must of necessity be perfectly adapted to cure just these complaints. Its discoverer, Dr. Greene, of 85 West 14th street, New York City, can be consulted free, personally or by letter.

Whooping-cough, croup, sore throat, in fiuenza, bronchitis, cold, and cough are at once relieved and positively and permanently cured bv Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup, the incomparable remedy for all pulmonary and throat affections.

A City of Bridges.

Few people realize that Chioago today possesses more bridges in number than any other city in America. Col leotively they constitute a greater total length in miles than any other system The extent of a Single span of one of the swing bridges is greater than that of any other bridge. Modern bridge con struction is embodied in and illustrated with a greater variety of perfeoted mechanical devices in Chioago than is the case in any other city in the world

Standing out like monuments erected to engineering skill, to a people's enterprise, and to meohanical perfection, these bridges present a greater variety of admirable featnres and are evidences of better workmanship than can be found in the best of all tte cities in either the old or the new world.

Chioago has 68 bridges spanning the river and its branches at every point where commerce and traffic demand a passageway. There are 88 systems of viaducts, which bespeak as many safeguards for the people against the dan gairir of railroad transportation.

Represented among these 68 bridge is to be found every description of swing or drawbridge whioh the world possesses today that is of practioal value. They constitute within a radius of a few miles a congeries of mechanical devices which captivate the spectator with their perfection and diversity of arrangements.—Chicago Inter Ocean.

5

hotel

table. "Aren't yon hungry, dear?" asked her annt, with whom she was traveling. "No." "Does your head ache?" "Na" "What is the matter?"

&&

,v

A Dog Makes Sunday Visits. A bright terrier dog owned at the American House, Pittsfield, Mass., is known at the Maplewood as Billy. The dog every Sunday morning goes to the Maplewood and stays in the cashier'^ office, but never goes away from the American on other days unless taken to the Maplewood. Snndays, as regularly as that day comes, in the season, the animal takes up his early march for the other house, remains all day and returns. This he has done for the past few seasons, and so regularly that the guests at the Maplewood have become familiar with him and his peculiarities. Nofr they are asking how the dog knows the difference between Sunday and other days, as his visits are made before the church bells begin to ring.—Boston Herald.

Noise and Numbers.

A Yankee, upon eating his first meal of frogs' legs, asked the hotel proprietor how he accounted for the high price. He was told it was on aococnt of tho scarcity of the product "Not at all," said the Yankee. "I can get yon 1,000,000.* "A million?" gasped the boniface. "I should like to engage to find yon a profitable market if you can prodnce them." "Why, I can get them today sorely." At night the Yank came back with eight pairs and declared the trick off. "I thought yon said you knew where you could get 1,000,000," saiu boniface. "Well, to tell yon the truth," explained the other, "I formed my judgment of the number by the noise."—San Francisco Argonaut.

A Piychologtnl Cots.

The small boy had been requested to do some errands, but insisted that he was feeling badly. As the family physician happened to call he felt the boy's poise and looked at his tongue and said: "Ton had better make a good, Strang mustard plaster."

The boy looked depressed and left the

"When shall I apply the piaster*" asked the mother. "Don't apply it at all. He'll get well before that stage of the treatment is reached."—Washington Star.

Base ffprimt C&urrter Plgeoaa. An agriculturist of Westphalia made a bet that 13 bees, released at a distance of three miles from the hives at the same time as 13 pigeons, would travel over the ground as quickly as the birda. The first bee entered the hive one quarter of a minute before the lint pigeon reached itSvolumbary. Three other bees arrived before the seoood pigeon, and the remainder of the competitors reachad home simultaoeovaly.

American Matters and Gibbon. Gibbon carefully studied for himself the questions at issue in the American war. From Israel Mauduit, the agent of Massachusetts Bay, and from Governor Hutchinson he gathered material for forming an independent judgment "I think," he says, "I have sucked them very dry, and if my oonfidenoe was equal to my eloquence, and my eloquence to my knowledge, perhaps I might make no very intolerable speaker." It is curious to note in his letters the apathy of parliament on the subjeot "In this season and on America," he writes in May, 1775, "the Archangel Gabriel would not be heard." His own opinion was, on several points, adverse to the policy of the government, which, except on one oooasion, he steadily supported. He was one of those indolent men who attach uiemselves to political lead^s rather than to political principles. For Lord North he felt a warm affection, and throughout voted with him, sometimes against his better judgment

His speech would probably have been silver, his silence was certainly golden. In 1778 he was appointed a commissioner of trade and plantations, with a salary of £750 year. Fox believed that he bad been bribed by office and expressed the belief in the lines:

King George, in a fright

-q Lest Gibbon should write The story of England's disgrace. Thought no way so sure

His pen to secure As to give the historian plaoe. Gibbon held the appointment till the abolition of the offloe in 1783.—Nineteenth Century.

Cigarette Smoking.

Cigarette smoking in England dates back to 1844. The great impetus to their inoreased nse was caused by the Crimean war of 1854-6, when numbers of military and naval officers adopted this method of smoking from the inhale itants of Russia, Turkey, Malta, the Levant and other parts of Europe.

Tbe Tyranny of the Desk. We will suppose that your occupation Is sedentary—that you are chained, so to spoak to the desk in some counting house, or perhaps to the loom in some vast mill where you are compelled to labor from morning till night. Sunday is your only day of relaxation. You return home every evening wearied mentally and bodily. Your health and strength begin to fall. What will most effectually recuperate your vital energy? The weight of evidence points to no other conclusion than that Hostetter's Stomach Bitters Is your safest, most reliable sheet anchor. Use It persistently, and your system will soon regain Its pristine vigor. Every function will receive a healthy Impulse. There Is no remedy to equal the Bitters for nervousness and want of sleep, dyspepsia, constipation and biliousness. It averts -and remedies all forms of malarial diseases, and is a preventive of rheumatism and neuralgia.

1 Tbe Manufacture of Fkraffln. Paraffin is oue of the most valuable produots of petroleum, and its manufacture has been brought to suoh perfection that it is scarcely possible to improve opon it. By the most approved processes the wax is redistilled for the purpose of reduoing to the desired gravity and crystallizing the wax. Then the oil is frozen by pfooesses similar to those employed for rroduoing artificial ioe. The apparatus :r this work is of tbe most complete and scientific construction. Enormously powerful pumps force the frozen oil into filter presses and convert the wax into a solid cake. The uses of paraffin are manifold, and every detail of its maurfacture is of the greatest interest to all scientists.—New York Ledger.

House Plants.

Many a little woman nearly cries her eyes out because her house plants die inch by inch when she "takes such good oare of them." The fact of tbe matter is, house plants in gaslighted rooms simply die a death of torture. Yon will have to give up gas or the plants.

j!JOgggafegoooopflt

Fifty Years Ago.

This Is the tray it was bound to loo* When grandfather had his "picter took," These were the shadows cast before The coming of Conjarer Dagnerre And his art like a girl in pinafore Some day to bloom to a goddess fair. Men certainly were not as black, we know As they pictured them, 50 years ago.

Ayer's Sarsaparilla

began to make new men, just as the new pictures of men began to be made. Thousands of people fronted the camera with skins made clean from blotoh and blemish, because they had purified the blood with Ayer's Sarsaparilla. It Is as powerful now as then. Its record proves it. Others imitate the remedy they oant imitate the record:

SO Yeart of Cures.

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trial.<p></p>PILLS

PENNYROYAL

Orlgbitl Chtly 8w«lw A tot, atvmr* wfliMi. UBIU mk M\ ar* MmfUA •Iftftillllliviy 'fMitoi

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

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VANDALIA LINE. MAIN LINK.

Arrive from the East. Leave for the West. 7 West. Ex*. 1.30 am 15 Mail & Ac* 9.45 am 5 St. L. Lim* 10.35 am SI St. L. Ex*.. 2.45 3 Mall tt Ac. 6.30 11 Fast Mall*. 8.55

90 Atl'c Ex*..12.32 8 Fast Line*. 1.50 2 N. Y. Llm*. 4.55

Vz

7 West. Ex*. 1.40 a 5 St. L. Llm*.10.40 a 21 St. L. Ex*.. 2.50 pm 13 Eff. Ac 5.05 pm 11 Fast Mall*. 9.00

Arrivfc from the West. Leave for the East.

6 N. Y. Ex*.. 3.20a

12 Ind Llm'dm.20 am 6N. Y. Ex*.. 3.35 am 4 Mai! & Ac. 7.30 am SO AtJ'c Ex*..12.37 8 Fast Line* 1.55 2 N. Y. Lim* 5.00

MICHIGAN DIVISION.

Leave for the North. Ar. from the North

S St Joe Mall.6.30 am 8 S. Bend Ex.4.30p

13T. H. Ex...11.10am UT. H. Mall. 6.00 pm

PEORIA DIVI810N.

Leave for Northwest. Ar. from Northwest.

7 N-W Ex 6.80 am 21 Peoria Ex .3.15

SOAtltcEx ..12.15pm 6 East'u Ex. 9.00

EVANSVILLE & TERRE HAUTE. NA8HVILLK LINK. •Leave for the South. Arrive from South. 5 & N Llm*.11.40 3 & Ev Ex*. 5.38 am 7Ev Ac 10.10 am 1 Ev&IMall* 8.15 pm

6 & N Llm* 4.45 a a 2THE&X* .11.00am 80 Mixed Ac.. 4.45 4 O & lud Ex*11.10

EVANSVILLE & INDIANAPOLIS. Leave for South. Arrive from South. 33Mail & Ex..6.00am 49 Worth. Mix .3.30

48TH Mixed.10.10am 32 Mall .& Ex. 3.15

CHICAGO & EASTERN ILLINOIS. Leave for North. Arrive from North. O & N Llm* 4.50 am 2 & Ex.11.20 am 8 Local Pass 3.10 4 E & O Ex*. 11.35

8 O & E Ex*.. .5.30 am 9 Local Pass .9.25 am 1 O & Ev Ex.. .3.10 a 50&N Llm*. 11.85pa

C. C. C. & I.—BIG FOUR. Going East. Going West. 36 N YkClnEx*1.55 am 2 Ind&ClnEx 7.00 am 4 TPAFlyer*10.00 am 8 Day Ex*... 3.05 18 Knlckb'r*. 4.31 22 lud Acc*... 10.00 am

35 St Ex*... 1.33 a a 9 Ex & Mall*10.00 a 11 S-W Llm*.. 1.37 pa 5 Matt'n Ac. 5.00 a 23 Matt'n Act 7.45

.70 THE,

'o*a WAT TMKIT* AM aota

At 12 Cents a Mile

FROM THB MONTH OVBN VMB

LOUISVLLKB NMMVIUI M.N.

To individuals on the First Tuejdfljsand to parties of seven or more on the Tnlra Tuesday of each month, to nearly au points in the South and on special dates Excursion Tickets are sold at a Httle more than One Pare for the round trip.

For full information write to

1.1. EIDOELY, N. W. Pass. Aueat, CWcauo, E C. P. ATMORE, Gen'l Pass. Agt., LonlSYille,

11.

SENT FREE.

Write for County Map of the South to either of the above named gentlemen, or to p. SID JONES. Pa««. Agent, in charge oi Immigration, Birmingnam, Ala.

The COAST LINE to MACKINAC I TAKE THE I

MACKINAC DETROIT PETOSKEY

CHICAGO

2 New Steel Passenger Steamers

Tbe OrxtMt Perfection yet attained In Boat tioa »f. I insuring the highest degree of

Coostrnctioa Laxarloas ^qaipmeat. Artistic Parafshlag, Decoration aad Enicteat Berries.

COflFORT, SPEED AND SAFETY. Fouit

TRIPS

pv* Went

BCTWUM

Toledo, Detroit ^Mackinac

PETOSKEY, "THE BOO," MARQUETTE. AND DUL.UTH. LOW RATES to Ptctnresqae Mackinac safl Retara, Indodlag fleals and Berths. Pnm Cleveland, fi8

tij.fo.

fna Tslsde, figs from Oetrett,

EVERY EVENING

Between Detroit and Cleveland

Connecting at Cleveland with Battiest Train* tor all points Bast, South and Sootbwest and at Detroit ior all points North and Northwest, trnday Trips lass, My, A«f*st an4 Sspttafcsr (Mfc.

EVERY DAY BETWEEN

Cleveland, Put*in-Bay Toledo

Bend for Ulnstrated Pamphlet, Address A. A. SCHAMTZ. «. r. OBTAOrr. MiOfC

He Mint at Cintia* Item in. a.

FITS CURED

(ftns a. & qfJUdieisu.)

PmC.W.B.Peeke,wbo makes a specialty of Bpfeptjt has without doabt treated aad eared more caesstfeaa any Bring Phyrrtrlss his snceess Is istwlahliig. We have beard of cases of 90 yean'steading cared by kfea. BepabUsbcaavahisMe work on th|s disease which ha saods with a large bottle of his abeotate core, tree t* aaysaiZerer who may seed their P.O. aod Express adf»aa We advUsaayone wishing caus to address feet. W. B. FXEKB, F.Di,4 Cedar St, Saw Tot*.

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