Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 29, Number 17, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 22 October 1898 — Page 7

UNREST.

•tunmer wooed the glances of the son _d -doodlesei skies smiled over land and sea, thought Che long, sweet days would ne'er be done. All wearied of the glow and harmony, longed to hear the winds of winter blow 4nd see the great earth buried 'neath its snow.

And now, when high along the barren way, In pallid majesty, the great drifts lie

5lnd

all the earth is desolate and gray And cowering beneat-h the frowning sky, jslgh for all the sweetness that was spring's And the soft-joy a yellow primrose brings. —Theodosia Pickering in 'Woman's Home Companion. _______

THE EDITORS.

I suppose It was a rather unusual sort ?f office, if office it could bo called. It

wan

originally rented by Bob Allison as a convenient receptaclo for spoiled and mangled canvases. "Dirt cheap," be said, "and plenty of accommodation." He certainly wanted tho latter, as the number of mangled canvases grew almost daily.

I think it was Taylor who first suggested that Tho Organ should see the light of fame and popularity in Bob's attic. Our Organ—we wero so proud of the distinctive title,

bo

1

full of the responsibilities its pro­

duction entailed, so very conscious of the debt the public would owe us, that wo were slightly incoherent, I fear, in our explanations, for many went away thinking wo referred to a melodcon, a concertina or some other vile Invention.

When we talked of Tho Organ striking tho note of freedom, and "pealing forth tho glorious symphony of the people's cause," it was surely obvious wo could only have meant a nowspapef. Bob said Tho HJurdy Gurdy would be better understood Ijy the masses, and offered a mangled canvas of a rapacious looking Italian with two white mice as a frontispiece.

But as Tho Organ it was started, and The Organ it remained. Dick Taylor was the editor, by reason of his lodging at a compositor's, the said compositor having undertake*! to give us any hints wo might require.

Bob didn't behave so badly as might havo been expected. His uncle had just diod and loft him £200, and after much argument he agreod to devote £150 to voicing tho wails of the afflicted. I fancy ho was thinking more of tho side ho put on as proprietor of The Organ than of "tho afflicted."

Wo hold a full council of war shortly after Bob's accession to wealth. The compositor—a pale, thin looking man—discoursed ponderously of some woird sort of machine called a 'press, of reels and of reams, etc., till I was quite dazed. Taylor took it all calmly, however, and spoke learnedly of "pressing a ream" as if he'd been in the trade all his life.

Percy Haggles—Hags, as wo called him —was created musical critic of Tho Organ. His and indml all tho staff appointments wero made with a beautiful eonse of tho fitness of things. Hags' sister used to bo a tonic sol-fa teacher in a board school, and, as Dick said, if Hags didn't know what music was he ought to. Taylor salt! at present ho coukl only offer tho rest of us positions as outside contributors. I confess it hurt mo a little—Bob's landing was so very drafty—but as tho compositor explained that mostly outside contributors sat inside lie office and took up the editor's tinio it was agreed that for tho present wo might sit at tho editor's tabio.

Tho room was swept and garnished and somowhiit. lavishly decorated with bills. Huge yellow posters, with flaming red letters, hung from tho walls and from tho ceiling, while inkpots and pnstebrushoa gave an air of "midnight oil" to the apartment. A lounge also, Taylor assured us, was aneeesslty otherwise ho could not think. It seemed a bit odd that a loungo should make opo think but, then, of course an editor is necessarily different from an outside contributor.

Before I became connected with Tho Organ 1 tiad a vaguo notion that papers, generally speaking, canto out at a lixed time. That. Taylor assured me, was all amateur idea. What was wanted, ho said, was originality. "Tako'the public by surprise, so to speak. Keep them on tho tiptoo of expectancy," So each week tho paper was Issued to a thirsting public on a different dnv. It is strnngo how prejudiced tho public is. Tho few shops that

had taken up Tho Organ wrote complainingly of Its uncertainty and threatened to drop It in consequence but, then, as Dick said, who cared for thorn?

The articles In our paper wero marked by a degree of originality and fearlessness such as I havo never met with In any other periodical. Thrones must have trembled and tyrants tottered when they read The Organ.

It's all very well for you chaps, said Taylor, "but tho tremendous responsibility Is wearing mo to a thread. You don't goom to understand how much Tho Organ will cost tho oppressors of the poor." "One hundred and fifty pounds," muttered Bob, gassing gloomily at a pile of returns. "One hundred and fifty pounds and not a penny to show for It."

Going to press was tho most exciting time of tho week. Dick's landlord had boon appointed master printer, and ho composed the

pai*r

It

it

tioned

4,I

up," he said. "I can

stand tho brain fag. None of you chaps haw done anything for the paper except cover

with

scorn.

wish you

Look at Rags!" Poor

Bags had been sent to Queen's Hall to report a concert and had incidentally

and

-v. ».

in The Organ

men­

In his "copy" that "Cruffs dog

show" was very fine. "'I feel," said the editor, "that one pair of shoulders

cannot

support this load." And he pulled out of his pocket bills for paper, printing, etc., to the amount of Bob's face was a study. "As well as my £150?" he gasped.

your afflleted were at

Jericho before I'd thrown away

my

money." lint what was the use or losing his temper, though, to be "walls seem much in exchange for wealth. Dick said all reformers hod to suffer, and that ho had no doubt poor Bob was jealous. 1 think Bob was annoyed he'd not put on

Annn

««ii um «u

she said deprecatingly. Here was an awful thing—payment—a girl, too—and we had not a penny! We might have represented to a man that surely "wails" should be uttered free of charge, but a woman was different. Bob pulled at his collar and got crimson in tho face. Bags smiled nervously and tried to whistle, ana Dick, stared gloomily at the ceiling.

With some idea of making conversation, I faltered out some nonsense about virtue being its own reward, but my voice trembled and died away In face of her astonished gaze. "Can you give me any information?" she said to Bob. I felt just a little sorry for him. After all, he was the proprietor of The Organ, and bis position, to say the least, was hardly dignified. Since he'd owned the paper he'd worn tight patent leather boots, which made his temper rtoe and his feet ache. He had discarded them early that morning and was now capering about in red socks, trying to believe that tho w. p. b. concealed one foot, while the coal box hid the other. Each time he tried to bow the coal box gave a lurch, and in recovering his balance over went the basket. By this time Dick came down from the clouds. "If you will be kind enough to call again this afternoon, I will have the amount ready for you," he said.

This was a bold statement, and as 6uch wo treated It with respect. "You have a watch, Bob," said Dick when Miss Morris had gone. But Bob rebelled. Not for all the wails of all the afflicted would he part with that watch. After much searching, however, and sundry visits to an obliging relative we scraped together £6.

Now the difficulty was how much to pay her. It was childish to pay too much, mean to pay too little. None of us had ever written for any other paper than The Organ, so we had nothing at all to go on. The sketch was about 500 words, and we decided that we'd make it £5, as she was a girl.

Miss Nora Morris often called up after that, and we got quite friendly with her and told her of all our trials and troubles with Tho Organ. She seemed, however, to like to talk about Dick more than the affiicted, which was strange, as I always thought women were tender hearted.

Dick seemed to havo grown a deal older and graver than he had been, and some of tho fellows grumbled because, they said, tho paper was so much tamer than it used to bo. I think Dick had changed his opinion about what the public wanted.

He said that at present they (the public) wore not educated up to so much originality, and thut it was better to train them by degrees. The compositor had been discharged long ago, and Dick made other arrangements. 1 learned after that ho had sold out tho small sum his mother had left him Invested In consols and paid tho printing and paper bills in full. He wanted to give Bob back tho £150, but Bob wouldn't touch a farthing.

Tho Organ had always meant a lot more to Dick than the rest of us, and now ho throw himself heart and soul into the work, writing most of tho articles and mastering all the businoss details in tho most wonderful manner.

But, in spite of all his efforts, tho returns grow larger and largor, and tho poor old Organ walled only very Intermittently. Ono afternoon, when, as usual, wo turned up to see tho paper go to press, wo found Dick, stom and despairing, all alone "It's nil over, you fellows," ho said "Tho Organ's dead. I've no monoy, and it's no use trying for tick. You'd hotter go, all of you," ho added, with a catch in his voice. "There's nothing to wait for," and it was that very afternoon, of all others, that Nora Morris chose to call.

To tell the truth, wo wero miserably poor. Bob had given up his watch weeks before, and I don't Iwsllevo Dick had had a proper dinner for days. Miss Nora tumbled to tho state of tho case

In

a moment

and announced tlint she'd had a stroko of luck. Tho Warrior had taken a serial of hers at last and would we all please to come to tea with her in honor of tho occasion? She got awfully cross when, awkwardly enough, wo stammered an excuse "As If I didn't know," sho said, "how infamously you overpaid mo for that wretched tale of mine, and I was so terribly poor I had to take it, and now, just becauso I've got a little luck, you're hatoful and won't let mo do tho sanio for you. Dick," she said, "Diek, I won't keep the horrid money, and I hato you," and with

a

burst of tears sho threw her purso at the head of the editor of Tho Organ. After that wo fled, leaving Dick to stem tho torrent But whon, after waiting some minutes, our editor had not appeared, wo felt conscience stricken and sent Hags up to see what was going on. He came down grinning in a foolish way.

"I

his spare time and

got It stitched and bound In some mysterious manner. Dick said wo must sit up all night when tho paper wont to press. "Wo must remember tho public," ho sa'd, "and not mind ourselves." So wo usod to play nap, smoke cigarettes and chaff Bob and feel very important when the advance copies were brought by the printer devil.

One morning, after an all night sitting, Dick looked very glura. "I think I shall have to throw

don't think thero is much tho matter," ho said, chuckling. After that of course wo all went up There, seated on a pile of dusty Organs, a smudge all across her pretty face, was Norn Morris, her arms clasped around Taylor's neck and her head on his shoulder, while Dick, looking idiotically happy, was kissing her hair.

"Well, I'm dnshod!" said Bob. "What an ending to The Organ 1" But that was where ho was mistaken Somehow or other Dick and his clever little sweetheart got the

poor

old paper on

its legs again. It didn't pay so much attention to the afflicted, and though it declined In originality of stylo and fearlessness of attitude It was more of success financially.

Dick and Nora were married only last venr, and they own a very popular weekly. It Is not called The Organ now, and somehow lately I've decided that until the public is better able to appreciate originality I'd better drop journalism and return to business.—Answers.

Too Much Stttdjr.

M. Berthelot, the famous French scientist, says that children In school should have twice as much play as they have now, with a radical change In the character of their studies.

In an address before a scientific body In Paris M. Berthelot said millions of francs are wasted every year In pouring learning into sieves. "'According to the educational method in vogue," said Berthelot, "most of the education goes In at one ear and out at the other without kaxing any other lia* pression than mental disgust fur further education. What educators need to do fa to east aside at once that iniquitous institution calkxl weekly examination,' wbiah compels the pupil to cram, cram, cram, "la it* place should be established a

system

were i.

ISii

of

raXSL for we'd had a I particular stud.^ by pointing out to hiw tLt S»i^ the article* bow be individually baa a permanent inby tM outside

inter* log mob pupil's ml A I®

in

ff"'" nnfrtrd written hy "There entirely too many tut t» M?rrS I being taught," Berthelot in oowir a

persuing tKm and then giving

tite pupil tdenty of

tei&ure

to think over

WcomebJ "Induce the number of subjects of

—and mw Mbw Nora Morris bad shorten the hours, and if we are to petwon we oBh*. —. have examination* tot them be as brief "I don know what arrangement* ine "**v Oman make, with regwd to payment/*

sunii

gas

The Round BobU.

The "round robin" had its origin Several centuries ago Prance. It was used there by officers of the army as a method of expressing their dissatisfaction with the course of the king or his ministers. By signing in a circular form the leaders of the movement could not be ascertained and singled out for punishment.

The first instance on record of the use of this form of protest in the navy occurred in 1625. At the instigation of the Duke of Buckingham, the king's favorite, an English fleet, under Admiral Bennington, was dispatched to Bcchelle to assist in the coercion of the Protestant subjects of Louis XIII of France. But the English tars, in common with their fellow countrymen, looked with favor upon the resistance of their coreligionists against the proselyting zeal of the French king, and they signed a "round robin," expressing their determination not to fire a shot against them, and without waiting for a reply they weighed anchor and brought their ships back to Englaud. The admiral, however, received a peremptory order to return to Dieppe, whereupon the whole of the crews quitted the ships without further parley.— Providence Journal.

A Diaajipearluj? Bullseye.

The Chinese peasant wears a turban, loose coat and short and very baggy trousers, all of blue. The Chinese toldier wears the same, with an overall sleeveless smcck, or long waistcoat buttoning on the right shoulder, edged round the neck, arms and skirt and down the front with broad "facings." The breast and back are decorated with a one foot bullseye with characters on it. This is all the character the Chinese soldier possesses.

The bullseye would be a very convenient mark for an enemy if the Chinese soldier would give the latter a chance of shooting him, but the bullseye is only wora to raise false hopes, for no sooner does he arrive dangerously near the enemy than he doffs the garb of war to appeal asap innocent civilian. He is usually armed with a muzzle loader or standard, both equally harmless weapons.

In the case of General Liu's escort the uniform smocks had evidently not been tired as nightshirts for more than a few weeks, the men were armed with "Winchesters and a few Martinis, rusty, dirty and out of order, and wore about their middles a belt of some GO rounds of solid drawn braes cartridges.—London News.

1

The Atmospheric Clock.

The atmospheric clock—a sort of device that goes of itself—is not inaptly termed a perpetual hourglass. In appearance it is like a long thermometer with the bulb of mercury at the bpttom. The glass tube is about threeeighths of an inch in diameter and secured to the fraiuo by two bands through which it passes easily. The divisions of time are marked on each siae of tbe tube. Inside the glass tubo is a smaller tube shaped very much as an hourglass. Some mercury and a scrap of blotting paper for tbe purpose of taking up any moisture that might gather in the tube are placed at each end.

Tlio mercury in tbe top end of the tube is placed opposito tbe mark of tho proper timo and falls to tho bottom of tbe tube exactly as tho timo passes. When it has run out from the top, tbe frame can be turned and the mercury set to time on the other side. Thus it registers the seconds and hours quite as accurately as any other timepiece—the drawback to such an arrangement being, of oourso, tho turning of the frame, a task as irksome as that of winding a clock.—Exchange.

Siamese Stiperut Itloiis. j0

Tin fir^t thing an orthodox Siamese does in tbe morning is to scare away the family ghosts who may have gathered about the old place in the night. Letting off crackers is an effectual means. At the new year all the ghosts come trooping to their former dwellings. For three days they have their fun. At the end of the time tbe priests and their flocks fire guns and use other, devices for getting rid of them. A Siamese is coffined face downward, so that the ghost may not sneak back through the dead man's mouth. Tbe coffin is taken out throngh a hole in the wall and carried several times round the house in order that the ghost may be put off the scent and not return to rex his family.—Exobahge.

Hone Racing? and Socialism.

In the Militar Wochenblatt, a leading German military organ, Herr Von Ploetz recommends horse racing as a panacea for socialism. He says that the reason why there is no socialism in England is that they encourage horse racing there and that

f,tbe

love of tbe sport is the

connecting link- between all olasses of men, enabling the poor to comprehend the necessity for a difference of fortune."

Following.out Hetr Ploetz's idea, it is said that gambling on horse racing is increasing in Germany at a tremendous rate, though so far no diminution of socialism has been noticed.

out the Other Way.

"I am delighted, "said the old mend who bad called, "to find that you agree with your husband in everything, Mrs. Hen peck." "Indeed!" answered that estimable lady. "If you *»ill take the pains to investigate our domestic rein tions, sir, you will find that It is Mr. Hen peck who agrees with me in everything."— London Fun.

51

The Frijrmle Bird.

Many sailors believe that tbe frigate bird can start at daybreak with the trade winds from the coast of Africa and roost the same night upon the American shore. Whether this is a fact or not has yet to be determined, but it is certain that the bird is the swiftest of winged creatures and is able to fiy, under favorable conditions, 200 miles aa boor. *•.

y-i iw'

Porpoise Oil.

Oils, anipaal, vegetable and mineral, are second in importance to bet few domestic articles of commerce. Already medicinally invaluable in* tbe bygone ages of hand labor, ]ubri~"M?s have liecome almost a'condition of existence ia this century of machinery, and of all oils porpoise oil is the finest, the most difficult to obtain, almost the most costly. Tbe difficulty, be it incidentally remarked, lies not in

espreEsiug

Webxtcr Cowed Them.

William Wetmore Story, the sculptor and poet, was one of the few men who presumed to call Lowell "Jim" to the end, and Miss Mary E. Phillips, in her "Reminiscences of William Wetmore Story," tells, in Story's own words to her, the following tale of tbe two young men: "James Lowell and I were very angry with Webster for staying in old Tyler's cabinet, and as he was to speak in Faneuil hall on the evening of the 80th of September, 1842, we determined to go in (from the Harvard Law school) and hoot at him and show him that be had incurred our displeasure. Thete were 8,000 people there, and we felt I sure that they would hoot with us, young as we were. "But we reckoned without our host.

Mr. Webster, beautifully dressed, stepped forward. His great eyes looked, as I shall always think, straight at me. I pulled off my hat James pulled off his. We both became as cold as ice and as respectful as Indian coolies. I saw James turn pale he said I was livid. And when the great creature began that most beautiful exordium, our scorn turned to deepest admiiation, from an abject contempt to belief and approbation."

They

Are

Gone To Stay.

"I was troubled with sick headaches and

whs

advised to take Hood's Sursap,-

arilla. After usiug six bottles I

Soon pencil studies lay all around him on the grass. Suddenly he felt a gentle tug at his back hair. He thought, "That is some fresh Alec trying to guy me," and he did not look up. The gentle tuggiug ceased, began again, became mnch stronger, and then ho felt something wet, soft, slimy, on his neck. With a dreadful oath he leaped from the fence and looked behind him. Back there was a smart trap, in which sat two girls and a young man laughing. The horses were close to the fence, and it was one of these that had commenced browsing on the artist's profuse locks. Explanations followed and apologies. "All flesh," the artist said, "is grass, but not all hair." —Philadelphia Record.

Salvation Oil is repeating its cures of neuralgia, rheumatism, headache, and toothache every day, until their name is legion. Price 25c.

We offer no rewards, an offer of this kind is the ineanest of deceptions. Our plan is to give every one a chance to try the merit of Ely's Cream Balm-the original Balm for the cure of Catarrh, Hay Fever and Cold i6 the Head, by mailing 10 cents for a trial size to test its curative powers. We mail tbe 50 cent size also and the.dragglst keeps It. Test it and you are sure to continue the treatment. Relief is immediate and a cure follows. Ely Brothers, 56 Warren Street, New York

HAPPY

the oil

from tbe porpoise, but in catching tbe porpoise itself. These cetaceans, like the fish they prey on, are most uncertain in their movements, at one time playing by the week in our very harbors, at others staying a whole month fai from the coast.

An

economic and reliable method

of obtaining a regular supply of porpoises from our seas would be worth a fortune.

At present their capture is no more than accidental. Porpoises are known to venture into salmon estuaries during spring flood tides, returning to salt water with the ebb, and, as an improvement on the present casual supply system, strong rope nets might he cast at the mouths of these estuaries to intercept the invaders as they leave. Probably, however, the ultimate solution will be found in tbe rifle and some particular cartridge, preferably fronted with soft, hollow lead to flatten in the creature's ribs. It may be that even with a fatal bullet the difficulty is not ended, for it has not yet been shown whether, when fatally hit, the porpoise sinks or floats.—London Spectator.

whs

curtd

and have had no sick headaches since. I gave Hood's Sftrsa pari 11a to my little girl for stomach trouble and it cured her. We call it an excellent medicine." IrA F. JSMlNftEU, Wolcottville, Indi-ina.

Hood's Pills

are the only pills to take

with Hood's Sarsiiparilla. 25c. ..

His Hair In Danger.

A yonng artist whose pipe, eyeglasses and luxuriant blond hair have made him well known in town went to a garden party not so much for social amusement as for pencil studies of high life. He wore a tall hat, frock coat and lavender trousers nnd carried a sketching block a yard square. At the party his epigrams, paradoxes and fiendish silvery laugh overwhelmed, as he in tended, all the girls in sight or hearing, but he gcrt through with his social duties as speedily as might be, then went and sat down on a distant fence.

I am grateful to say that after taking three bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I was considerably better, and after using three more it brought me where I am to-day. I am well, and the mother of a threemonths' old baby.

Doctors had failed to help me. I have no one to thank but Mrs. Pinkham and her wonderful remedy."

k~

Mrs. F.t.t.a Dun©AST, Reeder's Mills, Iowa, writes: "DearMrs.Pinkham:—Ithank you forwhat your medicine and advice have done for me.

I have a baby two months old. When he was born I was sick only fifteen minutes, whereas with my other children I was sick for two or three days, and also suffered with my left leg, and could get nothing to relieve the pain but morphine. My leg did not trouble me at all this time. I had no after pains and was not as weak as I had been before.

I cannot praise Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound too highly. May God bless you in your noble work."

Mrs. J. W. Pritett,Medford,Oregon,says: "My health, also the baby's, we owe to' Lydia E. Pinkham's, Vegetable Compound."

Knickerbocker Special.

VIA

BIG FOUR ROUTE

FltOM

TERRE HAUTE

NEW YORK, BOSTON, MONTREAL,

INDIANAPOLIS, CINCINNATI, WASHINGTON,

Finest and fastest regular truln between Mississippi Klvor mid Eastern Soushoi-o over proa test system of transportation In the World—tho VunderblIt blnus.

Stops allowed at

Maftara

tfagg's

3

The Havana Limited. The first American railway to announce train service for the especial benefit of travel to the West Indiaa has been heard from. The QUIvfcN* & ESCENT ROUTE are announcing a fast train known as tbe "FLORIDA & HAVANA LIMITED." It will go into service from Cincinnati to Tampa, Jacksonville, Miami, Mobile and New Orleans. This exponent of tbe genuine American idea of getting into the field early will be a complete vestiboled service, with diners, observation cat*, wide vestibules, electric headlights, and all the paraphernalia of modern railroad train. It is chiefly to be marked as being first in the field for the new territory which is jnst coming under the protection of the greatest on earth. Train will make fast time to ports named and will connect with fine steamer service to various porta in Cnba, Porto Rico and Jamaica. It marks a new era in railroading in this country.

§ss

MOTHERS AND HEALTHY CHILDREN.

Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Goes Straight to the Cause of All Female Troubles and Assures a Healthy Maternity.

Mrs. M. Sixgkb,104 Hudson,Ave., Rochester, N. Y., writes to Mrs. Pinkham $

ns follows: When I applied to you for advice I had been suffering son bility, nervousness, etc. I had had several miscarriages and was pregnant when I wrote to you. 1

4

Mrs. John W. Lose, Wyoming, Iowa, writes: I had shooting pains all over my body, was very weak and nervous. I could not straighten up. I wished to become a mother but was afraid 1 never could. Seventeen months ago I got some of your Vegetable Compound, and after taking half a bottle was much relieved. I took four bottles and was cured. Now I have a big baby boy which I feel I owe to your Compound. Many thanks for your kind advice." A Million Women Have Been Benefited toy Mrs.

THIS FAMOUS TRAIN

Into tho only depot In New

\ork City. SOUTH. General Agent*

inPROVED SCHEDULES TO

FLORIDA

Beginning July Otli, via

Southern Railway«« Queen & Crescent Route

On account of Increased travel to l- lmrkla and other Southern points the SOUTHERN RAILWAY. In connection with tho QUEEN & CRESCENT ROUTE, have inaugurated, beginning July 8th, through, yestibuled train service, on accelerated schedules, from Cincinnati and Louisville, to Atlanta, I onian dlna, Jacksonville, Tampa, Miami, etc.

On this new schedule the train leaving Louisville 7:40 a. m. and Cincinnati 8:30 a. in. arrives Atlanta 12:00 midnight, ternandlna 8:30 next morning. Jacksonville 9:40 a. m., Tampa 5:50 p. m.—train being a solid, vestid. through train, with first-class day coaches, and I'ullman sleepers J0.™ _„iH"

bule

nati to Jacksonville, chair care froir Lpuisvilie to Lexington, connecting therewith. The night train, leaving Louisville 7:45 p. m. and Cincinnati 8:00 p. m., will continue as at present, arriving Atlanta 11:40 a. m., making connection for all points South.

By these new schedules of tho Southern a a In it

7 West. Ex*. J.30am 15 Mall & Ac* 9.50 am 5 St. L. Lim* 10.05 am 21 St. L. Ex*.. 3.35p a EfT. Ac 6.80 11 Fast Mall*. 8.55 tn

rMils.

Wusn-

ington. Philadelphia, and Virginia Hot ^'tIlls train

rocs

Store

Artists' Supplies, Flower MaterlaL Picture Framing a Specialty. tg SOUTH SIXTH. East Side.

Terre Haute, Ind

O'NEIL & SUTPHEN

years from de­

Pinkham's Advice and Medicine

mm T1MK TADil

Trains marked thus run dally. Tralni marked thus run Sundays only. All othet trains run daily, Sundays excepted.

VANDALIA LINE.

MAIN I.INK.

Arrive from the East.

Leave for the West.

7 West. Ex*. 1.40'a in 5 St. Llm*. 10.10am 21 St. L. Ex*.. 2.40 8 Eff. Ac 0.45

,11 Fast Mall*. fi.OO

Arrive from the West.

Leave tor the East.

6 N. Y. Ex*.. 3.30 am 4 I n(l. Ac 7.05 a 90 Atl'c Ex*..12.38 8 Fast Lino*. 1.45 2 N. Y. Llm*. 5.11

0 N. Y. Ex*.. 3.35 4 hid. Ac.... 7.30 aw 13 ind Llm'd*1l.25 a 20 Atl'c Ex*. .12.32 8 Fast. Line* 1.50

UN. Y. Lim* 5.15

MICHIGAN OIVISION.

Leave for the North.

6 St Joe Mnil.fl.17 a 20 St. Joe Sil ..1.00 8 S. Bend Ex.4.30

BUFFALO,

Ar. from the Nortb

21 T. H. Ex... 11.20 ai»v SIT. II. Mail..(1.40 tr 7 South. Ex. 11.00

PEORIA OIVJ8ION.

Leave for Northwest.

Ar. from Northwest

7 N-W Ex ....7.10 a in 21 llocatur Ex 8.35 pin

12 At.ltc Ex ..11.10 a

hi

0 Easfn-Ex. 7.00

EVANSVILLE & TERRE HAUT* NARHVMjI.W LINK.

Leave for the South.

A ri lve from South

5C&NLlm*. 11,50 pm 3 0 & Ev Ex*. 5.3K a 1 Ev & I Mail. 2.45 rn 7 NO&FlaSpj* 6.33

0 0 & N Lire* 4.03 a n.

2

U&E Ex*11.00 am

8

N

33 Mall & Ex..9.00 am 49 Worth. Mix.8.40 pin

N E W

S

Crescent Route, the time via these lines to Florida and other Southern points is many bours quicker than via any other road.

For information apply to any agent Southern Railway or connecting Hnes.^^ Ass't Gen. Pass. Agt. Southern By.,

Louisville. Ky.

OA FSpl* 3.35 n.

4 C&lnri Ex*11.10

bj

EVANSVILLE & INDIANAPOLIS Leave for South. 1 Arrive from South

48 Mixed.10.10 a n? 32 Mall & Ex. 2.45 tin

CHICAGO & EASTERN.ILLINOIS

Leave for North.

6 & N Llm* 4.08 a 101.M.S.&TII. 6.30 a 8 TH AO Ex.11.30 am 8 NO&FSpl* 3.40 4 E & 0 Ex*.lL20

Arrlvo from North.

5C AN Llm*. 11.45 am 8C A E Ex*.. 5.30 a 1 O A Ev Ex.. .2.10 at

I M.S.&T H. 5 15 7 NO&FSpl*.. 6.30 pm

C. C. & I BIG FOUR.

Ooing Ease.

Oolng West

86 N Y»OinEx*1.66 a 4 In&CldEx. 8.00 am 8 Day Ex*... 8.02pm 18 Knlckb'r*. 4.20

85StL Ex*... 1.33am 9 Ex & ai 1*10.00 am 11 S-W Llm*.. 1.30 pm 6 Matt'n Ac. 7.00 15 Sund'y only8.45

DINING CAR SERVICE

Anew kind of service of particular concern to patrons of the CHICACO A EASTERN ILLINOIS Railroad has been adopted by that company in Its dining car department. All meals served are now on a la carto plan, that is. passengers pay for what they order. I rices Charireo arc very rciwonjihlc, coiiMucriri^ the quality of the articles served. 1 his plan was put In effect October Jnt, and the lnereased patronftfc* brought about by tho change attests Its popular favor.

SAMUEL R. HAMILL

Attorney at Law

Snice 202-208 Grand Opera

,House Building,

Local and Long Distance Telephone 443.

3&W

Machine Works

Maoafactarers M^DeiJers^ in Machinery and Supplies. Repairs a Specialty a iF Eleventh and 5ycamore Sts., Terre Haute, Ind

MOTJDY & COFFINS Artificial Stone.Walks and Plastering

l^eave order» at 151T Poplar, Cor. Gib and Willow or UOl JMaln 8t

$