Terre Haute Daily News, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 20 August 1890 — Page 3

ft

I

MEDICAL ELECTIUCUll.

OATAftftM, THMOAT, AND Nf*V-

Oil® OtSCMW*, TUHOTO. Moves, Suwumooue Mains WWW*0, aarsotm,9to 11 a. au.Stol P.M. 110 8wt »l«th «mt

I. H. C. ROYSE,

INSURANCE,

REAL ESTATE,

Amo

MoarnMos umm,

No. 617 Ohio Street.

A. B. GILLBTTB, D. D. S.

DENTIST.

VcrtlwMt Cornsr Seventh tod Masn, opposite Terr® Haute Boose.

WILL E. BELL,

FHY6IOIAH AND SURQBON. Residence. 818 walnut street, OflSc# or«r A. Willison's drag store at Fovsrth street and tbe Vandal IA rutid. (fell* promptly Attended to.

Ottee telephone 178. Rwidenc* telephone, 192.

DR. F. G. BLEDSOE,

DENTIST!

mr Ho. #*7 JIAIS STBECT.-M ine GOLD and RUBBER PLATES ft specialty.

LEO. J. r, M. IX,

Physician and Surgeon!

Residence, 620 Chestnot street Offloe, ill f. Sixth (Bay ins* K*nk Buildlnr.) All mil* promptly anawewl. Residence telephone 21J.

BOOTS, SHOES AND RUBBERS.

LADIES,

TRY THE NEW

Holdfast Rubber!

Cannot slip off as others do (hey Are much more comfortable and durable and cost no more.

Bargains in BOOTS AND SHOES. Before purchasing elsewhere come and examine the goods and prices.

D.l^eibold

300 Main St., Terre Haulg, Ind.

SteSS BATH HOUSE.

MICHANflK ARTESIAN BATB SODSB.

Tho water from them wells den* not strike tbe air until it is in tho bAth tub, thaa jirwrvin* ail health firing quail tie*. It in pronotiaw*! by pby»iclani» to be luperlor to the lemons Hot Kpri»«. Cold and hoi baths, vapor, Tnrkinh and Russian baths. Elegant ladles' waiting room*. Hums taken cat® of white 70a are batbinir.

Corner Tenth

and Chestnut strata,

union depot

if*-,

Kaasateo thorn to

order S «j

i4W»« aho« halt toted......................

J. WALTER KELGHNER.

No, OO© Oor. Chestnut and Ninth Streets. Terre Ha.ute, Ind*

Dtx WORKS.

NE PLUS ULTRA!

Dyetns and waetattag «t aad oeattemea'* wear la all •badea ot any tabrto atalKWt nettt* end mod«ni prton at

H. P. REINERS" fls

Steam Dye Works

and

AFFAIRS OF THE RAILWAYS

nerBLE BHKWise AMoaro XM IUMOM

Tfaey Wilt *«et M. H. T+rfr ft of BHtTWM* WrU (bij-Wllll tlM 5l'k*l P1M«

BalM HMtakBekea.

A general feeling of dissatisfaction has been manifest among the employe® of the Eastern Illinois lor the past few day* over the non-settlement of the question, which they fully expected would be settled by their committees at the conference with General Manager George Sao

11

and General Superintend

ent D. II. Patterson last Friday and Satnxday. The men are very reticent when approached on the subject, but they ail agree that it was Saul's hope to bluff the the members of the committee* into making more concessions than they were at liberty to make. His manner has been a matter of much comment among tbe em ployes and the switchmen and brakemen are especially restless just at this time. The conference came to naught and the committees were told to come to Chicago again on Friday when they would meet Ex-President H. H. Porter. There has long been a dissatisfaction among all flumtrn of employes on the Eastern Uli uois, who claim to have a number of grievances and that Mr. Sauls' haughty manner has precipitated the demand for redress. If they fail to secure an advance at Friday's meeting with Mr, Porter, trouble is anticipated and the company has been laying in a coal supply for some time as a precaution. Their demands are as follows: That hostlers receive $80 per month instead of 180 that the hostlers relieve tbe engineer# and firemen at the Polk street dopot and take the passenger engines back to Thirty third street Between Danville and Chicago, on through freights, they want all time over ten hours to be extra, and on local freight extra time over twelve hours, a reduction in Jwth cases of three hours, regular time at present being twelve and fifteen hours respectively. Engineers demand a raise from $4.75 to $5 69 on a trip between Danville and Chicago, Firemen demand two promotions from their ranks for every engineer hired by the company from outside sources.

Railway Baniblliun.

The Vandalia engineers and firemen are universal in their sympathy for Win. Davidson in his unfortunate affair.

Freight business on the Logan division er '81 road besides the regular

ign

near

SHOKMAKINQ,

FIRST-CLASS WORK.

BOOTS I SHOES

MADE TO ORDER.

First-class work hand tewed tonga* toot, Morocco L«r*, ...... I? All French ?*llboot*. bandtewed,......... Men's fine shoes, made to oMer, peeked... 4 W in ad to Men*# flue boot*, made to order, pecged... Men'* ftne hand sewed

'V*

Ho. 065 Wabash Avenue.

wall pai»*b,

rrc.

is very brisk at present. ial freight

of the vandalia To-day there were three speci trains over the trains.

W, C. Irwin, chief engineer of the Big Four, has begun to make some improvements on the Wabash river bridge here. small steamer is engaged in hauling stone and some strong rip-rap is bein in. The bridge is also being repaint

The Indiana Midland is now complete as far as Waveland, where they will take the Park county coal field. President Harry Crawford owns 514 acres of fine xwil land there, and the mines will soon be reopened and operated. A paying coal traffic will thus be secured by the Midland.

Whether or not the Indiana Midland will be extended twenty miles to the southward in order to make a connection with the Big Four and thus secure an entrance to this city, can not now be positively stated on account of some complications which are said to stand in the way. In the opinion of Big Fouroffi-

way. dais, however, the matter will not be long delayed.

Superintendent Williams, of the Nickie Plate, is at Lake Maxinkuckee in his special car for a phort vacation. He came down from Hibbard by special train. The object of Mr. Williams' trip to Maxinkuckee is given out

PI

being purely for

pleasure but it lias given rise to a rumor which is far different. It is said that while there Mr. Williams will look over the ground for the purpose of investigating the advisability of building a siding from Hibbard to the lake. It is said that if Mr. Williams can secure aright of way at a reasonable figure the Nickie Plato will build, as the distance is only four miles. The Nickie Plate now runs numerous excursions to Maxinkuckee, but is compelled to use the Vandalia tracks from Hibbard and they pay wheelage for tho same. This amounts to but little, as the Vandalia furnishes all tho accommodations required by them, but a direct line is desired. The increasing popularity of Maxinkuckee and the fact thatChicago people have begun to turn their attention that way is said to be the cause of the Nickie Plates' desire to build to the lake. There would be but little freight business to or from the lakes, and passenger business would be their only inducement to build.

REV. JEFFERY'S FAREWELL.

TBBBS HATJTB

for.

il« Marrlt« ««h) Will Beewme *t*a aiMionary. The Rev. F. E, Jetlery, %ho h*i had charge of the Second Congregational Sunday school and work in the East End, ended his labors hers last week. Became only for the Summer months.

IktmrvD. of Joliet* III, yesterday* H« is to

be

ordained in Galeeburg, Tuesday

of next week and saite with hit young bride September 6th for India, under the of the American board. They auspice* wilt carr

The

many friends here and obewhere. of!- i*l board of the Fiwt C\mgregatknal dhurdh took

to

seenre

a

permanent mco&mr tu Mr. Je£h*y to lake tbatge of the work he has ao well begun. It ire some weeks he fore this eaL lie ... .wnplMwd, but tbe field Is to he oeea|»ied mm lis Is expeded adbMftel will he erected in the near fn-

Coroner Hyde haa retum^i a verdki In the estse el thes* a tthof Dora A. Joyce* in which he «*ya that death n« anUedl from chrwsic aowmia, inducing «adka h«hii fallows. The oMhnner waai ^ooNfind in nthefiflut tosUcn ry in the ease of KiHtham's kllUng ym^rtiav. It#! w««t^» the] afternoon. mead! «#*ame

Wall Paper, Window iJt?.«(«| Wall Paper, Wmdow Shades, House Painttag

Hud Wood

KniBhed, 102 NORTH FOURTH STREET,

Ceaasatmtaneai

1

AFTER eUNSTT.

cottspAny

of clouts

.Around tb® ana'*

dMth. lit,

Oooi

b!B

tacArnAdtocd,

ta&oaafay was twt

dwbroad#

Cows low fro® tar ctf tonne

.VWr«rery«»d At l«*tb ta h««£d aw* Xbaae tew are aacred momenta, One more day 1*^ to tba shadowy golf oC byreae tittle.

WiUiAm AUtwyhmrw

AN 0UTLA

The surrender of Barby Smith let loose upon the southwest a horde of danjrerous men, and by tbe time the govern inent had established its departments and military posts hundreds of the late rebel soldiery were little better than tmtlawa. The strong hand of*the mili taiy authorities soon downed the majority, but there were others who preferred to die in tho woods or swamps rather than return to ways of peace. When they had been given a reasonable time to come in, and when it was seen that they openly defied the power of the government, they were outlawed and a price set upon the heads of the leaders. Moreover, small detachments of soldiers hunted them down, and army scouts •went out in pairs and had many a stirring adventure. While these outlaws were ex-rebels most of them had been guerrillas in the war, robbing both friend and foe, and the regular rebel soldier who had made a regular surrender had no sympathy with them.

In September, 1866, word came into Helena that an outlaw named Bill Traver had taken up his retreat in the woods a few miles below and on the Mississippi shore Of the river. Indeed, the word, came to us direct from him and was brought by a colored man. Not being able to write, he had to send a verbal message, and it was to the effect that he hated the government, bad killed fifty Yankees during tho war, and now defied the military force to capture him. William Bastrop and myself, both being on duty as scouts, were detailed to investigate. The order detailing us meant this:

You are heseby granted ten days' leave of absence to kill Bill Traver, outlaw, or to be killed yourselves."

The negro disappeared after delivering his message, and we waited two days before making a move. We were then set across the river in a skiff at night and left to pursue our plans. Traver would be expecting us to approach his retreat in front and "by boat, while we proposed to go in by the back door, if at all. He might be in the woods and he might not, although the negro was honest in telling his story. We doubted if any human being could live in the woods at that season on account of tho torment of the insects. We had in mind an old cabin in a clearing two miles back of the river. A squad of fifteen of us had once captured five outlaws in this cabin, and in the fight two more had been killed For this reason no one would occupy the cabin, not even a negro squatter Whether Traver would be affected by alike superstition we did not know, but proposed to find out. We each bad a Winchester and a revolver, with a pack of provisions, and an hour before day light we were in hiding close to the cabin. When day broke we saw that the door—there was but one—was shut, and that an old coffee sack had been nailed over the only window. These were evidences that the house was occu pied by some one, and from our ambush behind a log, and only pistol shot away, we kept a closer watch.

It was about 8 o'clock in the morning when a colored man came out of the cabin and built afire on the ground and began to cook breakfast. We could smell the frying bacon and catch the odor of the coffee, and we felt sure that Traver or some other white man was inside. It took the man about half an hour to prepare the meal, and during this interval we made up our minds that we had never seen him before. When he had everything ready he went to the door and called, and five minutes later Traver appeared. There was no mistaking him, as he tallied point for point with the description given us. He was a ragged, dirty, desperate looking fellow, and he was evidently in bad humor, He kicked the negro aside and sat down to his breakfast, and for ten minutes he kept up a continued growling and cursing. Hi© negro retired to a log ten feet away, and while he made no reply to the abuse heaped upon him, he did not seem much disturbed by it

There was no doubt that Tracer was well armed. Had he not considered himself perfectly safe he would not have stirred outdoors without a weapon While he had been outlawed, and while we knew him to be a robber and murderer, we could not kill him off hand. Either one of us could have sent a bullet into his head from our ambush, and we knew that be would shoot us down likedogsif he had the chance. We finally decided to flank him right and left, and bopp to get so near the cabin as to cut off Ms retreat to it when we called ttpoaMatosmatdsr. passed to the right and Bastrop to the left He had the beat cover. When I had aceomptished half the distance the negro suddenly rose alarmed by the breaking of a twig, saw me, and uttered a whoop. Bastrop rose up and demanded a surrender, while I fired on the outlaw. In tut instant both men were in the cabin with door irittft, and oar game was blocked. We dropped tothe ground, and five minutes later one passing bf oould not hare told that there was a haman being within twenty miles of the spot.

After quarter of as bour of 't$&» deepeet sileace we ved back unto w» came together. W« bad caged our mau, and thetuagro was evidently a bed omi asweil. Wehadtheadvaatageafbet®# able to cetama&d the only exit tram tlni IjotM&u but th^re was no teffing whftt sort et a dodge Trawar would be up to mm cAk£. We decided to guard the door and window lar the day a* least* feeling certain thij& tita--outlaws wat^ fe the a&ia. Tk»5* day nafca full week* We were tsstneoted by (fuStpe*, had only hardtack to ieiga{* ew topf, aad our ttrintem^asiMbKl wiQi wator (unfit an ex to drlak. W# B*pe«feg toaeethe

«#*&*

.IiH-rewwii,

.VFim it csstolsiKt' tax ""nt-Ufwft xmhiiml. Koca

tieeu made by our enemfcsa* Had we not Bern them rush into the cabin and shut the door we should have aaid that the place was untenanted. Traver, though a desperate man, had too much sense to expose himself to our fire by daylight. He knew that there were at least two of us, Mid perhaps he feared that we numbered five or six. He had only to wait until night cam to get a more even show.

As the sun went down and the dark* ness settled upon the wood we crept nearer the house, and when we finally got settled it was at the roots of a tree not over twenty feet from the door and directly opposite. While the night was a fairly dark one the door could not be opened without our hearing and seeing. It was our idea that along nbout midnight it would be suddenly flung open and the men would leap out to the right and left, and therefore neither of us slept. Indeed sleep, with the myriads of mosquitoes swarming around us, would have been impossible. There were times when It seemed as if we would be eaten alive and when we had to lay down our guns and make a fight for it. At about 1 o'clock there was a pounding on the door of die cabin and the thick voioe of a negro called out: •'Hey, you white men .out darl'V.'

We did not answer until he had called several times and he then announced: •'Marue Traver ar' dead an' I want to surrender." "When did he die?" I asked. "Jee' "bout an hour ago. One o' you shot him dis mawnin' an' he's been bleedin' all day."

I had fired upon him and I felt quite certain that 1 had hit him, and so this statement seemed very reasonable. After consulting for a bit we called to him to throw open the door and come out, but he answered:

This plan suited us gust as well, and everything went along quietly until day was just breaking, when Bastrop suddenly roused up and" whispered:

It struck me that this was the he had played, and leaving my to watch the door I made a circuit to approach the cabin in the rear. The first thing I saw was a pile of fresh dirt close to the logs, and this was proof that the outlaws had escaped. The talk of the negro was apart of the plan to throw us off our guard, and he had probably gone with Traver. My first thought was to advance to the cabin and settle the question, but as I was about to leave my cover I heard a noise inside which satisfied me that at least one of the pair was still there. If so, he would shoot me as soon as I exposed myself, as there was no chinking between the logs on the back side of the hut. After a few minutes' reflection I felt that I had sifted the plan. Traver had left by the hole, not for the purpose of running away, but to circle around to our rear and then creep up and shoot us.

It had now come to be broad day, and I moved swiftly to get back to Bastrop I had to make a considerable circuit, and as I approached the spot, dodging from tree to tree, I heard the report of a rifle, followed by a ringing war whoop. Next instant I saw the outlaw before me, holding a smoking rifle in his hands, and I took a snap shot and dropped him in his tracks. Next moment i«nother rifle cracked, and I heard a yell from the negro, followed by a call from Bastrop. I advanced to find him sitting on the ground with the blood flowing from his head, and at first I thought he had a fatal wound. An investigation, however, revealed the fact that he had had a narrow escape. The bullet fired at him by the outlaw had raked his scalp and knocked him down, but he had jumped up just as the negro flung the door open to come out, having a rifle in his hands. Bastrop had fired upon him and sent a bullet into his shoulder, and the fellow was rolling around on the earth and howling like a wolf with pain and fear. Traver was stone dead. The bullet had struck him In the head, and he fell in a heap. He had a Winchester, two revolvers and two knives, and there was such a look of ferocity in his face that we had to turn away from it.

The negro was also well armed, but the wound had taken all the fight out of him. Be had been with Traver for three months, and admitted to having had a hand in several serious crimes during that period. We took him to Helena, where he suffered amputation of the wounded arm and died soon after.—New YozkSun.

Deft witb HI* Toes.

A man recently wrote to the Louden newspapers about an !8-year-o!d lad living at Bristol, who, being without arms, paints pictures by holding a brush in hi* mouth. It has ainoe been discovered tliat there is an armless man at Antwerp who has for years worked at copying pictuna in tbe public gallery there. He uses his toes Instead of his fin gera, and can put his foot into the tail pocket of hisooat, pull out his hasdkggrthief and wipe his heed, whkh is bald, all the while balanced on a high stooL—Car. New York Sun. sfeei

Vh

?Xawahc*r me the cow that gin* the buttermilk," said young lMtey feeetlowdy to tfa«

prwttr

milkrotid,

"Oh, wedonHget tba* from the cow," rtplM tho

MTbU

*-sr

DAILY NEWS, WEDNE^DAt, AXfGtJST 20.1890.

II *r Tea flown,

Is *w*ebtaf fowe of dainty pink (To m*uh. bar Uushas,) PrapAiiag tiu aedswtJre drink

BofcaA, midst pittsfcM, biWbree wee abet

Oldracnaad A rwsoOaotfcm TbAi is ttut vary ptnk, to mo,

Ot swaet pertescioe.

"Twaa

enreiy not bar

t»A bAs njAde

My Ttatoa rosy. Thai now couleor da

rose

Arrayed

Life aeetos iaat proey. And this to tall ber I lactlaf This vary tafoato: I wish that dainty gown wereeatoe—

And sbe wttbin iti

-H. E. W. ia LUta.

Judging tram Appearanoee.

Thin Person—Mr. Cleever, I think Til trade with you hereafter, 1'vo been buying my meat from the butcher across the way.

Cleever—Well, you look it!—Munscy's Weekly^,/!

'--"te?

11

me

Ize done afeared you'll shoot down." "But we promise not to fire if you do not seek to escape." 7 •'What's de time o' night?" "About 1 o'clock." '•Den I'll wait 'till daylight afore I cum out. Den you kin all see dat I want to surrender, an' go up to Helena and jine my wife. I didn't dun want to be heah, but Marse Traver made me cum?"

Don't

What infernal fools we are! you smell the rat?' .cy, "No." "111 bet a hundred to one that the nigger was giving us taffy. They have dug out under the logs on the back side while we were waiting here."

Making a Speecb.

It may look like a very easy thing for a member, having his speech written, to deliver it during the course of an hour in the house, but it is not such an easy thing as it looks. The average speaker gets a deal of athletic exercise in the course of an hour's speech. There are some members in the house who can stand and read a speech without lifting a hand except to turn the pages, and almost without changing position and there are others who can talk all day without getting tired but the average speaker perspires as if he were sawing wood. An offhand speech'of ten minutes does not count, but the man who throws his arms in the air as if whirling Indian clubs, hammers his desk like a blacksmith, and dances all around the place for an hour or more is taking very violent exercise. Experience has taught some of them that it is not safe to make such a speech without taking extra precautions against cooling off too quickly afterwards. Cor. Philadelphia Telegraph.

Conkllng's Generosity.

It was the same with Roscoe Conkling. He charged the millionaires, but he worked for nothing for the poor. A highly cultured widow of Washington, whose property was tied up and was being unjustly appropriated by others through a supposed legal technicality, met Mr. Conkling in New York and presented her case. He offered to take it up, but she told him she could not pay him. In the gentlest manner Mr. Conkling told her he would do it for nothing, and he then set the machinery of law in motion, which gave her back her little fortune.. It did not cost her a cent.

AiStbr

jhI

mm I

mats

ceew* from tbe

Weekly.

A hjudeMd ImtiolllT thus nrntM im ths iticfanu cC

.some fittoeids who osbnkltd

himt«»c*ta]rtagAWtfe certainly coald oof f(xp««» ttte te waovy a woman who*d be toooeh eoons^j

JM«s.

to hmm «».«—

in the

Mm

InHk'

""SESSS.*

KXCUR8IOX RATES.

SUMMER TOURS

-yiA-

O.

TOWN LEY 8TOVE 00.,

609 Wabash

UNDERTAKERS AND

THE HEROINE,

Knowlton, is supposed to be none other than

PACTS AND SUITS.

I Have Just Received Another Shipment of Trouserings and will

1 0

MERRITT

$8 AND UPWARD. AUtllllU 1 1

Tales of American Osawlatea. I saw Adam King, the newly appointed consul to Paris in place of Mr. Bathbone, of California. I asked Mr. Hooper, as be filled the place of vice consul for many years acceptably and ia wonderfully up in everything about Paris, and ha told me that the consulate was worth about $17,000 a year. He aaid that he kept the books for Mr. Walker, our consul there for several years, and that he netted about $17,000 out of the position. He said that the consulate at Frankfort, which Capt. ifason holds, was probably worth |8,000 to $8,000 a year. The Loudon consulate, held by Mr. New, is more profitable than any of these, and Mr. New has conducted himself in a very agreeable way in London, and has also been fairly thrifty with the proceeds of his office.—Gatli in Cincinnati Enauirer.

Ml SM%

E. I. R. R.

Round trip ticket* at low rates now ou sale to the various pleasure and health resorts of Iowa, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Idaho, Montana, Colorado, Dakota, Yellow Stone National Park and Pacific eoaat also to various points reached by the Lake lines from Chicago, for

DESCRIPTIVE :-:«GUlDES

or information in detail apply at 696 Wabash avenue or Union Depot Ticket Office. R. A. CAMPBELL,

General Agent.

REFRIGERATORS.

Artistic Wood Mantels, Tile Hearths

—and—

Pa&tear Germ Proof Filters

EMBALMSR8

EOBXBT H. BLACX.. JAMM A. XX0XT, BLACK & NISBBT,

Undertakers and Embalmers,

96 NORTH FOURTH ST., TERRE HAUTE. aar

All oalli will reoetve prompt attenUoe. Otmki dav ard ntirbt.

ANEW STORY.

From Re

W

The Story of* a* Young Journalist's Experiences

in Ne&Yprt .Citg.

E ARE GLAD TO ANNOUNCE, as our next attraction, a Mag4* liificent Serial Story, the plot of which was taken from real 'i1*

The Author Refuses to Disclose His Identity,

is thought to be ^Celebrated Journalist, of New York, now living.

bearing,

The Celebrated Prima Donna, Clara Louise Kellogg.

The New York Newspaper—The Dawn—to

Hurlstone, was attached, is none other than *7

THE EWW TQKK, HERALD,

•m

toml naoktr Ana. it. ma-tsirts snst

The other characters arte people conspicuous in New York society* The story the inside workings of some of the great Metropolitan Daily Newspapers, and shows how pluck} brains, and luck will enable a young man to rise to the highest rank in journalism.^

Do Not Fail to Read This Start}—It Is True—It Is FascinatingIt Will Do You CoodI

ifc •*fcr

TH1B TAILOK AND hatter. 845 MAIN &THJERT,

TONE TABUS,

J^AXLBOAD TIME TABLE,

Standard time 10 alnntee slower than eity tt»e.

|«t^ I.dT.H.

Trains leave the south at 5:20am MfcSOa m,a:15 pa and fcSQpaa.. Trains arrive from tbe «oath atfctt am li sa am &«Q m, and 11:00 ts. "*ao

T.H.AP.

Trains leave for the nortbweit at Hibtlf B. TrriM arrive from northwest at ll:is a and TMp ia.

K.4I.

Trains leave for tbe sontfa, mall and ex»M &» am Worth, mixed *:C6 Arrive from tbe south. Worth, ntxe*' i&sq mail and express, n».

C. A. E. I

Trains leave for tbo north at&23aa: it it &3D pa and 11:10 re. Train* arrive from the north at 5:10 a m: i&lft an fclO sa and flc5 m.

BIO FOUR.

Trains leave for east at 1:10 a. m. 8:02 a. n,\ p. n. Jt48 p. m. Leave for tbe west 1:53a.10:09 a. m.: 1^» p. m. 7:38 p. xa.

RAILWAY.

3

EXPRESS IONS DAILY

BVANSVfLLK, VtNOBNNKS* TKRRE HAUTE and OANVILLC

TO

CHICAGO

WHENCE DIRECT CONNECTION iamado to all points EAST, WESTand NORTHWE8T

Ail fat tU CUa*go SuUra IlllaoU forratss,timstablssand information In detail* adefresi your nearest Ticket Agent. WILLIAM HILL, Oen. Pass, and Tkt.

CHICAGO, ILL.

R. A. CAMPBELL, Geo. Agt, Terre Haute

STATIONERY, ETC.

Stationery, Blank Books, Sacks, Twino, Etc., J. B. DUNCAN & CO., Noa. 600Midi663 Wabaah Avenue.

:al Life.

Siege"

the storv. the name of Miss Helen 'j ,.c. r. -k.

the slaff of Ivliich the Hero, Rush

siegb^wilb~be commenced in the news.

mat Tiuuts

&