Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 November 1881 — Page 2

WENDELL PHILLI

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MT

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Prevented Only by Feebleness from Advocating "No Kent" in Ireland.

In response to a cable despatch from Patrick Eg»»n, Treanurer of the Laod League, now in Paris, asking through Patri. Ford of the Trinh World whether he would go to Ireland and advocate „No rent," Wendell Phillips has sent the following:

BOSTON,NOT. 2,1881.

Sin: I ieceive with humility the summons yoa send me—well knowing thatr In an/ circumstances, I could not do a tenth part ef what your partiality inakrs you think, I could.

But, in thiB case, humanity, civil liberty, constitutional government, and civilization itself claim his best eervioeof every man

Ireland to-dar leads the van in the Struggle for ribt, justicc, and freedom. England has forteited her right to rule, if she ever bad any, by a 300 years' exhibition of her unfitness and inability to do so. The failure is confessed by all her fitatcsni n, of both parties, for the last hundred years.

Discontent, poverty, famine, and d« ath are her accusers. Her rulers cannot plead ignorance. Their own shameless confessions, re-

peati-d over and over again, admit that England's rule has been unjust, selfish, ana cruel. She lias planned that Ireland should starve, hoping she would then be too w. ak too resist.

To-day. while her Government tram-

Elcs

uuder foot every principle in English istory that makes meu honor it, the world vrHii* in sure and glad expectation of her detent, confident that her overthrow will be the triumph ot right, jutice, and civilization.

The three thousand miles of ocean thut separates us from her bhores enable us to Judge her course as dispassionately as posterity will judge it a hundred years hence and we see the mad blunders of her Government as posterity will see them.

Let Ireland only persevere in her sub lime patience, keeping ever within the limits of peaceful agitation, and her vie Jory is certain.

Willi unbroken front let her assault despotism in its centiai point, rent Hon«st rent is the surplus left after the tenant haa lived in comfort—material, intellectual, personal and social comfort Ireland owes none to-day ccrtainly not to a class whose Government is the prison and the bayonet.

How cheerfully would I do my part! How gladly would I share in the" honors a he at a health obliges me to give up public speaking. I can only bid you God speed, and pray for your speedy and complete SUCC088.

Yours very respectfully, Wi

WENDELL PHILLIPS.

MR. PATRICK EGAN,Taeasurer of the Land League.

FIVE HUNDRED DOLLA.RS RE WARD. We will pay tlxo above regard for anv case of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Indigestion, Constipation or Costiveness, we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are pure Vegetable, and never fail to give satisfaction. Sugar Coated. Large boxes, containing 80 Pills, 25 cents. For sale by all Druggists. Beware of counterfeits and imitations. The genuine manufactured only by John C. West & Co., "The Pill Makers," 181 and 183 W. Madison street Chicago, 111. Free trial Packages sent bj mail prepaid on receipt )f a three cent stamp. Cook & Bell of Terra Haute, Ind ABasseit, wholesale agent, Detroi.t i*

A Texas man vas lynched for riding a mule on tiunday. It was another man's mule, by the way.

S uthe

'tii

Fortunate ones on Earth•

At New Orleans, on the 11th day of October, at the 137th Grand Monthly Drawing of the Louisiana State Lottery Company, $30,000, the first capital prize was won by ticket No. 7,240, half of which was held by ajolly Alsaeian saloon keeper, Max Schmidt, No. 440 W.32nd street, New York City half by Augustus I)e Grummund, a poor, but popular pump maker of No. 488 M. street, Washington, D. C. $10,000, the second prize, by No. 56,930, also sold by halves, one of which was held by Mr. John C. Dieffenbach, a prominent steam tug owner of West street, New York City the other halt collected through the well*known bankers of Washington D. C., Messrs. H. D. Cooke, Jr. & Co. $5,000, the third capital, prize by No. 99.538, half of which was held by Unas, a cigar dealer at No.

Division street, New York City the other bv J.G. Boux, |Edwards, Miss. 42.500, by "No. 55,971. held by R. M. Howard, of Aberdeen, Miss. and No. 23,977, held by M. C. Caspari, No. 245 Argyle street, Baltimore, Md. These are only some of the thousands of the lucky investors. Any one who is interested in «vich remunerative speculations should wriu at once to M. A. Dauphin, New Orleans, La., in time to participate in the great Semi-Annual Distribution of over half a million dollars on December 13th, under the sole management,of Gen'ls G. T. Beauregard, of Louisiana, and Jubal A. Early, oi Virginia.

Ex-President Dial, of Mexico, is about to marry his fourth wife, a handsome miss of eighteen.

OH AS. EAYXE HINKLB, Jersey City Heights, N. Jreports that his son, alaa of twelve years, was completely cured of a terrible case of Eczema by the Cuticura Remedies. From his head to his feet was one mass of scabs.

"Short, but sweet." as an old maid said when she kissed the dwarf who was on .exhibition.

HON. WM. TAYLOR,

Boston, is vrell

again. Completely cured of a aorofulous humor which poisoned his blood, cov ering his face and head with sores, by •Cuticura Resolvent internally and Cuticura and .Cuticura Soap externally.

wn

CAIXDTQ THE AKOKUDT.

We mean to do it. Some day, aotne day, W« mean to (lack** this fevered rush ,„ That is wearing our very souls away, fe._

And grant to our goaded hearts a hash '1 That ia only enough to let them hear 1 The footsteps of aagala drawing near

We mean to do it. Oh, never deubt When the burdens of day time droil is ar. We'll sit and muse, while the stars come out.

As the patriar ih sat at the open door Of his tent, with a heaven ward gaxing eye, To watch for the angels passing by.

We see them afar at high noontide, When fiercely the world's hot flashings beat Yet never have bidden them turn aside,

And tarry awhile in converse sweet Nor prayed them to hallow the cheer we spre*^ To drink of our wine and break our bread.

We promised oar hearts that when the strese Of the life-work reaches the long fore-close, When the weight that we groan with hinders leea» ugnt As banishes care's disturbing din

We'll loosen oar thought to such repoee

And then—we'll call the angels in.

The day that we dreamed of comei at length. When tired of every mocking quest, And broken in spirit and shorn of strength.

We drop, indeed, at the door of rent, And wait and watch as the day wanes on flut the angels we tneant to call are gone) (••t JJ —(Margaret J. Presto*

THE MARK OP THE CRUTCH.

Old Adam Hardburn was always accounted very eccentric, but when he adopted Malone's boy people thought that his eccentricity amounted to madness. The Malones were a bad lot, and this boy was not, as far as any one knew, better than any other of the family. Moreover, he had fallen from a tree which he was robbing of peaches in his youth, and crippled himself so he must always walk with a crutch. What did old Adam want with him? But Adam cared nothing for criticism he knew that no one ever pleased all the world yet, and, when his friends prophesied that he would be sorry, he laughed in their faces. Old Malone was dead, two of the boys were in jail, one gone away upon a voyage. He found Dan deserted in the miserable hut they had inhabited, friendless, with no one to help him to such work as he could do, and he had taken him home.

There could not be a better boy," old Adam said and after Dan had been with him two years he was still so much of this opinion that he made a will in his favor. Dan Malone, the old ruffian's lame boy, had come to be the prospective heir of the largest estate in the place.

He was a gentle-looking boy, who grew refined in manner, learned rapidly but even when he had come to be twen-ty-one, people were still prejudiced againBt him. Adam's venture might turn out well, but they doubted it

At last something happened that seemed to prove that they were all right. Old Adam was very fond of fishing. Sometimes he spent long days beside a certain trout stream, and often his boy, as he called Dan, was with him but one summer day Dan was not well, and Adam went out alone. The hired man was chopping in another direction, and the old woman who washed and cooked kept to her kitchen. But about eight o'clock that evening, Dan, very pale, and with strange looks in his eyes, came into A neighbor's house. "i came because I wanted help," he said. "Sir. HartfBurn went away tt fish this morning. I was sick. I grow giddy when I try to stand. I oan't go after him, and he'B not home yet. I wanted Simon to go, but he says his master is old enough to take care of himself, and has probably gone somewhere to supper. But that's not like Mr. Hardburn besides he had on his fishing hat and linen jacket. I wish some one would do what I am unable to do. I'm alarmed—very much alarmed."

The neighlxrs were kind. The men started out for the trout stream, and the women comforted Dan, telling him that good news would come soon that it was too cool for sunstroke, and that the stream was too shallow to be dangerous. But the yonng man sat pale and shivering, partly with illness, and partly with anxiety, until news came. It was the worst news possible. Mr. Hardburn had been found dead, shot through the head. A. pistol lay near him, and his pockets were turned inside out and his watch was gone.

When Dan heard the news he fainted away, and for awhile every one sympathized with him. But soon the tide turned. ni T-

Detectives came down from the city and made their explorations and inuuiriea. The watch was fo*uid in a hoi low tree, and all along the soft wood path were very peculiar footsteps. They traced them from the woods to the gate of the old man's home, the mark of a shoe, and where the other shoe print should have been, a puncture. Some one had been there who walked with a crutch, was the conclusion.

In the whole village was but one who used a crutch—young Dan Malone. The clouds of suspicion began to gather. Dan declared that he had been ill in bed all day but Simon, the man, knew nothing of Dan's whereabouts from the time he left home until he returned, and Betty only knew he had not come to dinner. The pistol with which Mr. Hardburn had been murdered was one he always kept in his own dining-room. And finally, Dan and no other had an object to attain by the old man's death.

Poor Dan was arrested, and his agonv was very great.

44

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SS

What do you think of

meT"

he

cried. Is money anything in comparison to the friend I have lost? I had all

THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE

I wanted. He was like a father to me. How can yon think I would harm aj^pir of his dear head?"

But, say what he would, no one beQeved him. They had no proof that lie had not been to die woods indeed, there were the marks of his crutch, and that the watch had been hidden, not carried off was proof that no thief had been the murderer. So Dan Malone lay in prison for a while, and was at last brought to trial. The facta which the jury had to consider were these:

No one had seen Dan after Mr. Hardburn had left home. A pistol which was tn th« house had been used to shoot him with. Dan declared that he had not crossed the threshold yet there were the marks of the crutch from the gate to the woods, where th* murdered man lay, and back again and Dan came into a fortune on his death.

During the trial his manner, his words, his pallid face, his evident terror, even before Mr. Hardburn had been found, were all described and set down against him. One of his brothers was in prison for man-slaughter, and the race was bad.

The jury only brought in the verdict all expected when they brought in that of Guilty of murder in the first degree and, when asked wha^ he could say in his own defense, Dan only an* swered:

How could any one believe that I could kill him?" So Dan was condemned to be hanged by the neck until he was dead, and all the world said it was only what might be expected of Malone's boy—that he should turn and bite the hand that fed him. -Even when the dreadful day came there was little pity felt for him. Such a traitor, every one felt, deserved hanging.

Simon and Betty both came in for a comfortable legacy, and the property went to a charity in case of Dan's death and Simon took his legacy and lived in a little house that he had bought, and for a man of humble station was very well off He lived thus ten years, added to his means by driving people to and from the station when felt like it, and mar* ried a buxom wife.

One day, however^ the wagon of which he was so proud came to grief. Simon was thrown out and taken homo in a dying condition. As he lay on his bed, attended by his weeping wife, more than bodily torments seemed to rack him, and he begged for a priest, and at the end of the confession to which he listened, summoned the magistrate.

This is what was taken down in his presence and that of the priest from Simon's own lips:

Father Steck says I must tell the truth before I leave the world or I can have no absolution. I wouldn't tell it if I had a chance of life, but it doesn't matter now.

I lived with old Mr. Hardburn ten years ago. I'd lived with him quite a time, and be tlv night a good deal of ma At last he took a boy to live with him —Dan Malone, a lame fellow—and he thought of no one else after that. I hated Dan he was no better than I, and the old m»n made a will, leaving him all he had. He put me in the will for three thousand dollars, too, but I wasn't satisfied. One day the old man had a lot of money paid him. It waa a mortgage he put it in his pocket and went to fish I knew he was down in the woods alone, and I thought if any one could knock him senseless he could get the money and then I thought of my legacy. If he was dead I could have that, too. Dan Malone was sick that day I saw him in bed he was asleep. I went and got a pis* tol there was in the house,and then I saw Dan's crutch outside the door he'd got to he could walk about the house pretty well without it. He'd costly doctors called in to him and I thought a minute, and I took it. I wasn't going to have my shoe measured if anything happened to the old man, and the crutch seemed to be a good thing to knock him on the head with, too. I tied my leg up with a handkerchief and went down into the woods, leaning on the crutch as if I was lame. No one saw me. The old man was fishing. I went behind him and hit him on the head and took his money and his watch as he lay senseless. wouldn't have killed him if he hadn'-t come to and called out, Good Heavens! It's Simon I' Then I had to. I hid the watch in the tree, meaning to get it again some day, and I limped home as 1 had come. If any one saw me from distance, they thought it was Dan. 1 left the crutch where I'd found it. No one was near. No one suspected me. Dan was arrested, and tried, and hung. I would have saved him if I could, without hurting myself but that was not possible. I here swear that he was innocent as a babe, and that I did The deed He was hung for."

Simon lived just long enough to sign this confession, and long ago repentant hands set a stone over poor Dan's neglected grave with his sad story upon it It was a poor atonement to the victim of circumstantial evidenoa.

There are 300,000 members on the rolls of the African Methodist Espiscopa2 church, that church having been organized in 1816. It hali one college, a publishing department. aix bish3paand many t&oela.

Mile. Rhea, the French actress who H. J. Sargent hopes will rival Modjeska'a success, has reached New York and will begin her season at Brooklyn, November 24, going thence to Booth's in New York But somehow Sargent has lost something of his old-time Bplendor nothing is said abeut the magnificence and vanity of his scarf-pins in these days (here is no mention of special palace cars and Indeed very little has been said about the new star's coming anyway, aside from the fact that her dresses are made by the dressmaker of the Czarina of Russia. That is a weak advertisement and would indicate a decay of the powers of the hitherto luxuriant mifid of the manager ,n

CATARRHAL P0I80N. Catarrh poisons the mucous membrane, poisons the blood and vital fluids,

Kom

isonsthe lungs, liver

W!'*—-

isonsthe lungs, liver and kidneys lple cold to the rotting, sloughing and death of the senses of smell, taste aid hearing, Sanford's Radical Cure for Catarrh is supreme. Complete treatment $1.

a simple cold to

Indianapolis correspondence of the New York Mercury: William H. English, late Democratic candidate for Vice-president, and owner of English's Theater here finds solace for disappointed ambition in the fiddle. Almost every morning he takes his favorite place on the back porch of his mansion, and as the inspiring strains of "Money Musk" float on the air he keeps time with his feet with a fervor that would excite the envy of the boss fiddler country hoe-down.

It is impossible for a woman after a taithful course of treatment with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, to continue to suffer with a weakness of the uterus. Enclose a stamp to Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, 283 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass- for her pamphlets. »us "v -v

Along in the fifties two young girls the Bennett sisters, were dancing between acts at the National, Cincinnati. One of them man ied the keeper of a restaurant, and, for a time, retired from the stage. A year or so after her marriage she went on the road with an Uncle Tom" combination, playing "Topsy," and took her voung babe with her. The child soon became the pet of tbe troupe, and was nickname! "PicKV." Mise Alice Atherton was that "Piggy."- a

M'M ALL PLATED OUT,"

is a common complaint. If you feel so, get a package ot Kidney Wort and take it and you will at once feeljgits tonic power. It renews the healthy action of tbe kidneys, bowels and liver, and thus restores the natural life and strength to the wearry body. It can now be had in either way dry or liquid form, aud in either way is always prompt and efficient in action"—New Bedford Standard.

-'"1

TERRE HAUTE

Marriage Benefit

X* ASSOCIATION.

The objeot of the association Bhall be to encourage matrimony and give financial aid *o men and women at the commencement of married life. To secure this end it shall be the purpose of this association to encourage small coutiibutlous to a common endowment fund, for the mutual assistance of those who contribute to said fund, and from the amount so accumulated in this way, to give at marriage to those so contributing tneir pro rata snare of such fund.

The business affairs of the association sball be managed by aBoard of Dicectors. chosen by those who hold certificates of snares representing the corporate property of this association. The association was duly organised under the laws of the 8tate of Indian on the 21st day of October 1881, and Its articles of association are filed In the ofllce of the Recorder of Vigo County, and with the Secretary of State. The treasurer and secretary of this association have given bonds in sums of ten and five thousand dollars respectively for the faithful performance of their duties. Any unmarried person male or female, may secure to themselves a certificate ef membership by filing an application in compliance therewith, and paying a membership fee.

The practical operations of the association are plain, the maaagement most economical, and tor a small investment, sure and large returns may be secured.

S 1 OFFICERS:

M. S. President.

JOHNDCTfcSAK,

F.

GUMCK

Vice President.

DICK

MORGAN,,

T.

11

WILSON NAYLOK,Secretary.

'treasurer.

~JAMES N. SHOCKNBY,

General Agent

tZsS, |General Managers.

SECRETARY'S OFFICE, Send for circulars explaining workings of association. {Xiive agents wanted everywhere.

No. 521 Ohio Street,

I

I 7

1

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

A.E.BURKHARDT & CO

MANUFACTURERS OP THB

Latest Paris Modes

IN

SEALSKIN GARMENTS

(nBST ENGLISH DTK), .-

FUR-LINED WRAPS —AND— .3 FUR TRIMMINGS.

Aprlicatiea* for gseia mm anre« tafiea will rccelvs prenpt (mention. ani onr aftfcnnt containing Dhotorrapkie copies of tka newest atTlesrwfll ke sent for EXAMINATION, upon reoeipt of satisfactory reference, to persons desirous of

purchasing.

113 West Fourth St, CINCINNATI.

Scrofulous Itching and Scaly iHumors of the Skin, Scalp and Blood Cured.

NMCULOUS CUREr I will new at»te that I made a miraculous ottre of eneof the wont cases of skin disease known. The patient la nan forty years old:bad aofftared .fifteen yean. Hia eyes, •calp, and nearly hla whole body pieeented a frightful appearance. Had had the attention of twelve different physicians, who prescribed the best remedies known to the profession, snch as iodide potassium, arsenic, oorroslve sublimate, sanaparritla, etc. Had paid tSOO for medical treatment with bat little relief. I prevailed upon him to «se the Cuticara Resolvent Internally, and the Cuticura and Cuticura Soap externnUjr. He did so, and was completely cured. Tne akin on his head, faoe, and many other parts of hia body, which presented a most loathsome appearance, is now as soft and smooth as an Infant's, with no scar or traoe of the disease left behind. He has now been cured twelve months. Reported

F. H. BKOWX, ESXby

ECZEMA.

out on my leg and both feet, wnlch turned

and annoyance. I tried various remedies with no good results, until I nsed the Cntleura Resolvent Internally and Catlcara and Cuticura Soap externally, which entirely cured me BO that my Bkin is as smooth ana natural as ever.

LEN. M. FARILKT,61South

CUTICURA.

Price of Cuticura, small boxes, 50c large boxes, $ 1. Cuticuru Resolvent, |1 per bottle. Cuticara Soap,

25c.

Barns graneries and houses often cleared tn in a single night. Best and cheapest vermin killer in the world. No failure 80 years. Every box warranted. Sold by all grocers and druggists. Ask for

•j

Cuticara Shaving Soap,

15o. Sold by all druggists. Depot, WEEKS & POTTER, Boston, Mass.

nCATARRH

l--* I

Sanford's Radical Cure,

Complete Treatment for $1.00 Clear head and voloe. easy breathing sweet breath, perfect smell, taste and hear ing, no cough, no choking, no distress These happy conditions are brought abont in the severest cases of Catarrh by the most agreeable, economical, speedy, safe and never fullng specific, sanford's Radical Cure. Complete and infallible treatment, consisting or one bottle of the Radical Cure, one box of Catarrhal Solvent and one Improved Inhaler! all wrapped In one package with treatise and directions and sold by all druggists tor |1. Ask for Sanfords Radical Cure.

General Agents, WEEKS & POTTER, Boston, Mass.

PAKSOS'S.

nfflfi

I

Mailed

for 25c by WEEKS A POTTER, Boston, Mass

LYDIA PINKHAM.

OF LYNN, MASS.

nucorxaxn or

LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S veqbtablb compound.

For all Female Complaints.

.Jifa pMparaMoo, Its nan* ilfflH oond»ti ftgtHliU finrnrHii tintr'Iwnilmtn tlnmnit rtnl oate Invalid. T7poa OM trial

UM

merits of this

GMB-

wfflbT»Boywl«H, aarrtlaf Is lumtlaf aad rbM lti na* eontteoad, ta niMty-Bine a—«la a haa. toad, apirna—tewlaagactad^aMKwinla via Ify. On aoaonnt of tti proTm Harlta, tt to to-day r» xxanaodad aad niiirUii* by tk» bart yilijriitaai ia a*«ouk7.

It eoi* wiWi'ily

OM

ot

MwUstaiaa,

twl fom at Mk|

twoowkw, Imgvlar Md palatal

Manalni«Sna,anOrarlaaTroahlaa, faJfasnsttMoa and TleomMos. floodtai^allDtoplacinuf and tka aoo m—it tplsal wwhw, and la aapaeUBy adaptad to ilnflianfi

It wttl dtoaolT* and aa«l tamon

!wa Mbatttamalaaa aarly itifi af daralesnet, Tba indaaqrtoiaiimi —Iwnn—tfca— haksM wf ^MiWy by Ma naa is laat it haa provad to to tba eras* Ml aad tost maadr that has fnr toao dtamr id It panaaataa iwy portloa of lhi |Sm, aad gtraa lawttfaaadTlfor. It maoras fain toaai.llatnlnany, daitrofa anstatrlBC far attmlaat* and nltofw waakaaa ifthastonaeh

JteoroaBloattav, ITaaitacaaa, JUrroaa riuatisHua, MwnlDablltlr.lbtplNSMa, Dqnato sad Jadl/aation. That ftoBagcClwai In down, raadsf pala, reigh. and backarha, la ahrayi nrmi• mil/ eotadhj .tanaa. ItwlllataHttmaa,aadondaraU etrauaataajaa, art la harmony trtthtba law that gonrtm tba

for PdnayO amUlili oCaHtoe as tUsi

»ydia

E. Pinkham's Yegetabie Compound prepared at 88 and 138

McetLN.

WeaUrnAraaoa, Lma,Kaa^

bottles

for (SAL

iormotpfUa, alee

Saat by mafl

la

ia the

tha form ofLoangaa,

price, $L-0t,

ah at

at -a

on

r*o«4p4

per boa, for

either.

Km ruiaJUM

imtj «n—enallhtlmnf taqalry. lead

for paaa-

Ad re a as a pa mr So tamfly ihoaMba sMhuiil LYDIA & HJItHi* JVDFIUJ. Tfeay core Caaf.tMtm, Mtoaai adloapfdltjroftbtUver.

Bold by tfuntlii ft Armstrong* iwre

Richardaoiis. Oo„ Wholesale Drag store.

Our Goods

.S3

$ PRICES

.M

3

E

., Barnell, 8. A

SCROFULA SORE.

Rev. Dr. in detailing his experience with the Cuticura reinedlee, said that through Divine providence one of his parlsbonerft was cured of a scrofulous sore, which was siowly draining away his life, bv the Cuticura Resolvent internally and Cuticura and Cuticura Boap externally. The poison that had fed the disease was com-, pletely driven out.

-a#

Sixteen months sincd an eruption broke it on my leg and both feet, wnlch turned out to be Eczema, and caused me great pain

2

St., Baltimore.

The Cuticura treatment, for the cure of skin, scalp and blood diseases, consists in the Internal use of Cuticuru resolvent, the new blood purifier, arm the external use of Cuticura and Cuticura Soap, the great skin enres.

W

1 CORRESPOND

Beady Hade or Hade to Order

Men's, Youths' or

I

Boys'.

5?

J. T. H. Miller,

MAIN STREET.

f-.

'i:#

RAILROAD TIME TABLE.

Union depot Chestnut and Tetith streets for all trains except I A St L, A and freights. Time five mlautes faster than Terre Haute time.

Depot of IA St corner Tippecanoe and Sixth streets. Depot ofT A S E corner Main and First

Iepo

RATS,

MICE,

Roaches, W at bugs and red and black ants eat ravenously

PARSON'S

E

E II A O

streets. Explanation of references: (S) sleeping cars attached (f) parlor cars attached (Tally except Sundays dally. All other trains daily, Sundays excepted.

T. 0. 4 I. a. It.—Vandulla Lino. (Arrive from the East.) •iS) No. 2 Pacific Express. 1:26 a

4

and die. No fear of bad smells.

LJ

4 Mail Train 10:10

•(Bit 6 Fast Express 2:45 8 Indianapolis Acc 7:00 lOCln. and Louis Expiess... 2:18 a (Teavefor the West.} HB) Wo 2 Paolflc Express 1:32 am 4 Mall Train 10:18 (S) 0 Fast Express 2:90 i0 Gin. and Louis 'Express... 2:'J& am (Arrive from the West.) •(B) No. 5 Fast Line 1:82 am

8 Mail and Acc 8:50

*(S) 1 Day Express 2:50 9 Cln. and Louis Express...12:56 am (Leave for the East.) •(B) No. 5 Fast Line am 8 Mail and Acc'n 8:40 pm 8)t 1 Day Express 8:10 7 Mall ana Aco'n 7KK) am 9 Cin. and Louis Express...

1:02

a.m

I". 4c I.-Levaaapert Dlvlalan, (Arrive from the North.) No. S Mail Train J2:80 4 Accommodation 7:86 (Leave for the North.) No. 1 Mall Train 8:00 am 8 Aooommodation 4^0

UfDIAlf APOL1S liwttlB. (Arrive from East) Cleveland Ex ...J025 am N.T. and Boston Ex 1:85 am (ndpl. Acc 1O O0p (Depart for the West) Kansas City Ex ...10:80 a Indpls. Acc .10:11 am N. T. A Boston Ex 1:49 am (Arrive from West) ndpls. Acc 7:82 am Cleveland Ex 4:03 N. Y. and Boston Ex 1:35 am (Depart for the East) lndpl acc 7:87 a m, Cleveland Ex 4:07 N. T. A Boston Ex 1:40 am

ETAIfSTIIiLE 4c TERRE HAUTE. (Arrive from the Sonth.) No.2 acc'm -11:00,a *iB) 4 Chicago Express .11:05

No. 0 Eastern Express 2^6 (Leave for the South.) No. 1 Express 836 No. 8 Nashville Express (3) 4."06 am No. 6 acc'm 11:80 a mf CHICAGO EASTERN ILLINOI* (Arrive from the North.)

No. 6 Terre Haute Acc'n „.1040 a I Chicago AT. H. Express... 1106pm. «fl|) 8 Chicago A Nashville Ex... 866 am (Leave for the North.)

No. 2 T. H. A Chicago Express... 7,50 am 8 Danville Acc'n saopm. 4 Nashville A Chicago Ex..—11:06

ILLnOISHlDLAIID. «Arrive from the North.)

No. No. 8 12« mt (Depart for North) 6^7 am. No. 4 P»

All dally except Sunday

TBRBE HAUTE «c WOHTHI'QT'H. (Depart for the Southeast. Mall and Express...... 7rt» am Aooommodation Jwom (Arrive from the Southeast.) Mall and Exprens 2» Accommodation 18® am I Ef EBSONTILLE, MADUOJI A

INDIAN aPOLIS. (Depart from Indianapolis.) h.Ex.d'y 4K»a t. A Mad. Aco'n d^ 7:10 a

Sooth. Louis. Ind. A Mad. Mall EvenineKx...^

This wall

am

2^0 m: «:10p tt

(Arrive.)

Ind. AMad. Mail 10410 a ml., Ind. and Chicago Ex 12:10 a ml N.Y. A Northern Fast Ex I

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