Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 22, Number 9, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 22 August 1891 — Page 8
1
OB
MURDER WILL NOT OUT.
A
LfeytfST IT LOOKS THAT WAY SOMETIMES.
Pfliarie*
THAT 8KE919 DEI*
MYITEBV
TIN ED TO SO BKJ1UX.
The Ruitjr File* of the PI»k«rto» Asencr Tell or the Slnrder of
Harper, an Exprew, Ultm-
*euger—Planned to Defy Detection.
E O
that murder will out is not- always reliable.? Even the records of the famous Pinkerton detective agencies arc Droof oi this.
I ZZmcgSe&B^— In the day of Allen Pinkerton, Sr., it seemed that tio mystery was too deep for his sleuth honntl methods and it was troly said that mysteries committed to his invev tigrntions never went unrareieu.
Home time before he died though, a ease was taken in hand which until this day remains as bi|? a mystery as ever—to the famous Pinkerton detectives the public have long since forgotten the case. It never got much publicity at the most. Still it can be numbered among the great murder mysteries of modern times. ''M.
It is now ten years since Charles Fargo, general manager of the American Express company, reported to the Pinkerton agency, at Chicago, the .circumstances surrounding the disappearance and death of Charles Harper, for many years a trusted jneBaenger in the service of the company. Simultaneously with his disaotiearance there also of the amount has never been made public, jf Harper hnd one *t t*n? most important runs on the orn pa sy's lines—-from
Buffalo. K. V.. 10 i* «.t,.Mih., viathe reat Western rail ay. He carried vast sums of money iwtween the two points, the pajlcag.'K often running as big as ten and twenty thousand dollars at a time. Ahuhof was exchange between the di f«n»nt banks Ontario and their branches while the rest was through packages of United States currency, lie was a familiar figure at the way stations in Canada, but that is all. Though ten years on the "run" at the time of his death, not even a local express agent had succeeded in getting intimately acquainted
tremely distant and always did his business with as few words as possible IIis past was a mystery to all and is, as yet, only known to the detective^, who \are vainly honing to solve the mystery j\surrounding ms death. Detroit wae *hia place of residence. At the lotel where he stopped as little was nown of him ae elsewhere.
Mr. Seeloy, Detroit agent of the .merieati express company, had often iad his attention culled to the queer inner in which Harper carried himself. He was of en tod to -'look out for him."
Were it not for the fact that Harper h»ore a »ear received in an enoou titer v, ith express robbers in the West, Mr. Seeley might have been influenced. As it was lUirper was put under the survdlUmoe of sp*H'Inl agent IMerson, one Of the Jilmnvdest detectives In the employ of vhe company.
When one morning in June, 1881, Harper aid not put in an appearance at Ills train which was ready lo leave for the Kant, a quick investigation was avade. It showed fltat iome packages
Jfwere missing and the eoncluiilon was Jr at onee formed that Harper had "feath* ©red his nest" and skipped. At the headquarters of the company, though, this theory would not be aeeeptcd an onier eanu\ from the general superintendent to "keep mum,"
The wisdom of this course came to light a few da j» lai*y when the body of Harper was found floating in the llauge river, a small stream midway between Detroit and Wyandot, j/rhere was nothing to indicate & fstniggle, and A theory of suicide wns fttiek% accepted by the local authorities, who knew nothing of the missing money, and there the matter ended, exvept ix\ the newspapers, representatives of which got an inkling of the robbery. About that time another body, that of a young woman, was found in the same river, and the inter* est in the Harper ease died away In the host of developments which followed ite stteeesaKH'.
Hut the eaqwess people were not sati&fiecL They knew that Warper did not steal money. Even if he would steal it wvuld he to live tn luxury w#| not to sukide. Ilc&ides. he had no fvil habits.
IHnkextdti mm w** at m* fat the cases it had many eompl^ tfot*s» but such detective were not dismayed. The theory thai Harper had oeen robbed of some picksige® between Loo* don and Detroit* as a mesas of covering t»p the .subsequent crime, was hit upon, who could have planned i^uch a deeol g«Htaar rid of 5*
petate means •Bother hnmaa est could
Wha
belogf
Inter* had
anybody tsare
In U\e of Charles Harper? These question* were the first aiked by the deteeUve* True, he was a toysfecnotts man. Ills past lite had to be limited up. After was fouud that the way hills for the tnisalmg poekafes bad »1*»disappeared, so that Harper «R&ld not hate discovered the shortage himself alter reaching- Detroit.
After a year or soft wa« learned that he was a& Ea«llsJh»aa. Be bo*
liSSlSfSSi
longed to the nobility of his country. For some reason or other he had been disowned. With the exception of one sister, it is said, his people felt no interest in his strange death. This sister came to America with a view of assisting the detectives. She seemed to htCve an idea that her brother was murdered by wealthy enemies in England, who cared nothing about tlie money that was stolen, further than itf value as proof that Harper took it. gambled it all away and then suicided. A day and a night intervened between his arrival in Detroit and the time he must have been thrown into the water. He drank considerable the day before. After nightfall no trace of him could be found until the river gave up its dead. As no marks of violence wtro found on Mm, the means used to produce death proved a puzzler.
One person was found who said Harper was seen with two stranger*, who looked like Englishmen. The investigation has been going on ever since, but those Englishmen have never been found. Perhaps they never will. ___
CANADA'S DIRTY MB8S*
Mr Hector Langevln Le*m the lUflnI*trr 1» Dl**race. Sir Hector Langevin has finally given way before the clamor without and within the conservative party of Can-
ada and resigned from the ministry, thus relieving the government of the odium of the charges of corruption brought against it by the press and speakers of the opposition party, from which he has been unrtbie to clear himself.
Sir Hector has been prominent in Canadian affairs for more than forty years, and until a short time prior to the death of Sir John Alacdonald he was regarded'as the most probable successor to the premiership. Afer having been admitted to the bar he edited several journals printed in the French la gunge, and identified himself «vith the Catholic party. His first official position was that of mayor of Quebec, to which ho was elected in 1858. Latev he entered the provisional legislature and in l»7*\ was elected £to the Do minion Parliament. Subsequently he became a mdrnber of the exWutive* council, and at different times held^he office of Solicitor-Oeneral, Postmaster^ General, Secret MKMlf^Statc for, Canaot^T and Minister o*Eul
JP ecu tcdjrarious
sldntpor thefPHninion government, in lecogoition $f which sevenil decorations wero bestowed upon him by the Queen. His disgrace, it is said, u»ili be followed by the downfall of other Canadian politicians.
ROUMANIANS ROMANCE
No Obtrtaele to the Mnrrlaee of I'orAluand and Jtlle. Varnrrmcu. DitTloulties almost without number have beset Prince Ferdinand von Hohen^ollern, heir presumptive to the throne of Roumama, in his quest of a wife. First of all it should be understood that the State religion of Roumania is that of the (3reek Catholic church, than which there Is none more tenacious of the principle that forbids marriage with an unbeliever. When, therefore? last year there
WHS
talk of "l
J^V^falarciCSM.
an Ettlish urincess II was objected she was a Protestant and an Australia^ princess was barred because she was a Roman Catholic. The idea of a Russian Princess, could not be entertained for political reasons. In this condition of affairs It Is not sur-
Prlnce, who is a tore maid of
honor and literary assistant to the Queen, and a beautiful woman as well. Not only did |his happen* but Mile. Vacareseu quite naturally reciprocated In full measure. The marriage of Prince Ferdinand and Mile. Vacarcacu would make ao difference with regard to hb right of succession to too throne, lie had been adopted as heir by his ur^ and accepted by the people. la so law to repeat his marrlage with a subj?et. lYobaWy them would have been fewer objteetlens had he ch^s«n a Moldavian. The stories regurdittg the ilfe€t of y» king aad hi^ rfc Mr. 111. Bw. ami
Miltmto tho marjMtteh exaggera ted. V:-- fisll .serlousiy red and is sow in fro-ci the
Vamret'
u6 -has heating
of the The rotnaatiN. who
•'iz
SKS&
only
U^-sd with h. •. idded the yoaag
jwop their cour- in, did sotr taho lo her bed to gtieiat fcfi# oateiwtae of theaff^lr, but while iho «Kasfe(ia. ex*. Isted mat4e h^meM uaefal ha the diOQsoljit« 3Hl«k MosmsutpritS^glhinp solfht h^pe» than ro*urila« oftha prince
A BOY PHENOMENON.
FLAVIUS TAYLOR DEVELOPS A MARVELOUS OCCULTt POWER.
Kentucl&r Produces a Rival to the Fame of BUhop and feller—Home of the Strange Feat* Performed by tlie Vouthl'nl Phenomenon.
Kentneky has produced sf "minqp reader who is likely to rival Bishop and the most famous performei^ of the age.
Flavins Taylor, a boy of nineteen, has discoVered t^lit he is the posses oif of marvelous faculties which are as much a mystery to him* as they are to the people who have seen them applied. He has been living in Glasgow, that State, all hiT life and is the son of Dr. F. J. Taylor, a physician of standing. The boy is what, for lack of abetter name, can be called a mind reader. He knows and learns the thoughts and actions of others through some medium which has yet to be discovered. Little objects are hid away, and by simply bodily contact with the person who hid them he can go to the spot and find whatever has been concealed.
This trait in the boy was simply discovered and not developed. Dr. P. Sotphin, a physician at Glasgow, and an intimate friend of the boy's family, has taken an active interest in the ease and made a study of it. He is trying to define the powers" and find how far it is muscle reading and how much it is mental sympathy. At firat his impression was simple muscle reading, or, in otlier words, that the boy could tell from the feeling whether he was nearly right or entirely wrong when searching for lost articles, but when the test of telling what any particular person was thinking of was applied, the muscle theory furnished no explanation. Dr. Sutphin says about the boy: "It is not improbable that nearly every instance the gift of mind reading has Mfeen of accidental discovery on the
ft
art
of the one possessing it, and thus was accidentally made known to voung Taylor. Several mont.is ago an Itinerant mind reader exhibited in this place, and young Taylor attended his performance. Returning home, he playfully remarked to a young man who had accompanied him that he thought he would make a good mind reader, and that if the other would blindfold him and hide something he would find it for him. To have a little amusement he was duly blindfolded and told to find a book' that had been hidden in an adjacent room. He grasped the hand of the young man who had hidden the book, but was utterly surprised to find that not only the book, but also its place of concealment, were impressed on his mind, ne readily took the young man to the place where the Dook was and handed it to him. After this there were more or less frequent tests of his powers in finding things thus, while all hidde% articles were always promptly located by him. Invbrmingled with these tests were others, such as willing him to do certain things. Say, for instance, that it ^was willed for him to take a oartlcular flower from a number of «.owors in a vase in the room, and to
W orks. He has^ it to a certain young lady present is important mis- to* remove the watch from the pocket pf a gentleman and to put it into that
Of another certain gentleman to go to a library and take out some particular volume in it, and to turn to a certain page'and paragraph or sentence in it, and so on of other requestsof this sort., "But he has done better even th this. Any figure or any number figures, being thought of, )ie hS readily announced what it or they were, calling them out singly or in Combination as desired. For instance, suppose that the figures 5, 3 and 8 were separately thought ox» Then these were promptly told out one by one, and announced singly as thought of or suppose, again, these were thought of as f38, then this number, or 538, would be told. Some time ago, knowing that he diet not understand Latin, I improvised a short Latin sentence—'est mihi voluntas ut legte meam mentttm'—-and asked him to tell me what it was. This was made out slo\vly. but quite accurately, the being spelled words letter.
FERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MATE*
out, letter by
It is proper so say, too, that
these were called out at once without going over the alphabet and gettingat them in this way. one by one, on the
order of 'table rapping." Nothing was said, really, more than to call out the letters in their propel order."
The boy's performances are often attended with fatigue and weakness, but so far he has suffered no harm from JH te demonstration of his powers.
TH^ MODERN MOSES.
"IBtmrom Ifiriets, the J«wf»h FliUaB* ttroitM.'Fawoa» World Oxer. ^Baron jrsdif the modei Mose&who haa attracted gueh wide^prcftd mien-' tlon with his plan to guide thi Israelites of Bu**Sa and Polaao through the wUd&Hfe •. their }«e*»eeutlons to a,
Istad of promise Brtull, Austradfis or pwm other cSioseaa location. ceatly declared It no bo his finn ooavk&koi tha^lr the expulsion of these hl» people /rem soil the of eentttries had made them otmsider their own wa* by uo means aAunmitjgstrd etil. liwtmld l^e far better for ihetaat. he thiuka, to be led to »new U»d. where they might enjoy the same rights and privileges as other cttfwaa, than to remain longer ts the wretohednass prepared tor them la
tdiLUti
he antipathy of Russian statesmen he deems rather a matter of rel:g4 .nd
1
reigtous
prejudice than race hatred and believes that every effort to effect reconciliation wtould be fruitless. hen be refieeted on the barbarities of which he had heard, the fate of inndbent people who while quietly attending to their own affairs were driven from home loaded with chains and cast into cruel dungeons women ^and chiidren who had been assailed Avlth almost inconceivable cruelty frireds of families who had been led tsnwier, thought the expulsion /rpm the czar's realm was far from be|i^gs,their worst misfortune.
Upon being asked whether the condition of the Jews coaid in amy way te alleviated. Baron Hirsch suggested two measures that might. te tried. The first was to supply the Czar with precise information concerning the cruelties being peroetrated against the Jews in his empire. If he fully realized them he might issue orders to accomplish the expulsion in a more hpmane fashion. The other was to endeavor to have order and method exercised in the expatriation of so large a multitude. If the Russian gov rnment was resolved on the expediency of parting with 3,000,000 citizens it should at least permit tbe many who were interested in the fate of these to afford them aid, for without such aid wholesale slaughter alone could rid the government of them. A certain period of time should be allotted them to pre-
¥x mrm -. BARON .HXBSCH. pare for their journey, and they should be left in peace until the, moment of peace •departure arrived.
Should the Czar on such a
measure those peraou|* .who have the welfare of the .lews at heart would see to providing the ^fun^r' necessary send the emigrants safely forth^t
neT hTe'-
lecessary to fortluto a
IA belo#d son #his Iffilljidite
0
It was the death of tifat leffhim alone, wit andorobliied life and all theApwerjvvith which jvAalth had invested7 it of#pei sonal interest to him, that mad* Baron irsc turn his, -^ioughts ^.to' his unhappy people the Ksst. H^ has approp .dated "£3,00Q|-, 0n(T to the ei.dgratiok fund, whttoh will be further swollen by contrijutlons from ihe RotMichitds. M^iteflOres and qtl). financiers who,
liice himi5felf, have" pitied wealth, exit dreams mighty* proposed, geographically donsiderei
'SAi
ceetnng me loftiest dreams of to,Croesus or Soloifiofi. Th# mi
nighty wandering ibally dsonsidered,
would reduce the wanderingsJ,of the Israelites of old to an insignitii»Ht trip into the country, but with plenty of idhey, combined with thp modern apjliances of travel, it^ is within the range ofrpossibility.
AUBKB FOBBSTIBB.
ENCOUNTER WITH BRUIN.
Mm.
ThlilllnK Bear Storf Fresh from the Pill
New Jon,,cy
Mountain*.
The woods are full of bears and hardly a day passes without some woodsmen bringing a ca»ass or afresh bear skin to some of thejptations along the line of the Ulster & Delaware railroad, says an Adeville, N. J., correspondent. The latest exciting ad-' venture with?* a be$r occurred a lew days ago when Warren Enderly, a woodsman living over on the Millbrook mountains, came near losing his life. Enderly was In woods peeling bark nearly on the cr&t of the mountain. At noon he sat4 down upon an old hemlock log to eailhis lunch, when suddenld he was seized from behind, pulled over the log, and thrown upon the ground. He then and there made the unpleasant discovery that he had intruded upon the privacy of an old she bear and that she ba& resented it by knocking him off the log.
As he went over Enderly yelled for Spot, a big bull terrier, which had accompanied him into the woods. 8$ot had a weakness for hunting wood* chucks on his own account, but when his master called him he broke through the brush and sailed into the old bear, which was standing over his* master. While the rumpus was on between the bear and the dog Enderly hastily rolled but of their way and seized his ax. Making a blow at the bear's he only inflicted a bad cut in the shoulder, causing Bruin to leave his canine antagonist and turn again on his human foe.
A peach grown at Styroal*,
at
On.,
w«Aghod eighteen ounces and moaaaiM thirteen Inches in dtacusnfexeiM*.
Billy's Party.
Billy's mother, wishing to make hiUi happy on his sixth birthday, invited a number of the children of, her friends to celebrate the event. V&.
Billy begged that the invitations should embrace two or three "Tom Canty" sort of friends, whose sidewalk acquaintance had a peculiar fascination also a little Topsy, the child of an occasional colored understudy in the laundry.
At the appointed hour the guests arrived With their conventional gifts. The unconventional sidewalk boys, manifestly HI at ease in a pent up drawing room, stood awkwardly about in corners and watched the proceedings with stolid countenances. Not so Topsy, the gradual expansion of whose eyes showed her interest in what was going on.
When the little company was marshaled for supper Topsy was missing, but soon appeared, bursting into the room with the announcement: "Say, Miss Johnson, my mother says she'll buy Billy a present when Miss Wheaton pays her for the washing."
The Wheatons being among Billy's more aristocratic guests, his mother's dismay may be imagined.— Brooklyn Arlington.
Force of Habit.
Mr. Methodus—1There should be system in everything, my dear. If you were as particular in filing your tradesmen's bills as I am in filing my letters, drafts, exchanges, etc., you would never have any trouble to find them. 1 adopt this system in everything. In fact, it has grown to be such a habit with me that there is no important incident of
my
A Subterfuge
is
"Turn to oo mamma, Willis mamma lias candy for her little boy." it
""Now rub out and play like a good litt^ boy."~Am ri ca.
Would Keep His .Promise. A "We'll fix the furnace in the fall," said the landlord. "But you said last fall that you'd fix it In the spring." "Did If* "You did." i. "Then I'll do it—but really I don't see how you can go through the next winter with it ns it is."—Truth.
What Ho Meant.
Young K'-pnrter—-Thestorm king Imrled his torn ami tumbling torrents over the ruins nf the broken and dismembered edifice.
Old Ivditor—Wlmt'H tbatf What do you mean, young fell'»tvf Young' J{ejior»*!•.—• I er—er—the flood washed iw!iv I'm rick McDougal's old soap factory.—Tii IJlw
A Solid Knock-down Blow. ••'.The whale blows water whilo at play Trees blow In every clime
The sweetest flowers blow in May, But wind blows all the time. There's lots of blowing in this world. "Sufferers from catarrh blow their noses, and quacks blew about their "cures." Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy is the only illtble Its proprietor,! back up
infallible one. this claim by offering
Sharp head
The brute forced the fighting an£, coming to close quarters, clawed Enderly over the breast andshoulderein tbe most frightful manner. The woodsman fought desperately, but could not reach a vital spot in the breast with his ax. After a protracted and severe bombardment by Spot on the reaf oi the Ixar, she turned on Mm again, giving Enderly ft chance to get Ia a telling blow with bis ax. He struck for "keeps,** tMs time hitting Bft»|p te the neck near the left for®* sJtqggsder, nearly severing the head front the body and killing her. he had kiliea the bear he exthe ground about the log and ia it ££t!SJ" underneath two u% and frisk cube. These he took with tifrn, intending to raise and taane them. The old she bear was full of fight, but vfaia, weighing only 130 pounds. Bnderly said she would have weighed at least 3f* pounds it she hnd not been killed until fall, after the Ibe&fe aad chestnuts were ripe. He *id the hide for £5 to a peddler who tidied his house the oay after the brute was killed.
they fail to cure permanently. This is an unanswerable blow at humbuggery,
AM WMSIU«JT*V»P»w»v OO"
comingffrom men of sterling reputation and ample capital. Nasal Catarrh cannot resist the potency of this Remedy. It stops discharges, leaving the senses acute, the head clear, and the breath normal. Of all druggists, 60 cents.
I suffered from acute inflammation in my nose and head—for a week at a time I could not see. I used Ely's Cream Balm and in a few days I was cured. It is wonderful how quick it helped me.— Mrs. (Jeorgie S. Judson, Hartford, Conn.
Being a sufferer from chronic catarrh, and having derived great benefit from the use of Ely's Cream Balm, I can highly reeommend it. Its sales are far in excess of all other catarrh remedies.—B. Fraken, Druggist, Sigourney, Iowa. «-2.
A Safe Investment.
Is one which is guaranteed to bring you satisfactory results, or in any case of failure a return of purchase price. On this safe plan you can buy from our advertised Druggist a bottle of Dr. Kings New Discoveryfor Consumption. It is guaranteed Coring relief iaeve^case, when used for any affection of Throat, Lungs, or Chest, such as Consumption, Indentation of Lungs, Bronchitis* Asthma, Whooping Cough, Croup, etc. It is pleasant and agreeable to taste, perfect! safe and can always be depended upon. Trial bottle 10 cents «t any Drugstore,
Xonea* C*ood.
Elmer W. .T JMt©*#-' —-Z
Mr. .Tacoy, of Edgar of Oiambefiftin's
tive pills:
pur*, and have never found any as good.'* Evetyon# who have ased th«tn say the same thing. Nothing ean take their place. For sale by *11 druggists. 5.
Mile*' Sterre and Urn Pills. Act oo anew t&eiiv«r »*o»*ch ••waA %», A new dtowverr* Br iiiUni' pipispeeauy cut*
zm&wiam
A
waking hours that
I do not make a note of and file away. Mrs. M.—Yes, my dear, but there is such a thing as carrying a habit too far. From the rasping nasal sounds I hear at night I should judge you were given to filing your dreams as welL—Boston Courier.
eiT«&« F1*e drufftots.
Noted Divine 8ays:$
ARE A SPECIAL BLESSIN6.
had anytlit«Ktodo««*omnch reccommena ttiem to all
Sabcatnaedr«ineIn «i*t*nc«." B«. F. B. OSGOOD, New Todb SOLD EVERYWHERE. Office, 39 & 41 Park Place, N. Y«
MAt?30R
^asoTrHEeEIITLEHWSFRIIHO. Our IVrfeoilon SvruiHt* Iw wltli ,'v-rv bottle. ,? Does not Blntn. Pr««vwm* Ntrlrture. orrhtra *nd In 1 to 4 days. Ask UruRgtM-v Sent to any address for Sl.OO. JtAM DOR MAXCHT'O CO., bmnntfr, Ohio. For at •, GUUCK & CO.. Drunfli»t*. TERRE HAUTE. IND.
63aWABA§H,A\fE
Dr. DeLuc's Periodical Pills, FROM PARIS, FRANCE. Acts ouly on the menstrual system and positively cures suppression of the mentis. From colds, shock, etc. A safe reliable monthlv medicine, warranted to relieve price $2, three for 15. The American Pill and Medicine
Sold and :S, and /byifc
ujglst, coruer Third anil Mnln'4
streets, Terro Iinuto, Ind
$3000)
A TEAR 1! umUrUke to brtsflr |tMch»nyMrijlnt»lH(r«iiH»'r«onofellh«r i«x,whoc*n r«art end writ*. *nd who, after Imtruetion,will work Inonitrtoanijr, 'how to enm Thr*« Thounad Oollkn
Vi»r In their own loc*lltte»,wlirr»*trthpyUv«,l will altoftimtih th« »Uu»tlon oremploymeuMt which ,vou run **rn thM amount. So money fur me ttnlm *t»re. E»«llviinl quickly loamvi. I do«lr» but on* worker from each dlrtrlct or county. I •. have alraadj- taught and provided with employment a tare* number, who are making orer $1000 reareach. It's NEW •nd 801.11k. Full rartlculara RKK. Addreu at onev £. O, ALLEW, Box MO, Auuiuta, Maine.
ST. LOUIS,1 TEREE HAUTE IHDIANJiPOLIS,, CINCINNATI^L
.jEfcorrmBS.
5
J%£
Tering foOO for every case
E02E3B2to
-"--T—•
WI
have tried your
5
8nu(t little forlune»ha*»bMn tnadokt work flir u», by Anna Pur', Au«tln, Taxaa, and Jno. Ponu, Toletlo, Ohio. *e out. Othmaredclniraawell. Why 5*5$ ot you? Sctn* rarn over HOC. 00 month. r«M ran do tht work and lire at honi*, vlirri'vir ypu are.. Kven b«» .SigS
Inner* are Mullv eantlnir from St to !&g 10 a ilny. AH *tre». We »(iow you how •nil «tart you. an work 1n *nnr« tlma j] or nil Hi time. Illtr money for workera. Kallure unknown nmoiiR them. N'KW ami wonderful. I'ortlnilnn free, ri'",.?:
Il.llallctt A* llox MHOl'oi-tlRntl.Mnlin 4
ABSOLUTELY
NoChanffeofCai'S' -W
4 j:®
DAYT0H SPJilNGSPIEff TO
New Yo^kf Bdstoiit \A.HrT
THE EAST
VIA THE POPULAR
D4rv/ ka&e Sliore and /ii Dig Hr, NewYorkCentral
THE—• J1'f:*
Shortest & Quickest Line '."
I- BKTWBBN IVV'-rr
EAST! WEST
All trains arrive and Depart from Sixth Street BepotJ'jS*-
81 Berths in Sleeping Cars
SECVHBt) THItOUOM TO
NEW YORK & BOSTON
'rv'-rjf
E. E. SOUTH, Gen. Agt., 'I
710 WABA8H AVENUE
ACKSOKVlUf
04 Miles the Shortest and tbe Quickest,
CINCINNATI to NEW ORLEANS
^ssaBf^SKg^sss
Direct eonneeUon# «t V&w tWean* and Shrerepcrt for Texas, Mexico nod 1U MileK ifae Bhortetrt, hour# the Quickest. from CINOINNATI to JACKSONVILLE, Fla#
Time 27 boar*. Solid train# and ttoron&t. 81 eeotsr* wlthoul chauife for any «Iam ot put* xSgm: T^Sbort Lin'J bctwt^a d»cioo«l l^xlngton, K% Urae, 2«hour* $ •,
KraoxYtti*. Txrnn., Ume, 12 boor» AmfavUlfN N. a. tJmc.n honrxj Cfaftttaooosaij T««n.. UUMS, 11 boars AO*»t«,**-!time,»hoewj *i»
•affisBseasstckte.® eroiNUMi tbe Femettf KeulMcky and roamlitig th« bt liOU&tllBc
O^er oaemillioa of l«nd la Ajabajna* tbe fntore greet of tb« «ub» i«ct UtpHHMptUm. dlflMrtB. Tut. PMU, A|i, So. W Foartli «tre»W
A fffi a o. EDWARSK, a l'.&t.A, 4
eta aam. vjm fte^di&t^
