Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 22, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 November 1892 — Page 2

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OOPYBIQHT BY AMERICAN P1£S8 ASSOCIATION, 1805

CHAPTER X.

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It \v ifl a golden opportunity. The two were alone, far from camp, and who was to deny any .story he might tell when he returned without his partner? With Harl.'ins out of the way he was the sole pos.scH.sor of the golden secret.

Taylor's change of demeanor should have put the Englishman on his guard, but it had the opposite effect. The warnings uttered by Bess and Joe were forgotten, and the man reproached himself with the thought that ho had unjustly accused one who was that very moment thirsting for his life.

Dinner being over, Taylor was ready Tor action. His face was pale, his hands trembled and he could not control his voice as he said: "You examine that ledge over yonder, while I bear off here to the right a bit. I won't go far."

With an "all right" on his lips Harkins «hoaldered his rifle and moved forward without a look behind him. Reaching the ledge he leaned his gun against it and began to investigate. He moved to the left, and was at the corner of the mass and on the edge of a gully or ravine when he felt the ground giving.way under his feet. At the same iustant he heard Taylor twice shouting "Indians!" and felt a hot flash across his shoulders. He went down ten or twelve feet with a mass of dirt and rock, but was not injured by the fall. Believing that they had boon discovered by Indians, he wisely decided to remain whore he was at the bottom of the ravine until something further was heard from the savages.

Not a sound reached him from above. He was suijo ho had heard the report of at least oho riflo ns ho was falling, and others might have followed it without his hearing them above the noise of his fall. Had the Indians killed Taylor at the first fire? Would they make search for him? If Taylor had escaped, wouldn't he return after the coast was clear?

For a full hour Harkins lay quiet in tho ravine, half buried under the dirt. As nothing to alarm him had occurred, lie determined to crawl out and make a survey. It was only after ho was clear of tho dirt that ho discovered that he was bleeding from a flesh wound in the shoulder. The bullet had scarcely cut below the skin, and it was a liiirt to be laughed at, but it settled Harkins' •doubt regarding tho Indians. Both men had been fired upon at tho same time. Ho had been wounded and Taylor had been killed.

But if this was tho case, tho man speedily reasoned, why had not tho Indians searched for him? If alive thoy would want to finish him or make him prisoner. If dead they would want his scalp. Ho could not make it out, and after waiting a few minutes longer he moved down the ravino to a spot where lie could ascend the bank. He worked his way up with great caution, and when iio had a clear view of the ground above there was nothing in sight to increase i»is anxiety. He had expected to behold Taylor's dead and mutilated corpse, but aothiug of tho man living or dead met Ixis view,

Harkins kept his place of observation for a quarter of an hour, and then boldly climbed out of tho ravine to make an investigation. Tho first thing he saw was his gun, which had been tucked away under a cedar bush. He walked down to where he believed Taylor stood when he shouted his alarm, and thereon tho ground was a cartridge shell. It was proof that the man had fired from that spot and stood right there to throw the shell out of his gun. If there had been an attack he would have been on the move. Harkins was slow in reaching a conclusion, but he had arrived at the truth when he eat down and soliloquized: "It was Taylor who fired at me. He wanted me oat of the way so that he »eed not share tfcO gold with me. He -shot just as I was falling and he dared not advance to see whether he had made a sure job or not. He hid my rifle bevcause he means to go back to camp and claim that I was killed by Indians."

It was now midafternoon and Harkins was at least ten miles from the camp. Having no skill as a woodsman, he had trusted entirely to Taylor to observe landmark?, and he now doubled if he •even knew Hie general direction ia which the eawip was situated. He cast -about for the highest point of ground, uid when he had ascended it he discovered that he could see a portion of the valley up which the train had come. This gave him the general direction and he set off with feelings much relieved. Taylor had no doubt started for camp at once, and as he would have to account for his appearing alone he would tell a mty which would bring grief and distraction to at least on© heart. "Poor Bessie? What would she doT the father kept saying as he hurried

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"Outlaws arid renegades!" Taylor had been deliberating and planning since leaving camp, and he had firmly decided to assassinate Harkins.

along, and tne tnongnt or ner wild grief at learning of his death made him hurry the fasten

He was com palled to bear to the left to avoid obstructions, and when he had covered half the distance he suddenly found himseif on the brink of a canyon. It was a wild, gloomy chasm in the hills, and »o dark at tho bottom that he etruwl lUJiko or.t nothing. He kicked a loose siono ni his feet into the gulf, and it v/out £»hw ilown seventy-five feet before it struck with a dull thud.

The lakes and riveJ-s and mountains and valleys are wonderful things in nar ture's handivork, but the canyons are more wonderful still. Think of the mighty power required to split a great mountain in twain for miles and miles, beginning where it rises from the plain and continuing back until the walls of the chasm area thousand feet high!

Think of the mighty wrath let loose upon the ear£h that day—the' sun hanging blood red in the murky heavens, the awful roar of the hurricane sweeping a continent, the crash and explosion, the trembling of a world!

And deep down in these awful rifts there is ever darkness—ever midnight. The water drips and drips and drips with sound so monotonous that a human being would be driven insane in a day. No serpents crawl there—no living thin| can endure that grimness and solitude. The grizzly bear—the king of terrors—shunned and dreaded by al1 and hating all, makes his lair in these drifts, but goes back only to the edge of the shadow cast by the sun. He fears nothing living, but he fears that darkness and silence. .Harkins followed down to the edge of the canyon, and after half an hour's walk he came to the spot where it began, and this permitted him to make a descent to the more level ground. As he stood for a moment looking up thd rift it seemed to him as if he had seen the place before. This was, as he reflected, impossible, but a sudden idea-made him almost gasp for breath. "I am about five miles to the right of. Custer's peak," he whispered to himself, "and this must be the canyon the old hunter told us of in his dying hour."

Had it been earlier in the day he would have investigated, for he had not the least fear of Indians, but the rapidly declining sun. warned him that he must be op the move if he would reach the wagons before dark. His way to tho south was almost blocked by a huge mass of rock, and he was about to flank this when he heard the sound of human voices. Some one was speaking on the other side of the rock.

For a moment Harkins was filled with such alarm that he was ready to bolt up the ravine. Then came the thought that he had been standing very quiet for some time past, and that had his movements been heard the ownenj of the voices would have attacked hSn, if enemies, or hailed him, if friends. He argued that his presence was entirely unsuspected, and this being the case his curiosity was aroused to know who was so near him. He crept forward on hands and knees, hearing the voices more distinctly each moment, and at length he reached a spot from which he fcould see what was goinsf on on the south side of the rock.

There was a campfire burning very low, and on either side of it sat a white man—two of the wickedest looking fellows ho had ever put eyes on on a heap of brush near at hand lay two more, seemingly fast asleep. "Outlaws and renegades!" whispered Harkins as he drew back a little.

So they were—men more to be dreaded than the dusky savages**because having more reckless bravery and being en^ dowed with keener intelligence.

CHAPTER XI.

Let ns go back a little. On the day the wagon train with which we had to do turned aside and erected its defense against the Indians massed po overwhelm it, another train was creeping over the plains not more than thirty miles to the north.

It was the outfit of a party of gold hunters which had crossed the state of Nebraska from Sidney and was moving for tho east side of the Black Hills. There were seven wagons and fifteen horsemen, and one of the wagons contained the wife and daughter of one of the gold hunters.

It seems singular that husbands and fathers would not leave wives and children behind to safety when setting out on expeditions fraught with such hardship and peril, but the history of the jreat west shows that woman has been one of the foremost in encountering the perils of frontier life. Men have grown dissatisfied with civilization and pushed out until beyond all protection and in hourly danger, and wives and children have cheerfully gone with them.

A few Indians had been encountered, many alarms had been experienced, there had been hardship and suffering but on the day of which we write there was nothing to alarm, and the people of the train were in good spirits at the knowledge that their long journey was almost ended.

In the making up of the expedition numerical strength had been considered more than character. Any and every one was taken that could provide himself with a wagon or a horse and rifle. The first day's travel proved that a great mistake had been made. While the owners of the wagons were mostly men of steady habits and good character, looking for homes as well as for gold, the majority of the horsemen were turbulent and unruly characters, some of whom at least were leaving civilised Nebraska and pushing into the Indian cotmtry from fear of the law. They carried a plentiful supply of whisky with them, and they made it plainly understood that they would obey the captain orders only when it suited them to do so. At the first campfire six of the wagoners, disgusted with the mtlook. were in favor of turning back, bsi tho captain, who was an old plainsman. encouraged tfcem to go on by say-

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"These men are like sailors who always start on a voyag« full of liquor.

.-' .\-f0k TERRE HAIJTE SATURDAY S VBNIN

"After we get beyond civilization they will tone down and become as humble as you please."

But he was a false prophet so far as four, of them was concerned. These four men were well mounted and armed, and they had the look and demeanor of border ruffians. They had evidently joined the train to enjoy its protection, and in return defiantly refused to afford it any of theirs. To compel them to stand guard and assist in the various other duties would be to bring on a tight, and this the trainmen wished to avoid. If the four men were driven away it would only be after they killed some one, and the train would then be so crippled in strength that it might fall a prey to the first roving band of Indians encountered.

For two or three days all hands had been expecting to meet with a force of redskins who would attempt to block the way, but to their great surprise the country, seemed entirely clear of them. They were gathered, as the reader knows, to attack the party coming across from Brule City.

When the train halted for dinner the four men we have referred to drew off by themselves and held an earnest conversation as they broke their fast, "It isn't over twenty-five miles'to the Hills from this," said one, "and if we are to do anything it must be done tonight."*" -vi "How many wagons do we want, Bdb?" asked a second. "Only one. We want the best wagon and the best team."

After a halt of an hour the train moved on. It was fair traveling now, and the sight of the mountains in the distance and tho thought of the gold to be obtained put every one in fine spirits and created a desire to push on as rapidly as possible. Six miles from the south fork there was a halt, and $ soout went forward to select a route for the wagons over a bad piece of ground. The four renegades nodded to each other, but while three of them rode forward and officiously offered their services to the captain, Bob'made his way to Brown's wagon, which was the last in the line. Its occupants were on the seat in front, all interested in what was going on ahead, and in three minutes the renegade had removed the linchpins from both hind wheels of the heavy wagon. The "prairie schooners," as the big wagons of that date were called, had these pins in the place of burrs, now so generally used.

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A quarter of an hour later, as the wagons started forward, the wheels had made only a few turns when both rolled away and the rear end of the wagon came down with a crash. By this time the leading wagon was half a mile in advance. "Very careless of you, Brown, not to took your wagon over occasionally," said the captain as he halted the train and rode back to ascertain the, cause of delay. "1 did look it over at noon and everything was all right," replied Brown. "Well, those pins dropped out somewhere within a quarter of a mile, and the thing is to find 'em."

Half a dozen men walked back oveif the trail for a hundred rods, but with* out avafl. Then each wagoner was asked for spare pins, but none could be had. More than one had an extra aetj but their nearness to gold had brought forth a selfish spirit. "I may want tfcem myself," each on« argued, and each one denied that it wa in his power to accommodate.

Another and closer search was made and while it was going on there were load murmurs all along the line.

Let us go on!" "We can't be responsible for his car©-, lessnessr'^r' "What"* the matter that he cazi't fol^ low our trail to thrj river?"

The thirst for gold closes the humadheart to friendship, pity or spirit. Bach momeat of delay was fel to be dollars lost, aad finally the began to push on without orders. "See here, Brown." said the ca^ when he saw them jfoing, "the boys off, but it's only an hour to the river. Just take a sharper look for those pinfj aasd you!! turn'era up and be able fa come on. If you don't join us in al hoar

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send you the pins from

wagon." "And yoa are all going forward anc,, lesvo me ukm© and liable to be butcb^! at onoe^

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"And that's Brown's," said a third. "Just what I was going to say," added the fourth. "I had already settled on that," observed Bob, who was evidently the leader of the gang. "First, because it's the best outfit and second, because 1 want revenge on the whole family "They don't like us any too well.' chuckled one of the men. "I reckon not, and now's our chance to get even. We want to fix .that wagon in about two hours from this. It's about four hours' haul to the south fork of the Cheyenne, and that's where the train will camp tonight." "What about Brown?" asked one of the men.

Bob drew his finger across his throat. "And the old woman?" Bob repeated his gesture. "And the gal?" "I want the gal spared," he replied. "Mebbe I shall turn her loose after awhile, and mebbe I shall trade her off to some Indian chief for a dozen ponies. I'm told that the big chiefs are paying fancy prices for white gals this summer."

At this there was aloud laugh from the four, and when it bad subsided Bob resumed: "Yes, that gal must be considered my property, and don't you ^fellows get up any kick about it. We'll make a square divide on the gold, but keep your hand^. off the gal." "Have you got a plan?" whispered one of the men as he saw that a number of the trainmen were suspiciously regarding the group. "Leave that to me. You fellows just go on about your business and be on hand when wanted. If the plan I've got miscarries, I'll let you know in time to try something else."

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ered by the Indians!" demanded the wagoner. "No danger—not the slightest*' Tljere isn't a redskin within twenty miles of us. I've got to go on. but perhaps some of the horsemen will stay and help you to fix up." '•Aye, that we will!" answered Bob, Who was waiting for the opportunity. "Here are four of us who won't see you left defenseless. Here, Jack, you ride on to the river with the train and bring back those pins, while the rest of us will keep up the search and be on hand to help put on the wheels." 3

The four who were to stay were the renegades. Brown had rather been left alone, for he was firmly satisfied that they were bad men, but he could not make a decent excuse to rid himself of their presence. And besides he felt that there was danger from the Indians, no matter what the captain thought.

Mrs. Brown was a woman past forty but in excellent health and having a man's courage. Her daughter Lizzie was twenty years old, born on the frontier and inheriting more than the average woman's nerve 'and endurance. While the three outlaws left behind were making what seemed to be a very careful search of the trail and were out of earshot, Brown queried of his wife: "Mother, don't you think there is something queer about it?' "t„ ,. "I do, Daniel—I do," she promptly replied. "I believe those pins were purposely removed. Indeed, 1 remember to have heard the noise of their being knocked out when we were halted." "Just what 1 suspect! Who could have done it and for what?" "Daniel, I am most afraid to tell you that I believe these three men know all about it, and that one of them removed the pins!" "But if they wanted to break us down and leave us in the lurch, why did they offer us their assistance when all the others hurried away?" "I don't know—I don't know, Daniel! Who knows but they mean to murder us and run off with the team! Let us unharness the horses and mount them and ride on. I feel that some great shadow of danger hangs over us." "Do, father!" added the girl. "1 am sure it ia a plot to murder us all!" [lobe Continued Next Week.']

"I sufiered for two years from a bad cough and pain in my chest. I tried a number of remedies, but Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup was the only one that etiected a cure. P.J. Murpbv, Ashley, Pa."

Playlnir House.

Madge (supposed to be in search of board) —Can I get rooms here? Jenny (landlady)—Is that child yours?

Madge—Yes'm. Jenny—I'm sprry, but we don't take children here.-^Brooklyn Life.

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Getting Bid of a Boy.

Ahead master of Harrow had a way essentially his own of getting rid of little boys whom ho invited to breakfast. You know, little boys have a peculiar habit of becoming inconveniently glued to a chair The hospitable "head" would quietly go tip to the youngster—whQ was perhaps In the middle of another muffin—and say gently, and with paternal kindness, ''And must you really go?" The little boy in variably went.—Strand Magazine.

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

Easy Enough to Please a Man. A man may perhaps look bored if he is talking to a woman who is bent on conversing about things in which he has no interest. For instance, if he is a man of literary tastes, an embryo savant with rather dull and prosy ideas, she will never be able to get a word out of him if she rattles on until doomsday about the latest society gossip, the fashionable walk or the new opera, but let her touch ever so lightly 0a the question of books, even though her knowledge be very, very slight, and sec how he awakens to new activity. He will then do all the talking, and if she is only clever enough to be a good listener and not yawn In his face, even though at times he gets beyond her depth, she will never have occasion to complain of her inability to get such a one to talk.

It is the same with men in every walk in life. Every single one has some especial hobby which, if you are fortunate enough to tctach, will prove the keynote of an interesting conversation that is bound to teach you something well worth knowing. The humblest artisan may not of course be possessed of society lore, but he can talk intelligently and well concerning the trade that he understands from AtoZ. Any woman can please a man if she has tact enough to draw him out on those topics that he himself knows he is able to fa»Hr about.—New York Commercial Advertiser. 7"

We want every mother to know that croup can be prevented. True croup never appears without a warning. The first symptom is hoarseness, then the child appears to have taken cold or a cold may have accompanied the hoarsness from the start. After that a peculiar rough cough is developed, which is followed by the croup. The time to act is when the child first bocomes hoarse a few doses of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy would prevent the attack. Even after the rough cough has appeared, the disw.se may be prevented by using this remedy as directed. The only r*afe way is to ke«p a 50 cent bottle of the Remedy in the bousa for use whenever symptoms of the diseaae appear, For sale by droggiMs. ?»or, X«b«» Stonily Medicine ti»« Bowel* day. Most people need to use it*

AwyaanerwMt VmDr.Jmes*Kanrtoa

CottgbJng Letd* «o CoMnmplloa. Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough

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A Woman \VI10 Dorotl Poo. The name of Sarah Helen Whitman will be forever associated with the name of Edgar A. Poe as that of the woman he most passionately loved during life, and who most jealously rmartled and defended his memory when was dead.

Their names will be linked together like the names of Surrey and the fair Geraldine, Byron and Mary Chaworth, Bums and Highland Mary. It is'well known that after the death of his child wife, Virginia Clenim, Poe, seeking "surcease of .sorrow for his lost Lenore," became engaged to Mrs. Whitman.

But it was not to be. The engagement, for some mysterious reason that has never been clearly explained, was broken off. That Poe was blameless in the matter is proved by Mrs. Whitman's affection for his memory and defense of his character. Scarcely was the dead post in his loug neglected grave when slander and obloquy were heaped upon his memory.

Mrs. Whitman was one Of the first to come to the defense, and as has been beautifully said, "she walked backward and threw oyer his memory the shining mantle of her love." She appeared as his champion whenever he was attacked—whether it was by some penny-a-liner seeking to puff himself into brief T&otice by abusing Poe, or some silly woman trying to skip into fame on Poe's name.—Eugene L. Didier in Chautauquan.

V.V*V\

All She Bid Was to Smile. "You look -very much pleased about something," said a gentleman on a suburban train to tho conductor, who was ordinarily a somewhat grim and stern faced personage. "I presume so," replied tho conductor. "I've just seen a little girl who takes this train to go in to school every morning, and she always smiles up at me when I punch her ticket. I declare, it makes me good natured for the rest of the trip!"

Yet all she did was to smile.—Youth's Companion.

Opinions of the

Trade-South.

I find Chamberlain's medicines very excellent, particularly Chamberlain's Cough Remedy.—B. F. Ethridge, Hallettville, Texas.

I have tried Chamberlain's Cough Remedy with great success.—R. Tanneretr Waveland, Miss.

Chamberlain's Cough Remedy can not be beat.—W. L. Davis, Liberty Hill, La. I hdve used Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in my family, and consider it the best I have ever tried.—W. J. Flowers, Doraville, Ga., 50 cent bottles for sale by druggists. Nov.

A Bemedy for the Grippe Cough. A remedy reoommended for patients afflicted with the grippe is Kemp's Balsam, which is especially adapted to diseases of the throat and lungs. Do not wait for the first symptoms of the disease, but get a bottle and keep it on hand for use the moment it is neq$ed. If neglected the grippe has a tendency to bring ou pneumonia. All druggists soli the Balsam. for Torpid I*Iver im Dr. Miles' Pills.

Catarrh in Colorado.

I used Ely's Cream Balm for dry catarrh. It proved a cure.—B. F. M. Weeks, Denver.

Ely's Cream Balm is eppeelally adapted as a remedy for catarrh which is aggravated by alkaline dust and cirv wlndp.—W. A. Hover,'Druggist, Denver.

I can recommend Ely's Cream Balm Cb nil sufferers from dry catarrh from personal experience.—Michael llerr, Pharmacist, Denver.

Ely's Cream Balm has cared many cases of catarrh. It is in constant demand.—Geo. W. Hoyt, Pharmacist. Cheyenne, Wy. 22-2

flhMwm of Mr, and Mrs. M. M. Soller Altoona, Pa.

Both Had Eczema

In Its Worst Form

After Physicians Failed, Hood's 8uraaparilla Perfectly Cured. Great mental agony is endured by parents who see their children suffering from diseases caused by impure blood, ana for which there seems no cure. This is turned to joy when Hood's Sarsaparilla is resorted to, for it expels the foul humors from the blood, and restores the diseased skin to fresh, healthy brightness. Read the following from grateful parents:

To C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: "We think Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the most valuable medicine on the market for blood and skin diseases. Our two children suffered terribly with the

Worst Form of Eczema

for two yearsV Wo bad three physicians in that time, bnt nelther of them succeeded In curing them or £?en in (dring them a little relief. At last we tried Hood's Sarsaparilla and ia a month both children were perfectly cured. We recommend

Hood's Sarsaparilla

as a standard family medicine, and would not be without it." -Mb. and Mas. KpK. Soixes, 1412 2nd Avenue, Altoona, Pa.

HOOD'8 PlLL8 cure Uror ills, eoruUpatlon, fcUkttiaeu, jiBDlic*, sick hwdtcto, iodigMttoa.

THE NEXT MORNiNO I T££L BRIGHT AND NEW AND MY COMPLEXION 18 BETTER.

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LAKE'S MEDICINE sSSSES

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is stamped in the best watch cases made. It is the trade mark of the Keystone Watch Case Company,of Philadelphia, the oldest, largest and bestknown factory in the world— 1500 employees, capacity2000 cases daily. Its products are sold by all jewelers. It makes the celebrated ?as. Boss Filled Watch Cases, now fitted with the only bow (ring) which cannot be pulled off tne case—the

Askyourjewelerforpainphlet.

Railroad Time Tables.

Train rlced thus (P) denote Parlor Cars attached. Trains marked thus (S) denote sleeping Cars attached daily. Trains marked thus (B) denote Buffet Cars attached. Trains marked thus run dally. All other trains run dally, Suudays accepted.

JIT UNTIED.

T. H. & I. DIVISION.

1.KAVK F0K TIIK WBST.

No. 11 Western Express «(S&V) 1.85a No. 6 Mall Train 10.40 am No. 1 Fast Line'* (P&V) 2.15 No. 21 2.85 pm No. 7 Fast. Mall 0.04 pm No. 18 Ellingham Ace 4.05

LEAVE FOR THE BAST.

No. 12 Cincinnati Express *(8) 1.20 am No. 0 New York Express (SAV). 2.20 am No. 4 Mail and Accommodation 7.15 am No. 20 Atlautlc Express (P&V). 12.47 am No. 8 Fast Lino 2.80 No. 2 5.05pm

AKUIVE FROM THUS BAST.

No. 11 Western Express(B&V). 1.20 am No. 5 Mall Train 10.40 am No. 1 Fast Line (P&V)....... 2.00 No. 21 2.80 pm No. 8 Mail and Accommodation 6.4ft pm No. 7 FastJMail *. .....

4

... 9.00pm

ARRIVE FROM THE WEST.

No. 12 Cincinnati Express (8) 1.10 am No. 6 New York Express (H&V). 2.10 am No. 20 Atlantic Express (PAV). 12.42 No. 8 Fast Line 2.15 pm No. 2 5.00pm No, 14 Eflingham Ac 6.80 am

T. H. & L. DIVISION.

LEAVE FOR THE KORTH.

No. 62 South Bend Mail ....... 6.20 am No. 54 South Bend Express 4.00 No. 50 St. Joseph Special 1.00

ARRIVE FROM TnK NORTH,

No. 51 Tcrre Haute Express 11.45 am No. 63 South Bend Mall 7.80 No. 55 Southern Ex 0.45

S3. &c T. ZEST. ARRIVE FROM SOUTH.

No. 0 Nash & C. Ex* (S & B). fi.00 am N 2 & E as E 1 1 5 0 a ^No» 4 Ch & Ind Ex* (S) 10.30 pm NO. 00 5.00 pin

IjKAVE FOR SOUTH.

No. 3 Ch & Ev Exf(8) (t.OOam No. lEv&lndMail 8.15 pm No. 6 Ch & N Ex-HS&B) 10.00 to No. 7 10.41!am

& I.

AUHIVK VKOM 80UTIX.

No. 60 Worth Mixed lO.'iO am No. 82 Mall EX 4.26 pin *TJEAVK VOR SOUTH. No. W) Mnil Ex 8,60aim No. 49 Worth'n Mixed ....... 4.25 pin

0. & Ei. x. 'Y ARRIVE FROM NORTH.

No. .'i Ch '& Ex*(8) 6,45 am No. 40 H. Ace 10.2-5 am NO. 1 Ch & Ev Kx 8.10 pin No. SCAN Ex*(BAB). .... 9,50 pin

T.F.AVE FOR NORTH.

No. 0 N A Ex"(HAB) 6.10 a No. 2 HA Ch Ex 12.10 in No. 60 Watsekft Ace 3.20 No. 4 Nash A Ex'^S) 10.15

ARRIVE FROM KORTHV /8T.

No. 4 Pass Ex 11.20 am No. 2 Pass Mall A Ex 7.10 LEAVE Fee WORTH WEST. NO. 1 Pass Mi.:i A Ex 7.10 am No. 8 Pass Ex 8.20

C. O. C. & I.-BIG 4. GOING EAST No. 12 Boston AN Ex* 1.22ant No. 0 New York and Boston *S 2.29 am No. 2 Cleveland Acc 7.25 am No. 18 Southwestern Limited*. 12.50 No. 8 Mail train* 3.48

GOING WEST.

No. 5 St. Louis Express «S ..... 12.17 am No. 7 Ht» Louis Ex* 1.41 am No. 17 Limited* 1.68 pm No. 8 Accommodation 7.58 pm No. 9 Mail Train* ......... .10.06 am

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cwt Hervt Affect****. FU'. JZPUtPty, tie. I tlffAlun* If taken diracjcd. tf Ftli after Yfirtt daft trill bottle free to mt DmTreaties»nd (xytaffemCM on boi when 3*nd O. *rui extxTrt* tMreu of a DK.KUNR*tt Areh S«.,W»llad«1j

JtStfAJCBOF IMITATING FtdUDX.

CURE FOR CATARRH

FOR OYER FIFTY YEARS this old Sovereign Remedy has stood the test, and stands to-day the best known remedy fo# Catarrh, Cold in, the Head and Headache. Persist in its use, and it

will effect a cure, no matter of hor* long standing the case may be. For sale by druggists.

Too need not be «lck if

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will tak« Mooro's Pilule*. 1 Tb«jr area marr eion# medicine:v They kill the microbes. Tber care chill*, forces, sick headache, rfeetunatism, liver

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