Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 26, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 December 1892 — Page 3

2

%G®T.PSI

OOPYRIQHT BY AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION. 1084

CHAPTER XXX,

And how fared the renegades? The girl Lizzie had been cut loose from the tree to which she was bound within thirty feet of them so carefully that Harkins had her a quarter of a mile away before she was missed. A rush and a search was made, and no one questioned that she had got off alone. They consoled themselves with the thought that the wild beasts would have her life before morning, and when Bob strolled down the valley it was with the expectation of finding some evidence of .her death.

Well it was for the girl and the wagonmen that Taylor had been kept in ignoronce of her rescue and arrival. Had the renegades known she was in camp they would have shed blood to recapture her. Having no suspicion that she had been seen or heard of, they had no particular animosity against the gold hunters, When Taylor, burning for revenge, wanted to head a raid to steal the horses or attack the camp, Bob met him with the reply: "They drove you out, and I reckon they did right, but we don't propose to burn our fingers to help you git back at 'em. We cum yere fur that gold, and "the fust hard work we do will be to look for it. If we don't trouble that gang they won't trouble us."

Taylor had to be satisfied with that. His standing among them was not pleasant. His excuses and explanations did not go down. He was looked upon as a traitor who had received his just deserts, and he very soon realized that he was being endured for the sake of what he might know About the cave of gold. This knowledge imbittered him, and the hour he rode by the cainp hidden in the wagon he gritted his teeth and whispered to himself: "These outlaws want iue to help find tho gold, but what will hir^ then? They won't stickle to shoot »..«* down like a dog. They have no notion of dividing with me. They own tho team and will have all to say."

And then ho took an oath that if ho •saw tho first sign of treachery iu his new found friends every man of them should die by his hand. It was no idle oath. He had a terrible weapon in store for an emergency.

Tho outlaw party reached the canyon below tho peak without incident and the wagon was pulled well out of sight of any one passing tip and down the valley, and tho camp was pitched with a view to defense. They were men who knew tho perils of tho Indian country and were both brave and cautious. On the morning after their arrival Bob and Taylor Bet off up the canyon on an exploring expedition, and within an hour they had discovered tho cave. Indeed, Taylor scarcely hesitated in walking directly to ,the ledge and pulling himself up.

Tho opening to the cave was large enough to admit tho body of an ox. To the left of it rested a large stone which had beon cut to fit tho opening, but which had nevor been placed in position.

Saunders had said to the right of Custer's peak. Ho had beon mistaken. Here was tho cave to tho left.

Tho men hesitated to enter the opening, although provided with torches to dispel something of the inky darkness. In spite of their wicked hearts, a feeling of awe and reverence held them spellbound for a time. By and by Bob shook It off sufficiently to say: "This is the place. Thar can't be no floubt of it, for it's the location we both .got from different men. Fin now a-won-doring what's inside."

Taylor thought this a fitting opportunity to decido a matter which had "worried him not a little, and ho said: "In case tho gold is hero do we five .share and share alike?" "Sariinly," was Bob's prompt reply. "Yon go first and let's see if we hev -cum on a wild goose chase."

Taylor knocked his torch against the rocks to make it burn up more brightly, and holding it ahead of him passed into the opening, slowly followed by Bob. They found themselves in a rock lined room about twelve by sixteen feet in width and length, while the incline was from six to eight feet in height. Nature had made the cave, but man had enlarged and improved it.

For a moment the men looked about them in wonder, "and fearful that a grizzly or puma might be there to receive them. The place was untenanted, and Taylor moved to the right, thrust his torch into the darkness and hoarsely exidaimed: "We've hit it—we've hit it! Here is the gold!"

Yes, the gold was there, and silver as well. It was in crude lamps and pigs, each a heavy weight for a man. And there were crosses and spearheads and anklets aud bracelets, all rudely fashioned from the precious metals. Bob •did not trust himself to say a word until he had lifted half a dozen of the pigs and cut away at some of the smaller articles with his knife. Then he said: "Thar's no room fur doubt! It's treasure!" "And it is share and share alike, remember!" cautioned Taylor. "Of—of course." stammered Bob. dLvarice, doubt, selfishness, thoughts «of oinrder w^re creeping in before the discovery was ten minutes old. "The fool—to expect us to divide with Wm?" growied Bob to himself. lookout! I may take allf hissed Taylor as he held up a lump of

^°Who had placed that treasure there? Men of the who peopled the west before Coitunbv.* landed! The ores had been reduced arM moul turned out in crude form, bat the wealth waa there. Whea assay*1

at Uu

on its purity v**

3

Why should the treasure have been left? may be asked. Who can tell when and why the Atzecs went? The ruins of their cities are found all over the west, but the race disappeared off the face of the earth before the Pilgrim father^ touched these shores. "V "Bring along a chunk to show to the boys,"' said Bob, and each selected a specimen and/ made haste down the canyon

by the three outlaws left on guard, and plans were immediately made and discussed for loading up the stuff and getting out of the valley. In the making of these plans Taylor seemed to be entirely ignored, and when he put in his boast of finding the cave Bob took occasion to remark: "We didn't need yer help in the least, 'cause we had the bearings all O. K, but itwas white in you to offer yer services, an we hain't the men to forget it." "But I'm to have my fifth of courser hotly exclaimed Taylor.

The men looked at each other without replying, but presently he was ordered to stand guard at the wagon while they went up together to bring down the first load of treasure. "They think they have caught a fool!" hissed Taylor as he looked after them, "but they are mistaken. They are playing with a tiger!"

CHAPTER XXII.

"Phew! But we have struck a cave of the deadl" exclaimed Joe, who was nearest the opening as the stone fell out.

A rank, musty odor issued from the cave and drove the three men down the canyon a distance of a hundred feet and kept them sneezing and coughing for a quarter of an hour. During this time the captain prepared a couple of torches, and by and by they advanced to find the odor no longer perceptible. The captain pushed "his torch into the dark opening for a look at the interior of the cave, and after a moment he drew back and said: "Wo have got a find here, but there will be some disagreeable work about it. The cave is heaped with bodies of the dead."

The others looked in to find that his words were true. It was a chamber sixteen or eighteen feet square and ten or twelve feet high, and it was solidly packed with a grayish mass. That mass was the shriveled and mummified bodies of the lost race—dead men, women and children who had been laid away for perhaps two or three centuries. "Well, we have had our labor for our pains," said Harkins as he stepped back. "And we don't want to disco'ver any more caves," added Joe with a tinge of bitterness. "If they followed the rule in burying these dead we shall find a fortune in here," said the captain as he braced his torch against a rock. "Let's see what I can discover.'*

He entered the opening, thrust his hand into the mass of dust, worked it about for a moment, and then backed out holding in his fingers an anklet weighing at least four ounces. He rubbed the metal briskly on his sleeve, and lo! tho shine of gold caught every eye! "Worth at least seventy-five dollars," said the captain as he held it up, "and thero ought to be bushels of them in there. Take it with you to camp and give 'em the news, and send up two of the men with Bhovels. Everything in there has got to be thrown out."

So will it be a century hence. The dust of those who live today will be treated as earthly clay in the search for wealth.

At the end of the third day there was a council of the wagonmen. The cave had yielded an amount beyond the wildest guess. It had been cleared of the last shovel of dust, and every ornament and relic had been carried to the camp. Each member of the party would have thousands of dollars, and the council was called to determine what next step, should be taken. The unanimous decision was that the party should make its wav back to civilization as soon as possible.

Since the Indians passed down the valley not a redskin had been seen, and it was hoped the way out was safe and clear. It was a long and dangerous journey across the plains, but if attacked the little band must make the best defense possible. It was a peril that must be encountered in any event, and there was just a chance that the train might be left unmolested. The men were feeling exultant over their good lack and the hope of a safe jour-

42

"Worth at

least scxenty-jlve dollar*."

ney when the lookout at the mouth of the canyon, whom services had never

the canyon* whose services

"The

**nv®r

mint later

horsm

of wonder.

ma

eanyon as we can get them, the fire put out and np man must close his eyes tonight"

The horses were at once led away, the fire smothered, and a quarter of an hour after the Indians arrived the canyon was plunged in midnight darkness and seemed to contain no living thing. The white covers had been removed from the wagons and earned up the rift, and one standing twenty feet away could not distinguish the vehicles. Joe and

The discovery was hailea with delight were ordered to remain with the wagons as protection to the girls, while the others took places along the embankment, and thus the night came on.

The Indians were on the warpath, buV they seemed to have not the slightest suspicion of the presence of the train. They could plainly be heard singing, laughing and talking, and a few of them acted as if they were hilarious with whisky. "All we've got to do is to keep quiet," whispered one of the men to the captain.

I don't know. Those Indians are too much off their guard. They are acting a part. I think they have some plan in their heads. If some of them are not crawling this way before mid-, night I shall be greatly mistaken."

At ten o'clock the campfires of the Indians had burned low and all was quiet on that side of the valley. The men in the mouth of the canyon crouched behind rocks and logs, and the darkness was so dense that the keenest pair of eyes could not see a yard distant. One looking over the barrier into the valley could see a hundred feet quite distinctly, is the night was starlight and the trees tast no shadow there.

Eleven o'clock found everything quiet. A quarter of an hour later, as the captain raised his head for a keen look around him, it seemed to him that the darkness of earth was blackened at a spot not over fifty feet away. A spot of bltvck paint or an inkstand stands out in relief. A human figure dressed in black will stand out in relief against the gloom of midnight.

Was ho mistaken? Did the object move? Was there an object to begin with? He touched the man nearest him on the shoulder and whispered his suspicions. After a steady look the man returned the whisper with: "It's an infernal redskin creeping up to make sure that we are still here! It's apart of the same band we saw four days ago, and they suspect we are hidden away in some of the canyons! "Pass the word to every man to lie low for his life and make no move until he gets the word! That fellow will come right in among us."

CHAPTER XXIH.

He rises to his feet.

There are times when the tiger is off his guard. There is never an hour when the Indian of the plains is free from suspicion. In his waking hours qpch rock or tree or hillock may conceal an enemy. When ho sleeps it is to waken at the croak of a frog or the chirp of a cricket, suspicious that the sounds were made by enemies closing in upon him.

The Indian is a hypocrite and a dissembler. If he suspects that an enemy is hidden in a strong position he will pass it carelessly by to return by stealth and wait and watch.

Three or four days had passed since the Indian band disappeared down the valley, and it had Beemingly gone away satisfied that the train had escaped. But the warriors 'were not satisfied. They were mystified, but not satisfied. They had returned to play hypocrite and dissembler. They had gone into camp as part of the plan. They had waited for night—as another part of it.

White men would have advanced in a body toward the mouth of the canyon, or at least sent skirmishers forward, to investigate. The Indian is a human cat. He creeps upon his prey—he wins by cunning and stealth. "Tell Joe to come down here!" whispered the captain to the man at his side after watching the seeming figure a few minutes longer.

The man quietly disappeared, and Joe was at the captain's elbow. "Do you see anything on the ground in line with my finger and perhaps two

hnndwd feet awav?' asked the cantain.

An Indian is creeping along to turn the end of the barricade and come into the canyon!" "Sure?" "HI stake my life on itr

an alarm into camp that something was wrong. In five minutes every man waa at the barricade or wall. Opposite the mouth of tile canyon, across the narrow valley, was a fine spring. A single Indian had come gullQiping tap to dismount, but five minutes later a band of at least forty arrived and prepared to camp. The ponies were unsaddled, two or three fires kindled, and it was evident the raiding had gone into camp for the night. The captain. Joe and two or three other plainsmen drew aside for consultation, but it waa a torkf one. kept lost men and women from going "It's just one chance in a hundred that crazy under the great mental strain, they may overlook us,** said tho captain.

must be led as far up

Word was passed for every man to

TERHB HAUTE SATURD E V3ININ.S*LIFTTL^

But in

the

never word was passed for every man to They're quick. They'realive, ana yet It

for a moment been dispensed with, sent fall back to the wagon, and after a brief was a man who discovered the one reman alarm into c&mt> that something was consultation between the captain and uiv far their oecullar ailments. The Joe one took position to the right and man was Dr. Pierce. The discovery .4 .« it ku iiVavApftA Prtt«nrintJon,?—to©

the other to the left of the entrance, but fifty feet bock. If the Indian scout

The sound connected them with civili zation and safety.

gran and gloomy canyon

there was no sound. The horses, which had been led to the extreme end, peered about them and shivered with fear. The men lying down about the wagon felt a -jveight upon ihpm. If there were cricketa in the grassjthey, were silent.

If man wants to find a greater punishment for criminals than the dark cells of state prisons, let him turn to the canyon. No prisoner chained to a rock in the gloom and silence and darkness would keep his mind a week. The verv silence would torture him until he would cry out to heaven for njfrcy, and the sound of his own voice would terrify him to insanity.

The captain and Joe had not been deceived. It was an Indian creeping toward the mouth of the canvon.

Creep! Creep! Creep! So a tiger creeps up to withm striking distance of a man. So a cat creeps to within striking distance of a bird. The sharpest ear could detect no sound. The shadows of evening could not have crept more noiselessly.

Now the human cat has reached the end of the barricade. Now he turns into the mouth of the canyon. Now he advances'np the center. It is so dark in the rift that he cannot see his hand when held at arm's length. Instinct gnides him. A rock lies in his path. He knows this before he sees it. He creeps up and carefully passes his hand over it. If the white men came in there with their wagons they might have moved the stone.

No, they did not. He creeps to another and another. They have not been disturbed. He sniffs at the air. If there was the lease fire he would discover it. He lies with his ear to the ground. The stamp of a h)rse half a mile away would have been detected.

Creep! Creep! Creep! Now he is within sixty feet of the wagons, now it is fifty, now forty. The slightest cough—a sleeper's change of position, a woman's sighing as she dreamed—would reach his ear. He heard nothing. Not a stone has been disturbed—not a wheel print can he find as he passes. For ten long minutes the red man listens with ears strained to catch the slightest sound.

Silence—nothing but silence. Now he is satisfied. He rises to his feet and walks back to the barricade, turns to the left and holds straight for the camp on the opposite side without a pause. He is satisfied at last. He finds every warrior awake and alert for an alarm. In a few words he makes his report to the chief, and in ten minutes more the band is flitting down the valley so quietly that their departure is not suspected.

Morning comes and the men in the canyon are filled with astonishment and satisfaction. .They could not know what tlia scout would report, and not an eye had closed in sleep during the night. "Now for breakfast and then we will be off," said the captain after satisfying himself that the enemy had departed.

An hour later every wagon was ready to move and the train passe*down the valley a couple of miles, crossed over into the smaller valley in which Taylor had encamped the day he was driven out, and I leave them for a time, as they push ahead to find a route through the foothills to the plains. [lobe Continued Next Week.]

High-priced competitors disregard a well established law of physics when they buck against Salvation Oil. It is the best and cheapest. 25o.

The Woman Movement.

It is not a less domesticity but a differ ent and broader domesticity that is the result of the woman movement. It gives one wider views, and makes one live in a glass house to some purpose—not to throw stones, but to send out good influences.— Mrs. A. A. Claflin.

Caring for a Precocious Child. Instead of proudly pushing a precocious child in his studies we hold him back behind his mates, and seek to restore the harmonious balance of his brain with his body by an abundance of pure air, nourishing food and zestful play. We thus save him from becoming a dullard or an imbecile.— Youth's Companion.

As your daughters grow up teach them at least the true merits of housekeeping and cookery. They will thank you for it later in life a great deal more than for accomplishments.

In the "spareroom" the bed should be made with only the spread and shams over until needed, when the sheets and bedclothing may be put on.

The headdresses of 1770 were so large that ladies going to balls were forced, to save their headgear, to kneel on the floors of their carriages.

A good evening silk for an elderly woman is a black moire having hair line stripes in several colors. It is subdued and yet sufficiently lively.

Mrs. Millicent G. Fawcett is one of the most aggressive workers in England for the enlargement of women's rights.

ar®

fehe

ri8ht

of platel Ijeavc the

penetrated thus far he must pass be- fn sllence—misunderstood-wben there's tween them, and his retreat would be

cut off. Now came a silence so profound that it was positively painful. The grimness of midnight in a city is broken by foot-steps—-the barking of dogs—the whistle of a locomotive. On the open plains the chirp of crickets never ceases while darkness lasts, and that very sound has

a

sP°°.n

in

Tn bouses where strict order prevails the friction of the kitchen work is never felt beyond its walls.

Women are not slow to comprehend.

his "Favorite Prescription"—the boon t» delicate women. Why go round with one foot in the

to

ODe

toot id me grave," »uu*miig

grave," buffering

remedy at hand that isn't an expert ment, but which is sold under the guarantee that If you are disappointed in any way in it, yon can get your money back by applying to Its makers, ^e can hardly imagine a woman's not trying it- Possibly it may be true of one or two—hot we doubt ft. Women are ripe for it. Thay must have it. Think .of a prescription and nine oat of ten waiting for it. Carry the news to them!

The seat of sick headache is not fn the brain. Regulate the stomach and you core it. Dr. Pierce's Pellets are the Tittle Regulators.

'~i-:

,i

T. .iivv-. ,'4«

mmmmsm

Harry's flats.

Harry Willis had sis bat!*. There was his best hat—a round cloth liat with a turned up brim, a striped bicycle cap, two polo caps, a cloth cap with a peak, and

straw hat.

Yes,

be had a sailor bat

besides. That makes seven. But for all that he was the most iiatless boy I ever beard of. Every time be went out he had a terrible time hunting"for a hat to wear.

One day everybody was ready to go driving—everybody except Harry. He was looking for a hat. Pap.i called that if Harry didn't come soon he'd go without him. Mamma was just getting into the carriage, hut she turned back. "What's the trouble, Harry?" she said. "I can't find my hat," replied Harry. "Somebodv always takes it away and hides it." "Where did you put tho last one you wore?" "Well, I don't know," said Harry, looking perplexed. "I think on the hall table, or on the sofa in the sitting room, or perhaps on the bookcase, or in the dining room, or perhaps" "The other day when you came in I saw you throw your bat across the sitting room, and it flew behind the sofa," said Bridget. "It isn't any such—I mean you must be mistaken, Bridget. How, that's my last hat. Somebody has hidden them all I haven't seen my sailor hat for a week, nor the peaked cap either. I lost my best hat last Sunday and my bicycle cap three days ago. I had my straw hat yesterday morning, and I haven't seen it since. And that's the second polo cap I've lost today. It's just too bad. Somebody hides them on purpose." "Suppose you look behind the sofa, Harry," suggested mamma. "I must go. Papa won't wait any longer." "It isn't there, I know." But Harry ran in to see. He pulled out the sofa with a desperate tug and looked behind it.

What do you think he found? In a heap in the corner lay a straw hat and a sailor hat, a best hat with a turned up brim, a striped bicycle cap, two polo caps and a cloth cap with a peak.

Did you ever hear of such a boy?—Buffalo News. R. H. Paton, 613 Walton Ave., N. Y. City, writes:—"I have used Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup for years and find it the most efficacious remedy for coughs, colds and laryngitis 1 have ever tried."

for Torpid Liver mse Dr. Miles' Pills.

liftno'H Family Mcdlctno Moves the Bowels e.ach day. Most people need to use it.

Jtfrs.

Mary E O'Fatton

of Plqua, O., My* tho Physicians are Astonished* and Ipolc lit her like on*

Raised from^ the Dead

Lonjg and Terrible Illness from Blood Poisoning

Completely Cured by Hood'B

Sarsapartlla.

Mra. Mary E. O'Fallon, a very intelligent lady of Piqua, Ohio, was poisoned while assisting physicians at an autopsy 5 years ago, and soon terrible nlccra broko out on her head, arms, tongue and throat. Her hair all came out. She weighed but 78 lbs., and saw no prospect of help. At last she began to take Hood's Sarsaparllla and at once improved could soon get out of bed and walk. She says: I becamo perfectly cured by

Hood's Sarsaparllla

and am now a well woman. I weigh 128 lbs., eat well and do tho work for a largo family. My case seems a wonderful recovery and physicians look at mo in astonishment, as almost lcko one raised from tho dead."

HOOD'8 PILL8 Should be in every family medieine obeat. Once u»ed, alway* preferred.

CONSUMPTION

SURELY CURED.

To THE Enrroa—Please inform your readera that I have a positive remedy for tho above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad' to send two bottles of my remedy free to aiiy of your readers who have consumption if they will send me their express and post office address. Bespectfully, T. A. Slocum, M.C.,

No. 183 Pearl Street, New York.

All PA RemedyFro®. INSTANT BELIEF. F»nn I'll LV cnr.j in loda*.Nu»fri-Hiurn«: no par**

Li* missive: no *appo*i1onr. A victim tried ,n

r(l

jn „erw rntn dy h*# discovered

nimp'o core, which he Mritfnwil

ft**

TocmiDfx, Ohio, Oct. &>, l&JD.

I used Pastor Kxxmlg's Net /o Tonis for a iad7 26 ye&» old every two or three weeks aha had a sertou* attack

of

falling slcknen,

mib

C.

tn hi*

aawmpsmifi

headache and was drfvtci to madmxts she wa# seat once to an insane asylSDn.

Tba

CI. C. &

cof­

ferers. J.H.KKXrEM.tUi »WI.Xr» Vorlttlly.at.lf.

ETOI

In Its Worst Form. ,i Bextos,

L&f. Co., Wis., Dee. IA

Bet. J. C. Bergen vouches for the foilcwing: James Roan ay, wbo suffer lug from Vitus Danes in its worst fonfl for about one sad fourth yearn, was treated by wver&l physicians witb&ct effect two bottles of Pastor Ktxsnig'a Kerve Tunic cored him.

doc­

tors eooM not reUnve her I began with bottle

o:

yoar

tatduAoe

she had taken three-

mutters of it, and ate wrote to me a fenr daya ago -The imaiieine fcali* ma meeb I *Muk another bottle wOl eare »».*

pSS*1. FBPQV Uacwrt

IlEV. AHUAXD HA-MELIN. Valuable Km-nms free aqr sddmea indents cao a&o ofctoln medicine fire® of elta**«.

IITJV.

FRFRrrS'•estBooktoon

lltLL Ottamiodi

KOEKIG l»SO. CO., Chicago, til. gpHhrntng^rfi^siBerBotaa OfittSS yofnfflge.81.7S. 4 Bottle* for «0.

•ii

immm

•pf?r

Every Man whose watch has been rung out of the bow (ring), by a pickpocket,

Every Man whose watch has been damaged by dropping out of the bow, and

Every Man of sense who merely compares the old pullout bow and the new

will exclaim: "Ought to have been made

Ion or

apfo!"o

Itcan't betwistedoff thecase. Can only fye had with Jas. Boss Filled and other cases stamped with this trade mark

Ask your jeweler for pamphlet. Keystone Watch Case Co., Philadelphia.

Railroad Time Tables.

Train rked 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, Sundays accepted.

~VA.35TX?A.XiIA. XiI35TS3. T. H. A I. DIVISION.

LEAVE FOR THE WEST.

No. 11 Western Express (S&V)... 1.35a No. 5 Mall Train 10.46 am No. 1 Fast Line (P&V) 2.15 No. 21 2.85 pm No. 7 Fast Mail 9.04 pm No. 13 Elllughnm Ace 4.05

LEAVE FOR THE EAST.

No. 12 Cincinnati Express (S) 1.20 am No. (1 New York Express (SAV). 2.20 am No. 4 Mall nnd Accommodation 7.15 am No. 20 Atlautlc Express (P&V). 12.47 am No. 8 Fast Line 2.80 No. 2 5.05

ARRIVE FROM THE EAST.

No. 11 Western Express (8&V). 1.20 am No. 5 Mall Train 10.40 am No. 1 Fast Line (P»fcV) 2.00 No. 21 2.30 pm No. 3 Mail aud Accommodation 0.15 No. 7 Fast Mall 9.00

ARRIVE FROM THE "WEST.

No. 12 Cincinnati Express (S) ... 1.10 am No. 6 New York Express (S&V). 2.10 am No. 20 Atlantic Express (P&V). 12.42 No. 8 Fast Line 2.15 No. 2 5.00 No. 14 EfRngham Ac. 9.80an

T. H. A L. DIVISION.

LEAVE FOR THE NORTH.

No. 52 South Bond Mall 0.20 a no No. 54 South Bend Express 4.00 No. 50 St. Joseph Special 1.00

ARRIVE FROM TH NORTH*

No. 51 Terro Haute Express 11.15 am No. 53 South Bend Mall ....... 7.150 No. 55 Southern Ex ....... D.45

IE3. SsCC. IEJ-

ARRIVE FROM SOUTH.

No. 0 Nosh & c. Ex* (S & B). 5.00 am No. 2 T. Ei. & East Ex 11.60 am No. 4 Ch & lud Ex* (S) 10.80 No. Op 6.00

LKAVK FOR SOUTH.

No. 8 Ch & Ev Ex^S) fl.00 am No. 1 Ev A Ind Mall 8.15 No. 5 Cli A N Ex*(SAB) 10.00 mi No. 7 10.42 am

S3. &c X.

ARRIVE FKOM SOUTH.

No. 50 Worth Mixed 10.80 No. 32 Mail A Ex 4.25 pm T.RAVJK* FOR SOUTH. No. t5!l Mall A Ex 8,5tt No. 40 WorthVi Mixed ....... 4.25 pm

O. & ZED. I.

ARRIVE FROM NOHTH.

No. 8 Oil A "ash ICx^fS) 5.45 an. No. 4!) AuC 10.25 l» No. 1 Ch A Kv Fx 3.10 i) in No. 5 AN Kx^BAB) f).50

LEAVE FOR NOKTH.

No. ON ACK.v'(SAB) ........ 5.10a in. No. 2 A Ch Kx 12.10 No. 50 WalHttka Acc 8.20 111 No. 4 Nash A Kx*{8) 10.45

r-i\

EC.

&c

ARRIVE FROM WORTH WEST.

No. 4 Pass Kx No. 2 Pass Mall A Ex LEAVE FOR NORTHWEST. No. 1 Pass Mail A Vx No. 8 Pass Ex. '.

11 ".'O am V. .-I 111

7.10 am 8.20

I.-BIOr 4.

CJOINQ EAST

No. 12 Bo to A N Ex* ....... 1,22 a ia No. 0 New York and Boston "8. 2.29 am No. 2 Cleveland Acc 7.25 am No. 18 Southwestern Limited*.... 12.50 No. 8 Mall train* 8.48

GOING WEST.

No. 5 St. Louis Express *S .12.17 am No. 7 St, Louis Ex® i. am No. 17 Limited*1 1.58 No. 3 Accommodation 7.68 No. 9 Mall Train* 10.08 am

(firmB

•B^FASTOFPED FREE

Es MarvtUut nutttt.

I dm 16 Person* Rostored

8

fellow

BHDrJGUirE'S GEEAT W NERVE RESTORER

•/#r«ZfBKAnr&NwKVsDis*AS«. Only tun

Inrx

curl for Ntrvt Jfftctieni, FUt, F.fittfty, IIKFALLIBLK If taken directed. N» FUt a/Ur it riiday't Hit. Treatl*e ud |i trUt bottle free

rFit pMfeott, they psytnge*

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14

CURE FOR CATARRH

FOR OVER FIFTY YEARS this old 8overeignBemedy has stood the test, and stands to-day the best known remedy for Catarrh, Cold in the Head and Headache. Persist in its use, and it will effect a care, no matter of hor long standing the case may be.

For sale by druggists.

Yoa need not be *ck If yon will take Moore Pilule*- (fty ThatareafoarvBloti* medicine^

They kilt the microbes. Tber cure ckill«. fe?ffr», ale! headache, rbctjmirtUtn, lirar an blood disorders, malaria.

Better than quinine TV n« TV bowd*» qttluiius/ -. relief jnlek. Ij.t :r, bex. AOs. 3tor St.

Dr.C. C.Uoore,

7f CCIUjwkH Ktuct, "r\.

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