Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 24, Number 26, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 23 December 1893 — Page 2
2
HUH
CHAPTER XXXII. I CONFESS TO GORDON.
"My dear girl," remonstrated Gordon, "is any one lying ill in a stuffy cabin, with nothing to breathe but yellow fog, in a position to see things in anything but a gloomy light? Are you yet in a condition to form an impartial judgment on the affair? Now, If you had been pondering the matter with a clear head, as I have been doing for the past week" "But you don't know all the facts," 1 said, interrupting liiin.
Pulling his beard, he reluctantly admitted that this was true. "And," he added, "it's true that I've had to draw a good deal on my imagination to square things comfortably. However, we are not going to discuss tlie mutter today. It can easily stand over till you are stronger, and then if it's necessa ue'il Have all the facts and make the best we may of 'em."
I assented to this proposal with a sigh, knowing that the truth must bo told, but I was grateful for the delay, feeling so feeble and downhearted.
Wo staid
U.JOU
The wind lreshentd in the night, but the sen was not rough enough to prevent my going on deck after breakfast, though I found it difllcult to keep my feet under this novel condition of things.
Gordon was waiting for me at the head of the stairs in a fur jacket he had bought from one of the sailors. He had a pipe in his mouth, and his face was radiant with boyish delight. "I'm ghui to see you have not been ill," Mid he, taking my arm to steady me. "Oh, that's all past.""Seasick, 1 mean." "I don't know how any one can be sick on the sen," 1 replied, looking out over the dancing waters. They seemed to me as Brand in their strength as they had been Beautiful in their calm repose, and the tre»h air gave me new life.
Be glanced at me in perplexity as he steered me across to the corner he had almady prepared. We seated ourselves, and Rudersdorf stmt us a couple of rugs and a tarpaulin, with which we made ourselves very snug aud comfortable. "I'm a bit puititled, mademoiselle," said Gordon, when Rudersdorf and his secretary had left tis. "From one or two remarks you made yesterday, and what you •aid just now, one would think you had never been on the sea before." "I saw it for the first time yesterday." "Then how in tho world did you get Across from Russia?" he said in amazement.
MI
hare never been iu Russia. I fancy was born in Shadwell. Anyway I lived there as long as I can remember and never left It till last year "But—you speak French like a native*"
Bit pipe irtni out he IM&uetL "That's bwinw I nothing *1 homo, bt"c«u*p 1 could not. speak like or anyone else who has been ©do-
r.r
BAR&ETT.f
pec ted, and Aura becomes a
zealous watchdog over the person of her benefactor. XVIII, XIX and XX-Whlle dmdowing Taras to protect him Aura is rfbadowed by Drigo. She gives him the slip and rescues Taras from abduction br Kav anux'i- XXI, XXII and XXlII-Kavanagh exjflalns that he is engaged in a deep scheme tosave Taras from assassination by minions at the czar. By helpof Auraa mutual friend of uil concerned, George Gordon, who is Taras' double, Is to be abducted and delivered to the czar's agents. XYIV and XXV-Hu-derxdorf of the Russian secret police reaches London to silence Taras. Gordon Is a constant caller at Tara's house, and his trysts with Aura have the color of a love attachment. The remaining chapters tell how Gordon and Aura are carried to Russia and started on the read to Siberia. Aura escapes, returns to London, secures Gordon's escape and unmasks Kavanagh, who loves Gordon's aiJlanwl and Is in the pay of the czar. He meets a terrible fate, and Aura marries Taras, otherwise I'rlneo Borgensky.
deck until the sun sank
in tho golden sea, but the kind hearted fellow said not another word on the subject that obviously caused me such depressii. anxiety. He knew a great deal about ships and tho sea and told me many stories of his adventures iu a yacht with so much humor that more than once I was forced to smile.
Wo were closely watched by Rudersdorf and the old gentleman, who, seeing !y tho openness of our manner that we were not hatching plots, marked their satisfaction by promising that, we should come on deck the following day if the weather held fair.
•r
®XC^fi
($PYf?iGtlT. 1693: BY CABELL C2
^^-AND PU5LOMCD DY SPECIAL -Af?F?ANCrE"iV\E'NT SYNOPSIS. A natnelets girl waif on the t/ndon wharves overhears a plot between Putty, the landlord of Mariner's Joy, a confederate named Drigo and a stranger known as Taras, to help Rome deserter* escape from a ship. CHAPTER II—The deserters arrive, a scuffle ensues In the barroom of the Joy, and Taras disappears. Ill and IV-After a vain hunt for Taras the waif in led by a strange sound to a cellar beneath the bar. Following the ciew. she finds Taras imprisoned and releases him through means of an old robber tunnel from the cellar to the wharf. V—Putty and Drigo discover the escape and cut off the waif in the tunnel, but sue takes terrible revenue on them ami Is befriended by i'aras VI, VII, Vf 11—The ^raifruns away and attempts suicide. Taras finds her in a police c€!i and takes her to his own home under tbe care of Mere Lucas. his housekeeper. There she begins a new life as Aura. IX, and I—Aura Is dressed for her new station in Taras' household and makes the acquaint ance of Major Kavanagh, a bosom friend of Taras, who is a Russian nihilist. XII, XIII and XIV—Taras is an artist making plaster groups to portray thetyianny of the czar. Aura develops by dint, of hard study In tola com pais Ion of the artist refugee. XV, XVI and XVII—Love emotions are awakened In Aura for Taras. A cast representing downtrodden ltuKsia Is mysteriously destroyed in Taraa' workshop. At a hint from Kavanagh Mere Lucas is
cated, because Taras vished me to begin a new life, and break away from all that had gone before" "Look here, mademoiselle," Gordon said, Btopping me with apprehension in his tone, "if this sort of thing will upset you, you know" "No, no. I'm strong now. 1 must tell you what 1 hud not the courage to tell you yesterday. I ought to have told you the first thing, because I've no right to profit by your kindness until I know whether you can forgive me or not." "Oh, I say, don't you know"—Gordon expostulated uneasily.
Disregarding his remonstrance, I told my story as simply as I could, relating all that had taken place between Kavanagh and myself truthfully and with a desire to say nothing which might bias his judgments.
His pipe went out as he listened, astonishment holding him spellbound. We looked each other straight in the eyes until I bad spoken the last word. Then I dropped my head and waited in trembling uncertainty for his verdict.
He did not leave me long in doubt as to his present feeling. "You are a brick," he said "a regular brick!" and taking my hand he pressed it warmly. "I—I didn't expect you to think so." said I. "Why, you don't think I could have any grudge against you for making me useful, do you? You have led me to do no more than I should willingly have done to save old Taras if I had been asked, and if it were otherwise that would not alter my esteem for you—not a bit. It's this devotion that I admire you for. A real, genuine, womanly woman, don't you know, should stick at nothing, but go bang through thick and thin for a man. Judith, I believe, would do as much for me if it came to the pinch. If not (and know it)—well, she would be my Judith, that's all. Don't give way, little woman," he continued, seeing my lips twitch perhaps, for his generous enthusiasm touched me greatly. "You have done all that you could do, and it's bound to turn out right. I have unbounded confidence in Kavanagh." "Have you?" I asked hopefully. "I should think so! Why, he's one of the subtlest, shrewdest, cleverest men in London. He's not a fool, I can tell you." "No I didn't think he might be that exactly, but" "I see. Yon thought it possible that he might be something worse. Well, that's excusable, for when a man owns up to doing other people you can never feel quite sure that he isn't doing you. You see, we can't all tell the truth and hit straight out from the shoulder. Why, take this case, for example. Without lying, how could Kavanaugb have circumvented the smartest police in the world—how could he have got over the minister of police and those crafty rascals and upset their villainous game?" "Is it certain that he is deceiving them and not us?" I asked. "Wait a bit. This wants a deuced lot of cool judgment. Let me have a pipe."
He lit his pipe and puffed out great streams of smoke bt Jjre lie spoke again. When he had taken three or four pulls, he said:
1
"But is there any fact—has anything occurred—which directly supports your suspicious? That's what I should like to get at." "Kavanagh led tne to believe that, when you were arrest e.!, I should be free to return to Taras. Can you tell me why I was brought on board with you?" "You would come, you know." "But there is evidence enough that had 1 not come of my own accord I should have been brought here by force. From the very outset it was known on board here that I was to be taken away with you." "Hang me if I can explain that arrangement. Can you?" "Yes it was necessary to get rid of me." "Why?" "That I might not tell tales." "But if the whole story is to come out?" "It is not to come out," I said, with the emphasis of conviction. "He never intended that it should. If this affair were made public, inquiry would lead to the discovery of his share in it, a discovery that would be fatal to him." "But the truth must come out at some time," he remonstrated, still with his face turned from me. "Why, whom can we tell in Russia? Who will hear our voices when we are in Siberia?" "But the police must learn in time, by his works, that Taras is stiil free." "Is it likely that they will send you back to England to prove their fault?"
He knocked out his pipe slowly on the deck before he made any reply. Then, drawing along breath, he said: "Well, we shall see if you are right, mademoiselle, when we get to Russia." "Too late," said I, with deep contrition in my heart. "I ought to have found that out before." "Oh. my dsar girl!"' he cried, turning again quickly to me with the genial warmth that characterised him, "whatever turns tip, you must always be held blameless. You're not the only one decnived. Here am I to justify you, led like a lamb by the man I professed to know, so no more self reproaches." Then, giving my hand a hearty shake, he added, "Are we not companions in adversity?"
CHAPTER XXXIIL WK SET OCT.
We were allowed to see each other no more until we reached St. Petersburg, and then only at a distance, as we were harried from the train which brought us from the port into the separate carriage? in whicli we were rattled off to prison.
In that moment GonVn his hirod to me and smiled ei ara,- gty. but I knew that the poor flow, despite his sait* fpnne tcniperwnwnv, !d find bot little ground to base hope uj
About an boar after my arrival I taken down to nu wh«?re the mm' a a a it in a a The only otlier persons present were Kudersdorfandtfce" itk n, Their manner was obseqtu. diu_:eniial toward their chief, sharp and severe toward me.
W hai-Hghlinc. of the head he toK to take act.*..,'. .~.l fixing his dark, per rating eyes upon me said "Ma" p, do you deny that Tars*, Prince is jxmr frieod?"
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MATT DECEMBER 23, 1893.
"No," I replied proudly "he is the dearest friend I have in the world." These words brought tears into my eyes, so that I saw everything as in a mist, but I brushed them away impetuously and met the minister's eyes firmly, and with the resolve to keep my emotion down. "Then how comes it," the minister asked, "that you have aided in bringing him here?" "I have done no such thing. The man you have here is not Taras, but George Gordon. If you are the minister of police, you will know that when you see him." "Assuming that this is George Gordon, why did you aid in bringing him here?-' "To save Taras from being murdered by your agent, Rudersdorf." "Is this the first time you have endeavored to save your friend?" "No I have balked Kavanagh in two if not three attempts to carry him away." "And you hoped to save Taras a fourth time by substituting George Gordon, to mislead our agents?" "Yes." "You thought to throw off the pursuit by making us believe that we had captured Taras?" "Yes." V* "Then why are you so anxious now to make us believe that we have not got Taras?" "Because Kavanagh made me believe that the moment you discovered the mistake Rudersdorf would be banished in disgrace, while a public outcry would compel you to abandon any further effort to remove Taras from England." "You are candid, at any rate," said the minister, after exchanging a Bwift glance with Rudersdorf. "I want you to know the whole truth." "In that case, will you be good enough to give me the particulars of the attempts made by Mr. Kavanagh to kidnap Taras?"
I narrated the events as simply as I could. When I came to an end, the minister wrote a few lines, banded the paper to Rudersdorf, and rising took up his hat. "What are you going to do with me?" 1 asked. "During the inquiries which must necessarily be made to ascertain the truth of your statement you will be detained. You will be provided with every available comfort, and in consideration of the straightforward manner in which you have given information, if there is any reasonable con--cession I can make" "George Gordon—I want to see him," said I, for I felt the need of a companion.
The chief looked grave then, after giving some instructions to Rudersdorf, he said to me: "You shall see him tomorrow morning," and with a slight bow left the office.
I was taken back to the cell, and as the door closed with a clang, and I looked round the four bare whitewashed walls, with their one barred window high up, showing but a few inches of leaden sky, 1 asked myself where was the comfort that had been promised me.'
In the evening the warder brought me a bundle of thick serge clothes and a greasy sheepskin coat, telling me that I should have to wear them for my journey and that I must get up when I was called. This was the first intimation I had received th we were to be removed from St. Petersburg. The minister had spoken only of a detention. He had said that I should see Gordon the next morning, but was it only to say "goodby?"
Before it was light the warder entered my cell, and seeing a candle on the shelf which served as a table told me I miist be dressed in 10 minutes. In 10 minutes I wa$ dressed in my ill fitting clothes, looking more like a white bear than a human creature in the great sheepskin coat which touched the ground at my feet and was furnished with a hood and a collar band, which left nothing visible of my face except my nose and eyes. A pair of enormous boots lined with sheepskin and great fingerless gloves of the same kind added still more to the uncbuthness of my appearance. The warder brought me a mug of hot tea aud some dried fish and bread, and while I ate my breakfast made up the clothes I had worn into a bundle for me to take with me.
I was taken down into the yard, where, to my great joy, I found Gordon arrayed in a suit similar to my own, by which I concluded that he was to go away also. 1 think he was no less pleased to see me. He gave me both hands, and we stood there hand in hand, too grateful to speak at first. "You are going with me?" we said, at last and simultaneously.
W "i arc going with met" we sriid, at Icut and simultaneously. "Yes," Mid he, "though where we are gointf I can say." "CTrkutak, 1 believe." "Orkutsk, hey? Well, that's got a sort of outlandish sound about it. But what doe« that matter? We shall come here ag before very long, that's a certainty. the minister have it pretty straight, I can tell you. Threatened him with The Times and all sorts of punishment."
A sledge was brought into the yard, for the ground was already^overed with snow. It was drawn by three horses, each with a bell in the arc over the saddle. Inside
Continued on 7Mrd Page, ... iSyrkl
rn
Yaletfde A*»oci*tlons.
Christmas is always associated with the good Jesus, who, whether regarded as God or man, was the purest, kindest, noblest being that has walked the earth. He has inspired love in saipt and sinner, in devotee and skeptic alike. Men may wrangle about creeds, but about Jesus and his beautiful life there can hardly be any difference of opinion, for he pitied all who Buffered and strove to heal every aching heart.
Ttough.
1
Customer—If you ever send me another piece of meat like the last, 111 take away my custom.
Botcher—What was tbe matter with it? Customer—Why, It was no tough that when it was cooked 1 oouldn 'tgefc my fork «rea into tbe gravy.—London Tit-Bits.
CHRISTMAS IN THE ARCTIC.
Hungry Explorers Celebrate With a Feast of Seal Meat and Blabber. "I think Christmas, 1883, was my most memorable one," said General Greely, the famous arctic explorer. "With -my com mand I was proceeding southward in the hope of obtaining help, and about the 26th of October we ensconcedourselves in a little hut at Cape Sabine. Our supply of food was running very low, and we were on very short rations, every one being allowed just enough food in each 24 hours to sustain life. Under these depressing circumstances and amid the awful silence of the polar night the cheerfulness that we contrived to maintain was remarkable. As the Christmas season approached we all looked forward to it with eager anticipation, not only as a festal day whose associations and memories vrould to some extent vary tlfe wearisome monotony of our lives, but because we knew that the winter solstice would fall about Dec. 22 and that then the sun would return and the long dreary night be at an end. "Christmas day came at last. Christmas in the arctic regions! At 6 o'clock we had our breakfast—thin soup made of peas, carrots, blubber and potatoes. Our Christmas dinner was served at 1 o'clock. Harken to our menu. First course, a stew of seal meat, onions, blubber, potatoes and bread crumbs. Second course, served one hour after the first, a stew of raisins, blubber and milk. Dessert a cup of hot chocolate. The best and most Christmaslike feature of this meal was that we were allowed a sufficient quantity of it to satisfy the pangs of hunger. "Our enjoyment of the dessert—one cup of chocolate—we tried to prolong as much as possible. Over it we told each other Christmas stories we exchanged reminiscences of bygone Christmases at home with the loved ones so far away. We discussed the probability of our ever reaching our own firesides again, and we entered into an agreement that if we got back to civilization before another Christmas we would pass the day together in memory of that awful Christmas we were then spending in the realm of tbe relentless ice king. Alas, many of those brave fellows never lived to see another Christmas. "Then we had some singing. There were some good singers among us, and of different nationalities, too, so we had songs in English, French, Danish and German. And then we received the only Christmas present that was vouchsafed to us that year. One of our party—Kislingbury by namehad somd tobacco still left, and knowing that most of the men were destitute of it he very kindly made a cigarette for each of our little party. I will wager that in all Christendom that day not a present was given or received that gave such intense delight to the recipient as did those little rolls of tobacco and paper. They were quickly aflame and being puffed away at for dear life, and thus my most memorable Christmas—a Christmas near the north pole—ended in smoke."—Buffalo Express.
i., /, ,* One Australian Christmas. A hot northerly wind, laden with sand and dust, had been blowing with great force for two days. The thermometer in the warmest part of the afternoon touched up to 120 in the shade, and even at night did not fall below 100. The small birds, finding but little shade in the straight leaved gum trees, came iu under the covering of the wide verandas of the huts. The snakes were almost more dangerous at night than they were in the day. In fact, it was intensely hot weather. The sun rose on the Christmas morning without any appearance of a change.
The forenoon was spent in branding cattle in order that they might be released and watered, as detention in such heat much longer would probably cause some mortality. In the meantime the dinner was in progress. The lady of the establishment had roasted the wild ducks and teal, prepared the green peas—potatoes there were none—and boiled the plum pudding. At 8 o'clock we sat down in a long veranda to do our duty, notwithstanding the state of the weather, when we were not made cooler by having, in default of other beverage, to drink hot tea, which we sipped from large basins. The pudding was a great success and was the more appreciated because the whole of the ingredients had been brought 800 miles in bullock wagons at a cost of $800 a ton and had run many risks of being stolen or lost on the road.
Lily's Predictions.
Lilly, the great English astrologer, annually published a little leaflet under the title of "Astrological Predictions." In the one for 1648 occurs the following, "In the year 1665 the sphelium of Mars will be in Virgo and all kinds and sorts of disasters to the commonwealth, monarchy and kingdom of England may be expected in that and the two following years."
It is needless to add that 1665 brought the "great plague," which carried away 68,556 people and 1666 was the year of the "great fire," in which 13,200 hout»ea were destroyed.—St. Ixrais Republic.
Wonderful Invention.
The weight and dimensions of each and gvery piece in the construction of a United States warship is computed before starting to make any of them. Such a great •olum* of computation is too much for the brain. Formerly much of it was performed on machines made in Europe, but now 95 per cent of it is computed on comptometers, invented by Dorr E. Felt of Chicago. The adding and other calculations in many of the accounting departments of the government are done in the •ame manner.—Chicago Herald.
Hood's5^Cures
Master Oasseil JPurceU
Amthe result of a fall, severe inflammation appeared In my boy's eyes. We had to Keep Ikla* im Duk
Bmb,
and we feared he
wonid lose bii sight entirety. Hood's Sarsapa^ rilla werfced like duina While taking two botUcs the inflammation gradually disaptppeared, hte eyes grew stronger so that be could bear the light. He was soon eMBpletely ewrcdU I cheerfully recommend
Hood's Sarsaparilla
for aS diseases arising from Impure blood." Mas. S. K. PtTEcstx, fsu9so«t& BL, Piqua. ft Hood's
Pills Cure ail liver ILU. 25s.
A Needed Reform la Telegraphy. At a recent competitive trial of skill between telegraph operators one of the most interesting features was a test of a receiving instrument technically known an the "audison"—a small instrument fitted to the head of the operator, giving a sound which, although perfectly distinct to him, Is wholly inaudible to any one else. It is high time that the use of a receiving instrument of this character became general in the telegraph service.
Under the present condition of affairs, it is almost literally true that he who runs may read. Hundreds of telegraphic stations in hotels, railroad depots and other equally public places are equipped with noisy sounders, enabling every message that goes over the wire to or from that or any other station to be read by any person within hearing who is able to do so. There is not the slightest attempt to preserve the secrecy of communication, which ought to be one of the all important requirements of the service.
There are thousands of ex-operators and other persons in the community who can read these signals as easily as they could read a bulletin board, and there is obviously nothing whatever to prevent any one of them from obtaining information of other persons' business or personal matters in this way and using it to their own advantage. It is a state of affairs which calls loudly for immediate reform.—JEngineering Magazine.
Ton Never Heard a Dentist
say that SOZODONT was not a good article to preserve the teeth and gums. This fact is not to be controverted. What gives it suoh prominence aR a curative wash? It is compounded, after years of scientific plodding, of materials calculated to harden tbe gums, remove tbe septic acid, and avoid putrefnotion.
So all ladies say of SPAULDING'S GLUE. They use it to make Lovers stick.
Christmas Greeting.
A merry, merry Christmas to all you girls and boys, A jolly week of holiday with Christmas games and toys. A lot of roasted tuVkey, cranberry sauoe and pie, A lot of good plum pudding if you're good and do not cry. Let every happy youngster keep the toys he likes the best And give his poorer neighbor his ohoioe of all the rest. Let every one do something to make the angels
Bmile
And plant a pretty white stone at the end of this year's mile. —Buffalo News.
Coughing Leads to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the cougn at once.
Relief in Six Hours.
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DEAD HOGS
Also Tallow, Bones and Grease
OF ALL KINDS.
At my factory on the Island southwest of the city.
Harrison Smith,'
Office, 18 8. Second St., TERRE HAUTE, IND.
Dead Animals removed free within ten miles of the city. Telephone, 78.
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CONSUMPTION
SURELY CURED.
To
THE EDITOR—Please
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IF YOU ARE,
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'WINTER FUR HEAIZH,
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WRJJE CPATMORE G.P.A.
LDlHsVlLLE^HAjffVlLLERJ},
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OF THEGULE COAST
MFQKIBA
Railroad Time Tables.
Trains marked thus (P) denote Parlor Cars attached. Trains marked thus denote Bleeping Cars attached daily. Trains marked thus (B) denote Buffet Cars attached. Trains marked thus run dally. All other traiua run daily, Sundays excepted.
E
.MAIN LIKE.
LEAVE FOK THK WKST.
No. 7 Western &x«(V). 1.40 am No. 5 St. Louis Mail .10.11am No. 1 Fast Llne*(P). ........ 2.20 No.
21
St.
IJOUIS EX*1 (D&V) 8.10
pm
No. 18 EtT. Acc .... 4.05 No. 11 Fast Mall* 9.04 JJKA VK FOR THK BAST. No. 12 Cincinnati Express (8) 1.30 am No. 6 New York Express (S«V). 2.20 am No. 4 Mall and Accommodation 7.16 a No. 20 Atlantic Express (DP&V). 12.47 No. 8 Fast Line 2.20 pm No. 2 Indianapolis Acc 6.06
ARRIVE FROM THK KA8T.
No. 7 Western Express (V) .... 1.26 am No. 6 St. Louis Mali*1 10.06 am No. 1 Fast Line «(P) 2.05 pm No. 21 St. Louis Ex" (D&V) 8.05 No. 8 Mall and Accommodation 6.46 No. 11 Fast Mail 9.00 pm
ARRIVB FROM THE WKST.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express (S) 1.20 am No. 6 New York Express (S«V). 2.10 am No. 14 Effingham Ac 9.80 a ro No. 20 Atlantic Express (P&V)... 12.42 No. 8 Fast Line 2.06 No. 2 Indianapolis Acc 6.00 pm
T.H.4L DIVISION.
LEA VK FOK THK NORTH.
No. 62 South Bend Mall 6.20 am No. 64 South Bend Express 4.00 ARRIVE FROM TBI NORTH. No. 61 Terre Haute Express 11.46 am No. 68 South Bend Mail 7.80
PEOItIA DIVISION.
ARRIVS FROM NORTHWEST.
No. 78 Pass Ex 11.00 am No. 76 Pass Mail A Ex 7.00 LEAVE FOR NORTHWEST. No. 75 Pass Mall & Ex 7.05 am No. 77 Pass Ex 3.28 pm
IE. &c T. 131.
ARRIVE FROM SOUTH.
No. 6 Nash A C. Lira* (V) 4.30 a No. 2 T. H. & East Ex* 11.60 am No. CO Accommodation" 6.00 No. 4 Cb A Ind Ex* (8 A P( 10.60 pm No. 8 World's Fair Special* 4J»pm
LEAVE FOR SOUTH.
No. 3 Ch A Ev Ex* (SAP) 5.10 a No. 7 World's Fair Special*. ,11.65 am No. 1 Ev A Ind Mall 8.16 NO. 6 Ch AN Llm* 10.00
IB.
& X.
ARRIVE FROM SOOTH.
No. 48 Worth Mixed 11.00 am No. 32 Mail A Ex 4.20 pm LEAVE FOR SOOTH, No. 33 Mail A Ex 8.50 am Na 49 Worth'n Mixed 3.20 pm
C.
&c JS1. X.
ARRIVE FROM NORTH.
No. 3 Ch A yn»h Ex*(S) 6.10 am No. 7 Nashville Special* (PAB). .8 00 No. 1 Ch A Ev Ex .......... 1.50 No. SCAN Lim (DAV) 10.00
LEAVE FOR HOKTH.
No. 6CAS Llm (DAV) 4M am No. 2 HA Ch Ex. 1 2 1 0 vm No. 8 Chicago Special* (PAB). 3.20 pm No, 4 Nash A fci*(H) 11.15
C. O- .C. Sc I.-BIG 4. ATOUTQ KAFLT No. 10Boston A N
YJEX*.
I.30&M
No. 2 Cleveland Acc 7.25 am No. IS Southwestern Limited*.... 1.01 No. 8Mail train*. .......... 3.56p
ID
OOIWQ WEST.
Ko. 7 St. Louis Ex* 1.45 a ro No. 17 Limited* ........... 1.45 pm No. 3 Accommodation ... 7.48 pm N 0 a a in 1 0 0 0 a
