THE SUCCULENT PEACH
The Downy, Pink Cheeked Fruit
Is With Us Again.
AN ABUNDANT OBOP THIS YEAB.
Aood Newa From the Orchard* of Dela
ware and Georgia—Importance of the
Peach Growing Industry—How It Haa
Grown In Recent Year*.
The peach is having its day. For a
brief season it is king of the fruits, com-.*
ing just as the berries begin to fail and
before the bulky watermelon has reached
the zenith of its sway. The peach comes
tons this year in the usual large quan
tities in spite of the tribulations of late
frosts, spring storms, dreaded yellows
or adventurous bugs. At the last mo
ment the alarmist orchardists admit
that, contrary to their gloomy forebod-
&
-ft
PICKING PEACHES.
ings, the peach crop is all right. In
fact, it is going to be a big peach year.
As a nation we fully appreciate the
peach. Our appetite for the downy
cheeked, pink skinned, luscious orbs is
something wonderful. During the two
months of July and August, when peach
es are at their best, we eat many thou
sand tons of them every day, and we put
mountains of them into cans for use
during the peachless months.
In six states the raising of peaches for
the home market is a prominent indus
try and gives employment to a great
army of workers. We spend more money
for this summer luxury alone than we
do in maintaining our entire army and
navy.
Maryland, Georgia, Delaware, New
Jersey, Michigan and California are our
great peach states—pretty well distrib
uted geographically, you see. Of course
other states grow more or less peaches
—in fact, there is hardly a state in the
Union where they are not grown—but it
is on these six that we depend to supply
the country. Ten years ago or less Del
aware would have stood at the head of
the list, but the little state has had to
take aback seat since the Maryland and
Georgia growers have gone into the
business so extensively. Yet Delaware
is raising more peaches this season than
for 20 years before, as the crop about to
be gathered will probably exceed 7,000,
000 baskets. Florida, New York and
Connecticut also furnish a good many
peaches, but their distribution is main
ly within state lines. Georgia peaches
are scattered to all points of the com
pass and are sold from Boston to St.
Louis and from New Orleans to Minne
apolis.
California sends her peaches, along
with her other marvelous fruits, to
every part of the country, and some
even find their way to England, but
east of the Mississippi California peach
es have to take second place while the
local fruit is in season.
Perhaps Georgia should have the
first place in the ranks of the peach
growing states. The Georgia orchards
are certainly the greatest individually,
although collectively they are not so
large as are those of Delaware. On the
Delaware peninsula it is estimated that
there are almost 9,000,000 peach trees
in full bearing. The orchards are small,
however, in comparison with those of
Georgia.
The greatest peach orchard in Georgia,
and probably the largest one in all the
world, is the Edgewood fruit farm, lo
cated about 25 miles from Macon. It
consists of 1,087 acres of land. Of this
tract 887 acres have been converted into
one great peach orchard, a square mile
in extent, and the rest is occupied by a
peach tree nursery, houses and factories.
It is owned by a stock company, and the
founder was a young Connecticut fruit
8. H. BUMPH, THE GKOEGIA PEACH KING.
grower, who is still president of the
company. The owjharS is only 6 years
old, but already its peaches are famous.
There are in this single orchard 100,
000 peach bearing trees, and about this
season of year the Edgewood farm is
one of the busiest spots in the whole
state. The 100,000 trees are planted in
a single block or square, and every one
of them oan be seen from an observatory
whioh rises from the great central pack
ing shed. 1?h«re are 17 miles of drives
through the orchard, whioh is laid out
with streets and avenues intersecting at
right angles. Just now fully 500 people
and 100 horses and mules are kept very
busy picking the ripe fruit from the
trees, packing it in baskets and orates
and shipping it in refrigerator oars north
and west.
When the season is at its height, 10 or
13 carloads of peaches are shipped every
day. A oar holds 550 orates. This year
there are about 70,000 crates to be picked
and shipped, and the work has been un
der way since the middle of July, A
merry and busy time it is on a big peach
farm like thia While the pioking is
largely done by colored help, the lighter
work of packing is done by the young
white people of Houston county. Every
night after work there are sounds of
merrymaking, for the oolored folkfe in
dulge in breakdowns and jigs to the
musio of the banjo, while the white peo
ple dance quadrilles and waltzes on the
broad verandas of the boarding houses.
When the demand for fruit falls off
by reason of a glut in the market,
then the canning factories are started,
and the ripe fruit is saved from spoiling.
"What do you do with so many
peaohes was asked of a Georgia farmer
who was expatiating to a visitor on the
amount of fruit he raised in his little
orchard.
'Oh, we eat what we can, and what
we can't we can," was his reply.
And that is exactly what they da
Canned peaches, as you know, are a
cheap and staple article the world over.
Another big Georgia peacfi farm is
that of Mr. S. H. Rumph. He is called
the peach king of Georgia, not because
his orchard is the largest, but because
it was he who first attracted attention
to the money making possibilities of
peach growing. You will still be told
in Georiga of the great crop of 1887,
when from an orchard of less than 200
acres Mr. Bumph cleared $50,000. Since
then he has been known as the peach
king, although larger and perhaps more
profitable orchards have been planted
since. But Mr. Rumph has been plant
ing peach trees since then, too, and last
year he made a net profit from his or
chard and nurseries of $100,000.
You may be sure that, with cotton
down to bedrock prices, the Georgia
farmers have not been blind to the
money making chances which this com
paratively new industry opens to them.
They have fully realized that no other
crop, that can be raised in Georgia pays
better on the investment than the peach
crop, and consequently every year more
than a million new trees are put into
the ground. Of course this will eventu
ally result in a glut in the market that
will last all through the season, but
until that time arrives new orchards
will be started.
The peach raising fever in Georgia is
similar to the craze for planting orange
groves in Florida, which received a
deathblow by the snowstorm of two
A PRETTY PEACH PACKER.
years ago, that destroyed thousands of
orchards worth over $1,000,000. The
same craze once seized the Delaware
farmers, and they paid high prices for
land that was before almost useless. A
glut in the peach market, followed by
the appearance of the peach yellow,
which killed acres of trees, checked this
enthusiasm a few years ago, and there
are Delaware farmers today who hate
the very name of the fruit. They are
the men who paid from $300 to $500 an
acre for land and planted peach orchards
only to lose the savings of many years.
But in Georgia today you will hear
stories of small growers who have sold
their peach crops for fabulous prices.
They say that a Tifton grower sold
peaches in New York for $12 a bushel
in 1894, and that another man realized
$1,500 an acre for his crop. With these
unusual if not exaggerated figures as a
basis of calculation the enthusiastic
orchardist or prospective peach grower
sits down and figures himself out a rich
man with very little exertion. As a re
sult some of them are sorely disap
pointed.
But many farmers are doubling their
incomes by raising peaches as an extra
crop. Orchard land can be bought for
from $5 to $25 an acre, and with a cap
ital of a few hundred dollars quite a re
spectable orchard can be planted. The
cultivation is comparatively easy, and
while his trees are reaching the produc
ing point he can raise early vegetables
and other products- sufficient to make a
living. When his trees begin to bear,
which requires but three or four years,
he can realize handsomely. Young trees
will produce about two, crates to the
tree, and he will probably clear from $1
to $2 per crate. Twenty acres of peach
trees should yield a net income of from
$2,500 to $3,000 a year.
Along the line of the Central Railroad
of Georgia there are more than 2,000,
000 peach trees in bearing and fully as
many more that will be producing fruit
in a year or twa When you consider
that a peach tree will continue to bear
for from 20 to 80 years you oan calcu
late that it will be a long time before
the peach crop will fail entirely, unless
pome unforeseen catastrophe overtakes
the orchards. CYBUS SYLVESTER.
PERSONAL GOSSIP.
The president of the republic of An
dorra, in the Pyrenees, receives a salary
of $15 a year.
Georges Charpentier, the Paris pub
lisher, has retired from the firm that
bears his name.
The widow of Baron Hirsoh has made
a donation of 100,000,000 francs to pro
mote the emigration of Russian Jews to
Argentina.
Senator Blackburn of Kentucky is an
athlete among athletes. He rides horse
back, not a bike, and thinks horseback
riding and hunting the finest of sports.
The queen of the Bismarck archipela
go, who is inaking a tour around the
world, will visit all the principal places
in the United States. Her sister lives in
Haverhill, Mass.
Count Adam Moltke, who has recent
ly become engaged to Miss Louisette
Bonaparte of Baltimore, has an Ameri
can aunt in the daughter of Benjamin
Hutton of Orange, N. J.
Miss Florence Lauterbach, daughter
of Edward Lauterbach, president of the
New York Republican county commit
tee, has begun the study of law as a stu
dent in the offioe of her father.
Photographs whioh were recently
taken of Prince Bismarck and Li Hung
Chang sitting together on the terrace of
the ex-chancellor's house at Friedrichs
ruh have been placed on sale in Berlin.
Two babes at English, Ind., have re
cently been christened Abraham Lin
coln Ulysses Grant William McKinley
and Thomas Jefferson Andrew Jackson
James Monroe William Jennings Bryan.
Marshall Field, the millionaire mer
chant of Chicago, it is said, intends to
make Washington his winter home. He
is to build a palace of such proportions
as to give his entree a profound impres
sion.
Pierre Loti is said to spend more of
his time before the camera than any
man in Europe, except Kaiser William
and the Prince of Wales. He has a
mania for being protographed in fancy
costumes.
The veteran German rope dancer
Kirie, who has just died at the age of
77, performed on the tight rope a week
before his death. He was celebrated
outside of his profession as the father
of 35 children.
John Quinn, a Louisville policeman,
weight 245 pounds, was married the
other day to Miss Mary E. Smith, who
weighs more than 200 pounds. They
are the heaviest bridal couple of the
year in Louisville.
Bishop Alfred E. Curtis (Roman
Catholic) of the diocese of Wilming
ton, Del., has forwarded to Rome his
resignation of his see because he be
lieves that he has reached the age (63)
when he should give his place to an
other.
Mr. Arthur Pinero, the English
dramatist, is a man of pronounced in
tellectual .presence. He has a fine fore
head, bulging out somewhat over the
eyes, and those strong, heavy frontal
arches which are almost instinctively
associated with brain power.
William Brooks, who deserted from
the English navy and was reported dead,
is now in a predicament. He wants to
be recognized as alive., even if he will
be tried for desertion. The officials,
however, refuse to revise their dead list,
and as he is officially "dead" Brooks
is a much perturbed man.
STAGE GLINTS.
Hilda Spong, the Australian actress,
is on her way to London.
'Trilby'' is reported to have cleared
over $15,000 in six weeks at Melbourne.
Sir Henry Irving begins rehearsing
"Cymbeline" at the London Lyoeum in
a fortnight.
Adrienne Dairolles has been engaged
by Daniel Frohman for his production
of "Les Deux Grosses."
Zelie de Lussan was the star enter
tainer at a reception given in London
by Henry Labouchere.
W. S. Hart is specially engaged for
the leading heroic part in the coming
production of "The Great Northwest."
Harry Shannon has closed a contract
with Lillian Mortimer and will star
her next season in a repertory of his
own plays.
Wilson Barrett, it is whispered in
London, has for some time been married
to Maud Jeffreys, but the matter bias
been kept a secret.
A unique play is reportedt a big hit
in Siam. Queen Victoria is the heroine,
who goes to war with the king of Siam,
and, being vanquished, eventually mar
ries him.
Beerbohm Tree's next American tour,
beginning in the autumn, will be of 12
weeks' duration and will include only1
four oities, New York, Boston, Wash
ington and Philadelphia.
One advertiser in an English dramatio
paper wants "a colored man must be
tall and of dark complexion," and an
other seeks to introduce a new song
whioh "mnst be sung in pantomime."
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
An ordinary silk hat weighs only
•even ounces.
In Berlin no woman is allowed to
ride on the top of an omnibus,
In England men of title who, for a
consideration, allow their names to fig
ure in the direotory of stock companies
are called "guinea pigs."
The Westminster Gazette* says that
2,896 of Spurgeon's sermons have been
printed and sold, and that the sum total
of the sales reaches nearly 100,000,000,
an average of about 85,000 copies per
sermon.
Otmvejrard Idtoiwtnr*,,
The fashion of the world changes,
and the trade of the epitaph maker
grows slack. Here and there, it is true,
some one is still honored after the old
custom, but for the most part a text,
appropriate or the reverse, a brief reo
ord of birth and death, a word or two of
vague and general significance, with
possibly a simple expression of regret,
have replaced in our modern cemeteries
those shorthand histories of the dead,
tragio or humorous, tender or severe,
Borne stained as with wine and made bloody,
And some HB with tears,
whioh formerly marked their resting
places.
It is not that in these later years men
have lost that craving for remembrance
which, as old as life itself, is so vain,
in the case at least of the commonalty
of the race, that it might well be a sub
ject for laughter were it not that what,
seen from without is purely grotesque,
assumes quite another complexion when
it is touched by our own personality.
It is not that the desire to. be remem
bered Is gone, and it is likely enough
that in some fashion or another we
should all srill be epitaph makers, for
ourselves or other people, if we had not
lost faith in the permanency of the
work. But time brings involuntary wis
dom. "Our fathers find their graves in
our short memories, and sadly tell us
how we may be buried in our sur
vivors." "While I live," promises a
lover with melancholy truthfulness in
a Roman epitaph quoted by Mr. Pater
•—"while I live you will receive this
homage after my death, who can tell?"
Aud so it comes to pass that, submit
ting to the inevitable, men learn to lim
it their aspirations and to content them
selves, by way of epitaph, with the
"two narrow words, 'Hie jacet,' with
which, says Sir Walter Raleigh, "elo
quent death" covers all.—I. A. Taylor
in North American Review.
What to Say About the Baby.
One is always expected to say some
thing when looking for the first time on
a new baby, and, as it is neither kind
nor safe to tell the truth and say that
the little, red, podgy creature doesn't
look like anything, an English maga
zine gives a list of unpatented and un
copyrighted remarks to be used on such
occasions:
"Isn't he sweet? He looks like you."
"I think he is going to look like his
father."
"Hasn't he dear little fingers? Do let
me see his dear little toes."
"Isn't he large?"
"Isn't he a tiny darling?"
"How bright he seems."
"Did you ever see such a sweet little
mouth?"
"Isn't he just too sweet for any
thing?"
"The dear little darling. I never saw
so young a baby look BO intelligent."
"Do, please, let me hold him just a
minute."
Any and all of these remarks are war
ranted to give satisfaction, just as they
have been giving satisfaction from time
immemorial until the present day. —Ex
change.
Tom Reed'a Argument Against Hanging.
"Did yon ever hear Tom Reed's argu
ment against capital punishment?"
asked an attorney. 'It was over in Tops
ham, during Tom's undergraduate ex
perience at Bowdoin. A deaoon had ar
gued that' Whoso sheddeth man's blood,
by man shall his blood be shed.' The
Mosaic law didn't hit young Mr. Reed,
so he jumped up and drawled: 'Sup
posing, sir, we take the law which the
gentleman has quoted and see where the
logical deduction would bring us out.
For instance, one man kills another,
and another man jumps in and kills the
man who killed the first, and so on un
til we come to the last man on earth?
Who is going to kill him? He can't com
mit suicide.- It is contrary to law, for
the same law forbids it. Now, deacon,
what's the last man going to do? Must
he wait until he is struck by lightning?'
"The logic was unfair, bnt it won
the debate.Lewiston Journal.
A
Chamberlain Story.
The remarkable youthfulness of Mr.
Chamberlain's appearance has given
rise to many stories. Here is one of
them: In the days when he was a mem
ber of Mr. Gladstone's administration
the distinguished statesman had occa
sion to cross the Irish sea on a day when
the boat was overcrowded and there
were no berths for all. He was attend-,
ed by a private. secretary with a beard.
The private secretary picked acquaint
ance with a Scotchman, and the Scotch
man made a suggestion for the distri
bution of the party on the principle of
age before honors. "You and I, mon,"
he said, "will occupy the berths, and
the wee laddie can just lie himself down
on the floor."
Persian Tears.
A physician who has just returned
from a visit to Persia says that the Per
sians still believe that human tears are
a remedy for certain chronic diseases.
At every funeral the bottling of mourn
ers' tears is one of the chief features of
the ceremonies. Each of the mourners
is presented with a sponge with whioh
to mop off his face and eyes, and after
the burial they are presented to the
priest, who squeezes the tears into bot
tles, which he keeps. This custom is one
of the oldest known in the east and has
probably been practiced by the Persians
for thousands of years. Mention is made
of it in the Old Testament.
Where Woman Proposes.
Between the mountains of India and
Persia is a powerful tribe among whom
an extraordinary custom prevails. Wom
an's rights have apparently received full
recognition, for the ladies of the tribe
oan ohoose their own husbands. All a
single woman bas to do when she wish
os to ohange her state is to send a serv
ant to pin a handkerohief to the hat of
the man on whom her fanoy lights, and
he is obliged to marry her, unless he
oan show he is too poor to purohase hex
at the prioe her father requires.
DOCTOR!.
JJOMEB Y.^PBIBSON, M. D.7
(iraduate Bush Medical College,
House physician St. Man's Hospital,
•lis, Minn. Office over Hirsh's clothing store,
attended day and night.
J^BTHUB WEST ALLEN, M. D.J
OPEBATIVE SCBOEBT
Bra AND EAB A SPECIALTY.
Surgeon C., M. & St. P. By. Office, night'and
day, Opera house, main entrance, Austin.
H. JOHNSON, M. D., C. M.,
Graduate McGill Medical College, Montreal,
late Assistant Surgeon in Montreal General
Hospital, Office in George W. Merrick's block,
opposite Opera house. Calls attended day
and night.
P. LOCKWOOD, M. D.,
HOMEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN
AND SUBGEON,
Office over Golden Eagle Clothing Store, Austiik
Office hours, IS to 8 p. m. Calls promptly at
tended to day or night.
F.
E. DAIGNEAU, M. D.,
PHYSICIAN AND SUBGEON.
Special attention given to diseases of the EYES,
EABS, NOSE AND THROAT AND ELECTBO-THE
BAPEUTICS. Errors of refraction scientifically
corrected and glasses ground to suit the re
quirements of each individual case.
LAWYERS.
beenma¥&"dowdall,"
ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELOBS AT LAW.
Law, Insurance, Collections and Loans. Office
in Schleuder's Block, Austin, Minn.
J. M. Greenman, City Attorney, B. J. Dowdall.
INGSLEY & SHEPHEBD,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW AND COUNSELOBS,
Austin, Minn. Law, Land and Loan Office
Insurance, Collections, Taxes.
•J^YMAN D. BAIBD,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Beal Estate, Insurance and Collection Agent.
Office, Mill Street, next west of Citizens' Bank.
E.
B. CRANE,
ATTOBNEY AT LAW,
Beal Estate and Collection Agent. Taxes paid
for non-residents. Office, second floor of Don
kelmann's new Block, Main Street.
S. D. CATHERWOOD,
GENERAL LAW BUSINESS^
Successor to Johnson & Catherwood.
Office established in 1859.
Solner's Block.. ..Austin.
PROFESSIONAL.
A. AVEBY,
DENTIST
Office over Citizens' National Bank, Anstin
LLAN MOLLISON,
A'
Insurance and Collections promptly attended
to. Office over Loucks & Hollister's, opposite
Court House, Main Street, Austin, Minn.
SOCIETIES,
UDELITY LODGE, No. 39, A. F. AND A. M.
The regular communications of this lodge are
held in Masonic hall Austin, Minn., on the first
and third Wednesday evenings of each month.
Mec
A. C. PAGE, W. M.
C. H. WILBQUB, Secretary.
OYAL ABCH CHAPTEB, NO. 14.
The stated communications of this Chapter are
held in Masonic hall, Austin, Minn., on the
second and fourth Friday evenings of each
month. WM. TODD, M. E. H. P.
D. Z. B0BIN80N, Secretary.
T. BEBNABD COMMANDEBY, K. T. No. 13,
Leets first Monday evening of each month at
Masonic hall. N. S. GORDON, E. C.
PARKE GOODWIN. Becorder.
A
USTIN LODGE No. 55, K. OF P.,
Meets on the second and fourth Wednesday
evenings of each month. Visiting Knights
welcomed. S. D. CATHEBWOOD, C. C.
S. S. WASHBURN, K. of B. and S.
cINTYBE POST, No. 66, G. A. B.
Regular meetings are held at their post hall on
the first and third Saturday evenings of each
month. Visiting comrades cordially invited.
G. W. MERRICK, Commander.
B. J. VANVALKENBUEGH, Adjutant.
J. M- MALMBRRG,
DEALER IN
FURNITURE
OF ALL KINDS.
WALL PAPER
AND
WINDOW SHADES
UNDERTAKING IN FNNWRRTIAM
Northwestern Nursery Company
OF ALBERT LEA, MINN.
CLARENCE WEDGE, Proprietor.
Everything Adapted to Minnesota and the
north. Choice fresh stock. Reliable salesmen.
Why buy trees of strangers and distant nurser
ies when you can get tnem fresh from an ad
joining county of our Mower county agent.
Sly CAPT. S. H. JUDD.
RYE GLASSRS.
Office over L.
P. Nelson's store,
where he is pre
pared to do all
kinds of work in
Dentistry, in
cluding gold
crown work.
Teeth extracted
without hurting.
AysTiN,
I carry a full stock of
the best Eye Glasses and
can satisfactorily fit all
cases. Eyes examined free
Glasses ground to order.
Errors of refraction scien
tifically corrected.
T. O. RYE,
Dealer in Optical Goods, Watches, Silverware
and Jewelry. Opposite Transcript Office.
B. P. B. PECK.—DENTISTRY.
MINN.
ESTABLISHED 1866.
ENCH. A. W. WRIONT
FRENCH WRIGHT,
Successors to Bichardson, Day &|Co.,
and Lafayette French.
A SPECIALTY.
Also deal in Beal Estate, Negotiate Loans,
and carefully attend to collections, Austin.
4131.
ional Bank,
AUSTIN, MINN.
Incorporated as a State Bank February 1,1887.
Beorganized as a National Bank Oct. 1,1889.
PAID BP CAPITAL,
$50,000.00.
G. SOHLBUDER, Pres. F. I. CRANE, V.-P.
J.^L. MITCHELL. Cashier.
COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY.
Interest allowed on time deposits.
JAMES A. HART,
FLOUR
and PEED.
Mill St., feet. Chatham and Franklin.
TO FARMERS
AND
OTHERS.
I CAN NOW MAKE
LOANS AT ft PER CENT.
on approved Farms and City property.
TERMS MOST
FAVORABLE AND EASY.
For further information call at my
ABSTRACT OFFICE. It will pay you.
WILLIAM M. HOWE,
AUSTIN, MINN.
NEW YOBK.
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CHICAGO MILWAUKEE & ST. P. R'Y.
TIMETABLE.
IOWA & MINNESOTA DIVISION.
Arrives at Austin from Chicago and Milwaukee
via Calmar:
Passengerl No. 1, 6:50 a.m.INo. 3, 2:35 p.m.
Freight.-.I No. 93, 7:25 p.m.!*No. 65, 1:30 a.m.
From St. Louis & Kansas City via Mason City.
Passengerl *No. 101, 6:45 a.m.j»No. 103, 2:35 p.m.
Freight.• I *No. 195, 5:35 p.m.|*No. 173, 9:30 a.m.
From St. Paul and Minneapolis:
Passengerll*No. 2,12:10 p.m. I *No. 4, 8:40 p.m.
Freight. No. 92, 2:30 p..m.lNo. 72,11:30 a.m.
Departs from Austin to Chicago and Milwau
kee via Calmar:
Passengerl|No. 2,12:35 p.m.INo. 4, 9:00 p.m.
Freight. ll*No. 78, 4:00 a.m. [No. 94, 7:15 a.m.
To St. Louis and Kansas City via Mason City.
Passengerl|*No.l02,12:30 p.m.l*No.l04, 9:05 p.m.
Freight...] |*No.l96,ll:55 a.m.)
To St. Paul and Minneapolis
Passengerll*No. 1, 7:10 a.m.|*No. 3, 3:00 p.m.
Freight... [|No. 91, 6:20 a.m.|*No. 75, 6:15 p.m.
SOUTHERN MINNESOTA DIVISION.
Arrives at Austin from Chicago and Milwau
kee via LaCrosse:
PassengerlI No. 1, 4:15a.m.|No. 23,11:55 a.m.
Freight..-11 No. 91, 6:20 p.m.lfNo. 69, 5:30 a.m.
From Jackson, Mankato, Wells and Albert
Lea:
Passengerl I No. 4, 7:55 p.m. I No. 22,11:45 aan.
Freight... I |No. 94, 5:30 p.m.)
Departs from Austin to Chicago and Milwau
kee via LaCrosse:
Passengerl INo. 22,12:40 p.m. No. 4, 8:20 p.m.
Freight... 11 No. 92, 7:30 a.m. |No. 6S, 1:00 a.m.
To Albert Lea, Wells, Mankato and Jackson:
PassengerlINo. 1, 7:20 a.m.' No. 23, 8:15 p.m.
Freight...11 No. 93, 6:45 a.m.l*No. 63, 6:30 p.m.
•Daily. tSunday only. All others daily, ex
cept Sunday.
Iowa & Minnesota train No. 75 carries passen
gers to Northfield only.
I. & M. trains Nos. 1 and 4 carry through
sleep jr between Austin and Chicago via Dubu
que. Nos. 102 and 108 carry through sleeper bet
ween Austin and St. Louis via Mason City and
Iowa Central.
Southern Minnesota trains Nos. 22 and
1
carry
through sleeper between Austin and LaCrosse.
I. & M. tram No. 104 has through sleeper via
Mason City to Peoria.
C. W. SNEBE, Agent.
CHICAGO A,
GREAT
WESTERN
Maple Leaf
Koulc"
GOING SOUTH.
No. 76 No. 78
Lv Chicago 11:30 p. m. 6 :S0 p. m.
Lv Kansas City...... 7:50 p.m. 11:15 a. m,
Lv St. Paul 7:30 a. m. 8:10 p. m.
Lv Hayfield 11:15 a. m. 6:0Q a. m.
Ar Austin 11:58 a. m. 7:05 a. m,
Lv Austin 11:58 a. m. 8:05 a.
Ar Lyle. 12:80 p. m. 3:45 a.
Ar Manly 8:00 p. m.
GOING NORTH.
No. 75 No. 77
Lv Manly 5:45 p. m.
Lv Lyle 9:00 a. m. 7 K)0 p. m.
Ar Austin 9:25 a. m. 7:35 p. m.
Lv Austin 9:25 a. m. 8:05 p. m.
Ar Hayfield 10:00 a. m. 9:15 p. m.
Ar St. Paul 1:55 p. m. 7:45 a. m,
Ar Kansas City 7:00 a. m. 3:15 p. m.
Ar Chicago 10:00 p. m. 9:30 a. m.
All Austin trains daily, except Sunday.
ABTHUB COLB, Agent.