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AUSTIN WEEKLY STATESMAN. THURSDAY. JUNE 23 1837. z - I I MIME; NO FEE ' ESTABLISHED 1851 j 811 UNTIL B?TUR. f St. Louis, Mo. ' LOCUST ST. The Regular Old-Established I PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Is illll Treating with the Greatest ma and snwrcss IA1 V V Vrilllir?lini who by their own acts o? ALAS I Ala for all h'sh lwpes and nil desires! Like Iravs iu yellow autumn time they fill. Alas for prayers and rumltns, a:i.l low's pure fin's, Oue ailet.ee and one darkuesa ends them nil. Alas for oj! mankind sad, fleet in-? raw: Alas, my l-jvo, for you aad m clis! Some day death holds us In a close embrace; We, too, Jikf ail the rust, from earth must pass. Alan! to think we shall forget some hours Whereof the memory like love's plain t glows Forget them, on the year her withered flowers Forget them, as the sun forgets the rose. WHAT KILLS AMERICANS. Our keenest rapture, our most deep despair. Our hopes, our dreads, our laughter and our tears. Shall be no mor" at all upon the air- No more at all through all the endless years. Fist Livinft Reckless Eating Hard Drinking-Foor Sleeping- Social Jealousy Political Am bitionViolent Pas sionsThe Kace for Money. 18 BOOKS AND AUTHORS. never-failing success. MIDDLE-AGEDMEH .11 Imprudenceor Four sutler irom nervous ueDimy, r-irutnting urum upon the Fountains of Life, affecting Mind, Body aat mannood, should comult tne celebrated UK. CLARKE at once. Remember! Nervous diseases (with or without dream) or debility and !o of nerve power trebled scienlinully by new method wiin who now find the pen alties following their Transgressions, iuiWrcuomor Over Brain Work, nay consult with the auurance of Speedy Relief and a Permanent Cure, if withinreach of Human Skill, ni Tt Rirl who suffer from weakneiiei will find ULUlVlLll immediate Relief and Comfort.and la nianv cur. u ierfnanent cure. J-The terrible polaons of Syphilis and all bad blood and skin diseases, completely eradicated with out mercury. 9f Remember that this one horriDie disease, if neglected or improperly treated curses fhe nretnt and eominr reiterations. Md-Al unnatural diichargej cured promptly with out hindrance to buiineif . Old Gleets, Strictures and all diseases of the eenitc-urinary organt cured without injury to stomach, kidneys or other organi, - No experiments, Both sesn consult confi dentially. -Aze and experience important. 44lt makes no difference what you have taken of -wno na lanea 10 cure you. Mf Send 4 cts. pottage for Celebrated Works on Chronic, Nervous and Delicate lhieaes Con sultation personally or by letter, free. Consult the old Doctor. Thousands cured. Offices and parlors private. Those contemplating marriage send lor l)r. Clarke's celebrated guide. Male anil Female, each 15c., both $c.,fMamps). Before confiding your -case, consult DR. CLARKE. A friendly letter, or Call may save future suffering and shame and add golden years to life. Medicine and Works sent everywhere secure trom exposure. Moure, stos; Sundays, 9 tola, Address; F. D. CLARKE. M. D.. SI 1 Locust Street, St. Louis, Mo. is thoA which ctwvWns jNo Opium Lung DLOMrl ,J suV Coup DR, DROf.lGOOLE'S ENGLISH FEMALE BITTERS A powerful I ii rini' I .m u 11 1 l Winnie Ki-lmi Intor, for the rii r.' ..f nil Ki'inhIo ( i.iiipliiiiiu iiii'l Irrtxu lnrili. .-Ki.r h iilMint'i'l-lK. 'ham,l feiirul . 'Vriir" iiMiil.- l m i: 01, 11 p pi 11 1, 1 i .11 1., .P. DROMCOOLE A CO., Louis.. ... K Dr: BraKK, HouiBopn'hio Physician and Surgeon. Com pound oxygen. Office and home treatment for the cure of con sumption, bronchitis, catarrh, , nntliitut, dyspepsia, blood nnd nervous diseases. Hours: 10 n. m. to 12 m., nnd 4 to C p. ni. .'tilt Congress avenue, Au-itin, Texas. "A UVlt'K IO MOTH F.KS. "Mrs. Window's Soothing (Syrup should always bo used for children teething.' It soothes the ohild, soften the gums, rI lays all pain, cures wind colij, and is the Ht remedy for diarrhmn. 2fc. n bottle "l"he Becchor So $22,620. monument Mud amoants Miraculous Escape. "W. W. Reed, druggint, of Winchester, Ind., writes: ''One of my customers, Mrs. Ixiuisia l'ike, Bartonia, Hnndolph county, lad., was a long BufTerer with consump tion, and was given up to die by h.r phy sicians. Hhe heard of Dr. King's New Dimovery for Consumption, and beguu baying it of me. In six months, time she walked to this city, a distance of six miles, and is now ao much improved she has quit using it. She feels she owes her life to it. Free trial bottle at Morloy Bros. No fewer than 12)1 clergymen from New York for Europe in a day recently. sailed single AS IMPORTANT ELEMENT Of the success of Hood's Snrsaparilla is the faol that every purchaser receives a fair equivalent for Lis money. The fa miliar headline, "100 Doses One Dollar," stolen by imitators, is original with and trae only of Hood's 8arsaparilla. This can easily be proven by anyone who de sires to test the matter. For real econ- oiy, buy only Hood's Snrsaparilla. Sold hj all druggists. Harper's Weekly says that if Senator onerman bad been the republican candi late in 1884, there would have been no re publican bolt. But that was before Sena XorS. spoke his Springfield piece. Saved His Life. Mr. D.I. Wilcoxson, of Horse Cave, Ky ays he waa, for many years, badly afflict-, d with phthisio, also diabetes; the pains were almost unendurable and would some times almost throw him into convulsions. He tried Electric Bitters and got relief from first bottle, and after taking six bot tles was entirely cured and had gained in .flesh eighteen pounds. Says he positively Relieves he would have died, had in not 'been for the relief afforded by Electirc Hitters. Sold at fifty cents a bottle by .Morley Bros. We sliall be mute beneath the grass nr.d dew We shall lie very mute there. In Ueatu s state And you will be as I, snd 1 as you One sameness Kneu ujxn us, nun oue imc. I'bilip Uourke Marston lu Toe Iudeiiendent. A. T. STEWART'S APPOINTMENT. hont Ills Chanee of Hecoiiilng at States manLeft Out In the Cold. Nolxxly dreamed then that Mr. Stewart would be opwinteJ secretary of the treasury, but before the 4'.h of March the pla?o was of fered to him. As the world knows he was appointed and confirmed, and then it wa3 dis covered that ho was ineligible. A forgotten law prohibited any ono interested in imports from holding the office of secretary of the treasury. Stewart bad been immensjly gra tified at the offer, and was anxious to hold the post. He projiosed to turn over his great bu inoss to trustees for the space of four years, the entiro profits to be devoted to some public or charitable purpose in which he should not be interested. But the device was insufficient to obviate the difficulty and another secretary was ap pointed in his stead. Thus Stewart lost his chance of becoming a statesman. The presi dent could find another secretary of the treas ury, but Stewart had no other president to turn to. He became a plain dry goods man again, without place, or power, or public career. To be so near a great position, and yet to lose it; to be appointed and confirmed, and even congratulated; to have made bis arrangements, and, doubtless, determined on his appointments in advance, and yet to be dashed down to private life, was bard. But besides this, Stewart thought that some of the importance or influence which had been offered him should have been allowed to re main. Ho even wanted to retain a little of the patronage which might have been hM had be entered office. I went out of the country in May, 1SC9, and returned in the next September. Oh arriving at Now York I went to Mr. Stew art's great store, as I hud been used to do bo fore Urant was president, and spent an hour with him iu private talk. I was amazed at the tono of bis conversation. He did not ex pect, he Raid, to enjoy the influence he had once anticipated, but oven the few favors he asked had been withhold. The personal friends he had expected to advance we ro overlooked, or their claims belittled, if not ignored. Judgo Hilton, his life long ess-siK-iate and intimate, ho hail hoped would bn apsjinted collector of New York, nnd a relative of his wife he wanted niailo consul at Havre. Tho collector- ship was gone irretrievably to another, and instead of llavro his relativo was offered Bor deaux. Ho wanted mo to represent this to tho government. But tho government was made up; the carriage was fuX; the train had started, and those who had not succeeded in entering oould hardly expect to be treated like regular passengers. Stewart was out in the colli. Ho saw tho president occasionally after this, and entertained him when ha came to Ne.v York; but their intimacy was at an cud. Adam Badeau's Letter. ends and fill the Odor of the Chinese Quarters. After tho prenattiral activity of the Chi- se, winch makes upon the observer the samo impression produced by the study of one of Doro's sketches of tho lost souls of Dante, forever toiling in tho gloom of the nether world, tho next thing that strikes tho stranger ii the peculiar odor thnt fills the uir; ami that resembles a combination of bad tobacco and tho pungent fumes from tho punk thnt tho American small boy uses on tho Fourth of JuV to light his lire crackers. Mingled with Ibis is the smell of unclean streets, tho whole making a combination not ensily forgotten. The Abbo Huek, who traveled in China in nativo diets, declared that ho could readily deceivo tho peoplo in regard to his nation ality, as bo spoke tho Innguago perfectly, and as long exposmo had stained his (skin to u copiKT color; but tho Chinese dogs always barked fit bis heels, because they detected the absence of the national odor. Tliis smell is due iartly to tho coolio's custom of sleepling in us ficthi-n, l.ui mainly to the fact that the constant sinoliing of opim.j and tobacco, and the preparation of food ut open fires, sub ject the dweller in a Chinese house to per petual fumiution. Hence tho smoky odor diir.;s to him, nnd not oven the breezes of the Fai'iilc have power to dislodge it. Ceorge H Fitch in Cosmopolitan. Good New for the Iliitisliers. Two young men 1-ft Chicago a fow weeks since to go into bu-iinss in Loudon, England. They intend starting in tho world's metropo lis an American lunchery like those of the Kohlsaats and others in Chicago places wherein the luucbors sit on high stools in front of big counters and eat sandwiches, hot cakes, pies, pastry, xirk nnd beans, etc., all clean, wlioleoiuo and cheap, quickly served and presenting tho attractiveness of an al most endless variety. Tho young men in tend muking their Loudon lunchery c,s thor oughly American as jiossible, with mince pie, cider, pumpkin pie, pork and lieans, buck wheat cakes, oyster pies and other dishes dis tinctively Yunkeeisb. They have a capital of only f2,.i(lo between them, but expect to reap a rich harvest from their efforts to show the Londoners a few tricks in tho lunching lino. Chicago, by the way, was tho pioneer iu this model form of lunchery, and to this dny carries on tho business iu a state of per fection reached ly none of thj imitators in other cities. Chiougo Herald. A Very Young Merchant. Some odd facts are occasionally found just beneath a most commonplace surfa"0. Hap pening iu a largo hat and cap establishment wholesale tho other day, I inquired for tho proprietor. A boy about 11 years old was ixiinted out to me. "But I want to see tho proprietor," I said. "Iain the proprietor of this store what can I do for youf exclaimed tho hid. And, suro enough, investigation proved that ho was the actual owner of tho establishment, and nominally the head of the firm. His father had owned tho store, but, having other business as well and not wishing to carry them both iu his own name, present ed the hat and cap establishment to his 11 year old son and placed the boy in charge. Of course the father still exercises general control, but the legal head of tho firm, signer of chocks, keeper of tho combination of the safe and man of authority is the son, un doubtedly the youngest wholesale merchant n Chicago. Chicago Herald. John Boylo O'Koilly does not lielieve thut Queen Victoria owns real estate in Washing ton, as sho would have to ay taxes out of her own pocket on it if shs did. The alarming disease of this country irvous debility and prostration. It goes under many names, but it is essen tially the same complaint. Hospitals and private institutions for nervous patients are crowded. The average of life in the United States is decreasing every year Sudden deaths from nervous collapse among our business, professional and public men are so frequent as scarcely to excite remark. The majority of suicides committed without apparent reason, or under so-called "depression of spirits," are really prompted by nervous prostra tion, which is a fruitful source of insanity and crime, with all their grief and horror. These facts are startling. They threaten the very life of the nation. They assail the springs of its power and prosperity They wreck manhood's strength and wo man's usefulness BDd beauty. Every one should know the causes What are they J The answer is easy and terribly plain: Our vicious personal hab its; our careless and lawless eating and drinking; the intense mental and physi al strain arising from our mad race after money, position and influence; the fears and struggles of poverty; the use of nar coticj and stimulance; our fashion of turning day into night and night into dny; aud, briefly, our, desperate willingness to pay any price for an hour's pleasure or success. So we burn life's candle at both lunatic asylum and the graveyards The disease from which we suffer and die is, in plain English, Nervous Dyspep sia, as it is seated in the Nerves and in the organs of Digestion, Assimilation and Nutrition. Healthy digestion being im peded or destroyed, the whole body, nerves included, is literally starved; even when there is no emaciation to tell the sad story. Nervous prostration sends out its warn ings: henduche in tie morning; a per sistent dull heaviness or aching at the base of the brain; wakefulness; loss of appetite and disgust with food; loss of mental energy and interest in ordinary duties and business; restlessness and ani iety without any assignable reasons; er uctations; bad breath; foul mucous on the teeth; occasional giddiness; palpitation of the heart; sallowness of theskin; coated tongue and gradual failure of strength and ambition. The remedy is a total abandonment of the habit and customs which cause the disease in each individul case, and the use of Shaker Extract of Roots (Seigel's Syrup) to cure the mischief already done. This great remeJy, prepared by the Shaker Community of Mt. Lebanon, N. Y., is especially adapted to eradicate Nervous Dyspepsia. To do this it directly nnd gently but powerfully tho disordered stomach, liver and kidneys, restoring their tone and vigor, promoting thf secretion of bile, expelling waste matters from the system, and purifying the blood. Upon the nervous system Shaker Ex tract (Seigel's Syrup) acts as a safe and wholesome anodyne without the slightest norcotic effect, and then leaves the nerves are gain their natural tone and strengths through its wonderful influence upon the function of nutrition. It is safe to say more nervous dyspep tics have been restored by it from the depths of misery to a fresh enjoyment of life aud labor thn.n by any or all other forms of troatment combined. ac's u n; o John S. Mosby's "War Reminiscences" are announced for publication the last of this month. As was of course inevitable, Tom Stevens' bicvele tour around the world is to be the subject of a book. Mr. J. E. Cabot's memoirs of Emerson, in cluding much valuable and unpublished mat ter, will be issued late in May. Old yachtsmen and veterans of the turf will doubtless find something to interest them in "Sports and Anecdotes of Bygone Days," by U. T. S. a. Kichardson. Mr. Julian Hawthorne, whose pen is kept very busy by the demands upon it from all quarters, contributes to the current Epoch a very entertaining story, entitled "An III Wind." The first number of Mrs. Jenness Miller's iconoclastic monthly, Dress, will appear in May. It will open a vigorous war on the fetich of fashion, and advocate a radical reform in the feminine wardrobe. The poet Whittier has written the intro duction for Whipple's volume of essays on "American Literature." recently published, The Boston critic's literary remarks' seem to be considerable in quantity and uniformly excellent in quality. "Josiah Allen's Wife" has been spending h' winter iu Washington and at Old Point Comfort, and duly chronicles her experiences and observations in "A Pleasure Exertion." Those w ho are partial to this species of humor win mm this just the sort of book they like. IL Bernard Carpenter's "Liber Amoris" stands well the test of criticism on both sides of the Atlantic, and is taking rank as one of the mast meritorious volumes of verse pub lished during the year. Its faults are those of an excess rather than a paucity of imagination. The author most in demand at present in the Jioston public library is Mary N. Murf ree, alias Charles Egbert Craddock. Mr. Howells, Miss Jewett and William Black are neri in order. Thackeray is gaining on Dickens, but there is more call for Scott than for either of them. Mr. George Bancroft presented Secretary Whitney's baby with a copy of "Paradise Lost" on the occasion of her christening. If the favored infant will study that fine poem carefully she will be able in a few years to appreciate the high philosophy of "Mother Goose's Melodies." ACROSS THE SEAS. Her imperiul majesty the queen of Eng land never travels without taking her bed along with bor. The empress of Austria is about to publish a volume of her adventures while yachting incognito In the Levant. The Duke of Connnught is to return from India in May, 18S9, when he is to bo appointed to the command ut Aldershot. The emperor of Germany has never been inclined to literary pursuits. His table is heaped with pamphlets treating solely of military mutters. Lady Emma McNeill, sister of tho Duke of Argyll, is now a lady advanced in years. She married Jate in life Sir John McNeill, an eminent physiciun and Indian statesmnn. The Empress Eugenie will hold a solemn function in May. The remaius of her hus band and son will be placed in tho new and splendid mausoleum which she has built. M. Kutkoff, the Russian editor, is a man of medium size, with gray hair brushed back from a broad forehead, a short white beard, and a face bearing the marks of age and overwork. Cesare Canter, of Milan, the Catholic his torian, has been elected to succeed Leopold von Ranke as extraordinary member of the Institute of France. Ho is more than 80 years old. Lord President Inglis, of the Scotch bench, is about to retire. He was an able counsel when Jeffrey and Cockburn sat upon the bench. In his prime ho was unquestionably tho ablest Scotch aflvocato of his day. A Ilunsnrirm band that was to play before tho czar ut St. Petersburg had a novel ex perience. Ench horn was taken to pieces and searched for bombs, and even the catgut of the fiddles was minutely examined before the players wero allowed to appear before the emperor. The latest thing in the way of observing the queen's jubilee is a proposal that fifty famous English novelists shall write a novel devoted to some year of tho Victorian reign, and thnt the fifty volumes, uniformly bound, be presented to her majesty. We are not told who is to find tho "fifty famousi English novelists," or whether the queen is expected to read tho stories after she gets them. ALL SORTS. WEEKLY. Six months , $ 0.75 Twelve months '. 1.25 INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. P Postage free to all ports of tha United States and Canada. Remit by draft on Austin, P. O. money order, postol note, registered letter or ex press Sample copies sent sree on application. Have you ever thought how very few bar bel's are left handed? Malaria is tha name of a new postoffice in Mocklonberg county, Virginia. A novel written by a B. and O. official is soon to be published in Now York. Exchange, l here may be a great deal In this. Some of the carpets in the White House are to be replaced. They have been down since the fall of lSS), and are worn into holes. A new postoffice in Pittsylvania county, Virginia, has just been named Piggs, and Hezekiuh Piggs has just been appointed its postmaster. A man who sent $10 to a Philadelphia ad dress in answer to an advertisement of the finest feed cutter in America, received in return a $3 set of false teeth. The strength of the lion in tho forelegs is only C9.9 per cent, of that of the tiger, and the strength of tho hind legs C5.9. Five men can easily hold down a lion, but nine men are re quired to hold down a tiger. The cat has alwuys been a favorite animal ith tho Mohammedans. They have a tra dition that tho prophet, on a certain occa sion, being called to quell a riot, cut off the sleeves of his robe rather than disturb a cat which was sleeping upon it. The chewing gum habit has seized the In dian. When the noble red man gets tired of working his jaws, and feels disposed to give them a rest, he passes tho "chaw" to another, who masticates it until his jaws ache, and then it is passed cn to the third or tenth as the case may be. ABOUT WOMEN. THE Austin Daily Statesman. t:;SS 1 vh: a::Sx"-MsSSi r (wrrtvi a'.iu i laciarn IUt ESTABLISHED 1871. DAILY AND WEEKLY. ONLY MORNING PAPER AT THE STATE CAPITAL. ALL THE LATEST NEWS FROM ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD. FULL WESTERN ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES RECEIVED DAILY. SPECIAL TELEGRAPHIC SERVICE FROM ALL POINTS IN TEXAS. FULL MARKET REPORTS TELEGRAPHIC AND LOCAL. Daily Reports of the Business Transacted in the Various Departments of State, and iu tha Unued States and Stnte Courts at Austin. GENERAL INFORMATION ON ALL SUBJECTS, AND PARTICULARLY ABOUT THE GREAT STATE OF TEXAS. SPECIAL PROMINENCE GIVEN TO NEWS FROM MEXICO. THE WEEKLY STATESMAN !-i the Vost Interwttns and Instructive, and the Best General Family Paper in the Smith To Farmers, Stockmen, Merchants, Mechanics and Housekeepers it is Indispensable. DAILY. One month 1.00 Throe months 2.50 Six months 5.00 Twelve months 10.00 SUNDAY DAILY. Twelve mbnths $ 2.00 Six months 1.00 STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO., Austin, Texas. r ; TIlADg r.rMjIUMPUJWMi IIWII Mill lll II II mi I Irtrffr-Ml el ' t aftfl 'aaataVI VatU UHkffW Mill MjtTI Ii tfafft M IT nmtwNmmf&yv'it'wi w m 11 hum . rlaaOj... - . BTV MARK, t ECZEMA ERADICATED. Gentlemen It ll dne yen ta uy that I think I am entirely well of eczema after having taken Swift'i Specific I hare been troubled with it very little in my face since last spring. At the berfnnine of cold weather last fall it made a slight appearance, but went away and has never returned. S. S. S. no donbt broke it np: at least it put my system in good condition and I got well. It also benefited my wife greatly in case of sick headache, and made a perfect care of a breaking ont r-j my little three year old daughter last summer. Watkinfville, Ga., Feb. 13, IS. Eiy. JAUS Y. H. MORRIS Treatise os Slooe aud Stan Diseases mailed free. Ta Swiit Srxctnf Co., Drawer 3, Attar ' 1! '1 7N (bill FOR PITCHER'S FA) Centaur Liniment is the most wonderful Pain-Curer the world has ever known. There are 500,0(10 more women than men in England. Mme. Nilsson's private fortune is said to exceed $1,000,000. Her husband has only a moderate fortune. According to a new Ohio law, the wife must assist the hunbaud to support the family when he is unable to do it himself. It is a mnrvelou9 fact that the best cattle reporter in the United States should be a woman Miss Mi !die Morgan, of The New York Times. Mrs. Dinah Mulock Craik thinks that women united to bad husbands ought, for their children's sake, to leave them rot by ilivoi'ce, but by jutlicicl separation. Kon -rtnatna nnlenn 4tmped witb the Above TRAPS HARK. int tin vp tho "ri'-n mt Is The Best Waterproof Goat Ever Maae. Don't WHltP vnnr rnnripv nn p tntm nr mrihof mat Tl ttctt o a vn ot Titrr,nI isbum.hu eiK?',7anu "MJor.ana win Keep you dry in the hardest storm - the His FJ BRAND" slicker ami take no other. If your storekeeper doe: An '. seni fnrrWrintiver-itnlniriie to A. .1. TOWEK, 20 Slmmoni St Hntnn M HOUSTON & TEXAS CENTRAL R'Y THE ONLY ALL-STEEL RAIL LINE IN THE STATE. Double 4- Daily j Trains ? Each 4 Way. Is- Pullman Slkzpkss and Dbawiso Room Cabs Bbtwbkh Houstoh and Austib Daily Tdrrnm SIso'M batj?a Ns Orleans and 9t. Lonia on train 1 n..r! 4 anl rtniPaf rlumh ki Gilvjstoa nd St. Lonls oa trains S and 2, via Dallas, Denison and Sedalia. Thra lgh tickets to all points. Quickest route to Naw Orleans and points In the southeast. Choice of routes, via Ueniaon and St. tstom'hlp Tlckffte to er from any Point to Europe. LOCAL TIMS CARD. GOINU SOUTH LEAVE. GOING NORTH ARRIYI 'Accom. . tNo. 4. tNo. 3. 7.30 a ra s.05 a m 0. 3 a m 2.00 f m 1. tO p m 5.30 p m Arrive. 3.00 p ra S.30 p m 4.47 p m 6.3a p m 5.00 p m 7.48 p m S.iS p m 3.30 p m 6.30 p m l.M a m $A" p m 2W a m 5.50 a ml .20 a mi K05 p ni Arrive. 4.M a m 4.25 a m 5.35 a m 7.05 a m 2 50 a ra 8.10 a m 9.10 a m 9.45 a m 1-i.W p m 10.35 a iu i 10 p m 5. 5 p E 7.:tt a m 8.115 s m ArTiv Declson , Sherman , . ..McKlnner Dallas ..Fort Worth..... Garrett . ...Coraicana Morean Waco Hearne Auedn Brenham . .. .Hoi9ton .. .Galveston ...Mrr OrleiM.., tNo. 1. I tNo. 8. I 'Accom. !i.48a n '2.18 a n (0.58 a it 9.20 p n 12.55 a m 8.05 p m 6.50 p 6.05 p" iii 3.10 p m 5.15 p m 1.10 p m 10.00 a m 7.25 a m 7.20 p m Iave. 2.10 p m 12.48 a m 10.83 a m H.15 a m 10.45 a m 7.50 a m 6.40 a m 0.30 a m 6.40 a m 3.10 a m 7.30 a m 1.40 a m 10.00 p m T.35 p m 7.15 a n Leave. 6.00 p m 5.24 p D 8.55 p m 12.85 p m '.40""n5 7.40 a d Leav .- v:v. A FAULKXKR, General Pasaeneer and Tlcke P. J. LAWLESS Union Ticket A?ent nt. If 1 --Vlf