Tuesday, Oct :r 8, 1312. KI2 AZHZ7TLL2 G AZZXT2-i;Z772 Pi 1 r 'ii UL Horace ;-t SYNOPSIS -, .! CHAPTER I.Robert Cameron, capital lit, consults Philip Clyde, newspaper pub lisher, regarding anonymous threatening letters he has received. The first promises a sample of the writer's power on a cer tsln day. On that day the head Is mys teriously cut from a portrait of Cameron while the latter Is In the room. CHAPTfcR-II.'-Clyde has a theory that the portrait wn mutilated while the room was unoccupied and the head later re moved by means of a string, unnoticed by Cameron, '-"- - CHAPTER m. Evelyn Grayson, Cam ron'a niece, with whom, Clyde Is In love, finds the head of Cameron's portrait . nailed to a tree, where hau been used ' as a target Clyde pledges Evelyn to se crecy. - CHAPTER IV.-Clyds learns that a Chinese boy employed by Phlletus Mur phy, an artist living nearby, had borrowed a rifle from Cameron'h lodgekeeper. "' tUTA"PTTK! T.-CTTSe make's 8n excuse to rail on Murphy and Is epulsed. He pretends to be investigating alleged In fractions of the game laws and speaks of finding ,4he bowl of an opium olpe under the tree where Cameron's portrait was foi n J. The Chinese boy 1 found dead PLXt morning. CHAPTER VI. I Nail Gwynne'a Mirror. ""' With the approach of tie twehty- sflrst- of the month; -which IB to say the seventh day following Cameron's receipt of the second letter, I ob served in him a growing nervous rest lessness, which with praiseworthy, ef fort he was evidently striving to over come. Of my visit to the red giant and the tragedy -which followed it, he was, of' course, informed; as he had been of the incident in the wood, in cluding the finding of the - bullet pierced piece of canvas. "" Every thing, save only that Evelyn was the discoverer-of the portrait remnant which I . thought best wider the cir cumstances to keep secret was told to him in detail, and with all the cir cumstantiality necessary to an intel ligent discussion of even the minutest point. .- . .My description of Murphy . elicited from him a recollection. He remem bered having seen the man once. It a -was on the Fourth of July. Evelyn and Mts. Lancaster, Cameron's house- . keeper, had accompanied Cameron to what is called "The Port 'of Missing Men," . a resort for motorists, On the summit of Tlticus mountain. They had lunched there and were returning by a, route which-took them over a succession of execrable roads, but through some of the most ' glorious scenery in the whole state of Con necticut For a while they had been following a stBeam, -willow-girt) that went babbling down over a rocky bed which at Intervals broke the waters Into a series of falls and cascades. At the foot of one of these they had stopped the car and alighted for a better view, and so had come upon the unexpected. " Seated upon ' a great bowlder, his easel planted between the stones of the stream's shallows, was a red headed, red-bearded CoIobbub, in a oiled suit of khaki and a' monstrous straw hat such as Is worn by harvest ing farmers. - Cameron told me that all three of them made bold to peep over the painter's : shoulder at his work, and then, though It was of -the most mediocre quality, to shower him with laudatory and ' congratulatory phrases. "I can fancy how he thanked you," I broke in, smiling. . . "I suppose he aid something very rude."- ' ' "He said nothing at all. He simply topped painting, and turning, fixed his eyes upon me. It was as if he aw no other one of us. He seemed to be making a careful appraisement of my every feature. -.After a-mo. ment it grew embarrassing, and though I did .not resent it feeling rather that we, ourselves, had been In the wrong I very5- speedily with drew. To my surprise he rose from his stone seat; and, palette and brush in handy followed us "up' the little acclivity te the road, watching in silence, until we got back into our car, and wheeled away." . , ... "Did yod gather from his inspection that be recognized you, or thought he recognized yout" I asked. "I gathered only that he meant to be insufferably rude," was Cameron's answer. "And you have never seen him slnceT" , - "Never." . ; "Ho has evidently seen you. He spoke of the Russian wolf-hounds that go about with you." Cameron mads no' response. "Well," I added. In a tone meant to be reassuring, "I think we need have little fear of a continuance of this singula method of anqoyano?. IMPORTANT TO IIOTHESS A record of Hlx'ty-flve years continu ous line of "Mrs. Wlimlow's (Southing tiyruji" In- mothers In all pnrts of the world. Is the hlKhoMt praiHO that nny remedy fur "children teething" has ever received. Kvcry year the yourm mother follow In the footHteps of Imr mother uudj llnils Mra. WiimloV.'s Kootlilni; Fyrnp to lie tho fnvorlto, nnd mi 11 hurt :on; tin f..r a period of nlx-t.v-liVM yi.tr-v MMIIonh nf mothers time iimiI It .'or their children while teething with ji Roothrs tho clill.l, m !); nil 1 in. ci N the b, I r ; i ! 1'V in (., ,. t-.i- ..vi 'I i't HII. II f I t'lo RIMIIH, t ' t ' 1' : ..-v MOT rirongn-we t?an-t traoa lr arfeCGJTTd Murphy and his Unfortunate Mongoli an, I thoroughly believe that one or the other i was responsible. With the Chinaman dead and Murphy in Jail, the persecution will cease. The threat contained in the second letter will never be executed. Bee if I'm not right!" ,. i-v. : - ; r-v - . Mr hope of potting Cameron 'at ease, however, was not rewarded. He continued to exhibit signs' of an al most constant apprehension. There was, i. Indeed, a sympathy-stirring pathos about the nervous disquiet of this man, usually so Impenetrably self-contained. And at moments, in spite of me, a suspicion gripped and held that he had not been entirely frank;-that somewhere in his past there ' was " something ' 1 unrevealed which might serve as a clue, if not an explanation, to the present But these doubts of him were . always transitory. I : ,t y - The twenty-first of September fell that year on Monday. - My office de manded my presence, but I arranged affairs as well as possible by tele phone and devoted the entire day to Cameron.., When I told him I meant to do this he protested, pretending that he was quite without foreboding; while' the' unconscious tapping of bis foot on the rug, even as he spoke, be lied his words. ; We spent the better part of the day golfing over the Apawamls links at Rye, lunching at the club house be tween rounds, for as a specific for nerves t have ever found that game of rare benefit. In the present in stance' It more than fulfilled my ex. Dictations. Cameron, apparently at least, forgot everything save his de sire to out-drive, out-approach, and out-put me. " And when It "was over, and 'with sharpened appetites we drove back to Cragholt for dinner, he appeared stimulated by a new-found courage. . : The day had passed without unto ward event, and I felt sure that my friend was gradually coming around to my way of thinking. Neither of us mentioned the subject, but it must have recurred to him, at intervals, as it did to me. And as the hours went by without a sign, the conviction grew that Murphy, with hands tied, was fretting over the coup he was de terred from compassing. Mrs. Lancaster, whom I have men tioned merely as Cameron's house keeper, but who was, in addition, a distant kinswoman and acted as a sort of duenna to Evelyn, dined with us that evening, and our little partle carree seemed to me more than us ually merry, owing doubtless to the relaxation of the strain which both Cameron and I had been under for the past week.: It gratified me to see my host so unfelgnedly cheerful. I remember how he laughed over Mrs. Lancaster's recital of an incident of the morning. "I had no idea," she said, "that An drew," referring to the kennel master, "was married. He astonished me when he told me be had a wife and three children. And when I told him he did not look like a married man he seemed rather pleased than other wise." :.- "It Js.Odd," Cameron returned, "but it seems always tor flatter1 a husband to tell him he doesn't look It" And then he laughed as though he had no care on earth. ' " After dinner we bad the usual music, and Evelyn sang again that lyrlo of Baudelaire's, this time in the original French, - But the melody brought back to me In vivid vision our chance meeting in the woods and all Us train of circumstances. .When I had' finished applauding1, Cameron turned to me. "Do you like Baudelaire!" "Mike his art," I answered, "and his frank artificiality." He' appeal to me," Cameron con fessed, "decadent though 'he isy I have read everything he ever wrote, I think, prose and verse. "Did you ever see my copy of hi 'Fleurs du Mal'f The casket ts worthy of its contents. It is the most exquisitely bound little volume I ever saw. Come, I'll show it to you." I excused myself to Mrs. Lancaster', and with pretended formality bent over Evelyn's hand, brushing it with my lips. "Won't you be backf she, whis pered. "I hope so," was my answer. "But I can't promise." "Ob, what a trial it is to have selfish uncle!" she murmured as went. Cameron led me through the 11 brary, acroHg the ball, and thence In to his study, where he dove into miniature book rack reserved for his favorites. After a moment of fruitless search he said "it Isn't here. How stupid! I took It upstairs a week ago, I remember. It Is In my dressing room. Do you mind coming up?" Hid I mind coming upT How glad I was to see him Interested! He was more like the old Cameron, thim h hnrt b"n t any time In tlin pnnt wv en dv. ?y rolf presi-rlntkin had proved evon more lind da ril h"pe. At, th r! v f r - t ' " 'I (' r i. It v ,,.( tn.t " I ( ' e.r,r!Hloim thnn 1 SAVED FRO'i Ail WEBATlOll How Mrs. Reed of Peoria, EL, ' , Escaped The Sur .. geon's Knife. . .... ... PepriafJU. "I wish to let every ohe know what LydiaE.Pinkham'B Vegetable Compound has done forme. For two years I suffered. The doc tor said I had a tumor and the only remedy was the surgeon's knife; My mother bought me Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound, and trwtav T flm a well And J healthy woman. For months I suffered from inflammation, and your Sanative Wash relieved me." I am glad to tell anyone what your medicines have done for me. You can use my testimonial in any way you Wish, and1 I will be glad to answer ie-tters.! V Mrs. , -CHRISTINA. Reed, 105 Mound St, Peoria, 111. Mrs. Lynch Also Avoided Operation. - .TeRsmri. Pai "Aftet the birth of mv fourth child, I had severe organic inflam mation. I would have such terrible pains that it did not seem as thotigh I could stand it . This kept up for three long months, until two doctors decided that an operation was needed. . "Then one of my friends recommended Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Com pound and after taking it for two months I was a well woman. Mrs. Joseph a. Lynch, Jeasup, Pa. , ' women who -suffer from femeie ilia should try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound, one of the most success ful remedies the world has ever known before submitting to a surgical opera tTri fliS leff'the third" d6r connected with Cameron's bedchamber. On the right were two windows, giving upon an outside balcony. Between them was a fire-place. . To the left of the bath room door was the entrance to a huge closet, guarded by ad heavy curtain Of old rose velvet To the right, was a sta tionary wash-Btand, and above if rectangular mirror, probably ten inch es wide and a foot long, and very curiously framed.' Across from tbls, against the wall which' divided the room from the passage; was an enor mous chiffonier, or chest of drawers, In the room's center was a round tablei on which rested a - reading lame. Between-the table and the fire-place was a reclining chair. Oth er chairs, three or four, were various ly placed. T htfve" given' these facts 'because they are necessary to an intelligent understanding of what I am about to relate. .That in furnishing and adorn ment the room was plainly utilitari an is not so material..' But there is one exception to this general declara tion whlchf demands to be specified, The mirror above the wash-stand pos sessed a distinction quite aside from Its practical utility. This was by no means the first time I had seen It. Cameron had showed it to me, with a degree of pride, early in our ac quaintance, explaining that it' Was at once a relic arid an heirloom. Orig inally the property of Nell Gwynne, it had descended to him through three or four generations of maternal ancestors. The glass was framed in colored beadwork, to Which were attached wax figures in high relief: it the top a miniature portrait of Charles IL in his state robes; at the bottom,1 one of Nell herself, in court dress. The king appeured also on J he right, In hunting costume, and on the left was another figure of his favorite in less ornamental garb. According to the legend which accompanied this in teresting antique, - it was Nell Gwynne own handiwork..' It possessed for me a certain fas cination due mure to its history than Its beauty, for it was not the mout artistic of creations, and as Cajieron poked about for bis Baudelaire; I stood gating St the glass1 and think ing of all I had ever read of the Il literate; but saucy, sprightly actress whoso solO claim to fajne hung on her winning the favor of that easy-going, royal hypocrite, Charles II, "Here's the binding!" I heard Cam- eron Bay, and turned from the mirror to the table, Where be had found his sought-for treasure beneath a pile of heavier, grosMr works. "You knw ' something of book binding," W went on;' with enthusi asm. "Now examine that carefully, and tell me if you ever saw anything more exquisite. I had it done in Lon don, laBt year. It's a copy of one of Le Gascon's." : At first slpht it kerned all glitter ing gold, but on closer Inspection I found that the froundwork was bright red mororco, inlaid 'with buff, olive, snd. marble lenther, the spaces close ly filled with very delkute and beau tlful polntllle traceries, it was a ver itable gem in Its way, and I could not blame Cameron for his raptures. When I had apiilnuded and be- pralsed to Ms content, ho took the 11 tie volume from my hnnd and onery- Ins It, with a sort of slow reveronc obaerved with something Has patron- lsm: "I'm afraid you don't qnlte under stand Baudelulro." rf "Docs anybody?" I fituifi back. "Ho Is nut so obscure an his crlllr would have us believe," Cameron serted. ".'Ut down in clinlr a limn,, i.t, i,;. 1 tliat lonnrJt I'll read ye if Borne1? '.if." 01 I dm .v I ,) n ' ., i- j r ! l ' - ! . s 1 1 . ! ' veil, 1 pauses often In mld-vef'ge'lo explain what he thought I might regard as an affectation or, as Tolstoi has put it, 'an- intentional obscurity." - There was one verse which. Im pressed me particularly as he read it, and remained with me for a long while afterward, for,. In view of every thing. It seemed to have a special ap posltiveness. The lines to which I refer have been translated In this way: . . .; v From Heaven's high balconies - , - Seel in their threadbare robes the dead years-cast their eyes, And from ths depths below regret's wan sm!l appears, i . ; Cameron eat with his back to the door leading to the passageway, arid facing diagonally,' across the - table, the Nell Gwynne mirror. My own gaze was on him as he read. ' As he finished the verse, a portion of which I have quoted; he lifted bis eyes, I thought to meet mine, but his look rose over- my head, and clung. While his lids widened; and into every line of his. face there came a rigid, startled expression, half amazement, half -.horror. And in tbatf instant of tense silence the "Fleurs du Mai1 slipped from his nerveless' fingers. struck the table' edge, and dropped with -unseemly echo- to the floor. In a' breath I was on my feet arid staring where his vision had focussed. I hardly know what I expected to Bee. I am sure nothing would have sur prised me. ;And yet I Was scarcely prepared for tho inexplicable ruin which my sight encountered. The glass of the Nell Gwynne mirror was in atoms.' - ' Cameron rose; a little unsteadily thought, and coming around the table, joined me in closer inspection of his wrecked hereditament' I can find no word adequate to the description of what we experienced. - Amazement and all its synonyms are far too ! feeble for the task. We were certain ly more than appalled. 1 What we saw suggested to me spontaneous disin tegration. :' If such a thing were pos sible, which I believe It is not, it might have explained the condition of the mirror. No other ascription seemed admissible; for, though the glass remained in its frame not so much, as a splinter having been dropped, it was : fractured into a thousand tiny pieces, resembling a crystal mosaic. Incapable of any but the most minute reflections. And the change to this condition from a fair, unmarred panel had been wrought without sound and seemingly without human agency. , ' ' For just a moment Cameron stared in dumb awe. When he turned to me he appeared suddenly to have aged. His eyes were lustreless, and bis cheeks wore a gray pallor. "My God!" he murmured In a kind of breathless whisper. I would have given a great deal to have been able' to allay that terror of the Impalpable which was gripping him. But I was helpless. Shocked and astounded, myself, solace was not at my command. More to escape the piteous appeal of his silent gaze than in hope of making discovery, I turn ed in haste to one of the long win dows which opened on the outer bal- cony.'- Drawing back the sashes and; flinging tbem wide, I stepped outside and, listening, over the railing. But the night was strangely still. There was no sound, even, of stirring leaves. 'A brooding hush seemed spread over all the outdoor world that ominous silence which often pre cedes the breaking of a storm. I looked up to find the heavens wrapped in a pall of inky cloud. And then, with a feeling of having fled from a lesser to a greater evil, I re turned to the lighted room, and closed the window to shut, out ths horror of the night " Cameron was standing where I had left him. He looked woefully tired and haggard. '' ' '' "Explain It!" he cried hoarsely. "My God, Clyde;, explain it!" "I would to Heaven my forlorn' reply. I could," was CHAPTER VII. v "From 8lght of Men Into Torment." Seldom have I passed a more mis erable hour than that which followed upon the seeming phenomenon I have described. Cameron was nervously in tatters and my own poise was something more than threatened. The sight of a usually brave, strong, self contained person of stolidly phleg matic temperament transformed into a relaxed, nerveless, apprehensive creature is enough of Itself to try one's fortitude, even with the most favorable collateral conditions. Arid the collateral conditions here were quite the reverse. That which' bad af fected Cameron bad exerted an influ ence upon me as well, knowing, as I did;' all the- circtrmHtances nd Ming Interested, as I was, In my friend's problnm. And so while his plight tee at my heartstrings, my own In ability to grapple with the mystery contributed . an added mental dis tress. To my dismay t found ; Cameron quite incapable of anything approach ing a alm, common-sonse discussion of the matter, and realized to the full the mischief which this last perfor mance, coming as a climax upon a we?k of more or less disquietude, bad effected. He eat most of the time with head bent forward and knees doubled, his totis touching the floor but bis heels raised and in constant vibrating movenvotit, as though stricken with pulsy. The fingers of one band toyed InrosHnnlly, too, with the BugeM of tho othrr, in a viirinty of twisting. snnkollVfl involutions. In vain I en deavor! to rniii Mm; to stir in Mm a Ki'irlt of rotnllntton. ' Some one wns r!n.' l"K ffrka upon him, snd that, some ni'o rrns .be discovered Snd J. W. uoi of li m, O., pur- MinlM-rlnln'j! .v who h.i'l I i O O.I4 II l! a I, ..hi f .r broagnVto JUstlCe. Common serfse told us that, however mysterious these happenings appeared, they could not have occurred without hu man agency. It was our task to dis cover the agent and punish him. This was my line of argument; but through it all, Cameron tat unmoved and unresponsive. And then there came to me again, that unwelcome suspicion that all along he had been hiding something from me'; "that lie divined the cause and the source' of the persecution, but for some reason of hi own would not divulge them.. . . I rang for one of tie footmen and ' j had some brandy brought, and forced Cameron to swallow a stiff drink of It, in which I Joined him. But even this stimulant had small effect upon him. And when, finally, I reluctantly bade him good-night, 1 I was over whelmed by the pathos of his condi tion. So wrought and tortured, in deed, was I, by the sad picture of de throned courage which followed me home, that sleep fled me and left mh wide-eyed until the dawn. The tidings which came td me with my coffee that morning we're more than half expected. Cameron was ill, and his physician had been sum moned from New York",' , When 'I reached Cragholt the doc tor, bad come and gone, and a trained nurse was in attendance. Evelyn, meeting me in the hall, con veyed this intelligence in a breath, and then, laying ' hold upon me, a slender hand upon each coat sleeve, ber big eyes pleading and anxious, she ran on: ... "It 1b shock, Dr. Massey says. De- ferred shock, he called It. He says Uncle Robert has suffered from some Sudden grief, fright, or other dread ful mental impression. His tempera ture is way below normal and his pulse Is a sort of rapid feeble flutter. 011, do tell me what you know about it. What shock has he had? You were with him last evening. He was gay enough when you' and he went from the music room. What hap pened afterward?" Caressingly I rested my palms upon her shoulders. "My dear little girl," I said, sooth ingly. "I am sorry I can't satisfy your very natural curiosity." "But It isn't curiosity," she correct ed, promptly. "It's interest." , "Well, interest then. I'm sorry, I say. Something did happen; but to tell you Just what it was, and why it was a shock to him, I am not able. Not now, at least. Maybe, some day, you'll, know 'all about it" There never was a more reasonable young person than Evelyn Grayson. Most girls, I fancy, would have teased and grown peevish at being denied. But she seemed to understand. "Do' you want to see uncle?" she asked me. ' "I don't belley it would be wise," I answered. : "Probably I, being a i reminder, might do him harm. Tell me how be seems? He isn't Uncon scious?" "No. He answers questions. But he never says anything for himself. And, Philip, he looks so pinched and old and pale! And his hands' are so cold. The nurse has taken away his pillows and raised .his, feet,, and it's gruesome, that's the only word that describes it". "But he'll soon be better? The doctor said that, didn't he?" "Yes. He said that." ' But the reaction which usually fol lows shock was only partial in Cam eron's case, and for days his life was in danger. Then followed a period of slow, general recovery. As the month of October pro gressed I feared the liability to re lapse. I knew, instinctively, with what dread sensations he must be awMtlng the fourteenth of the month, ! He had been forbidden, of course, to ' revive any mall, just as he had I been denied visitors; but I felt that in an uncertainty that must of neces sity prove Injurious. And so I took Dr. Massey, in a measure, into my confidence, ud gained from him per mission to Cameron for a brief moment "He has been asking for you," the physician Informed me, "but I fan cied it better to' make no exceptions. Now, however, I see that you may be a help Instead of A hindrance." Despite the more or less circum stantial reports as to his condition and appearance which had filtered to me from the sick room, through the medium of Evelyn, Miss Collins, the nurse, and Dr. Massey atid his assis tant. Dr. Thorne, I Was not altogeth at prepared for the marked change wlilch Iohb than three weeks had wrought In my friend. He was peaked and bloodless and tired and old. And hti voice was little more than a whis per. i ' He made a brave effort to smile, as I came in, but it resulted In a sad grimacing failure. I lifted one of his thin, clammy hands' which lay Inert on the coverlid, but it gave me only the feeblest answering pressure, "I'm so glad you're better," I told htm, cheerily. "Fancy the doctoV al lowing me to see you! That shows what he thinks." "Yes," he .whispered, "I'm coming round, slowly. And I wanted to see you, Clyde. What day of the month Is this?" "The twelfth." ' "Day after tomorrow, It will come," he said. i "Don't be too sure," I replied. "I think they've done about enough to Satisfy any Ordinary villains." ; He was silent for a moment Then, with Just the faintest turn of his head from side to side, he said: "Hut they are not ordinary Til- lalaa."..- ' (To lie Couttmiud.l AN hen you have a lnl fold yoo'want llm hi nt mi ufcllui (ilitiilniililu so as to cure It with us llltlii rl. l.iy ns pofsullile. llrro 1h a ill lllilfl'.s (')titilon ; "I hnv.. c!,ii''!r H ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT Aegctab!e PreparatiohlorAs J sinuiatuig nKfuTMiitUMta ting the StmnarJis andJowasol' Promotes DitSestioitXleeiful ncssandRestXantalnsneJiiKr Opiuni.Marr'lini: narMiaeraLi NOT MARC OTIC. 1 Bnpkm Sua" Jlx.Sic.-yf J&Mie&JIs jdiigSttd HimSeri- iiatiem i Anerfect Itemedv foTCoroRM Hon , Sour Storaach,l)!arrl5 NYonn5foirvnlsioTis,tCTerKu AndLOSSOFSlXEP.i nil XCLuUlUiC sJijjiMin- .r"' KEW YORK. i.,.-.'.;kKS;itifBliz Exact Copy of Wrapper. V ' , ,It!s.,a Saving of money to trade at ; Levitt's Is'a Store . The Store of Ten Thousand Bargains. . 3 South Main St. Former Stand of Bon Marche. uiiwjwiwiiib J - STREET CAR SCHEDULE IN EFFECT JUNE 30, 1912. ZILLICOA AND RETURN 0 8 m- RIVERSIDE PARK 6:30 and every 15 min. until 11 p. m. ; "" ' E:1S and 6:00 a. m. and every 15 min. DEPOT VIA" until 1:15 p. m.; then every 7 l- SOUTHSIDE AVENUI n0,Then " DEPOT VIA 6:00 and every 15 minutes until 11:00 FRENCH BROAD AVE.. p- winnn . 6:00 a, m. and every 16 minutes till fliiutu.K, , 11;00 p CHARLOTTE STREET 7:00 a. m. then every 16 minutes till TERMINUS :. ' .. ": p- ' PATTON AVENUE nVm""1 " mlnutM EAST STREET - 8:00 a m &n tJerT 16 minutes till . 6:00 a. m. and every 80 minutes till GRACE VIA MERRIMON 8:00 a. m. Then every 15 minutes till A VTrwrns 10:80 p. m. Then every 80 minutes till aviiHUa; 11:00 p. m. ' - 8:15 a m. and then every It minutes BILTMORS till 10:80 p. m. Then every to mln. ' ' till 11:00. last car. DEPOT & W ASHEVILLE 6:4B and :00 a. in; and .very t VIA SOUTHSIDE AVE. mm. till il:00 p. m., last car. ; Sunday schedule differs in the following partljulars: , Car- leaves square for Manor at 6:00 a. m., return 6:16. Cars leave Square for Depot via. Southside Ave. 6:15, 6:80-, 7:00, 7:81, 8:00 and 8:80 a. m. Cars leave Square tor Depot via French Broad Ave. 6:16, 6:80, 6:45, 7:15, 7:45 and 8:15, Car for Depot leaves Square 8:45, both Southside and French Broad. First car leaves Square for Charlotte street at 8:46. .. First car leaves Square for Riverside 8:30, next 8:45. First car for West Asheville, leaves Square 8:80. . ,,- With the above exceptions, Bunday schedules commence at a. m. and continue same as week days. . On evenliiRa when entertainments are in progress at Auditorium the last trip on all lines will be from entertainment, leaving Bquar at regu lar time and holding over at Audltorlu.n. Car leaves Square to meet 86. nlnht train, 80 minutes before schedule vf announced arrival. " SOUTHERN RAILWAY, Vernier Carrier of the South. Schedule Ugures published as Information only and not guaranteed. EFFECTIVE OCT. t. 1012. Arrives from Eastern Time Departs for Eastern Time No. 6 Brevard and Lake No. 6 Brevard and Lake Toxaway . .......11:30 sum. Toxaway 5:80 p.m. No. 7 Brevard and Lake No. 8. Brevard and Lake Toxaway . 6:15 p.m. Toxaway ,, . t:05 sum. No. I Savannah and Jack- No. 10 Savannah, Jackson- eonvlllo 1:10 p.m. vllle 4:10 p.m. No. 11 Washington and No. 11 Cincinnati, St Lou New York, Norfolk Is, Memphis and and Richmond ... l:4S p.m. Louisville 8:05 p m, nu. Am v;inciiinttu a u u Louisville, Bt Louis and Memphis 8:05 p.m. No. 18 Charleston and Co- lumhia 1:15 p.m. No. 16 N. Y., Philadelphia Washington (d) ..16:80 a.m. No, 18 Murphy and Waynesvllle . ..... 6:05 p.m. No. 18 Waynexvllla and Vo. 10 T.I u r p h y and Murphy 8:20 p.m. .. W'ayneavllle 1:55 p.m. No. 21 Waynes vllle . .... 7:LB p.m. No. 81 Grfldsbnro and Ral No 28 Raleigh and Colds-. elprh . 7:46 p.m. boro 1:10 a.m. No. 28 WayncfvlUa . . .... 8:00 a.m. No. 87 Chicago and Cincln- No. 27 Charleuton, Colum- naU 7:C9 r ' Ma .. 7:30 p.m. No. 28 Columbia, Charles No, It Cincinnati and ton 10:2 r, n.m. Chicago . ........10:15 a.m. No. 85 Memphis and Cliat- Ho. 85 Washington, N. T. ' tanooira 19.. ; and Richmond .... 1:40 a.m. No. 86 Wanhlnrtm. I:' h Vo, 86 Memphis and Chat. mond ami N. .V... 7: i i s- tannoais 6:50 sum. No. 42 Atlnnla, iron an 1 No. 41 Charleston, Macon,- . , New Orlcimn S Alliinta 11:15 a.m. No, 103 li -Intnl. I-. nm -. ': Ko. 101 Hrlfrtol. Knoxvllle and Chattun.x.g ..10:55 p.riu Tliroucli slooplnw t-nrn dully to (m l frooi y v- I in 1 1 1 1 o . i -. w.i. lui.Bt i . liin..i).l, M. hi. .Ik. i- ( I'lllM. .1.1' I .lll- ill.', i t..l.l. II. I '. 1..J1M..., I 1 ':; -i , ; , tr i.ii ( !', :i ! ' . ' ' ' I . : . i " e 3' p n n. lilJiiiEJ For Infants and ChilJrsn. Tha Kind You - Ilsva Always Bcoshl Bears the Signature of ;ln Use For Over Thirty Years VMK OCNTAUfl (TOMMNY. HBWVOSR OITT. t-tu. vv cLniiiiigLuii, j-i. a., Norfolk and Rlch- montl 1:15 p.m. N'O. 14 Atlanta, Charleston 7:00 a.m. No. 16 N. Y, Philadelphia, . WashlnKton (d) ... 7:00 p.m. No. 17 Waynosvlllo and Murphy 8:81 a.m. .. w t Imtin no' i . AW .. Clu ImtI ilV 1. i