JAMES' RAIL ROAD AND ROUTE BOOK FOR THE WESTERN AND SOUTHERN STATES. COMPILED By J. GRISWOLD. CINCINNATI: J. A. & U. P. JAMES, No. 167 Walnut Street. 1863. s> t,^ G«1 \%&'^ Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1855. Br J. A. & U. P. JAMES, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States, for the District of Ohio. C. JAMES, 8TERE0TYPKB, 167 Walnut St., Cincinnati. INTRODUCTION The routes of travel embraced in this work commence at New York, Philadelphia or Baltimore, thence westward, via the rincipal thoroughfares, to Buffalo, Pittsburgh, and Wheeling, •ranching out from these last-named cities in every direction, hrough all the Western and Southern States to New Orleans ■nd Texas ; and returning thence, via railroad and steamboatt hrough Alabama, Georgia, and South Carolina to Charleston ; .hence, via the Atlantic shore route, to Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York again, thus completing a circuit of ihe Union. In making up the routes, the object has been to have them as direct, concise, and lucid as possible. The information has been obtained at considerable expense of time and labor, mostly from the officers of the various roads direct, and can be relied upon as correct. New Railroads constantly coming into operation, opening new routes and changing old ones, thus altering the means of inter- communication, time of departure, fare, &c., (fee, may cause some apparent errors, which it will be the Publishers' care to correct in every subsequent edition of this work. INDEX TO TAMES' RAIL ROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. JS^The figures refer to Routes and not^to pages. Route. Adrian, Mich., to Chicago, 111 126 " Monroe, Mich 126 « Toledo, 127 Akron, Br. Rail Road 98 « to Cleveland 98 " to Hudson • • • • 98 Alliance, 0., to Cincinnati 12 " Cleveland, 97 " Pittsburgh, Pa 99 " Wellsville, 97 Alton, 111., to Cincinnati 19 " Springfield, 111 119 Ashtabula to Buffalo 80 « Cleveland 83 " Toledo 80 Aspinwall to Panama 155 Atlanta, Ga., to Cincinnati 26 " Charleston, S. G 26 " Chattanooga, Tenn 148 " Louisville, Ky 26 " Macon, Ga 150 " Memphis, Tenn 45 *' Montgomery, Ala 146 •« Nashville, Tenn 26 " Tuscumbia, Ala 45 Augusta, Ga., to Atlanta 149 '• Cincinnati 26 " Charleston, S. C 153 " Louisville, Ky 26 " Memphis, Tenn 45 " Montgomery, Ala 47 * Nashville, Tenn 26 '* Mew Orleans, La 48 " ^Yiclisburg 47 Aurora, lU., to Chicago 118 Baltimore., Md., to Charl'ston, S. C. 154 " Cincmnati — ^-^.- -. 12 « Richmond, Va 154 « Wheeling, Va 79 « Wilmington, N. C 154 B«llefontaine, 0., to Dayton 93 " Sandusky City 93 « Springfield 93 Sent'a Fort, to Santa Fe 54 " Independence 64 PoBton— from Albany & N. Y. City.l&6 Route. Bowlmg Green, Ky,, to Cincinnati 20 " Louisville, Ky • 20 " Nashville, Tenn 20 Brazos, St. Jago, Tex., to N, 0- • • 51 Brownsville, Tex., to N. 51 Buffalo, N. Y., to Albany, N. Y- • 72 " Chicago, 111 2, 3 " Cincinnati — •• 8 " Cleveland, 1, 6, 80 " Copper Mines 1 « Detroit, Mich 1 6 " Dunkirk, N. Y 81 « Erie, Pa 1, 5 " Indianapoli-s, la 85 " Louisville, Ky 40 " Newark, 9 « Pittsburgh, Pa 7 " Sandusky Cit}', 1, 5 " Sault St. Marie 1 '•' St. Louis, Mo 4 « Toledo, 80 " Zanesville, 9 Cairo, 111 59, 58, 65 California and Oregon Routes 56 Chagres 56 Charleston, S. C.,to Augusta, Ga- 153 " Chattanooga, Tenn 26 " Cincinnati 26 "• Louisville, Ky .-. • 26 " Montgomery, Ala 47 « Nashville, Tenn 26 " New Orleans 48 « New York 154 Chattanooga, Tenn., Augusta, Ga. 26 " Charleston, S. C 26 « Cincinnati 26 « Dalton,Ga ...148 « Louisville, Ky 26 « Nashville, Tenn-...*.. 137 Chicago, 111., to Adrian, Mich- • 126 " Buffalo, N.Y 2,3 " Cincinnati 15 « Cleveland, 30 " Detroit, Mi oh ... .- 1 24 « Dubucjue lowjiL.. .— "- f» INDEX. Route. Chicago to Galena, 111 28 " Janesville, Wis 31 « Joliet, 111 121 « Lasalle,Ill 27 « Louisville, Ky 39 «« Madison,Wis 31 *' Monroe, Mich 126 *« Nashville, Tenn 41 V^ « Rockford, 111 117 « Sandusky City, 15 « St. Louis, Mo 27 « Toledo, 15, 127 Cincinnati to Alliance, 12 « Albany 10 « Atlanta, Ga 26 « Augusta, Ga 26 «« Bowling Green, Ky 20 « Buffalo, N.Y 8 « Charleston, S. C 26 « Chattanooga, Tenn 26 «< Chicago, 111 15 «* Columbus, 85 « Crittenden, Ky 22 « Daytou,0 94 « Detroit, Mich 15 «* Dunkirk, N. Y 10 " Fort Wayne, la 25 " Frankfort, Ky 22 '* Georgetown, Ky 22 '< Hamilton,,© 94 «« Hillsboro, 89 " Indianapolis, la 16 « Lafayette, la 23 « Lexington, Ky 22 " Logansport, la 24 «« Louisville, Ky 21, 65 *» Mammoth Cave, Ky 20 •* Nashville, Tenn 20 « Newark, 13 « New York 10 « Philadelphia 12 " Sandusky City 14 « Shelbyville, 111 19 « Springfield, 88 « Springfield, 111 19 « St. Louis, Mo 18 « Terre Haute, la 17 « Toledo, 15 « Wheeling Va 13, 64 « Williamstown, Ky 22 « Xenia, 88 City of Great Salt Lake 53 " Fort Laramie, 53 " Kanesville, Iowa 53 " Sacramento City 53 V^ ClaxkBTille Tenn. to Nashyille- • • 67 Routt. Cleveland, 0., to Alliance, 97 «' Akron, 89 « Buffalo, N. Y 1, .5, 80 « Chicago, 111 30 " Cincinnati, 85 " Columbus, 86 " Detroit Mich 1 « Dunkirk, N. Y 80 « Erie, Pa 1, 83 " Indianapolis, la 34 '« Newark, 9 « Norwalk.0 84 " Toledo, b 84 « Wellsville,0 97 « Wheeling, Va 11 " Zanesville, 9 Columbus, 0., to Cincinnati" ••<-»• 85 " Cleveland, 86 " Wheeling, Va 13 « Xenia, 87 " Zanesville, 100 Columbus, la., to Jeffersonville- • 113 " Louisville, Ky 113 Cohimbus, Miss., to Florence, Ala. 42 " Jackson, Miss — • • 42 " Nashville, Tenn 42 " Natchez, Miss 42 '< Tuscumbia, Ala 42 Columbus, Ga., to Macon, Ga 147 " Montgomery, Ala 145 Council Bluffs to Lexington, Mo- 62 " St. Charles, Mo 62 Covington, Ky., to Lexington, Ky 22 Crittenden, Ky., to Cincinnati- • • 22 " Georgetown, Ky 22 " Lexington, Ky 22 Cumberland to Baltimore 79 " Wheeling 79 Dalton, Ga., to Atlanta, Ga- • • • • • 148 " Chattanooga 14S Dayton, 0., to Cincinnati 94 " Detroit, Mich 33 " Indianapolis, la 16 « Sandusky, '■ 33 •« Union, la 95 Decatur, Ala., to Tuscumbia 144 Detroit, Mich., to Buffalo, N. Y- • 1 " Chicago, 111 124 " Cincinnati 15 « Dayton, 33 « Indianapolis. la 33 « Michigan City 124 « Monroe, Mich 32 « Sandusky City, O-.-. • 16 « Toledo, 0. ••• 82 Dre&non Springs, Ky • ... _ W INDEX. Vll Route. Dubuque, Iowa> to Chicago, Dl. • 29 « Galena 29 Dunkirk, N. Y, To Buffalo, N. Y. 81 " Cincinnati 10 « Cleveland, 10, 80 ** Erie, Pa 1, 80 « New York 71 Eaton, 0., to Cincinnati 96 Edinburgh, la., to Shclbyrille, la. 103 El Paso to San Antonio, Texas- • • 55 Erie, Pa., to Ashtobula, 0. 83 « BufFalo,N.Y 1, 80 « Cleveland, 83 Painesville, 83 7 80 65 37 37 42 42 42 42 69 52 53 53 52 62 52 62 52 62 63 63 63 50 63 25 66 22 129 128 « Pittsburgh, Pa- " Toledo, Evansville, la., to Cincinnati- • • " Indianapolis, la " Terre Haute, la Florence, Ala., to Columbus, Miss. " Jackson, Miss " Nashville, Tenn •* Natchez, Miss " (Tenn. River) Fort Laramie to Ft. Leavenworth. " Great Salt Lake ** Kanesville, Iowa " Oregon City Ft. Leavenworth to Council Bluffs " Fort Laramie " Jefifer.son City, Mo " Oregon City " St. Charles, Mo Ft. Smith, Ark., to Ft. Gibson, I. T. " Little Rock, Ark " Napoleon, Ark " New Orleans, La " Van Buren, Ark Fort Wayne, la., to Cincinnati- • Frankfort, Ky., (Ky. River) " Cincinnati " Lexington " Louisville Hilleboro, 0., to Cincinnati- Hudson, 0., to Akron, O- - • " Cleveland Independence, Mo., to Bent's Fort " Mo., to Santa Fe Indianola, Tex., to New Orleans - Indianapolis, la., to Cincinnati- • " Cleveland, '* Buffalo, N.Y " Dayton, 1( " Detroit, Mich " Evansville, la " Greencastle, la i " Jeffersonville, la " Lafayette, la " Louisville, Ky " Madison, la «« Peru, la " Princeton, la " Sandusky City, " St. Louis, Mo « Terre Haute, la •* Union " Viucennes, la ••• — ■- - • 54 54 51 16 34 35 ,33 33 37 110 102 107 37 33 18 110 108 37 Galena, HI., to Chicago 28 '•' Dubuque -.-. 29 " St. Louis, Mo 57 Galveston, Texas, to N. Orleans- • 51 Georgetown, Ky., to Cincinnati, 0. 22 " Lexington 22 Hamilton, 0., to Cincinnati - 94 « Dayton 94 " Eaton 96 Jackson, Miss., to Columbus, Miss. 42 " Florence, Ala 42 " Nashville, Tenn 42 " Natchez, Miss 42 " Tuscumbia, Ala 42 " Vicksburg, Miss 138 Janesville, Wis., to Chicago, 111- ■ 31 " Madison, Wis. 31 " Jlilwaukie, Wis 123 Jefferson City, Mo., Coun. Bluffs- 62 " Fort Leavenworth 62 " St. Josephs, Mo 62 Jeffersonville, la., India'polis, la. 36 « Columbus, la 113 Joliet, 111., to Chicago 121 Kanesrille, loa., to Gt. Salt Lake • 63 " Fort Laramie 53 # Lafayette, la., to Cincinnati 23 " Indianapolis 106 « (Wabash River) 68 Lasalle, 111., to Chicago, 111 27 " Illinois River 61 « St. Louis, Mo 27 Lavaca, Tex., to New Orleans, La- 61 Lexington, Ky., to Cincinnati 22 « Covington, Ky 22 « Frankfort, Ky 129 " Georgetown, Ky 22 Vlll INDEX. Route. Lexington, Ky. to Louisville, Ky- 128 Lexington, Mo., to Council Bluffs • 62 '« Danville, Ky 133 »* Jefferson City 62 " St. Charles, Mo 62 Logansport, la., to Cincinnati •• • 24 " Indianapolis, la 24 Louisville, Ky., to Atlanta, Ga- • • 26 " Augusta, Ga 26 " Bowling Green, Ky 20 « Buffalo, N.Y 40 « Charleston, S. C 26 « Chicago, 111 39 " Cincinnati, 21, 65 « Frankfort, Ky 128 " IndiaDapolis, la 36 " Lexington, Ky 128 " Mammoth Cave 20 " Nashville, Tenn -20, 41 " St. Louis, Mo 38 " Slncennes 38 " River Towns, 57, 58, 59, 64, 65 Macon, Ga^, to Atlanta, Ga 150 " Columbus, Ga 147 " Savannah, Ga 151 Madison, la., to Cincinnati 65 " Indianapolis 102 '• St. Louis, Mo 18 Madison, Wis., to Chicago, 111 31 " JanesvOle, Wis 31,123 " Milwaukie 123 Mammoth Cave, Ky., to Cincin'ti. 20 " Louisville 20 " Nashville 20 Mansfield, 0., to Mt. Vernon, 0-- 92 " Newark 92 « Sandusky City 90 Marietta, 0., to Cincinnati 64 " River Towns 64 Massilon, 0., to Pittsburgh, Pa- • 99 Matagorda, Texas, to New Orleans. 51 Maysville, Ky., to river Towns- • 64 Memphis, Tenn., to Atlanta, Ga- 45 '•' Augusta, Ga 45 « Charleston, S. C 45 « Little Rock, Ark 46 " Tuscumbia, Ala 45 " River Towns 69 Michigan City to Detroit 124 " Chicago 126 Milwaukie, Wis., to Madison, Wis. 123 « Janesville, Wis---^..- 123 « Whitewater. • 123 Mobile, Ala., to Augusta, Ga.- • • • 48 « Charleston, S. C- -nii • 48 Route. Mobile, Ala., Montgomery, Ala- • 70 " New Orleans, La 70a 48 « River Towns 70 Monroe, Mich., to Chicago, 111 126 « Detroit, Mich 32 Montgomery. Ala., t' Augusta, Ga. 47 " Atlanta, Ga 47 « Charleston, S. C 47 « Columbus, Ga 145 « Mobile, Ala 70, 48 « WestPoint,Ga 145 " Vicksburg, Mise 47 " River Towns 70 Mt. Vernon, 0., to Mansfield, 0-. 92 " Newark, 92 " Sandusky City 90 Naples, 111., to Springfield 120 " River Towns 61 Napolean, Ark., to N. Orleans, La. 50 " Mississippi River towns. 69 " Arkansas River Towns- 63 Nashville, Tenn., to Augusta, Ga. 26 " Bowling Green, Ky 20 '< Charleston, S. C. 26 " Chattanooga 137 « Chicago, 111 41 j^ '» Cincinnati 20 *' Columbus, Miss 42 •< Louisville 20,41 " Mammoth Cave 20 " Memphis, Tenn 44 " Natchez, Miss 42 " New Orleans, La 49 " St. Louis, Mo 41 V£ " Tuscumbia, Ala 42 " River Towns 67 Natchez, Miss., to Nashville, Tenn. 42 " Columbus, Miss 42 " Florence, Ala 42 " Jackson, Miss 42 " Tuscumbia, Ala 42 New Albany, la., to St. Louis, Mo. 38 " Vincennes, la 38 " River Towns 65 Newark, 0., to Cincinnati 13 " Cleveland 9 " Columbus, 0- • • 13, lOO «« Mansfield 92 *' Sandusky City 92 « Wheeling, Va 13 " Zanesville, 100 New Orleans. La., to Augusta, Ga. 48 " Brazos St. Jago 51 _ «_ BrownBTille, TexaB"-- SI INDEX. IX Route. N. Orleans, L., to Charleston, S. C. 48 " Galveston, Texas 61 " Indianola, Texas 51 " Lavaca, Texas 51 *< Matagorda, Texas 51 « Mobile, Ala 70a 48 ** Montgomery, Ala 48 « Nashville, Tenn 49 **' Napoleon, Ark 60 « Point Isabel, Texas 51 ** Miss. River Towns 59 « Arkansas River Towns- 63 « Ohio River Towns • • • 64, 65 New York to Baltimore 154 '• Charleston, S. C 154 « Dunkirk, N. Y 71 « PhUadelphia 154 « Richmond, Va 154 « Washington, D. C 154 Norwalk, 0., to Buffalo 80 « Cleveland 84 « Toledo, — • 84 Oregon City, Fort Leavenworth- • 52 ' Laramie 52 Painesville, 0., to Cleveland 83 « Erie, Pa 83 « Toledo 80 •* Panama 56, 155 Paducah, Ky., to River Towns- -65, 69 Paris, 111., to Cincinnati, O 19 « Springfield. Ill 19 Peoria, 111., to River Towns 61 Philadelphia to Baltimore 154 « Charleston, S. C 154 « Pittsburgh, Pa 78 " Wilmington, N. C 154 Pittsburgh, Pa., to Alliance, 0- • - 99 " Baltimore, Md > • • • 78 « Buffalo, N.Y 7 « Cincinnati 12, 64 « Cleveland, 12 « Erie, Pa 7 " Massilon, 99 « Philadelphia 78 " River Towns 64 Point Isabel, Tex., to N. 0., La- - 51 Pontiac, Mich., toDetroit 1 25 Richmond to Charleston, S. C- • • • 154 « New York 154 " Philadelphia 154 Sacramento City, Gr't Salt Lake -533/^ San Antonio, to El Paso, Tex- - • • 55 Route Sandusky City, to Buffalo, N. Y- -1, 5 « Chicago, 111 15 " Cincinnati 14 « Dayton, 93 " Detroit, Mich 15 " Indianapolis, la - • 33 « Mansfield, 90 « Newark, 90 « Springfield. 93 " Zanesville 9 Santa Fe, to Independence, Mo- - 54 Sault St Marie, to Buffalo, N. Y- - 1 ^avannah, Ga., to Macon, Ga- • - • 151 Shelby ville, 111., to Cincinnati •- • 19 " Terre Haute 19 Shelby ville, la., to Edinburgh la- 103 Springfield, 0., to Cincinnati •-• • 88 " Dayton, 93 " Sandusky City 93 Springfield, 111., to Alton, 111 119 " Cincinnati 19 « Jacksonville, 111. 120 « Naples 120 " Terre Haute, la 19 St. Charles, Mo., to Council Bluffs- 62 '•' Mo. River Towns 62 St. Joseph, Mo., River Towns • - • • 62 St. Louis, Mo., to Buffalo, N. Y- - 4 " Chicago, 111 27 " Cincinnati 18 " Indianapolis 18 « Lasalle, 111 27 « Madison, la 18 « Nashville, Tenn 413^ « Terre Haute, la 18 « River Towns 58, 59, 60 Smithland, Ky., River Towns- -65, 67 Terre Haute, la., to Cincinnati- • 17 " Evansville, la 37 « Greencastle, la 110 " Indianapolis 110 « Shelbyville, HI 19 « Springfield 19 " Saint Louis-' 18 " River Towns 68 Toledo, 0., to Adrian, Mich 127 « Ashtabula, 80 « Buffalo, N.Y SO " Chicago, 111 127 " Cincinnati 15 « Cleveland 84 " Dunkirk 80 " Detroit, Mich 32 " Erie, Pa 84 " Monroe, Mich 32 INDEX. Roue. Toledo, 0., to Painesville, 80 Tuscumbia, Ala., to Atlanta, Ga- • 45 " Augusta, Ga 45 " Charleston, S. C 45 " Columbus, Miss 42 " Jackson, Miss 42 *• Memphis, Tenn 45 " Nashville, Tenn 42 " Natchez, Miss 42 ♦' River Towns 69 Union, to Dayton 95 Van Buren, Ark., to N. 0., La 50 " Ark. River Towns 63 Ticksburgh, Miss., Augusta, Ga- • 47 " Charleston, S. C 47 " Montgomery, Ala 47 " Nash vile, Tenn 43 " River Towns 57 to 65 Vincennes, la., to Indianapolis" 37 " Louisville, Ky • 38 " New Albany, la 38 « St. Louis, Mo 38 « TerreHaute 37 Route. Washington, D. C, to Baltimore- • 154 " Charleston 154 " New York 154 " Richmond, Va 154 Wellsville, to Cleveland, 97 West P'nt, Ga., Montgomery, Ala. 145 Wheeling, Va., to Baltimore, Md- 79 " Cincinnati 13 « Cleveland,© 11 " Columbus, 13 " Newark, 11 " Zanesville 11 " River Towns 64, 66 Xenia to Cincinnati 88 " Cleveland 85 " Columbus 87 Zanesville to Buffalo 9 « Cleveland 9 " Columbus 100 " Newark. — •100 " Sanduskv City 9 " Wheeling. 11 « Cincinnati. -^« 13 RAIL ROADS. Route. Akron Branch 98 Albany and Buffalo 72 Albany and Schenectady 73 Atlanta and Lagrange 14G Aurora Junction 118 Baltimore and Ohio 79 Buffalo and Penn. State Line 81 Chicago and Aurora 118 " and Galena Union 117 " and Mississippi 119 " and Rock Island 121 Cin. Columbus, and Cleveland- • • 85 Cincinnati, Hamilton aud Dayton 94 " and Hillsboro' 89 Cleveland and Pittsbui-gh 97 '•' and Erie 83 Clinton and Port Hudson 139 Columbus and Cleveland 86 " and Xenia 87 " and Lake Erie 92 Covington and Lexington 130 Dayton and Miami 95 Detroit and Pontiac 125 East Tennessee and Georgia 135 Erie and New York 71 Erie and North East 82 Route. Erie and Kalamazoo 127 Evansville and Vincennes • • 112 Georgia 149 Georgia Central 151 Hamilton and Eaton 9? Indiana Central 109 Indianapolis and Bellefontaine • • 108 Illinois Central 122 Jefifersonville and Columbus- ••• 113 Knightstown and Shelbyville 104 Lafayette and Indianapolis J06 Lake Shore Road 80 Lawrenceburg and Upper Miss- .- 114 Lexington aud Big Sandy 131 " and Danville 133 " and Frankfort 129 " and Louisville 128 " and MaysviUe 132 Little Miami 88 Louisville and Frankfort 128 « and Nashville 134 Macon and Western 150 Madison and Indianapolis 102 Mad River aud Lake Erie 93 Maysville aud Lexington 132 Memphis and Charleston 136 INDEX. XI Route. Mexican Gulf 142 Michigan Central 124 Michigan Southern - • 126 Milwaukie and Mississippi 123 Mobile and Ohio 143 Montgomery and West Point 145 Muscogee 147 Nashville and Chattanooga 137 New Albany and Salem Ill New Castle and Richmond 116 Ohio and Pennsylvania 99 Pennsylvania Central 78 Panama 155 Peru and Indianapolis 107 Ponchartrain 141 Rochester and Syracuse 76 Rochester and Bufialo -• • • • 77 Route Rome, Ga 152 Kushville and Shelbyville 105 Sangamon and Morgan 120 Sandusky City and Mansfield- • • • 90 Scioto and Hocking Valley 101 Shelbyville Lat. Branch 103 South Carolina 153 South Western Georgia 147 Terre Haute and Richmond 110 Toledo, Norwalk and Cleveland- • 84 Tuscuml^iia and Decatur 144 Utica and Schenactady 74 Utica and Sy lacuse 75 Vicksburgh, Jackson & Brandon- 138 Wabash 115 Western and Atlantic, Ga 148 West Feliciana, La 140 RIVERS. Route. Alabama 70 Arkansas 63 Cumberland • 67 Illinois 61 Kentucky 66 Mississippi to St. Louis 57 " St. Louis to Cairo 58 Route. Mississippi, Cairo to New Orleans. 59 " N. Orleans to Mouth- - - 60 Missouri 62 Ohio to Cincinnati- • •' 64 " Cairo 66 Tennessee 69 Wabash 68 EXPLANATION OF THE PLAN OF THIS WORK, To find any desired Route, the Index should first be refer- red TO. The routes are indexed by numbers and not by pages; and, to save space, the same route is to be reversed, or read backward when necessary, thus, Route 70 is from Mobile to Montgomery; but should we desire to go from Montgomery to Mobile, we read the route backward, commencing at the end. The /are from place to place will be found in the lefi hand col- umn of figures,, as in Route 14: Cincinnati to Dayton, $1.50, Dayton to Sandusky City, $3.25, and by adding these two, we have the fare from Cincinnati to Sandusky City, $4.75. On the Rail Roads, the fares are from the starting point, to any station on the route. The distance from either terminus of any route, to any point on that route, is to be found in the Jirst or third columns, as may be required, as in Route 1. Buffalo to Eagle River, we find, by following the column of places, to be 1125 miles in the first col- umn of figures ; to St, Clair is 390 miles. By reversing the route, and searching the third column of figures backward, we find St. Clair to be 735 miles from Eagle River. This explana- tion will render the reversing of any route very easy. The center column of figures denotes the distance from point to point along the route; thus. Route 1, from St. Clair to Mach- inac we find is 259 miles, and from Machinac to Sault St. Marie is 90 miles. When the Index refers to a point not to be found at the begin- ning or end of the Route, seek for it in the body of the Route, and read backward or forward, as may be required. The Index says : Cincinnati to Atlanta, Ga., Route 26 : by reference to that route, we find it to be Cincinnati to Charleston, S. C; but, as Atlanta is between these two places, we have only to follow the route until we reach Atlanta, which we find is 611 miles from Cincinnati. Figures in brackets, thus, (21), refer to routes throughout the work. Example : In Route 23, we see Lafayette, (106); by ref- erence to Route 106, we find it to be the Lafayette and Indianap olis Rail Road, which is thus referred to, here and elsewhere, to obviate the necessity of a frequent repetion of it throughout the work. The hour of starting upon the diiferent Rail Roads is put at the head of such routes. At those stations marked D, on the various Rail Roads, the trains stop for meals. JAMES' RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK FEOM BUFFALO, N. Y., WESTWAED, (Route 1.) Buffalo to Copper Mines, Lake Superior. (Via the Lakes.) Buf- falo. lut. Eas;le| Riv. 1 F„.| 1125, 90 1035 195 105 930 253 58 872 331 78 794 390 59 735 649 259 476 739 90 386 779 40 340 809 30 31G 821 12 304 8« 22 282 858 15 267 PLACES. B.if- f.lo. Int.| 870 12 890 20 905 15 920 15 930 10 941 11 987 46 1019 32 1105 86 1113 8 1125 12 Bufalo to Erie, Pa. CleTeland, 0. Santlusky City • • Detroit, Mich. • • • St. Clair .Machinack Sault St. Marie- • Whitefish Point • Two-head River Sucker River- • • Ilnrricane River, Grand Sable Steamboats leave Buffalo constantly varying in accordance with the class of Pictured Rocks, - - Grand Island, River Au Train • - Laughing Fish R. Chocolate River - • Dead Riv., Granite Point Huron River Lanse Bay, (Fur Co. station) Copper Harbor- •• Agate do Eagle River - - • . for the above ports. boat. 255 235 220 205 195 184 138 106 20 11 Price of fare (2.) Buffalo to Chicago, lU. (Via the Lakes.) Boats leave each city constantly during the season. I Buffalo to I I |1023|| [Milwaukie I 9271 531 95 Machinack (r'tel) 1649 374' Racine I 956 1 29 67 I Sheboygaa, Wis. • I 874 1 225 1 149 I 1 Chicago 1 1023 1 67 1 • - • (3.) OR EXPRESS ROUTE, DIRECT, WITH THE MAIL. Fare. I I Miles. I I Buffalo via the Lake, to i T S.OO Monroe, Mich. 294 7.00 I CJiicago, 111., (Michigan Southern Railroad, 126) i 2461 2 12 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. OR, LAND ROUTE. 100 6.00 Buffalo to Toledo, (80.) Adriiin, Mich., (127)- ChicRiiO, 111.. (126.)- •I I I 539 •I 296 248 . 329 33 210 ■ 539 2i0 Through fare from Buffalo to Chicago, $ (4.) Buffalo to St. Louis, Mo. Buff. |lnt- 10 00 1 To Chicago. (Routes 2 or 3) 7 OOl «. Louis, (Route 27) ;540, 9i7 947 4071 (5.) Buffal to San dus ky City, . rare. PLACES. KI-S7 Fare. PLACES. Buf- f.,lo. Int. San- Sandusky, by lake OR Buffalo, to 253 265 Cleveland. (84.) • • Bellevue, (84.) • • • Saudusky C, (93 ) 250 265 188 67 16 82 15 (6) Buffalo to Detroit, Mich. {Land Route, Via Canada.) PLACES. Buf. falo. Int. De- 1 troit. 1 Fare. 22 276 254 36 72 14 36 240 204 1 PLACES. B.if. fAlo. Int. 97 25 157 60 224 67 274 50 276 2 Buffhlo Niagara. By R. R. St. Catharines, Ca By stage Hamilton Brantford London Chatham Windsor Detroit, Mich.ferry. 179 119 52 2 (7.) Buffalo to Pittsburgh, Pa. PLACES. Bufalo Erie, Pa. yia (80) or boat. Waterford, stage Rockdale Woodcock Meadville Culbertson's PLACES. Mercer North Liberty • • • Brownington • • • Butler Glade Mills Bakerstown Alleghany Pittsburgh Bnf. falo. Int. 156 lo 168 12 176 8 188 12 197 9 203 6 219 16 220 1 Pitts- b'rg. (8.) Buffalo to Cincinnati, 0, Fare. | PI.ACES. Buf. I Inf. I Cin. Thr. 10.00 Buffalo Cleveland, (as in Route 1.) Cincinnati, (C. 0. & C. R. R. 85.). ;0r by Land Route, (as RoutelO) 195 449254 JAMES* RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. 13 (9.) Bu ffa lo to Zanesville, 0. F»re. PLACES. Buf- falo. '-•Iv^i;: Fare. PLACES. Buf- falo. Int. Z'us- ville. 3.00 to 5.00 3.26 76 Buffalo to Sandusky City, 0. (R.i.) Newark, {%Q. )..... Zanesville, (100.)- • 370 397 253 117 27 397 144 27 3.00 1.80 2.25 75 To Cleveland.CRA.) Shelby, junct. (86.) Newark, (90.) Zanesville, (lOO.)-- 262 334 301 195 67 72 27 166 99 27 (10.) Fare Cincinnati to New York City [.ACES. I Cin. i Int. ,^^'"1 Fare. PLACES. PLACES. I Cin. | int. ^^^;';| Cin. j Int. I New 1 York. Thr. 11.90 Cincinnati, to • • Cleveland, (85 ) Dunkirk, (80.) • N r. City, (71.) Or Tia Buffalo '-|c3o: Thr. 11.00 Cincinnati to Sandusky, 0-i.-)'- ' Detroit, sti-amer • • Chicago, Q2^.')---- OR Cincinnati to 294 571 216 78 277 571 355 277 430 Thr. 11.00 Bellevue, (93.) ■ • • • Toledo, (84.) Adrian, Mich. flO'7\ 11411 289 187 46 243 220 33 210 430210 . Chicago, 111., (126.) OR SUMMER ROUTE. Via I^akes, (Route 1,) from Cleveland to Sandusky. Time to Chicago, 3C houi's; to Detroit, 16 hours. Fare $6.50. (16.) Cincinnati to In dianapolis, la. Fare. 1 PLACES. Cin- c'li. Int. i;:^;ll-e. PLACES. S1>- Ind'. ap-.,. 1,50 Cincinnati to Madison, la. (Riv. 55-) 177 91 86 177 1 Thr. 86 4.50 OR Cincinnati to Dayton, (94 ) ■ • • • Greenville, (95.)- • • Indianapolis, QSi^."^ 60 951 35 18S| 93 18S 128 2.50 Indianapolis, (.M. &I. R. 102.) ••• 93 (17.) Cincinnati to Terre Haute, la. in- ! t„, I Ter :'ti. |'°'-|H'te I Cincinnati to ^.mJndiayiapolis. (Route 16.) 2.00lTerre Haute, (T. H. & R. R. 110.) I I 249 |l77 72 2491 721 (18.) Cincinnati to St. Louis, Mo. Fare. PLACES. I Int. I Cincinnati to S.OOj Cairo, (Ohio River, to I 65.) 10.00:.Src ioM(S,Mo.(Mis, 1 RiTer,68.) 539 712173 7121 173 6.00 1 1 ab't 1110.00 Cincinnaii to • • • • • Terre Haute, (17.) Illinois Town, stg. St. Louis, ferry • • ■ 414 2491 165 JAMES RAILROAD AND RODTE BOOK. 15 (19.) Cincinnati to Springfield, 111. ?;"■!•"'. \^;i Fare. PLACES. I Fare, j FLACES. I Cin- I c'li. \Oincinnati to • lO.OO!^^. Louis, Mo. (18.) bi\ . . Wubuque, stage (30.) Chicago to Cleveland, I Cdi- I caiO. 7.00 Chicago to Toledo, (126.) Cleveland, steamer- (31.) Chicago to Madison, Wis. I Mad- I ison. Chicago to Rockford. 111.(117.) Roacoe, stage Beloit JanesvilU, Wis. • • Union • Madison 41 (32.) Detroit, Mich., to Toledo, 0. I De- I troit To- ledo. Detroit to Gibralter, stage- Brest Monroe ■ ■ • Erie Toledo, 0- (33.) Indianapolis, la., to Detroit, Mich Fare. | PLACES. ! Indianapolis to • Union, 0. (108.) Dayton, (95.)... 1 I 362 83 279 128 45 234 Saiidusky O. (93)- 1 284 Detroit, (steamer route.) 362 78 18 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. (34.) Indianap olis to Cleveland, 0. Fare, j PLACES. ' ^p^" lut. .^a'aa:! Fare. PLACES. \^^^^\^, Indianapolis to Dayton, 0. (33.) • • Bellevue, (93) • • • Cleveland, (84.)..- OR Indianapolis to • • • 269 336 128 141 67 336, 208i 671 214| 4.00 7.00 Sandusky C. (33.)- Cleveland, st'r OR Indianapolis to • • • Cincinnati, (16.)- • Cleveland, (85.)..- 214 431 156 58 254 68 431 254 (35.) Indianapolis to Buffalo, N . Y. Fare. 1 PLACES. Inn. ap',. Int. Buf-I falo. 1 Fare. PLACES. In'n-I , . 1 Buf. \Indianapolis to • ■ 11 00 C/eveZand, (34.) •• . 3.00\Buffalo, steamer • • 626 431 195 626 195 11.00 OR Cleveland, (34.)- •• Buffalo, (80.) 1 1*^1* 431183 614^183 (36.) Indianapolis to Louisville, Ky. Lo'is-I ■ vine. I PLACES. 2.50 1.00 Indianapolis to • • • Madison, (102.)- • • Louisville, Ohio R. (65.) .« 80 137 51 137 1.25 1.75 OR Indianapolis to • . Columbus, (102 )• JeffersonviUe.QlZ.'y LouisviUe, ferry (37.) Indianapolis to Evansville, la. Fare, j a.s. •"'•l^f;:: {Indianapolis to • • • • 2.00 Terre Haute, (110.)- Vincennes, stage • • • • \ Princeton, " \Evan^Ue, (112.) • • • 102 120 64 30 (38.) Louisville, Ky., to St. Louis, Mo. Fare, j PLACES. PLACES. 8.00 to 10.00 LouisviUe to Cairo, (65.) St. Louis, (57.) • OR Louisville to New Albany, st'j Orleam, (111.) 670 570 Faoli, stage ■ • • Mt. Pleasant • • Vincennes Salem, 111. •■•. Belleville Illinoistown • • • St. Louis, ferry JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. 19 (39.) Louisvil le, K Y'^ to Chicago, 111. Fare. | PLACES. \^,nl']l'^i- ^. Fare. PLACES. |^^^;ilnt. Chi- cago. Louisville to 10.00 St. Louis, IMo. (38.) 7.00 C/nca^o, (27.) 977 570 407 977 2 50 10.00 OR Louisville to Cincinnati, (21.)- • Chicago, (15.) 713 142 571 713 (40.) Louisville, Ky., to Buffalo, N. Y. PLACES. 1 Lo's- , , 1 Huf- i ville. ^°'- I falo. Fare. | I Louisville to 2 50\Cincln7iati. (65) 10.00\Buffalo, (8.) 591 (41.) Louisville, Ky., to Nashville, Tenn. \m^ |N'h- •|ville. ■| ville. S.OO\Louisville to to \Sinithland, (65 ) IQ.W Nashville, (67.) • |334 535;201 53511 Louisville to Nashville, (20.) 178 (41 1.) Nashville to Chicago, 111. Cl;i- 8.00 to 10.00 7.00 Nashville to Smithkind, Ky. (67.)- Cairo, (65.) St. Louis, (57.) Chicago, (27.) * I 844 201 643 63 5S0 173 407 $144:4071 (42.) Nas hvill e t 5 N atchez. Miss. Fare.l PLACES. j:^;tiI"^ l^^iil Fare. PLACES. i'^';,^^; ■••■iss. 10.00 to 15.00 Nashville to Cairo, (411^.) ••.• Natchez, (59.) OR Nashville to Frauklin, stage, • • Columbia l264 949 685 1Q 949 469 Mt. Pleasant Lawrencebtirgli' • • Florence, Ala. Tuscumbia Columbus, Miss. • • • 53 75 111 116 228 369 Ill 416 22 1 394 36 358 5 353 112 241 in 1 f>A 42l 24i 427 I^atches 469.100l """ (43.) Nashville to Vicksburg, Miss, Fare. PLACES. N'sh- ville. Inf. V'ks. bur?. 415 369 46 415 TacJtnn MU ^ 2.00 Yicksburg, (138.) 20 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. (44.) Nashville to Memphis, Tenn. Fare. PLACES. PLACES. lilt 8.00\Nashville to to ICairo, in. (41340 10.00]JUemphis. (59.) ■ • OR llfashville to I lleyuo'dsburg, stg Huntingtou iBolivar ISommerville \Me))iphis I 691 161 98 29 132 142! 64 63 185| 23 45 230 45 (45.) Memphis, .Tenn., to Charleston, S. C. PLACES. IS:l'--l' Memphis to Colliersville, (136.) Holly Spriugs, stg. llipley J at into Buzzards lloost- • • Tuscumbia Decatur, (144.) • • • Triana, steamboat 23 53 30 83 30 117| 34 144| 27 164^ 20 207 j 43 225 18 iGuuter's Luudiug- Van Buren, stage- Georgia State Line Rnme Kingston, (152.)- • Atlanta, (148.) Augusta, (150.) • •• Charleston, (153.) • 267! 42i 487 295' 28i 459 328 1 33; 426 346 18 366! 20 4461 80 611il71 7541137 408 388 137 (46.) Memphis to Little Rock, Ark PLACES. phis. '"'-Ilfck. Fare, Fare. I PLACES. ""• K'ck. Memphis to Grand Prairie, stg. Reagans Blufif Clarendon Oakland 178 35 143 St. Francis • • Green Plains Marion Little Rock • • (47.) Vickshurg, M iss. , to Charleston, S. c. Fare. fi^ACT.s. j,^;^^- -l^:;;ri Fare. 1 PLACES. bu^il '"'' Ch's. Ion. 2 60 Vicksburg to Brandon, (138.)- •• Montgomery, Ala., stage 60 1 Z^r)\West Point, (145.)- 3.50L4<;anto, Ga. (146.) b.m Augusta, (149)... l.m' Charleston, (\bZ.-) ■ 1 88 1 87 171 137 (48.) New Orleans, La., to Charleston, S.C, Fare. | Orl's. Int. I New Orleans to 5 (i(i\ Mobile, steamer (70a)- %m\Mo7itgomery, (70.) • • • 2&J>0\Charleston, (47.) Ch's- ton. 1 p:i24 |175 949 581406 543 •11124,543 JAMES' RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. (49.) New Orleans to Nashville, Tenn. PI, ACES. I ^^"Jl rrt. New Orl&ms to I I Cairo, (Miss. River, 59.) I 973 Sinithland, (Ohio River, 65 ) il036 63 Nashville, (Cumb. River, 67.) 11237 201 21 Nsh- v.lle. 15.00 to 20.00 1237 264 201 (50.) New Orleans to For t Gibson, Ind. Ter. Fare. PLACES. iur'^!'"'- l°:i\^^..\ PLACES. j^^.-lint. Fort Gb'n. New Orkans to- •• Napoleon, (59.) • • ■ 569 Little Rock, (63 ) • 854 285 1214 045 360 Van Burets (63.) • lOSo 231 Fort Smith, (63.) • 1094 9 Fort Gibson, (63)- 1214 120 129 120 (51.) New Orleans to Texas. Steam packets leave New Orleans for Lavaca, J Indianola, S Every Sunday at 9 A. M. Matagorda, ) Brazos St. Jago,"| Point Isabel, V Every Thursday at 9 A. M. Brownsville, J Galveston, every Sunday and Thursday at 9 A. M. 22 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. (52.) From Fort Leavenworth to Oregon City, AS MEASUHED BY AN ODOMETER. PLACES. J^rt Leavenworth Nunahaw river Big Vermilion river Br. of Blue river Big Sandy river Dry Branch Little Blue river Ibrt Kearney N. Fork Platte river • • • Lower Crossing S. Fork. Upper " " North Fork Platte river, through Ash Hollow • Chimney Rock Scott's Bluff Horse creek • Fort Laramie Bitter Cottonwood creek Horse Shoe creek, He- ber's spring Spring Branch Deer creek Crooked Muddy creek • • Mormon Ferry, North Fork Platte river Mineral spring Willow spring Sweet Water river, near Independence Rock • • South Pass Sublitt's Cut-off Little Sandy river Big Sandy river Green River ferry Black's Fork Muddy Fork Fort Int Or'u L'lh. I'"- 1 City. 2016 110 1906 138 28:1878 154 161862 207 53,1809 220 .131796 2351 1511781 310! 7511706 393: 83:1623 431 3S 1585 478 47 1538 501 23 1515 564 63 1452 585 21 1431 604 19 1412 637 33 1379 661 24 1355 675 14 1.341 715 40:1301 742 27 1274 752 101264 764 121252 782 18 1 12.34 801 19 1215 816 15 1200 911 9511005 918 71098 947 29 1069 959 12 1057 982 23 1034 1002 20 1014 1021 19 9951 PLACES. Fort Bridger - Big Muddy river Bear river Smith's Station Camp spring Soda spring Port Neuf creek Rock Branch Fort Hall Snake River Bottom • • • Snake river Raft river Rock creek Chute, or Salmon Fall creek First Crossing Snake R. Oathei'ine creek Fort Boisse, 2d crossing Snake river Malhem river Birch creek Burnt river Grand Ronde Blue mountain Lee's Camp Umatilla Crossing Columbia river .lohn Day's River -• Dalles of the Columbia- First Branch of Chute river Indian village Sandy river Hern Prairie Fosters Oregon City L'th.|'"' 1038 1055 1097 1136 1156 1176 1201 1216 1242 1266 1280 1295 1350 1388 1421 1471 1543 1558 1580 1590 1673 1692 1709 1737 1779 1840 1877 1893 1908 1944 1979 1996 2016 Or'n City. "978 961 919 840 815 800 774 750 736 721 666 628 595 645 473 458 436 426 343 324 307 279 237 176 139 123 108 72 37 20 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. 23 (53.) Mormon Eoute FROM KANESVILLE, (XExVR COUNCIL BLUFFS,) To City of the Great Salt Lake, Utah, PLACES. K'ns-i, vile. I ' Gr't S. L. 485 481 466 44S. 428 423 420 416 411 353 352 343 333 332 327 315 303 281 253 252 247 232 229 213 205 197 170 150 146 115 102 84 82 73 67 45 41 30 16 5 Kanesville Ferryville, on Mo. river Pappcn creek Elkhorn river Platte river Sliell creek Long lake Loup fork Looking-gla.^s creek Beaver river Plum creek OM Pawnee village • • • • Cedar creek Upper ford Loup fork • • Prairie creek Wood river Elm creek •• • Buffalo creek "Willow lake - Ptali lake Skunk creek Carrion creek Blaclc Mud creek ••....• North Bluff fork Bluff creek Petite creek Goose creek Duckweed creek Rattlesnake creek • Crooked creek Camp creek Wolf creek Watch creek Castle creek Sand Hill creek Crab creek Cobble hills Ancient Bluff Ruins Chimney Kock Scott's Bluffs Spring creek Rawhide creek I^irt Laramie Warm Springs Porter's Rock 30l 29] 51 741 S6i 97 107 116 123 127 129 146 170 182 234 241 263 270 291 308 322 331 343 353 355 358 364 371 375 381 385 395 400 422 427 431 464 484 488 522 534 548 554 171 897 24^ 873 12' 861 52j 809 7 802 22 780 71 773 21 752' 17! 7.351 14! 7211 9 712: 121 700 lol 690: 21 688! 3 0851 6 679 1 7 6721 4 668 1 6 662' 4 65S! 10 04S] 5 643! 22 621 5 616! 4 612 i 3.'^ 5791 20 559 4 555 34 521 12 509 14 495 6 489 I Bitter creek 658i ! Dead Timber creek 562! {Horse creek &Heberspgs 577J 'La Bonte river 595 !a La P. river 615; !Box Elder creek 620i I Fourche Boise river 623 { North Fork Platte river 627 iOeer creek 632 Upper Platte ferry and ford 661 llock avenue 681 Willow spring 690[ Prospect hill 691 j Greasewood creek 700i Sweet Water river 710 Independence Rock • • • • 711 Devil's Gate 716 Alkali lake 728 Bitter Cottonwood creek 740 ice spring 762 Strawberry creek 790 Quaking Aspen creek • • 791 Willow creek 796 South Pass 811 Pacific creek 814 Junction California and Oregon route 830 Little Sandy 838 Big Sandy 846 Green River ford 873 Black's Fork 893 Ham's Fork 897 Fort Briiiger 928 Muddy Fork 911 Sulphur creek 959 Bear river 901 Yellow creek 970 Cache cave 976 Red Fork, Weber river • 998 Weber river ford 1002 Kanj'on creek • 1013 Bi-owu's creek 1027 Mouth of Kanyon 1038 CU;/ of Salt Lake jl043 24 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. (53|.) To Sacramento City, via Mormon Route. To City of Salt Lake- Mary's river The Link of do 10431 "~ri912 135S 315 1597 1632 274,1323 mv< Truckees Lake 11766 13411189 Johnsons 1877 jlll 1078 \Sacramento City |l912| 35!l04:3 (54.) From Independence to Santa Fe. PLACE:^. InrP.pe7i Grand Tower 5 Bainbridge, Mo. > Hamburgh, 111. 5 Cape Girardeau, Mo. Commerce Ohio C. & m'th of Ohio R, MISSISS (59.) From Cairo, IPPI RIVER, 111., to New Orl( PLACES. INewI Orl's.l PLACES. Cairo, 111. Island No. 1 Columbus, Ky. Hickman, or Mills point New 3Iadrid, Mo. Point Pleasant Riddle's point Walker's bend Little prairie. Mo. Needham's cut-off Ashport, Tenn. Osceola, Ark. Fulton Randolph Greenock Memphis^ Tenn. Pickering Norfolk, Miss. Commerce St. Francis river > Curran, Ark. ) Helena Yazoo pass & Delta, Miss Horse Shoe bend Montgomery point, Ar, ) Victoria, Miss. ••...•. J White river, Ark. Napoleon > Arkansas river i Bolivar, C. H. Miss. Columbia, Ark. Point Chicot Greenville, Miss. •••••• Princeton Bunch's cut-off Lake Providence, La. • • • Tompkins settlement- • • Biunflwick landing 3 18 38 82 89 92 110 117 141 149 161 171 181 228 248 250 258 283 295 307 315 323 381 385 401 ' 414 467 471 475 479 489 608 523 637 Milliken's settlement- • • Yazoo river Walnut hills Vicksburg Warrenton Palmyra settlement- - • • Carthage landing, La. • • Point Pleasant Big Black creek Grand gulf. Miss. Bayou Pierre } Bruinsburg, Miss. 5 Rodney Natchez Ellis' cliff Homochitto river Fort Adams Red river Bayou Atchafalaya Raccourci cut-off Bayou Sara, St. Fran-j cisville & Pt. Coupee 5 Waterloo Port Hudson Thomas' point Baton Rouge Bayou Manchec j Iberville 5 Placquemine Manchac church Bayou La Fourche- • • • ; Donaldsonville ) Contrelle church Bonnet Quarre church • Red church Carrolton Lafayette New Orleans 549 12 557 567 8 10 569 2! 579 10 594 15 598 4 608 10 622 14 624 2 634 10 644 10 685 41 703 18 729 26 739 10 750 11 753 3 763 10 793 30! 799 6l 804 6! 817 13 1 829 12 844 15 862 8 862 10 886 24 903 17 927 24 943 16 962 19 966 4 969 3 420 412 402 400 390 375 371 361 347 345 335 325 284 230 219 216 206 170 165 152 140 125 117 107 83 28 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. MISSISSIPPI RIVER. (60.) New Orleans to Gulf of Mexico. PLACES. Ne«' .„. iGulf II Orl'3.|""-| Mo. II 1 104 6 9S| 18 12 86 38 20 66 45 7 59! 62 7- 52l PLACES. Neio Orleans, La. Battle Ground- • • English Turn • • • Poverty point • • • Wilkinson's Johnson's Grand praiiue Fort Jackson South West PasS'- Pass a L'Outre Balize • Parat, South East 62 10 42 72 10 32 92 20 12 95 3 9 100 5 4 104 4 RECAPITULATION. PLACES. I'alls of St. Anthony to St. Louis, Mo. Cairo, lU. Memphis, Tenn 994 1242 1963! 1142 721 Miss. Vicksburg Natchez New Orleans, La. 1563 321 1679,116 19631284 400 284 Boats ply constantly between all the places on this river, — fares vary according to the accommodations. Meals and berths on the Western river Btcamers are always included in the fare. (61.) ILLINOIS RIVER, Navigable to La Salle, 267 miles. PLACES. Grafton, m'th of Illinois Twelve Mile island Hardin Newport Bridgeport Montezuma Florence Griggsville Landing- •• • Naples, (Sangamon and M. R. K.) Meredeosia Lagrange Beardstown Frederick- • Is^rj Bath Ilavanna Liverpool- •• • • Copperas creek- Kingston Pekin Peoria Rome Chillicothe • -• • Lacon Henry Hennepin Peru Lasalle I Graf- 1 I ton. I 131 22 145 14 155 10 165 10 177i 12 I85I 8 1951 10 213i 18 216 3 226 10 236 10 248 12 266 18 267 1 136 122 112 102 90 82 72 54 51 41 31 19 I ECAPITULATION. 1 Salle.. '"'• ; Lo's. Lasalle Mississippi river St. Louis Boats ply daily on this river between St. Louis and Lasalle, and St. Louis and Naples, in connection with S. & M. R. R, (120.) 30» 42 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. 29 (62.) MISSOURI EIVER. Council Bluffs to Mouth. PLACES. PLACES. Council Bluffs • • • • Traders point Bellevue Platte river Iowa point Node way City St. Joseph Weston Fort Leavenworth • Little Platte river- Parkville Kansas Randolph Wayne city Liberty Landing- • Livingstone Owens Landing- •• Sibley Camden Wellington Lexington Walconda Waverly 25 40 1 205 230 2S5 292 312 313 3231 3281 3-35 340 345 346 360 ! 14| 372; 12l 377 5l 3331 6] 4081 25 41l| si 690 6S6 665 650, 515 4^5 460 405 898 378 377 367 362 355 350 345 344i 330 31S 313 307 282 2791 Grand river Brunswick Old Jefferson Glasgow Arrow Rock La Mine river Booneville } Franklin 5 liockport Providence Nashville Marion Hibernia Jefferson City Osage river Portland Gasconade river Herman Pinckney Washington St. Charles Mouth of Missouri river 261 259 231 228 219 191 179 178 163 148 143 134 113 103 93 76 68 22 The Gates of the Rocky Mountains are 441 miles above the extreme point of navigation. The " Great Palls" and Fort McKenzie are 110 miles below this, and 2,575 from the mouth. Above Council Bluffs we can not obta.in any reliable information as to distances, the country being very thinly settled. Boats to Council Bluffs, and all the intermediate places, from St. Louis daily. (63.) ARKANSAS RIVER, PLACES. Ibrt Gibson, Indian Ter- ritory Webber's Falls Fort Coffee Fm-t Smith, Ark. Van Buren Ozark M'Lain's Bottom Morrison's Bluff Fort Crb'n. Int Na- po'n. 645 40 605 100 60 545 1201 20 5251 129; 9| 516 189! 60| 456 199j lOl 446 214 15 43111 PLACES. Spadra Bluff Dardanelle Lewisburg L'ttle Rock I: -e Bluff Arkansas Pass Montgomery point • • • • Naj^oleon, (Mississippi river.) Fort Gb'n. ■„.| 220 6 250 30 295 45 360: 65 460 100 580 120 625 45 645 20 N* po'n. "425 395 350 285 185 65 Navigable to Little Rock, 285 miles, at all seasons, and to Fort Gibson, 64S miles, during high stages of water. Boats from New Orleans ply on this river constantly. Boats from Cincin- nati, St. Louis, 4c., usually reship their freight destined for thia riyer at Napoleon. 30 JAMES' RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. OHIO RIVEE. (64.) Pittsburgh to Cincinnati. PLACES. Pittsburgh Middletown, Pa. Economy Freedom Beaver Georgetown i Glasgow •-•5 Liverpool, 0. WellKville Steubenville Wellsburgh, Va. Warrentou, 0. Martinsville Wheeling, Va. > Bridgeport, 0. i Elizabethtown, Va.- • ^ Big Grave creek V Moundsville J Steinerville, 0. New Martinsville, Va. • • Clarington, O.---- Sisterville, Va. Newport, 0. Marietta i Harmar, 0. 5 Vienna, Va. Parkersburgh, Va. • •• i Belpre, 0. 5 Blannerhassetts' island • Troy " ^ Hockhocking river • • • 5 Bellville, Va. Murraysville Shade river, 0- Bavenswood, Va. Letartsville and isl'd, 0. Graham's station Pomeroy Coalport Middleport Sheffield Point Pleasant, Va. • • Great Kanawha river Gallipolis Millersport PLACES. Guyandottc, Va. ) fiottorsville, 0. 5 Burlington Big Sandy river, Va. • • ) Catlettsburgh ) Ironton, O. Hanging Rock, 0. (Jreenupsburgh, Ky. • • • Wheelersburgh, O. Portsmouth ] Scioto river, 0. > Springville, Ky. } Kockville, 0. Vanceburgh, Ky. Rome, 0. Concord, Ky. Manchester, 0. Maysville, Ky. } Aberdeen, 0. 5 Charleston, Ky. Ripley, 0. Lavana, 0. ? Dover, Ky. 5 Higginsport, 0. Augusta, Ky. Rockspring Mechanicsburgh Neville, 0. Moscow Point Pleasant, 0. ? Belmont, Ky. > Susannah, 0. ? New Richmond > Palestine Little Miami river ) California, 0. i Columbia, 0. "| Pendleton, 0. > Jamestown, Ky. J Fulton, 0. "j Newport, Ky. Licking river, Ky. • • • r Covington, Ky. I CINCINNATI, O.-... J Pitts- burg. Int. 323 18 331 8 335 4 344 9 348 4 354 6 362 8 374 12 391 17 393 2 400 7 407 7 414 7 426 12 433 7 435 2 437 2 441 4 445 4 449 4 452 3 455 3 457 2 462 5 467 5 469 2 482 13 484 2 485 1 J 111 119 122 126 152 164 19S 210 214 219 220 231 254 260 2S5 310 11 8 6 5 4.S5- 474 466 460 455 14 441 4 437 41 433] 19 414 i 71 407 7 400 8 392 1 391 17 374 8 3 4 26 12 366 363 359 333 321 19 302 6 296 7 289 2 287 12 275 4 5 1 11 23 6 8 271 2(361 265 254 231 225 217 1 216 12 204 4 25 200 175 JAMES* RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. 31 OHIO RIVER. (65.) Cincinnati to Cairo L'lii- I r„» I Lai- I .'t,. m ro. I Cin- Int. 243 12 253 10 267 14 273 6 274 1 276 2 279 3 292 13 301 9 304 3 307 3 310 3 323 13 329 6 337 8 349 12 375 26 390 15 395 5 401 6 406 5 416 10 418 2 430 12 436 6 459 23 476 17 488 12 496 8 498 2 499 1 506 7 515 9 525 10 527 2 533 6 539 6 Oincinnati Industry, 0. Taylorsville, Ky. ; Home City, 0. S North Bend, 0. Great Miami river Lawrenceburgh, la. • • • • Petersburgh, Ky. Aurora, la. BellcTiew, Ky. Rising Sun, la. Big Bone Lick creek- • ; Hamilton, Ky. 5 Patriot, la. Warsaw, Ky. New York, or Florence • Vevay, la. ; Ghent, Ky. S Carrolltoii, ~| Kentucky river > Preston, Ky. j Milton, Ky. > Madison, la. 5 Hanover Landing, la.- • New London Bethlehem Westport, Ky. Charleston landing, la.- XJtica Jeffersonville Louisville, Ky. Shipping.'sport Portland, Ky. > JVew Albany, la. 5 Salt river ■> Westpoint, Ky. J Brandenburg, Ky. Mauckport, la. Northampton Amsterdam Leavenworth Fredonia Alton Concordia, Ky. Rome, la. Stephensport, Sinking creek, Ky, Cloverport Hawsville, Ky.. • •. Cannelton, la. Troy, la. Maxville Batesville Lewisport, Ky. • • • Rockport, la. Oweusboro, Ky.--. Bon Harbor Enterprise, la. Point Isabel Newbui'gh Green river, Ky. • - Evansville, la. - • • • Henderson, Ky. Mount Vernon, la. Uniontown, Ky. - • Wabash river Raleigh, Ky. Shawueetown, 111.- Casoyville, Ky. Battery Rock, 111.- Cave-in-Rock Elizabeth Golconda ■ Cumberland river - Sniithland, Ky. Tennessee river • • • Paducah, Ky. Belgrade, IlL Fort Massac Metropolis Hillaman VVilkinsonville - . . . • Caledonia America Trinity - • • » ■ Cairo, 111. ■ Mississippi river Mouth of Ohio EECAPITUL ATION. FLACES. Pittsburgh Cincinnati Louisville 11993 485 1 1608 1 142il366i I Pitts- |b';h. New Or'j. Evansville I 822119511171 Cairo 1024 202 9§9 New Orleans 19931969 32 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. Regular Lines of Steam Packets leave CINCINNATI for the following places, viz. : PITTSBURGH, Pa., and intermediate points, daily. Fare $6.00. MAYSVILLE, Ky., daily, except Sundays. Fare $1 50. MADISON, Ta.. daily, except Sundays, in connection with M. & I. R. R., (102.) Fare $1.50. LOUISVILLE, (Mail Line,) and intermediate points, daily. Fare $2.50. FRANKFORT, Ky,, every Sunday and Wednesday at 10 A. M. Fare $3.50. NASHVILLE, Tenn., every Wednesday. Fare $10.00. MEMPHIS, Tenn., weekly. " Fare $10.00. And transient steamers for St. Louis, Mo., and New Orleans, leave daily during the season. Faxe, as can be agreed upon. N. B. — On all Western river steamers, meals and berths are always ill' eluded in the cabin passage fai-e. Regular Lines of steamers leave LOUISVILLE, Ky., for — ST. LOUIS, daily. Fare $ 8.00. NEW ORLEANS, daily. Fare $20.00 to $30.00. FLORENCE, Ala., weekly. Fare $10.00. BOWLING GREEN, Ky., weekly. Fare $10.00. 4@* All of these packets stop at any intermediate point. KENTUCKY EIVER, (66.) From the Mouth to Cogar's Landing. The CSTII m'th. '"'• L'd?.|| 1 104 8 96: 12 4 92: 15 3 89, 19i 4 851 201 1 841 2S 8 76 311 3 73 37j 6 67 42 5 62 PLACES. Cg'r Ldsr. Carrollton Worthsville Law's Landing • • • Marion Springport Drennon's Lick* ■ • Gratz Lockport Owenton Landing- Monterey Flat creek Landing •"• Franl-fort Woodford Landing- • • Shriock's " Wilson's " McCowan's " Oregon Cumming's Landing Monday's " Cogar's Landing 45 3 60 16 72 12 75 3 79 4 83 4 86 3 96 10 100 4 104 4 * Passengers for Drennon Springs, one mile west of this place, stop here. EEC APITUL ATION. IPitis- . , iF'iik- |brgh. '"'■ I fort. 626 141 60 Pittsburgh Cincinnati Carrollton, Ky. river Frankfort There are 17 locks and dams on this river between its mouth and Frank- fort, 60 miles, overcoming a hight of 210 feet. Cost, $2,300,000. A boat leaves Frankfort for Louisville, and another for Cincinnati, semi- weekly. Fare in each, $3.60. JAMES* RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. 33 CUMBERLAND RIVER, (67.) From Nashville to the Mouth, PLACES. Smithland, Ohio river Eddy ville Canton Tobacco Port 50 70 20 83! 13 Dover t'alinyra • • Olarksville Nashville ■ • 131 30 70 146 15 55 201 551 Regular packets ply, in the season, ou this river ; also regular lines to New Orleans, St. Louis, and Cincinnati. RECAPITULATION Pitts- I . . I Nsh- Pittsburgh Cincinnati Louisville • Smithland Nashville • 1 11162 14851 677 627142 535 961334 201 1162 201 WABASH RIVER, (68.) From Lafayette, la., to its Mouth. PLACES. 1 The iM'iti. Int. r^r,-e.|| 378 1 60 318 75 15 303 120 45 258 156| 36 222 174 18 204l 191 17 187i 199 8 179 207 8 1711 216 9 1621; 232 16 146 264 32 114 284 20 94 1 PLACES. Wabash river ■ • New Harmony- Graysville Mount Carmel- Vinconnes • • • • Russellville- •• • Palestine Merom Hudsonville • • York ••• Darwin Land'g- Tei're Haute •4- • Clinton Jlontezuma ■ • • • Pilson's Ferry • • Vermillion river Perry ville Covington Baltimore Portland William.sport • • • Attica Independence • • La Grange Lafayette 12 82 9 73 8 65 10 55 12 Navigable for medium sized steamers, in high stages, to Lafayette. Transient boats ply between the principal points during the season. TENNESSEE RIVER, (69.) From Florence, Ala., to Paducah, Ky. Padu- cah. '"'•le:i:i:i 155 274 105 169 50 1 119 CarroUsville Savannah Tuscumbia Landing • Florence cth. I ^"'- 175 20 210 35 270 60 274' 4 'PaducaJi, (mouth of the Tennessee rivei) Reynoldsburg Perry ville Navigable to Florence at most seasons of the year. It is here interrupted by the iMuscle Shoals. Merchandise is landed at Tuscumbia and forwarded to Decatur per T. & D. R. R. (144), and there reshipped, the river being navi- gable some distance above the Shoals. A regular line of packets plies upon this river ; also a line between Florence and Louisville, Ky. 34 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. ALABAMA RIVER. (70.) Mobile to Montgomery. PLACES. Mo- i„i bile. I.I. 261 5 271 10 276 5 281 5 301 20 326 25 341 15 364 2a 371 7 37.5 4 380 5 381 1 390 9 406 16 8.00 2.50 3.00 4.00 6.00 Mobile Fort Stoddard Mouth Alabama R. Cut-off Choctaw Bluff Gainestown Gosport Claiborne Bell's Landing Lo'er Peach tree L'g. Up'r Peach tree L'g. Prairie Bluff Aola Bridgeport Portland 406 5 00 45 361 a 50 5 356 « 72 22 334 '« 112 40 294 ft 122 10 284 6.00 142 20 264 '« 147 5 259 li 177 30 229 " 182 5 224 6.50 212 30 194 " 224 12 182 « 228 4 178 7 00 242 14 164 8.00 256 14 150 Elm Bluff White's Landing- • King's Landing- -- Cahaba Selma Gaston's Landing - Benton Cyprus Creek Vernon Newport Tallawassa Grave's Landing- • Washington Montgomery 145 135 130 125 105 80 65 42 35 31 26 25 16 Regular steamers ply upon this River in connection with the New Orleans Packets. Time about 45 hours. (70a.) New Orleans .to Mobile, Ala. Fare. | PLACES. 6.25 25 2.00 2.50 2.50 xVcMJ Orleans- • • MilneburgR. R--- Fort Pike, steamer. Lake Borgne Bay St. Louis- ••• Pass Christien- • • • 3.00 5.25 Mississippi City- Biloxi Pascagoula Grant's Pass---- Mobile 90 15 100 10 115 15 145 30 175 30 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. 35 (71.) ERIE RAIL ROAD. B£NJ. L'^DER, PresH. Chajiles Minot, Sup't. Between New York City and Dunkirk. Length, 469 Miles. Connects at Dunkirk with Lake Shore Road (80), and steamers on tho Lakes. Leaves New York 6.30, and 8 A. M. and 6 P. M. Leaves Dunkirk at 4.00 A. M. and 1.30 and 4 P. M. Time through, e^spress train, 18 hours. New yrk. Int. ^ir^ll 469 24 445 25 1 444 29 4 440 33 4 436 35 2 434 37 2 432 39 2 430 42 3 427 44 2 425 45 1 424 48 3 421 52 4 417 54 2 415 57 3 412 59 2 410 62 3 407 64 2 405 65 1 404 70 5 399 74 4 395! 77 3 392 81 4 388 85 4 384! 92 7 377 98 6 371 108 10 361 112 4 357 121 9 348 126 5 343 132 6 337 137 6 332 141 4 328 146 5 323 153 7 316 163 10 306 169 6 300 174 5 295 ISO 6 2S9 182 2 287 187 5 282 194 7 275 202 8 267 210 8 259 Fare. STATIONS. I New iY'ik ,00 New Torli, (steam- boat to) Pier Piermont, (R. R.)- Rlauveltville Clarkstown Spring Valley • • • • Mousey Fifteen Mile Turn- Sufferns Ramapo Sloatsburg Shultz Town Monroe Works Wilkes Turner's. D . • • • • Monroe Oxford .Junction Chester Goshen N. Hampton Middletown Howells Otisville Shin Hollow Delaware 25 25 30 3» 40 45 50 60 65 70 75 85 90 95 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.10 1.20 1.25 1.40 150 1.65 1.75 2.00 Rosa Switch • • 2.10JMiddaghs 2.25 Lacka waxen •• 2 351 Mast Hope 2.40 Narrowsburgh • 2.50 i Nobody's T. ••• 2 60Cochecton 2.70 Callicoon 2.85 Hankins 3.05 [ Kquinuuk 3.15 [Stockport 3 25 Hancock 3.35 3.40 3.50 S.65 8.85 Dickensons • • Hale's Eddy • • Deposit. I) . . Summit Susquehanna- 4.00|Great Bend 4.10 Kirkwood • • - - 4 15 Windsor Road 4.25 Binghampton 4 45 Union 4 60 Campville 4 75 Owego D. 4.85 Tioga 4.95 Smithboro 5 00 Barton 5.15 Waverly 5 25 Chemung 5.35 Wellsburg • • • 5.50 Elviira 5.60 Junction 5.65 Big Flats 5.80 Corning, junction 5.85 6.00 6.10 6 25 6.50 6.60 6.70 Painted Post Addison Rathboneville Cameron Canisteo HornellsvilU, j'n N Y. City & Buf. R Almond 6.80 Alfred 6.95|Andover 7.15|Genesee 7.20|Scio 7.30! Phillipsville 7.40J Belvidere 7.50 Friendship 7.70 Cuba 7.80 Hinsdale 7.95 Clean. D 8.00 Alleghany Tumingwaut Great Valley Bucktooth Little Valley Cattaraugus Turnout Dayton Cooper's Corners • • Porestville — Dunkirk 36 JAMES' RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. ERIE RAIL nOAB.—QContiiiued.-) Fare from Cincinnati to N. York, via Lake Shore R., $16.90. Time 39 h'ra. From Dunkirk to New York, via Ramapo R. R, through New Jersey, is but 460 miles. This road proposes to lay an extra rail to accommodate the guage of the Erie Road, thus enabling the cars of that road to run direct to Jersey City. ^^__^ (72.) ALBANY AND BUFFALO EAIL EOAD. Between Albany and Buffalo, length 338 miles, is composed of the follow- ing lines ; Albany and Schenectady, (73.) 17 miles. Utica and Schenectady, (74.) 78 " Utica and Syracuse, (75.) 53 " Rochester and Sjracuse, (76.) 114 " Buffalo and Rochester, (77.) 76 « Fare from Cincinnati to New York, via Lake Shore Road (80.) and the Hudson River from Albany $17.30 By the same to Albany, thence via Hudson River R. R. instead of R., 18.40 Fare from CinciunsUi to Boston, via same route to Albany, thence via Western R. R., (156.) 21,30 Time to New York 39V^ hours To Boston, 48 hours. (73.) Albany and Schenectady Hail Boad. E. C. McIntire, Fres't. E. Foster, Jr. Sec'i/. Length, 17 miles. Leaves Albany daily, except Sundays, as follows :— 6 30, 7.30, 9, and 11 A. M., and 12, 4, 6.30, and 11- P. M. On Sundays, the 6.30 P. M. train only leaves. Leaves Schenectady for Albany on arrival of the cars of the Utica and Schenectady Road from the west. Through fare, 50 cents. ..j STATIONS. Sche- nc'v. ! Albany Center House Schenectadi/ • (74.) Utica and Schenectady Eail Road. E. Corning, Pres't. C. Hibbard, Siq)'t, Le7iffth, 78 miles. Leaves Schenectady on arrival of cars from east. Leaves Utica on arrival of cars from west. Through fare, from Albany, $2.06. STATIONS. Sche- Uti-I nc'y. *"*•! ca 1 78, 10 6SI 16 6 62 22 6 56| 27 5 61 32 5 46 38 6 40 Fare, STATIONS. IS?;- Int. 41 3 47 6 57 10 64 7 69 5 7S 9 Uti Srhrnectady Hoffmans Amsterdam Tribes Hill Fonda's Yost Palatine Bridge- 85 Fortplaiu 95! St. Johnsville. D. 1.15 Little Falls 1.30 Herkimer 1.40, Frankfort IbQ'Vtica, JAMES* RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. 37 (75.). Utica and Syracuse Rail Road. J. B. WiLKlNSOX, Pree'f. and Sap't. Length, 53 miles. Leaves Utica on arrival of eastern cars. Loaves Syracuse on arrival of •western cars. Through fare, from Albo-uy, So.Off. 1.00 10 15 Utica Whitcsboro • Oriskany • • Rome, (junction of Watt^rtown K'd.) Green's Corners Verona Center- Oneida. D. • • "i: Int. Synvl cuse. 1 F.e.| 531 65 4 49 70 ' 3 46 75 80 14 7 39 90 19 5 34 95 23 4 30 1.00 27 4 26 I ca.' Wampsville • Caiiastota • • • Canaseraga • ChittenangO' Kirkirlee Manlius Syracuse • • • • (76.) Rochester and Syracuse Rail Road. H. B. Gibson, Pres't. Carlos DuttoxX, Suji't. Length, 114 miles. Leaves Syracuse on arrival of eastern trains. Leaves Rochester on arrival of western trains. Through fare, from Albany, $5.10. Fare, j STATIONS. 2.&i St/racuse 20 Camilhis 25 Marcellus 35: Halfway 45 Skaneateles ••■ 55 Sennett 65 Aubu7-n j Shunpike 94 Cayuga Bridge ■ 1.05: Seneca Falls- •■ 1.15, Waterloo jSyra. Int. c^;.ll 114 9 105 14 5| 100 16 2 9S 22 6 92 26 4 88 37 11 77 43 6 71 46 3 68 53 7 61 Fare, j STATIONS. lint. 1.30 Geneva 1..50 East Vienna- •• l.eoiCHfton Springs 1.70 Shortsville 1 85 Canandaigua - - 2 Oo! I'addloford - - • • 210 Victor 2 20 Fi.=hers 2 40 Pitt?ford 2 60. Rochester 95 (77.) Buffalo and Rochester Rail Road. J. Field, Pres't. Henry Martin, Sec'y. Length, 76 viiles. Leaves Rochester on arrival of trains from the east. Leaves Buffalo 6, and 6 P. M. Through fare, from Albany, $6.60. 1.50 1 25 30 40 Rochester- ■ - • Coldwater • • Chili Churchville - Bergen. D. 45 1 West Bergen 50|Byron 65 Batavia. D. SOlAlexander •• 761 Fare. STATIONS. 90; Attica. D. • - 95 Darien City 1.00 Darien l.liliAlden 1.20 Town Line 1.30| Lancaster 1.40 Clark's Branch 1.50|5i#ito 441 49 51 56 61 66 1 701 76 Buf 32 27 25 20 15 10 38 JAMES* RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. (78.) PENNSYLVANIA CENTRAL RAIL ROAD, Between PMladelpMa and Pittsburgh. Length, 357 miles. Leaves Philadelphia at 8 and 11 A. M. Leaves Pittsburgh at 6.30 A. M. and 6.30 P. M. Time, 24 hours — and is composed of the following lines, yiz. : Columbia and Philadelphia 70 miles. Ilarrisburgh and Lancaster 36 " Eastern Division Pa. R. R. 138 " Alleghany Portage 35 " Western Division Pa. R. R. 78 " Passengers for Baltimore from Pittsburgh take the Baltimore and Susqu©- hannah Road, 82 miles, at Harrisburgh. Time, 22 hours. Fare through, from Baltimore or Philadelphia to Cincinnati, $16.30. Time through, via Cleveland, 39 hours. (See Route 157.) (79.) BALTIMORE AND OHIO RAIL ROAD, Between Baltimore and Wheeling, Va. Length, 377 miles. Completed to Fairmount, 303 miles. Will be completed to Wheeling, 74 miles, by January 1, 1853. Leaves Baltimore daily at 8 A. M. and 7 30 P. M. Leaves Cumberland daily at 8 A. M. and 10 P. M. Time, about 9 hours. Fare through, $10.00. Fare. STATIONS. 1 Bal- Ini're. Int. Cum-l b'nd. 1 179 15 164 21 6 15S 2h 4 1.54 29 4 150 32 3 147 35 3 144 38 3 141 44 6 1.35 50 6 129 54 4 125 59 5 120 62 3 117 63 1 116 Fare. STATIONS. Bal- Int. 70 7 76 6 82 6 88 6 93 5 101 8 108 7 117 9 124 7 130 6 142 12 154 12 179 25 5.00 Baltimore to • • 37 Klicott's Mills 70 Elysville 85 Woodstock • • • 1.00 Marriottsville 1.10 Sykesville ••• 1.20 Hood's Mill-.. 1.35 Woodbine • • • 1.55 Mount Airy • • 1.75 Monrovia 1.90 Ijamsville 2.05 Monocaoy • • • • 215 Frederick .... 2 20 Buckeyestown This road, is completed to order. 4 4 4 4 4 5, 5 5 Fairmount 2 45 Point of Rocks 2 65 Berlin Harper's Ferry, Va. Duffield's Kerneysville Martinsburgh 00! Cherry Run 20 Sleepy creek 35 Hancocks 55, Sir John's Run- •• 95i Doe Gully Tunnel 00| Paw Paw Depot • • OOj Oumberland OO! Stages to Wheeling , 303 miles, but not yet in 109 103 97 91 86 78 71 62 55 49 37 running (80.) LAKE SHORE RAIL ROAD. From Buffalo, New York, to Toledo, Ohio, 296 miles, is composed of the following roads, viz : Buffalo and Pennsylvania State Line, (81.) 69 miles, Erie and North East, (82.) 19 " Cleveland and Erie, (S3.) 95 « Toledo Norwalk, and Cleveland, (84.) 113 « Through fare, Buffalo to Toledo, $ Through fare, Buffalo to Cleveland, $5,00 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. 39 (81.) Buffalo and Fa. State Line Bail Boad. Geo. Palmer, Pres't. C. C. Dennis, 5ec'y. Between Buffalo and Pa. State Line, yia Dunkirk, length 69 miles. Con- necting with Erie and North East R. R. at Pa. State Line. Leaves Buffalo, westward, at 11.00 A. M., and 11,00 P. M. Leaves State Line, eastwai-d, at 2.15 A. M., and 1.30 P. M.. Fare. STATIONS. Fare. STATIONS, 2.001 Buffalo 30 Kodgers' Road- 45118 Mile Creek • 60! Evans' Center- 75JSawMm 85 Irving 90lSilver Creek- •• 10 59 5 54 7 47 43 40 2| 38 1,20 i Dunkirk, (Erie K., 71.) 1.50 Centerville 1.70 Westfield 1.90 2.00 Quiney State Line. (E. & N E. R. R., 82,) - - • (81.) Erie and North East Bail Boad. W. Kfllogg, Prea't. J. F. Tbacy, Sup't. From Pa. State Line to Erie. Length, 19 miles. Running in connection with the Cleveland and Erie Road on the west, and the Buffalo and Pennsylvania State line ou the east. Erie Bail Boad W. M. Beckwith, Sup*t. (83.) Cleveland and Pres't. Between Cleveland and Erie. Length, 95 miles. Commenced, 1850; completed Nov. 23, 1852 Cost $20,000 per mile. Connecting with Erie and North East K. R. at Erie, and with the C. C. & C. R. R., and the C. and Pittsburg R. R. at Cleveland. Leaves Cleveland daily, (Sundays excepted,) at 8 P. M., and 8 A. M. Fire. STATIONS. (Tv- land ■"•• Erie. Fare. 9.T 10 85 14 4 81 19 5 76 23 4 72* 29 6 66 35 6 60 40 5 55 42 2 53 Int. Erie. Cleveland ■ ■ • Euclid Wickliffe •• Willoughby Minder PainesvUle • Perry Madison • • - Unionville - Geneva Saybrook Ashtabula Kingsville Conneaut* - • • . Springfield, Pa. Girard Fairview Erie 46 4 60 4 55 5 61 6 68 7 76 8 80 4 95 15 * The portion from the Ohio state line to Erie is called " The Frarilclin Canal Company R. E." 40 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. (84 ) TOLEDO, NORWALK AND CLEVELAND R. E. This road is now finishod west, fifteen miles from its intersection ■with the C. C. & C. R. K. (85) at Grafton. We are informed that the connection with Nor- walk will be made by the first of December, by which time the Toledo section ■will also be closed to Norwalk, affording a continuous railway communica- tion between Cleveland and Chicago. The road is being thoroughly built, and when completed, it is said, will compare favorably with any road in the New England States. (Particulars in next issue.) (85.) CINCINNATI, COLUMBUS AND CLEVELAND R. R. Tirough line between Cincinnati and Cleveland, 254 miles, is composed of the following lines, viz. : Little Miami, (88.) ' 64 miles. Columbus and Xenia, (87.) 55 " Columbus and Cleveland, (86.) 135 " Leaves Cincinnati daily, (.Sundays excepted.) at 7 A. M. and 5 P. M. Sunday, a train leaves for Columbus only, at 2.30 P. M. Through time, 11 hours. Through fare, $7.00. (86.) Columbus A. Kelly. Pres't. . and Cleveland Rail Road. Sup't. Length, 135 Miles. Between Columbus and Clevelan i . T^aid with T rail, 64 pounds to the yard. Leaves Cleveland at 11 A. M. and 2 30 P. M., in conjunction with through lines. Leaves Columbus in conjunction with through line. Connects at Columbus with Ohio Central to Wheeling, via Zanesville. and the Columbus and Xenia to Cincinnati, and at Crestline with the Ohio and Penn. Road from Pittsburgh (when completed). Time, 6 hours 10 minutes. SJiATIONS. CI'v- land. Int. Col- n.h-s. lrare.i 135 2.00 12 123 2 00 15 3 120 2 25 25 10 110 2.35 29 4 106 2 55 33 4 102 2.75 36 3 99 41 5 94 2 90 47 6 88 335 54 7 81 3 45 60 6 75 3.55 375 67 7 68 4 00 STATIONS. iClev. Ih.Kl. i„t.| 75 76 8 1 79 8 85 6 92 7 97 5 104 7 112 8 115 3 119 4 126 7 135 9 4.00 35 45 75 80 85 1.05 1.25 140 160 1.801 Cleveland Berea Olmstead. Grafton, j'n Toledo &' Norwalk R. R. Lagrange Pittsfield Wellington Rochester New London Greenwich ...... Salem Shelby, j'n Sa'ky C. & Mansfield R'd Vernon • • • • Crestline, j'n Ohio also with steamers at this last place for St. Louis, via Illinois River. The time of departure and table of distances have not yet reached us. (122.) ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAIL ROAD. R. Schuyler, Pres't. R. B. Mason, Sup't. Between Cairo and Lasalle. (Main line ;) branch from Marion Co. to Chicago, and branch from Lasalle to Dubuque. Length, 706 Miles. To be laid with T rail, 64 pounds to the yard. Commenced Dec. 1851 ; completed to Calumet River, 20 miles from Chicago, and used by Michigan Central Road 14 miles. Main Une expected to be completed by March, 1855 ; branches, in March, 1859. To connect with Michigan Central at junction, Springfield and Terre Haute, Alton and Terre Haute, and Ohio and Miss, at their various crossings in the state. This road is rapidly progressing. 56 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. (123.) MILWATJKIE AND MISS. EAIL EOAD. John Catlin, Pres't. E. W. Brodhead, Sup't. Between Milwaukie, Wis., and Miss. River, (terminus not fixed). Length, about 200 miles. Laid with heavy T rail. Commenced June, 1849; completed to Janes- Tille, 70 miles. Will be completed entirely in two years. Leaves Milwaukie, express, at 7.30 A. M. ; accommodation, at 4 P. M. Leaves Whitewater, express, at 7 A. M. ; accommodation, at 4.30 P. M. Fare. STATIONS. .Mil- wke. Int. zi:.\ Fare. 60 6 44 10 4 40 14 4 36 17 3 33 1.25 20 3 30 STATIONS. Mil- vvke. Int.| 28 8 31 3 36 5 43 7 50 7 Wfe w'fr. 1.25 Milwaukie Wauwatosa • ■ Elm Grove • • ■ Powers' Mills Forest House Waukesha • • • Ger North Prairie • • Eagle Prairie • ■ P.-ilmyra • Whitewater •••• 60 Stages for Madison and Janesville, Wi; Whitewater station. connect regularly with the cars at (124.) MICHIGAN CENTEAL EAIL EOAD.* J. M. Forbes, Prea't. J. W. Brooks, Sup't. Between Detroit and Chicago. Length, 277 miles. The last 14 miles of which, entering Chicago, are a portion of the Illinois Central. Connecting with Northern Indiana, and New Albany and Salemf at Mich- igan City, and with the Pontiac at Detroit. Leaves Detroit daily, Sundays excepted, at 7.30 A. M. & 5.45 P. M. Leaves Chicago daily, Sundays excepted, at 8.30 A. M. and 9 P. M. Fare I De- jtroit. Chi lo\ ^are. STATIONS. Int. Chi- cago. n.m Detroit ■•■ 35 Dearborn 60 1 Wayne •• OSjYpsilanti- 1.10 1.35 Ann Arbor- • • Delhi Scio Dexter Chelsea Grass Lake- • • .Jackson 2 55 Gidley's 2.85 Albion S.20 Marshall. D. 3 60| Battle Creek- - 4.00iGalesbury - • • 1.65 1.95 2 25 277 267! 259 247 j 240! 2341 232 230; 221 212' 201 191 181 169 156 143 i 4. .30; Kalamazoo 4 75|Paw Paw 5.00[ Decatur 5 35 Dowagiac ■ 5 70lNiles ■ 6 OOi Terre Coupee - - ■ 6.50 New Buffalo, (sf: boat to Chicago from here also) Michigan City, (j'n N. Albany and Salem Road) . . • Junction Illinois Central R. R. • - Chicago 7.00 218 227 8j 135 17 118 8 110 11 99 13 86 21 65 59 * Not receiving any reply to our request for information as we have been compelled to make it up from various sources. t Unfinished. 14 to this route. JAMES* RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. 67 (125.) DETEOIT AND PONTIAC RAIL ROAD. Pres't. A. Williams, Sup't. Length, 25 miles. Laid with T rail. Connects with Mich. Central at Detroit. Leaves Detroit at 8.30 A. M. Leaves Pontiac at 1 P. M. Fare. STATIONS. 1.001 Detroit 60 Royal Oak 76 Birmingham • — IJMPontiac 112 6 7 (126.) MICHIGAN SOUTHERN RAIL ROAD. John B. Jervis, Pres't. Jos. H. Moore, Sup't. Between Monroe, Mich., and Chicago, 111. In connection with Northern Indiana Rail Road. Length, 246 miles. Connects with Erie and Kalamazoo at Adrian, and with New Albany and Salem* Road near Michigan City. Leaves Monroe daily at 4.00 P. M. Leaves Chicago daUy at 8.30 A. M. and 9.00 P. M. Time, 14 hours and 30 minutes. Fare. I STATIONS. I Mon- roe. 7.00 SO 75 1.00 1.35 1.50 1.70 1,85 200 2.15 2.40 2..i0 2.65 2.75 Monroe Ida Sylvania Ottawa Lake ■ • • Petersburgh- •• Doerfield Knights Blissfleld Palmyra ■ Adrian,X (127.) • Clayton Ilu.lson Pitt-iford Osseo Hillsdale •lonesviiie Aliens Quincy Coldwater Branch C bi- I cago.l I Mon- j I roe. I 13 247.1 3,00:Bronson 234 217 210 199 193! 187! 183! 177! 172 161 154 1.20| Burr Oak 3.40;Sturgis 3.701 White Pigeon. Constantinef • 3.90 Bristol 4.15 Elkhart 4 50!.Mii=hawaka ••• 4. 65! South Bend--- 5.00:Tcrre Coupee- - 5.30 Rolling Prairie 5,50jLaporte 5.80 Holmesvilh 6,0ii 6.20 Calumet Baily Town - • • -Mirhigan City- Millers' 6.90 Ainsworth 1 .ao' Chicago Chi- cago. 144 137 131 119 lOS 100 80 85 73 X Train leaves Adrian for Tecumseh 10 A. M. Train loaves Tecumseh for Adrian 5,15 P. M. t Train to Coustantine and return daily. * Unfinished. 58 JAMES* RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. (127.) ERIE AND KALAMAZOO RAIL ROAD. Between Toledo. 0., and Adrian, Mich. Lengthy 33 miles. (Leased to, and run in connection with the Mich. So. R. R.) Connects with Mich. So. at Adrian, Dayton and Michigan,* Toledo, Nor tralk and Cleveland, and Sandusky City and Toledo,* at Toledo. Leaves Toledo daily at 8 A. M. Leaves Adrian daily at 6 P. M. Fare. | STATIONS. To. ledo. int. rtn. F=^'"e- i STATIONS. To- ledo. Int. Ad- rian. 20 11 9 33 22 13 22 28 33 11 5 SO'Palmvra eOlKnights l.m\ Adrian, i'liM.. So. * Unfinished. The Louisville and Frankfort and the Lexington and Frankfort RoadB form what is known as the Lexington and Louisville Road. Length, 94 miles. Leaving each end of the route at 6 A. M. and 2 P. M. Fare through, $3.00. Time, 4% hours. (128.) LOUISVILLE AND FRANKFORT RAIL ROAD. J. Guthrie, Pres't. T. Medbery, Sup't. Between Louisville and Frankfort. Length, 65 miles. Laid with T rail. Connects with Lexington and Frankfort, and with an extensive chain of roads centering at Louisville. Leaves Louisville at 6 A. M. and 2 P. M. Leaves Frankfort at 8 A. M. and 3.45 P. M. Fare. | STATIONS. t^;e.!'"t. j Fare. STATIONS. Int. Fr'k fort. 2.00 Louisville ■ ■ ■ Hobba O'Bannons • • Bairds Lagrange D .Smithfield-- 75 2.00 Eminence • • • Pleasureville • Bagdad Milams Engine House Frankfort • • • 65 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. 59 (129.) LEXINGTON AND FEANKFOET BAIL EOAD. W. A. Dudley, .Pt-es't. Sam'l Gill, Suji't. Length, 29 viiUs. Laid with T rail, 56 pounds to the yard. Ck)st of construction, $20,397 per lile. Commenced iu 1848. Connecting at Frankfort with the Louisville and Frankfort Road, at Lex- gton with the Covington and Lexington, Maysville and Lexington,* and «xino;ton and Danville* Roads. Leaves Lexington at 6 A. M. and 2 P. M. Leaves Frankfort at 10 A. M. and 5 40 P. M., on arrival of the trains front juisville. . { STATIONS. iS.h"t.|^,^^-|F.re. STATIONS. Vton. I°H^oH.' ..00\Lexi7>gton 25jYarnallton 35| Payne's Switches • 60|Midway 60 Big Spring 75 Duckers- •• l.QQ\Franlcfo3-t * Unfinished. (130.) COVINGTON AND LEXINGTON EAIL EOAD. J. B. Casey, Pres't. R. M. Shoemaker, Sup't. Between Covington and Lexington. 'Lengthy 93 viiles. To be laid with T rail, 60 pounds to the yard. Cost of construction, 25,000 per mile. Commenced iu 1851 ; will be completed in 1853. Connecting with various roads at Lexington, and with Maysville and Lex- hgton at Paris. This road is in course of rapid construction, and will afford means of direct ommunication with Charleston, S. C, via McMinnville, Tenn. and Chatta- looga Roads. (131.) LEXINGTON AND BIG SANDY EAIL EOAD. ElCHARD ApPERSOX, Pres't. Between Lexington and mouth of Big Sandy River. Length, 12-4 miks. Intended to be laid with heavy T rail. Estimated cost, $20,000 per mile. dompimy organized .June, 1852. Will be comxileted in 1855. Connects at Big Sandy with road from Virginia,* and at Lexingtoa with /he systi'ra of roads centering there. It is now being pushed to a rapid completion. * Unfinished 60 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. (132.) MAYSVILLE AND LEXINGTON EAIL EOAD. Henry Walter, Pres't. N. McNeill, Suj^'U Lengthy 67 miles. Lrsid with T rail, 60 pounds to the yard. Estimated cost of construction, $22,000 per mile. Commenced July, 1851 ; expected to be completed by Jaa- uary, 1854. . Connecting with Covington and Lexington Road at Paris, and with the system of roads at Lexington, and the Maysville and Big Sandy at Maysville. This is an important road» and will be urged to completion as rapidly as possible. (133.) LEXINGTON AND DANVILLE RAIL ROAD. JOHX Baukley, Pres't. G. C. SCHAEFFEB, Sup't. Between Lexington, Ky., and McMinnTiUe, Tenn. Length, to Danville, 35 miles. From Danville to McMinnville, 160 miles. Total length, 195 miles. To be laid with T rail. Commenced Oct. 1, 1852 ; expected to be completed to Danville by 1854. Connecting with the rhain of southern roads through Georgia and Alabama. The road is all iinder contract. $500^000 having been subscribed to carry it from Danville to Tenn. line, where it will be taken up by the McMinnville Road, and completed to the Chattanooga Road, near Wia- cho.«ter, thus opening a southern communication from Cincinnati, via Lex ington, Ky. (134.) LOUISVILLE AND NASHVILLE RAIL ROAD. This road has been located and put under contract, and will be vigorously prosecuted to final completion, being an important link in the southern chain of roads. Our future issues will contain information of its progress. (135.) EAST TENNESSEE AND GEORGIA RAIL ROAD. A. D. Keyes, P'res't. ^Y. B. Pritchard, Eng'r. Between Knoxville, Tenn., and Dalton, Ga. Completed to Charleston, 42 miles. Connect."? with Western and Atlantic Road at Dalton. Leaves Dalton at 3.20 P. M. Leaves Charleston at 7 A. M. Fare. STATIONS. iQt ! Ch's- 1 ton. Fare. STATIONS. 1.40 30 60 70 Dalton • • • Varnells • lied Clay Igo's I 421 10 32 16 6 26 21 61 21 l.OOjCleavelaud 1.15 Four Mile Station- l.io] OJiarleston 12 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUtE BOOK. 61 (136.) MEMPHIS AND CHAELESTON RAIL EOAD. E. C. Mills, Pres't. S. Cruse, Secy. Between Memphis and • Completed to CoUiersville, 25 miles from Memphis. Connecting with the various roads crossing Tennessee, and with the roads through Georgia, and the S. Carolina road to Charleston. Stages for Tuseumbia, Holly Springs, &c., connect at CoUiersville. Leaves Memphis at 8 A. M. Leaves CoUiersville at 1 P. M. Fare to Germantown, 50 cents ; to CoUiersville, 75 cents. (137.) NASHVILLE AND CHATTANOOGA RAIL EOAD. V. K. Stevenson, Pres't. H. J. Anderson, Sup't. Between Nashville and Chattanooga. Length, 151 Miles. Shelby ville branch, 8 m.iles to Wartrace. Laid with reversed U rail, 50 pounds to the yard, laid upon continuous cedar bearings. Completed to Aadersoo, 105 miles; will be completed in 1863. Connects with stages for Chattanooga at Anderson, and for Huntsville, Ala., at Decherd. Leaves Nashville daily at 7 A. M. Leaves Anderson daily at 1 P. M. STATIONS. |N'sh-|,„, I An. 60 1.00 1.30 L70 JVashville Antioch Smyrna Murfreesboro Christiana Wartrace, Sh'yvilh Lat. Br. 8 miles ■ 105, 190 10 95 1 2.10 21 11 84 2 30 33 12 72 250 43 10 62 2.eo 2.80 57 14 48 310 Xormand • Tullahoma Alisonia • • Decherd- •• Cowans • • • Tantalon • Through fare to Chattanooga, $7.00. Stages from Anderson direct to Chat- tanooga, or to Caperson-s, on Tenn. River, 12 miles, where steamboats are in readiness to convey passengers to Chattanooga, thus affording them an opportunity to sleep. (138.) VICKSBUEG, JACKSON AND BRANDON E. E. Geo. S. Yerger, Pres't. J. H. Crujip, Sup't. Length, 60 miles. Connects with So. Western Road, through Alabama and Georgia,* at Bran don, and with New Orleans Road* !!t .Tackson. Leaves Vicksburg at 7 A. M. and 7 P. M. Leaves Brandon at 6.45 A. M. Fare. } STATIONS. buS- ! '"M^d^^-'ik^^e- I STATIONS. burg. I '"'• dan. 2.60! Vicksburg ■ 30lMt. Alban-. 45 Bovina •••■ 60 Big Black • 80 1 lid ward's- •■ 60{| 120|Boltoas. D. 2.60 Jacl-sov. junction N. 0. Road Brandon 29 9 9 14 This company has hanking privileges. J. Roach is Cashier. * Unfinished. 62 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. (139.) CLINTON AND PORT HUDSON RAIL ROAD. E,. W. Troth, Super intendent. Length, 21 miles. Laid with flat bar. Leaves Clinton at 7 A. M. Leaves Port Hudson at 2 P. M. Time; 2 hours and 30 minutes. Fare, $1.00. (140.) WEST FELICIANA RAIL ROAD, E. M. Gehee, Pres't. Between Bayou Sara aud Woodville, Miss. Length, 26 miles. Leaves ■Woodville at 6 30 A. M. Leaves Bayou Sara at 2 30 P. M. Fare. | STATIONS. ISi- Ba-u .■^ara. 1.501 Woodville 75' Laurel Hill 12 26 14 26 14 This company has banking privileges also. E. H. Wailes, Cashier. (141.) PONCHARTRAIN RAIL ROAD. Jno. Egerton, Pres't. J. W. Smith, Sup't. Between New Orleans and Milneburgh. Length, 5 miles. Laid with T rail. Cost of construction, $10,000 per mile. Commenced in 1850. Connecting with the Great Southern Route to Mobile. Leaves each end of the route hourly, from 6.30 A. M. until 8 P. M. every day. A horse car leaves the Lake every A. M. at 5, and New Orleans every P. M. at 9. Fare, 12}^ cents. This road is intended to connect with Mobile by a continuous line. (142.) MEXICAN GULF RAIL ROAD. Pres't. W. W. Gordon, Sup't. Between New Orleans and the Gulf. Completed to Proctorsville, 27 miles, where steamers for Mobile meet thi« road. Leaves N. Orleans at 6 30 and 10 A. M.. and 5 P. M, Leaves Proctorsville at 6 A. M., 1 and 5 P. M. Fare, STATIONS. Int-lv p-tr Fare. STATIONS. Int. I New Orleans 25: Congress St. 25;U. S. Barracks- •• 25 Versailles SOCuculu's 60 Ducro's Landing- lerreaiix- • • • B.uf C. H. - Santiagos ■ • • T ntauts ••• Proctorsvfillt 27 15 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. 63 (143.) MOBILE AND OHIO RAIL EOAD. Between Mobile aud Cairo, 111. Through Mississippi, Tennessee, and Kentucky. Is under contract all the wajr through Mississippi, and completed and running S3 miles from Mobile. (No particulars.) (144.) TUSCUMSIA AND DECATUR RAIL ROAD. Around Muscle Shoals, Tennessee River. Pres't. Sup't. Length, 43 miles. STATIONS. ?^ [at. De- c'tur. 43 10 33 23 13 YO 31 8 12 43 12 Tuscumbia ■ • • Leighton Uutland Hillsborough- Decatur The old flat bar of this road has been entirely taken up, and is being relaid with T rail, and the road put in complete order, as it will form a portion of the Memphis and Charleston line. (145.) MONTGOMERY AND WEST POINT RAIL ROAD. C. T. Pollard, Pres't. S. G. Jones, Eng'r, and Sup't, Between Montgomery, Ala., and West Point, Ga. Length, 88 miles. Laid one-half with flat bar and one-half flange bar, 40 tons to a mile. Cost of construction, $14,800 per mile. Commenced in 1835. Connects with Atlanta and Lagrange Road at West Point. Leaves Montgomery at 2 30 A. M. Leaves West Point at 3 P. M. Time, 5 hours and 30 minutes. Fare. STATIONS. .M'l.t- Int. ^Vesr Put. Fare. | 88 2.15 11 77 2.40 20 9 6S 2 65 25 5 63 30 5 58 2 80 35 5 53 3.15 40 5 48 3.50 47 7 41 b«TATIONS. M nt- i , ?'ry. i' 850 45 80 1.00 1.20 140 1 1.90 Montgomery ■ Tippecanoe • McGars Shorters • • • • Fort Decatur Franklin Chehaw Notasalga - • • Loach apoga .\uburn Opelika,* Colum- bus, Ga., junct.- Rough aud Ready Cusseta West Point ^. * A branch of this road from Opelika, to connect with the Muscogee Road at Columbtts, Ga., will be completed in 1S53. 64 JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. (146.) ATLANTA AND LAGRANGE BAIL ROAD. Jno. p. King, Fres't. L. P. Gtrant, Sup't, Between At'anta and West Point, Ga. Length, 87 miles. Completed to Newnans, 40 miles. "Will be completed iu 1S53. Connects! with the 0.ior^ia, the Western and Atlantic, and the Macon and Western Roads at Atlanta, and with the Montgomery and West Point Road at the latter place. Leaves Atlanta at 9 A. M. Leayes Newnans at 5 P. M. STATIONS. Int. 25 75 1.00 1 Atlanta • Junction- Fairburn Palmetto Ntwnans 8.60 1 West Point, (stage)- 40 6 34 18 12 22 25 40 7 15 15 87 37 (147.) SOUTH-WESTERN RAIL ROAD. L. 0. Reynolds, Prea't, G. W. Adams, Snp't. From Macon to Fort Gaines, on the Chattahoochee River. Completed to Oglethorpe, 50 miles. Connects at Macon with Georgia Central, and Macon and Western Roads, at Fort Valley with the Muscogee Road, now being completed, and at Fort Gaines it will intersect a proposed line from Savannah to Mobile. Leaves Macon at 6 A. M. Leaves Oglethorpe at 3.30 P. M. tut. lint. l.lb\ Macon 50 1 Kchecon nee 75 Mule Creek \m\Eirt Valley* D. 1 C^Iuscogee June.) 28 Ith'p e. 5~0" 38 30 22 Fare. 1.25 1.40 150 165 STATIONS. Marshalville- Winchester • • -Marthasville Montezuma - 1.1 b ^Oglethorpe- Int. L Osle- h'pe. 7f 15 3 12 41 8 6 2 * The MUSCOGEE ROAD connects Columbus, Ga., with the South West Road, thus opening a route to Savannah from Montgomery, Ala. It is completed 50 miles, and will be fully completed, 71 miles, by the first of next March. ,8-0. Jones, .Brt^r. John H. Howard, Pres'^. B. E. Wells, iSTwp'^ (Partioulars in our next Usue.) JAMES RAILROAD AND ROUTE BOOK. 65 (148.) WESTERN AND ATLANTIC RAIL EOAD. W. M. MiTCiiEL, C. Emjr. W. M. AVadley, Sui^' Between Atlanta and Chattanooga, Tenn. Length, 140 miles. Connects with Nashville Road at Chattanooga, and East Tennessee Georgia Road at Dalton, Ga. Leaves Atlanta at 8 30 A. M. Leaves Chattanooga at 7 A. M. and Fare. STATIONS. i^.2(i. Atlanta 25| Bolton 60i Mnrictta 90| Moons 1.05|Ackworth 1.2o|Allatoona 1.50] Etowah ) 1.50lCartersville J 1.65 Cass lM\Kingston. junction Rome R. R. Fare. STATIONS. 2 10 Adairsville 2 40|Calhou.n 2 55 Resaca 2 75'Tilton 3 00,Z>a/- 271 277 279 288 29 297 299 304 308 312 317 319 320 329 334 336 344 346 351 353 357 * Passengers for Baltimore, from Pittsburgh, take the Baltimore quehanna Rail Road at this point. Through from Cincinnati to Baltimore or Philadelphia, $16.30. 5 5 5 2 4 and Sus* 1 LITTLE MIAMI AND COLUMBUS AND XENIA WINTEE ARRANGEMENT, 1852-53. Three Passenger Trains daily, Sundays excepted. — Hour of De- parture Changed. Trains run by Columbus time, which is seven minutes faster than Cincinnati time. On and after Wednesday, November 17th, 1852, until further notice, Passenger Trains will leave the Depot on East Front street as follows : Morning Express Train at 7 A. M. Evening Express Train at 5 P. M. Hillsborough Train at 2.15 P. M. Returning from Columbus — Evening Express Train will leave at 4 P. M. Morning " " " " " 4.15 A. M. Returning from Springfield, Trains will leave at 5.15 A. M., and 3.15 P. M. Passengers for -Hillsborough, Chillicothe and intermediate points, will take the 7 A. M. and 2.15 P. M. Trains. On Sunday but one train will be run, leaving Cincinnati at 2.30 P. M., Columbus at 4.15 A. M. Fare from Cincinnati to Xenia $ 1 90 Hillsborough 1 75 Chillicothe 3 25 Springfield 2 00 Cleveland 7 00 Shelby 5 50 Columbus 3 50 Zanesville 5 00 Wheeling 9 50 CLEVELAND COLUMBUS & CINCINNATI R. K. ^VINTER ARRANOEITIENT, 1852. On and after Wednesday, November 18th, the Passenger Trains leave as follows : Cleveland for Columbus, at 8.30 A. M., and 8 P. M. Columbus for Cleveland, at 12 M. and 11 P. M. Shelby for Cleveland, at 3.35 P. M., and 2.35 A. M. RAIL ROAD CONNECTION. At Columbus, with the Columbus and Xenia, and Little Miami Roads to Cincinnati ; at Shelby with the Sandusky and Newark Road; at Gallion with the Bellefontaine and Junction Road to Ma- rion; at Cleveland with the Cleveland and Pittsburgh Road to Pitts- burgh, Philadelphia and Baltimore; at Cleveland with the Lak© Shore Road to Erie, Dunkirk, Buffalo, Albany, N.York and Boston. Do do do Do do do Do do do Do do do Do do do Do do do Do do do Do do do BALTIMOEE AND OHIO EAIL ROAD. THROUGH TO CINCINNATI. "Wiia-tor .21^ x* x> £&< a:i S o ass. e 2X t - Passenger Trains are run as follows: LEAVE BALTIMORE FOR Cumberland, Hancock, Martiusburg, Harper's Ferry, Winches- ter, Frederick, Ellicolt's Mills, etc. at 8 A. M. daily. Night Express Train for Cumberland and the West, at 7^ o'clock P. M., Daily. LEAVE CUMBERLAND Daily, at 8 A. M. Express Train, for Baltimore, at 10 o'clock P. M. Passengers by the Express Train cross the mountains each way by daylight. Those who leave New York at 8 A. M., and Phila- delphia at 2 P. M., will take the Evening Express for the West; those from the West, breakfast at Baltimore, and take the 9 A. M. train for Philadelphia and New York. Through. Tickets are issued between Baltimore and Wheeling, at $11.00 Baltimore and Pittsburgh 10.00 Philadelphia and Wheeling 12.00 Philadelphia and Pittsburgh 11.00 UU'This road; completed through by the 1st of January 1853, will run in connection with a line of SPLENDID STEAMERS ON THE OHIO, now constructing, connecting Wheeling with Cincinnati and Louisville ; thus affording travelers an opportunity of a change from the fatigue, dust, and confinement of a long railroad ride, to a commodious steamer where they can sleep and eat comfortably. "WASHINGTON BRANCH." From Baltimore, at 6 A. M , 8^ A. M , 5 P. M., and 7^ P. M. DAILY, EXCEPT SUNDAY, and at 6 A. M. and 5 P. M. on Sunday. Frojn Waskington, at 6 A. M. and 8i A. M., 12 M. and 5 P. M. Daily, except Sunday. And at 6 A. M. and 5 P. M. on Sunday. Round Trip Tickets, to and from the Relay House, 30 cents. By order, J. T, ENGLAND, Agent. SOUTH CAROLINA RAIL ROAD. A Passenger Train runs daily from Charleston, on THE ARKIVAL OE THE BOATS FROM WILMINGTON, N. C, IN CONNECTION WITH TRAINS ON THE §m^m, UMmx, ani Atlantic gail "§mh, And, by Stage Lines and Steamers, connects with the Montgom- ery and West Point, and the Tuscumbia Rail Road, in N. Alabama. FARE. Through from Charleston to Montgomery, (daily). . .$26.50 Through from Charleston to Huntsville, Decatur, and Tuscumbia 22.00 The South Carolina Rail Road Co. engage to receive Merchan- dize consigned to their order, and to forward the same to any point on their road ; and to the different stations on the Georgia, and Western and Atlantic Rail Roads ; and to Montgomery, Ala., by the West Point and Montgomery Rail Road. J. D. PITSCH, Supt. C3- H. IE -A. T NORTHERN AND SOUTHERN MAIL ROUTE. From New York to Charleston, S. C, daily, Via Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington City, Richmond, Petersburg, Weldon, and "Wilmington, N. C. Travelers by this route, leaving New York at 4^ P. M. Phila- delphia at 10 P. M., and Baltimore at 6 A. M., proceed without delay at any point on the route, arriving in Richmond, Va., in a dav,.and at Charleston, S. C, in two and a half days from New York. THROUGH TICKETS From New York to Charleston $20.00 From Baltimore to Richmond 7.00 From Baltimore to Petersburg 7.59 For tickets to Richmond and Petersburg, or further informa- tion, apply at the Southern Ticket Office, adjoining the Wash- ington Rail Road Ticket Office Pratt Street, Baltimore. STOCKTON & FALLS. CENTRAL RAILROAD, FROM SAVANNAH TO MACON, GA.. 190M Ittiles. Passenger Trains leave Savannah daily, at 8 00 A. M. « ** « Macon daily at 8 00 A.M. «« " arrive daily at Savannah at. . . .6 15 P. M. « « « « at Macon, at 6 45 P.M. This Road in connection with the Macon and Western Road from Macon to Atlanta, and the Western and Atlantic Road from Atlanta toDalton,now forms a continuous line of 391 i miles in length from Savannah to Dalton, Murray county, Ga., and with the Memphis Branch Rail Road, and stages, connect with the fol- lowing places : Tickets from Savannah to Jacksonville, Ala., $20.00 Sl":'r5^'? Ala., 22.00 «' '' « Decatur, " " « Tuscumbia, Ala., 22 50 " " " Columbus, Miss.,^ oo ^n « " " Holly Springs, J ^^•"" « " " Nashville, Tenn.,/ oc nn " « « Murfreesboro' { ^^•"*' " « " Memphis, Tenn., 30.00 An extra Passenger Train leaves Savannah on Saturdays, after the arrival of the steamships from New York, for Macon, and connects with the Macon and Western Rail Road ; and on Tues- days, after the arrival of the Macon and Western cars, an extra Passenger Train leaves Macon to connect with the steamships for Ifew York. Stages for Tallahasse and intermediate places connect with the road at Macon on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, and with Milledgeville at Gordon daily. Passengers for Montgomery, Mobile, and New Orleans, take stage for Opelika from Barnesville through Columbus, a distance of 97 miles, or from Griffin through West Point, a distance of 93 miles. Goods consigned to Thos. S. Wayne, Forwarding Agent, Sa- vannah, will be forwarded free of commission. Wm. M. WADLEY, Sup't. Savannah, Ga., 1852. E lo ill 111 il S! BETWEEN LOUISVILLE & CINCINNATI, BEN FRANKLIN, Summons, Master. TELEGRAPH No. 3, McLellan, Master. Leave each Port daily, af 10^ o^clocJc, A. M. Connect at Cincinnati, with the Pittsburgh Packets, and with the Rail Roads North and East. Connect at Louisville with the St. Louis Mail Line of Steam- ers, the New Orleans Steamers, and the various Land Routes South and West. LAND AT ALL INTERMEDIATE POINTS. ROGERS & SHERLOCK, Dec. 1S52. No. 2 Broadway, U.S. MAIL LINE OF STEAMERS BETWEEN LOUISVILLE & ST. LOUIS, T R I -iy E E I£ Si Y. PIKE leaves Louisville every Monday, at 10 A. M. Leaves Louis, every Thursday, at 4 P. M. GENERAL PIKE leaves Louisville every Wednesday, at A. M. Leaves St. Louis every Saturday, at 4 P. M. LADY FRANKLIN, leaves Louisville every Friday, at A. M. Leaves St. Louis every Monday, at 4 P. M ROGERS & SHERLOCK, Cincinnati, C. BASKAM, Junr., Louisville. December 1852. Wm. DWYER, Saint Louis. St i 10 ; 10 mm Steckxxx Acls.et Xjlxxe. Steamers. Captains. Leaves Chi. LmcesPittsU'g PITTSBURGH Campbell Monday . . . .Friday MESSENGER Klinefelter Tuesday Saturday KEYSTONE STATE. . .Stone Thursday . . . Monday ALLEGHANY Batchelder Friday Tuesday. These Boats leave as above for Pittsburgh, at 11 o'clock A. M., are furnished in a superior manner, and commanded by skillful and experienced officers. They connect with the Pennsylvania Rail Road to Philadelphia and Baltimore at Pittsburgh. CINCINNATI AND MADISON DAILY U. S. MAIL LINE, Steamer WISCONSIN, Capt. T. T. Wright. « HOOSIER STATE, . . . .Capt. J. J. Wright. The above splendid .steamers form a Daily Line to Madison, connecting with the Rail Road to Indianapolis, Terre Haute, and St. Louis. A. IRWIN, Jr. & CO. STEAMBOAT TRANSPO R TATION AGENT S, No. 33 Broadtvay, Cincinnati. T=» uSL O KL ES T SJ - Steamer BOONE Capt. Church, " - KENTON Capt. Cooper. One of the above, well known, popular Steam Packets leaves CINCINNATI FOR MAYSVILLE, and intermediate Ports, daily, Sundays excepted, at 11 o clock A. M., from Wharf Boat at the foot of Sycamore street. ©HBSOH IBI©¥SIE< WALNUT, BETWEEN FOURTH AND FIFTH STS. '9 jt, 'ui"'3 "9 ■■Hi 'm ''D '111' 11 11 in Mil 'nil 'iH 'null 'iu Opened March 1st, 1852. 0. H. GEFFROY, Proprietor, Walnut StveeS, between 6tli and Yth, J. W. SIVENEY, Proprietor. ■ 4^ This House has recently been enlarged and refitted throughout.*© TAYLOE, FRENCH & WYNNE, fil IMPORTERS AND WHOLESALE DEALERS IN a iiiiii k 111! 1 1 AL S O Fmlirellas, Parasols, Gloves, Hosiery, j AND EVERY DESCRIPTION OP ^ TRIMMINGS & FANCY DRY GOODS, Cor. Main and Pearl Streets, SOUTH-EAST CORNER )F THIRD STREET AND BROADWAY, K. WINNE, Proprietor. This new, elegant, and commodious Hotel is now open to the Travelinor Public. VS. >■ -i^^^fefc- arsi- Odd Fellow's Offering, for 1853, single copies $2.50. Odd Fellow's Manual, by A. B. Grosh, single copies $1.50, by the dozen at cheaper rates. Odd Fellow's Text Book, by P. Donaldson, $1.50. Masonic Offering and Craftsman. For sale by WM. ADDIS. MANUFACTURED AT GEO. D. WINCHELL'S JAPANN'D TIN WAEE ESTABLISHMENT, Corner of It^alnut and Penrl Streets, oi3xroi3xr3>ar.^^Ti- T. W. SPRAGUE & CO. 2^0. lia main St., b^. Sir anb ^% (SiiroiEirMAiiro THE ONLY PLACE IX THE CITY FOR FINE CLOTHES READY MADE. We keep nothing but fine goods, and warrant them made EQUAL TO THE BEST CUSTOM WORK. We are connected with a New York House, and get up our work after the LA?!I®T EASTISM STTLHi. We also keep a full stock of goods in the piece, which we make to measure, at short notice. One day's notice is sufficient for a full suit. We NEVER DISAPPOINT A CUSTOMER. We have BUT ONE PRICE, and that as low as good goods can be sold. Strangers visiting the city will find it to their ad- vantage to CALL AT No. 113 MAIN STREET. To ascertain the character of our House, we refer you to any Hotel in the city. No. 113 Main Street, Cincinnati. HEXRY H. SHIPLEY. WILLIAM SHIPLEY E E IHrail & BIO. No. 22 West Fourth Street, Cincinnati. mo, SE1L,& GENERAL ENGMMS, MANUFACTURERS OF ADVERTISING BUSINESS ENVELOPES. ALSO THEIR IMPROVED SEAL PRESSES. H. H. SHIPLEY & BROTHER, (Under the direction of Geo. K. Stillman,) iiSliillB & iiiiif 111 if Will PORTRAITS, LANDSCAPES, VIEWS OF BUILDINGS, MACHINERY, &c. Executed in the best manner and on reasonable terms. SOLON PALMER, U, Sfi toest fovixli), max tXJalnttt St., (Eincinuati, IMP ORTER OF Keeps constantly on hand EYERY VARIETY OF ARTICLES IN HIS LINE, if the best quality, and he pledges himself that no imitation or inferior articles shall be found in his Store. Received monthly, the latest style of LADIES' SHEIL TUCK COMBS. > CHAS. STARR, Jr., & Co. MANUFACTURERS OF lAFETY GAS AND BURNING FLUID I AND PHOSGENE GAS, AND IMPORTERS OF No. 165 Walnut St., Corner of Fourth, MELODEON BUILDING, Burning Fluid, Spirit Gas, and Camphene, wholesale and retail. Lamps and Gas Fixtures repaired and refinished. J. A. Sf U. P. James* Publications. THE WESTERN PILOT. Containing Maps or Charts of the Ohio River, and of the Mississippi from the mouth of the Missouri to the Gulf of Mexico ; accompanied with DIRECTIONS FOR NAVIGATmO THE SAME, and a GAZETTEER, or Description of the Towns on their banks, Tributary Streams, &c. Also, a variety of MATTER INTERESTING TO TRAVELERS, and all concerned in the navigation of those rivers; with a TABLE OF DISTANCES from town to town, on all the above rivers. By Samuel Ccmmings. REVISED AND CORRECTED EVERY YEAR. By Capts. Charles Ross and John Klinefelter. One vol., 8vo., half bound, 75 cents. CONCLIN'S NEW RIVER GUIDE; Or, a Gazetteer of all the Towns on the "Western Waters. Containing sketches of the CITIES, TOWNS, AND COUNTIES Bordering on the OHIO AND MISSISSIPPI RIVERS. and their Principal Tributaries ; together with their Population, |3robuct0, €ommem, ^c. And many interesting events of History connected with them. Compiled from the latest and best authority. ILLTJSTEATED WITH 44 MAPS OF THE EIVERS, PRICE TWENTY-FIVE CENTS. J. A. (L- U. P. James' PnhUcations. THE AMERICAN FORM BOOK AND LEGAL GUIDE, Containing the most Reliable Information relating to LAWS, FORMS OF INSTRUMENTS UNDER SEAL, &c. Required by the Business Man, the 31echanic, the Farmer, etc., in almost every possible circumstance in the ordinary course of Business Transactions IN EVERY STATE IN THE UNION. aSo a ptembcv of tl)c (ECnciiinati ISar. In one volume, large 12mo., law shewp binding. Price, One Dollar. This work ha/3 been prepared with scrupulous care, and contains in small compass, an unusual amount of information of a highly useful and practical character, relating to the varied business inter- ests of society, and adapted to the wants of every vocation in life, prepared iu accordance with the requirements of recent laws of the several States and the N£W CoNsriruTiONS of such States as have adopted them. It has been the design to make the varied information so plain that, although not attempting to " Make every man his own lawyer, with a fool for his client," yet none need err in using any of the forms, etc., contained herein. In a community like ours, where almost every man is a trader— where property is constantly changing hands, and where so many business transactions requiring the medium of legal evidence, are of daily occurrence aniong our Farmers, Mechanics, and Household- ers, as well as regular business men, the want of a work of this na- ture, the accuracy of which could be implicitly depended upon, has led to many serious and vexatious litigations, all of which may here- after be avoided hy the aid of this boofc In addition to the matter designated in the Synopsis of Contents will bo found accurate information relative to the laws of Homesteads and Personal Property Exempt From execution in the different states ; as well as MECHANICS' LIENS, JUDGMENT LIENS, &c. Not found in any similar work ; Recent Laws of Congress ON Prb- EMPTioN, Land Warrants, Naturalization, and Pensions. I J. A. & U. P. Jamea' Pxihlications. MINIATURES. Beautiful Editions in 32mo. size, cloth, gilt edge, of the following ""'songs of the affections. BY MRS. HEM AN S. A selection of beautiful pieces, from the works of this GIFTED WHITER. POPE'S ESSAY ON MAN ; To which is added his celebrated UNIVERSAL PRAYER. Also an edition of the same, with Miscdlantous Poems, Epitaphs, &c. THE ENCHANTED PLANTS; BeiDg FABLES IN VERSE, by ZnIadam Moxtolieu; on the vari- ous sentiments personified in flowers and plants. PAUL AND VIRGINIA, FROM THE FRENCH. J. B. H. De Saint Pierre. THE LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS, And Alphabet of Floral Emblems. To which is added, FABLES OP FLORA, and the POETICAL FLOWER BASKET. A Beautiful miniature edition, cloth, gilt. THE AMEPvICAN TEXT BOOK. A useful Pocket Manual, of interest to every American citizen ; containing THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE. THE ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION. THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES. AND WASHINGTON'S FAREWELL ADDRESS. THE BELLES-LETTRES LETTER- WRITER ; Containing a great variety of letters, original and selected, on the various subjects of Relationship, Friendship, Love, Courtship, Mar- riage, &c., &c., with forms of Invitations, and Miscellaneous Letters, selected from standard authors, for the use of Ladies and Gentlemen, In making up this LETTER WRITER, the object has been to pre- sent the best specimens of English Correspondence, such as will have a tendency to elevate the miuds and style of all who may con- sult it for the purpose of information. J. A. Sf U.P. James'' Publications. PARADISE LOST. A Poem, in twelve Iwoks, by John Milton. "With Explanatory Notes, and a Life of tlie AutJwr, by the Rev. H. Stebbing, A. M. THE COURSE OF TIME; A Poem by Robert Pollok, A. M., with a Memoir of the Author, by Wm. Livingston Prall, Esq. A Copious Index, and an Analysis, prefixed to each book. Few modern poems exist, which at once attained such acceptance and celebrity as Pollok's Course of Time. Originally issued without a name, preface, or any other appendage, its lofty themes, exdting spirit, melodious verse, and all-powerful effects upon the reader, completely silenced criticism, and secured general aiid lasting popu- larity. LADY OF THE LAKE. A poem in six Cantos. By Sir Walter Scott. Last revised edi- tion, with an Introduction, Glossary, and Copious Note^, by the au- thor. " There is a richness and spirit in this poem — a profu.sion of inci- dent, and shifting brilliancy of coloring, that remind us of the witchery of Ariosto — and a constant elasticity and occasional energy, which seems to belong more particularly to the author now before Vis"— Jeffrey. LALLAH ROOKH, AN ORIENTAL ROMANCE. BY THOMAS MOORE. This exquisite poem has long l>een the admiration of readers of all classes; and is now presented in a neat and beautiful form. MO ORE'S MEL OD IE S. IRISH INIELODIES, by Thomas Moore; with the original Prefa- tory LETTER ON MUSIC. These celebrated melodies are too well known and appreciated, to need much eulogy ; they breathe throtf^hout a spirit of nationality, in the language which " Moore " alone could give. BURNS' POEMS — COMPLETE. WITH A GLOSSARY,AND LIFE OF THE AUTHOR. BY JAMES CUREIE, M. D. Including the Poems from the edition of ALLAN CUNNINGHAM. J. A. Sf U. p. James' PuUicaiiom. VALUABLE BOOKS, OP GEXERAL INFORMATION, FOR FAMILIES AND PRIVATE LIBRARIES. THE UNIVEESAL PICTORIAL LIBRARY. Containing interesting papers upon subjects of Natural History, Science, Agriculture, Biography, Fine Art?, Travels, Geography, Botany, Ac, &c. Illustrated with upwards of FIVE HUNDRED ENGRAVINGS, [n one imp. 8to. toI., 640 pp., hound in embossed leather. Price $3. This work has already become very popular, and contains more scientific and literary matter, suitable for FAMILY READING, than any other single book, while its numerous handsome illustrations make it peculiarly ATTRACTIVE TO CHILDREN ; awakening the spirit of inquiry, and creating a rtesii-e for knowledge. LIBRARY OF AMERICAN HISTORY. Containing Selections from the best authors on American History, Biography, Commerce, Statistics, Indians, Revolutionary Battles, &c., &c. One volume. Imperial 8vo., fi-lO pages. $3.00. ILLUSTRATED WITH ABOUT 140 ENGRAVINGS. The great amount of valuable historical information contained in this volume, and the large number of fine engravings illustrative of its subjects, render it a most interesting and useful work for all classes of readers, and especially in families where there are chil- dren. LIBRARY OF GENERAL KNOWLEDGE. Embracing a great variety of subjects, in HISTORY, BIOGRAPHY, ASTRONOMY, ARCHITECTURE, NATURAL HISTORY, POETRY, ItALES, &c., &c., and about I ONE -HUNDRED AND TWENTY USEFUL RECEIPTS. I Embellished with upward of TWO HUNDRED ENGRAVINGS. THE GEM; A handsome present for all seasons, containing selections of ; PROSE AND POETRY lOf a moral and instructive character ; also a number of interesting j STORIES AN D TALES. ' ILLUSTRATED with Ten Engravings, two of which are colored. In one 8vo. vol. bound iu embossed leather. Price $1.75, or mus- lin, gilt back, $1.50. J. A. Sf U. P. Jameses Publications, Cincinnati. MAREIAGE and the Duties of the Marriage Relations, in a series of six Lectures, addressed to youth and the young in Married Life. By the Rev. Geo. W. QuiNBY. One vol. l6mo., 216 pages. Price, mus- lin, 50 cents ; do. gilt, 75 cents. The subjects of the. Lectures are : *? -' - ^, L Marriage — its blessings. IL Importance of Right Visws of Marriage. Advantages and disadvantages of Early Marriage. IIL Hints in the Choice of a Com- panion. IV. Hints in the Choice of a Companion, continued. V. Moral Duties of Husband and Wife. VI. Reciprocal Duties of Husband and Wife. " Tljis little volume is well calculated to lessen the trials and dif- ficulties common to the lot of humanity, whether in married or sin- gle state. There are rough roads aud stormy days in the path of most young married people ; yet with such knowledge of correct rules and principles as this volume presents, these rough roads will be made smooth — the storms be calmed, and all the little difficulties attendant upon this divine institution alleviated. It is a delightful and instructive volume for the young, from the pen of a good pas- tor, who has compiled the work from a series of Lectures delivered to the youth of his congregation. It is handsomely published, and abounds in simple truths, well calculated to lead the mind to profit- able reflection." — hidiana Daily State Journal. HERVEY. Meditations and Contemplations, by the Rev. James Hervey, A. M., late Rector of Weston Favell, Northamptonshire; containing his Meditations Among the Tombs, Reflections in a Flower Garden, together with the Life of the Author. SALATHIEL. A Story of the Past, the Pres- ent, and the Future. By the Rev. Geo. Crolv, au- thor of the " Life and Times of George the Fourth." Two volumes in one, 12mo., cloth, 75 cents. Paper, two volumes, 50 cents. " ' Tarry thou till I Come.' The words shot throua;h me — I felt them like an arrow in my heart — my Irain whirled—my eyes grew dim. The troops, the priests, the populace, the world passed awaj from before my senses like phantoms." Chapter 1. HANNAH MOEE'S BEVOTIONS. The Book of Private Devotion. A series of Prayers an