Though there was no Table of Contents in the original, one has been included for ease of navigation.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

[The Night Express]
[Over The Garden Wall]
[Rural Insurance]
[His Honor, The District Judge]
[A Fog-horn Conclusion]
[Mary Jane's Diversion]
[Between Friends]
[The Hammerpond Burglary]
[A Fo'c's'le Tragedy]
[The Adopted Son]
[Providence And Mrs. Urmy]
[The Million Dollar Freight Train]
[The Bulldog Breed]
[Ice In June]
[The Ditty-box]
[The Yellow Cat]
[A Cock And Policeman]
[Prisoners In The Tower]
[Sankey's Double-header]
[Aunt Mary Telegraphs]
[The Vengeance Of The Wolf]
[The Wooing Of Bettina]
[The Jam God]
[When Father Worked]

I

THE NIGHT EXPRESS

The Story of a Bank Robbery

By FRED M. WHITE

A pelting rain volleyed against the great glass dome of the terminus, a roaring wind boomed in the roof. Passengers, hurrying along the platform, glistened in big coats and tweed caps pulled close over their ears. By the platform the night express was drawn up—a glittering mass of green and gold, shimmering with electric lights, warm, inviting, and cozy.

Most of the corridor carriages and sleeping berths were full, for it was early in October still, and the Scotch exodus was not just yet. A few late comers were looking anxiously out for the guard. He came presently, an alert figure in blue and silver. Really, he was very sorry. But the train was unusually crowded, and he was doing the best he could. He was perfectly aware of the fact that his questioners represented a Cabinet Minister on his way to Balmoral and a prominent Lothian baronet, but there are limits even to the power of an express guard, on the Grand Coast Railway.