CHICAGO & NORTH WESTERN HOLDINGS CORP
PRE 14A, 1994-03-07
RAILROADS, LINE-HAUL OPERATING
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                           SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
               Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
                       Securities Exchange Act of 1934
                               (Amendment No. )

   Filed by the Registrant  [ X ]

   Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [  ]

   Check the appropriate box:

   [ X ]     Preliminary Proxy Statement
   [   ]     Definitive Proxy Statement
   [   ]     Definitive Additional Materials
   [   ]     Soliciting Material Pursuant to Sec. 240.14a-11(c) or
             Sec. 240.14a-12

                   Chicago and North Western Holdings Corp.

              (Name of Registration as Specified In its Charter)

                   Chicago and North Western Holdings Corp.

                  (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement)

   Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

   [ X ]     $125 per Exchange Act Rules 0-11(c)(1)(ii), 14a-6(i)(1), or
             14a-6(j)(2).
   [   ]     $500 per each party to the controversy pursuant to Exchange
             Act Rule 14a-6(i)(3).
   [   ]     Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4)
             and O-11.

        1)   Title of each class of securities to which transaction
             applies:
             _______________________________________________________

        2)   Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
             _______________________________________________________

        3)   Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction
             computed pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11:1
             _______________________________________________________

        4)   Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:


   1    Set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and
        state how it was determined.


   [ ]  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange
        Act Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the
        offsetting fee was paid previously.  Identify the previous filing
        by registration statement number, or the Form or Schedule and the
        date of its filing.

        1)   Amount Previously Paid:
             ____________________________________________________________

        2)   Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
             ____________________________________________________________

        3)   Filing Party:
             ____________________________________________________________

        4)   Date Filed:
             ____________________________________________________________<PAGE>


                          Chicago and North Western
                                Holdings Corp.
                            165 North Canal Street
                        Chicago, Illinois  60606-1551








   Robert Schmiege
   Chairman, President
    and Chief Executive Officer




   To Our Stockholders:



   Our 1994 Annual Meeting of Stockholders will be held at 9:00 A.M.,
   Tuesday, May 3, 1994, in the auditorium of Harris Trust and Savings
   Bank, 111 West Monroe Street, 8th Floor, Chicago, Illinois.  Matters to
   be considered and acted on at the meeting include:  (a) the election of
   three directors for terms expiring in 1997; (b) an amendment to the
   Restated Certificate of Incorporation to rename the Company; and (c) the
   1994 Equity Incentive Plan.  Detailed information concerning these
   matters is set forth in the attached Notice of Annual Meeting of
   Stockholders and Proxy Statement.

   To ensure that your vote is counted, please be sure to sign and return
   the enclosed proxy card.


   Sincerely,



   Robert Schmiege
                                                          March _____, 1994<PAGE>


                   NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

                                      OF

                   CHICAGO AND NORTH WESTERN HOLDINGS CORP.






   You are hereby notified that the 1994 Annual Meeting of Stockholders of
   Chicago and North Western Holdings Corp., a Delaware corporation (the
   "Company"), will be held at the Harris Trust and Savings Bank
   Auditorium, 111 West Monroe Street, 8th Floor, Chicago, Illinois, on
   Tuesday, May 3, 1994, at 9:00 a.m. (local time), for the following
   purposes:


        1.   To elect three Directors for terms of office expiring at the
             annual meeting of stockholders in 1997; and

        2.   To consider and act upon an amendment to the Restated
             Certificate of Incorporation which, if adopted, would change
             the name of the Company to Chicago and North Western
             Transportation Company.

        3.   To consider and act upon a proposal to approve the Chicago and
             North Western Holdings Corp. 1994 Equity Incentive Plan.

        4.   To transact such other business as may properly come before
             the meeting.


   The Board of Directors has fixed March 23, 1994, as the record date for
   determination of stockholders entitled to notice of and to vote at the
   meeting.  Stockholders are urged to date, sign and return the enclosed
   proxy promptly, whether or not they expect to attend the meeting.

                                 By Order of the Board of Directors




                                 James P. Daley
                                 Senior Vice President,
                                 General Counsel and Secretary



   March ___, 1994<PAGE>


                   CHICAGO AND NORTH WESTERN HOLDINGS CORP.

                              _________________

                               PROXY STATEMENT



                             GENERAL INFORMATION



        This statement is furnished to the stockholders of Chicago and
   North Western Holdings Corp. (the "Company") in connection with the
   solicitation on behalf of the Board of Directors of the Company of
   proxies for use at the 1994 Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held at
   the Harris Trust and Savings Bank Auditorium, 111 West Monroe, 8th
   Floor, Chicago, Illinois at 9:00 A.M. (local time) on May 3, 1994, and
   at all adjournments thereof, for the purposes set forth in the attached
   Notice of Annual Meeting.  The Company's executive offices are located
   at 165 North Canal Street, Chicago, Illinois 60606 (Telephone: 312-559-
   7000).

        In each case where a stockholder has appropriately specified how
   the proxy is to be voted, it will be voted in accordance with those
   instructions.  Unless a stockholder specifies otherwise therein, the
   proxy will be voted in favor of the election of the three nominees named
   below to the Board of Directors of the Company, in favor of an amendment
   to the Restated Certificate of Incorporation to change the Company's
   name, and in favor of approval of the Chicago and North Western Holdings
   Corp. 1994 Equity Incentive Plan.  Any stockholder has the power to
   revoke his or her proxy at any time before it is voted by filing with
   the Secretary of the Company a written revocation or duly executed proxy
   bearing a later date, or by voting in person at the Annual Meeting.

        Only the Company's voting Common Stock, par value $.01 per share,
   can be voted at the Annual Meeting, each share entitling the holder
   thereof to one noncumulative vote.  The record date for the
   determination of stockholders entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting is
   March 23, 1994.  On that date, there were _______________ shares of
   Common Stock outstanding.  Of these, 12,835,304 are currently non-
   voting, so that on March 23, 1994, there were ___________ shares of
   voting Common Stock outstanding.

        The presence in person or by proxy at the Annual Meeting of the
   holders of a majority of the issued and outstanding Common Stock
   entitled to vote at the meeting will constitute a quorum.  Election of a
   director requires the affirmative votes of the holders of a plurality of
   the voting Common Stock present in person, or represented by proxy, at a
   meeting (at which a quorum is present).  Therefore, the three persons
   receiving the greatest number of votes will be elected as Directors. 
   Since only affirmative votes count for this purpose, withheld votes will
   not affect the outcome, except that they will count in determining the
   presence of a quorum.

        Approval of the proposal to change the Company's name requires the
   affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the outstanding shares
   of voting Common Stock.  Approval of the proposal therefore requires
   that at least __________ votes be cast in its favor; abstentions and
   broker non-votes will not affect the outcome except in determining the
   presence of a quorum and in the sense that they do not contribute to
   reaching the number of votes required for approval.

        Approval of the Chicago and North Western Holdings 1994 Equity
   Incentive Plan requires the affirmative vote of a majority of the shares
   of voting Common Stock represented at the meeting and entitled to vote
   on the matter (assuming a quorum is present).  Proxies marked to abstain
   from voting with respect to the matter will have the legal effect of
   voting against such matter.  Proxies submitted by brokers for shares
   beneficially owned by other persons may indicate that all or a portion
   of the shares represented by such proxies are not being voted with
   respect to approval of the Plan.  This is because the rules of the New
   York Stock Exchange do not permit a broker to vote stock held in street
   name with respect to this matter in the absence of instructions from the
   beneficial owner of the stock.  The shares represented by broker proxies
   which are not voted with respect to the Plan will not be considered
   represented at the meeting and entitled to vote on the Plan.

        The cost of solicitation of proxies will be borne by the Company. <PAGE>


   In addition to the use of the mails, proxies may be solicited personally
   or by telephone or telegram by regular employees of the Company.  The
   Company may reimburse brokers and other record stockholders for their
   expenses incurred in forwarding proxy material to beneficial owners and
   obtaining voting instructions.  The Company plans to engage the services
   of Morrow & Co. to assist in solicitation for a fee estimated not to
   exceed $6,000, plus reasonable expenses of approximately
   $___________________.


                           1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

        The Board of Directors is divided into three classes, each of which
   consists of one-third of the total number of directors constituting the
   entire Board of Directors.  The terms of three directors expire in 1994,
   with one current director continuing in office until 1995, and another
   three current directors continuing until 1996.  (Two additional persons
   have been elected to terms as directors commencing at a future date and
   ending in 1995.  See "Certain Relationships and Transactions - 1993
   Agreement").  The nominees for whom the enclosed proxy is intended to be
   voted are set forth below.  Unless otherwise instructed by the person
   returning the proxy, each proxy in the form enclosed will be voted for
   election of the nominees listed below.


                      NOMINEES FOR ELECTION AS DIRECTORS
            TO BE ELECTED FOR A TERM OF THREE YEARS ENDING IN 1997


                                Age, Business Experience
          Name                  and Other Directorships 

   James E. Martin              age 67, Director since May, 1992; President
                                of the Belt Railway Company of Chicago
                                since 1989.  President and Chief Operating
                                Officer of Illinois Central Gulf Railroad
                                Company from 1983 to 1988.

   James J. Mossman             age 35, Director since February 1990 and
                                Vice President, Assistant Treasurer and
                                Assistant Secretary from October of 1989
                                through January of 1992; General Partner of
                                Blackstone Group Holdings L.P. ("BGH")
                                since 1990; Vice President of The
                                Blackstone Group L.P. ("The Blackstone
                                Group") from 1987 to 1989.  Mr. Mossman is
                                a director of Great Lakes Dredge and Dock
                                Corporation and Transtar Inc.

   James R. Thompson            age 57, Director since May, 1992; Chairman
                                of Winston & Strawn since January, 1993;
                                Partner and Chairman of the Executive
                                Committee of Winston & Strawn since 1991. 
                                Governor of Illinois from 1977 until 1991. 
                                Governor Thompson is a member of the Board
                                of Directors of FMC Corporation, United
                                Fidelity, Inc., Sun-Times Co., Pechiney
                                International, and Chicago Board of Trade,
                                and on the International Advisory Board of
                                the Bank of Montreal.


                  DIRECTORS CONTINUING IN OFFICE UNTIL 1995*



   Robert Schmiege              age 52, Chairman and Chief Executive 
                                Officer since August 1988; President and a
                                Director since July 1988.

   *  See "Certain Relationships and Transactions - 1993 Agreement."







                                    - 2 -<PAGE>


                  DIRECTORS CONTINUING IN OFFICE UNTIL 1996


   Richard K. Davidson          age 52, Director since September 1991;
                                Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of
                                Union Pacific Railroad Co. ("UPRC") and
                                Missouri Pacific Railroad Company (together
                                with UPRC, "UPRR") since September of 1991;
                                President and Chief Executive Officer of
                                UPRR from August of 1991 to September of
                                1991; Executive Vice President-Operation of
                                UPRR from 1989 to 1991; Vice President-
                                Operation of UPRR from 1986 to 1989. 
                                Mr. Davidson is also a director of
                                FirstTier Financial, Inc. and California
                                Energy Company, Inc.  Mr. Davidson was
                                designated as a director by UP Rail, Inc. 
                                The six executive officers of the Company
                                are obligated to vote their shares to elect
                                Mr. Davidson and to assure certain other
                                representation of UP Rail on the Company's
                                Board of Directors.  (See "Certain
                                Relationships and Transactions".)


   Harold A. Poling             age 68, Director since November 1993;
                                Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of
                                Ford Motor Company from March 1990 until
                                his retirement in November 1993;  Vice
                                Chairman and Chief Operating Officer from
                                October 1987 to February 1990.  Mr. Poling
                                is a director of Shell Oil Company, LTV
                                Corporation, and Kellogg Company, and is a
                                member of the BHP International Advisory
                                Council and the VIAG International Board.


   Samuel K. Skinner            age 55, Director since November 1993;
                                President and director of Commonwealth
                                Edison Company since February 1993; prior
                                to February 1993, General Chairman of the
                                Republican National Committee, Chief of
                                Staff to the President of the United
                                States, and Secretary of Transportation.  
                                Mr. Skinner is a director of LTV
                                Corporation.
































                                    - 3 -<PAGE>


                     BOARD AND BOARD COMMITTEE MEETINGS,
                     COMMITTEE FUNCTIONS AND COMPOSITION



     The Board of Directors of the Company has an Executive Committee, an
   Audit Committee and a Compensation and Stock Option Committee.

     The Executive Committee consists of Robert Schmiege, Chairman, James
   E. Martin and James R. Thompson.  During 1993, the Executive Committee
   met once.  The Executive Committee may exercise the powers of the Board
   in the management of the business and affairs of the Company, subject to
   certain limitations of Delaware law.

     The Audit Committee consists of James E. Martin, Chairman, Richard K.
   Davidson and Samuel K. Skinner.  During 1993, the Audit Committee met
   twice.  The Audit Committee recommends the selection of independent
   public accountants to the Board for approval, reviews the Company's
   annual financial statements and its annual report on Form 10-K,
   considers matters relating to accounting policy and internal controls,
   and reviews the scope of the annual audit.

     The Compensation and Stock Option Committee consists of James R.
   Thompson, Chairman,  Harold A. Poling and James J. Mossman.  During
   1993, the Compensation and Stock Option Committee met twice.  The
   Compensation and Stock Option Committee determines the salaries and
   fringe benefits of the executive officers, reviews the salary
   administration and benefit policies, and administers the 1989 Equity
   Incentive Plan for Key Employees, the 1992 Equity Incentive Plan, and
   the Bonus Plan.

     During 1993, the Board of Directors of the Company held four meetings.

     Each director attended not less than 75 percent of the aggregate
   meetings of the Company's Board of Directors and the Company's Board
   Committees on which he served, during the period of his service, except
   Mr. Poling, who joined the Board in November 1993 and was unable to
   attend the meetings of the Board and the Compensation and Stock Option
   Committee held on December 8, 1993.


                              2. CHANGE OF NAME

     In order for the Company's name to reflect its business as a
   transportation business, the Board of Directors has recommended to
   stockholders that the Company's name be changed to Chicago and North
   Western Transportation Company.  This change would be effected by
   adoption of an amendment to the Company's Restated Certificate of
   Incorporation.  If the amendment is approved by stockholders, the
   Company will cause its direct wholly owned operating subsidiary to
   change its name from Chicago and North Western Transportation Company to
   Chicago and North Western Railway Company ("Railway").  In addition, the
   Company recently, by merger, eliminated its intermediate holding company
   subsidiaries Chicago and North Western Acquisition Corp. and CNW
   Corporation.

     The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR approval of the change of
   name.


                    3. HOLDINGS 1994 EQUITY INCENTIVE PLAN

     On _______________, 19__, the Board of Directors adopted the Chicago
   and North Western Holdings Corp. 1994 Equity Incentive Plan (the "1994
   Plan"), subject to approval of stockholders at the 1994 Annual Meeting. 
   The 1994 Plan provides for the granting of stock options ("1994 Plan
   Options") covering an aggregate of two million shares of Common Stock. 
   Material terms of the 1994 Plan are summarized below.  The full text of
   the Plan is set forth as Exhibit A to this Proxy Statement.

     The 1994 Plan provides benefits to key employees of the Company and
   its subsidiaries as determined by the Compensation and Stock Option
   Committee ("Committee").  An option gives the recipient the right to
   purchase a specified number of shares of Common Stock within a time
   period and at the price specified in the option (not less than 100% of
   fair market value on the date of grant), subject to various
   restrictions.  Subject to the terms of the 1994 Plan, the Committee has

                                    - 4 -<PAGE>


   the discretion to determine the terms of any agreement pursuant to which
   all awards must be granted.  Under the terms of the 1994 Plan, options
   on not more than 200,000 shares of Company Stock may be granted to a
   single individual in a calendar year.  The 1994 Plan provides that in
   consideration for the grant of an award the grantee will remain employed
   for at least one year after the grant date.  The term of each award may
   not extend beyond ten years from the date granted.

     It is not contemplated that any of the present executive officers
   named in the Option Exercise and Year End Value Table ("Table") will
   receive any options under the 1994 Plan.  Nor do they hold any options
   or related LSARs under the 1992 Equity Incentive Plan.  They do,
   however, hold options granted them at the time of the 1989 leveraged
   buy-out of the Company under the 1989 Equity Incentive Plan for Key
   Employees and hold rollover options granted them in that transaction. 
   (See Table)


   1994 Plan Options

     Both non-qualified options and "incentive" options, within the meaning
   of Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
   "Code"), may be granted under the 1994 Plan.  The Committee may, in its
   discretion, direct that shares issued upon exercise of Options will be
   restricted and non-transferable.  In general, 1994 Plan Options will not
   be exercisable earlier than the first anniversary or later than the
   tenth anniversary of the date granted.

     Payment of the Option Price may be made in cash, through the exchange
   of Common Stock held by the grantee, or through a broker-assisted
   exercise.  The Committee may allow a grantee to pay the exercise price
   with restricted stock held by the grantee.  

   Accelerated Vesting

     Any unexercised 1994 Plan Option will terminate in the event the
   grantee's employment is terminated for "cause" (as defined in the 1994
   Plan).  If the grantee's employment is terminated for any other reason,
   any 1994 Plan Option, to the extent otherwise exercisable at the time of
   termination, will remain exercisable for a specified period.  In the
   discretion of the Committee, 1994 Plan Options may continue to vest or
   become exercisable subsequent to a termination of employment.  The
   Committee may also accelerate the exercisability of or accelerate or
   waive restrictions and conditions applicable to awards as it deems
   appropriate.


   Amendment and Termination

     The 1994 Plan will terminate on the tenth anniversary of its effective
   date.  The Board of Directors may before that time terminate the 1994
   Plan and may amend or modify the 1994 Plan without shareholder approval,
   except as may be required for purposes of compliance with federal
   securities laws or listing requirements of a national securities
   exchange.  Termination of the 1994 Plan will not affect any Stock
   Options then outstanding.


   Tax Withholding 

     The Company may make such provisions as it deems appropriate to
   withhold any taxes due in connection with any Award and may require the
   grantee to satisfy any relevant tax requirements before authorizing any
   issuance of shares to a grantee.  Grantees may elect, subject to
   Committee approval, to have shares of Common Stock otherwise issuable to
   them withheld to satisfy federal, state and local withholding tax
   liability with respect to the exercise of Options in the year such
   exercise becomes taxable.

   Federal Income Tax Consequences of the 1994 Plan

     The following discussion is limited to United States federal income
   tax laws as in effect on the date hereof, and does not discuss the
   income tax laws of any State.  There can be no assurance that such
   federal law will not change.

     The 1994 Plan is not a qualified plan under Section 401(a) of the

                                    - 5 -<PAGE>


   Code, and is not subject to the provisions of the Employee Retirement
   Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).


     Non-qualified Options

     Upon the grant of a non-qualified option under the 1994 Plan ("Non-
   qualified Options"), the employee does not realize any taxable income
   for federal income tax purposes, nor is any deduction for federal income
   tax purposes available to the Company.

     Upon exercise of a Non-qualified Option where the purchased shares are
   not subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture, the excess of the fair
   market value of the purchased shares on the date of exercise over the
   option price of those shares will be taxable for federal income tax
   purposes as ordinary income to the employee.  Upon the exercise of a
   Non-qualified Option under which the purchased shares are subject to a
   substantial risk of forfeiture, the employee will not realize any
   taxable income for federal income tax purposes, nor will any deduction
   for federal income tax purposes be available to the Company.  The amount
   by which the fair market value of the purchased shares exceeds the
   option price is taxable to the employee when there is no longer a
   substantial risk of forfeiture.  However, the employee may elect (by
   filing with the IRS not later than 30 days after the date of exercise)
   to be taxed as of the date of option exercise on the amount for which
   the fair market value of the purchased shares on the date of exercise
   exceeds the option price.  The Company will generally be entitled to a
   deduction at the time the employee recognizes income in an amount equal
   to the amount of ordinary income recognized by the employee, unless such
   deduction is not allowed under Code Section 162(m) which disallows
   deductions for certain non-performance-based compensation in excess of
   $1,000,000 paid to certain executive officers in any year.

     In the event the employee receives cash consideration for the
   termination of his/her option prior to exercise thereof in the event of
   a merger or similar transaction involving the Company, the amount of
   cash payable to the employee is includable in the employee's taxable
   income for the year in which such amount is payable.  The Company is
   entitled to a deduction in the same year for the same amount.

     Upon sale of the shares acquired by the employee upon exercise of an
   option, the excess of the sale price over the fair market value of the
   shares on the date the employee was subject to taxation with respect to
   the exercise of the option will be taxable to the employee as a capital
   gain. Such capital gain will be long-term if the shares have been held
   by the employee for more than one year after the date the employee
   becomes subject to taxation with respect to the exercise of the Non-
   qualified Option, and short-term if the shares have been held for less
   than that period.  No tax consequences to the Company will result from
   the employee's sale of shares.


     Incentive Options

     If the requirements for treatment as an incentive option are met, the
   grantee will not realize any taxable income for federal income tax
   purposes upon either the grant or exercise of an incentive option
   granted under the 1994 Plan, nor will any deduction for federal income
   tax purposes be available to the Company.  However, the difference
   between the fair market value of the shares purchased upon exercise of
   an incentive option at the time of exercise and the option price is an
   item of tax preference subject to the possible application of the
   alternative minimum tax.  Upon disposition of the stock acquired
   pursuant to an incentive option, the grantee will be taxed at long-term
   capital gain rates on the difference between the fair market value on
   the date of disposition and the option price, provided the grantee has
   held the stock for at least two years after the date the incentive
   option was granted and at least one year after it was exercised (the
   "holding period requirements").

     If the stock acquired pursuant to the exercise of an incentive option
   is disposed of before both of the holding requirements are met (a
   "disqualifying disposition"), generally, the difference between the fair
   market value of the stock at the time of exercise and the option price
   will be considered compensation and will be taxed.  Any portion of the
   amount received upon a disqualifying disposition of the stock which
   exceeds the grantee's basis in the shares (as increased by the

                                    - 6 -<PAGE>


   compensation income realized by the grantee upon the disqualifying
   disposition) will be subject to tax as either long term or short term
   capital gain depending upon the length of the period for which the stock
   was held before the disposition.  In the event of a disqualifying
   disposition, the Company will be entitled to a deduction, subject to
   possible disallowance under Code Section 162(m) as discussed above, in
   the amount of the compensation income received by the grantee provided
   that the Company withholds the applicable tax from the grantee.






































































                                    - 7 -<PAGE>





                            EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

        The following tables set forth compensation information required
   for the six  most highly compensated executive officers.

                          SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              Annual Compensation  (1)        Long-Term Compensation
                                                                                                        
                                                                Other           Awards                       All
                                                                Annual                          Long-Term   Other
                                                                Compen-   Restricted   Stock    Incentive Compensa-
Year     Name and Principal Position        Salary    Bonus     sation      Stock     Options#   Payouts   tion (2)
                                                                                                                   
<S>   <C>                                  <C>       <C>          <C>        <C>         <C>        <C>   <C>                    
1993  Robert Schmiege                      $390,000  $292,500     $-         $-          -          $-    $ 75,574
1992    Chairman, President and CEO         390,000    97,500      -          -          -           -     136,586
1991                                        387,734   388,490      -          -          -           -      70,166

1993  Arthur W. Peters                      263,925   198,263      -          -          -           -      49,575
1992    Senior Vice President-              253,500    63,500      -          -          -           -      85,459
1991     Sales and Marketing                241,557   242,038      -          -          -           -      42,009

1993  Robert A. Jahnke                      247,271   185,963      -          -          -           -      46,141
1992    Senior Vice President-              231,625    58,021      -          -          -           -      77,669
1991     Operations                         220,656   221,104      -          -          -           -      37,967

1993  Thomas A. Tingleff                    222,863   156,433      -          -          -           -      41,106
1992    Senior Vice President-              208,750    52,292      -          -          -           -      69,185
1991     Finance and Accounting             195,667   197,111      -          -          -           -      31,746

1993  James P. Daley                        222,525   133,730      -          -          -           -      41,036
1992    Senior Vice President,              213,750    53,542      -          -          -           -      71,338
1991     General Counsel and Secretary      203,813   204,208      -          -          -           -      34,743

1993  Jerome W. Conlon                      217,350   130,620      -          -          -           -      39,968
1992    Senior Vice President-              208,735    52,288      -          -          -           -      69,515
1991     Administration                     198,767   199,178      -          -          -           -      33,764

</TABLE>
                                    
(1) Includes amounts earned in fiscal year, whether or not deferred. 
    Employment agreements ("Employment Agreements") with each of the
    executive officers named above, which were terminated on February 22,
    1994, provided for salaries determined by the Board of Directors and a
    non-competition agreement for two years following the executive's
    voluntary termination or termination for cause.

(2) All other Compensation consists of Company contributions under its
    qualified profit sharing plan, the Chicago and North Western
    Transportation Company Profit Sharing and Retirement Savings Program
    (the "Program"), and under its non-qualified unfunded defined
    contribution retirement plans (taken together), the Chicago and North
    Western Transportation Company Executive Retirement Plan and the
    Chicago and North Western Transportation Company Excess Benefit
    Retirement Plan.  Total benefits are calculated under the formula
    defined in the Program.  Benefits in excess of certain Internal
    Revenue Code limitations are payable through the non-qualified
    unfunded defined contribution retirement plans.














                                   - 8 -<PAGE>





               OPTION EXERCISES AND YEAR-END VALUE TABLE (4)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                      Number of                      Total Number of                     Total Value of
                       Shares                   Unexercised Options(1) Held         Unexercised, In-the-Money
                     Acquired on     Value          at Fiscal Year End         Options(1) Held at Fiscal Year End
                                                                                                                  
    Name              Exercise      Realized    Exercisable   Unexercisable    Exercisable (2)   Unexercisable (2)
                                                                                                                  
<S>                         <C>     <C>         <C>               <C>          <C>                  <C>       
Robert Schmiege             -       $    -      385,183           81,712       $7,364,699           $1,562,333

Arthur W. Peters            -            -      307,777 (3)       32,792        6,618,486  (3)         626,983

Robert A. Jahnke            -            -      244,404 (3)       32,792        5,034,077  (3)         626,983

Thomas A. Tingleff      60,000      1,191,450   175,116 (3)       32,792        3,464,541  (3)         626,983

James P. Daley          85,000      1,348,950    44,585           32,792          852,465              626,983

Jerome W. Conlon       100,000      1,337,000    54,585           32,792        1,043,665              626,983

</TABLE>

                  
(1)  All options were granted under the Company's 1989 Equity Incentive
     Plan for Key Employees, except as otherwise shown in Footnote 3.  None
     of the named executive officers holds any options or related stock
     appreciation rights under the Company's 1992 Equity Incentive Plan.
(2)  The dollar values shown are calculated by determining the difference
     between the market value of the Company's stock underlying the options
     at December 31, 1993 ($25.00) and the option exercise price.
(3)  Includes rollover options (all exercisable) received in exchange for
     options of the Company's predecessor during 1989 as follows:  Mr.
     Peters, 153,192 (total value $3,662,821); Mr. Jahnke, 89,819
     ($2,078,412); Mr. Tingleff, 30,531  ($700,076).
(4)  There have been no awards of SARs to the named executive officers
     under the Company's stock option plans.



































                                   - 9 -<PAGE>





PENSION PLAN

          The Supplemental Pension Plan provides a benefit which is the
equivalent of a single life annuity for a participant's life commencing at
age 65 in an amount equal to (1) the product of 1.5% of the employee's
final five years' average annual salary, multiplied by his years of service
(40 years maximum), that product being reduced by (2) the sum of certain
offsets related to other benefits being received under the Railroad
Retirement Act and under the Program, the Chicago and North Western
Transportation Company Executive Retirement Plan, and the Chicago and North
Western Transportation Company Excess Benefit Retirement Plan.  The
Internal Revenue Service has issued final regulations which when
implemented will require the modification of certain of these offsets.  The
Company expects to implement these regulations in a manner which will not
result in a material increase in the amount of benefits provided under the
Supplemental Pension Plan.  In the case of the persons named in the Summary
Compensation Table, the modification would be applied retroactively to
1989.

          The Program was established in April 1975 and does not provide
for benefits based upon prior service.  Therefore, the later the date at
which an employee reaches age 65, the larger the amount the employee could
have accumulated under the Program, and thus, the smaller the amount which
would be payable under the Supplemental Pension Plan.  Actuarial
projections indicate that of the persons named in the Summary Compensation
Table, only Mr. Daley will receive benefits under the Supplemental Pension
Plan.  These benefits are estimated to be approximately $8,000 per year at
age 65.














































                                   - 10 -<PAGE>





                                 REPORT ON

                       EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION OF THE

                 COMPENSATION AND STOCK OPTION COMMITTEE OF

                  CHICAGO AND NORTH WESTERN HOLDINGS CORP.



COMPENSATION POLICY


          The Company's compensation policies are:  to maintain a
competitive compensation program in order to attract and retain well
qualified management; to provide management with the incentive to
accomplish the Company's financial and operating objectives; and to link
the interests of the Company's executive officers and management to the
interests of its stockholders through bonuses tied to performance and
through equity-based incentive plans.  The Company regards the
deductibility for Federal income tax purposes of compensation paid to its
chief executive officer and each of its other four highest compensated
officers as a factor to be considered in putting these policies into
effect.  These policies reflect a continuing effort to align the interests
of the Company's stockholders and its management, evidenced in the
significant equity interests which the Company's executive officers and key
management employees hold in the Company as a result of their participation
in the 1989 leveraged acquisition of the business of CNW Corporation (the
"Acquisition") and in the Company's 1989 Equity Incentive Plan.


PROCEDURE

          The Compensation and Stock Option Committee (the "Committee")
approves the overall compensation package for the Company's executive
officers (including the Chairman and Senior Vice Presidents).  The
Committee is responsible for reviewing overall compensation, including base
salary and bonus, for granting and administering options under the
Company's 1989 Equity Incentive Plan, and for granting and administering
stock options, restricted stock, SARs, and LSARs under the Company's 1992
Equity Incentive Plan.  In addition to these elements, the Company's
compensation package includes qualified and non-qualified retirement plans,
medical, life, and other insurance and other benefits.  In its 1993 review
of compensation, the Committee was assisted by an independent compensation
consulting firm ("Compensation Consultant").


APPLICATION OF COMPENSATION POLICIES

          In general, cash compensation (base plus bonus) is designed so
that when the Company achieves superior results, total cash compensation
for management will be above the competitive median of the group of
railroads considered to be the most direct competitors for the Company's
executive and managerial talent ("Comparable Railroads"), and when the
Company fails to meet its financial and operating objectives, total cash
compensation will be below that median.


BASE SALARY

          The Committee annually reviews Mr. Schmiege's recommendations
with respect to base salaries for executive officers and considers the base
salary competitiveness of the Company's executive officers and management
employees at various levels.  At its December 1993, meeting, the Committee
conducted that review with the assistance of the Compensation Consultant. 
The Compensation Consultant reported on the effectiveness of the Company's
compensation programs, on compensation comparatives for the Comparable
Railroads and on compensation comparatives for a group of industrial
companies.

          In setting Mr. Schmiege's base salary for 1993, the Committee had
accepted Mr. Schmiege's 1992 request that he receive no increase in base,
so that the principal focus of his compensation in 1993 was performance, as

                                   - 11 -<PAGE>





reflected in bonus and in the 1989 Equity Incentive Plan.  In doing so, the
Committee had noted, however, that Mr. Schmiege's base salary had not been
increased in 1992 and had expressed its view that an increase in his base
salary for both 1992 and 1993 would certainly have been appropriate.  On
the basis of Mr. Schmiege's leadership in a difficult economic environment
and in dealing with the impact of the extraordinary Midwest floods in the
summer of 1993, and on the basis of a comparison to Comparable Railroads
and general industry, the Committee increased Mr. Schmiege's base salary
for 1994 to $450,000, an increase of 15.4% over his base salary for each of
1993 and 1992.  The Committee also approved Mr. Schmiege's recommendation
for a 1994 base salary increase of 4.5% for each of the Company's Senior
Vice Presidents, and an average increase of approximately 4.5% for
employees below the level of Senior Vice President.


ANNUAL BONUS

          All of the Company's management employees not covered by a labor
agreement are eligible for an annual cash bonus.  Corporate performance
objectives at threshold, target and superior bonus level, are established
early in each year.  Varying bonus payment levels (reflecting threshold,
target and superior target levels), expressed as a percentage of salary,
are assigned to each performance level, depending on an employee's job
classification.  For Group I employees (Chairman and Senior Vice
Presidents), achievement of the threshold, target and superior performance
levels would result in bonus payments of 0%, 50% and 100% of base salary,
respectively.  Bonus payments for performance levels between the threshold
and superior levels are determined by proration.  The corporate performance
measure for bonus payments in 1993 was based on earnings before interest,
taxes and depreciation ("EBITD") and plan expense and permits exclusion of
extraordinary or non-recurring items which the Committee in its discretion
deems appropriate.

          In April of 1993, the 1993 EBITD targets were set at: 
$265 million threshold, $285 million target and $315 million superior.  At
the December 1993, meeting of the Committee, Mr. Schmiege advised that the
$285 million target (cash bonus at 50% of base salary) would be achieved,
after an adjustment of approximately $5,000,000, representing non-recurring
cost of employee buy-outs and relocation allowances.  The Committee
considered that adjustment appropriate.  Final 1993 EBITD as adjusted for
plan expense and such non-recurring costs was $291.2 million, so that for
Mr. Schmiege, this Committee action resulted in a bonus of $234,000.

          The Committee awarded additional bonuses to recognize and
encourage continued long-term commitment to the Company.  That action
resulted in an additional bonus of $58,500 to Mr. Schmiege.

STOCK OPTIONS

          The 1989 Equity Incentive Plan is administered by the Committee.

          Under CNW's 1989 Equity Incentive Plan options were granted on
July 14, 1989, (the "1989 Options") to executives of the Company (including
the Chairman and the Senior Vice Presidents) on 1,820,012 shares of Common
Stock at an exercise price of $5.88 per share, the same price paid by
Blackstone Capital Partners L.P., DLJ Capital Corporation, and members of
senior management in the Acquisition.  Options on an additional 247,582
shares of Common Stock were granted on July 30, 1990 (the "1990 Options"),
to other key members of management at the same exercise price.  Under the
Plan 37.5% of the options vest on the basis of longevity and the remaining
62.5% on the basis of performance as measured by EBITD targets.

          At December 31, 1992, 37.5% of the 1989 Options had vested on the
basis of longevity and, at December 31, 1993, 37.5% of the 1990 Options had
also vested on the basis of longevity.

          At December 31, 1992, 32.5% of the 1989 Options and 32.5% of the
1990 Options had vested on the basis of performance, and vesting of the
remaining 30% of the 1989 Options and of the 1990 Options depended on
achievement of performance levels, subject to adjustment of those levels by
the Board, over fiscal 1993 and 1994.  For 1993 the Committee had set the
EBITD target for vesting of 12.5% of the 1989 and 12.5% of the 1990 Options
at $293 million and had provisions for partial vesting on achievement of

                                   - 12 -<PAGE>





between 95%-100% of this goal.  Recognizing that 1993 EBITD target would
not be achieved because of the increased operating expenses and reduced
revenues resulting from the Midwest floods in June, July and August, 1993,
the Committee approved an adjustment to permit vesting of the full 12.5%. 
In doing so, it recognized that the EBITD target would have been achieved
had it not been for these extraordinary Midwest floods, and it also
recognized that the Company's management had achieved significant cost
savings which would benefit the Company in the future.  It therefore
approved, and recommended to the Board, vesting of 12.5% of the 1989
Options and 12.5% of the 1990 Options at the end of 1993.

          As a result of this action of the Committee, options held by
Mr. Schmiege under the Equity Incentive Plan on 58,361 shares of the
Company's Common Stock vested.


1992 EQUITY INCENTIVE PLAN

          In 1993, the Committee awarded no options under the 1992 Equity
Incentive Plan to the Chairman, any of the Senior Vice Presidents, or any
other management employee.


                  COMPENSATION AND STOCK OPTION COMMITTEE

                               James Mossman
                             James R. Thompson
                              Harold A. Poling














































                                   - 13 -<PAGE>





Comparison of Cumulative Total Shareholder Return







           Performance Graph is Submitted Under Cover of Form SE







________________________


NOTE:     Assumes the value of the investment in the Company's Common Stock
          and in each index was $100 on March 31, 1992 and that all
          dividends were reinvested.  March 31, 1992 was the first trading
          day in connection with the Initial Public Offering of the
          Company's Common Stock.


Compensation of Directors

The Company compensated directors who are not officers or employees of the
Company or its principal stockholders (or affiliates thereof) as follows: 
until September 30, 1993, with an annual fee of $25,000 and certain meeting
fees; since September 30, 1993, with an annual fee of $50,000.  In 1993,
such compensation amounted to $37,750 each for Messrs. Martin and Thompson,
and $4,306 each for Messrs. Mossman, Poling and Skinner.  Other directors
of the Company do not receive any fees or separate compensation.  All
directors are reimbursed for out-of-pocket expenses.  See "Certain
Relationships and Transactions - Compensation Committee Interlocks and
Insider Participation" for a description of annual management fees received
by Blackstone.

          Beginning effective January 1, 1994, non-employee Directors may
elect annually in advance to receive fees currently or to defer all or any
part of them under the Chicago and North Western Holdings Corp. Directors'
Pension and Retirement Savings Plan ("Directors' Pension Plan") and the
Chicago and North Western Holdings Corp. Directors' Deferred Compensation
Plan ("Directors' Deferred Compensation Plan").  Pursuant to the Directors'
Pension Plan, participating directors are awarded matching contributions
equal to 50% of the fees which they elect to defer in a year.  The
Directors' Pension Plan credits participating directors' accounts with
contributions, dividends, and gains and losses, as if their accounts are
fully invested in shares of the Company's Common Stock.  The Directors'
Deferred Compensation Plan credits participating directors' deferred fee
accounts with a rate of return based on London Interbank Offered Rates
(LIBOR) plus one percent.  

          Both plans are unfunded.  However, the Company has established a
trust ("Plan Trust") to hold shares of Common Stock in approximately the
amount credited to its participating directors' accounts under the
Directors' Pension Plan.  The assets of this trust are subject to the
claims of the Company's creditors in the event of insolvency or bankruptcy,
but are otherwise used to discharge the Company's liabilities under the
Directors' Pension Plan.  Each of the participating directors votes any
shares held in the trust in the proportion that his account balance under
the Directors' Pension Plan is to all account balances under that plan. 

          Distributions of a director's account balances under both plans
are made, in cash, promptly after he retires or otherwise ceases to be a
director of the Company.  Under the Directors' Deferred Compensation Plan a
director may elect, at the time of his election to defer fees for a year,
to be paid at the end of a shorter fixed deferral period.  

          Directors who are Company employees are not paid for their
services as Directors.

                                   - 14 -<PAGE>







       SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

Set forth below is certain information as of March 1, 1994, with respect to
the persons or groups which are known to be the beneficial owners of more
than 5% of the Company's Common Stock.

    Name                      Number of Shares        Percent(5)

UP Rail  (1)                  12,835,304              29.4
FMR Corp. (2)                  5,756,425              13.22
Neuberger and Berman (3)       3,726,534              8.56
The Capital Group (4)          2,206,500              5.07


          (1) UP Rail's current stock ownership consists of Non-voting
              Common Stock.  Subsequent to approval by the Interstate
              Commerce Commission ("ICC"), UP Rail may convert its shares
              into voting Common Stock on a share-for-share basis.  On
              January 29, 1993, UP Rail filed an application for such
              approval with the ICC.  The Non-voting Common Stock would
              automatically convert into voting Common Stock in the event
              of its transfer to an entity not regulated by the ICC.  See
              "Certain Relationships and Transactions-UP Rail and UP." 
              The address of UP Rail is UP Rail, Inc., c/o Union Pacific
              Corporation, Martin Tower, Eighth and Eaton Ave., Bethlehem,
              Pennsylvania 18018.

          (2) The information is contained in the Schedule 13-G dated
              February 11, 1994 filed by FMR Corp., 82 Devonshire Street,
              Boston, MA  02109

          (3) This information is contained in the Schedule 13-G dated
              January 31, 1994 filed by Neuberger & Berman, 605 Third
              Avenue, New York, New York  10158.

          (4) The information is contained in the Schedule 13-G dated
              February 11, 1994 filed by The Capital Group, 333 South Hope
              Street, Los Angeles, CA  90071.

          (5) Assumes the conversion of Non-voting Common Stock into
              Common Stock.

          Set forth below is certain information as of March 1, 1994
regarding beneficial ownership of the Company's Common Stock by each of the
Company's directors, by each of the Company's named executive officers, and
by all of the Company's directors and executive officers as a group:

                Name                        Number of Shares    Percent(5)

          Richard K. Davidson  (1)                  0             0
          James E. Martin      (2)              2,735             *
          James J. Mossman     (2)                735             *
          Harold A. Poling                          0             0
          Robert Schmiege      (3)            538,375             1.2
          Samuel K. Skinner    (2)                735             *
          James R. Thompson    (2)                885             *
          Jerome W. Conlon     (3)            132,277             *
          James P. Daley       (3)            185,953             *
          Robert A. Jahnke     (3)            232,777             *
          Arthur W. Peters     (3)            307,777             *
          Thomas A. Tingleff   (3)            172,623             *
          All executive officers
           and directors as a group
           (12 persons)  (4)                1,547,872             3.6


          *Less than 1%


          (1) Mr. Davidson is Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of
              UPRR.  Share data for Mr. Davidson does not include any of

                                   - 15 -<PAGE>





              the shares in the previous table beneficially owned by UP
              Rail.


          (2) Includes, for each of Messrs. Martin, Mossman, Skinner and
              Thompson, 735 shares held in the Plan Trust which are voted
              by such respective directors but with respect to which such
              directors do not have the right of disposition.

          (3) Includes shares which may be acquired within 60 days through
              the exercise of options for Messrs. Schmiege, 385,183;
              Conlon, 54,585; Daley, 44,585; Jahnke, 169,404; Peters,
              307,777; and Tingleff, 155,116.  Also includes 22,512 shares
              held by Mr. Daley's spouse, of which Mr. Daley disclaims
              beneficial ownership.

          (4) Share data includes 1,116,650 shares which may be acquired
              within 60 days through the exercise of options.  Excludes
              shares included in the previous table for UP Rail.

          (5) Assumes the conversion of Non-voting Common Stock into
              Common Stock.

                        ___________________________

Beneficial ownership of shares reflected in tables above includes the right
to vote and to dispose of such shares, except as otherwise noted.


                   CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND TRANSACTIONS


          The Company was acquired in a going-private transaction (the
"Acquisition") in 1989 involving the issuance and sale of Common Stock to
Blackstone Capital Partners, L.P. ("Blackstone"), Donaldson, Lufkin &
Jenrette Capital Corporation ("DLJCC") and certain members of the Company's
management, including the six executive officers, and the issuance and sale
of Convertible Preferred Stock to UP Rail.  Blackstone and DLJCC and
certain of their respective affiliates (collectively, "Former Principal
Stockholders") sold substantially all of their Common Stock in July 1993,
500,000 of such shares (the "UP Purchase") to UP Rail (which converted the
shares into Non-voting Common Stock) and the balance in a public offering
(the "Offering").  UP Rail exchanged its Preferred Stock (and an additional
cash investment in the Company of $28 million) for 10,153,304 shares of
Non-voting Common Stock as part of a recapitalization transaction in 1992.


Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

          Mr. Mossman, served as a member of the Compensation and Stock
Option Committee and its predecessor separate Stock Option Committee and
Compensation Committees during the last fiscal year, and James R. Birle
served until July 28, 1993 as a member of the Compensation Committee.  They
are General Partners of BGH which received $1 million from the Company for
management and advisory services for each of the 12 month periods ending
July 1993 and July 1994 and will receive $1 million for such services for
the 12 months ending July 1995.  Mr. Mossman is also a former officer of
the Company.

          An agreement among Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Securities
Corporation ("DLJSC"), an affiliate of DLJCC, The Blackstone Group and the
Company entered into in connection with the Acquisition provided for DLJSC
and The Blackstone Group to act as co-investment bankers to the Company
with respect to certain transactions and receive investment banking
compensation in connection with such transactions to be shared equally
between DLJSC and The Blackstone Group.  DLJSC's rights described above
terminated in July 1992 and Blackstone's in March 1994.

          Blackstone and its affiliates are also parties to the
Stockholders Agreement, the 1993 Agreement and the Registration Rights
Agreement, defined and discussed below.



                                   - 16 -<PAGE>





Stockholders Agreement

          The provisions of the Second Amended and Restated Stockholders
Agreement ("Stockholders Agreement") among the Former Principal
Stockholders, the Company's executive officers, UP Rail and the Company,
requiring the Former Principal Stockholders and such officers to vote their
shares for designees to the Company's Board of Directors of the Former
Principal Stockholders, the executive officers and UP Rail, terminated in
July 1993 following the Offering (except for such officers' obligation to
vote their Common Stock for the election of one UP designee to the Board of
Directors).  At that time, the four directors designated by Blackstone,
including Mr. Mossman, and the director designated by DLJCC resigned from
the Board; however, Mr. Mossman was reelected to the Board in November
1993.

          Under the Stockholders Agreement, subject to certain exceptions: 
(i) if UP Rail wishes to sell or otherwise dispose of any of its shares of
Common Stock (the "Transfer Securities") to a person other than a party to
the Stockholders Agreement or a permitted transferee of such party (a
"Third Party") (excluding, in the case of UP Rail, a sale or spinoff to the
stockholders of UP) in one transaction or from time to time in different
transactions or (ii) if the Company wishes to sell or otherwise dispose of
all or substantially all of its assets or all or a part of the East-West
Main Line, whether or not a part of the sale of any other assets ("Transfer
Assets") (any Transfer Securities together with any Transfer Assets being
referred to herein as the "Offered Assets"), then (a) UP Rail or a
permitted transferee, in the case of a proposed sale by the Company of any
Transfer Assets, and (b) the Company, in the case of a proposed sale of
Transfer Securities by UP Rail or any of its permitted transferees, shall
have a right of first refusal with respect to the Offered Assets at a price
specified by UP Rail or the Company, as the case may be (the "Seller"),
exercisable for a period of 45 days following written notice from the
Seller of the terms of such proposed sale of Offered Assets (the "Sale
Notice").  Following a party's failure to exercise its right of first
refusal, for a period of 400 days from the date of the Sale Notice, the
Offered Assets may be sold to a Third Party on terms and conditions no more
favorable than those offered to the person having the right of first
refusal (each, a "Rights Offeree"), provided that such sale (x) is at a
price in excess of 82.5% of the price at which the Offered Assets were
offered to the Rights Offeree and (y) is otherwise on the same general
terms and conditions as such offer to the Rights Offeree.

          UP Rail's right of first refusal with respect to the proposed
sale of any Transfer Assets is subject to certain limitations and
exceptions and is also subject to ICC approval or exemption.  See "UP Rail
and UP."  In addition, UP Rail's right of first refusal with respect to the
East-West Main Line terminates if, under certain circumstances, UP Rail
fails to exercise its right, and its right of first refusal with respect to
the Transfer Assets (except with respect to the East-West Main Line)
terminates if UP Rail, together with its permitted transferees, ceases to
own approximately 2,840,000 or more shares of the Non-voting Common Stock
or Common Stock.


1993 Agreement

          Pursuant to an agreement, dated as of June 21, 1993 (the "1993
Agreement") among the parties to the Stockholders Agreement, the Company
has agreed to use its best efforts to cause two members of UP's senior
management (the "Additional Nominees"), to be appointed to the Board of
Directors as members of the class of Directors serving for a term ending on
the date of the Annual Meeting to be held in 1995.  The Board of Directors
has so elected the Additional Nominees, such election to be effective upon
the obtaining of any approval, exemption or declaratory order of the ICC
necessary for the election of such individuals to become effective (the
"Effective Time").  UP is seeking such approval in connection with its
application, described herein, filed on January 29, 1993, for an order
authorizing the common control, within the meaning of the Act, of the rail
subsidiaries of the Company and of UP.  In addition, the Company has agreed
to use its best efforts to ensure that there will at all times be three
nominees of UP Rail on the Board of Directors (and, if the Company shall
continue to have a staggered Board of Directors, one such nominee will be
in Class I (current term expiring in 1996) and two such nominees will be in

                                   - 17 -<PAGE>





Class III (current term expiring in 1995)), such efforts to include, if
necessary, expanding the Board of Directors, and filling vacancies on the
Board of Directors with, and nominating and soliciting proxies for the
election as Directors at each annual meeting of the Company's stockholders
of, UP Rail nominees.  The Company has also agreed to use its best efforts
to ensure that the Board of Directors consists of nine Directors (including
the Additional Nominees), provided that the number of authorized Directors
may be increased in certain instances to permit the election of UP Rail
nominees.

          Pursuant to the 1993 Agreement, the executive officers have
agreed to vote their shares of Common Stock and otherwise use their best
efforts to ensure that there will at all times be three nominees of UP Rail
on the Board of Directors, provided that such obligation will not restrict
sales of Common Stock held by the executive officers and will cease with
respect to any executive officer if he ceases to be an employee of the
Company.

          The provisions of the 1993 Agreement described above will
terminate (i) with respect to the two additional UP Rail nominees to the
Board of Directors provided for by the 1993 Agreement, if UP Rail ceases to
own at least 20% of the capital stock of the Company of any class or
classes, the holders of which are entitled to vote generally in the
election of the members of the Board of Directors, and any securities of
the Company presently convertible into, or exercisable or exchangeable for,
any such capital stock of the Company, including but not limited to the
Common Stock and the Non-Voting Common Stock (whether or not presently
convertible), and (ii) with respect to one of such additional UP Rail
nominees, if UP Rail ceases to own at least 25%, but continues to own at
least 20% of such capital stock and securities.

          The 1993 Agreement terminates an agreement entered into in
December 1990 among the Company, certain of its subsidiaries, UP and
certain affiliates of UP, which restricted the Company from paying
dividends and making other distributions in respect of Common Stock.  The
Company remains subject to other agreements with lenders which restrict its
ability to pay dividends.

          Pursuant to the 1993 Agreement, in connection with the Offering,
the parties to the Stockholders Agreement agreed to the UP Purchase and
otherwise waived certain rights of first refusal and restrictions
concerning transfers of Common Stock by the Former Principal Stockholders
set forth in the Stockholders Agreement and subscription agreements entered
into by the Company with the Former Principal Stockholders.

          Pursuant to the 1993 Agreement, the parties thereto also
confirmed and agreed to eliminate restrictions on transfers of Common Stock
and related options held by the executive officers set forth in the
Stockholders Agreement and in subscription agreements between the Company
and such officers.

Registration Rights Agreement

          UP Rail has the right, pursuant to the Registration Rights
Agreement, to require that the Company effect the registration under the
Securities Act of all or any part of its shares of Common Stock, and UP
Rail and the executive officers of the Company have certain piggyback
registration rights at such time or times as the Company publicly offers
securities.  The Former Principal Stockholders also had registration rights
under the Registration Rights Agreement until after the Offering.

DLJSC

          DLJSC, acting as co-lead underwriter in the Offering, realized as
such $2.3 million in aggregate selling concessions.


UP Rail and UP

          A Standstill Agreement under which UP Rail agreed, among other
things, that it would not, prior to April 6, 1994, acquire or agree to
acquire more than 30% of the aggregate outstanding Common Stock and Non-
voting Common Stock terminated in July 1993.

                                   - 18 -<PAGE>





          Provisions of the Interstate Commerce Act (the "Act") require the
ICC to approve the acquisition of control over an entity, such as the
Company, that controls one or more railroads by an entity, such as UP Rail,
that is under common control with one or more other railroads.  The ICC
has, in certain of its decided cases, held that even the ownership of a
minority percentage of voting stock, such as UP Rail will hold in the
Company upon conversion of the Non-voting Common Stock into Common Stock,
can constitute such "control" within the meaning of the Act, depending on
all the relevant facts and circumstances, including the other existing
relationships.   UP has advised the Company that it wishes to convert the
shares of Non-voting Common Stock into shares of Common Stock and to vote
such shares of Common Stock.  In this connection, UP has applied to the ICC
for an order (on which ICC action is expected this year) authorizing the
common control within the meaning of the Act of UP's rail subsidiaries,
which will permit such conversion and voting.  Obtaining ICC control
authority would eliminate any uncertainty as to UP Rail's ability to vote
the Common Stock to the extent that the right to vote the Common Stock, in 
conjunction with UP's and its subsidiaries' other existing relationships
with the Company and its subsidiaries, might be considered to constitute
common control within the meaning of the Act.  UP has requested that the
ICC issue an order that would permit UP to, among other things, acquire
further Common Stock and (subject to approval of the Company) coordinate
further the services of the railroad subsidiaries of UP and the Company,
without the possible need to obtain any further control authorization from
the ICC, although particular coordinations may require other ICC approvals
or exemptions.  The Company and the stockholders party to the Stockholders
Agreement (but not Blackstone and DLJCC since the Offering in July 1993)
have agreed to cooperate with UP in such a control proceeding, and in any
other ICC proceedings necessary to UP's conversion of Non-voting Common
Stock hereafter owned by it to Common Stock and UP's voting of that Common
Stock.

          Additionally, UP Rail has a right of first refusal with respect
to a proposed sale of certain assets of the Company.  (See "Stockholder's
Agreement").  Such right is subject to certain limitations and exceptions,
including UP's continuing to maintain ownership of approximately 2,840,000
or more shares of the Non-voting Common Stock or Common Stock. 

          Pursuant to a Trackage Rights Agreement, approved by the ICC,
among UPRR and the Company, as supplemented and amended by a Supplemental
Form of Agreement for UP Trackage Rights, dated as of January 31, 1990 (the
"Trackage Rights Agreement"), the Company hauls certain traffic over the
east-west main line for UPRR using Company employees, engines and
facilities under terms that preserve the Company's revenue on that traffic
and at the same time provide the Company with increased revenues in the
event of increased UPRR usage under the Trackage Rights Agreement.  The
Trackage Rights Agreement was further amended by the amendment dated as of
December 20, 1990.  The Trackage Rights Agreement, as so amended, requires
the Company to maintain 90% of the east-west main line at Class V Federal
Railroad Administration ("FRA") standards by the end of 1994.  Since
December 31, 1992, this condition has been met.  In addition, UPRR has
agreed that if it determines by the end of 1994 that further upgrading of
the east-west main line is desirable, it will provide $35 million of
additional debt financing to help the Company achieve the maintenance of
100% of the east-west main line at Class V FRA standards by 1996.  As
discussed below, implementation of the Trackage Rights Agreement has been
approved by the ICC.

          The trackage rights granted to UPRR under the Trackage Rights
Agreement run for a term of 999 years and consist of bridge rights (i.e.,
rights to haul freight from one end of the east-west main line to the
other, but not to originate, terminate  or interchange traffic at
intermediate points) between Fremont, Nebraska/Council Bluffs, Iowa and
points in and around Chicago, Illinois, and full rights throughout the
Chicago area, each subject to certain limitations.  UPRR retains the option
of working with the Company and other railroads on an interline basis
rather than handling traffic via the trackage rights.  UPRR is allowed to
interchange with all rail and non-rail transportation companies in the
Chicago area for traffic to and from points not served by the Company or
FRVR Corporation (a Wisconsin regional railroad which purchased its line
from the Company).

          The Trackage Rights Agreement also calls for provision by the

                                   - 19 -<PAGE>





Company of terminal services, including switching for UPRR to connecting
railroad companies and to and from selected terminal and shipper's
facilities.  Other services to be provided to UPRR by the Company include
locomotive servicing and fueling, locomotive and train inspection,
derailment cleanup, bad order repair and clerical services.

          As compensation for the rights and services afforded thereunder,
the Trackage Rights Agreement obligates UPRR to pay the Company its revenue
per unit (by traffic classifications) of the first quarter of 1989 net of
refunds and all appropriate allowance payments, with the level of such
compensation to be adjusted upward or downward (subject to a defined
minimum rate) in accordance with the percentage increase or decrease of
UPRR's net revenue per unit for each trackage right traffic classification. 
The aforementioned level of compensation will be adjusted every five years
to reflect productivity per unit where such adjustment would not reduce the
revenue to variable cost ratio below the level prevailing on the date of
the Trackage Rights Agreement.  In order to provide UPRR with an incentive
to increase the traffic subject to the Trackage Rights Agreement, the
compensation described  above is to be adjusted to reflect UPRR's increase
in usage (volume as measured in carloads, trailers or containers) by
traffic classification for trackage rights traffic using the East-West Main
Line.  In addition, the Company is entitled to supplementary compensation
for handling empty returns in excess of the number of loads handled.  The
Trackage Rights Agreement also requires UPRR to reimburse the Company for
additional costs associated with certain special services.

          In order to insure provision by the Company of the high level of
service and maintenance required under the Trackage Rights Agreement, any
material breach of the service or maintenance standards incorporated
therein, which is not cured within the period allotted therefor, will
result in the entitlement of UPRR to expanded rights in respect of the
trackage right lines, including, under certain circumstances, the right to
undertake maintenance therefor, to make capital improvements to insure
continued maintenance at Class V standards, the immediate right to fully
operate its own trains over such lines, and corresponding changes in the
compensation provisions for trackage rights.

          The Trackage Rights Agreement further provides that, except in
the event of a material breach of the agreement (in which event control of
train operations will be held by the party with the greater usage and UP
will be permitted to utilize its own train crews), the Company will be
solely responsible for control of train operations on the lines subject to
the Trackage Rights Agreement and will conduct  the same in a non-
discriminatory manner.  Absent breach, the Company will also be obligated
to provide crews for UP trains and will in any event bear the same
liability for trackage rights traffic as it would have had if such traffic
had moved in interline service.

          The Company and UP and certain of its subsidiaries are also
parties to certain agreements originally entered into in connection with
UP's participation in the financing of Western Railroad Properties,
Incorporated ("WRPI") in 1982 and restated in December of 1990 when WRPI
completed a refinancing (the "WRPI Refinancing") of indebtedness incurred
in connection with the construction of WRPI's rail lines.  Under these
agreements, a trust for the benefit of a subsidiary of UP (the "WRPI
Trust") owns approximately one-half of the track constituting the WRPI line
and certain support facilities and leases them to WRPI pursuant to the
Lease.  During 1993, WRPI paid $22.6 million to WRPI Trust for lease
payments and contingent rent.  In order to secure the performance of WRPI's
obligations under the Lease (including rental payments in respect of
indebtedness incurred by the WRPI Trust in connection with the WRPI
Refinancing) and the other agreements entered into as part of the WRPI
Refinancing, all of the capital stock of WRPI is currently pledged to the
WRPI Trust.  Under the pledge agreement with the WRPI Trust, the Company is
required (subject to certain exceptions) to obtain the consent of the WRPI
Trust or UP to any transfer of capital stock of WRPI at any time prior to
April of 2001.  In addition, the WRPI Trust has a right of first refusal
with respect to transfers of the capital stock of WRPI under this agreement
and would have the  right, unless prohibited by law, to acquire the capital
stock of WRPI at the lower  of the fair market value and the book value of
such shares in the event of: (i) a material breach of the participation and
loan agreement entered into in connection with the WRPI Refinancing, which,
in the case of a non-monetary breach, would, after expiration of a 60-day

                                   - 20 -<PAGE>





grace period, have a material adverse effect on UP or its affiliates or its
interest in WRPI; or (ii) a continuing event of default under the Lease.

          In addition to the foregoing, the Company has a substantial
operating relationship with UPRR.  Approximately 65% of the Company's total
loads in 1993 were interchanged with UPRR railroad lines at the Company's
Omaha gateway and at the south end of WRPI.  The east-west main line also
links UPRR's primary western routes with eastern railroads in Chicago,
providing the most direct freight service available between Chicago and
West Coast points in the nation's central corridor.


                       INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

          On recommendation of the Audit Committee, Arthur Andersen & Co.
has been selected by the Board of Directors as independent auditors for the
Company for 1994.  Representatives of Arthur Andersen & Co. are expected to
be present at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders and to be available to
respond to questions.  Those representatives will be given the opportunity
to make statements if they so desire.  

                           STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS

          Stockholder Proposals submitted for inclusion in proxy materials
for the 1995 Annual Meeting of Stockholders should be addressed to the
Company's Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary, 165 North
Canal Street, Chicago, Illinois 60606, and must be received by November __,
1994.


                               OTHER MATTERS

          While the Notice of the 1994 Annual Meeting of Stockholders calls
for transaction of such other business as may properly come before the
Meeting, the Board of Directors has no knowledge of any matters to be
presented for action by the stockholders at the Meeting other than as
hereinabove set forth.  The enclosed proxy gives discretionary authority,
however, in the event that any additional matter should be presented.


                              By Order of the Board of Directors,




                              JAMES P. DALEY
                              Senior Vice President,
                              General Counsel and Secretary


























                                   - 21 -<PAGE>





                  CHICAGO AND NORTH WESTERN HOLDINGS CORP.
                           165 North Canal Street
                          One North Western Center
                          Chicago, Illinois  60606


Proxy Solicited on Behalf of the Board of Directors


Annual Meeting of Stockholders - May 3, 1994



          The undersigned stockholder hereby appoints ROBERT SCHMIEGE,
JAMES P. DALEY, AND ROBIN BOURNE-CARIS, or any of them, with full power of
substitution (the action of one, if only one be present and acting, to be
in any event controlling), the proxies of the undersigned to represent the
undersigned at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Chicago and North
Western Holdings Corp., to be held at the hour of 9:00 A.M. local time, on
May 3, 1994 and at any and all adjournments thereof, and to vote all shares
which the undersigned would be entitled to vote thereat as designated
below, with all powers which the undersigned would possess if personally
present.


1.        ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

          [ ]  FOR ALL nominees listed below
               (except as marked to the contrary below)

          [ ]  WITHHOLD AUTHORITY
               to vote for all nominees listed below

          JAMES E. MARTIN     JAMES J. MOSSMAN    JAMES R. THOMPSON

          (INSTRUCTION:  To withhold authority to vote for any individual
          nominee, write that nominee's name on the space provided below)
          ____________________________________________________________

2.        Approval of amendment to Restated Certificate of Incorporation to
          change the Company's name to Chicago and North Western
          Transportation Company

                    FOR            AGAINST        ABSTAIN
                    [ ]              [ ]           [ ]

3.        Approval of 1994 Equity Incentive Plan

                    FOR            AGAINST        ABSTAIN
                    [ ]              [ ]           [ ]
























                                   - 22 -<PAGE>





4.        In their discretion, the Proxies are authorized to vote upon such
          other business as may properly come before the meeting.

              (Continued, and to be signed, on the other side)
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
This proxy when properly executed will be voted in the manner directed
herein by the undersigned stockholder.  If properly executed, but no
direction is made, this proxy will be voted for the election of all
nominees listed and for Proposals No. 2 and No. 3

                              Please sign exactly as name appears below. 
                              When shares are held by joint tenants, only
                              one need sign.  When signing as attorney,
                              executor, administrator, trustee or guardian,
                              please give full title as such.

                              DATED:  ________________________, 1994


                              ______________________________________
                              Signature

                              ______________________________________
                              Signature if held jointly


    PLEASE MARK, SIGN, DATE AND RETURN THE PROXY CARD PROMPTLY USING THE
ENCLOSED ENVELOPE














































                                   - 23 -<PAGE>







                                                                 EXHIBIT 22

                       CHICAGO AND NORTH WESTERN HOLDINGS CORP.
                              1994 EQUITY INCENTIVE PLAN


               The Plan.  Chicago and North Western Holdings Corp., a
          Delaware corporation (the "Company"), hereby establishes the
          Chicago and North Western Holdings Corp. 1994 Equity Incentive
          Plan as set forth herein and as it may from time to time be
          amended (the "Plan"), effective March 7, 1994, subject to
          shareholder approval.

               1.  Purpose.  The purpose of the Plan is to provide a means
          by which key employees of the Company and its Subsidiaries can
          acquire and maintain Stock ownership, thereby strengthening their
          commitment to the success of the Company and their desire to
          remain employed by the Company and its Subsidiaries.  It is
          anticipated that the acquisition of such Stock ownership will
          stimulate the efforts of such employees on behalf of the Company,
          strengthen their desire to continue in the service of the Company
          and encourage shareholder and entrepreneurial perspectives
          through employee stock ownership.  It is also anticipated that
          the opportunity to obtain such Stock ownership will prove
          attractive to promising new key employees and will assist the
          Company in attracting such employees.

               2.  Definitions.

               As used in the Plan, terms defined parenthetically
          immediately after their use shall have the respective meanings
          provided by such definitions and the terms set forth below shall
          have the following meanings (such meanings to be equally
          applicable to both the singular and plural forms of the terms
          defined):

               (a)  "Award" means options granted under the Plan.

               (b)  "Award Agreement" has the meaning specified in
          Section 4(b)(v).

               (c)  "Board" means the Board of Directors of the Company.

               (d)  "Cause" includes termination based on the commission of
          any act or acts involving dishonesty, fraud, illegality or moral
          turpitude, or the Grantee's habitual neglect of his duties.

               (e)  "Code" means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
          amended, and regulations and rulings thereunder.  References to a
          particular section of the Code shall include references to
          successor provisions.

               (f)  "Committee" means the committee of the Board appointed
          pursuant to Section 4.<PAGE>





               (g)  "Company" has the meaning set forth in the introductory
          paragraph.

               (h)  "Disability" means, as relates to the exercise of an
          incentive stock option after Termination of Employment, a
          disability within the meaning of Section 22(e)(3) of the Code,
          and for all other purposes, a mental or physical condition which,
          in the opinion of the Committee, renders a Grantee unable or
          incompetent to carry out the job responsibilities which such
          Grantee held or the tasks to which such Grantee was assigned at
          the time the disability was incurred, and which is expected to be
          permanent or for an indefinite duration exceeding one year.

               (i)  "Effective Date" means March 7, 1994.

               (j)  "Fair Market Value" of any security of the Company
          means, as of any applicable date the closing price, regular way,
          of the security as reported on the New York Stock Exchange
          Composite Tape, or if no such reported sale of the security shall
          have occurred on such date, on the next preceding date on which
          there was such a reported sale.

               (k)  "Grant Date" means the date on which an Award shall be
          duly granted, as determined in accordance with Section 6(a)(i).

               (l)  "Grantee" means an individual who has been granted an
          Award.

               (m)  "including" or "includes" means "including, without
          limitation," or "includes, without limitation."

               (n)  "Minimum Consideration" means $.01 per share (other
          than treasury shares) or such larger amount determined pursuant
          to resolution of the Board to be capital within the meaning of
          Section 154 of the Delaware General Corporation Law.

               (o)  "1934 Act" means the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
          as amended.  References to a particular section of, or rule
          under, the 1934 Act shall include references to successor
          provisions.

               (p)  "Option Price" means the per share purchase price of
          Stock subject to an option.

               (q)  "Plan" has the meaning set forth in the introductory
          paragraph.

               (r)  "SEC" means the Securities and Exchange Commission.

               (s)  "Section 16 Grantee" means a person subject to
          potential liability under Section 16(b) of the 1934 Act with
          respect to transactions involving equity securities of the
          Company.<PAGE>





               (t)  "Share Withholding" has the meaning set forth in
          Section 12(a).

               (u)  "Stock" means the common stock of the Company, par
          value $.01 per share.

               (v)  "Subsidiary" means (i) with respect to incentive stock
          options, a corporation as defined in Section 424(f) of the Code
          with the Company being treated as the employer corporation for
          purposes of this definition, and (ii) for all other purposes any
          entity in which the Company directly or through intervening
          subsidiaries owns twenty-five percent (25%) or more of the total
          combined voting power or value of all classes of stock or, in the
          case of an unincorporated entity, a twenty-five percent (25%) or
          more interest in the capital and profits.

               (w)  "Taxable Event" has the meaning set forth in
          Section 12(a).

               (x)  "Tax Date" has the meaning set forth in
          Section 12(b)(iii).

               (y)  "Tendered Restricted Stock" has the meaning specified
          in Section 9(a).

               (z)  "10% Owner" means a person who owns stock (including
          stock treated as owned under Section 424(d) of the Code)
          possessing more than 10% of the total combined voting power of
          all classes of stock of the Company.

               (aa)  "Termination of Employment" occurs the first day an
          individual is for any reason entitled to severance payments under
          the Company's or any Subsidiary's personnel policies or is no
          longer employed by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries, in
          each case as determined by the Committee.

               3.   Scope of the Plan.

               (a)  An aggregate of 2,000,000 shares of Stock is hereby
          made available and is reserved for delivery on account of the
          exercise of Awards.  Such shares may be treasury shares or newly
          issued shares, as may be determined from time to time by the
          Board or the Committee.

               (b)  If and to the extent an Award shall expire or terminate
          for any reason without having been exercised in full or shall be
          forfeited, without, in either case, the Grantee having enjoyed
          any of the benefits of stock ownership (other than voting rights
          or dividends that are likewise forfeited), the shares of Stock
          associated with such Award shall become available for other
          Awards.<PAGE>





               4.   Administration.

               (a)  The Plan shall be administered by a committee
          ("Committee") which shall consist of not less than two persons
          (or not less than such larger number of persons as is required to
          permit transactions in stock pursuant to the Plan to be exempt
          from liability under Section 16(b) of the 1934 Act pursuant to
          Rule 16b-3 thereunder, as from time to time applicable) who are
          directors of the Company.  Membership on the Committee shall be
          subject to such other limitations as the Board deems appropriate,
          whether to permit transactions in Stock pursuant to the Plan to
          be exempt from liability under Section 16(b) of the 1934 Act
          pursuant to Rule 16b-3 thereunder as from time to time
          applicable, or otherwise.

               (b)  The Committee shall have full and final authority, in
          its discretion, but subject to the express provisions of the
          Plan, as follows:

                    (i)  to grant Awards;

                    (ii)  to determine (A) when Awards may be granted, and
               (B) whether or not specific Awards shall be identified with
               other specific Awards, and if so whether they shall be
               exercisable cumulatively with or alternatively to such other
               specific Awards;

                    (iii)  to interpret the Plan and to make all
               determinations necessary or advisable for the administration
               of the Plan;

                    (iv)  to prescribe, amend, and rescind rules and
               regulations relating to the Plan, including rules with
               respect to the exercisability and nonforfeitability of
               Awards upon the Termination of Employment of a Grantee;

                    (v)  to determine the terms and provisions and any
               restrictions or conditions (including specifying any
               performance criteria as the Committee deems appropriate, and
               imposing restrictions with respect to Stock acquired upon
               exercise of an option, which restrictions may continue
               beyond the Grantee's Termination of Employment) of the
               written agreements by which all Awards shall be evidenced
               ("Award Agreements") which need not be identical and, with
               the consent of the Grantee, to modify any such Award
               Agreement at any time;

                    (vi)  to accelerate the exercisability of, and to
               accelerate or waive any or all of the restrictions and
               conditions applicable to, any Award, or any group of Awards
               for any reason;

                    (vii)  to make such adjustments or modifications to
               Awards to Grantees working outside the United States as are<PAGE>





               necessary and advisable to fulfill the purposes of the Plan;
               and

                    (viii)  to impose such additional conditions,
               restrictions, and limitations upon the grant, exercise or
               retention of Awards as the Committee may, before or
               concurrently with the grant thereof, deem appropriate,
               including requiring simultaneous exercise of related
               identified Awards, and limiting the percentage of Awards
               which may from time to time be exercised by a Grantee.

          The determination of the Committee on all matters relating to the
          Plan or any Award Agreement shall be conclusive and final.  No
          member of the Committee shall be liable for any action or
          determination made in good faith with respect to the Plan or any
          Award.

               5.   Eligibility.  Awards may be granted to any employee of
          the Company or any of its Subsidiaries.  In selecting the
          individuals to whom Awards may be granted, as well as in
          determining the number of shares of Stock subject to, and the
          other terms and conditions applicable to, each Award, the
          Committee shall take into consideration such factors as it deems
          relevant in promoting the purposes of the Plan.

               6.   Conditions to grants.

                    (a)  General conditions.

                         (i)  The Grant Date of an Award shall be the date
                    on which the Committee grants the Award or such later
                    date as specified in advance by the Committee.

                         (ii)  The term of each Award (subject to
                    Section 6(c) with respect to incentive stock options)
                    shall be a period of not more than 10 years from the
                    Grant Date, and shall be subject to earlier termination
                    as herein provided.

                         (iii)  A Grantee may, if otherwise eligible, be
                    granted additional Awards in any combination.

                    (b)  Grant of options and option price.  No later than
          the Grant Date of any option, the Committee shall determine the
          Option Price of such option.  The Option Price of an option shall
          not be less than 100% of the Fair Market Value of the Stock on
          the Grant Date.  Such price shall be subject to adjustment as
          provided in Section 20.  A Grantee shall not be granted options
          for a total of more than 200,000 shares of Stock in a calendar
          year.

                    (c)  Grant of incentive stock options.  At the time of
          the grant of any option, the Committee may designate that such
          option shall be made subject to additional restrictions to permit<PAGE>





          it to qualify as an "incentive stock option" under the
          requirements of Section 422 of the Code.  Any option designated
          as an incentive stock option:

                    (i)  shall have an Option Price of (A) not less than
               100% of the Fair Market Value of the Stock on the Grant Date
               or (B) in the case of a 10% Owner, not less than 110% of the
               Fair Market Value of the Stock on the Grant Date;

                    (ii)  shall be for a period of not more than 10 years
               (five years, in the case of a 10% Owner) from the Grant
               Date, and shall be subject to earlier termination as
               provided herein or in the applicable Award Agreement;

                    (iii)  shall not have an aggregate Fair Market Value
               (determined for each incentive stock option at its Grant
               Date) of Stock with respect to which incentive stock options
               are exercisable for the first time by such Grantee during
               any calendar year (under the Plan and any other employee
               stock option plan of the Grantee's employer or any parent or
               Subsidiary thereof ("Other Plans")), determined in
               accordance with the provisions of Section 422 of the Code,
               which exceeds $100,000 (the "$100,000 Limit");

                    (iv)  shall, if the aggregate Fair Market Value of
               Stock (determined on the Grant Date) with respect to all
               incentive stock options previously granted under the Plan
               and any Other Plans ("Prior Grants") and any incentive stock
               options under such grant (the "Current Grant") which are
               exercisable for the first time during any calendar year
               would exceed the $100,000 Limit, be exercisable as follows:

                         (A)  the portion of the Current Grant exercisable
                    for the first time by the Grantee during any calendar
                    year which would, when added to any portions of any
                    Prior Grants first exercisable in such year, be
                    exercisable for the first time by the Grantee during
                    such calendar year with respect to Stock which would
                    have an aggregate Fair Market Value (determined as of
                    the respective Grant Date for such options) in excess
                    of the $100,000 Limit shall, notwithstanding the terms
                    of the Current Grant, be exercisable for the first time
                    by the Grantee in the first subsequent calendar year or
                    years in which it could be exercisable for the first
                    time by the Grantee when added to all Prior Grants
                    without exceeding the $100,000 Limit; and

                         (B)  if, viewed as of the date of the Current
                    Grant, any portion of a Current Grant could not be
                    exercised under the provisions of the immediately
                    preceding sentence during any calendar year commencing
                    with the calendar year in which it is first exercisable
                    through and including the last calendar year in which
                    it may by its terms be exercised, such portion of the<PAGE>





                    Current Grant shall not be an incentive stock option,
                    but shall be exercisable as a separate option at such
                    date or dates as are provided in the Current Grant;

                    (v)  shall be granted within 10 years from the earlier
               of the date the Plan is adopted or the date the Plan is
               approved by the stockholders of the Company; 

                    (vi)  shall require the Grantee to notify the Committee
               of any disposition of any Stock issued pursuant to the
               exercise of the incentive stock option under the
               circumstances described in Section 421(b) of the Code
               (relating to certain disqualifying dispositions), within 10
               days of such disposition; and

                    (vii)  shall by its terms not be assignable or
               transferable other than by will or the laws of descent and
               distribution and may be exercised, during the Grantee's
               lifetime, only by the Grantee; provided, however, that the
               Grantee may, to the extent provided in the Plan in any
               manner specified by the Committee, designate in writing a
               beneficiary to exercise his incentive stock option after the
               Grantee's death.

          Notwithstanding the foregoing and Section 4(b)(v), the Committee
          may, without the consent of the Grantee, at any time before the
          exercise of an option (whether or not an incentive stock option),
          take any action necessary to prevent such option from being
          treated as an incentive stock option.

               7.   Grantee's agreement to serve.  Each Grantee who is
          granted an Award shall, by executing such Grantee's Award
          Agreement, agree that such Grantee will remain in the employ of
          the Company or any of its Subsidiaries for at least one year
          after the Grant Date.  No obligation of the Company or any of its
          Subsidiaries as to the length of any Grantee's employment shall
          be implied by the terms of the Plan, any grant of an Award
          hereunder or any Award Agreement.  The Company and its
          Subsidiaries reserve the same rights to terminate employment of
          any Grantee as existed before the Effective Date.

               8.   Non-transferability.  Except as provided in Section
          6(c)(vii), each Award granted hereunder shall not be assignable
          or transferable other than by will or the laws of descent and
          distribution provided, however, that a Grantee may in a manner
          specified by the Committee and to the extent provided in the Plan
          designate in writing a beneficiary to exercise his Award after
          the Grantee's death.

               9.   Exercise.

               (a)  Exercise of options.  Subject to Sections 4(b)(vi) and
          13 and such terms and conditions as the Committee may impose,
          each option shall be exercisable in one or more installments<PAGE>





          commencing not earlier than the first anniversary of the Grant
          Date of such option.

               Each option shall be exercised by delivery to the Company of
          written notice of intent to purchase a specific number of shares
          of Stock subject to the option.  The Option Price of any shares
          of Stock as to which an option shall be exercised shall be paid
          in full at the time of the exercise.  Payment may, at the
          election of the Grantee, be made in any one or any combination of
          the following:

                    (i)  cash;

                    (ii)  with the approval of the Committee, Stock valued
               at its Fair Market Value on the date of exercise;

                    (iii)  through simultaneous sale through a broker of
               shares acquired on exercise, as permitted under Regulation T
               of the Federal Reserve Board; or

                    (iv)  with the approval of the Committee, shares of
               restricted stock valued at the Fair Market Value of a share
               of Stock on the date of exercise;

          including, with the consent of the Committee, by pyramiding
          (i.e., paying the Option Price with shares of Stock
          simultaneously acquired by option exercise).

               If restricted stock ("Tendered Restricted Stock") is used to
          pay the Option Price for Stock subject to an option, then the
          Committee may, but need not, specify that (i) all the shares of
          Stock acquired on exercise of the option shall be subject to the
          same restrictions as the Tendered Restricted Stock, determined as
          of the date of exercise of the option, or (ii) a number of shares
          of Stock acquired on exercise of the option equal to the number
          of shares of Tendered Restricted Stock shall, unless the
          Committee provides otherwise, be subject to the same restrictions
          as the Tendered Restricted Stock, determined as of the date of
          exercise of the option.

               (b)  Special rules for Section 16 Grantees.  No option shall
          be exercisable by a Section 16 Grantee during the first six
          months after its Grant Date, except as exempted from Section 16
          of the 1934 Act under Rule 16a-2(d) under the 1934 Act.

               10.  Notification under Section 83(b).  The Committee may,
          on the Grant Date or any later date, prohibit a Grantee from
          making the election described below.  If the Committee has not
          prohibited such Grantee from making such election, and the
          Grantee shall, in connection with the exercise of any option,
          make the election permitted under Section 83(b) of the Code
          (i.e., an election to include in such Grantee's gross income in
          the year of transfer the amounts specified in Section 83(b) of
          the Code), such Grantee shall notify the Company of such election<PAGE>





          within 10 days of filing notice of the election with the Internal
          Revenue Service, in addition to any filing and notification
          required pursuant to regulations issued under the authority of
          Section 83(b) of the Code.

               11.  Mandatory withholding taxes.

               (a)  Whenever under the Plan, shares of Stock are to be
          delivered upon exercise of an Award, the Company shall be
          entitled to require as a condition of delivery (i) that the
          Grantee remit an amount sufficient to satisfy all federal, state,
          and local withholding tax requirements related thereto, (ii) the
          withholding of such sums from compensation otherwise due to the
          Grantee or from any shares of Stock due to the Grantee under the
          Plan or (iii) any combination of the foregoing.

               (b)  If any disqualifying disposition described in
          Section 6(c)(vi) is made with respect to shares of Stock acquired
          under an incentive stock option granted pursuant to the Plan or
          any election described in Section 11 is made, then the person
          making such disqualifying disposition or election shall remit to
          the Company an amount sufficient to satisfy all federal, state,
          and local withholding taxes thereby incurred; provided that, in
          lieu of or in addition to the foregoing, the Company shall have
          the right to withhold such sums from compensation otherwise due
          to the Grantee or from any shares of Stock due to the Grantee
          under the Plan.

               12.  Elective share withholding.

               (a)  Subject to Section 12(b), a Grantee may elect the
          withholding ("Share Withholding") by the Company of a portion of
          the shares of Stock otherwise deliverable to such Grantee upon
          the exercise or payment of an Award (each a "Taxable Event")
          having a Fair Market Value equal to:

                    (i)  the minimum amount necessary to satisfy required
               federal, state, or local withholding tax liability
               attributable to the Taxable Event (in 1994, the minimum
               amount required by federal tax withholding rules is 20% of
               the Grantee's taxable income); or

                    (ii)  with the Committee's prior approval, a greater
               amount, not to exceed the estimated total amount of such
               Grantee's tax liability with respect to the Taxable Event.

               (b)  Each Share Withholding election by a Grantee shall be
          subject to the following restrictions:

                    (i)  any Grantee's election shall be subject to the
               Committee's right to revoke such election of Share
               Withholding by such Grantee at any time before the Grantee's
               election if the Committee has reserved the right to do so in
               the Award Agreement;<PAGE>





                    (ii)  if the Grantee is a Section 16 Grantee, such
               Grantee's election shall be subject to the disapproval of
               the Committee at any time, whether or not the Committee has
               reserved the right to do so;

                    (iii)  the Grantee's election must be made before the
               date (the "Tax Date") on which the amount of tax to be
               withheld is determined;

                    (iv)  the Grantee's election shall be irrevocable;

                    (v)  except to the extent such condition may be waived
               by the General Counsel of the Company, a Section 16 Grantee
               may not elect Share Withholding within six months after the
               grant of the related option (except if the Grantee dies or
               incurs a Disability before the end of the six-month period);
               and

                    (vi)  except to the extent such condition may be waived
               by the General Counsel of the Company, any election of Share
               Withholding by a Section 16 Grantee must be made either six
               months before the Tax Date or during the ten business day
               period beginning on the third business day after the release
               of the Company's quarterly or annual summary statement of
               sales and earnings.

               13.  Termination of Employment.

               (a)  For any reason other than Cause, death, retirement or
          Disability.  If a Grantee has a Termination of Employment for a
          reason other than for Cause, death of the Grantee, the Grantee's
          retirement or Disability, any unexercised option, to the extent
          exercisable on the date of the Grantee's Termination of
          Employment, may be exercised in whole or in part, not later than
          the 90th day following the Grantee's Termination of Employment;
          provided that if such 90th day is not a business day, such option
          may be exercised not later than the first business day following
          such 90th day, and:

                         (i)  For Cause.  If a Grantee has a Termination of
               Employment for Cause, any unexercised option shall thereupon
               terminate upon the date of the Grantee's Termination of
               Employment.

                         (ii)  On account of death.  If a Grantee has a
               Termination of Employment on account of the Grantee's death,
               then, except as otherwise provided in the Award Agreement,
               any unexercised option, whether or not exercisable on the
               date of such Termination of Employment may be exercised, in
               whole or in part, at any time within one year after such
               Termination of Employment by the Grantee, or after the
               Grantee's death, by (A) his personal representative or by
               the person to whom the option is transferred by will or the
               applicable laws of descent and distribution, or (B) the<PAGE>





               Grantee's beneficiary designated in accordance with Section
               6(c)(vii) or 8.

                    (iii)  On account of retirement.  If a Grantee has a
               Termination of Employment on account of retirement, any
               unexercised option which is then exercisable at the date of
               such Termination of Employment may be exercised, in whole or
               in part, at any time within 90 days after the Grantee's
               Termination of Employment; provided that, if the Grantee
               dies after such Termination of Employment and before the end
               of such 90-day period, such option may be exercised by the
               deceased Grantee's personal representative or by the person
               to whom the option is transferred by will or the applicable
               laws of descent and distribution within one year after the
               Grantee's Termination of Employment.

                    (iv)  On account of Disability.  If a Grantee has a
               Termination of Employment on account of Disability, any
               unexercised option, to the extent exercisable on the date of
               such Termination of Employment, may be exercised, in whole
               or in part, at any time within one year after the Grantee's
               Termination of Employment provided that, if the Grantee dies
               after such Termination of Employment and before the end of
               such one-year period, such option may be exercised within
               one year after the Grantee's Termination of Employment, or,
               if later, within 180 days after the Grantee's death by (A)
               the deceased Grantee's personal representative or by the
               person to whom the option is transferred by will or the
               applicable laws of descent and distribution, or (B) the
               Grantee's beneficiary, if any, designated in accordance with
               Section 6(c)(vii) or 8.  

               (b)  Exceptions at the Discretion of the Committee.  If the
          Grantee has a Termination of Employment for any reason other than
          Cause, the Committee may provide on or after the Grant Date
          (including after a Grantee's Termination of Employment, but
          before the expiration of the term specified in the applicable
          Award Agreement) for one or more of the following:

                    (i)  that any unexercised option, to the extent
               exercisable on the date of such Termination of Employment,
               may be exercised, in whole or in part, at any time within a
               period specified by the Committee after the date of such
               Termination of Employment;

                    (ii)  that any option which is not exercisable on or
               before the date of such Termination of Employment (A) will
               continue to become exercisable, as if such Termination of
               Employment had not occurred, after such date for a period
               specified by the Committee and (B) to the extent such option
               has become exercisable during such period, may be exercised,
               in whole or in part, at or before the end of such period;

                    (iii)  that if the Grantee dies after such Termination<PAGE>





               of Employment and before the expiration of the period
               specified under clause (i) or (ii) of this Section 13(b),
               such option may be exercised within the specified period
               after the Grantee's Termination of Employment, or, if later,
               within 180 days after the Grantee's death by (A) the
               deceased Grantee's personal representative or by the person
               to whom the option is transferred by will or the applicable
               laws of descent and distribution, or (B) the Grantee's
               beneficiary designated in accordance with Section 6(c)(vii)
               or 8; 

          provided that the Committee may after having taken action under
          this Section 13(b) take further action to limit these rights but
          only if such limitation is consented to by the Grantee.

                    (c)  Maximum Extension.  Notwithstanding the foregoing,
          no Award shall be exercisable beyond the maximum term permitted
          under the original Award Agreement unless the Committee
          explicitly extends such original term, in which case such term
          shall not be extended beyond the maximum term permitted by the
          Plan.

               14.  Securities law matters.

               (a)  If the Committee deems necessary to comply with the
          Securities Act of 1933, the Committee may require a written
          investment intent representation by the Grantee and may require
          that a restrictive legend be affixed to certificates for shares
          of Stock.

               (b)  If, based upon the opinion of counsel for the Company,
          the Committee determines that the exercise or nonforfeitability
          of, or delivery of benefits pursuant to, any Award would violate
          any applicable provision of (i) federal or state securities laws
          or (ii) the listing requirements of any national securities
          exchange on which are listed any of the Company's equity
          securities, then the Committee may postpone any such exercise,
          nonforfeitability or delivery, as the case may be, but the
          Company shall use its best efforts to cause such exercise,
          nonforfeitability or delivery to comply with all such provisions
          at the earliest practicable date.

               15.   Funding.  Benefits payable under the Plan to any
          person shall be paid directly by the Company.  The Company shall
          not be required to fund, or otherwise segregate assets to be used
          for payment of, benefits under the Plan.

               16.  No employment rights.  Neither the establishment of the
          Plan, nor the granting of any Award shall be construed to
          (a) give any Grantee the right to remain employed by the Company
          or any of its Subsidiaries or to any benefits not specifically
          provided by the Plan or (b) in any manner modify the right of the
          Company or any of its Subsidiaries to modify, amend, or terminate
          any of its employee benefit plans.<PAGE>





               17.  Rights as a stockholder.  A Grantee shall not, by
          reason of any Award have any right as a stockholder of the
          Company with respect to the shares of Stock which may be
          deliverable upon exercise or payment of such Award until such
          shares have been delivered to him.  

               18.  Nature of payments.  Any and all grants or deliveries
          of shares of Stock hereunder shall constitute special incentive
          payments to the Grantee and shall not be taken into account in
          computing the amount of salary or compensation of the Grantee for
          the purposes of determining any pension, retirement, death or
          other benefits under (a) any pension, retirement, profit-sharing,
          bonus, life insurance or other employee benefit plan of the
          Company or any of its Subsidiaries or (b) any agreement between
          the Company or any Subsidiary, on the one hand, and the Grantee,
          on the other hand, except as such plan or agreement shall
          otherwise expressly provide.

               19.  Non-uniform determinations.  Neither the Committee's
          nor the Board's determinations under the Plan need be uniform and
          may be made by the Committee or the Board selectively among
          persons who receive, or are eligible to receive, Awards (whether
          or not such persons are similarly situated).  Without limiting
          the generality of the foregoing, the Committee shall be entitled,
          among other things, to make non-uniform and selective
          determinations, to enter into non-uniform and selective Award
          Agreements as to (a) the identity of the Grantees, (b) the terms
          and provisions of Awards, and (c) the treatment, under
          Section 13, of terminations of employment.  Notwithstanding the
          foregoing, the Committee's interpretation of Plan provisions
          shall be uniform as to similarly situated Grantees.

               20.  Adjustments.  The Committee shall make equitable
          adjustment of:

               (a)  the aggregate numbers of shares of Stock available
          under Section 3;

               (b)  the number of shares of Stock covered by an Award; and

               (c)  the Option Price

          to reflect a stock dividend, stock split, reverse stock split,
          share combination, recapitalization, merger, consolidation,
          acquisition of property or shares, separation, asset spin off,
          reorganization, stock rights offering, liquidation or similar
          event, of or by the Company.

               21.  Amendment of the Plan.  The Board may from time to time
          in its discretion amend or modify the Plan without the approval
          of the stockholders of the Company, except as such stockholder
          approval may be required (a) to permit the grant of Awards under,
          and transactions in Stock pursuant to, the Plan to be exempt from
          liability under Section 16(b) of the 1934 Act or (b) under the<PAGE>





          listing requirements of any national securities exchange on which
          are listed any of the Company's equity securities.

               22.  Termination of the Plan.  The Plan shall terminate on
          the tenth (10th) anniversary of the Effective Date or at such
          earlier time as the Board may determine.  Any termination,
          whether in whole or in part, shall not affect any Award then
          outstanding under the Plan.

               23.  No illegal transactions.  The Plan and all Awards
          granted pursuant to it are subject to all laws and regulations of
          any governmental authority which may be applicable thereto; and
          notwithstanding any provision of the Plan or any Award, Grantees
          shall not be entitled to exercise Awards or receive the benefits
          thereof and the Company shall not be obligated to deliver any
          Stock or pay any benefits to a Grantee if such exercise,
          delivery, receipt or payment of benefits would constitute a
          violation by the Grantee or the Company of any provision of any
          such law or regulation.

               24.  Controlling law.  The law of the State of Illinois,
          except its law with respect to choice of law, shall be
          controlling in all matters relating to the Plan.

               25.  Severability.  If all or any part of the Plan is
          declared by any court or governmental authority to be unlawful or
          invalid, such unlawfulness or invalidity shall not serve to
          invalidate any portion of the Plan not declared to be unlawful or
          invalid.  Any Section or part of a Section so declared to be
          unlawful or invalid shall, if possible, be construed in a manner
          which will give effect to the terms of such Section or part of a
          Section to the fullest extent possible while remaining lawful and
          valid.<PAGE>


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