s
WILLIAM H. WHITING D flNG. ?
Nkw Yom. Mareh V. The physi
cians and surgeons in etendance npon t
Commander Win. IL W&atinfr hate no
hope for his recovery, i-nd say that It
is only a question o -f
the end cornea.
Cdmmatader Wll-l-jjiin
II. Whitinjr
Isbovi past fifty
arid was appolted
to the nary from
Wise oniin in
isca f He f distin-
I si " -
December, 1812,:
he sailed ; with;
theU. fJS. Alli
ance to Samoa", i
lie has a hanh
comhaVmr wpitiuo, some Tilla on the
HncUon where he spends his summers
He was made especially famoutby
his recent marriage to Miss Etta Ah
I Fong, the full-blooded Chinese daugh
ter of a wealthy celestial merchant t
Honolulu. She is now only 82 and is
noted for her "classical accomplish
menu, being as conversant with lan
guage as with her ; natirengneand
Is said to be remarkable beautif uL
f ATAL CYCLONE IN TEXAS.
- a - j ' - --
jrv Karljr Sabbath Morala Markrd Wltfc
i Catastrophe Ln to lie Bemembrred. ; .
, wLoxo View, Texas, March J9. A cy
clona swept qver this place at 1 o'clovk
yesterday uibruingv ' accompanied by
hail stones of immense size. The
greatest fury was six miles east of
here, vy here "it struck the large country
home of Johfi Caitf. lately occupied by
a larRe family of negroes. . The house
was in an ancient grove of oaks, twenty
In number. Every one' of y them were
torn hp and piled np in terrible coif n
r sion with dea:! fowls, dogs' and cows
and fiAj daad and eiffht,bud!y wounded
4nejTes. i
' , Old man Alexander Lester was found
fifty yards away entirely nude, and
dead. His old wife, Sarah was pinned
under a tree mangled and dead. Alex
ander Lester. Jr., was mangled and is
I dead. Robert Lester, nine -years old.
j was found ne-ar a tree without a mark,
1 of violence, dead. Jasper Collins was
pinned under a large oak . snugly cov
ered in bed with his head" crushed and
limbs broken, dead.
Most of the injur-d will die; The
destruction is kidcscribabie. Hail as
Hg a eggs fell for several hours. Ex
citement Is liih and the reports from
the wake of the ttoim cannot be justi
fied even at this late hour, tho thj de
ati uctioa here Is the mM?t noticeable. 9
. PECElVEn FELTON REPLIES.
Oirrt M AaiTH to President Smith's
Area iktloQ.
Cixcixxati, March 13. Heeeiver S..
M. FclUm has given out his answer to
the accusations of President Smith, of
the Louisville and Nhville railway
being datcnr of February 13. In that
letter Irident Smith, giving his rea
sons for withdrawing from the South-e-n
Railway and Meamship associa
tion, rathf r b?ttTly accused rhis -competitors,
notably the lueen and Cresr
cent. .. -. - ,.
- President Felton is the receiver that
cut rates in violatioii of the com
pact and ot fttderal law. 1 "resident
r elton's reply avoids recrimination and
is wholly applied to answering Presi
dent Smith s statement of the grounds
for his adverse conclusions.
In answer to the argument that the
Queen and Crescent inercase of earn
ings in 1893 indicated a cutting of rates.
President Felton says that in 1S03, the
road was for the first time in several
years sufficiently aciu'pped to meet all
-Tflerannds for business made noon it.
that moreover, it was ll miles shorter
! rovte from Cinchinati to Chattanoo-a -r
and r londa and seventy mil s shorter
lo New Orleans than the Louisville and'
Nashville and furthermore that as the
Southern was paying an annual rental
to Cinc'mHati, the basin ;ss men of the
ci(v gve it the preference.
; - ...
SHERMAN SOUTHWARD BOUND.
Will Rrnprae. WhtM Stavontioa
' rttrrfun llsro Moa lloidlac Forth.! i
Wasuiswtox. March 19. Senator
-Hherman will leave Washington, pro-bablj-Thursday
evening, for Asheville,
X.XC.. where he will remain for per
haps two weeks recuperating his
1 faith. -.'He has been suffering from
cold for the past week, and his friends
are anxious that he should throw it off
r.nd get some rest lefore it gets a hold
cm him. The friends of Mr. Sherman
deny the printed stories that he is los
ing hi strength and will be unable to
take part in 4he tariff debate. They
also deny the Rtory that he intends to
retire from public life. ' i-
4
K111k1 Mother ud Child. 4
Lawrkxckvit.i.k, Ca., March 10.
ne of the most shocking casualties
that has occurred in this voiinty for
. ma ny years happened at the home r of
Mr. John Johnsun, about" four miles
from here. While the family were
gt)w.rcd together at supper 'time a
ftorm eame up and the lightning struck
tie bore and killed two of !t
Uiata Jlr. Johnsons wife and his
j year-old son. knocking Mr. Johnson
senseltss for more than an hour. At
the time the lightning struck Mrs.
Jphnso'i she had a young baby m her
arms, bat did it no seriaus injury, ex
. cepjrom the fall to the floor. - -
A NecroToinhn Hnrnrd.
.ATnAXTA, Maie 1 10. While taking a
bath jut lieiore noon yesterday
Amanda Henderson, a rep-ctuble ut
l.l woman of i lvj ativet. fell from
tne bathtub into the lire; and half of
hr form burned to a crisp. Jshe is sup-'
po-isd to have had a fit.
. Mr. Catoas Bacrcsaor. 1 , '
NAHitvuxR, Tenn., March 19. Uot
ernor Turney says he will appoint the
inmbr of the Chattanooga police
bonrd about April 1. ,lle has a pile of
applications and recommendations on
hand. '
yUow faver Coatluow rpldm!.
Hio Dk Jaxciho, March ji9. The
' deaths from yellow fever average 70 a
da?. The United States cmher San
P ancisco, the flagship of Admiral
llenham, has sailed hence. , . ...
Dr. Mary Walker Appll. j
Wasuisotox. March 19. t)r. Mary
Wa ker has applied to Potmaler-Gen,
eral Uissell to. be appointed po&tmia
tress at T Oswego, ,H. Y. She claims to r
belong to tha liill factiou. . .
s GLASSCUTTERS WALK OUT?
XlrsUrm Manlfoto of Tn avrf Cant, 'ftr
4ortlm nnd m XoM-rslon Labor Kert.
KEIroilD' XISR- March 13.
Every', giascutter employed in 4he
MouJit Washington glass works, I to-
Keiaur wiu uc apprentices, failed
appear this mornmg and are
minca 10 resist me arm s manifestA rt
ten per cent, reduction andnoiji-union
shop. 1 The x men arepledged to stand
together for a jearlf neceasary. IAb
istance froniptfier cities is guaranteed
tuMiu whihrlhc fiUt lasts.
ft"
g .Such'Wond as ;i .
9 ' i'-v'iil if
-1
Tune ad, iSjjJ
H "I have usea uicv xictw-
8 poise in my family forleightcen
9 ' -months for Neurat&o, t-Cffldf,
p ? Rheumatism, Constipation, N er
g vousness, etc., and it 5 ha never
3 failed in any case tofure.
g - Rev. J. Kj Fant,U
6 :- . : Hiirb Point.
REED'S RECKLESS STATEMENTS
BU DtftmcM to KtrtUb Corn Laws Are
. .- Mllllaf. 4 j
Ilv a ingular fatuity, common to the
Instinct of the party, republican edit
oi have seised that part of Mr; Reed's
speech in which he deali r with the
period of thr English: corn : Jaw repeal
aa the most brilliant and anocessfal ef
fort, not only of his' speech, -bat of the,
debate. It happens that that is just
the portion of Mr. Reed's argument n
which be was either entirely Ignorant
of the facts or in which he most will
fully suppressed them. f I : - "A
Let ns state his position la ftll franlf
ness, in hia "'own word: " 1 1 ,.
"According to thi usual story that ia
told, England had been engaged in
long and rain struggle with the demon
of protection, and had been' year after
year sinking further into the depths,
until at a mome it when she was In her
deepest distress and saddest plight,
Mr. Cobden and his friends providen
tially appeared, and afte' a hard
straggle established a principle for all
time and for all the world. iid straight
way England en joyel j tle Rum of
human happiness. : Ilcnee, lalVgood na
tions should V as England has done,
and all would be welL : .-'
This fairy tale has not the slightest
resemblance to history. " i y
"Was thit erusadd the same aa la
waged here to-dav? Are the gentle
men of the ways and means committee
legitimate successors of illrght and
Cobden and the Anti-Corn Law league?
Not the least in the world, j ; That was
a fight by the manufacturers,' This is
fight against the manufacturers."
Now what were the ' facts? The
declaration of the league,, which di
rected the repeal agitation,1 expressly
laid down the principle that all duties
were to be abolished. Its; organirerf
selected the duty on corn pnly as the ,
most odious an 1 the most successful to
appeal to the country on, for it touched
every man's stomach (mostly then
em pty, by virtue of its operation), but
the battle was continued against every
other form of. protection duty until the
number of articles liable to duties has
been reduced from the' host, which no
man could number, to a total of less
than twentv. , !
Mr. Reed put In the forefront the
battle for corn-tax repeal a repeal he
justifies, curiously enough, on exactly
the - arguments we demoerata use
against him -'because it was an odious
law enacted to enhance tho price of
bread.not for the benefit of the farmer,
but of the aristocratic owuer of the
land; Just as we .say odious paw here
'Enhance the price, not for the bene
fit of him who makes, but of the aristo
cratic combiner. Having got so f.ir
honestly, however, he drops the his
tory of the repeals of protective cus
toms duties which followed corn, and
then pauses, points the moral to his
admiring and unenlightened satellites,
and says:. "Thank God- we are not
like those wicked 'English ' tories who
enhanced the price of daily bread. We
do no such abomination, and, there
fore, gentlemen, the democratic allu
sion to the free trade campaign In
England is a fairy tle.jfr, j ,-,
--- Werwill continue the: history, in.
short, where Mr. Reed. blindly or will
fully left it So 'multitudinous were
the articles subject to import duty no
man - could number them;: they were
like the sands of the sea.:,. No man liv
ing at the time when, in August, 18il,
Peel became prime minister and Chan
cellor of the exchequer, with an empty
treasury, which higher and higher pro
tection only starved more und.more ef
fectually, could be found to' tell thej
committee on import duties how many,
articles were really subject; to duty;
All the most experienced secretary of
the board of trade could isay rwasjthat
there were 1. 1J0 I articles ' specifically
mentioned, each having ai fixed speeifio
duty charged thereon, but that every
thing which was missed by ; the speciflo
duty was covered by three other ad
valorem duties of 50 an4 5 and 20 per
cents., respectively. Any way,' the cas
torn for the year ended January &, 1840.
amounted to 118,000,000. jj- 1
-In the three years - succeeding 1841
the duties on fiOO articles,, were entirely
repealed, and -on 700 more the duties
were reduced. I, !
In 1845 R20 more articles were placed!
on the free list at one blow. Nearly .
al customs taxes on raw material werQ '
released, the only exception being tim
ber and tallowy which survived yet s
few more years . -
Where Peel left the ax in l845 Glad
tone took it up In 1853, and before
1800 be had reduced rates on $10 articles
and repealed 110 duties. r
In 1860 he reduced Urates on 56 artl.
eles and repealed 950 duties. In 1861
he brought the total of articles leviable
to 127; in 1866 to 100; in 1867 to 64, and
in 1886 to 47. j
And yet Mr. Reed would have the
American voter believe the i movement
was merely one begun and -: concluded
against an odious corn tax and not for
the freedom of manufacture and raw
material Not so. The corn law was
the ..strongest point of attack. The
principle admitted on that repeal tear
ried the logical seqnence-the ultimate
freedom of alL American Industries.
; Xmnmim ( ;raaf NutorStwi
J MoBiut, Ala.. March 19 MrT Sover
eign spent Sunday in MojdleV Ala. Left
for New Orleans this morning, where
Ue speaks tonifrhC-lle will return here
tomorrow, andaddreas . the laboring
men of Mobife tomorrow night. j
FlorldarriMapp: HMLf tot MhlpaaMt,
acksontiixx, Fla., March 19. The
Srst shipment oi Florida bineaDplea
will be made April 15. j ! The crop this
year is estimated at 50.000 crate's on aa
increase of 15,000 over the last crop.
TXIU Johm W. 31 oh! tVaMi. 1
St. Lona, March '9. Mr. John W.
Noble, wife of ex-l'rcudcnt; Harrbon s
secretary of interior, d:ed suddenly at
her-home in this city esi night. '
1
,9
I
If .
' ' Cares when all dse fls.
Air)istcrs of the
speak out for us. These words o
of commendation frani,pne of g4
the most nrominent Baptist Di 8
. - - i - U '
vines of4he State yba,shoul4
believe and. appreciate. 1 Con
sult with us by maiL i Informa-s
tion book mailed free. t
7
! I ATIAHTIC ELECTROPOISE CO-i
y - n
SHIRT CUFFS. :
Miny Men Use Them; as Pais for
1 " Jottinrr Down Thinss. ?
i A Tvndon laundryman says that
the use; of sbirt cuffs .tor... yp&2
down jncmbramla is mpro cominbn
than Is.rhaps," commonly sup
posed, lie related how' one day a
youu fellow drove ;up in a cab aad
rushed into the office In great ex
citement, asjrfnjj whether some
shirts deposited in the name of L
had been washed,
j We found they had not, and as
the owner turned them over in
feverish" heat he fairly yelled with
joy, - poUting to a little , column of
figures on the left cuff of pne, which
he explained were Ibc oumbcr of
eight ten pound banV notes which'
bad been lost or stolen, and had the
shirts been washed all hopes of ever
getting them back must have been
abandoned.
I They- wercs however, successf ully
traced and recovered a few t'-iys
later. . The cuffs of stock cxchr.age
rben are often covered, with myst.-ri-
ous charactcrss presumably incaea
t!ons of the slock market, and the
"tips" found on The wrist' linen of
racing men were act'jally taken ad
van tajjo of by irouiari'jjirls- on cue
or two otcasions with success. It is
not yot recorded, however, that the
manuiuh young woman has taken to
V'cuff jotting." as she has to cuff
and shirt wearing. N. O. Picayune.
v Tliey Have Ma Corns.
JIdllc. Cerale, a premiere assol ul a,
was asked by a Boston reporter
whether it was true that bullet
daneers suffered intensely from
corns, as, ho said, it had bef n re
ported. i "I have traveled with ballet troupes
off and on for fifteen years all over
thcworld," said she, "and have had
lots of opportunities to hoar all a! out
their woes and ailmeuts, but 1 never
heard corns mentioued. Danrors
are least likely of all women to bo so
troubled, for they make no secret of
looking out for the comfort aud well
being of their feot . before everything
else. I eau pick out a ballet gill in
a c rowd by her feet every time.
! "When chorusand ballet are mixed
together in street dress lean readily
tell which, is .which, for the darners
all wear larger s.hoes than most of
tlu'ir sex. They go i a for comfort
in footwear, because it means bn-ad
and butter to Ihcm. The chorus
cf course, '' has the common
weakness of her sex for squeezing
her foot into the smallest K)ssible
shoe. The dancer can't afford to;
she must wear an easy, wide sho".
,MNENDEZ IN FLORIDA.
Taking Possssoii of the Country
and Founding St. Augustine.
St. AuTustine, .Fla., was founded
oy Mencndcz in 1533. Whe that
ommandcr gave up the chase o the
Frenchmen, under Ribault, he
turned bark toward the Florida
coast, entering aa estuary in a boat
manned by six oarsman, leaving lij.
large flagship at anchor outside, aud
accompanied by his chaplaiu, Mcn-
doza, and followed by other boats
filled with gentlemen and ecclesias
tics, he went ashore, whilo trumpets
sdunded, drums beat, cannous thun
dered and flags waved. The chap
lain walked before, bearing a large
cross and chant ing a hymn. Menr
dez followed with his train, and car
ried in his hau 1 the standard of
Spain, unfurled. Mendoza, arrayrd
in rich sacerdotal garments, kissed
the cross, and then planted it in the
sand by the side of the staff that up
held the royal standard, and against
which leaned the shield bearing the
arms of Spain. Then, after all had
done homage to the priest, Meuen
dcz took formal possession of tho
xmntry, in the name of Philip of
Spain.
F1 Prn-nU.n. f
The reduction of wages in all the
New Eng-lsnJ mills and the total sus
pension "of some of them is not a re
demption of Mr. MclvinW's proniioe
made before his bill was passed The
occasion is said to be the depressed
condition of the market and cessation
01 demand. It was understood by th
western farmers w.at these manufact
ures were to afforw them nearer-fail-injr
market for their wheatrMd corn,
I while on the other hardCthe workers
in the" factories wetassured that the
farmers would-taka all the clth ui inu-
factnremjkand save the trouble of p-o
ing
new markets in the outside
Bat these promises haw not
n kept, f The weavers want bread
and (he - farmers want clothes, but
neither can ireWjwhat they need. The
exchange cannot be made. The hisrb
tariffites should explain this. Ex
change. Rome, Us., Mareh 7. John D. Moore
nd all of hi ticket yere elected jea
terdsy by s majority of 141 votes.
Sheriff Kin c U.4.
Fomtth. Ga, March 7. -Sheriff Carey
A. King di yesterday at 5 o'clock
at iua resilience here.
SIUI U I IIIICO wOlMUtoUnMndirftotsfor
Fertilizers.
FrtiUxrr
bletMU
far Ooca, Cottnt and Ftennta. at StSM)
ri
OmAm. Tubaceu and Fruits
.mixTv aiuu i ii nc
l.0O
AltnMintota of PotudL K&faut HnlnhM Potach. Bona
Blatrfc. Mitnto Soda, in lair Md nudl qnantitMa. brad
1A-OU
Sm 5 tUau for ciro". U .K.MIIVI111
gUiliif afnftiuii. HnHiiBirn Jd
CO.
Lessens Pain, Insures Safety to"
' 1 LHb of Mother and Child. ; .
My wife, after having used Mothers'
Friend, passed -through the ordeal
with little pain, was stohge nr omx
. hour than in a week, after the birth'
' cf hcrformer child.JJ JJcGoldricjc,"
13ean Station, Tenn. , , ..
Hotuers' Famto robbed pain of Its
' terror and ihorteoed labor. 1 have the heal
thiest chD4 1 ever aw.
- Mas. L. M. Abksm, Cochraa, Ga. 1 .
Ezpfessr4 1 znjr a'IrM. chafCs prepaid,
rtatt. Bnok to Mother, mailed (rmm.
i.KXDPlELD RECVLATOa ca. AtUata.Ca.
yVWSrWMVSWrVrVrW
FOR C:!ARLrr TON'S MAYOR.'
Mve fan !1 late In lh l!d m) Twm
Thrdo I'rlmnr c Tr:-ailf. i .
CoMTiiuiA, S. C, Mar.'hl-J.-jColnnilda
s no w :n tue thro- . -f a local campaign-
nd next -"hursdy i primary for tb.
lectl -n of city fli'; rs will tiue place
ITier-j aro vo candidates, in! the rae
!r the nrrorality-Caiitain Joseph H.
Alston, a proniineu younj lawyer, wb
s city ut'.orney; Captvii It. S. Dexpor-
us, a cai-.t.iii.t, v. ao h-ts b-en aider
nan several times, ..r. V. Melt. Sloan.
me ul tne n'Jenr.ef: flavor i lsuer.
ho stands f -r re-clccth;n, and ex
Mayor Xc.astr.
Ik is rally cnuc lod that the raCi
lies between C'a; t.i;n Alston and Cap
t..in lyo -poi ; .. w tli tlte chances posisi
ly iu fao;- of the o ;nor, as he er-
ored the contest curly, .while Cantata
Ucsport s has just cuin in. I
tin accou-it of tlv larjj: nnmber of
camliuu!es there is no probability ol
;ni lejli-n resulting frj-n tho first pri
mary, and V ere will hare t-t be at least
oho more, n tho follow iui Thursday,
befurc t'ie resu't wi'l le known.
R&TURNS FC.l 1.1AP.CH.
Tha . lJrar:int ol
TVullur Male
Ktiuvrtfa of i rip t cibu iun.
WAsuirOTox, Murch 12. The sta
tistical returns of the d.fartinent oi
afTieu'.ture f..r March consist priuci-
lially of estimates of tli-j .ustribution of
wheat and corn. t'- arao-nits remain
ing iu farmers" hands, the proportion
of merchantable coin and the average
jjrioos of both the merchantable aad
unmerchantable. -
Tha report is based upon returns of
corps of correspondents in each-. county
of the several state aud territories.
and a' so by an lud. pendent corpse
equal in number rej.-ortlnj? to the $ta
tistian throujju the - tatc ucuts of tlio
department.
IMPORTANT Mwl iNG AHEAD.
PonniblM 4'otnolldatio.i uf Alabama Irtu
w.uJ K.. lv., iii Tuiml.ir Col Co.
Sur.rF kt J, Ala.. March 1.-An
important meeting' vill le held in Nhef"
held, Ala., on April 'id f that of th.
stockhixiJei a of Uie Ai-b una Iron and
ttailway. company and tliose of th
TownU i' Coal hu1 Coke companv. The
object of the lnootinjr is to consolidate
the properties of the two companies.
A-hich. if accomplished, will result ii.
reat good 1 .r the Sriefiield section of
Jie stuto. The new coiupauy will own
the furuat-es at Sheffield, the mines at
Townley, a iarje nmubor of coke oven-
and thou an "Is of acres f vuluablc ore
ands. If consoiidat on i ' effecteci
it is staf'd that the furnaces at hef-
eid will iuto blast ami the Town-
ley mines w ; ii-. . operation wiyi u
full force.
THE EMPRiSS SICK.
Trip t
.Vb . ila On a!n1
by 8rlouK
IndUpitiuu.
Behi.in, Marc 12. The true reason
for the emvrehs' tr.p to Abazzia Iuik
een obscured by the usual court
hrti.ses, but in the last two days it has
econie an octi secret. 1 let majesty
ias. enfeebled her h-iith by unwise ef
'orts to reduce her weight Last year
.he 'aiuod Hcsh rapidly although her
,jh!ical strength showed no corre
sponding increase.
She became annoyed as well as
ilarmcd and beg-au taking a heroic
reatment r.t tho beg'inniujr of the
winter. llcr weight was brought
down, but her constitut'on was not
tronjr cnouyh -to withstand the se
verity of the methods employed.
Saved Her Life.
mmm V YTT it.. I
pin. i. J. vt oouwuwii oi n mvuui,
xas. saved the life of her child by the
se of Ayers Cherry Pectoral
"One of my children had Croup. TbB
ease was attended by our physician, and was
supposed to l well under control. One
night I was startled by the chUds hard
breathine, and on going to it found it straw
ltng. It had neany teasro w orwjjnc
lealizlne that the child's alarming condition
ue cnua uiree noses, .
anxtonsly waited resalts. From the mnf
the Pectoral was given, the child's breathing
grew easier and. in a snort time, she was
sleeping quietly and breathing naturally.
The ehfldls alive aad well to-day, aad I do
aot hesiute to say that Ayer's Cherry Peo
toral saved her Uie."
AVERTS
Cherry Pectoral
ftepsssdlryDr.J.C.ArwkOB,lwsll.l
Prompttoact,urotocurff
-. ...... A I.l mi.l
f,-JS!AMBtt.$75
a. ttMiT Kfritary. Vb j
BMIUVakMkVUMiiuiw
Im ifTT r "t ' '--
TiiItt. Illi 1 w rUm )Ma
vitkMt wauias ia . tm-
atutt ttM katwrn. ih aaaataaSMa
Uw m. Brteht. atea4 .
L(in.MtaiMtnm iMUm.
Sataaal.M.awMt.Cat 1
rab.,wTMt.Ctrcer.
W. P. HaXXISOU St CCt Ch- as. is, w. j
S. rTJ&-3 iK .-
nan tecome possiDie in spue m wic j
Kven, I reasoned tlist such remedies would
i of no avail. Having part ef s bottle of
fmtnn in tb nouae. i cave
and Onfam IXrbtta '
eaid at tume riih
utpala.Bookrfpar
tkmlan sent FKB ,
B.M WOOLLEY JI.D.
OswOaosfii WhhaU. ;
itaii &'i)aii itR. CflJ
pMel Six ncer, F. W..IIuldelcoper and j
, ' Mentea Foster, Mmeefrerm ? -CONU15NSCD
gCHubuJik.
LvUicluuouU !
LV Burwcxiiw ......
Lv Kej sville ... ....
Ar Uaunlie .....r.i.
Lv Uaovuie
rtirerpatobi u
i ralr-
a . 4
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ra
r
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a ureeastor . ... . .
Lv WlnsiODrKaleni.
.f rerusboro
Ars.iWHiry ........
Ar Hiatesviliir .......
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twrn
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ssvsa
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turn
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a uam
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II 5 AM
It t FM
4MTM
4tra
15 ra
nun ittsAs
r!tA issrs
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ACun-envtlle i.l
r Atlanta. .-.I
T 10 am is is ra
l.ir t'birltie .
J 3k ra
1AM
SliAM
Ar Clnnbla:.
r Augusts ...
HORTHBOuMD-X. J DAIL
I V Al Mflt
too im. ......... isspai
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r h-r titir
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y?n..... sim
sispui .mi am tMpm
1 3 aOi ; 4 1 m 9 1 4 pta
. ? .itm U piu tU pit
4 IS n i ?nni :7pm
is 44 pin
,. i sopia
7 V m.... .....
S'opm
4 is am 111 4n Ipm
tn im 11 40 pm is f pat
s am ts sa itni
Lv Atlanta
ArCliarlntt
LvChar'iOTte
Mll!lnry
Lv Hot a rlngs
Lv suevlltr
LvSUtes villi.
Ar-UUsnnry
Salisbury
t.rinhro
Ar Wlaston-MalMn
I.v Oreersl or
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9 9pn T4m
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Lv lireenvboio
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It tapis
Sam lissom l49pm
T 4 am I Xi am 10 7 am
IS team aia 4C3m
1 1 1 t.m SI am 4 tt am
1 1 i ui T 00 run ;niu
Arioanvnie
St Krj!TiHi.
ArBarkerine
A r Richmond
; I Dally exce,'t Sundar.
BETWEEN' WEST . POIHT AND
RICHMOND.
' Lrave West Polo l t.&s A. M. daily. and.5 A. M.
l:lly except Saais.v nd Monl4; urrtva icicb-
iiii)riu.o aui 1 .4" A M. icriurDirnr leave kicd
iiiodiI Lie and 4.4. P. M . dally xfpt Suadsj; ar
rive West Point 2.t and i.tc P. M.
BET. RICHMOND AND RALEIGH VIA
KEYSVILLE.
.Leave' SMimond 18.4a' P M.dullr; leave Kejs
vlllr 3.4u P. M : arrtvr Oxford 5..' P.M.; itnUfr
snaT.lvP. M, lMirtiam I. IS p. H., Halt Ijrta s.M A.
m.. lciurulng Uali-lx t rn. dally, Iarli.iii .i i am
llrndfrwn . P .V., oxf, rd .44 A. M.; arrive
KeyfVlUe 1.1A. M., Itt. hmond 1.s P. M. Dally. -
Mixed troio Sol t lrar-s Krysvlll,e tL.lly exot
$uitd:ij, 4 lo a m.. Oxfont. a m. and nnlvi
DurU.inill r. l in. Miqed train No. w leaves Dar
ham, rtn.lj rqcepi Sunday. ay ai., Opioid 6 30 pin
and arrives Krysvllli, l SsP.M.
MI.velTr.ilii No. -s H av.ojforT, dally except
Sunday, t.ii A. M , uDdaruivi-K-Dnrbam 4.li A. M
Mixed Tr.in No leaves Durln.n d-lly xi-rpi
sunda , T.:i M.. and tirrlvrs oxford. A.M.
. Trarns on O. A. II . R R., l-are Oxford n A M.
-ally exci-pl sunchij, 11.4S A. M.. dlly, nd . P.
M., daily except Sunday, and arrive llrndi ron
A. M., 12.1 P. M..aal I.is P. M. I'einrninp, Imve
ilendi rMinS.oraiid 7 ao P. M., dull- xcpl Mtoday
nnd arrive Oxford t. . M., s.is P. II. od S.fi P. M
Nos. v. :S and : codnect f-'tchmond from and
lo West Point aud Baltimore dally rxcrpt Aanday.
SL:.EPING-CAR SIRVICE.
On Train Nos. 33 and r?3 I'ullm n buffet Sleeper
betwern w Vnrt and Ulanti.
On No. 3'. and ss, Pnlun n 8:erplrjr CarsXi-w
York to New Orli- n!. New Y01V i aiiums and
: Wuslunsrten to Mrin;iUlH, and I iiilnj; Car New York
to MoiiHfuiT .
Trtlus N. il nnd 1i inn solid htween Rlcli
inond and Atlanti andc rry PulliniiiSi-ipln);t'ar!
b tw en litrhn'.Ohd. D'lhviiit : ud ren-hom.
Trains No. II :inl U, w. N. r. IHl:on. earn
1ullman l:irlT ris between SallHi-urj , AsholUr
;ina inn ui iiism.
K BERKLEY. J. S. B. TPOMPOX.
up,rini'iid-nt. ui e I t4-rideiit
liiefnshi o. N . C. I lrlimnd, Va.
W. A. Tl'I.K. .TiiTil Pisseny.-r Affrnt.
V slilnu'ion, n. .
s. H. HARD VK K, Aat. Gen'l Pass. Agrnt,
At I nla, Ga.
W. n. rSRKI'N, JJM HAAS,
lienl Van cr, Tn.mv Wanscrr
VasUiii'!oii, D. C. W'ahhlnxiofi, D. r.
- - I itm
V
:
i 4r
SMITHDEAL HARDWARE CO.,
SOLE AGENTS.
Steam, Air and
zontal of
t-H
Q
I?
r-l
03
O
- n fl ITIfiAifmr
m mmm
U U tlaasav
i
1 1
mm u(DAMmwmNJ ;
A. S. CAMERON STB AM
The Carolina Watchman,
IVill .k.a,fU...i; v.axjay-a- v v VI 1 1 11 1
: vnnTII llllllllll l &
pzmmwimmmi.-
". -'" '":"-!?-- - -,fmx ;-!!i;"-ii: "":V ; , ' . N
' . - ': -r' - ;. ..u ; - ". . ' '-"'j"
' -S I i "'" ' - ' S ;"
i , - '- f ,
. - - - . - 1 - - - 'i . t - .
Itenews its aiie
mocraey
of the
"':-
Ind ;us every
ernment, progreiss and enterprise
for support. Its subscription
price will be :
la Single Subscribers $2.00
To " of, over Te?i ,85c
m
of H j BWW
In the hands of an old experienced
Printer, is prepared to execute all
kinds of Job Printing, and at
prices that will compare
favorably with any '
OFFICE
Orders Solicited.
IM
LOST!
A lare aiiKiiuit of niuny
niiiiallv liy parti-s p!:rliainj; ,f rui
reis, nsiji7 Si: Got ihrm from a
Hrni Il a yrows tlu-ir own trt-;' stm1s
ml iiotiiin but gKjl stock :ii'l ell sit
taon..uie tritest. We want lire ad
!rrH of evrrt farmer or gartlpner in
vour sectitm ami will ""make yu a
tilieral offer. Write f r i arliMihir
mf
and pri es at once. Semi tatnt
Jecriptive catalogue.
Agents Wk tteil evei w liere.
Addiesi, Cherokee Nursry Ci).
Way Cmss, Ga.
(Mention this paer.) r
Vacuum Pumps,
i 1.1
I , . . , I ' "I
every Variety and Capacity.
Ecgrnlar Eorizontal Piston.
to l
fotttW&Srf FVI ?5i1f k
Tlie most $imlef durably and cf.
fective Pump in the market for Mines,
Quarries, Refineries. l.re.weiics, Vv6
tories, Artesian Wells, Yiirv lhy arid
General Manufacturingpurposics.
.it
Foot of East
3end for Catalogue.
00
d Street New York-
giance to
the--Cause
people,
friend of good govJ
per yearr payable';
" "
44
44
H
n
THE STATE
WANTED:
A Reliable 'IVnnii in Tf n Tti
to tftke the ExcIusiyeAgtnej ,
of the S
''World's Columbian Expo
, silion Illuslraled9 i
AUTHENTIC ORGAN OF THE FAIL
' KSTASLIHSI ll. ; J
. rat Opnorf nailr tm Vmk smt to
for ! '"Xt Tsar.
t
One Chance in a 14 me I iafj
ElJi-UiSe 15 Ceiitii in tlumi,i Jmr
pie corj tud full srliru!srs.
B. CiHFBELL.Frts;
159 Adams St., Ctintgo, IB-
Vertical and Hori
I
t-3
Pd
o
I
t
PUMP WORKS,
Batclmaa
I
mm
ID Mm j-
m 1 i
I
1 1 r v-
- I ' '" i -i
'A