Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / April 12, 1894, edition 1 / Page 4
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! , ; i - - 1 : ' -I ' ' ' " f'- -" ' f . . - I i . ' - i - . - -. t - - i 'u: . . - -u , . --r - e a-. --saV-w-.s.is--iss--"" A Z:. i: ft, r 1 ti n r A y V vr. 1 !1 6 - 44 ;1: 1 1 li in l j- A SOUTHERN NOVLlSi Richard Malcolm Johnston and Els Clover Worts. flww Bis tMwrilM f Itonana Ca'.hn'le lata Ckaa;et lllsa front E.laeJtwr M j Story Teller TlrSt Ul rrf ECarU. i ,- "'' I I spent an afternnon last week with one of the most charming writers of the United ? State. - writes Frank O. Carpenter in theCbicagro Herald. I refer to Richard Malcolm Johnston, who ranks with" Uncle Remus and Thomas ' Kelson Page as among the greatest tory tellers of the south, ad whose dialect tales of the Georgia hpls hare delighted the readers of the magazines for year It was at his home on West North arenue in IJaltimore that I called upon him. : His house is a three-storjr red brick.1 which is corereil , with Tines and looks- bat upon one of the" widest streets f the city. The liring rooms of the family are on the second floor, and it was in the parlor, furnished with antique pieces, that I met Mr. Johnston. lie is not so rich ; to-day as he was before the war, when : he owned a plantation 4n - the south and possessed the luxurious surround ings of '- tk well-to-do planter of his time. Ife lives rery comfortably, how ever, and his income from his writings is enough to support well himself and his family. It is iot generally known to the public that Richard Malcolm Johnston is one of the best educators of the United States. lie was a professor in ' the university of Georgia at the time ' the war began, and when it closed, leaving himself and all his friends poor, he opened a boarding school for boys at his home, "near Sparta, in Georgia, and made here for year? S20. 000 and upward annually ly teaching. He had about fifty boys, who paid hini tuition fees of C00 a year, and the most famous families of the south sent, their children to him. Very few teach- . ers in the United States to-day can make , as much as $20,000 a year, and 'the story of how Mr. Johnston gave up his r school and devoted himself to writing for an income about one-tenth this size is an interesting one. He told it to me in response to my questions.: faid he: "1 like the profession of teaching very much and 1 look upon it 1 jrs7ss RICIIJUIO MALCOLM JOIIXSTOS. I as my life work.- I never thought of making money by writing for pay, and it wan not until I cume to Iialti Oore that I realized that I could write K anything which hnd a real money . value. I left Gcorgiaon account of the death of ray daughter. We loved -i h'er dearly, and I couM not endure life i anid the old associations without her. 1 gave np my sehool and moved to this city and.ln'gan teaching here. About ; f"rty of my lio s came from the south to li;tltitaore to cater" my school, and had I not changed ray religion I would probably le teaching to-day. Some time 1 after I came here, however, t grew yeonvinced that my religious fch-as wero,wrong. and from Ivingan . Kpiseopalian I; was convert h t Ca tholicUiu and became a member of the Catholic ehErch. The most of my r indents were Episcopalians, nnd When r tleir p rents learrel erf the change in m'v religious belief thvy withdrew tneir : ons from the 'schicHil. and the ro .It was that I eventually 'gave 'teaching.. In the meantime I up had written Fomp rhort stories, which were published In : southern magazine that v:ih then printed here in Haltimore. These now form pant of my book, known us the . 'Dukesfcorougb Tales. Tlu-y attracted' attention, but 1 never vtltought of ther- having any money , ralue until one day Mr. Alden. the edi t tr of llarpr's Ma-ratine, asked me what I had receive! for them. He was surprised when I told him that I had written Ihem for nothing, aud he said r;that he would be glad to; have me do fome writin? foV Harper s, and that if I could give him etor es I ke those he I would pay for them. 1 then : wrote o: ae stories for Harper's. They were published and paid for. and I have been writing from that time to this. II y first story was published after I va.v fifty years of age. As Richurvl Malcolm Johnston said . this I looked into his bright blue eyes ; ud could uot realize that he was more than seventy years of age, Jt is J true that diU hair . and mustache are - .iro.tcd silver. bnthis cheeks are rosy vrith health and his voice has the sil very ring of youth. He- is a talL straight, fine-looking man. and he is full .f enthusiasm and life. He is raod est in' the extreme concerning himself und his work, and he told snc that it .was ajeontinual surprise to bin that I is stories were ncccptcif by the maga zines. -! supt-o.so." said he. 4,it is ba eause they are to a lar-- extent of his torical value. 'Ihey picture a people r nd a time which is fast passing away. Ti-ey are true -to life and they are merely my remembrances of the eo " pie of my boyhood. The dialect which I . use Is the language of the people among whom I was raised, and my -1 hara- tcrs are real characters with their names changed." " i:attwy Accidents la Ameriesv The interstate commerce commission hasj figured out thut one person h .killed by railroad accident in Jthis"' country out of every 1,491,010 persout who ride twentv-four miles. There is no loss of vitality in amocratirprinciples, aad there can be none us long as the, teachings of Jeffer fcon are accepted and a great political party remains to revere his memory. 1 emporary- adverse ma joritie of f alseU aud delusive issues are not a test of the genuine and lasting faith of thepeo-1 . pie. The.maj iritics.wUl come right ai a clearer intcliigence prevails in the! p plar mind, and' as the progress of -truth is accelerate 1 by appropriate in iruuientalit'es.0,.icagu Herald. --f"lltoTT!aK U T.ed's sarcasm on the l'ar:OHmi in prvscui coa-resa wouicl l;o uiOre .cutting if it came ! from! .uiryouy fcUo mair tne chief fhrnre kf Keed's hilhon-dollarBongresa Bostod' i t it I r r s , s ' i AWWWW S Rpv Dr. L REID WHITES AS FOLLOWS Vt THE . f ! CHRISTIAN ADVOCATE .;".; Or-i W rmhILth In tni Issue thTM OolnmM of 5, eertlfieatea,t&, U 0 the wonder ol remit i achieved by that trfjaderfpl Inventtoo. the m Kectro poise. Iu oecei3i simply msrrek J" oosv W hav trtodl It ieftoagb la oar own 's? BltpUeTeprtbipouglilytalnd tT 0 im had obni Moa ;ot IU Htcu on others .ufllclent to Jnrttfs ta sdrertWn jt to our readrra, sndj In wnmendlas 1U use to the Afflicted orerfwhcfB. We know ooe S others who hvrfttshoroii;hly,Bd apeak te the highest pmJse of IU We bellrre .11 nrraon who esa would do weU to give its Ill THE INCO"v tTAX 1 -. j . ! IS !-.:: - Ci.m 3ITIinn'rr Opp A t jt of Cnr"--V at ikvt - ' 0!l F It !'ndr the heHn.T fJ dl Wave of )js 'itsi the New York; ffjn says: f -If . tittf demoeriits iput .hrough the :Dc -me t ix. eall me u ftfpblicta.' i ' Tlivt is whit tnotjsiq3(sof.inen in thi- tw:i ;in I eisewtitjre. so'.i I citizens. .it -long d.'in'Hjrat-. thehtekbna of th oartv 1:1 every po' contest. arj -av.ngevei'y day. Th aliil. - X I care saying it i I: ! l -L ; "When the federal ttx punter begin W thu;nl' their privjieg ;ijN.i-,'r.4 toe th- n. Ihslr reinH,r"csxtijnfnier dem'- " racy uiii I even luord yrg jroua aul '.i::pn'Ss ve . This 'f idal Wave of DiSTUSt" is con dne I not e itirely but -almost ent rely, -t i r ch citizeil't wh- tvaiftd i ba callel upon t' p iy income i jxsjs a class of jitiz "is upo v whom tha tariff burden re-ts li'.'htly and who ; manage to e ::pe t':e gre.ttr share .at thjir just jro: riy .ixe. Million tire senators 4jil rieh tnanufaetnrer,' merchants iind editors know but;ltttl3 aoat the seiU.ia -nt of t ie p m44 3 ih this qaes tiofi. Theseplutoerai jjfny kick as loin-h as they . pleas- oa their own ac ouni but they shoulJj nujj presume to pe:tk for the musses. 1 i 1',-fj Undoubted"v soma tHnrsrjcriits thosa 5 1?. for revenue only like tbX ccaserva tlves' in the senjte f oud become re pu'iicans if the dmdcntie party n"ikea ineirra tax law 6 tht will tonch t:eir prec ous p-iti. Hut ten time s r.vmy poor wage-.trnin . republicans would become democrats because of tne mccmeax lnws -'T:irj;e6arths of tb voters ' of either pr..-iy? ire the east, as well as in the, south an .West, are la fuvor of ah income I tx $pd would oe el:ul to vote foF it if th(y had an oppor tunity to do so, ftee fj"p;hjen tangling alliances" with other party questions.; I jet both parties a'ree tt! ! decide this question by a vote of the" people next tall and see what would be .the result Imagine the masses of I voters, twenty tve percent of whose wages are taken in taxes, voting agAi-nsJ the prppositioa to take two percent of he surplus prof ts of the ricli,in order tq relieve the bur flen upon the poor, tfven lb" New York city, the home of t lie millionaire and iculti-miliionaire, three tiipes as many votes would be cast for as against the income tax New York's 1,200 Da;llion alres, in control of j.11 hut one or two of -the leading newspapers! there, could not. by any form of argument, induce the voters to vote against i their own and in favor of the plutocrat!'; interests. Education in mutters of taxation has gone too far and the evils of indirect taxation have become too apparent to the leaders of the working ;men. Another great mistake made by these same wealthy clascs-ahd ' many edi tors of so-called democratic jpapers are included consists in supposing that .the masses prefer a tax bfpne cent per pound or more on suar, to absolutely free and cheap sugar, jj Tile lesson of cheaper sugar w.th lowj duty con verted many a wage-earner to the dem ocratic position on tl.a tariff; the lesson of dearer sugar, w.th higher duty, would convert some of j them back to the republican party, and! others to some third party thai would - agree ax ways to reform tha la rif lo wn wards. Free sugar and an income tax are two of tha most popular.' measures pro posed byelther party. Pass' both and the : democratic ! parly maysjsave itself, even at this late-date. Kef ps?. to pass one of them and the detnocrats, may count upon defeat ne:;t jfalrtf I Refuse to pass both and defeat Is almost certain, not only j in . 1S94. bu (, ic and per haps before we uiayieygh see tariff measures passed over the ; president's vetoes Let any dcfnocratiC senator or editor, who believes Ui the contrary and who thinks that the! average voter will not object to a few 'dollars sugar tax each year, visit th4 jhjomes of the wage-earners and disuusi this question X at the breakfast table. IU W.dl. , COMMENTS OF THE iPRESS.- The republican newspapers are now en traced in carrvintf n vt. Korpm. ber'selctknsfbriijarty;JThUlsnot mw lira 1. uwe me rpu t mean party nas attempted - to anticipate the output of the poli tical incubator. N, :Y. WorlcL ; It will disappoint, the calamity howlers of the g. a p. to learn that the deficiency in the revenues of the gov--ernment for the fiscal year is not to bo so great as was anticipated, i ! It should console them to reflect thig lit is not their fault-p8trolt Free! Pfpss. "Jhe more the matter of pensions is looked into the more apparent it be coraes that the republicans ran the de partment as the main shaft in their huge political machine and I that they are still utilizing it to thetextent of their ability in that direction. Detroit Free lress. . j j The democratie party has not only accomplished nearly; all it prom ised to Ihe people, but it i has restored . confidence by undoing some cf the mis chief done by its predecessors. And jret. in the face of all this, i is no un common thing to hear democfuts talk- ing of their party in an ipologetic or pessimiitic vein. Up to this jtime the democracy is all right, and we believe it will triumph over its enetnies, both within and without. Baltimore News. The opium smugglers, or "cook ery" as they are called, of British Co lumbia areroising a big purse for a crusade at Washington to ihare the high tarill retained on prepared opium. Vhen the McKinley bill passed the smugglers succeeded. in j getting a twelve-dollar rate through which prac tically put an end to honest imports tioh-and brought the smugglers large profits. 1 1 the 4cooker8" arp; success ful they will make a great Ideal of money, as a reduction of the "Wflson tariff to six .dollars will cause direct importation from China. Kansas City Star. f 1-U ! : , . . : Z f TITeskncas, Walaria, laiiigesUou saa Bjucjs-.Krss, take t. , (. ,. 4 I uuown-s iron bittehs. It cures quickly. For sals by all tttalcis In -S ATLANTIC ELECTROPOISE CO., ' Washington, J. C, 61 A YEAR OF POWER. Sptendid Kcord SZmtlo by the Democracy KUM-e Mart h. 1803.. One year ago the democrats assumed control of the national government after a total or partial exclusion from power for over thirty years. . They found the tariff taxes higher than at any previous perio4 in the his tory of the government. They found a treasury . deficiency impending where they had left a surplus. They found the free gold excess of nearly f 100,000, 000. turned over by President Cleveland four years before, scattered in foreign lands. They fouud the country on the verge of a monetary panic owing to the operations of a republican silver-pur-chas claw. Tbey found cn the statute book the skeleton of an elections force law which the republicans bad' des perately endeavored to strengthen with federal bayonets at the polls. What is the record of the year? The World has not shunned the duty of criticising the administration and the democrats in congress, when the honor and welfare of the country re quired it. Cut in spite of blunders and delinquencies it is true and it deserves to be said that not in half a century be fore has the first year of a new admin istration and a new congress been so rich in important public services as has the year which has just ended. The Sherman silver-purchase act has been repealed. So mischievous had this law, passed solely by republican votes, become that business men of all parties united in demanding its repeal. The firm attitude of the democratic ad ministration secured an unconditional stoppage of silver purchases, and for the first , time since the passage of the : lUand act, in J87S. the currency of the country was relieved of the danger of debasement. The elections latv hss been repealed. With it disappeared the last vestige of centralized coercion, the fruit of the war. Elections arc hereafter to be free. The threat of "a bayonet behind eyery ballot" of the party in power doing, as Speaker Reed said the republican party intended to do, "its own registra tion, its own counting and its own cer tification" is removed. This achieve ment alone is enough to have made the first year of the democratic restoration memorable. A genuine tariff-reform bill has passed the house. The Wilson bill is the most scientific and just tari if meas ure that has passed either house of con gress in thirty yeara If enacted into law it will free the great body of the people from needlessly burdensome taxes, it will relieve our manufacturers from a hindering handicap.it will en large the activities and increase the re wards of labor. It executes the man date of the people. It fulfills the oft repeated pledge of the democratic par ty. There has been a promising start in pension reform. The greatest source of extravagance- and fraud in the en tire federal system has been boldly and honestly attacked. The pension appro priation bill reported to the house is nearly 115,000,000 less than the amour.t appropriated for the current fiscal year. ' This is a record of which the demo cratic party has a right to be proud, despite the shortcomings and wrong goings in other directions. As to the reverse side of the picture there is this to be said :E very mill thaV is closed was shut up under the opera tion of the McKinley fifty per cent, tariff. 2very workingman that is un employed is idle under the law that 1 was framed ostensibly to "protect" him. Every dollar of increase in the publicjlebt represents a dollar of the republican deficiency. Every lack in the treasury is due to the republican law .which .eut revenue- by raising taxes. Every expedient to obtain gold to maintain the public credit is the necessary result of the net loss of gold to the country during the republican administration of over 1122.000,000. Every deficiency, increasing payment from the public treasury, bears the sign manual of a republican president. That there are dangers ahead of the democratic party none will deny. But the record of its first vear in no war challenges comparison with any similar period in the history of the country. N. Y. World. . .. . THE TWO WILL NOT CONFLICT. No Hllrer BUI to Be Reported UatU the. State Bank Matter la Orer. Washington, April 9. --Chairman Bland has announced that he will not call the coinage committee together tc" report a silver bill until action is taken on the state bank tax bill. He doei not wish to embarrass the latter wi ,b the former or cause the two to connict. He discredits the statement that ths state bank tax fight will retard silver legislation. He does not think the passage of a state bank bill will in jure the cause of silver. -Mr. Blaod says, on the contrary, that the repeal of the. state bank tax will increase, instead ol decrease, the demand for silver. Adams 'ttop Arc Uone. City or Mexico, April 9. The high est court of Mexico has confirmed the sentence of death recently passed upon Charles Adams, the- American who murdered 4 waiter in a restaurant here three years ago. Adams comes of a , prominent family at New Orleans, and the American colony have, used every effort to have his sentence lightened. He will probably be shot within th next few days. Offden WUl Saeceed Blencherd. j Shrkveport, April 9. It is now reo. son ably certain that II. . W. Ogden will succeed Blanchard ; irom the I Fourtt Cojigression district In Congress v . Many Persons are broken flowj from ovenferk or household cares. Brown's Iron Sitters Rebuilds the yatem. aids digestion, removes excear "i bile ad cures malaria. Get the genuine. '-' . . . ..' ' v . 1 - Such tetimpny Isab solutely ! unimpeachable. If you desire to investi gate further, write to us. tWWWWWWWW 1? Lessens Pain, Insures Safety to j Ufeof Mother and Child, j j My wife, after having used Mothers ; Friend, passed through the ordeal with litde pain, was stronger IN ONE HOUR than in a WEEK after the birth iA her f ormer chili-J. J.McGoLDRlCK, Bean-Station, Tenn. . j . ; - Mothers' Friend robbed! pain of its ' terror and shortened labor. 1 have the heal thiest child I ever saw ' . 1 i . i Mrs. L. II. Ahern, Cochran, Ga. 1 Ejuwew.il it an address. ckarninaiiiiL oats cent "f pHcc, j:.japrr txjtile. For sals by all Dibjj- Eno jm9k 10 wnncn nwicn lire, BKADFiELD REGULATOR CO. ,AUata,C. aw NcGr.O LIhLHING. A Chance for the Republican Moral tractor to Co la ills Work. - : EX- The reported lynching of a negro brings several reflections forcibly to the mind. One of the first reflections that thus come thronging is the reflec tion how easy it must have been, in ex citing times, to write "editorials" for the republican press. It is true that so far as the substance or the style of the articles were concernel no great diffi culty attended the composition of them in off years. Only whea the party! was wrought up beyond, the critical point "by the danger to the nation, the edit orial writer used to dismiss even his usual very small fear of being laughed at and let himself go with entire reck lessness. The lynching of a negrp was a godsend to him, or, to speak less pro fanely, a windfalL' He squared his elbows to extract from it the most promiscuous and bewildering morals. One of them was that the south was in the saddle. Another would naturally be that the ly,nching showed thej sur vival of the spirit of caste, of southern race hatred, and of the democratic con tempt for the toiling masses and the desire of the democrats to bring the toiling masses into contempt by hang ing representatives of the toiling masses without process of law. These morals are all more or less dislocated by the circumstances of the latest lynching. It did not take place in any southern state, but in Pennsylvania, the seat and citadel of current repub licanism, which gave a majority against the democrats and the Wilson bill at the last election of something like; two hundred thousand. The extraction of republican morals from the lynching thus requires great ingenuity, and we shall look with curiosity to see what use the moral extractor makes of his unpromising material. N. Y. Times. Who has ever heard a protection ist give a valid reason for his belief? His reasons for believing in protection would apply equally well for belief in polygamy or plutocracy or phonog raphy. Everything that he can: see has happened under polygamy, plu tocracy and phonography has happened under protection and what has hap pened has bad the same relationship to the one as to the other. He thinks it was protection, and not phonography, but only beeuuse he is told to think so. K. Y. World. j Only the Scars Remain. "Among the many testimonials which I ee in regard to certain medicines perform ing cures, cleansing the blood, etc.," writes. LXBT Ucdsox, of the James Smith Woolen Machinery Co., Philadelphia, Pa., "none impress me more than my own caae. Twenty years ago, at the age of 18 years, I had swellings come on my legs, which broke and became running sores. jffl Ourfamilyphysiciancould do me no good, aud it was feared that;, the, bones would be affected. At last, my good old mother mm $J urged me to try Ayer's al oarsajJiiriiiii. 1 wu unco bottles, the sores healed, and I have not been troubled since. Only the cars remain, and the memory of the past, to remind me of the Rood Ayer's Sarsaparllla has done me. I now weigh two hundred aud twenty pounds, and am in the best of health. I have been on the road for the past twelve years, have noticed Ayer's Sarsaparllla advertised iu all parts of the United States, and always take pleas ure in telling what good it did for me." For the cure of all diseases originating in Impure blood, the best remedy is AYER'S Sarsaparilla Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer JcCo., Lowea, Haas. Cures others, will cureyou, BICYCLES! No acents. Wo sell from catalogue at ble aule trices. Ship lor insitlon before aa aircnts sell t rtiX oars at & same as agents sell orfl'U,ours atlarr.MKl-riins, 2i lbs., tanie as any imwlieel. 12 styles iU to 480. M11 1.. Dun t X sama &GL1E ROADSTER $55 Ooaranteed same aa agents sell for fT5 to flOQ. ACME ROAD RACER, 25 lbs. OQfl WOOD-RIMS, UUUi Perfect lines, perfect steertnir. perfect sdjiistmerit. Guaranteed same as agents sell for SI25 and $ 13&. Written warranty with every machine Ererr time yon boy a bicycle through an gntyo payKtOtoSaO more than our wholesale price for aaase jam)lty. It costs aboat as much to sell bkeycles through aaents and dealers as It does 10 make tbem. j Let prudence and economy snepet the b' tter way and buy from as direct t wholesale prices. Illustrated Catalogue free. ! Acme Cycle Company, ELKHART, !ND. j , meet the fltesaas Hard -m mn t mrwrcn, we i L w eat U haleaai fk. : ytr ton. : for Own. Cotton and !24J?! 0"U. T.ibsco sad FruiU - 1o-U Blscii. Must. Sods- in Unr saJ '"""r. m vo .tamos ft clrc'a WIWELL VsniUaM-asaafseturssa. IValuaaere JI. : When Baby waa sick, we gav nr Castorta. When she was a Child, slie cried t or Castoria. When aha became Jlias, she clung to Castoria. When sho had QuVreatshe gave them Casturiai 6 A St-' mm. sad OsItrraZTj felts . cared si fcucie wills out paiaUlook of per. stealers sent TREE. . IB.M .WaiLLRT m n . .Atlanta, On. OQceiWlUuhaUjr. & Danville R. R. Co.' luivel Sicer, F.W. Euidelrcper and Reuben Foster, Receivers. CONUKNSI2l. SCHIiDULli. ; IS EFFECT AUG 17 ST; ,13, levS. L htebmoud ,. i.v Uurkevnle . lv Keysrine... Ar Danville .... Lv Uauvtiie .... rref usburo. is lerAj -HiA.m" "i4oav lt"Ali .... 'SrS -i 5MA" . ... ... . S fc M i i ra w- r !10 AM - Jjturu am "" 1 I-lfcrli ;4-.a 8 rM - 9 45 AM ... 0 M " ....i". ... 4 oera 5?rj rM rAM 11 15 PM H5AM i 1 S'.asT tssrv 11 SSSAM i 45FM 1 1 Tie am leisrM 41 11 S3 rM .1 1 ife A 1AM.. 1 ? rM r 8 41 AM .i S5rM t.v uouisuoro Ar KHletj.h.... i.v ttaleigh Lv liurb.im ....... ArGreeasitoro..... Lv Wi nsi on-Ma lein . iv retiialoio Artlsiury ....... A stA.es vilTe Ar Asbeviile Ar i-ot Sorlngn Ia ftdlisbury ArrUarloile Ar SmirtHnburjr Ar Granville r Atlanta i.v rh irlntie A r Columbia .... Ar Augusta .... .... NORTHBOUND Xom.. "OAILA. .t<f. No. it o. LV Alls. .... I v olumbia ... 'r h- rottc... Lv Atlanta r Charlotte Lv( har otle ... rsnllsbury ,. Lvioi4:irlDg8 Lv shevll?f ... LvSt:ttesville.. B Uti )U).. 9 is pm.. s:im.J isptu Mim s : am T n i-ra t id am S nm 1 00 pm . so pin s 10 1 m 1 wopm s 1 4 put 814 pit m .t7pm 4 10 am ' t3 p 1 up n. tscpin. . Il'pm. AHi'tsbury t..... Salisbury renfebcro ... Ar Wlnsion-snlem Lv Greeusl-or .... Ar inrhsm... Ar Ralelg'h Lv Raleh?h Ar Ooldshoro Lv .'reenboro .... Vr Panvllle r KrysvlUr '.. Ar nuikovlilf .... A r Richmond "4V5" "am l am 8 -Jpin. 10 11 pra 1 1 jn nm 9S7 pm 10 pm 8 .v. am ttsaam. t Hill II UUl. tjRpm .am, lnnopm 6 30 am l K M llipm 1 am 11 so rm 7 40 ;m l 3D am KNam 4 os am li cs m 4 51 am 1 os ni 1 00 am 1 4pm ' 7 am 4 05 :.m 4 51 am warn X Diilly exce. tSundav. BETWEEN WFST POINT AND RICHMOT D ' Leave West Point 7.60 A. M. dally, ands.n a. M. dallj except Sunlay nnd Mondu; arrive 1 lob nrjoiid . an. 1 1" 40 A M. Keturnlny leave lileli rnoud 3.ir and 4.4" P. M . dally except Sunday; ar rive West Point 5.10 and s.to p. M. BET RICHMOND AND RALEIGH VIA KEYSVILLEt Leave Rl limond li.4 P M. d iiU; leave Ke vllleH.iuP. m.; anive Oxford 5.f P.M.; rieudVi son 7.10 P. M , Durham 7.15 P. M.. fait Igh 30 a. in., KeiurnlDg i:alH?ti 1 am dally. liurU.- m 15 nm ilendrrsou P M.. Oxf- nl .44 a. M.; anlve Keysvllie 10.10 A, M., Hit hinond 1 as P. M. Dally. Mixed trotn Nol 6! leavt s Keysvill.e il.illy exoci t uiida.,4 10a m.. OxfonUzn a m. and an Ives Durham 11 e a m M qtM iralu No. xii leaves Dur liaui, dai ly eqeept Snnday. w y ta., Oxford S 30 pm anl arrives Keys 111'-, 1 P. M. Mixed Tmln N0...8 u-av Oxfrrrt, dally except Sunday. S.25 A. ,M ..mdar.iKcs Durham 4.1a A. M Mixed Tr. In No 6 leaves Durhair, dally ixeept Sunda.7. M.. and arrives Oxford. .! A.M. Trains on O. 4. II. It U., leaves. Oxford C re a M. ally except Miiiday, 11 iVA. M.. d..ll.v, iDd 6 8" P. M.,dall except Sundav. and arrive Ilmdi rson S. X. M., 12. . I. M and 7.H P. .M. I.etutnlnfr, leave UClidenxm S on and 7.3o P. M., dalf. exee I Sunday and arrive Oxford . . M., s ir. P M. and 8.8JP. M Nos. sr, 36 and as eodnect at HU'.Mro' l.w nr.d to West Polnl aud Ballhdore dati.v i-iu 1 1 unday. SLEEPING-CAR CI RVICE. On Trains Nos. 3.3 and 36 Pullm in l.uffc-t Slecpt r oetwefii ew Yorl- and Atlant . On No. 3i and as, l'ul'jn s epptr rars X w Yor ioNf v OrV. ns. Nrv 'if K to Aiv.fla a .-1 ,iilnjfU'i to V.eiaMi.s. an. I Is it-K - vv Y-i-; to Moiilll: ! v : I- 1 .Hid i-J ,;:r, ."rt ... : . Uiond ! i.Uit I ;i fi'l c ; ; . 1 .., .; i tw.-ea ; in; !.' -.! D:t:. i- . , - T alt - N-- : r lv. . . k i'UlliK.i-i !;!!! (., , .. . : , -.- : . nd llul I. c. - 4 nEKKLF.Y. ' .i s p, T' u I s, : "Upenniendent. Su el t. 1 ( f ireer.j-N c: N O I lrhi.ii ii . v. W. A. TI i ; f . '-eneM P ssenger .&ent. W s'.'tncion, 1). ' . " S. II. IIARDWK K, Asst. Gen'l Pass. Agent, Atlanta, Ua. W. IK'fiKKKN, SO HAAS. Gen'l van;-jrr, Tr.-.ftlr tn rater WasblhP-ton, I). C. V s.blitntion. if. I Ti CQf-D ITV . J -. i: 1.; MITHDZAL HaBDWAHE CO., SOLE AGENTS. Steam, Air and zontal of 'Hyr ' rl i 4 I . ! Mliiir Watchman .4. TL' i t :f5? IX Rene ws its nllegiance to de; mbenicy I of -the And asks every friend of gcod g07. ernment, progress and enterpris for support. Its subscription price will be : " 1 To Single SuVftcritcrs frl.CX) To ' of over Ten .8oc 5(1 -t .- 12 1. .1 . .J..i -v ' t ij. h ?J k W Orders Sol'c'tcd. LOST! A l.tr.e ii'.n into oi m' -ip v st j iiiiiiiiiilly ly parties : : r 1 1 . . -j' x fruit tns, rose, &r. Gt 'lieni fnnii a .lisi. U I V. I i.t-H' OW I. JlVfS,. I Is .M.t iio'i. ii!.' imt 10 1 !ock -!nl e (lir c ! -li :!uhiii liiif- VjU i iilieia! off.-r . W 1 i e i' r j jo t;c- i, ;iinl iiiue.v'.o oiic. . S ui; -l..nj fin leM ;iptiw catitli iie. AHIltS MXIltftl rVfl U hiTI1. A. U s-. : : . 1: ,- X .,-,-. j ('... (Meutifirtliis j sipcr.) (DAfflEUfSJlo99 Vacuum Pumps, Vertical and Hori every Variety and Capacity, Eegrnlar Eorizortal Fi ten, 4 i i M .v .-fcr.. . - , r ? Tl)e most simple, duialic and tf fective Pump in the marjket for aiintf, Quarries,' Iiehnint.j Ii eweri( p, Fcc tories. Artesian .Welle, Fjre t)jty arwd General Manufacturing j urj o?cp. -'I 3St'i.d for Catalogue. J'oot of Eat 231 Sheet N. w York j AMERON STEAM ) iIL.lL! ? 4 M' " ' v - I the-- Ca use' people, , year pay a " a execute-. 'i w. J., OJ v.. a yy . :ri j ;i .1. Tfl i. if- 5 WANTED. A hVli:l)ie iVisoii in Every T..i to take 1 hvExc ltive Afercv of tie World's Tolumbianlxpo- Ml -A viTlAORGKCFTHZFAIlf. k hTASI I. IIKH 1' l r Wiewt rpporlun ij f yti.le Mont t f"' ' llie " xt Year. One Chance4n a Limctiinf Enclose 15 cents' in lamri lor ? jle cfpv :jih1 fi;!! j.,i .. uht-: ; B.C. It! BILL, Ires., 1C9 Ad&inE St-, Cticrgo, IU- T.-j WOBKS. 11 Ij lierald, r . X -. t wmuaao, uw ac ceiuur. 131 -. ' JJ If i '- .-' . ..'
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 12, 1894, edition 1
4
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