Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / May 17, 1894, edition 1 / Page 4
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- - -- . - - -:-"TV-777 ! if tf;7 .k - ' - -a 1 ft V ft IN ASHES wmmt Or. Taimage's Magnificent Tabrr- f a in . Krfli IKI V IK iJUlUOU 'tSZ D3CT03 WiS HOVED 10 TEiES. Vr th Third T.mi fir. n- Wk" hea Oat of WTf nrtt rfIfU- to tlui' World-"eur 1'irriutw Wr IpjrcL -.w York, fjr5.-Rer Dr. Tal jaaiVtoewUK riificle, at tbe corner ot Clinton and lireen arennrs, IJrook lyn. waa burned at noon Sunday, 'line hotel Uejrent adjoining:, and sereral dwelling hum in the jrieioity wrcra1 lo detrj4- Tba losa estimated lit a million dollars. This is the third lime Dr. Talmapa has Lost hta chureh by fir. II was in the ehurch when the tira si .rted, aurruonded by a uuw ler o his eoDfirreration. but U escaped. Me wa moved to te.ira.as ha witnessed tn detlnustioB oMh beantif al edifte.'. Kur firemen were injured dnrtaff the ri., ot f-stalljv however, and thera sras frreat excitement and 'scenes ot f.aU a the lira progressed. Peir the los thJt vvill fr'eve.Dr. Taimav tast U Vuat f the inoiuorial lose which he b ou?ht from tlie easU mud which weie et in the wail at the tUfct ot the orjpta, aca,ed tn atero-re lief wufk. They were four In nnraber. 'ih top tkelc was from Mount Cal- Srr, ua ixjid ue w - - fU sLocu wttiuW irtmi auuuv lwiuv it ''l'h Uw.M '1 he bott hj tooe U fr.m Mr 11 lit. and In-at tlie insrrlptlo '"tJohpeL" Tk lU4el Rejrent. ft fetraUjr hotel, HdMof the larfpest Urooklyn va totaitr dt-oyeL 4ittsta flew rom tb tulidlnff in terror, and t dne tlcae it was a panic on botU.fcidea of th 91. The " tal'irtiftcla was - maared fr fi4MM. The. btMird of trustees of the tahernaele lust nirht lu-ld a meenff in the house wf Dr. Talma fire at which it was d eide l to rebni'd the tabcruaele. 'I ho trustees ".iy. that" Dr. Talmae is to start tta hi ti ij) around the world a-s firat intended. - 5lr. Talwajfe will start txiy. He tvlll go to rhiladelphia first, then to Atlanta and U ine souinem ntuvet Jiunolulu. New Zealand and Australia. MURDER OF AN AGED LADY. VfcaCrlsnM ot foltfm (ouMtr Oeorela. CU. aa-ri n it ', ' Bra tat Murder. Atlanta. 'tin.: Mayli-In her qu&t home, about tliree miles from the city, on the" road to Westview cemetery, Mni. Mary Lilly, tluf mother of the wcil-kuotvn musietans, was strangled todeate at a late hour Saturday tiijiht. ' When tha discovery was made a pair of tongue rested against her neek, fchowintfthat uch was the instrument by which the foul deed yas consu- uiated A more repulsive tragedy has nevT Wencommitted in Fulton county. The i ouiincnee of Mrs. Lilly and the stand which her son-share taken in tue. com-, innnity. ; coupled, with ber advanced aire, griven to the trasredy a darker col oring aad will send a shudder this morning over the entire city. Supieiou is strongly fasteiied upon a negro man, and all of thecircumstancs confirm the probability of his gitilt. The negro was an occupant of the hott-ie. aod was employed by Mrs. Lilly in the operation of her small truck iurtu. A white man by the name of ' yr. bnead is aLso employed and resides in a small onthouse inthe rear of the ... . - .Ji v -.. Money was the rnue of the tragedy. It was rumored thai Mrs. Lilly was a voman of considerable wealth and that she kept her mouey in the house. . JShe resided alone with no one on the place except her iwo employed assist auts and vos about 65 years of age. Krerythtuir lu the house, at the time the discovery was made, had been com pletely flatted. Drawers were torn open. locks prized from their fasten lags, clothes piled up. In huge masses on th floor and fthe . interior of - the house was a perfect scene of bewil derneBt aud confusion. Tlte body of the murdered woman was stretched on the floor of tha kitchen, her head resting against the lgof th table and her feet pointed towards tbe open door. It was a ghastly scene and the horror of the pL sure beggars description. Twe ttunpeets Arrested. AnjXTi,' May 15. Two negrpee Kare been arrested for the murder of Mrs. Lilly, who was found dead Satur day night. There is nothing but cir umstantial erldence against them. TRAGEDY IN MISSISSIPPI. Jlrated Mardee f a Be-. ported Cltliea WhUm Aetlna; As Peaeesaaker. OaaaKviLLK. Miss., May 15. A trag edy occurred at Percy, in this, Wash ington, county, last night Jim and Kfl Hherrard became involved in a quarrel with a lot of negroes when Klrby K. Parish, manager on Capt . O. ; Willis' Pantherburn plantation, . wm called in aa peacemaker, but while Attempting to perform his duties aa ueh. the Sherrads abused him, and vrben he resented it, Ed Sherrard shot ad killed Jiim. The citizens are con siderably wrought up and are scouring the country to fiad the Sherrads, who escaped. - .t i Aeaooot ot thm Texas Treasnry Dedclency. AusTix. Tex.. May 15. State Treas ite Ireaa the empty wrer Worthanv, speaking of aUte treasury, says the deficiency will reach 300,000 before the end of the jear. As to the interest on the bonded debt of $3,000,000. which will be due in July and January next he r said he x 'would try and arrange , to meet it, and he believed he would. : n! Trtet e the Coteubtav "rTAiTox. a C, May 13. The flaal or deep'he ;rial of the first-class cruiser Columbia, the fastest vessel in the American navy.will take place gn 3Jaj 17 n4 the lollwVng day. - . Haiaese CoantdenttUm. In urging the passagebf the tariff bill, the XdW Orleans Picayune (dem ) says; "The business interests of the country have been injured by the Ion? puspea over the tariff hill. and busi nessman woald welcome a prompt set tlement of the question. Besides, the fact mnst not be lot sight of that tha going into effect o ! the new tariff in rolves eertaiu economic changes which , cause more or less friction." It is, there fore.; prudent that the bill should be pas ed at an early enough date to en able the measure to go into effect as Jon ? as possible be tore the time fixed 4. for the congressional elections of the foaling fUl. 4 i- : ; '" X - - : MfVLiTER CLARK 2 JUDGE uses Iand endorses the s "Care whea all S:m Tr0 W r V..,k rarelia lFfee Ceart. Tlble T r.. .tr W1U. From mr r,". serTAUon. i cn vL j Waltu PREACHING VS. PRACTICING. BrpabUea Bt the Caoe;l Seat sent of the CaBtry. l . RepublSean journals are takjg4iDOB themselres the gratoitusj dny of in forming the. democratic! inajgrity in congress that it sbouldl abandon Its ef fort to reform the tariff pass the ap propriatidn bills and go hipe. Tbe reason given for this ttilrfce is-that the euatiment of the country has changed, a e-jjeuced by the protest that have been made against tariff; legislation, and the admitted fac Hhat deftiocratis political prospects next. Jlpvctnber are not exactly rose-colored, j Of course, ronnbiii'An friends have not the least notion that their p4vicf wU be taken. . 3 !",. f 1 Dut it may not be out of place to re mind these self-appointei adrwers that the eourse they are j" recomnoending. ' even assuming that the advice is given in good faith and for the tiestnteresta of th eouniry, is ooci vvbich Apolitical parties are not at all likely to follow. So better illustration of thiifioulJ be f triad than the comparatively re cent experience of j thej republican party. In'" 188 a Mpubltcaif victory was. won upon ,j large fcale by pledges given in the west tha an hon est rerision of the. taritr wouiu do made by the republicans if they were given the power to act ; It was recog nized by the republicans 14 all of the states of the Mississippi valley that there was a growing demand for a change from the old high tx principles of the war Wiff that j the people wanted tariff reform. Bui' Iti was said and this was said bn the jitump In I88S in scores of western congressional districts that tariff revision ishould be made, not by the enemies, but by the friends, of protection! -Duties are un doubted ly too high, and the jtaxea im posed iu consequence' of thein too onerous, but it is well that tjje protec tion system should be jgradually changed by those who have for years past supported it, anti that :it should -not be suddenly destroyed ;i by those who have always opposed it ; It was upon these grounds ' that the publican victory was won. Evidence can be obtained that quite a number of western republican Congressmen tent to attend the first session of the Fifty-first congress tvjith the belief Chat the tariff was to be revised by cutting the duties down, and. vho found, to their surprise and lisgust, v after the session had opened, that the combina tion of republican congressional lead ers, under Messrs. Keed and jtfcKinley, were determined tha tfis coqrsc should should not be taken and thai, instead of lowering the .bairrir of protection, the height of that barrier was to be increased.. One of the leading western congressmen, a republican , of national reputatidn, sail in the summer of 1890: "Our party is betraying its trust., and, under the whip of party. discipline, I shall be compelled j to vote for a meas ure which is almost a complete repudia tion of the pledges mado to, my con stituents, and that my' western associ ates made their constituent at the time they were e'ected.' We: supposed, , and they supposed,, that the tariff as' to be revised downward, : axd not up ward, but we have jiow discovered our mistake; our people ire already in censed against us; and yet there is nothing to do but fojllow the bd ling of those who are recognized as ? the party leiders in and out of congresi, and who have definitely conjmitted themselves to this line of polic. ? S. F fi s .This, we say, was a' personal state ment made by a man holding an excep tional position, anL one who pahl the penalty that he know awaited him by a defeat in the fall, of 1890. There was, it is true, no financial ' panic to compli cate the situation; but throughout the country there were protests raised against tbe enactment of the McKinley bill The republicans in the west and northwest denounced the measure as n betrayal of trust, and it was predicted as inevitable that the party.that was responsible for thjs legislation would be overwhelmlnglyldefeatetjl in the No vember election. The handwriting on the wall was not in mystical character. On tho contrary, it' was easy of inter pretation to anyone who was not blind ed by interest or preconceived ideas. The leading protectionists, It is true, did not admit at the time the McKinley bill was under discussion, and at the time it was enacted, f that the country was soon to repudiate them and their measure; but the fact was; evident to everyone else. When they asserted that the election of 189 J, which re sulted in such an overwhelming defeat for them, was due to a misunderstand ing of the benefits of the protective tariff, it needed only the second defeat in 1692, after - two j years of experience with McKinlcylsm; to make it evident that tie judgment of these gentlemen as political prophets waa not in the least to be depended upon; that they predicted what j they deatred to aee brought about without the least regard to obvious facta. Now;' the proper course for the republican majority in congress in the spring and summer of 1890, when it found that the sentiment of tbe people Trer averse to McKinley htm, was either to have abandoned all effort to revise the tariff or to have taken up revision jupon the principle of lowering duties liut they did not do I anything ofthia If Tston Derald. The meannfis of :thn tactics by which Mr. Eeed won hia vjndicationln , the quorum-counng business should not escape attention. He filibustered persistently over; petty affairs and de liberately stopped the course of the house, with no irreat pqblie issue at 5 :: PmtrMsTl m. LH U til taUy for children. JI.'SyuV doctors' sad I ' " 1 personal to himseif.j Ile'aud his party have not gained: in the respect of the people by such a course; I But the dem ocrats, unable to inaintin a quorum with a great majority t draw from how contemptible i thiey" appear! tpringfield (Mask.) 'Republican (Ind.). .- . i ' 1 . I., i The l'ennsylvauia riots are the direct results ofi McKinTeyism. Tariff laws that pro tect capitalists in the im portation of cheap labor always pro ifsch resnltf 4N. y. World, j --"' !. v I . ;';t t 7 , - ! else falls.' Investigation l Invited.. - el - i BOOK FREE, Electrollbration Co. rOURTM AVCNUC. . NtW TOSS. Clam. 3 FRUITS OF PROTECTION. B9utllcavn Itule Ilesponsjble for Social ist 1 Uemoostrmtiona. The Coxey movement r is chiefly sig nificant as an expression of the social- istic tendencies that have developea indir renublican rule and protectionist i ln(nlos. In France the dpctrino of j protection has been aecepta&f by the i socialists in iU logical consequencea. and men are- saying to the state: ''buice protection makes price high, give us also protection for wages. Fix a mini mum seale, and let tba state sc-mpel employers to observe it , , There was no principle more essen tially emboli ied in the fou:i lotions of American liberty than the principle of individual liberty the independence h r?-n. . 'tha state was sov ereign only because he, the citizen, gave it of his own sovereignity. It waa his crcatiou; ha owed nothr lng to tho state but loyalty and obedi nee to necessary laws. The state owed all to biro. This spirit gave the dignity and strength that char acterized the men of America. In its destruction there has baen no influence more potent than the doctrine off pro tection. In its very essence it assume that one set of Individuals is not aa strong as another set. of individuals, that n. man isn't able to stand up be fore the world and win his own way through It In practice. It has fostered the idea" that one clas3 must be ma la to contribute to another and far small er class; that the government has the right to interfere in the affairs of iU citizens and determine how much of one man's goods shall be given to an other man. It has made the govern ment a part of and a party to the money-getting machinery of the fav ored elasa, and has made money-getting a governmental function, leaving the minds of the citizens with no sens s of their personal independence aud indi vidual responsibilities. We are no longer a nation of sovereigns, but of dependents. So paternalism drifts into socialism, and so protection comes back to the protected in the appeal of Coxey's "urmy" for help In this country the masses have not yet learned to apply the logiu of the situation; but they are fast learning it. It is r.o new idea; the' inevitable conse quences of protection were foreseen years ao.by stu'Jcrts nf sociological tendencies. So long1 ajoas 1S51 Cavouc, the Italian economist, said: "I maintain that :li most powerful a'lr ot r sr.cluli.-m. ia lis len al r lavion i i toe Jwir no of prot- ctioa. ltsetn out from absolutely ihe samo principle R';uut ed to its s'.mpl' st ti-rras. It aitlripf tbt- rlrlit uuJ duly of Ro-vcrnment to lntcivea'.' In tlio cinplo:mei:l :m i tllnrlbatiua tit capitjl: it affirms that tho fimotkjn and mis sion of jcvernni';ut aru to subsntnio its a ro -enliijUtetioi Jncisions for t":ie frcoi'Jiision t f V.'.e imiividual. if tlie? ! priac.pl i siioulU lr.i:io recognize J as iacontestably tru-J, Ida not t-ev what answer couli t m-ilo ta the worxia classos an I ihjir r jpra jalitivj whon th--y ! caino tj tho government aJ su'.J: 'You ixHt va j in the rl;ht nu I iiut; of roalatla r tV ills : tributioa of cipitol why not uUo ta'.; t u.) i.'-.e recul-tion of d:-q luction &uS wa-Tcjl Why nvjt establish govgramoat. v. orUshopar " Germany an I France, and now the United States, have verified these wcrd3. The proposition is so self-t-vi-dent that it scarcely need j tliscussioa. Speakiug of Mr. Leon Say's proposi tion tliat protection insensibly leads to '"nationalism," a French authority on economical questions lays down tha principle tltat "between protection and socialism the line of distinction is very difficult to perceive.!' A Frenchman defined the difference as being that the protectionist ' was a rich man, while the social :st was a pauper. Undoubtedly, if the robber barons are ritrht, Coxey is also right, and so are the populists, and with more-justice on the side of the latter, for th-ir needs are greater. The populists ere but the natural outgrowth of republic anism and protection. Let Coxey blow his trumpet long and lustily at the gates of the robber barons. It is his turn now. Louisville Courier-Jour naL? j Ohio tiopub!TcaaIm. liepabllcanism has been no greater success in Ohio than in the nation. A bill is now pending before the legisla ture of that. State providing for tlie issue of SGOO'OOO in certificates of in debtedness' to keep the state from go ing into bankruptcy. The chairman cf the finance committee of the house, in introducing the bill, admitted that the state had been for years spending moro than she received and that her income for the current year was virtually mortgaged to the extent of (500,00'JL An effort has been made to shift some portion of the responsibility for this condition of things on the late demo cratic admlnl.stratijn; but the fact is undisputed that 8350,000 of the $00,C0J deficiency was incurred by the last re publican legislature. Considering th McKinley boom it is no wonder that the Ohio republicans want to fix the matter up in some way; but they are going to have hard work to pose suc cessfully as economists or even as hon est administrators ot state government Detroit Free Press. Sot Mach In It. The Rhode Island election, in the light of the official returns, is more a triumph of the gerrymander than a po litical victory. What gave it the ap pearance of an overwhelming demo cratic defeat was the fact that there were 102 republicans elected to the leg islature against eight democrats. There were just 54.000 votes cast a littlo less than double the vote of Jackson county for president. Of these the republican got 29,003 In round figures, about 2,0 JO more than half. According to-this the republicans get a member of fthe legis lature for each 200 votes and the demo crats one for each 2,875 votes.. Rhode Island has been a hide-bound republic an state ever since the beginning of the war. On one or two occasions the majority has been 1vk than this year, but very rarely. If in were not for the palpably unfair apportionment the vic tory would have been a defeat Kansas City Times, Children Cr for Pitcher's Castorh. ZXr.r:-::-; - t" - ? ' -i - ; .- ,7- Lr-r: - -y- f-y-.s. - v -J K: :;U7 i .;-H'i"- "JP-- - .7- -x- - ' j. j y - . t f X."- . i .1-- ' iji - j ii-SlSo ijekwi- & DaiiYiiid b. b. coilOlf fill 1 OLDEST (JIHlIljiril :; Mfe of Mothered Child. ;J, iltel g Hitdekoper and 1 ' ' ' . . H1, ' with Uttlepain, was steoncejiih oni M ! CONDENSED SCHUDULE. : y :- ft 1 1 ll I 1 1 II 1 111111 11 ' hour than W a week after the birth - Di EKFKCT AUGUST 13. 1S3. -y 1 1 1 I! I 1 1 V it It If Li 1 1 1 ll I T7 ; of her former chiUL-JJiloGoi-DaKX. ; j ... - , Vianwnaiini W- i Bean Station, Tenn. . ".... . T r ; f . ! . j'.:i ! MoTHeas FkiEHO fobbed pain of Its L lUcbmoud u jc r s i3 54) ii y I j terror and shortened labor. 1 have theheal- , f anwyiue rat ,40 a ...... ...y t - l1 - tbiest child lew saw. - L,v KeysviUe ... aural 9 Aa , i.' . MRS.L.M.AHERK, Cochran, Ga. - -r uaavt Ue ..... ... 6 4 ra 5n -A- 71 - Enin,.ddrech1r!fe.pcepljoj:re. ,1 ? 21 " 1 50 AM ;.7. ...... y . j. . ' :t:r . . . f,.uUi,i Dnir. Ar ureeusuoro TSO ml rmiv - v. . ' LOUISVILLE MERCHANT MISSING Casmire. a Coniuiltsioo Uealer, at Large and Creditors Are Minus. Lorisvii.T.E. K.V., May 7. lany local creditors and q u ite a n umber of farmers throughout this section are mourning the disappearance of MM, A. Lasmire, who for the past thirty days or so has been carrying on a commission busi ness at Third street. Since Tues- dav he has not been seen, and it is be lieved thathejias. skipped out to the loss of many farmers who have shipped him eggs to sell. , Casmire, who repre seiited that he was from Cleveland, came here abont a month ego and paid a month's rent in advance for his store. He offered inducements of 2 cents a dozen on eggs more than the market price,-and many producers sent eggs to him. Mrf Knadler. of the Knadler Pickling company, was seen and said that two drafts, one of G5 and another of f8v had come since Casmire's disap pearance, ane that there were proba bly othors to follow. The landlord seized the furnitnre in tne omee lor a few days' rent which is now overdue. While congress dilly-dallies the 6ugar trust is making haste to import as much raw sugar as possible while sugar remains on the free list. tJold is beginning to be exported to CubvtO pay on sugar purchases. Keeiprocity is too slow to Jveep pacs with specu lation. Chauncey Oepew'a utterance that because the democrats have not freed the country from all the ills visit ed upon it by republican misrule, the people will fly to theg. o. p. for relief, is i the kind of talk that would be sugges ' tive of imbecility in almost any other I man. Detroit Fre Press. f j It is eminently fitting that he robber baron and the tramp fraternity should unite in sending delegations to ' Washington to represent themselves as living petitions to congress. The same protective system that built up the barons also multiplied the tramps. Louisville Courier-JournaL A FRIEND Speaks through the Boothbay (MejEepitUr, of the beneficial results he has received from a regular use of Ayer's Pills. He Says: " 1 was feeling sick and tired and my stomach seemed all out of order. I tried a number of remedies, but none seemed to give me relief until I was induced to try the old relia ble Ayer's Pills. I have taken only one box, but I feel like a new man. I think they are the most pleasant and easy to take of anything I ever used, being so finely sugar coated that even a child will take them. I urge upon all who are In need of a laxative to try Ayer's Pills. They will do good." For all diseases of tbe Stomach, Liver, and Bowels, take AYER'S PILLS Prepared by Dr. J.O. Ayer St Co., Lowell, Mass. Every Doso Effective tCAlfAP t?" No iconts. WeftlfrOi llflfMlli P V cutnlotrne nt W hit LIB a 3 ml r a,e " thlp o JlBJ I L ti0 fxummailon brl'or Vta&sWtai,.. ours at f44 rnvc. We tl from le- lor ire asai:iits sc!l t irtTi, oars jt f.V g;iin' 1.9 ciit ell nrao mrfi 11. o iri Ht:i) w ..i-riins, 2j lbs..mt; M any il2ojeel. 12stjlcs clJ to tSU. >.1E ROADSTER $55 Guaranteed same agents sell tcr FT5 to SMB. ACME ROAD HACER, 25 .us S80. WOOD-RIMS, Perfect linea. perfect steering, perfect adjustment. Guaranteed same as amenta sell fnr $125 and n& Written warranty with every machine Every time you buy bicycle through an agent you pay30 to$a0 more than oar wholesale price for nine vitality. . It eosta about as much to sell recycles through agents and dealers as U does to ruke tbem. Let orndenoe and economy suggest the better way and buy from ua direct at wholesale prices. Illustrated Catalog fna Acme Cycle Company, ELKHART. IND. a wt.k. Kie!at itftiwfj. Tmm oisie fur a rsmiu iBB. aiaat. W-h , nn. iud nirh lb. m wnvui waiisj lot uil. Tua bi Imlieu. lb' oiachinxtov tbe r. t. Bright, nnmboi Ulbr, nd cb rful wir-. 5a caidr4 .S nfrf.uo wiled hud.or clMbln(. 'M br,.kraUaM,Dniiu. CVp. 4ui aur.nrrautrd. Clr.;lr.fre W. P. DAKitlSON CO.. Cicrk 12, CulMBbns, O. Vhen Baby was sick, we rave her CastorU. Wbcn she waa a Colld, she cried fr Castorla. "Xhen she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When aho had Children, she gave them Castoria For ttilaria, Li7er Trou ble, or IridigeationjUse nnws IKON BITT ?.r Lv Ualeig-ti Lv Durham A r Oreensoore . Lv WinHtOD-Salem. 4 3j rat an n.a 1 00 AM t SO AM 6 30 AM 4 43 AM I :ura titttra 54aM S 13 AM t.v ureeiisttoro . Ar AitUsb'ury ... I 6 ra 9 St ra v 8 00 AM V5AM A r statesville i . . Ar Asbevllle..... Ar llotsprtngs.... nTsahsbuVy Ar rtmrlotte... .r4parnmburg.. At Oreenvllte Ar At'anta i i v Charlotte .... iAr Columbia 1 1 04 A M 4 00 ra SS&rM t no AM 43 ra; u is ra 1 s AM 2 23 AM . T 10 AM ' n3M B l" AM 8 43 AM 813 AM SX5AM II AM 1 2 ra 11 83 AM a S3 rM 4 A3 ra 10 13 rH 4 .5 ru T 3?am 4 so rM . 2.1 fm Ar Augusta NORTHBOUND-: DA IL Xo. It iLr Ati9 nst: e o pm. is pm 2 20 am 645pa 50am 5 so am T 41 pm 1 ' pm 4 so pm 8 io pm 1 o pm 6 14 pm l.v roiunioia Art'bir:otte. Lv Atlanta ArObarlo'te Lv Charlotte ....... ArSalWbury ... ... Lvllotorlngs Lv Ahhevllie LvSW-esvllle...... Arlallsbury Salisbury tJreenHbcro .Ar Wlnnion-Hiilem Lv Greensl or .... Ar nnrhpm Ar KalHgrh Lv KnietiTh Ar Ooldhboio Lv tireensbnro .... Ar DanvH'e 2 jo am -P 3'f pm 8 24 pn 4 10 am io i3nin3ipm iS4ipm ..... 2 fcfpin 2 1 1 pui 8 oo pin , 4 is am loll pm 9 87 pm sioam 11 40 pm 10 49 pui 3 si am ttMrn... 130 am It oi am .- 2Bpm :am lOfOpm csoam II 85 8 M 1 mo pro i5 am U so pm l 49 pm 7 40 nm 1 3f' m 10 7 am 10 20nm 4ti' Hm twnm ll5m 4 51am 4 51 am 1 08 pm 7 oo am 7 oo am Kr KVllle .. Ar RnikcvWe . .... Ar Rlchmoud ...... t r:dl.v except Snadav. BcTWEEN 5(E ST POINT AND RICHMOND Iave West Tolnt 70 A. M. dally, and 8.50 A. M. ilatly exefpt Kuniay nd Mond;i; i.rrlve hlch roud." ainl IH.40 A M. KfturniTi? leave Ulcb mond 3.1C and 4.43 P. M . dally except Sunday; ar rive West Point 5.00 sad s.oo P. M. BET RICHMNDNDALEICH VIA Leave Richmond lt.40 P M. dally; leave Kers vllle 3.40 P. M.; arrive Oxford 5.5S p. M.; Hender son 7.to P. M., Durham 7.15 P. M.'. Ualttgh 8.30 A. m., Ketumlnsr HnlHgh 1 am-. dally, Durhnn)6 15 am Henderson 7.2' " M.. Oxf rd .44 A. W.; arrive lieyxvlUe lo.in A. M., Kl binond 1. P.M. Dally.-" Mixed troin Nol 61 leaves Keysvlll.e it.illy exi t SundoT, 4 10 a in.. Oxford, 2 a m. and arilves Durham It 25 a m. Miqed train No. mo leavfs Dur ham, dally eqcept Sunday. 6 oo y m., Oxford S 30 pm and arrives Keysvtlle, 1 50 P.M. MlTeclTiiiln No. j3 leavts Oxford, dally exeppt Snndav, 2.25 A. M , and aniivos Durham 4.1" A.M. Vixt fi'Tr.iln No leaet Durharr, daily except Sunday. 7,30 A . M.. and" arrives Oxford. 9. If A.M. Trains on O. t. II. H U , leaves Oxford fi A M. allv except Knndn, 114" A. M.. dally, ana H r. M d.illv exce'pt Sunday, snd arrive H n1 rson 6 --o V. M . 12. in P. M.. nd 1.10 P. M. Keturnlng, leave Uptul.TSHn 8 or. atifi I 30 P. M.. dall exce I Sunday and arrive Oxford. A.M., 3.1" P. M. and .2 P. M Xox 35. Stiand as cod nee t al Klclanoiwl from and to W eVtJ'inl and Baltimore dully except onuday. SLtEPING-CAR GLRVICE. On Trains Nos. s." nnd 38. I'ullman Buffet Sleeper between New York and Atlanta. On No. 3. at-d 38, Pul'in m Siecplt g Pars New l . , TM3 n-P Vor : if. Ne-v orlc us. New y.i.k to Aupusta andl I rj thp nTlflS OI wasninsrtentnMemnbls. and Dlalng far New York -lLL VllC? XlCViXViO to Moms :niMv Tr IhkN' S. il and 12 run solid between Kicli mond and Atlantraitde -nv Pullmon SM pinsOars b-1v en i:i htr.o :d. Da:vlll' nd ;r ensluuo. T alus Nos. 11 aii( 1?. v . N: ('. DD ision. c.irry Puli nan Parlor Cois b-iveen Salisbury,- AsluviUe and Hot slwUigs. K BKUKLEY, J. S. B. 'Ti:OV. PSON Superintendent. Suie Intcndent .reensbo o. N. C. M litmnd. Va. W. A. Tl'HK. Of im ral Passenger Atrcnt. w siiln-rion. D. . s. H. 11AI:Dn irk, Asst. GenT Pass. Agent, , Atlanta, tia. W.T! T.IUCKN, SOI HAAS, tif-n'l Man iyer Tr;f!ie Maua r Washington, b. c. WahhinUtoii. D. C BOTANIC- BLOOD BALM. A household remedy for all Blood and Skin disease's. Cores without fail, Scruf. ula.tlrcr, Kheamatism.ratarrh. Salt lthenm & and everv form of Blood Disease from tbe W simplest pimple to the foulest Ulcer. Fifty igf yeara' use with unvarying success, dem- enstrates its ntramoun. healing, purify- ing and building up virtues. One bottle has more curative virtue than a do?en or any other kind. It builds up the health and strength from tho first dose. Z-WKITK for Hook of !Fm tlerful Cures, sent free on appli cation. ' If not kept by your local druargist, send f 1.00 for a large bottle, or 65.00 for six bot tles, and medicine will be sent, fiuight paid, by 6L00D BALM CO., Atlanta, 6a. Steam, Air and Vacuum Pumps, Vertical and Hon zontal of every Variety and Capacity. L 1 Mi, Q Renews mocraev of the And . asks every friend of good gov. ernmeni, progress and enterprise for support. Its subscription ? price will be : To Singh ' Subscribers tl.CO To of over Ten .So c Printer, m prepared to execute ail kinds of dob prices that favorably witn any Orders Solicited. j LOST! A lare itin'Hitit i' iu"i" v is. lost ! iinmiitlly l'v pntii s piTFi -lmsntp: fruit, jtivus, roses, &. Gt .thi ni from a I firm ti n row I lieir own trtT, simmIs j out nothing hut good slock nm.l sells at j reason. tl)io pi it es: We wi.nt the ui ' .In- of everv farmer -or gai(!nr in i vt'tir section aul yill make y u u and prices at once. Send "tni descriptive catalcgre; Ayents wan'ted -vei vJ re Ailfiitss. (MieKikte N' )( Co Wax. Uh-ss, Ga. tMeutitli this paper.) Begular Horizontal Piston. THo most simple; diirable fective-Pump in tlie market for Mine Quarries, Refineries, Breweries, Fae tories, Artesian Wells, Fire Duty aiid General Manufacturing purposes. ' JSend for Catalogue. Foot Of East 23d Street Ktv York' A. S. CAMERON.STEAMiPTJMP allegiance the - Cause people, V year paya blU it tt ,( ni CjLkM Caj old exrMcW printing, andt will compare IE STATE; WANTED.. A 1i;..l,l JWsnli III htejV lt X i i t 17 n - . to t:tke the Escjuye Agenc; of tlie , ' ' ''World's Columbian Expfi Illustrated,' AUTHiNTI3 ORGAN OF THE Ftl ii vo-Ai nnii u f anltfito Mal MmH the Sex Year, j 1 One Chalice iu a LiniBlf for P....l.. 1fv nonln ill klmilUS for' nle e,i.v and full partic"' and Watbiai i WW0 I Of- I - i rc t I - ii I:- ' - . :. U i- - i i 1 -;
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 17, 1894, edition 1
4
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