Newspapers / The Democratic Banner (Dunn, … / Aug. 4, 1897, edition 1 / Page 4
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ELK 'J When ever yon see a can of Baking Powders with the name and picture of ELK on it, it is a guarantee of purity. The Elk Powder is the host and cheap est powder. fc It stands the highest 'chemical analysis of any brand on the market. Give it a trial and yM will use no no ot her. Sold by H.'W. JERNIGAN & CO. Mayoth-tf. I)unn, N C. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. K. W. l)OTJ ; Attorney-at-Law. SMITH FIELD, N. C. Careful attention. to any civil matters intrusted. I to his care in the courts of Harnett County H L Godwin, t Attorney at Law. Dunn, - . - N. C. Ollice next door to Post Office. Will practice in the courts of Harnett and adjoining counties and in the Federal Courts. Prompt attention given to all h usines WE- Murchison, , JONKSBOUO, N. C. Practices Law in Harnett, Mooie and other counties, hut not for fun. Feb. 20-ly. Isaac A- Murchison, FAYETTE V I LLE, W. C. Practices Law in Cumberland, Harnett and anywhere services are wanted. SEWING MACHINES. I wish to announce to the people, of Dunn and surrounding country that I am selling the Wheeler and Wilson No. 9, .ind the Standard Sewing-Machines, which are guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction,' on reasonable terms. The best machine oil, needles, fixtures Ac., all -way son hand.f I alo repair machine at '-.'-moderate cost. Work guaranteed? I have fourteen years ex perience in the machine business and am thoroughly acquainted with them. Mv heado natters are at Mr. K. F. Young's store where I .will be pleased to show my 'machines- Your to please, i. J. M. HAYES. arI2tf. Dun::, N. C. TOWN DIRECTORY. CHURCHES. Methodist Church. Rev. E. C. Sell, Pastor Services first Sunday night, and fourth Sun day morning' and night. Prayermeeting every Wednesday night. Sunday schcel every Sunday morning at 10 o'clock, O. K. Grantham Superintendent. . Baj.tist Church. Rev. L. R. enroll, pastor Services every second Sunday moruing and night. Prayermeetlng every Thursday night Sunday School every Sunday morning. It. G TaylorSuperiutendeut. , Presbyterian Church. Rev. A. M. Hassel pastor- Services every first and fifth Sunday morning and night, Sunday school every Sunday morning, M. L. W ade Superintendent. Disciple Church Rev I. W. Rogers, pas tor. Services every third Sunday morning and night, cnristian iiiiueavor society every Tuesday night. Sunday School every Sunday evening. at i o'clock, McD. Holliday Supt. . Free Will Baptist Church. Elder R. C. Jackson, pastor. Services every second Suu dayinorniug and night. Primitive Baptist. Church on Broad street Elder W. O. Turner, Pastor. Regular servi ces ori the third Sabbath morning, and Satur day before, in each month at 11 o'clock. El der P. D. Gold, of Wilson, 1'ditor of Zion's Landmark, preaches at thii church on the fourth Sunday evening in each month at7M o'clock. Everybody is invited to these services. J, attend Young Mens' Union Prayer meeting every Sunday evening at 4 o'clock and Friday nighl at 7:30 o'clock. All are cordially invited to attend these services. An invitation is ex tended to the visitors. - LODGES. '. T ' ' ' Xncknow Lodge, No. 115, I. O. O.K. Lodge room over J. D. Barnes' store. Regular meet ing on every Monday night. Li II. Lee, N. G.; C. H. t'exton, V. G.; G. Kx Urauthani, Secre tary. All Cnld Fellows are cordially invited to attend. . f . Palmyra Lodge, No. 117, A. F. & A. M. Hall over Free Will Baitist church. F. P. Jones W. M ; W. A Johnson, S, W.; E. A. Jones J. W.; J G." Johnson, Secretary. Regular communications are held on the 3rd Satur day at 10 o'clock A. M., and on the 1st Friday at 7::!0 o'clock p. m. in each month. AH Ma sons in good standing are cordially inyitetlt to attend these communications. County Officeks. Sheriflf.J. II. Pope. - Clerk. F. M. McKay. ; Register of Deeds, J. McK. Byrd. Treasurer, G. D.Spence. . . . Coroner, J. J, wilon. Surveyor, J. A. O'Kelly. County Examiner, Rev. J. A. Campbell. Commissioners : J. A. Green, Chairman H,N, Bizzell and Neill McLeod. TOWN OFFICERS. H. L. Godwin, Mayor. ,. Commissioners E. F. Young, J. J. Dupree, J. H. Pope and W. F. Pearson. G. F. Knead, Policeman. 11 I him aont for Tucker's Omnite' and v Marble Work?, of Wilmington. N. C, anl w ill be. pIea.stM.1 to show Uigns and iiuike priries to any persons who desire a Monument, Head-stone, or .Iron Fenc ing for graves. Gootl work and low prices is pnr motto. Drop me a card and I will come to see you. . I. .1. Smith, . B.nson, N. O ; ELK ELK ' Us t fa STONES Tutfs Pills Cure All Liver Ills, Tried Friends Best. For thirty years Tutt's Pills have proven a blessing to the invalid. Are truly the sick man's friend. A Known Fact For bilious headache, dyspepsia sour stomach malaria.constipa tion and' all kindred diseases. TUTT'S Liver PILLS AN ABSOLUTE CURE. A Clillrt Heiress. Dorothy Edith Greedy is the G-year-old girl who will come into possession of the fortune left by N. C. Creede, the disr coverer of the. Creede mining camp in Colorado, and who com mitted suicide a short , time ago by taking movphine because lie would not live, with his wif. Dorothy is tlie daughter of -Mrs. II. R. "Basford, tlie wife of a San Francisco hardware dealer. Mrs . Basford has been twice married. Her first husband, John Mackay Walker, deserted her, and she and her child were in want at the hospital at Los Angeles. Mr.- Creede read the account of their suffering in the papers and yas moved to assist theny; . ' He saw Dorothy, and having no children offered to adopt her, and did so. Mi's-. Walker later obtained a divorce and married Mr. Basford. Mr. Creede, by his will, left his fortune to Doro thy, but Mrs. Creede, who a year ago accepted $20,000 on condition she would leave her husband, proposes to contest the will.. Philadelphia Record. Dr. J I. Terry, of Trimble. Tenn. , in speaking of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea, Remedy, It has almost become a necessity in thif vicinity." This is the best remedy in he world for colic, cholera morbus, dysentery and diarrhoea, and is recog n;zed as a necessity wherever its great worth and merit become known. No other remedy is so prompt or effectual or so pleasant to take. For sale by N. B. Hood, DruggiBt, Dunn, N. C. Ir Tnlmasrc's Wiwe Words. Rev. Dr. Talmage has given utterance to a great many, wise and true sayings, but nothing that he has said in the same number of words is more preg nant with the truth than the following : A newspaper whose columns overflow with advertisements of business men has more influ ence in attracting attention to and building up a city or town than any other agehev that can be employed : Capital and labor will locate where there is an en terprising community. No pow er on earth is so strong to build up a town as a newspaper well patronized, and its power should be appreciated. V.A T U Tvl A, PERFECT HEALTH RE GAINED THE WONDER OF THE AGE. Grandest dbeoverj- in the annals of medicine. v Guaranteel to eiire more diseases than any other metucine, treatment or sys tvm known to the medical profession. No MAX, nade'' remedj, but 'na ture's true panacea. Vat unia is an antiseptic jrermicide, it positively destroys all 'micioles" and germs of eyery kind, name and nature. it is heading and soothing to the mucuoiis membrane.' J t .will permanently cure tIieiusijority of ceases f rronchitis. Ca tarrh, Dyspepsia, all Stomache troubles, air tlisetises of the BIad'er, Bowels. Ki-lneys, Liver, Constipation, Tiles, Old 'Sores, Rectal Diseases. Ulcers, Kezema, Sciofula, Blood Poison, Rheu- latism, Neuralgia, Di-eased Discharges. Diseases peculiar to Wom-n, Nervous and Physical Y eak-.iess, etc. NO MATTER WHAT YOUR AIL- ; .VI K N T, oir w here you live, write us a full history of-your trouble, ami our ; what to do in o.der to regain 3'oiir health. Con. ultafion is Free and sacred ly confidential. Terms very low. For proofs enclose 2 cent stamp. Local :rjents wanted everywhere. No can vanillic. We alvert?se yon in your hoint paper. Address with stamp. THE VAT UM A COMPANY, l O. Box. T 14. Chicago, I1L Cm Returning Taxes in the Mountains- The French Broad Hustler says: Blue llidge township (transylvania county) is "hon ored'' with one colored taxpay ers, who listed one billy goat and $44 in cash. No doubt McKinley's wave of prosperitT has struck him. One devout ( ?) old gentleman who is known to possess considerable of the "lucre" told" the list-takers that he had no money to give in this year; that he had given it all to the Lord. His money is said to be in the bank here, and the county commissioners will in vestigate the matter further. Vheii they get to lying on the Lord it's time to call a halt. A Man Who Shed Iin. A Chicago dispatch to the Herald savs : John H. Price, a miner of -Phillipsburg, Mont., sheds his entire skin every year. He has twice come to Chicago to be attended by physicians, but this year he will go to Butte, Mont., where he will undergo the process which occurs regu larly on July 24th. Among the specimens in St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Chicago, is Mr. Price's skin of last year which, re moved in sections, was put to gether and stuffed. Price un derwent in the same institution the experience in 1890, and in the last thirty-two years he has annually exchanged his old skin for a brand new one. Besides having the only ne gro girl evangelist, North Car olina is 1 distinguished by hav ing the only negro vice presi dent of the national league of republican clubs John C. Dan cy and the only negro member of congress George H . , White And a former well known dem ocrat, one of those who bolted with the Palmer-Buckher peo ple last fall, accepts from the negro congressman indorsment' for a small consulate (or most any office) under this republi can administration. Concord Times. .' ' . irk . A newspaper without ene mies is scarcely deserving of friends. The vicious and law less neverlike a bold, fearless newspaper, and every self-rc-specting publisher should be proud of their emnity. There are other jnewspaper foes how- evei who are more troublesome and consequently more to be feared. First. And foremost is the man who owes -a newspaper an honest debt and will not pay it. Then there is the ambitious mortal who wants an office and complains because the newspa pers cannot" Consistently cham pion his cause; he is pretty like- ry to become an enemy. The man who wants to shape the policy of a paper and is not al 1 T 1 lowed to uo so, is a sure enemy but the meanest enemy is the man whom the newspaper has befriended, and who deliberate ly condemns the sheet after se curing from it all the assistance he possibly can. Fair Bluff Times. A Fireproof Tr se- A Government report from Columbia contains a description of a tree, known as. the chapar- ro, which is said to possess the quality. of being fireproof. It grows on the vast plains of Co lombia and the north of South America, called savannas, ex tensive districts which a re parch ed with heat except during th rainy season. It has long oeen the custom to clear the ground for the new vegetation which springs up so luxuriantly: on theseTplains after the raiivy sea son by means of fire and such fires, miles in extent, kindled by the herdsmen, destroy every thing in the shape of vegetation except the chaparro tree which survives to afford a welcome shade in an almost treeless re- ffinn to""- It is a small tree, seldom growing to more than twenty feet in height, with a girth of about three feet, and it owes its protection from fire to the na ture of its hard, thick bark. The bark lies onv the trunk in loose layers, which do not read ily conduct heat to the more delicate parts of the structure. It is a general idea among the natives that -this tree grows on-? ly where gold is abundant in the soil below. That it is commo"h in auriferous districts is indis putable, but there is no ground for supposing that it do?s not grow elsewhere Ex. ASM OF EN LETTER To MOTHERS. WE, ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD C ASTORIA," AND " PITCHER'S C ASTORIA," AS OUR TRADE MARK. I DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Hyannis, Massachusetts, was the originator of "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," the same that has dome and does now on eer bear the facsimile signature of C&fft&ZZfo wrapper. This is the original " PITCHER'S CASTORIA' which has been used in the homes of the Mothers of America for over thirty years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is the kind you have always bought yzttZSi0 071 e ancL has ihe signature of C(afiZk wrap per.' No one has authority from me to use my name ex cept The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is ct 8,1897: 0 Do Not Be Deceived endanger the life ot 'yowr child by accepting substitutewhich some druggist may offer you Do not a cneap (because he makes a few gredients of which even he does not know. "The Kind You 'Have Always Bought ,; BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF Insist The Kind That TNC CKNTAUH COMMNV. Literature Going to Waste- Jar aown in the subterranean recesses of J the capitol a lot of good literature-is going to waste and Martin McKay, a New Yorker, who has charge of it by reason of his position as super intendent of the House folding- room, properly styles it (the greatest circulating library; in the world. ( ! Mr. McKay has now in stock over 800,000 volumes of eulo gies, agricultural reports and reports of,, other bureaus. . His dominion has a capacity of over one million volumes. , These are sent broadcast over the United States at the request of Congressmen from time to time to their constituents, but the stock oir hand is rarely deplet ed. " ' ; The largest number of reports tuc tut; igi luiuimai, xijiiuii member is credited with 990 of them. To members who' repre sent the city districts, such as Bradley, Sulzer, Cummings and Quigg, of New York, city, these 990 copies, together with the 100 or so of - each eulogy that each member is entitled to, are of very .little usei The city members usually swap them for almost any old thing that a country member who needs them in his business has to ex change. McKay, who has charge of these millions of books, has the reputation of being able to find blindfolded any report or eulogy dating back fifty years. Wash ington Letter to New York World. TRADE-MARK. Nature's Nervine and Rapid Restorative. An unfailing cure for Diseases of the Digestive. Nervous and Generative Systems. , A Tonic of rje efficacy for the old and young and of marked ser vice for Students, Teachers, and Jail who are engaged in Brain work or close pecupations. - CURES Depression, Tired Feelings, Henfasness, Muscular Weakness, Loss of Appetite, Palpitation of Heart, Restlessness, Hysteria, Eerie Weakness', General Discomfort, Excesses, V llctolism, and that almost innumerable series of diseases and complications resulting from any derangement of the Nervous system. Invaluable for weak women and nervous children. Steady ITerves, Braced System, Sound Best, Good Work, HSCEED BT -Dsns-' .' Dr. Cox's" Cocelin ! ITerro 1 Tonic. CONTAINS NO OPIATES ON OAN6ENOUS DHWCS TO MARC A HABIT. 50 Cents per Bottle;' y If three bottles be ordered at onetime, a copy of Oriole Cook Book will be included free. AT DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS OR DIRECT Or US ON RECEIPT Of PRICE SO CENTS. Winkelmann & Brown Drug Co. SOIE PROPRIETORS, - BALTIMORE UD U. 8. A. ! For sa.'e by Hood & Grantham, Dunn, N. C. J Si 111: i . ; more pennies on it), the in on Having Never Tailed You. TT MUNHV STHCCT. WKW VORK CITY. Io Ioly grainy in Ufuli. ! has been abandoned has been condemned by the church of the Latter-Day Saints for years and is absolutely dead is as conclusive as the proofs that slavery no longer exists in the United States. From a period antedating the ' admission of Utah into the Union by many months, all reliable authorities official and unofficial Republi can and Democratic, Gentile and Mormon, have agreed in the declaration that polygamy had been in good faith and for all time given up. The Gentiles in Utah have not. hesitated to bear testimony to the honesty of their Mormon neighbors in the surrender of this item of their creed. Washington Post. Some time ago, a Hre bottle of ChamberlaiD6 - ie. olera and Diarrlcei RemeH vf. II int mj hand? just at a tim r y tw, ear-old boy wa err bl CI c Hi howels w re beyoL.' f.-i.t-ol U't hail tried many remetiien, t io fn' pose, but the little bottle of c lie Cnolera an DiarrVoe' Remp-dy spepdik cured him. William F. Jonb. Ogle,tby, Ga. For sale bv N B Hood Don n . N. C THE Charlotte Dailv Observer, J. P. CALDWELL, Editor. . ATo;f Carolina's Leading Newspaper Reliable, Complete Daily Reports From The State and National Capitals. Progressive', Candid, j and High Toned. Its Bailee! t of 'news is Hhvjiy.s cornpre hiMisive and from authoritative sources. Its local reports are full anfl up to-late. Subscription Price: $8 00 Per Year. The Semi-Weekly Charlotte Observer A complete Home Journal issued everv Tuesday and Friday and contaiuii ": all the new of the week In. a compact form A paper every fanner tdiould have. Onlj $1.00 per year. " t You cannot afford .to be with out the ! IMEWS AND OBSERVER. Alf the News, Foreign, N..tional, State, and Local all the time. Full Associated Prehs Dispatches Largest circulation in the S.ate. Dllln'Mot.!.' . n . fl " - j aim uuerer, jt per .year. $3 o0 six months. i Wetklj North Caroliuian, $1 per year. 50 cents six montb.. f Address NEWS & OBSERVER, , Raleigh, N. C. BO, YEARS EXPERIENCE. V V TRADB MARKS, . - . w , - COPYRICHTS Ao. qaickly aaoertaln, free, wbetner an inrantlnn pecUlnoUoeintbe moj vo. reoatTS JCIEIJTIFIC AMERICAII, befnll Patichts aeat free. Addreiii Z p : U v r MUNN A CO.. 361 UrejUwar. Row Ysrk. Co.'s Gorsots, MAKE. F3 Gi American .Beauties RCC0T5 CORRECT SHAPES. ARTISTIC EFFECTS. w All Lengths. HE WEST MODELS. FAHCY asd PLAIN. 1 ' tv Li': Vv OiTLiu.U Box. FEATHERBOHE CORSET CO.. SOLE MANUFACTURERS. SOLD BY R G. Taylor, Dunn, N. C. State Normal and Indus trial College, Greensboro, N- C. Oilers the young Women of the State thorough professional, lifer scientific, and indn-t rial ed ir3r, classical. ucation. ANNUAL EXPENSES $90 to $130. Faculty, of. 25 members. More than 400 re'g- ilar students. Practice school of 12C pupils tot teach ers. More than 1.200 matriculates . rep M'sentini; every couniy in the state ex cept three. 'oi lesjM)ndence Iny'lcd from those desiring competent trained teachers. To secure lnar.; in dormi tories all fiee-tuition applieationsi must le made ln-fore August l-t. For catalogue nd iiiforniation, address President Charles MclKit, . .. (Jreensboro. N.C. NORTH". CAROLINA COLLEGE OF AGRI CULTURE and MECHANIC ARTS, will open Sept. 9th, 1897. Thorough academic, .scientific and technical courses. Ex perienced Specialists in ever1 tlejmrtment.- Expenses per 'Session, . I3n.cl-u.cHrj.gr Board For Couity Students. $ 93.00 For all other Si udents, 123.00 Apply for t atajogue to Alexander Q. IIolladay, LL. D., IvALeiqh, N. Presiden .fMNITY QOLLEGE Next Session Opens September ? I hree full courses of studv. Large mimlter of elective. Two full chain' ii bnglisn. Women admitted to all elasse One Hundred and One Thousand Dollars added to the endowment during the prenenr year ilnlv male literarv eol letre iu North CaroliiiH that is loc:ied"in a city . I lie best business course offered In tlie State. Seu. for album and cita logue. Address J NO. C. 'KILfiO, Durham, N. C. THE UNTVEUSITY. "47 Teachers, 413; Students (bummer School 158) Total, o4D,. Board $8 a month, 3 Brief Courses, 3 Full Courses, L:uv and Medical Schools and Schoo of Pharmacy. Graduate Courses open to -WdSien, Suinnw School for Teachers, Scholarship and loans lor tlia JSeedV. Address, Pkesi dent Alder man, Chapel Hill, N. C. THE EVENING mm. The onlj afternoon paper in Wil mington. "Democratic in princii.le and noli. tics. Independent end- Impartial Honest and Fair toward all." o o ' It reaches the people, is with the people, fur the people, and of the people Accarat-; and complete latent newa K market report, tvd telegraph, and all the local happenings 4 'THE CITY BY THE SEA." By mail only $3 00 a j ear For A-lvertieing rates or aubscrio- tion adnre THE EVENING DISPATCH. Wilmington, N. C. ATLANTI COAST V WILMINGTON AND AND.RRANC1IKS AND FLORENCE li a I? CONDENSED SClfKbrt I ' D May ICtli, hs!); " trains ooi'N'a sbrTVi - Rocky Mount, 12 a. m., io:.-,5 Jn Leave Tartoro, 12:12 n. m ' Leave Rocfry Mount, -lsa v 5:45 a. in., li:45 p in. T " M- p Leave Wilson, Jt.o a m, im,1ib, i:12 pm. 11 I'm, rA Leave Helm a, 3:00 a in. Leave Kayetteville, 4:io ii mi r.,,, ' Arrive Florence. 7::?r a m, ,, K Leave Ooldsboro, 7K).Ta m, :t in , , ' Leave Manolla, 8.1)7 a mU i , Arrive Wilmington, jmo a , (,"'; TRAINS OOlSo NoRTll ' Leave Floretce, 8:15 am, H:i5 , ' Leave rayettevllle, n:i0 a iu t , Leave Pelma, 1.W) a m. ' m. Arrive Wilson, 1:4 a m. 12:io i. m Leave Wilmington, 7:15 p tn JJ! ' Leave Magnolia, 10:10 a ui, v-'fi i, fn L.eave uomauoro, n:ati a ui in in ,71 Leave WlUon. l u p m. l;:h ' I 12:48 pm. "v1, A nitlira IYswlrv Kfiait a . 11:57 P in. 1:0 p in. Leave Tarboro, 12:12 p iu. Leave Rocky Mount, 2:. jn' Arrive Weldon, 3:3rf p in. i 4 , . . Weldon 4:10 p in, Halifax 4-- n1 K' u.l.n4 CCA.. V III tw. Klnston 7:55 p m. Returning , 7:.0 a m, Greenville m a m, arrive KuN at 11:18 am, Weldon 11:33 a m dan, Sunday. , ' aalyirJ Trains on Washington Branch luton t.iO a m, and 1:U p m., rriv p V.lOani, and 2:40 p m, ivturnini u.Vt' mele 9:351a in. and CuWp m. arriv"u 1 h 11:00 a m, and 7:20 p m, daily. n8'11' Train leaves Tarboro N. C. iUu I Sunday, at 5:30 p i,,.. niuu' m., arrives Plymouth 7 40 p. , . H Returning leaves Plymouth W.ul Kniidav.TKOa.in.. and sm ' rives at Tarboro 10 05 a. in., n Ui , a-. lraln on Midland NC Branch lavn , ' boro, N.C, daily except Sumlay.no., rive Smithfleld N C, 8 ho a ni k1 " leaves tSmithfleld. N. C. 9 tm , . GoMaboro.N. o. 10 i5 a. m. ' ltn Train on Nashville Branch l. avci b ' Mount at 4;:.0 p. m., arrivon Na.shvili J,1, in., Spring Hope 6:30 p. in. lit turn'iu, ' Iring Hope 8:00 a. m.. Nashviii- Li?' SUIKlHV ttlal. . arrive at R-cky M unt 9:05 a. iii:.daiiv.J Sunday. a"lfr Train on Clinton Branch leave Vari,J Clinton ..ally, except Sunday, at tcxOa.il, ' .,. ......a , v union i III ami it Ki a. in. Tk TT1 HPII1PI11I liiffll'iid fi:... . ' i it Train No. 78 make clone :niiin-t'lnn' nou ior an pninis mirm ciai v n Richmond. Also at Rocky Mount with V foli and Carolina railroad" fur Aoftoik V- an uiuis nurui via .xorioiK. II. Al. -KMKRSON General I'aMMcn-cr Airnni J. H. KKXLY. T. M. EMERSON, General Maii- Traffic Mauager. " RAILWAY. JOHN GILL Kf-ceivcr. CONDENSED SCHKOULE. in i:in i my no, lssr North Hoi-nd. lUllj Leave Wilmington Arrive Fayettevllle Leave Fayettevllle Leave Fayettevllle Junction.. Arrive Hanford.... , Leave Sanford Leave Climax...-- Arrive Greenslniro eave (ireensboro Leave Stokesdale .'. Leave Walnut Cove ........ Leave Rural Hall Arrive Mt. Airy ... hi:, i i 3.4: 5 Dip i S.i " (!.5 ' 7.r. 7.15 c: " .M " IK South Bound. No.r Leave Mt. Airy S.K t4 Leave Rural Hall... M Leave Walnut Cove J.U Leave Walnut Cove . Leave 8tokesdale.... ; 7.5J " Arrive Greensboro i w " Leave Greensboro ; l.w Leave Climax i i " tLeave Hanford -1L: Arrive Fayettevllle Junctl.n H.it t Arrive Fayettevllle HM ' Lave Fayettevllle 1.13 " Arrive Wilmington I 4J North Bound. Leave Bennettsville 7. Arrive Maxton i"1" Leave Maxton , ; Leave Red Npringa ?. i H-fl . L.eave Lamtier lirldge Leave Hope Mills - Arrive Fayettevllle . lo it . 1M.-I z-3 SOUTH BOUND. Leave Fyetteville......... Leave Hoie Mills Leave Lumber Bridge Leave Red Hprings... Arrive Maxlpn Leave Maxton- Arrive Bennettuvsville. iM ; 5.i ' 11 K.I3 ' , 7.: !' Ho.i M'lt North Bound. Leave Raraseur - Leave Climax.- Arrive Greensboro Leave Greensboro... Leave tttofcesdale-.. Arrive Madison..' .:3 ' w.. (10 '" I I I yo. if 'Pall 1 south Bound; 'Tim I 3.1'' " 1 1- : i H : n ! 8..TS . Leave Madison Leave Htokesdale Arrive Greensboro Leave Greensboro... Leave Climax. .. Arrive Ramseu : t Meals. " conni:ctio.n lo.it i J K f a w . . 1 . t. y, II... Hanford with Keaboard Air Linf. ',.,,) oaiwu wiiii varoiuia it-mia. - ,lmt (Vnlral boro with Houthern Railway, at '" i with Norfolk k western Railway. HOG AND, CHI CHOLERA USE NO OTIIKR- The only ren.wl in positively V? I nt nA onr Cholera. '"J demand fl.W . A Tr al ni" v.i. - .J TTTB TITTUTT tt rTTOT.1!llA CD. DURHAM. NORTH OA BOU Return thla coupon wim r- & order. coupo - , ... . uanted-nn laea as?? JroUct yaar Id-aa: they wy P"u,p, Writ )6hH WKPDBRBDBJ Vo fU CAPE FEAR TADEIK CKEN Subscribe fpr Tue Union. BT, WaatiUrum. D. for "d
The Democratic Banner (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 4, 1897, edition 1
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