Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / May 8, 1889, edition 1 / Page 2
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GOLDSBORO BUSINESS CARDS 1 Dr . JAMES H . PO W E LL'S Drtjo Store in "Law Bcildtxg. Corner store, north end, keeps con stantly in stock Fresh Drugs, Patent Medicines, &c. Prices as low as at any drug store in the ily. Also offers hU professional services to the surrounding community, at day or night. R. W. NIXON. - - SWIFT GALLOWAY. NIXON & GALLOWAY, Attorneys at law, Goj.dsboro, N. C. Office : Room No. 2, Law Building, up stairs. POUTER & GODWIN, Contractors and Builders. Plans and estimates furnished on ap plication. F. J. II AGE, bit.. Artistic Wall Paper Hanger and House Decorator. WATTS & WATTS. Dealer in Fine Jewelry, Watche. Etc. Repairing promptly done by experi enred workmen. JST'Old Gold and Silver bought exchanged for new goods. F. J. IIAGE, Sr., Sign and Ornamental Painter fgTComBponc!e:ice Solicited. . W. COX, Real Estate Agent. Office the second door fn m the cm r f John and Walnut streets. 53"Collections of House Rents . specialty. J. W. Turner, PL A I1C and ORNAMENTAL PLAS TERER and C ALSO MINE U. Orders left at Miller & Shannon's Drug Store will receive prompt aad careful attention. IFW Correspondence Solicited. JOHN W. ALPHIN, Dealer In Heavy and Fancy Groceries. HIGHEST Prices Paid for Country Produee, and Sold at LOW EST Figures. My Duplin county friends will please fiall on me. fTW Corner of James and Spruce Sjreets. S. B. PARKER, Gun, Tin and Locksmith Repairing Neatly and Promptly Done. Roofing and Roo. -Painting Done at Lowest Prices. A full line of Flower Pots and Hang ing Basket?. 13. CREECH, - Dealer In SUGAR, COFFEE, MOLASSES, BUT TER, Lard, Candies, Crackers, To bacco, Cigars, Snuff, &c, to be sold Low for cash or country produce. UST'Co-ncr Slocumb and Pine Streets - W. II. TJnclei-liill, Dealer In FINE WINES and LIQUORS. Groceries A. SpecialtY. T. 13. Ilollingsworth, Dealer In STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES, CIGARS and TOBACCO. 23? Country Produce a Specialty. 1$ Corner Slocumb and Pine Streets. C7j. BEST, Dealer In All Kitd of FAMILY and FANCY GROCERIES, at the LOWEST .PRICES to ce SOLD. Country produce Bought and Sold. 23?" Cormr Hill and Slocumb Streets. NOTICE- The undersigned having purchased a large lot of Timber near this city are prepared to fill all ordeis for lum ber on Short Notice aud at Reasonable Prices. See our prices before purchasing. Orders left with I. S. D. Sauls, W II. Griffin, at this ofiioc, or at Post office, will receive prompt attention. Respectfully, W. E. LEWIS & COMPANY, Goldsboro, N. C. newsy briefs. A. freight train ran ...o a burning bridge at Cattawissi, Penn., an. i broke through into the ravine, making a terrible vrreclc and kill !fag Engineer Bcnsiiis. Firanm Jonas Rus sell and Brakeniaii Jams Indine. The loss was about $70, GOO. : i A GTjSHEE oil well tras discovered at Le 'gronville, Penn. It threw oil 115 feet in the air, and was running at the rats of 700 bar rels a day. The plant of the Harlan (N. Y.) Electric lighting Company was destroyed by fire, Causing a loss of nearly $150. CO J. Forest fires swept an nra of about 2000 acres surrounding rvlilivilie, X. J., destroying barns, crops and mucli valuable timber. The loss was estimated at o0,000. Oliver Perry Lewis, cged twenty-one rears, of New York city, tlrowned himself While clad in bis dress suit in Central Park reservoir. He had recently undertaken the support of his mother and sisters, and shame and distress at Lis failure are thought to have been his motive. Before drowning himself he had fixed the day and hour of his funeral, and sent out notices to friends asking them to attend it. , James Conner and James Harris were killed near Homer, Mich., by a premature sxplosion of dynamite while blasting stumps George M. McNeil, formerly of Iowa, employed on the Oak Levee, at Baton Rouge, La., and two colored wemen Colly Norton and Frankle Romero, were drowned by the upsetting of a skiiT in which they were j attempting to cross the river. I A collision occurred between two freight j trains a mile south of Glen Mary, Tenn. Brakeman Taylor, Conductor Hinelineand j Engineer Rusk were crushed to death. Two others were slightly injured. The Secretary of the Treasury has ap pointed Daniel A. Grosvenor, of Ohio, to be chief of a division of the First Comptrollers office. He is a brother cf Representative Grosvenor. ! Sir Edward Malet, th British Ambas sador at Berlin; Mr. Scott, the British Minister at Berne, and Mr. Crowe, the com mercial attache of the British Embassy at Paris, have been appointed P oval Commis sioners to represent England at the Samoan Conference. j MR. Pendleton, the United States Minis ter to Germany, will take no part in the con ference in Samoan affairs. He presented his letters of recall to the Emperor William, and Immediately left Berlin. j Messrs. Kasson, Bates and Phelps, the American Commissioners to th9 Samoan Conference left London for Berlin. J KING Charles of Romnania officially an nounced that his nephew, Prince Ferdinand, had been selected as heir to the throne of Roumania PROMINENT PEOPLE. Hon. S. S. Cox is lecturing out West. THE Czar is learning to play the cornet. J. D. Dana, the geologist, is seventy-fire. Von Moltke, the soldier, is eighty-eight. Alfred Tennyson, the poet, is seventv Bine. J Gttnmaker Krtjpp's annual income is fL 95,000. Queen Victoria's favorite dish is tapioca pudding. 1 Crown Pbencess Victoria, of Sweden, has given birth to a son. Senator Ingalls has a passiou for bright colors, and is very dressy. John Wanamaker, the new Postmaster General, is worth $10,000,000. Within the past few years Secretary Blame has doubled his fortune. George Bancroft, the historian, has en tirely ceased his literary work. Secretary Proctor is going "West to look Biter Government work in progress out there. Mr. Chamberlain says that all domestic animals had an instinctive fondness for John Bright. Russell Sage, Jay Gould's financial friend, is seventy years old and worth $40, 000,000. ' Dr. McGlynn will spend the coming sum mer in a lecture tour through Great Britain smd Ireland. The King of Greece buys his clothes in London, while the Queen sends to Paris for her costumes. David Sinton is the richest nia.n in Cin cinnati, bora in a cabin in Ireland, and worth now $5,000,000. Queen Natalie has been induced to re turn to Servia. Ex-King Milan will, there fore, return also. Mrs. Grover Cleveland is frequently leen on New York thoroughfares, usually with her mother. Captain Rigio, the last survivor of the band of Lafitte, the pirate slaver, recently died at Grand Isle. The German Crown Prince, six years old, has to get up at sis every morning and begin his studies at seven. The widow of Chief Justice TVaite will be compelled by her reduced circumstances to open a boarding-house. The Kingof Holland has bada marvelous recovery. His physicians expect that he will be able to resume his duties in a few weeks. Colonel Hugh 3IcCalmo:'"t is the most experienced cavalry officer in the British ervice. He has served in eight campaigns. The new Earl of Carlisle has emptied all the ale m his cellar, and closed the public houses on his property. He is a practical Prohibitionist. E. P. ALUS, who died in Milwaukee a few days agq, had policies of insurance on his life amounting to over f500,000. His yearly out lay in premiums reached 5532,000. WrxxiAil II., at a recent banquet., drank the health of the youngest sauor in the German navy." He referred to Prince Henry, his nephew, who was three days old. John D. Jennings, the Chicago real estate millionaire, who died a few days ago, was called the father of the ninety-mne-year Jeasesystem. His estate amounts to more than $5,000,000. The source of General Bonlanger's income still continues to be a puzzle to the Parisians. In spite of the most'riid search, it is im possible to find out exactly where the vast sums which the General dispenses so liberally come from. 'r Admiral David D. Foster Grand Mar shal of the Centennial naval oarade, will celebrate his seventy-sixth birthday on the 8th of June. He recently held a reception with his wife, in Washington., on the occasion of their golden wedding. The Commander-in-Chief of the Army of the Sultan of Morocco is an Englishman, the eldest son of Surgeon-General "Maclean, and he wears in Morocco the title of "Chief Kaid." He enjoj-s immense- honors in Mo rocco, and as he is to soon visit England, the Sultan insists that ha. shall be accompanied by an escort of a usi-irea pi -ed "nen. The lowest estimate pkces the we'dtii of President Harrison's Cabinet at '-4-", 2G0.C00. THE NATIONAL GAME. BOSTON is disappointed in Ray. Thx Washington Club is complete The Memphis Club has reorganised. Bates will pitch for Havard College. Bareley has signed with Kansas City. Cleveland is the League baby this year. Ruland is to Captain the Havard College Sine. Bostokians begin to think their outfield is weak. The four ball rule makes the pitchers work. Phenomenal Smith is suing the Baltimore Club for $750. Carroll has been appointed Captain at the St. Pauls. The Columbus (Ohio) Club is in need of a second baseman. President Harrison thoroughly enjoayt game of badSbalL Elmer Smith, of Cincinnati, is styled the dead arm pitcher. O'Brien, of the Brooklyfls, made the first three-bagger of the year. The Pittsfield (Mass.) High School girls have organized a ball team. Ladies are to be admitted free at all the games in Louisville this season. Qutnn is said to be the best thrower and the most active man on the Baltimore team. The Minneapolis team is to have a hand some street uniform of gray for use on trips. Never before this season has the Baltimore Club opened the championship season with a defeat. The first man to make two home runs in a single game this season was Duffee, of St. Louis. The Pittsburg Club has put its rules in book form for the players to carry about with them. Baltimore has the honor of being the first club in the race of 1889 to shut out an other club. The largest and finest baseball grand stand in the country is the one at the Philadelphia baseball grounds. Nineteen hundred dollars were divided among the New York players as a result of the Brooklyn series. Hutchinson, Chicago's new pitcher, is in finer form than he ever was in nis life, and his speed is simply terrific. The salaries and traveling expenses of this year's Kansas City team will cost Use management about $40,000. Cross, of the St. Louis Browns, is the most gile catcher in the business. He is perfectly eat-like and quick as lightning. It is predicted that the largest leather failure in Chicago this year will be the failure f the Chicago team to hit the ball. Williams, of last year's Buffalo (N. Y.) team, is beyond doubt the smallest catcher who ever played in a professional team. Ed. Williamson, the famous shortstop of the Chicago Club, who was injured during the game in Spain, has returned to America. A man who contributed $1000 to the stock of the New Yorks when the club was organ ized has since drawn $10,090 dividends three years in succession. A PURSE is to be presented to John Morrill upon his first appearance with the Washing ton Club at the "Hub" by his Boston friends as a token of appreciation. The League magnates are quite unanimous in their intention of passing a resolution not to engage ball players who are in the liquor lusiness during the winter. President Spalding, of Chicago, is op- gised to the three-strike and four-ball ruje. e favors last year's rule with the pitcher put a few feet further back. Manager Hart, of the Bostons, has taken charge of tho team. He will control the players on and off the field and will be held 5 lely responsible for their doings. The defeat of Louisville and Baltimore by he Kansas City and Columbus teams, re spectively, indicates that the weak clubs in the Association intend to have a say in the pennant race. The Chicagos and All-Americas broke even in the ten games played in this country. Altogether the teams played 53 games. AH America won 28, Chicago won 22 and 3 games were tied. Owen Williams, the young player who played right field for Canton, Ohio, last season, and whose sale to Lima for one dollar has gone down into history in the company with the Kelly ?10,000 deal, has signed to play centre field for Hamilton, Ohio. Governor Hill vetoed the bill which would have enabled the New Yorks to play auother season on the famous Polo Grounds. This compelled the New Yorks to play then opening game of the League season in Jersey City, y.J. Washington. The Secretary of State is informed that Russia will send delegates to the Marine Con ference, which meets at "Washington on the 16th of October next. The Postmaster-General made the follow ing important appointments: W. B. Cooley, of Pennsylvania, to be Chief of the Money Order Department; Frank M. Smith, of Maryland, and S. G. Sullivan, of Ohio, to be Superintendent of Mails at Baltimore and Cincinnati, respectively; John A. Chapman, of Illinois, to be Chief of the Inspection Division; Edward G. Carlin, of Pennsylvania, to be Assistant Superintendent of the Rail way Mail Service. Commissioner Tanner has discharged twenty traveling pension examiners because the appropriation for their pay was exhausted. The Secretary of the Treasury has ap pointed Daniel A. Grosvenor, of Ohio, to be chief of a division of the First Comptroller's office. He is a brother of Representative Grosvenor. Ex-Goverxop. "William M. Stone, of Iowa, has been appointed Assistant Cknum sioner of the General Land Office. Foreign. W. F. Dclmage, Crown Timber Inspector at Rat Portage, Manitoba, left town sud denly a few days ago, $20,000 short in his ac counts. An explosion has occurred in the Brance peth Colliery at Durham, England. Five persons were killed. The street car strike in Vienna has been ended in favor of the men who have re turned to work. A British espdition has destroyed the chief town of the Wendeb tribe, on the Suly mah River. Africa, and released 3000 slaves. A eridgk on the Aroya Railroad, in Peru, valued at $500,000, has been swept away by a cloud-burst. General Bcplaxgee, Henri Rochefort and r;ther members of the General's party left Belgium for England, and arrived in London after an extremely rough passage across the channel and established head quarters at the Bristol Hotel. Sir Edward Malet, the British Ambas sador at Berlin: Mr. Scott, the British Minister at Berne, and Mr. Crowe, the com mercial attache of the British Embassy at Paris, have been appointed Royal Comirns sioners to represent England at the Samoan Conference. Mil Pexdleton. the United States Minis ter to Germany, will take no pat in the con ference in Samoa u afTairs. He presented his letters of recall to the Emperor William, and immediately left Eerlin. Messrs. Kasson, Bates and Phelps, the American Commissioners to the Samoan Conference left London for Berlin. King Charles of Roumania officially an - . .unced that r.phw. Prince Ferdinand. :' i ben Kv.e-.oi ii..." tiii iiuune of ricuuiania. Alfalfa cultivation is on the increase in Western Kansas. FARMS ANDFARMERS PlfiST W0BKDTG OF CORN. A Short Talk With Men Who Guide the Plow by Dr. W. L. Jones. j - i When should it be given ? Oa a cot ton farm the most convenient season is when cotton planting is finifhed, and whilst waiting lor the latter to roir.e up. When cotton is planted late (middle of May) this rule would make the first working of corn quite late also; but Mr David Dickson, who wa most observant and -Fuccessful, held that it was time and labor thrown away to work corn very early. Early in May glass make? its appearance, and just as it comes or when still quite young is the best time to kill it. These remarks apply to'corn planted in March, the time when most of the crop is planted in the cotton re gion. How should it b3 worked f Most farmers would say side it close and deep. Why, to cut its roots that is not prob Lly their idei; but to bre.ik the 1 nd well. : Sometimes it is not well broken at first, and needs the broking; fre qucntly hard, compacting rains tall af ter the corn is planted, which run the soil together and make it hard again. In such "ase it needs br aking also. Old lmd kept mostly under clean cultiva tion is very apt to be in such condition, and on such it is well to break it over again. But is a slow process, ai d on sumes precious time when it cannot well be spate 1. The lesion js, not to plant such land . in corn, it ia-ly pays. for thes are exactly those that fuffer most from drought. Plant only such land as is in good heart, that has a good supply of humus, and which after being well prep ired, . will remain pre pared. But if you have planted land that has run together, why break it again? Run close nd plow deep; put a fender on plow, so you can run close and not lose time bv having to stop and un cover the orn eveiy ! w t ps. It is slow work at best to bi mk wi'h a scooter, and every hind rauce should be removed out of the way. At thn North where soils abmnd in humus (from extended grass ai d grain culture) it is a common thing to wrk crn until it id six or eight inches hijh with tbr! harrow. The same practice is gaining some foothold in the 8 nth. When the land is in good ord.r, dots not need breaking, harrowing is both a great labor and time saving operafon. A harrow will go over six or eiht t.mes .as many aci es in a day us a plow will. A smoothing hairow, one with teeth set sloping backwards, is the kind used. It is run in the sxtne direction as the rows, not. across them. It the. corn hits been pinn ed in a water furrow, the harrow will throw enough d.rc in it to cover up young grass, and will disturb the youn corn very little. After it gets larger, the harrow will mash it down more or less, will make it Jo k badly, but the corn will hoon right itself and grow right along. The harrow and the cul tivator are he implements wth which the large corn crops of the Northwest are raised. Washin ton as a Farmer. From an article on the Centennial of Washington's inauguration in the Cm tury we quote the following:. Good reason had M. Hrissoc de Warville, the traveler and author (the brisk little renchman' who became chief of the Girondists and died by the guillotine in 1793), to cry out in a-tonishment of the General's success in farming, when he went the rounds of Mount Vernon in the autumn of 178?. The estates were then at the highest pitch of improvement they ever attained, crops of wheat, to- ' bacco, corn, barley and buckwheat 'bur dening the ground. What excited the Frenchman's chief surprise was that every barn and cabin, grove and clear ing, field and orchard, pas-ed daily be neath the eye of the master. All the busy life of the negro world was regu lated by his personal directions to over seers and bailiff. No item was too in significant to bring before hi notice. The minutest contract for work agreed upon was put into writing. How curi ous, for example, the agreement with Philip Barter, the gardener, found among Washington's papers, wherein Philip binds himelf to keep sober for a year, and to fulfill his duties on the place, if allowed 'four dollars at Christ mas, with which to drink four days and four nights: two dollars at tasrer, to eect the same purpose; two dollars at Whitsuntide, to be drunk for two days; a dram in the morn.ng, and a drink of grog at dinner, at noon. For the true and faithful performance of all these things, the parties have hereunto tec their hands, the twenty-third day of April, Anno Domini, 1787. his " 'Philip Barter, mark. " 'George Washington. " 'Witness: " 'GbORGE A. W.A'H ngton, "'Tobias Leaf.'' 0i' of Bircri Costs Monsy. Recently there wa? sent fro-n orirxb to New crk five xwo-Hlloa tin can fil'ed with o:l of Mac b:r h, which was manufactured in Borah by John Miner. It is worth firOa gallon, and the fire cans contained 108 pounds of oil, valued at $800, or a little over J5 a pound. Black birch trees do not yield oil a the maple trees run san,. There is work in getting the tender twigs, and labor in the process of extract! ig the oil. One ton of twigs yields just three pound of oil, and it took nearly fifty-three tons of twigs to yield the ten gallons. This oil is used in givin the winlergreen favor to confections of all kinds. Ntte Lond-m Conn,) 2e!e;raj.h. CURIOUS FACTS. A. span is 10 j inches. The average human life is thirty-one years. The ralue of an Attic drachma was eighteen cents. Pigskin is now used for gloves and children's shoes. Vaccination is compulsory in England and optional in France. One out of every four persons in New York has money in bank. A colored man owns sixty houses and one of the hotels at Memphis. The new tunnel under thejake at Chi cago will be four miles long. During the civil war i7 Union soldiers were executed for desertion. Convicts cannot vote unless they have been restored to itizenship by a pardon. In Vermont, when they have snow, instead ot breaking the roads with a snow plow, they roil the snow down solid with a heavy roller. A new fruit has been discovered in Southern California. It looks like the fruit of the pear tree, but the pulp is soft and pasty, tasting like claret. An orchid grower says that in one spotted variety of the flower more than 100 will be given for one small spot, the plant being worth so much the mora. There is some doubt as to the place and date of St. Patrick's birth, but the leading authorities put Kilpatrick, near th8 mouth of the C yde, in Scotland, as the place of his birth. Several counties in California which are notoriously infested with mosquitoes are ridding themselves of the pest3 by planting eucalyptus trees, in the vicinity of which mosquitoes are unknown. Almost every day there are men at Cattle Garden, New York city, who assert that they are in search of and wiil'ng to marry any bright and intelli gent emigrant girl who pleases their fancy. Jonathan And ews. of En Sold, N. H., has been wearing his calf boots fot twenty-two years, his arctic overshoes twenty-three years and his gloves twenty four years, and all are good for some time yet. On board the British troop-ship that carried the Argyleand Sutherland High landers from Ceyion to Hong- on-, re cently, there were 140 applications for tea, coffee or cocoa, in place of the daily ration of spirits. A Massa husetts sportsman named Cbadwick has been hunting along Long Island Sound on a tricycle which travels on runners. He is able to cruise over many miles of inshore ponds and land locked bays daily without fatigue. Accidents in which people have been ser'ously injured by sneezing are cot un common. A few days ago a man at Scranton. Fenn., was atta ked with so violent a tit of sneezing that he broke two ribs, and the day before a man in Boston, through sneezing, dislo ated his shoulder. An Englishman has produced a pieca of mechanism containing 400 figures, representing horses, cannon, artillery, in fantry and a band of fifty -two men. each with an instrument A t ny w.nd mill turned by the current from burning candies, furnishes the power to move all the tgures automatically. One of the large shoe stores in Brook lyn has started someth ng that bids fair to cut into the income of the bootblacks of that city. In the rear of the store in question is a blacking stand where any regular customer can have his shoes poiished for nothing. The scheme, or course, is to attract trade, and as the chair has seldom been unoccupied since it was placed, it seems to take. A grand exhibition of safety apparatus is to be held at Berlin this summer, and the magnitude and importance of the undertaking is beginning to b appreciated. Until recently its character and scope were misunderstood. It is not to be a mere collection of apparatus and devices for the protection of the persons of work people, brought together to promote the interests of a small number of manu facturers. It will be rather a great in dustrial exhibition, superior to any held in Germany. A number of industrial operations will be carried on within the spacious building now in course of erec tion. Among these will be spinning, paper making, corn grinding, brewing, chocolate making, shaft sinking by the Pcetsch freezing process and other mine engineering work. This exhibition may be justly regarded as international. Prizes have been offered for the follow ing inventions: A prize of $2500 for a satisfactory means for preventing the in halation of dust in mills for grinding basic slag; a prize of $1000 for a similar means applicable to the mercury vapor in mirror factories, and several smaller prizes for a more efficient brake for the wheels of brewers' drays. The Albuqucic Isciuvu-ot k.xz "Xew Mexico covers a vast lake, and r wells are being su.ik in din"erent ports r the Territory this fact is being assure.. . A well sunk at Gallup has rxmetrated : body of water sixty feet in depth, an wherever a hole is sunk to the w?.ter it -" found to exiit in in3ihatiVI-: u-rt.-ties." 1 - " , 'Many extravagant stories are ia cjr culation," said George W. Allen to th St. Louis GloU'hmiocril representatiTe 'as to the cost of private cars, are used by railroad magnates, 0per singers,- imported actors and millioa aires, and I have often heard it static that an average Pullman palace car i. crM-tVi it'VOO. S?nr:a - WW. - f " " - y . ttic Printed hnnt r-ftr rntin" nil tVio , 0 ajr irom $100,000 to $-:KU0O. The fact of the matter is that a palace car costs aboat $U000 complete. The make-up 0f &'j cars, regular or special, is about the ame. Additional cost is bi ought about by the internal decoration, and tha must necessarily be limited. I doubt if there was ever a car constructed that cost more that &j(0M To exceed that figure we.would require a decoration ex. clusively in jewels and the precious metals.". , 'k v V7 m v NNE(oL0RsTrlAT ?O.Wacu nil-. INorFade NLY FUSING P il-fSlPhrni-? Sold bvdruggists TEH LESS BROZE PAINTS -C Color. 'KLKLESS Ltl NDRV BMJI5G. 7EERLESS INK POW DEBS - Kinds 7 ('n!or KULESS SHOE AND HARNESS IKEs.si(j "iEKLESS EGO DLS-8 Colon. Piedmont Air-Line Route. Richmond A Danville Railroad. CQEfleiisM SchedDle in Effsct Jan, 6, 1589. Trains Run hv 7.V Mndian Time. DAILY. SOUTHBOUND NO. 3:5. NJ. 50. NO 5'. Lv New York. Lv Philadelphia, Lv R lt. morn, Lv Washfnfrton. Lv Charlottesvflle, Lv Lvnchburg, Ar Danville 12l5am 4 30pm 7 2U a m 6 57 p m 0 45am 9 42 p m 11 St am linopm 3 40 p m 3 Oft a m h 45 p m 51fltn 8 30 p m 7 45 a m Lv Richmond, Lv Burkeville, Lv Kvsvi!le. Lv Danville, . .. Ar Greensboro,' 3 10 p m 5 12pm 553pm 8 50pm 10 35 p m 2 30am 4 27a m 5 07 an 5s (A a tn 9 42 a tn Lv GnMsb-ro, 11 -55 an 8 10pm Ar Raleigh, 2 10pm 12 am Lv fWma 3 40 r m Ar Raleigh 4 40 p m I.v R Vigh Ar Durham Ar Grei-RtKrr 4 4 p m 1 45 am 5 5 p m 3 12 a m 8 30 p m 7 4rt a ni Lv Salem 6 15 p m i 30 a m Lv Gremhoro. 10 45 n m 9 50 a tn Ar Salisbury, 12 21 a ui 1 1 IS a m Ar Stfltsvil!e, 1 51 am 12 12 p ra Ar ARheville, 7 44 am 444pm Ar Hot Springs, 9 21am 6 10 p m Lv Salisbury 13 2 a m 1 1 23 a ra Ar Charlotte, 1 55 a m 12 40 p m Lv Spartanburg 4 40a m 3 37 p m Lv Greenville. 5 50 am 4 4S p ra Ar Atlanta, 1 1 0.) m m 9 4 p ra Lv Chirlotr 2 10 a ra 1 ot) p m Ar Oluml ia ft 30 a m 5 10 p n Ar Augusta 10 30 p m 9 05 a m .' DAILY NORTHBOUND. No 57 No. 51. No. 53. Lv Anjfuirfa Ovumbia A Charlotte H 15 p tn 8 45 a m 10 40 d m 12 5 ) p ra 3 35pru 5!5i. m .v Atlanta. Ar Grwnvill, " Rnartanburg. 44 Charlotte, " Salisbury. fi oo p m 7 0 a 'ii ic!ani T il p m 2 1 1 a m :.: "2 p m 4 50 m 5 30 p n fi?iam 7 05 p ra Lv Hot Snrinzs s 05 p m 12 10 pm ' Ashville (igin 1 32 p n 44 Rtwfsville 3 30 a m fi 01 p m Ar Salisbury 4 37 p m (J 43 p ra Lv Salisbury 27pm 712a ra Ar Greens! mro. s u) a m 8 40pm 44 Salem. ll'0.ml 31 am Lv Gixemboro, 9 45 n vn 10 50 p ra A- Durham. V! o- m 4 : a m " Raleigh, 1 (r r !n 7 50 a m Lv Ra'eigh 10 X) a m Ar elmt 10 55 a m Goldsboro, 3 10 pm 11 45 a m Lv Gr ensboro 8 05 p m S 50 a m Ar Danville 9 47 a ra 10 20 j tu 44 Ive sville, 12 41 p m 1 4't - m 44 Burkevilia, 1 26 p m 2 3r am " RiohmoiuL 3 30 p in 5 15 a rn 4 Lvnehburg, ' C'harlotVsville, 44 tVasbineton, Baltimore, 4 Pbiladelphi 44 Nevr York 12 40 p m 12 55 m 2 55 p m 3 00 a m 7 35 p m (fOais 8 50pm 8 2 'am 30am 10 47 pm 6 20am 120pni I Mi iv. I ftily, ejr-ept Hunday SUCEPIKG CAR SERVIOK. On Trains 50 and 51, rudman liu.7et steep r birtween Atlanta and New York. On Train 52 and 53. Pullman Buffet sleep rfr between Waf t inton and Montgomery, Washington and Auuta. Pullman sleeper between Richmond and Greensboro. Pull man sleeier between Greensboro and Raleigh. Pullman Parlor Car leiwe.tn Salisbury au-' Knoxvilte. Through tickets on sale at principal sta tions to m11 points For rates and informa tion apply to any agnt of the company, or 'o Jas. L. TAYLOR. Gen.1 Pa.-. Agut SoL IIaas, Traffic Manager. ashipgton, D. C. J.S. rmn, Div. Pass. Agnt, Kich.uhoml, V TlThC, Div. Pass. Ajt. RiMgb. N.
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 8, 1889, edition 1
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