Newspapers / The Union Republican (Winston, … / July 7, 1887, edition 1 / Page 2
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Commnnicated. JENNIE, THE BOUNCER. Little Jennie is a bouncing lass, And a lively one is she; At bouncing none can her surpass, s Of high or low degree. - ' She bounces up at early dawn. And dresses for the day. Then goes bouncing o'er the lawn. In a bewitching way. Of all the bouncers in the land, I m sure that she is queen, She's ever foremost in the van, And bouncing there is seen. Elastic as a rubber ball. She up and down doth go, Bouncing 'fore both great and small. Regardless of friend or foe. She bounces best when at a ball, And dancing with a beau: Ah. then she bounces round the hall, Buoyant as ajzephyr's flow. Oh, then to see dear Jennie bounce. Quite reaches the sublime, As she waltzes round and round High bouncing all the time. She's ever bouncing when abroad, To show her agility; Most when farthest from her abode, And she's with company. She goes bouncing to the church, Quite gaily all the way. And many think by far too much. Upon the Sabbath day. At one bounce she's in the church Another, she's in her pew And bouncing, keeps her head at work, As no other one can do. So, now by some 'tis greatly feared She'll bounce from earth away; And nothing more from her be heard, Until the judgment day. Yet let none harbor such a fear, But bid her bounce along. In bouncing is her life and cheer, And makes her hale and stroncr. None need fear that she'll take flight, However high "she goes Though she quite bounces out of sight She'll return to earth, I'm sure. Then chide her not; but let her bounce, Where'er she will or can, For thus it is she hopes to pounce In the heart of some young man! And by bouncing hold to him fast 'Till she becomes his wife; Then bounce with him until his last Expiring breath of life. WHAT SHALL WE DO TO BE SAVED. Charlotte Messenger, colored. We do not mean to preach a sermon but as one of our jrinciple duties is to'look after and warn 1 our people of those things concerning their material, 'moral and intellectual welfare, we trust eacli one willr ask himself this question not saved spiritually, but .removed from the old time-served po sition of hewers of wood and drawers of water. This problem is easily solved. Let us take this as the genu ine and proper answer to the ques tion: "Jet morals, get land, get learn- "19 mg." The prosperity of any people depends upon their morals, without which, there is no substantial advancement. While thousands of, our people have made rapid progress in every particu lar we regret to say there is much more immorality among us than should be. As we have said before, our leaders should be unspotted. When a teacher, preacher or leader in society loses the confidence of his followers, and his character is questioned, he should be dropped at short notice and be jio long er trusted as a leader. We must do this to have pure women and brave men, and have them respected by all good people, and, in order to save our selves fronrthe curse of God's law laid down in the ten commandments. The negro must become owners of more land. They niusi stop smoking cigars, drinking whiskey, pleasure rid ing,, wearing line jewelry, fine dress; r and first of all, stop going to law with his neighbors. Fine dress and fine dinners are luxuries for the rich. Too often are our preachers in the way of morals and material advancement. They are themselves too fond of big dinners, fine cigars, &c. The preacher that walks the streets smoking cigars sets immoral and dangerous examples to a rising and dependent generation. This is the scientific age of the world's history, and the people must become educated in the sciences and arts. Ourboys and girjs must be en couraged, and urged upon to become educated and to read all the professions as well as make themselves proficient in all useful trades. The heart and the hand must be edu cated as well as the head. With an ed ucated, wealthy and moral colored' pop ulation, we are safe at all times and places. Safe from poverty, ignorance and vice, and to a great measure safe from the dangers of future punishment. The character, the habit and destiny of the youth are fixed by surrounding influences. If the home, school and church training is such as will animate and inspire the youth to possess the the moral, Christian virtues of the best men and women of our land, we will bring up an abundant , crop of intelli gent, industrious christians from the present generation. The youth must e taught that idleness is not only wrong, but exceedingly dangerous; that ! ignorance and idleness are bur . donsome with no hope of reward. That for all sin and wickedness both statute and divine law stands always ready to punish, for "the'wages of sin is death." A child should be compelled to attend school every day during the session unless he has a reason to remain at home. Punctuality is one of the es sentials for a child to learn early in life and practice till death. Children should attend Sunday School every Sunday and go 'to - the Church of the family and sit in the family pew. Then to be saved from the death of ignorance and poverty: Be sober, honest, indus trious, economical, intelligent, and the ! Negro will soon be recognized as the peer of other men. . . No medicine is more conscientiously prepared, more powerful, or more highly concentrated, than Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Its standard of excellence is the result of care ful study. -This preparation is acknowl edged by the medical profession to be the best blood purifier. GREENSBORO CRAIG TOLLIVEK KILLED. j . r The Noted Kentucky Desperado Shct j Down by a Sheriff s rosse. Morehead, Ky., June 22. About half-past 8 o'clock this morning deter mined men to the number of luO, all armed with Winchester repeating j ri fles came into Morehead under charge of Sheriff Hogge to srve a warrant on Craig Tolliver, charging him with false ; swearing in issuing warrants for the arrest of the Logan boys, killed several weeks ago. As one of the SherifFs posse was crossing the railroad near the water tank about fifty yards east of the of the Haines Cottage Hotel, and be fore! any attempt had been made j to serve the warrant, Craig Tolliver, who was 'near the hotel, saw him and fired at him. The man dodged behind a pile of lumber, and Tolliver and his two 'cousins, Bud and Jay Tolliver, and Hiram Cooper went into the hotel and barricaded the doors and windows. Then the posse came up under coyer of the brush behind the hotel and im mediately opened fire upon the build ing.l '; ' : Th'e house was soon surrounded, but at something of a distance. Xone of the Sheriff's men cared to get within range of the deadly guns the Tollivers knew so well how to use. After firing had been kept up for probably three-quarters of an hour the Tolliver men at tempted to leave the hotel and cross the railroad to another hotel on the opposite side. While making this foolhardly attempt the notorious lead er of the gang which has been such a ter ror to Rowan county went to the ground, pierced by four balls from the deadly Winchesters of the ambushed posse, two of the bullets going through liis head and two through his breast. The others got to the opposite house and fought the posse for some time, but, finding the dace less secure than they) had expected they made an at tempt to recross the railroad to their old position. In this they were unsuc cessful, for all three of them fell, rid dled with rifle balls. After ascertaining that no more re sistance j would be offered,! the posse picked up the dead men and placed them on the flour of the porch of the cottage hotel. Investigation showed that only one of the SherifFs posse was wounded, and that was Dr. Brown, who received an ugly flesh wound in the thigh. The fighting was kept up for two hours. During the firing the utmost consternation prevailed among the women and children, who ran from their houses and rushed to the depot, hoping thereby to escape the duel. The passenger train which is due here at 1 o'clock was delayed for two and a half hours on account of the shooting, as the fight began as the engine whis tled for Morehead. The Sheriff sent a body pi men to stop the train, but the engineer, hearing the firing, brought the train to a standstill before reaching the outskirts of the town. After the tight was over the engineer was permitted to run his train into the depot, which was immediately board ed by a number of the Sheriff's men armed with their Winchesters. Women screamed and a few fainted, while many of the men had business outside. The posse, however, carefully searched the train for one of the Tolliver gang they thought had escaped. I Catesby Tolliver, ! a boy and brother of Craig, had a hole shot through the leg of his pants.j The posse was composed of the best men in Kowan county. ; They ap peared to be hard-working farmers! and fere sober, earnest-looking men! Everybody in Morehead seems glad the Tollivers are exterminated, and the people will now breathe more free ly- I;!'"' I In the August (1884) election, after a heated contest, Cook Humphreys was elected Sheriff of Rowan county by -17 majority over Sam Goodwin. During the canvass many animosities were en4 gendered, the Martins allying thenii selves jwith Humphreys, and the Tolli-j vers with Goodwin's cause. Craig Tolliver, the leader of the latter fac-i tioD, swore after the election that Hum phreys should never ride Rowan conn ty as Sheriff, the result of which up to this date has been the sending of twenty-one souls into eternity, the maim ing and crippling of at least a score or more of persons, the destruction of all social relations and of nearly the en-! tire business interests of the county, and the bringing about of a state of lawlessness and terroism that has driv en good men with their familes away from home and friends to seek new homes in other parts of the country, where they might live without being in constant fear of their lives. The names of the victims in the or der killed are as follows: Solomon Bradley, John Martin, Whit Pelf rev, B. Caudelle, " Deputy Sheriff Baum gardner, Mason Keeton, John Marlow, John Davis, Wiley Tolliver, a railroad employe named Witch er, Willie Logan, Ben Rayburn, ' John Day, Floyd Tolli ver, a party whose name is not remem bered, j John B. Logan, W. H. Logan and the four killed to-dav. Fusmixgsbueg, Ky., June 27. The war in Rowan county is by no means ended, j The escaped Tollivers are now in Rowan county, their home, rapidly recruiting j a large following, and this week propose to retake Morehead, kill every man who took part in the recent killing of Craig Tolliver and three of his supporters. and then burn the town. j'Cal. Tolliver, a brother of Craig's is at the head of the movement. Cal. and a cousini also named Tolliver, were arrested in Elliott county Friday, on a rwarrant from Rowan county, and placed in jail at Martinsburg. That night a mob of forty or fifty Tol liverites broke into jail and j rescued the -two prisoners. There is intense excitement again throughout Rowan county in anticipation of the proposed raid. John Rogers, one of the Tolli ver men, who had such a narrow es cape from death at Morehead last Mon day, was arrested at Mount Sterling, Ky. He is charged with murder. - When everything else fails, Dr. Sage s . Catarrh Remedy cures. NORTH STATE: Thursday, A MYSTERIOUS STONE FORT. One of Tenneeaee Antiquities irk of the 3Xound IlalMcra. There is nothing in Tennessee, or in the south, whose antiquity is to myitcrious and entirely beyond the domain of decent speculation as the old fctonc fort, v.I.Ich L$ about a mile and a hclt belov.- tho town of Manchester. The two prongs of Dark river come within, gay, two hundred yards cf cacti other, and then widen out, making: a territory of perhaps one thou sand acres in the forks of the river, and below the Narrows. At the Narrows the fortj commences by a stone wall, now covered with earth, miming fro:i one river to the other, and the walls arc built along the banks of both rivers down to a point where a canal had been cut from one river to the other. There a wall is made from one river to the other, perhaps a quarter of a mile. On the outside of this wall is a hollow, and in this bollow 13 the sign of the canal or cut, evidently intended to protect the fort by both the wall and the canab From the npper to the lower wall at places there are high bluffs on both rivers. Wherever this bluff precipitous is found there is no wall, but wherever there is no natural barrier the wall is built. The en trance to the fort was at the upper end, and the gateways show that the builders were doing their work intelligently. The entrance is by a narrow passway, with walls on either side and offsets so as to prevent the enemy on the outside from having a direct entrance for themselves, and so as to protect those on the inside from missiles from the outside. The fort contains forty-seven acres, and is, or was when the writer first saw it, heavily tim bered, many of the tree3 of large size growing on top of the walls. CoL Sam Murray, who settled there about 1808, cut one of the trees from the top of the wall and found it to be 500 years old. One mile up the river from tho fort is an immense mound the largest one, perhaps, in the country making it probable that tho fort was built by the mound builders. Beyond this nobody knows anything about it. Col. Murray, who jwas a man of high intelligence, claimed to have conferred with the Indians of different tribes, but none of them could give him any account of it, either by tra dition orj otherwise. This fort is one of the many evidences that in this country, at some remote period, there was a race of people of more stability and intelli gence than the roving Indians which" the lirst settlers found. Nashville American Tlie Fopular Tandem Tricycle. I noticed in a walk through the park a few dajs ago that the tricycle is becoming very popular, and more especially the ma chine known as the tandem tricycle. It is the proper thing for a lady and gentle man to use one of these tandems, and many couples were spinning along merrily over the hard walks of the park. Some of tho ladies wore jaunty little caps and blue flannel dresses trimmed with white braid.' The effect was very pleasing. These tricycles are much more expensive than tho ! bicycles. A good one costs in the neighborhood of $300, and some come as high as 500. It will be remembered that an American artist and his wife made a trip through England and the continent on one of these machines not long ago. The trip was described in one of the magazines, and of course that gave a boom to tricycle riding. The labor of working these j machines is about equally divided between the two riders and they are especially well adapted to long distance traveling,1 but are practically out of reach of any one not having a good bank ac count. Brooklyn Eagle. ODDS AND ENDS. A workman in a vineyard in Napa val ley, Cal., committed suicide the other day by jumping into a cask of 'wine and drowning.j The outside seats of the New York Fifth avenue stages are now largely patronized by ladies in the evening, and consequently the avenue has quite a coaching club pa rade every night. , i 1 Says a London cable: "The subject is fast resolving into the question whether the Queen's jubilee is to be an incident of Buffalo Bill's capture of London, or whether Buffalo Bill is an incident of the jubilee." A law taxing ats in that state ten cents "per capita" is projected by a legis- lator of Georrfa. Mexico reports a big business boom, with a great rush of foreign capital. i i A naval officer; writing home, says that the Japanese calkers who labored on his vessel did three times as much work as the same number of our navy yard work men. A" book of rules for playing lawn tennis has been published, but it omits the most important rule of all for beginners, which is: First get your lawn. Louisville Courier-Journal. A pension is claimed by a Little Rock woman on the ground of nervous debility produced by seeing a wounded Federal soldier's leg amputated. Lots of pretty girls in New York wear nutmet ! around their neck as a charm against' malaria. Young men have it sprinkled on top of a class of milk and thinjrs for the same purpose. Omaha World. Advice to American Bachelors. The handsomest man connected ' with th American press is a woman. Mrs. Frank Les de. She is soon gofng to Europe, and ought to come back with a male attachment in the shape of a husband. If she does, every able bodied American bachelor ought to hide his head in ; shame. This elegant little woman has turned the cold shoulder to a number of titled foreigners and has given her own coun trymen plenty of chance to show whether they could win her on their own merits, but none scorn to have had tho winning qualities. The Times would awfully hate to see some "blarsted f urrinern carry off so desirable a matrimonial prize. Buffalo Times. Dnellng in tlnngaj-y. . Fifteen officers of the garrison of Gran in .Hungary were recently obliged to fight duels with as many civilians of the town in the course of one week. Two of them were killed, and most of the other fellows were badly wounded. This very , large and high toned row was all about one lady. Women's rights are evidently flourishing in Hungary. I : T2 IIbian Barley Sack. Two young ladies living near Auburn, CaL, being of an ingenious turn of mind, have con structed tasteful and stylish looking dresses of the plebeian barley sack. It took ten sacks for each drcsa. , Th fabric is really a good imitation of the new loose mesh goods known as canvna'clcth. Chicago Herald. TWO RIG BLOWS. A Dakotan and a Texan who met in Chicago were disputing about the greatness of their respective districts, and among other things traded marvel ous stories about the wind in each lo cality. ; "How fast does a Texas norther blow?" asked the Dakotan at last. IIow fast? Well, the only, thing that will measure it is lightning. When a Texas norther is coming they telegraph ahead, so that tho people can get under ground, but when it gets under good headway it will just about run a neck and neck race with the ' telegram. How fast's a Dakota blizzard?" VOh, you can't measure a blizzard. There's nothing like it. I've seen a blizzard skin a telegraph message right off the wires and carry it on ahead. I never saw but one the speed of which could be measured. There seemed to be something the matter with that one. It went rather slow, only about 100, 000 miles a second, and we couldn't tell what was the matter with it until it went by; when we found it was dragging one of those infernal Texas northers along behind." Ctioho 7r b'fte. Items of Special Interest. ft..The records in the court house show that in the six months ending Jannarv 1st 18SG, , J. W. SCOTT & CO., Iiouglit 812,502 worth more GOODS than am other two houses in the citv, and leaving out one dry goods house only, they bought more goods than any other four houses in Greensboro. jTROBERT G. GLENN, GENERAL. LIFE & FIRE INSURANCE AG EXT, Represents both American and Foreign Companies, with an aggregate capital of $60,000,000 ! All first-class and reliable. Patronage solic ited. Ofuce on South ldni street, next door to Glenn drug store. sepl7-ly GREENSBORO MARKET REPORTS CORRECTED WEEKLY BT J. W. SCOTT CO. PR OD UCE MARKETS. j BUXIXO PRICES. Apples green, per bu 40ao0 Bacon hog round 10 Beef 58 Butter....... 2025 Beeswax 18 Chickens old 20&25 ' spring 12 Corn new aty Corn Meal a68 Dried Fruits Blackberries C Cherries ;.. 10 j Apples.; 24 Feaches, unpared j, 2J unpared 4, 2 j pared 710 Eggs..... 10 feathers 40 Flaxseed. : 75 Flour Family 4.50 Superfine 4.00 Onions . . . 1 50G0 Oats.. 4550 Pork...... 67 Peas C0a75 Potatoes Irish 75al.OO Sweet ' flags Cotton 1 Tallow... 3a4 Wool washed 30 Unwashed 2J Wheat.... Sl1.25 RETAIL) PRICE OF GROCERIES. Bacon Sides Hams. Shoulders Cheese Coffee Rio Laguyra Java Kerosene OiL .... : Lard Leather Sole Molasses. . Rice : Syrup i Soda Salt Common , Fine Sugar Yellow White Crushed.... : TOBACCO MARKETS. . j Reported weekly by Williams & Miles, Proprietors of Banner Warehouse. Common dark lugs, .150 2.50 ' fillers,........ 4.00 6.00 Dark rich fillers G. 50 7.50 Bright 10.0015.00 Common dark smokers 5.50 7.00 Bright smokers 17.0022.50 Medium cutters 22.0025.00 Fancy " 30.0035.00 Medium wrappers 20.00025.00 Fancy r ... 60.0075.00 Our market is now very active for all grades of tobacco. Fancy wrappers very scarce., , P h . . ; q o PihotoGraphS i r a - P h All Sizes and Styles ! SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. OLD PICTURES copied to any size desired. jrPItICES REASONABLE.- Call at my gallery, West Market street, near the court house, Greensboro, N. C, and see specimens. Yours Respectfully, THE PHOTOGRAPHER. 25 50 10 PRINCE July 7, 1887. WONDERFUL CURES. W. D. Hoyt JL Co., Wholesale and Retail DruggL-U of Rome. Ga . say: We have been Rollins Dr. Kind's New Discovery, Electric Hitters and Buckkn's Arnica JalTe for two vears. Have never handled remedies that sell as well, or give such universal satisfac tion. There hare bn some wonderful cures effected by these medicines in this citv. Several cases of pronounced Con sumption have been entirely enreel by use of a few bottles of Dr. King's New Disco v erv, taken in connection with Electric lht ter. We guarantee them always. Sold by Hunter A" Michaux, dru-ists. Battle Sketches. 25l!i Anniversary of the Great Bat tles and Campaigns of the Civil War. Th he Qurtr-Ontnnil of all th Enctrn2ent Camp gn of thm battle yr luv. will occur ing !'.. TbU jer, couuHencicjf Mret lO and daring the Creensboro ort!i State, GKEEXSBORO, X. C, Will putlifch a eketch of eavh important bttl and caapa'rfu of the civil aT during ISCi. beginning with the engagement between the SJ EliBIMAC and MONITOR, fought March 9. lt-62. ot the battle of PEA 111 DOE fought March 7th and tU. 162. Tb will he followed at proper datea witn Shiloh. tne Peninm'ar Caroi-atea, tnelodinjr Cold Harbor, June 27. 18(52. STONEWALL JACKSON'S Camritn aiiaint Hanks. Milror and Fremont. THE 8E EN DAYS BEFORE itlCHMOND. POPE'S CAMPAIGN including ClarMountin.Gainavllle and Chan till jr. SOUTH MOUNTAIN and ANTIETAM; th Inva sion of Kentucky by Brag and Kirby Smith; Cor rinth and Stone River. These sketches will be followed next year by the etorua of the battles of lCi. aud o on each year, until th close at Appomattox. This series of sketches will close in April. 1). and will give an accurate historical and Ptatistieal record of the gTeat civil war. The sketches will be handaonrely illustrated, and all combined will make a valuable aud in partial history of the treat struggle. TEUMS; UBKEsiiOKo North State $1.50 a year an dvance. KEOGU Jfc BOYD. Oreensbom, N C. GOOD WORK ! LOW PRICES ! o THOMAS, REECE Sc CO., JOB PRINTERS, GREENSBOltO, X. C, Do all kinds of Job Printing that is wanted from a VISITING CARD to a BOOK. ' They do not brag of what they CAN DO, bnt refer to their work, to show what THEY ARE DOING. RICHMOND Sc DANVILLE R.R. CO. WESTERN N. C. DIVISION. Circular No. 483. Gen'l Pass. Dep Asheviixe, N. C, May Gth, 1887. The following Passenger Train schedule between Asheville and Spartanburgjis here by announced to take effect May 8, 1887: Train No. 53. Leave Asheville ; 11.30 a. m. Asheville Jnc. 11.40 Arden 12.06 p.m. Fletchers 12.16 Henderson ville 12.42 Flat Rock 12.55 Saluda 1.20 Melrose 1.38 Tryon 1.58 Landrums 2.10 Campabelle 2.23 Inman 2.38 Compton 2.46 Arrive Spartanburg 3.20 Train No. 52. Leave Spartanburg 3.50 p.m. Compton 4.09 Inman 4.14 Campabelle 4. 20 Landrums 4.41 Tryon 4.52 Melrose 5.14 Saluda 5.20 Flat Rock 5.53 Hendersonville 0.07 v Fletchers G.31 Arden 0.40 Asheville Junction 7.04 Arrive Asheville 7.10 Daily except Sunday. JAS. L. TAILOR, W. A. TURK. A. G.P.A. G.P.A. W. D. MENDENHALL, C. A. REYNOLDS, The Greensboro Sash aXANTJFACTTTHXBS OF DOORS, DOORS, DOORS, BLINDS, BLINDS, BLINDS, SASH, AND DZJLLETS IN " KIXDS OF DRESSED LUMBER, GREENBBOtO. N. C. ALL jjar We are running the finest SAW MILL in the State, cutting lumber from Lccg Leaf Pine that has not been boxed. Piedmont Air-Line Route. RICHMOND & DANVILLE RAILROAD, CONDENSED SCHEDULE IX EFFECT Max 20, . Trains Run by 75th Meridian Time. SOUTHBOUND. Ko. 60 dally. No. 52 daily. Leare New York 4 45 m Philadelphia 7 20 a iu Baltimore 9 45 a m Washington 1124 am x Chariot teTilie 3 23pm Lynchbnrg 5 50 p ra 4 3o p ra 6 57 p m 9 42 p'm 1100 pm 3 GO a m 5 05 a zu Richmond Bnrkevllle, KeyTille Drake's Branch Danrille Greenaboro" 3 00 p ra 5 02 p m 5 45 pm 6 01 p m 8 50 p m 10 44 pm 230am 4 23am 5 04 a m 5 21am 805am 9 43am t 8 iop"m 1C0 am 2 37 a m 3 32 a m Ooldsboro Baieigh Durham Chapel Hill Uilliboro 12 3J a in 5 30tm 6 37 a m 5 00 a m 7 15 a m t 7 20a m Salem 530am High Point Saiiabory. 11 15 a m 12 39 am 10 18 a m 1123am ArriYe btateaville 12 31 p m 5 38 p m T 35 p m Aeherille Hot Spnnea LreaveConcord 1 25 a m 225am 5 16 a m 6SOam 1 20 p m 11 69 p m 100pm 3 34 p m 48p m 10 40 p m Charlotte Bpartanborg Green Tille ArrlTe Atlanta Daily. n , . bULScAu somen On trains o0 and ot. Pnllman Bnffet Sleeper between Atlanta and New York Un trains o2 and 53. Pnllmnn Ttnffa sno. t. tt.a: . - i irnfnerr. A aslnngton and Augusta. Pullman Sleeper man bieeper between Greensboro and Ealeigh. Pnllman Parlor Car between Salisbury, and Knox ville. Through tickets on sale at principal stations to all points. - -1 or rates and information apply to any agent of the Company, or ' SOL, HAAS. T. M. ape Fear w Yadkin Va 1 Condenl Schedule X. -j.; : Taking effect C 00 a.ni,,Mond.v,MaT T Tkains Motio Xoeth """T- ' Pa Si Mail. Krt t 10.10 a. a .-. Lenre IJennettsTille Arrive Max ton Leare Maxton Arrive Fayetterille Leave Fayetteviile Arrive San ford Leave Sanford Arrive Greenslorv Leave Greensboro 11.20 ll.So - . r... 7 1.3i r.i. 11 ,., 2.t ."-. I. i 4.1a 10.15 a, n.. Arrive Walnnt Cove Passenger and Mail dinner at Favt - Thajxs MoviXi-. Srrii Pa. A Mail Frt .4 i.. Leave Walnnt Cove 2.10 p IT.!. Arrive Greens!oro Leave Greensboro Arrive Sanfonl Leave Sanford Arrive Fayetteviile Leave Fayetteviile Arrive Maxton Leave Maxton Arrive BennetUville ,. 0..Via.ni. 12..V p.r.j. 1.15 :i 2o :i no r.ir 5.2:. (V15 a. r. i i. 12.17 s r, Passencrer and Mail dinner at S.ir.f FACTORY BRANCH; Freight A; A, o ' Train Moving North: Leave Millboro 7.4. a.u. Arrive Greensboro '.HM Train Moving South: Leave Greensloro .5 : ) j, - Arrive Millboro 7.:;."i Freight and Accomtro. train n;i4H 1. t iTT, Fayetteviile and Bennettsvil!? on M. r, InT Vednesdays and Fridays. Freight and Accomnio. train run !. -4 Fayetteviile and Greenboro Tn.I,v, Thursdays and Saturdays; and b. tWf Greensboro and Fayetteviile M. :, Wednesdays and Fridays. Passenger and mail train runs !,u!v cept Sundays. The Passenger and Mail train l..., close connection at Maxton withC.tr Central to Charlotte and Wilmington Trains on Factory Branch run d.uh x. cept Sunday. ' W. E. KYLE, Gt n. K J. W. FRY, Gen. Snpt A tlantic &. X. C. Kailroad. Time Table No. 1, to take effect 12 ra Sundaj-, June 5th, lv7. Going East. Going W,-., (Read down. ) 51 Passenger. 50 Passnr D'y except Sun. Stations. D'y except San. Leave 4.55 p.m. Goldsboro, A rr. 1 1.11s i Arr. c 5.22 Best's, Lea. 11.1.1 5.37 LaG range, l.5s 5.54 Falling Creek, lo.:ts 0.09 Kinston, 10.21 6.26 Caswell, lti.K 6.3S Dover. 'J.'A 6.55 Core Creek, .t.:57 7.09 Tuscarora, ..22 7.19 . Clark's, U.n 7.38 Newbern, H..VI 8.21 Riverdale, HjC, 8.26 Croatan, h.ti 8.42 Havelock, 7.41 9.06 Newport, 7.1U 9.16 Wild wood. 7js 9.21 Atlantic, 7.03 9.34 Morehead, 6.50 9.41 Atlantic Hotel, 6.40 9.54 p.m. Morehead Depot, 6.25 am. Read tip. Train 50 connects with Wilmington Jt Weldon train bound north, leaving GoM boro 11.50 a.m., and with Richmon.l & Danville train west, leaving Goldsboro 12. a.m. Train 51 connects with R. Si D. train, ar riving at Goldsboro 4 30 p.m., and with W. Az W. train from the north, at 4.45 p.m. S. L. DILL, Sup't poll SALE. The farms owned by Mrs. Harriet rai nier, situated about two-and-a-half mi! from Jamestown, Guilford county, anl comprising two tracts, each conhitin of 85 acres, more or less. Upon one tract thre is an excellent dwelling, barns, an 1 superior improvements; and on the otitr a tenant house. To be sold together of separately. Land suitable for general crop- well wooded and watered. For terms apply by letter to r Mes. II. PALMER, Jnnustotrn, X. (.".. or personally to the same upon the prt rai ses. June 2-tf J. R. MENDENHALL, J. W. McNAIRY. and Blind Company, AC, AC, At .. MOULDINGS, sepS-lj IBS. I SOllTIIBOUXD. So. 51 daily. Xo. W i.r- jLe-are Atlanta Arrive Greenville Spartanburg Charlotte Concord Baliabnry High Point , Greensboro 7 00 p m 1 04 am 2 16 a m .5 05 a m 8 4 0 n 2 34 p n 34pD 23po "7 n po gflpB 9 13P&1 9 4J p a 0 01am 6 45 a ra 7 53 a m 8 28 a m Balem 11 30 a m t 12 ja P t2 i " til v a o t 30 a til 20 B "TT2po 3 10 a b 3WIB 3S58IB 15J3 JWIB 4 laao 8 10 a o io ram 12 33 p O J20p Ililltboro Durham Chapel Hill Baieigh Gold bora 3 50 p ra 12 47 p m 1 20 pm 244pm 4 30 p m Danville Irakea Branch Keysville Burkeville Richmond 10 10 am 12 45 p m 1 04 p ra 142pm, 3 60 p m Lynchburg Charlotte villa Washington Baltimore Philadelphia Sew York I 15 p m 3 40 p ru 8 23pm II 23 pm 3 00 a m C 20 a m t Daily except Saturday. between Richmond and Greensboro. PaU- JAS. L- TAYLOR. "Washixotox, D. C. GenlPass.Ag i I
The Union Republican (Winston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 7, 1887, edition 1
2
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