etjew and Marine immWms ? . tlj;:3w : COTTON it. LOCAL MARKETS pll ll)V - -x- -x- York. Nov. 4. There was a i . ., tlio cotton market today, fpl- Sgs, oozen S$3c Butter, "i wore First I B"tter, 1 n,r Country unchanged to 12 points j Paring (ickeiia apiecd" . , tb45c lower. A few purchase of the trad- w;!s the buying of about ten thous- in i 1 X 1 jlirnt room opeiciLur tusu look moaer ?fe amounts. Liverpool purchased September but sold July. . far chronicle estimates the world's a.M'.'H'.- supply at 4,714.724 bales. ' vx owu mcKens apice i 50c to 55c Puddle Ducks apiece . 45C ;:ml bales of January believed to be i us.apaece .-.v.- . . ... . . . .35c for an up-town account. There was j eef ' K -v . -Oc to 10c como Western purchasing and a prom.-! Sweet Potloes, bush. 1:60c insn t-otatoes, sack . $4 25 N. C: Haimv lb C 4C N. C. Shoulders and Ttibs, lb i8c Oranges, Cai. $6-03 Bananasj'h' bunch $1.20 Lemons, fancy $4.50 Apples,, bbl $3.00 to $4.00 Bell peppers, bush. 50c Onions, sack:.. $3.25 Cabbage, lb 3c to 3 l-2c Pork, lb 1 12c Open Close j pu ..18.87 18.97 ,ianiiu 18.85 18.95 M.-j-'ii 18.92 19.06 M, 19.07 19.21' ,!u! 19.06 19.24 I .W W York Spot 1S-95. Wilmington Cotton 18 cts. Charleston Cotton 18 1-2 cts Savannah Cotton r-18 3-4 cts. LIVERPOOL COTTON. Kxchange Closed. SAVANNAH NAVAL STORES. Spirits 46 3-4 to 47. Kosin $6.25. ALL MOTHERS INVITED. GRAIN. Pork .$25.82 1-2 The Moth-era' Committee of the Ex tension work of the Y. M. C. A., ex tend to every mother in the city an invitation to hear Mr. Odis B. Hin nant at 4 o'clock on the afternoon of November 14th at the J-ligh School au ditorium. Mr. Hinnant's subject will ba "Mental Traits of Adolescence." Because Mr. Hinnant has given years j of study to the problems of boyhood he is qualified to give invaluable sug gestions as to how the life of the boy should be guided 'It was at first plan- "; : V , STOCKS : , : . ... . -.' .. , . (By Broadan Wall.) New York, - Nov. 4. The average .'statement today showed an in crease of $6,639,130 in surplus re serves,' $42,053,000 in loans and $61, 566,000 in net demand deposits. The actual statement showed an increase of $13,325,210 in reserves, $26,436000 in loans and $48,873,000 in net de mand deposits. Brokers have reduced their loans materially, in the past week, The public and the professional traders have sold on balances. This is shown clearly by the smaller increase of loans and net demand deposits in the actual statement as compared with the average statement. The increase of loans and deposits, however, is such in both statements as to suggest-! that there has been heavy, buying of surplus. It must be that big people . WHEAT. (By Jos. F. Pritchard.) Chicago, 111., N6y.'. The specula tive wheat world encountered an old time enemy in the shape of "Rigged" Argentine Cables as "to the price of wheat there today. These . cables were . said : to have been sent to the United State? by tne "Big Three" of the country, who control the grain market. Following the report of a break ' of 7 cents inline market at Buenos Ayres .' a., later report placed the , change in Jprle fjSt.-- 6 3-8 and' in stead of the Tatter showing a decline it showed an advance. There was; heavy selling of wheat on the first cable, telling of the loss in price and of subsequent heavy buying on the reported advance. CALL MONEY. New York, Nov. 4. Money on call ruled between 2 1-2 and 2 per cent. Time money ruled very inactive dur ing the week with very few transac- have loaded up, believing that this i tions in evidence. Mixed loans, 3 1-2 is a favorable time, while the general. Per cent for 60 days, 3 1-4 cents for 90 public is in doubt regarding the elec- J days, also for four, five and six tion. The big people really do not months. Ribs 13.80 Lard 15.40 jn3d to have the exercises and lecture ! American Cotton Oil care who is President so far as the stock market is concerned, and the bank statement proves it. Allis-Chalmers 271-2 American Beet Sugar 102 8-8 American Can 63 1-2 American Car and Foundry '. . . 69 1-2 American Locomotive 90 34 55 Wheat Corn . Oats . . 1.82 1-2 1 on the seventh of the month, however ! American Smelting . ..1115-8 85 7-8 53 3-4 WILMINGTON NAVAL STORES. Spirits 45 3-4. Rosin $5.60 and $5.35. Tar $2.60 and 11 cents. Crude $4.00, $4.00 and $3.00. this has been changed and will take American Sugar place on the fourteenth. 120 American Tel & Tel . ..133 American Tobacco 228 Anconda Copper 96 3-4 106 3-8 Mercantile paper, quiet; all local institutions being willing to wait for better rates. Rates: 3 1-3 and 1-2 for 60 to 90 days; 3 1-2 and 3-4 per cent; for four, five and six .months. SENT TO PRISON FOR SMOKING. London, Nov. 4. Rachel Sydall, of ' Atchison Ponterfract, has been sent to prison ' Atlantic Coast Line 1213-4 for fourteen days because she smok-! Baldwin Locomotive 87 1-8 ed a cigarette in. a munition factory. Receipts. Baltimore & Ohio 88 Bethlehem Steel 665 Canadian Pacific 173 3-4 When Clyde Engle defeated Dan Cotton 485 McGrath, amateur golf -champion of , Chesapeake & Ohio 681-8 Spirits 6 Peru, the other day, the devotees of 'Chicago, Mil. and St. Paul .. .. 95 Rosin 7 the ancient game learned that Peru ! Chicaeo. R. I. and Pacific Ry . . 34 Tar 6 has a golf champion and his name is j Consolidated Gas 138 5-8 J. 500. Benny won the first clash by Crude McGrath. j ' 1 " U ;M"P-;P. liPw A ' . j i I A battle between Leonard and Kil bane would also serve to settle;' or go a long way toward settling, the moot question of how Kilbane would fare in a bout with Lightweight ! Champion Welsh. The universal idea appears to be that Kilbane would come close to knocking out Welsh, where he so disposed. ' Whether he would may be determined before next spring, as a Kilbane-Welsh fight is beyond the incubation stage and ne gotiations may be closed even before the Kilbane-Leonard match is clinched. Leonard na.s met Welsh twice in ten-round bouts, for an average of Crucible Steel 921-8 Erie 38 5-8 reversed General Electric 182 Great Northern Pfd 119 Great Northern Ore Ctfs 43 1-8 Illinois Central 108 Inter. Merc. Mar. pfd ctfs .. ..117 1-2 Kansas City Southern .. .. .. 27 3-4 Louisville 136 Ligget & Myers 298 Lorillard Co 222 1-2 Maxwell Motors , . . 84 3-4 Mexican Petroleum .. . .Ill 4 " W HOT OFF THE GRIDIRON. At Roanoke Virginia, Poly tech, 14, North Carolina 7. At Columbus Auburn 3, Qeorgia 0. . At Chattanooga Tennessee 12, Chattanooga 7. - . ' - At Nashville -Vanderbilt; 67, Rose Poly. 0?5 At Greenville Davidson 46, Fur man 14. . - At Shrevepo'rt-r-Louisiana 17, Ar kansas 7. ; At Tulsa Kendall 17, Oklahomn Apgies 13. ( . - At Waco Baylor. 20, Southwestern C. At St. Louis Creighton 20, --SL Louis 0. -., - At Houston Rice 20, Texas Aggie3 0. . At Lawrence Kansas 21, Okla homa 13. At Lexington Virginia Catholic University 16, Virginia. V. M. I. 14. . Eastern Circuit. At New Havens-Yale 7,: Colgate 3. At West ' Point Army 30, Notre Dame 10. At Princeton Princeton 42, Buck nell 0. i - v At Cambridge Harvard 61, Vir ginia 0. At Philadelphia Penna. 19, Lafay ette 0. At Ithaca Cornell 15, Carnegie Tech. 7. At Springfield Dartmouth 15, Syr acuse 10. At Pittsburgh Pittsburgh 46, Alle gheny 0. At Providence Brown 42, Vermont 0. At South Bethlehem -Lehigh 9, Muhlenberg 0. At Amherst Amherst 14, Trinity 0 At Williamstown Williams 7, Wes- leyan 0. At Waterville Colby 23, Bates 7. At New Haven Yale Freshman 7, Andover 0. At Annapolis Washington and Lee 10, Navy -0. the Fourth, who had it built as a prop er frame for his orgies. much at home in that product of the of the seaside resort, bizarre imagination of King George The Maharaja "of Patiala has given a thousand pounds to. the fund. The memorial will proDaoiy be in tne torm No one who visited the - Pavilion ! of a chatra an umbrella-shaned while it was an Indian hospital will j monument which is sure to attract forget the strange look of those huge I the attention of all sightseers. salons with their faded oriental dec- x ! Orations in gilt and crimson and their RETURN AFTER LONG ABSENCE. ig mirrors, full of dark men of all the races of India. Mrs. Elsie Calder Woody and hus- Now that these . warribrs who cross-i band, Mr. E. G. Woody, have returned cd the; ocean to fight for the empire ito the city after an absence of sistcen years or more ana win resiae nere m have gone it has Deen aeuided to erect a monument which in centuries to ccme. will tell of their presence here. The lonely piece of land on the Downs, where the bodies of Sikhs and Hindus soldiers were bur ied with strange ceremonious rites, has been bought by the municipality of Brighton and the intention was to erect a monument among the graves. This idea was given up but a strong movement - is now on foot supported by many prominent Indians here and In their native country for erecting a monument in the town of Brighton it self in commemoration of the com ing 'of the Indians to fight for the empire in Europe, and also in recog nition of ..the liospitality of. the peo ple of Brighton to any thousands of There are many religious, but there the future. During her former resi dence in the city Mrs. Woody was a member of a number of the church choirs and is pleasantly remembered by a host of friends who "will learn with pleasure of hr return. Mrs. Woody has opened a studio at the Y. W. C. A. and at Winter Park and will teach" voice culture. Mrs. Woody has studied voice in New York for several years and is well qualified for her work. Nature is inexorable. Even th3 man who climbs the ladder of fame can't defy the laws of gravation. Excange. MULLINS WON IN GRIDIRON BATTLE. J a wide margin, while the champion the order in the second meeting. Leonard had the champion primed for a knockout but once in the twenty rounds in the fourth round of the first fight but he lack ed the punch to finish off the title-holder. Since the second tilt Leonard has ! knocked out Ever Hammer, the hardy Chicagoan who a few months pre vious had given Welsh a severe trouncing in twelve rounds. Leonard flattened the bristling blond in twelve rounds, holding the upper hand all the way. So, it will be seen, 60 3-4 1 comparisons are odious. In his little talk to Western the- Mis., Kan. & Texas Pfd 18 Missouri Pacific ". .... 10 1-4 National Lead 68 5-8 New York Central 108 3-8 N. Y., N. H. & Hartford . . Norfolk & Western . f 144 I wortnern Racine ..iiji- atre-gosrs, Kilbane reveals some in- Pennsylvania 581-8 terpstine- farts. After takine his fall" out of Leonard, the featherweight Mullins, S. C, Nov. 4. In an excit-j ing and interesting game of football Mullins won from Dillon by the score of 14 to 0. Piatt's fifty-yard run was one of the outstanding features of the game. He was greatly assisted by Edwards, whose interference work was that of an expert. Edwards, Mullins' quarterback, kicked both goals. king declares that the lesser lights of the division have caused him infinite ly more trouble than the top-notchers. Johnny Dundee, whom many consid ered as efficient a lightweight as there is in the world today, was quite easy for him, Kilbane says. Continu ing, Jawn declares: "The toughest opponent I ever en- 150 3 4 V;UUUIC1CU WXO IJUUIU tXll-CV t . A.idJ pounaer trom JbrooKiyn. i met mm on two occasions once in Brooklyn, .162 3-4 . 61 1-4 g I IUC UlllCl unity Hi luvuii cai auu ? 120 i.g ' both bouts he made me miss repeat 122 5-8' edIy and jahed my face as no other 45 1-2 left a scar on my cheek, and try as I could I was unable to make him stop his annoying tactics." "Ry all means let us light up the Statute of Liberty, the gift of the n-f-nch to the American Republican, fcnd !f l the light of liberty shine over land and sea. "Xow, when in the Old World lib fi'ty and civilization itself are being 'Iiowned in murder and bloodshed, let Liberty with its lighted torch stand guard over the New World, lest ,V(- also forget the high ideals of freedom, of peace and of industry v'"h:ch have founded our republic." Dr. Charles P. Steihmetz. Tbe Statue of Liberty was thirty J'fars old October 28th. On that day s"!criptior-s of the American peo-l'l'- to flood light the statue was flosrnj with what has been termed Reading 109 1-4 Republic Iron & Steel 77 7-8 Seaboard Air 'Line ?T 1-4 Seaboard Air Line Pfd 40 Sloss. Shef. Steel & Iron . . . . 71 1-2 Southern Pacific 101 Southern Railway 281-2 Southern Railway Pfd 68 I Studebaker Corporation 1281-2 Tennessee Copper 22 3-4 ; Texas Co 224 1-2 Union Pacific . United Fruit. United States Rubber . . .. U. S. Smelting & Refining United States Steel United State3 Steel Pfd. . . Virginia-Caro. Chem Va. Iron, Coal & Coke 56 Wabash Pfd. B 31 Western Union 1017-8 ! Westinghouse Electric 65 7-8 ; Kennecott Copper .. 54 Tom Beiio, the Italian bicycle rid Gulf Steel ' tr who was rimner-iin in thfl amateur ! American Zinc 53 1-2 i championship this year, has decided ; Central Leather 98 1-4 to enter the professional class. Tom corn Froaucts iy i-s . opjnes that pedaling for medals, bric- " j a-brac, etc., ;s all right as far as it "This installation of riood lighting goes, but it doesn't bring home the ! will occupy a permanent place among , spaghetti. j the world's most remarkable lighting j achievements and it will mark' the i great progress atained in this most dignified and effective method of lighting! At the instance of the Society for Electrical Development the 268 A. E. W. committees, which are at work laying out electrical celebrations throughout America, will undertake to raise additional funds on, this day. These committees include 2,100; of the leading business men in the United States. The committees are to work with local newspapers who the French warship Isere, in April 1865. The - work of installing the flood" lighting apparatus is now under way. Engineers from the General Electric Company, working in conjunction j will act as depositories tor tne money collected. uepartment stores, boy scouts and all the civic organizations cooperat ing in the electrical celebration in cities and towns will join hands to round Out donations from every sec tion of the United States. Already 71,000 patriotic Americans have con tributed to the fund to light up the Statue of Liberty. This number will be doubled when "Liberty Day" closes. with government engineers, are stretching a transmission cable from New Jersey shore to Bedloe's Island, which will carry current to light up the hundreds of great reflectors re quired to evenly Illuminate all sides of the immense statue and its base, which covers nearly an acre of ground. President Wilson has promised the sponsors of the movement to light up the statue that he will attend the ceremonies. Members of the cabi- " Liberty Day" collections throughout j net, governors, distinguished mem !!t ("nited States. bers of the diplomatic corps, headeT With this fund it has been ar-1 appropriately by its dean in Wash f :" d to permanently flood light the ington, D. C, the French ambassador, em of '"0,000 French people to the j M. Jusserand, and noted civic and in l'r"!lp ot America so that at night it dustrial men will be present. Ex "1;,v bo seen far out upon the Atlah-j Senator Chauneey M. Depew, who, lir i with President Grover Cleveland, at tended the unveiling 30 years ago, will make one of the addresses of the evening- It is planned to assemble the entire Atlantic fleet in New York harbor on that nighl T. N. McCarter, president TO RECEIVE AID. night of Saturday, December nas been fixed fnr thft rfidedica- l!r'-i of the statue as "Liberty Enlight ' r'ing the World." These words were ton used by Auguste Bartnoldi, the 'I'ustrious French sculptor, when he i'ldceu the statue in 210 cases 'aboard Stuggart Nov. 4. To stimulate the birthrate the government of Wurt temberg has drafted a bill under which parents living in poor circum stances will receive financial aid from the state after the birth of their fourth child. The bill will be intro duced at the coming session of the Liet and Is sure' to be tossed. Special service for the patrons of the public Corn Show, Tuesday, November 7th. service corporation of Newark, says : Election returns by leased wire. AdvL Barney Dreyfus, the Pirates' boss, wants a National commission com posed of members who have no con nection with baseball. If that's all Barney - wants he need look no fur ther than the present "commish." Has not the chairman been president 'of the Cincinnati Reds for years As there are only six nights in a week on which boxing shows can be held, the only way Battling Levin sky and Jack Dillon can increase the number of their fight engagements will be for the promoters to stage matinees. riiven naving Rutgers' number (they wear 'em on their backs) before the whistle blows doesn't seem to make it any easier for the opposing foot ball warriors to beat Foster Sanford's gridders. The American League has been caught with the goods. After all their boasting of how they downed their National League rivals, it has become "known that American League teams carried 25 men against 21 in the National. Jack Britton and Ted (Kid) Lewis have met seven times, and now they are going to begin another se ries of clashes to determine which is the better battler. The Dartmouth hockey team is ne gotiating for the nse of St. Nicholas rink, in New York, for practice ses sions. From Hanover to New . York for practice may mean that the Green club wielders are to play their sched uled games in San Francisco. It is estimated that more than 70, 000 football enthusiasts will see the Tad Jones-Percy Haughton contest at New Haven, Nov. 25. WAS ENJOYABLE AFFAIR. The Hallowe'en season was brought to a fitting close at the Y. M. C. A. last n:ght when perhaps the season's most elaborate social event, was staged. Fully two hundred persons paid, the ten-cent admission and pass ed inside and enjoyed every minute of the evening. The affair eclipsed anything of a like nature ever at tempted here and will be remem bered for a long time by those who i were fortunate enough to attend. "Custer's Last Rally" as staged by 25 members of the Y. M. C. A. and Troop 6 of the Boy Scouts, was a spectacle that is seldom attempted by local talent, but the participants had been so well drilled there was noth ing to indicate that the affair was being staged by amateurs. When the last follower of Custer was shot down the Indians engaged in a weird war dance around a bon fire that gave the spectators an almost creepy feeling. The role of Sitting Bull was taken by Mr. Buck Morris, and Gen eral Custer was acted by Mr. Carl Fales. When the visitors arrived they were welcomed by Chief Spook F. W. Gerkins and after they had been ad ministered the oath were allowed to view the river Styx and be rowed across by Pluto. The next stop of the visitors was at the Wishing Spring, where a wish was made that is supposed to come true before next Hallowe'en. The following stop was in the Infernal Regions, where the: devil and his imps gamboled about to the amusement of the crowd. The visitors were then carried to the-lobby, which had been appropri ately decorated for the occasion and where Miss Grace Logan delighted all by telling their fortunes. Mr. P. C. White performed at the piano and the music added much to the occa sion. A visit to the Ladies' Parlor on the second floor, which had been deco rated for the occasion, was enjoyed and here various games were in dulged in. Miss Nettie Fleming oc cupied the fortune telling booth on the second floor and read the palms of all. A visit was made to "The Morgue" and the visitors were introduced to a Wax corpse that Was contained in a casket Mr. Richard Thigpin did the introducing add he explained to all the inanner itf which the man met his death. "The irishman shruks his shoul ders. 'Put that scrap of paper away,' j he says, but instead of running his , bayonet through his nemy lie tells ( him to fall in behind, in the evening the Irishman's comrades start i to tease hinu You ought , to have taken 11 the money, Pat. It might come in handy when we get, to Germany,' one of them says, but Pat fellies gently. 'Suf6 ! did not want to rub it in on the . poor fellow by telling him that at the present mdmetit his three marks is worth oftiy tupence ha pen Wounded Indian sbldiers have been nursed back to health ; in the famous Pavilion at Brighton. They felt very ( REGULAR DINNER TWENTY-FJVE CENTS NEW YORK CAFE. rp 4J Oscar P. Peck, 1 WOOD. Telephone 341. Pine, Oak, Mixed Wood. Dry Kiln Blocks, Slab. All kinds of ' Mill Woods. PROMPT DELIVERY. i uboroan Scbedu e In Effect October 9, 1916. WINTER PARK, WRIGHTSVILLE, WRIGHTS- VILLE BEACH And Intermediate Points EASTBOUND Klectrio Center for Winter Park 6:30 A. M. 6:50 A. M. 8 :00f A. M. 8:30 A. M. 10:00 A. M. 11 :30 A. M. xl :00 P. M. 1 :10 P. M. 11:55 P. M. 2:30 P. M. 3:00 P. M. 3 :30 P. M. ?4 :10 P. M. 4:30 P. M. ?4:50 P. M. 5 :30 P. M. 6:10 P. M. 6:40 P. M. 7:15 P. M. 8:15 P. M. 9:15 P. M. 10:15 P. M. 11:15 P. M. Lear Electric Center for WriffhtsTllIe 6:30 A. M. 6:50 A. M. 8:00 A. M. 8:30 A. M. 10100 A. M. 11 :30 A. M. xl:00 P. M. 1:10 P. M. ?1 :55 P. M. 2:30 P. M. 3:00 P. M. 4:30 P. M. 5 :30 P. M. 6:10 P. M. 6:40 P. M. 7:15 P. M. S:13 P. M. 9:15 P. M. 10:15 P. M. 11:15 P. M. Electric ' Center for Beach 6 :30 A. M. x6:50 A. M. 8 :30 A. M. lO'.OO A. M. 11:30 A. M. xl:00 P. M. zl:10 P. M. 3:00 P. M. 4:30 P. M. b6 :40 P. M. '9:15 P. M. 11:15 P. M. WESTBOUND !Leave Winter Park for Wilmington 6:26 A. M. 7:31 A. M. 8 :01 . i. M. 8:41 A. M. 9 :36 A. M. xl0:31 A. M. 11:0T A. M. 12:36 P. M. x2:06 P. M. 2 :01 P. M. ?2:36 P. M. ?3:11 P. M. ?3 :50 P. M. 4 :06 P. AI. I ?4 :30 P. M. ?. ?5 :10 P. M. 5:36 P. M. 6:11 P. M. 6:51 P. M. 7 :31 P. M. 8:06 P. M. 8:56 P. M. 10:21 P. M. 10:56 P. M. 12 :21 A: M. Leave WrightiTllle for Wilmington 6:15 A. M. 7:20 A. M. 7 :50 A. M. 8:30 A. M. 9 :25 A. M. Xl0:20 A. M. 10:55 A. M. 12:25 P. M. xl:5T) P. M. 1 :W) P. M. ?2:25 P. M. ?3:00 T. M. 3:55 P. M. 5:25 P. M. 6:00 P. M. 6:40 P. M. 7:20 V. M. 7:55 P. M. 8:45 P. M. 10:10 P. M. 30:45 P. M. 12:10 A. M. Leave Beach for Wilmington ..... " 7:40 A.' M. 0 :15 A." Si. ' it)':45' A. Ml 12:15 P. M. xl :45 P. M. !1:45 P. M. 3 :45 P. M. "5:i5-P.'M "!7:15 P. M. 10 :'ob P. SI. 12:00 M.'' SPECIALS FOR SUNDAYS Leave Front and Princess treets every half bonr from 2:00 to 5:00 P. SI. Leave Beach every half honr from 2:45 to 5:45 P. M. Ddly except Sundays. xSundays only. ?Superseded by- half hour cars Sunday afternoon. zDoes not go beyond Station No. 3. ! Leaves from Station No. 3. FREIGHT SCHEDULE (Daily Except Sunday) Leaves 9th and Orange Streets, 3 :30 P. M. L relgnl Depot open from 2 :30 to 3:30 P. SL A TTIARITIIG GO) AST MRIE Arrivals and Departures of Trains at Wilmington, Effective Sept 11, 1916. Time Not Guaranteed. DEPABTUBKi TO AND FBOM ASBIVALSl No. 90. ' j Ooldsboro, Hlchicond, Norfolik and Eastern No. 01. S:40 A. M. North Carolina points. Connect at (Jold- i:is A. M. Dally Except bora with Hovthern Railway at Narfolk Daily. Except Sanday. Hontbarn Kail road. Mos1h7. No. 64. No. 66. B;1J A. 1L Jacksonville, rtaw Bern and Iat29dUt :15 P. M. l WRn1 BUtlon. ' uhM Wed- nd yrldyOnly. Friday Only. w Chadbonm, Conway, Florence, Charteaton, twiw SaTannah, Jacksonyllle, Tampa St. S0;, .a w Petersbnrtr, Fort Slyera Columbia ana ,.DJf1iy,m. StM A. M. Ashevllle, Pullman Sleeping Car. iHween litO A. IX. Wilmington and Columbia, open to re ceive outbound passenger at Wllmlag ton at and after 10:00 P. M. and may Da occupied, lnbod until 7rfX) A. M - , . Goldsboro, Kfchmond, Norfolk and Wain No. 48. Ington. Parlor Cars between Wilmington No. 49 Dally. ana Norfolk connecting at Bocky Mount Dally. 8t40 A. ML with New York train haying Pullman 6:06 p. M. Service. No. BS. Solid train between Wilmington anS Mt. No. S3 Daily. Airy Tia FayetteTilla and Sanford. Dally. I - g; 45 A. M. 8:00 r. M. No. 62. No. 63. Now Daily Jackson rilla, Nrw Berm asd Xatarmadiai Dally sits p. m. stations. io p. m. Chadbonm,. Florence Colnmbia. Augusta, Atlanta and the West. Charleston 8a- Ma mm Tannab and all Florida Point. All Steel r?',,?r Pullman Sleeping Car between Wllmlng if;l,V .uTV7V ton and Atlanta, rla Augusta. 81eeplng , iiw r ' cars daily between Florence and Cofnm- r. M. bia, which may be occupied at Colum bia Until 7:00 A. M. f m No. 60. - No. 00. W'sIKnly rvstt-vlll. anA lotannadlat. it-tun JUi StSO P. M. 10; IS A. K. - . Dally. Udldsboro, Richmond, Norfolk, Washington end-New York, Pullman Brother, luSet No. 44. Sleeping Cars, between Wilmington and No. 41. ' Dally. Washington, connecting with New Tors Daily :4S P. M. train carrying dining cars: also Pullman l:W A. H. Sleeping Car between Wilmington and Norfolk. For Folder, Reservations, rates of fares, etc., call Thone 160. W. J. CRAIG,; T. C. WHITE,- Passenfier Traffic Manager. General Passenger Agent. Wilmington, N. C.

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