Newspapers / The Star of Zion … / July 30, 1896, edition 1 / Page 4
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OPS. , LL. D , Look Box N.O, r, D. D , Charlotte, N. C. By, D. D., Newberne, N. 0. _*, D. D., Salisbury, N. C. Hinton, D. D.,>Box 143, Lancast udor Walters, D. D., 228 Dun avenue, Jersey City, N. J. W. Clinton, A. M., D. D, 415 N. i St., Charlotte, N. O hu! Holliday, D. I)-, Little Book, B Small, A. M., D. D, York, Pa. GENKBAL 0FF1CEB8. .^neral Secretary—Rev. Wm. Howard y, d p, 501 Briggs street, Harrisburg, General Steward—Rev J W A lstork, > d, 308 Cleveland avenue, Montgomery, General Manager Of the Publication House and Superintendent of the Sun day-school Department — Rev. G, L. Blaokwel*, a w, Charlotte, N. C. Editor Tub Stab by Zion,—Bev. J W alth, d d., Charlotte, N. C. Editor Quarterly—Hon John C Dancy, A M. President of Livingstone College—Bev W H Goler, d d, Salisbury, N C. Missionary and Church Extension Sec retary and Editor Missionary Herald Rev,A J Warner, D o, Birminbgam. Al3, Secretary Educational Department Rev B F Wheeler, iu,dd, Ithaca, N Y. President Varlok Christian Endeavor Society—Rev J B Colbert, A B., 1114 6 h St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Editor Varick Christian Eudeavorer— Rev. J S Caldwell, B P, 1513 Lombard fet, Philadelphia, Pa. General Sististian and Editor Zion’s Year Book, Bev. J. H. Anderson, koch ester, N. Y. W. H. & T. M. SOCIETY* President, Mrs. K. P. Hood, Fayette ville, N. C. Vice President, Mrs. R. R. Morris, Charlotte, N. C. - Secretary, Mrs. P. E. D. Pettey, New J>erae, E. C. Treasurer, Mrs. M. E. Harris, Sails' bury, N. C. Read This Offer. By special arrangements with the publisher of The Pulpit—a monthly magazine of sermons only—we are enabled to make bur readers one of the best club offers ,yet. Each issue of The Pulpit contains in its 64 pages from six to eight sermons. Some idea of the great value of this magazine .may be gleaned from the following taken from the Northwestern ■ l . “ The Pulpit’s list1 of contributors is a guarantee that nothing stale or common place will be worked off on the public. We e know of no way whereby ministers whofrfe under the necessity of preaching two or three sermons a week that will £ sermons eet expectations and increasingly at tach men to the ministry of the Word, can qualify themselves more than by the perusal of the best productions of breth ren who are breast deep in work at the great centers of thought and activity. Te wish every one of our brother minis ters wouldinvest in The Pulpit.” (Now in its tenth volume, published at Frederick burg, Pa.)—Northwestern Baptist. ' The regular subscription price of The Pulpit is $1.50 and that of The Stab of ’ Zion $1.50: both $3.-00. Send $1.75 to the Editor of The Star of Zion and get The Pulpit and Thj^Stab for 1 year. This is $1.25 less than the regmar combined nr ice of both and the offer remains good for a short while only. Better send now. Sand 8 cents for sample copy of The Pulpit. All orders cash. Prizes!! Prizes!!! A LIFE SIZE PTCTURE OF JAMES VAR iok,.First Bishop of the A. M. E. Zion "Connection, will be. given to the church which raises and sends to the treasurer the largest amount of money (according to membership) for the Centennial Fund, Fifty dollars in sold will be given to the presiding elder who raises and sends to the treasurer the largest amount of money on his district (according to membership) for, the Centennial Fund. Fifty dollars in gold will be given to the pastor who raises and sends to the treasurer the : largest amount o money (according to membership) for the Centennial Fund. A LIFE SIZE PICTURE OF BiSHOP RUSH yili be given to the Sunday-school that raises and sends tjo the treasurer the largest amount of money (according to membership) for the Centennial fund. In addition to the above a beautiful CERTIFICATE WITH PICTURE OF BlSHOP arick will be presented to every per on who pays one dollar. A larger cer ificate with picture to the person who ys five dollars. A still larger certifi e with picture to the person who pays en dollars, and so on up to one hundred dollars. [Signed] Centennial Committee, A. Walters, Chairman. ~ G. W. Clinton, Secretary. VC Dancy, General Manager e committee that has charge of the Celebration of the A. M. n Church has decided to give a MEDAL, beautifully designed, person who writes the best poem E Hundred Years of Zion Hodism.” This competition is to all, regardless of church affil ons. Competitors must report be Sept. 1st. The prize Will be a ed Oct. 12th. Address all com to, Bishop A. Walters, Centennial Committee, 358 w york City. ALKING with God begins In short steps, j __ rifjia Christ Is very, yiviw dose to the penl ^tent sinner. T h e blackest devil outside of the pit is hate. Nothing a bad man owns can be his long. The right to do right is a God given right, man can Walk straght who fol lowi i a doubt. m *7 H ive more religion than you can cany in your head. Ni one can know Christ without wai ting to be like him. N > man treats Christ well who treats his brother wrong. Darkness cannot be made black euo ugh to destroy light. F iith used is as sure to grow as good seel in good soil. God knows how we love, while men onl f know how we live. The man who conquers himself has hat God for bis helper. h o man can fail until he tries to get alo ag without God’s help. * I [ire people to be good, and they will qut t when the pay stops. I: is hard to believe in tbe religion of soi is very religious people. 3 he man who never praises his wife, we uld have a better one if he did. Sleeping too much in your pocket m« y drive the Lord out of your heart. 1 ’hilosophlsin, ini o the ditch w! g,al m about bow a man got never get him out. 1‘ray much before you talk much ab >ut how big a sinner you used to be. 1 f we are doing less for the Lord than w< can do, we are not doing enough. 1 Whenever the Lord finds a man who cai be trusted with money, he makes hi: n riob, • ’he windows of heaven cannot open nr ich fer tbe man who keeps his Bible sh it The Performing Dog. in amusing story is told by a French co itemporary of an incident which re joe itly occurred at a town in the south of France during the Christmas visit »f a circus. One of the chief attrac ts ns of the show was a troupe of per* fo rming dogs, and, after they had gone tb rough various feats, their trainer ob ae rved that Azor, the most accomplish-* Of of them all, would faver the audl ez oe with a pianoforte selo. According ly Azor mounted a chair and struck rip tb s ‘'Marseillaise." At his moment, h( wever, some one in the audience stouted out “Rats!" Azor made one b< und in the direction of the cry; but tl a pianoforte went on playing! • Kittle Lesson* In the Kitchen. There, don’t burn yourself. Better le; cook fix the Are. Rut I know you lll e orafige cream. Here Is a very re liable recipe for It, Try It, It’s easily m ide and delicious; lata a half pint oi cold milk put half an ounce of gela ti le. When this has quite dissolved, w lich it will do best If placed near but m t on the Are, add four tablespoonfuls oi thick cream and one ofymgar. Stir U Is up well, and when almost cold add gi adually the Juice of four good or al ge». When perfectly cold this cream W H be solii enough to turn plcely out ol a small mold, although It remains St 11 uoft, PETITE COOKIE. "Court” or ‘‘Cwanht,* k Hlttle boy, according to Harper's Brand Tabls, has taksn a hand In ai lending English spelling; ’Mamma, how do you spell court h< iUSisT” said Little Willie. ‘C-o-u-r-t-h-o-u-s-e, dear," answered hi« mother, ’But I should think you ought to spell it e-a-u-g-h-t house, because all the peo pls vrho are caught are taken there,” H sponded little Willie. Tc> Remove nags rrom Rooms, Take a long-necked ol) can and All it with benzine. Apply the Anid thor oughly into all cracks and crtvices w aeie the bugs or their eggs may be. T le benzine at once destroys all Insect 11 e. Directly after use with a powder gun a good supply of Persian Insect P< wder, and be sure te have the powder fi Mb and strong. Use the benzine enly b; - daylight, as it is very inflammable w ben near a lighted lamp, V What the Flowers Bay* Tive red res# says, “Re sweet," And the lily bids “Be pure;’’ hardy, brave ohrysanthemnm. The "Re patient and endure,’1 ‘Give, - rhiepers, [S aer count the cost.” ns, "Keep on blossoming, In sstteef chill and frost," - iuian Oeeilage, • "What are you looking for? W*’*® gi >t everything worth taking,” "I am leaking-” The other burglar con ti iued bin search, the much la rg®r booty which the newspapers to il orrow will say we overlooked.”—Har p ir’s Bazar. A mustard plaster, or Aannels wrung silt In b*t water, constitute the sim plest yet bast remedy for cramps in U e stomach. Judge—Have you anything to say fetfere the Jhdgment of the court is pissed upon you? Tough prisoner— £ edgin’ yer honor’s pardss, hev ye b >ard the score, Judge?—Philadelphia £ scerd. More 1 edict sal value, more skill, core, expense, more m oaderful cureb and more curative power in Hood’s Sarsaparilla 1 baa In any other. Be sure to get only Hood's. * rud« young man or boy,*: Furlong was at first a furrow long, or the dla tanos that a pair of oxor would plow in half an hour. Shrewd once signi fied erll or wicked. Thomas Fuller used the expression “a shrewd fellow,” meaning a wicked man. The word “hoyden," now applied exclusively to a noisy young' woman, formerly denot ed a person of like character, but of either sex. Equivocation, a word now applied, to any evasion, was once un derstood to mean the calling of diverse things by the same name. Peck orig inally meant a basket op receptacle for grain or other substances. The expres sion at first had no reference to size. To starve was once to die any manner of death. Wycllffe’s sermons tell how “Christ starved on the cross for the redemption oi men.*’ Bombast once signified the dottop that was employed to stuff garments, particularly the enormous trunk hose worn in the four teenth and fifteenth centuries. Acre once meant any field. It is still used with this significance in allusion to a burial ground. , : : ' if Moles. ^ piole’s eyes are believed to give the animal nothing more than an impres sion of light, which is probably palm ful, or. at least, annoying, the sensation prompting the creature at once to bur row into the earth and escape the an noyance. Did lie Know It? A little boy was practicing a piece for Children's Day. His teacher told him to speak louder. He said, “I don’t know it loud.” Peraonal. Ant one who has been benefited by the use of Dr. Williams' Pluk Pills, will receive information of much value and interest by writing to Pink Pills. P. O. Box 1593, Phila., Pa, W. H. Griffin, Jackson, Michigan, writes: “ Suffered with Catarrh for fifteen years. Hall's Catarrh Cure oured me." Sold by Drug gists, 75o. | - FITS stopped free by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Nq fits after first day’s use Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial bottle free. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St-, Phila,, Pa. Of the 12,884 teaohars engaged in the soboolsof Wisconsin last year 9988 were wo men and only 2840 mdn. Their aggregate salary was $8,000,000. Buy 0. 00 worth Dobbins Floating-Borax Scap of your grocer, send wrappers to Dobbins Soap Mf’g do., Philadelphia, Pa. They will send yon free of charge, postage paid, a Worcester Pocket Dic tionary, 298 pages, bound In cloth, profusely il Sistrated. Offer good until Animat 1st only. The Socialist Labor party nominated Charles H. Matohett, of Brooklyn, for Presi dent. I cannot speak too highly of Piso’s Pure for aonsumption.—Mrs- Prank Mobbs, 215 W Bnfi Street, N. Yr Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children _niUBiun o kjoueuiifg o i uy a vi teeth!ag, softena the gams, reduce* irjflainma tlon. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. Reliable Charlotte Merchants Call on them when you go toCharlotte N.C. Write »If you do not go, and have your orders filled byeroall,' 'in"answering advertisements kindly men tion this paper. PRINTING JRoasonahlePrices Write News <fe TJmes Pt’g, House. Iharlotte Commercial PffB VfTTfTB B E. M. ANDREWS, 16-18 W. Trade * Also Pianos,.Organs & Bicycles. WATER PORTNER6 BREW C. Valaer, 317 S. College Street BEER. R. 1NG CO-, T, H: weddTjJqton & co-. HARDWARE bolesale dealers in Hard Ammunitton and Agri 29 East Trade St WILLIS' DININGR00M ~l w'TRADE ST Only flrst.class place in city REDDER 8TARPS-BR1rSHAW ANU SON Prices Low. 37 S College St CHARLOTTE OBSERVER. DAIL7 most Paper in N. Carolina. $8 a Year LUBRICATING OILS MMK 8. N. U.--31 Gladness Comes \A/ith s better understanding of the V V transient aatnre of the many phys ical ills which vanish before proper ef forts—gentle e fforts—pleasant effort*— rightly directed. There is comfort in the knowledge that so many forms of sickness ake not due to any actual dis ease, but simp y to a constipated condi tion of the system, which the pleasant family laxativ 3, Syrup of Figs, prompt ly removes. That is why it is the only remedy with millions of families, and is everywhere esteemed so highly bv all who value gocd health. Its beneficial effects are due to the fact, that it is the one reniedy which promotes internal cleanliness, without debilitating the organs oh whi 3h‘it acta It is therefore allimp<5rtant, in order to get its bene ficial effects, to note when you pur chase, that voti have the genuine r 'tide, which is raanii fractured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, and sold by all rep utable druggists. If in the enjoyment of good health, and tne systo n is regular, then laxa tives or other remedies are not needed. If afflicted with any actual disease, one may be comm ;ndea to the most skillful physicians, bi t if in need of a laxative, then one should have the best, and with the well-infornedeverywhere, Svrupof Figs stands highest and is most largely nsed and gives most general satisfaction? PEACE INSTITUTE. Raleigh, N- O. Superior facilities In all departments of Female'education at moderate prices. 80th rear and never a death of a pupil. Illustrated Catalogue free on application. Jas- Dinwld lie, M. A., of Uriversity of Va., Principal. Ani|||i~an<rtrHI8XY btblUeurad. Book«eo| Ur lllln rWM, Or. s. s. wooiiiT. atlasta, as. OSBORNE’S adtnedd 8oho9l Of 01a.ortlxaaxa.cl A UOUMTA. GA. No taxi books o*»d. Actual bosinsu from day of tnUriof. Buttinei s pEpers. oolla*e currency End roods usod. Bend for handsomEly illostrEted mu [Wue. Board ohsE yx than in any Southern oity. MEN AND BOYS! Yant to learn all about 4 horse? How to holt Out a Oooc (Joe? Know Jmperfectiom ind so guard ag liast Fraud. Detect Disease ind Effect a o ire when same is possible? fell the age by the teeth? What to osll the liffereut parts of the animal? How to Shoe 1 Horse Properl /? All this and other valua >le information san be obtained by reading >ur 100-Page ILLUSTRATED HORSE BOOK vhlch we will forward, post paid, on receipt >1 OLly 20 cents in stamps. BOOK PUB. HOU8C, 184 Leonard lit.. New York City. sou Book of to pay even Improving yon hundred-page mass of vafua __ yon. This valnabl a Enoyolopsedla will be teat Eaffisssaasssssf*. s® Everv person who has not a large encyclopedia Bhonld take advantage of this great otferat onoe and store his mind with the valuable facts collated in tills book. 91000. MT ._ Savannah, Ga. I v’as greatly annoyed last year with a se vere attack of eczema, and after using several other remedies wit>h 10 benefit I used Tbttxr IN* with perfect success, two boxes having made a complete cure. I would not take one thousand dollars for the benefit I’ve derived rr°m its use, and take pleasure in recoir mending it to others.” 8ai.omon Cohen, - v , “ 'Pr&»’t 8ava »nah Carriage C 1 box by mail for 50c. in stamp?, ,J- T. SauPTRiNU Savannah, Follow the directions, and you’ll get die best work from Pearline. Not that there’s any harm to be feared from it, no matter how you use it or haw much you use. But to make your washing and cleaning easiest, to save the most rubbing, the most wear and tear, the most time a id money—keep tq the directions g ven on every pack age of Pearline If you’ll do that with your flannels, for instance (it’s perfectly simple and easy,) they’ll keep beautifully soft, and without shrinking. eot *&.Pearline •Hi l«w to Ua f We bavi repeatedly refused to join, and, therefore, debated windmill combi- B t nallooe, and have, aince ’lg, reduced the cost of 1 wind power to one-sixth what it was. 1 We believe in low prices, high grades KaragMBand large salei. Ne one knows the bant pump or prices until he knows onr*. We moke short hand and long power stroke pnmpa, with best seam , CHlC.Aft/\ '•** bra9s to ha cylinder, lower than i iron ones—a s!(xr6 inch atta.ia. Jell J your dealer. Buy none other deriaotor price* and J paadn ara always bast. T) ffpugh gratitude, and M CailSB WA arA nrlr* m air ear. enH arm oaf mm* ENCYCLOPEDIA MM Hill BH II nil tht Well the thr . ■r I I I I n iW ■■ KVI m **" P»ee book sent postpaid fot UUIl 111 IIII 0 PIIBLltmNC HO U°8°EK | 134 Leonard street, N. Y. City for it serves the purpcsa of the great encyclopaedias coating a hundred times the 50c. asked. It ia completely Indexed, making the Information instantly available. With this valu- ft mm able boo t you baye ft world qf ltnowj .edge at yonr fingers’ ends, and can I 1 w4» easily stpply a lack of early educa> tlonal advantages. When reading, mm don’t yot. constantly come across ref erence# you fail to understand? Isn’t 50c. a small amount to pay for having such knowledge #t hand? Do you know who Crosens w(lb, and where he lived? ’ Vho built the Pyramids, and when? 'fhat sound travels 1125 feet per second? What ip th# lppgeet rivep in the world? That Marcq Polo invented the compass in 1280, and who hiajrco Polo Wis? What the Gordian Knoj ; f O was? The bopk contains thousands pf explana ions of Jnsf Q I I guph matters as you wonder about. Huy it >tt t*>* very I I %/ W iowpriue Of baUedQiiarand iMfKQVit y tVitsKx.p, W , | ong to let the poor t Maladies whloh afflict es a Cure oould have rife: Suffer and D1JT offer, epi braep devoted twea Poultry Yard living of hlm&i subject si hat he learned In all these >ok, which we send postpaid imps. It teaehas yoa how k» &S&3BS& (DISHING HOU8K. musHinu mroon, Leonard 8t.,N. Y. Oily **************** *********** 6ne hundred years #f IMeu Methodism. Centennial Ap peal of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church. QroeHng : In 1796 Janxea Yarlck and others, be cause of the existence of proscription and other conditions which hindered their intellectual development and religions growth, and prevented them from engag ing in the work of spreading the cause of Christ and uplifting their fellows ac cording as they felt themselves moved by the Spirit of God, withdrew from the Mother Church and formed a separate and distinct organization, out of which has grown tks great African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church. We congratulate ourselves on having had a man of such unselfish motives, starling qualities and pronounced ability as an organiser and loader, to head this Ceat religious movement) he was the st man of the race to grasp the great idea of a purely Negro religious ofgani Siion. staring this hundred years our uroh 1ms grown from a handful to nearly 400.000 communicants, embracing every section of the United States, Cana da, a part of Africa and some of the Islands of the Sea- It has taken a fore most part in all movements affecting tks moral, intellectual and spiritual welfare of the race. At the session of the General Confer ence held at Pittsburgh, Pa., in 1899, it was decided that we should hold our One Hundreth Anniversary in the month of October, 1896, in the “Mother Zion,” (our first established oh arch of the con nection,) now situated on the corner of West 10th and Bleecker streets, New York City, N. Y. We take this medium through which to inform you of our intention, and to earnestly ask your sympathy and co-op eration to make this Centennial effort a success in advancing the Redeemer’s Kingdom and in the elevation of the race. It is onr purpose to hold a Toh Pay Centennial Conference, two sessions each day, at which time papers will be read and such subjects discussed as may be agreed upon. Every denomination or religions or ganisation is cordially invited to partici pate with ns. We especially invite all Methodist organizations to take part with us. Each denomination desiring represen tation will please communicate with Bis hop A. Walters, D. D., Chairman Cen tennial Committee, No. 858 Bleecker St-, New York City, N- Y t/Ou XTniU* MS MModitt lb M swN^HfMjLshmwAM AMs* of AnorSZmnd to Mtm of Canada and As As Brituh Jsiss, SPECIAL APPEAL The General Appeal to the Minuter* and Membert of the A. M. B. Zion Church, and to all other* to whom fhie appeal thall come; Greeting:;' In (he providence of God, we ere near ing the close of the first century of oar ezutence as a church organisation. The success which has attended otur exertions through the century in tfee spread of churches, in (he gathering of converts and in the uplifting of the people gener ally, in their moral and religious life, and in their material prosperity has been phenomenal- J From a handful of members, sot more than sixty, who gathered lu New York ip 1786, we have increased in member ship to 411,768, enlarged our borders un til we now control our churches and ministers in thirty-one states, Canada, Africa and the Isles of the see God has wonderfully blessed our ef forts and prospered tne won of on hands. Necessary InstitutioiM for the better equipment and perpetuity of beginning of out ofit work, for which at the organization we had neither the means tp found, nor the men to fill, have been brought into existence and successfully operated. We feel reasonable and par donable pride in the tremendous growth lurch in all of its related branch few York suing tea iciaJ sum -ar of our church es; and we feel that the membershl] of the church share in tha feeling, api that they may be moved to MppEd ait efforts put forth to make (he Centennial year not only a success st far as w# are concerned as a church, but as marking a distinct spoch in the history of tha raoa on this continent. The Jubilee will be held in City in October, 1886, « days. The spiritual a*'* cess of the celebration u the united efforts of the beis and, friends of Zion Church. Lot us pray that the closing year of the cen tury will be marked by a genera) revival throughout the entire church, and that there will be an Ingathering of sosia SO precedented in the history of (fee Qdl* uection. To furnish an opportunity to the mem bers and frieude of Zion Church to ap propriately express thanks to God and show their loyalty and devotion to Hlg cause; we have deemed it fitting (0 ask % C< tennial thane offbeiUO QT OKI hi.'ndred THOCfSEp poLLAES to enable us to go forward in the work of cknzok extension with renewed confidence at th» beginning of the new century. Knowing the devotion of the ohi and their interest and in this oelebratiqn it each interested person will brace this opportunity to COL less than'one dollae t« (kit1 we also leak to the genefous confiding public who have ne1 assistance when fairly aafd *ert< pealed to for eld, And upon the celebration and the work of the church generally wa Invoke the pi vine blessli Signed for the by the Committee on _ <£ W. Offley, W H. Goler, Fortune, J. 8. Caldwell, J H. W. Smith.R S.HiTtl, hid f. 4 “ new century, tion of the Qhurcks4| “? uhtisX53 •a EDUCATIONAL. GREENVILLE COLLEGE, GREENVILLE, TENN. Offering a complete education to both male and female students. The beneficial feature of th* school is its Industrial Training It is the intent ot the managers to have a complete i tdustrial Department where students may receive instruction in all ot the trades taught in such schools. It has four departments, Industrial, Gram mar. Normal and Collegiate. faculty. R^v R A Morrisey, A B, Pree’t Rev P M Jacobs, A B, B D Mrs R A Morrisey. Lady Principal. Rev Jacob Branner, Asst. Teach r in Grammar School. Expenses—Board, washing & room rent $6 50 per month. For information address Rev F M Jacobs, Secretary of Board, Ashe ville, N C i kmsm College, MADISON VILLE, KY. Complete Arrangements and Ample Accommo dations for Both Sexes. SII DEPARTMENTS oi INSTBOCTO I. PRIMARY. II. NORMAL III. SHORTHAND. IV. CLASSICAL. V. ART. VI. INDUSTRIAL. Rfif. 6. B. WALKER D D., President FACULTY; -, Prinoipal and Profess or of Mathematics and Shorthand. , Instructor in Eng llsh and Penmanship. Mas F Dajob, Instructor in Photog raphy and Fainting. Mas jo&nson, Matron. Rooms and Fuel free, ition $7.26 per month. Photography, Painting In oil or water Board and Tu oolor extra. Panoy needle-work extra. Girls are tangbt ordinary needle-work free. Boys are taught to make barrels free. For farther particulars address th* Prerldeat, Rev. G. B Walker, 407 Hein lein a.ve., Evansville,' Ind. English. Norma), Classical, ‘ Indus trial, Theological and Mu sical Depart menta. SEVEN EXPERIENCED TEACHERS. For further iofortUaiion write to Bish >p 0 C Pettey (Founder), Nrw Berne, N. C., or David Williams Parker. Pru dent, Toscaloosa, Ala. lyr 10o« t95. DtSIO* The modem stand ard Family Medi cine : Cures the common every-day i}ls of humanity. ' sente or me mm one "aiui ►e tween New Tork, Washington, Itianta, New Orleans, Sooth we *11. A. L. Express.” Schedule in effeo Westward, No. L’r. Wilmington *3 20j Air. Lumberton 5 26 1 Max ton_ 6 ‘ Lanrlnburg 6 “ Hamlet ... 6 Lr. Hamlet.... 7 tr. Itock'gham “ Wadesboro “ Honroe_ “ Charlotte.. “ Vt Holly.. '• Llnoolnton '• Shelby Ar. Rnth'rf c Eastward. I v.Ruthr’fdtn '* Shelby.... “ Llnoolnton “ Mt Holly 11 charlott “ Monroe “ Wades lx “ Rook'gh At. Hamlet. !.▼. “ maxton.... # *» “' Lumberton 10 40 “ Jit. Wilm'gton. 12 4n' PALMETTO 9 25pm. top Srjastj “ Clinton. •* Greenwood. “ Abbeville.. “ Elberton,... •' Athens. “ Atlanta. South A Southwest. Lv. Atlanta..>... “ Elbertoo!. .* *.... 4 *• Abbeville. 6 00 “ Greenwood_. .. S 80 1 “ Clinton...^t3...- <25 “ Chester. 7 84 Ar. Monroe... 8 65 North and ^ Lv.NewYorl “ Philadelpl “ Baltimore.. “ WaahlhgtoD. •• Rlohqaoad “ Norfolk “ Portsmo “ Weldon. “ Henderson. “ Eoutiifcrn Pines..... Ar. Hamlet. 8 60 • Dally, t Dally exoeftt Sunday. Jllatty No*. 402 ind 408. “The AUenta 8pectaJ." •olid Pullman veetibuled llmlteaTHin, with Bullet slebhers and day oottohfe (no .extra fare), between WMblflgton ahd_ AtJaate, Portsmouth and Charlotte, connecting at At lanta for and from Chattanooga, Nashville, Memphis, Texas, California, Maoon $ad Florida Parlor and dining careTfbin New York to Washington. 5M.4I ana 4i,"n>e s,A.^i. Express.' train at Pullman sleepers and day 60 between Portsmouth, Weldon and AtL. New York and Weldon, <*1*6 New York Cape Charles, connecting kt Portsmouth Bay Line, ooastwlse steamers, WSahlJ steamers and “Cape Charles Route,’’ tr from ail points North and East. No extra fare on any train. For tlekets, sleepers and iftfo; nix to ticket agents, or to passenger agent. (Ch’w Rer S. St. JOHN. y. P. E. Gen’l Bppi _Portsmouth, Va. Southern Railwa] (PIEDMONT AIR LINE.) RICHMOND & DANVILLE AND NORTH CAROLINA DIVISIONS. IN EFFECT JUNE 14, 1896. This condensed schedule is publish e m TraffloM Information, and is subject to change; out notice to the public. Trains leave Charlotte, N. C. 10:65 P. M. No. 35, daily lor Atl Charlotte Air Line division, South and Southwest. Pullman drawing-room buffet tween New York, Washington, New Orleans. 9:35 A. M. No. 37, daily, Wi Southwestern veetibuled limited Birmingham, Memphis, Montgi and New Orleans, and all poll Southwest. Through Pullman York to New Orleans and New phis. Lining ear, vestibuled < Washington and Atlanta. 19:80 P. M. No. 11, daily lo all points South. Solid train, Atlanta; Pullman sleeping carj Greensboro, 11:00 P. M. No. 35 daily fo vannah, Charleston, Jackson: A local ntattons. Carries tfe drawing-room buffet sleep York, Savannah and Jacksoitf man sleeper, Charlotte to Au 9:85 A. M. No. 37, da*T and C C & A local stations, 8:50 A. M. No. 36, daily Btohmond, Raleigh and Carries Pullman drav er, New Orleans to New to N«w York. 8 <30 P. M. No. 88, dailj Southwestern vestibu ington and all points Nor man car, Memphis to Ne1 to New York; Tampa •o carries vestibuled a ' 6:40 P. M, No. 19, Raleigh, Goldsboro aq Carries Pullman sle boro to Richmond, with train carrying ] 7s00 A. M. No, • Freight and local stations.' 4*» P. M. No. for Statesville, Tay| Trains arrive at Prom the Nor Prom Atlant Prom Ah_ Prom Statesv *LaUy« All freight tra low* M. Culp, Trafflcr W. H. Gan Gen’ll 1H.
The Star of Zion (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 30, 1896, edition 1
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