EA'NER. H -p-r yPCL, xxn: GRAHAM; N. C, THURSDAY, AUG UST 6 1896, NO;.27; BEST ; Family fjEDiciriE - . f- i - . - Sks Bm Ever Known. Words of Frsiso from i JTew lark lady for .' AYitR'PILLSl , "I woahl like to add my testimony to that of -otbera who have aed Aer' Pills, ipict to say' tbatl have taken tueta " lor many years, and always derived tho Wat results from, iherr use.. For otom ach ami liver trouble", and for the cure . of headaclio? caused. ly these derange- .meats, Ayer Pills canuut be equaled.'' "When fry friends ask me what is tlis best remedy for disorders of the stom ach, liver, or .bowels, piy Invariable answer' Is, Ayer'i Pills. Taken in sea aon, they will break np a cold, prevent la grippe, check, fever, and regulate the digestive organs. Tbcy are easy to take, ami are, indeed, the best all-ronnd family medicine I have ever known." Mrs. Mat Johnson, 268 Rider Avenue), New York City. .- - AVER'S PILLS Highest. Honor at World' Fair. BraTs SinicirHI Com an Mats Dlwrstrt ' PROFESSIONAL CARPS. JACOH A. TOrVCJ, Att;orney-at-Law, BURLINGTON, .---.-- N. C Practice In the Stnte ftnd Fwlernl courts. Office over W h Ire, Mootu A Co.'e store. Main Street. 'Phone No. 9. , .T. 1.K.SH?1'OI1jI2. ATTORNEY AT LAW GRAHAM,. - - - - N. C. r QBAT nvni'it. Wi I. BYKOM, JH. BYNU3I & HYNUM, JAttoriiFTiMiMi 4wMewtor t lMyr: OUBEN'SBORO, N. 0. Practice irtsrnlerly nance cihiiiiv. Id tlie .court of Ala &u.i,9l y Dr. Jolmll.Stockard, Jr., DENTIST, BUttLINGTON, N. C. .- Wood m-tp of tfth flO rersot. . OltlceonMaiugt.ovcr I N.Vker & V.'s ' tore.' - . , :. . Livery, Sale li Feed ; STABLES. W. C. IMoore. Pkop'k, CrKAHAM. K. O. - - Hark, mrrl all trnln.. Orod ulnr or "on ble teaais. Cbanrni ninderale. X-2Mtia Fince its enlargement, Tlie North f..Kni.n . iiM tliA - la nry.wt WAi'lclv ncwliimier' published in the Wate. It iinnU all the news, and preaches the doctrine of pure democracy. - It j. cimtains eight ige of interesting Tnatter-ercrr week. Hcnd ono dol- r lar and get it for a whole year, a aample copy will be mailed free on anplk-stion to . .., i i '.i i virr o i. .1: V . ! ' Ralt'txh.' X. C. TheNoHh Carolinian and The ALAMAXCK (ilXAXKB will 13 JSfVtt for one year f Two Dollan, tah in advance.: Aptly Tut Gleam:! oflice, Uraltam. K. C . - r VANTED-AN !DEA5l'Si tMMSaaaarstr Protect rmntfirm: ihrj nrnj TT.4tT:wlaI: Kt H M O -, It. I . &.! the suss srtav gjT You should bate a county apvr. Sa'wcriW to Tas Ci r am MARTHY'S CONCLUSION.'. She Be Beeaoclled to Her Own Qalet, . . i . " Cannery Wars, They had returned from a visit to the borne of a grown tip son in tlie city. His face brightened as be ap proaohod tlio front goto, and be Leaved ft sigh of relief aa bo stepped np to tbo -well and began to pump a dipper full of water. '5 - -v VHqv a drink, Martby," ho said Mhev a drink. Tain't no Polly Nary water nor no ginger ale, bnt 'tain't the prickle tbet quonohes thirst, I'yo been a-bnnkorin fur a drink from Ibis well evor senoewo lef home." . Dnt sbo took ho notice of bis In vi tation and passed into the house. "' "Anything wrong?" he asked when lie laid down the wood be Lad brought in for tbo kitchen firo. 4Na Nothtn is wrong." - " "Ye seem sorter silon ter than usual. Ain't ye glad tor.be back bum?" "Yes. I'm glnd tor be book bum. But I'.vo snthin on vaj mind." ."Trouble?" ? ' . : "Not ezackly troubla. But I'm bnginnin tor think tbet wo ain't movin along weth tbo times. I'm kindor afraid thot we'ro gittin tor be back numbers. " , "Tbet oomes along er spendin so muob -time in the city surroundin's, Is'poseJJ' r:r. ''t';"-' "I'm af eared so. Wo don't talk liko them people does. We don't seem ter bev their way of oxpressin ourselves. " --':4x. . . " . Bo seated himself on the wood box and thought it ovor for a few min utes. Then ho looked up and said gravely : ; ... "Martby. ye ain't no slob." "How dare you use seen language ter mo?" she inquired indignantly. "Wbut I mean is tbet ye'ro a Jim Dandy..'? , :, j "W hoover said anyseeb 'a thing again my character? " she oxclnimcd, rising to her feet in her excitement. "Aw, that's oil right., sYo'ro a bnte, ye ora Ye're a corker.". Yo'ro right in it, see? Hully gee, but" "Ezekinli she fairly screeched. Stop that swrarin Ibis minute, cr us ez hot lived man an' wife oil ese yearsis a-gointcr hov court uorcocding's an our names in tbo pit porn." ; ,:f , ' ;". "Don't git rilod, Martby," bore- plied soothingly. Them's only somo o tbo tbin-,'d I picked Up while we wns ter town. I uidn t think yo'd liko 'em very well, but I didn't wantcr losono way sooin yor rocon oiled tor hum. " - . ; 'Air ye suro ye heard that kind o' talk?";- ' .;":. ; "Didn't hour much oLjo wliilo tho boys wus round. " . - .."Wolly" sle responded gontly, lo's say no more about it an talk our own talk in content from this on. - I reckon it tlepen's a pood deal on wbut yeTre useter. T Cities bev their outlandishness Jos' "the same ez the country, uu I dunno but wbut more so." Detroit Free Press. : "' n - Coriua ktmtia. . , The militia is now butweon 500 and 000 ofuoers below the ostablish mont, and tbo nambor of .vacancies tends to innreaso. Tbeehiof oausio of this is the groat agricultural de pression, which bn utterly ruined the smaller landowner! who former, ly officered tbo militia an 1 lias crip pled the groat ones. The landed gentry are living abroad or are crowding Into tbo cities to earn a living. Every younger son and most elder ones nro going into business and find they have no time to devote to soldiering. A inttn Who only gets a' .few woeks' holiday onn hardly bo exooted to spend month of it at some dull eountry town or at some camp of instruction and give up all forms -of sport Many regiments bave bad a number of vacancies fur many years, and this causes a largo mount of extra work and heavy extra expense to the officers, or else the plan of resorting. to attacbod officers must be followed, a method unsatisfactory to both sides. The fact remains a serious one tbtt the militia is aomothing like 15 per cent abort of it establishment of officers. Even this does not show the whole state of the case. The establishment in the artillery and infantry is only three subalterns to two companies, like tbo peace establishment of the regular army, and in the evont of war, if the militia it required for foreign or even borne service, it would want some 600 subalterns to make tbo battalions . up- to war strength. Kqtional Roviow. BUIririaa aa1 Cava. - It is to be 1 fared that Dr. dams will make many room tea. '- Botdw- i Via res tbnt in bis votrrinary practioe tbe wire hairpin Is a frrqoost cause f aiacana in cattle, and especially fen . pastnros near aamiruirie for young women.' fie eoegests that tbe lives of many eows might be b-irpin eouW be rnsno- wuina ui mnriHi uu woaiu DO aolaW. in some one of tbe animals stoasaoh. New York Tribune. An oat rich will -sever go strahrbt I . to its Best, bet always appro bea if with may windiDssnd del our, ra Trdcr, ft parvtble, tn eonoeal tbe 1 i CAlity from olatervatioa tm- How On of Bis Lasjs Cam to Bo . Than the Other. . ' "Perhaps you never notioed thr.t no of iny legs is a little shorter than the other, "said the retired burglar. way, unless you happened to meet me In damp weather, when the rheuma tism made me limp a little, but it is, and I got it in one of the toughest experiences I ever bad. - "I bad gone into a house In a town something less than 100 miles away from the city and bad takon about two steps Inside of a room on the second story whon I felt something give under my. foot, and I knew in a minute I was. in a trap. Two small pieces of timber, like pieces of joist, that bad been figged to work like a common steel trap, sprung up and came, together on my left leg and broke it, I know, and bold me fast ' "The noise of the sprfngingof the trap woke up a man who wns sleep ing in the room. I suppose some body bad been there to see bim be fore and he'd made up bis mind to get .the next man, and be'd set this trap and caught roe, Ho got out of bed, turned up the light and came over to take a look at me. I suppose be thought that all he'd got to do now was just to turn me over to the police. He must have bad absolute confidence in the trail, 'cause he came right up close, and it Nvns a good trap, but I don't see bow be could - have, .forgotibBt my hands' were Iree J tiian t, and wiien no got close enough I just smashed him and knocked him peusoloss over on tho other Fido of the room. - Then I tackled tboso timbers, and, making a tremendous effort, I managed to open 'em wide enough to let my log out. It was caught near the end, and I slid it out sideways. "Well, it was about ns bad as any. thing I ever struck. I hopped on t of tho room and -along tbo ball to tbo bead of the stairs and down, hanging on to tbo banisters and partly sliding on 'em and out through tho front door. My pal was waiting for mo there in iront, and he came up to see what was the matter. Ho knew something was wrong, of course, when ho saw mo limping. . Thoro was a train that stopped there about 2 o'clock in the. morning that we were going to take, though we didn't expect to take, it that way, and ho helped me down' to tho station. Of courso I might have got my log fixed in tbo town all right and comforts bio, but when I'd got aronnd again I'd have srot I don't know bow mauv Vdars df1 tbo ond of it, and that's something I didn't want I'd rather tako tho risk with th leg. ; , -"' "It was a milk train or a freight train, with a pasaengor car attached away down omr end. Nobody no ticed us in particular, and wo got aboard and came back to the city. It was in tho winter time and still dark when wo got back. I was glad of that ' We got a oarriage and wont home, and then I bad my leg set "It was weeks before I got out at all, and when I did got around the broken log was a little bit shorter than the other tbough, as I said be fore, you might never notice it 'cept in damp weather. "New York Bun. ralas Alarm. . There is a physician in Cleveland who is. pretty suro to stutter' when under - the stress of excitement Some timo ago be bad occasion ' to prulewvionally officiate on au inter-. esting occasion, and bis .vocal in firmity was the cause of a funny misapprehension. ' . " x The husband and prospective fa ther, who, by tbo way", bad set his. heart on a son and heir, was nerv ously paoing the library whon tbe doctor on tored. "Well, doctor," cried the hus band, forcing a smile,"! it twins?" "Tr-tr-tr" began tho doctor: ."Triplets! Great Cuwar!'; "Qu-qu-qn" stammered tbe doo tor. ;. - . . - "Quadruplets! Holysmokel" "No, no!" cried tho doctor. "jn-' qu-quite the contrary. Tr-tr-try and take it pb-philosophioally. It's just girL" Cleveland Plain Dealer. . Tea Far Ua4r Itottoal tVahatara. r Should ready boiled lobsters be purchased, test them by gently draw ing back tbe tail, which should re bound with a spring. - If tbe tail is not onrled np and will not spring back wben straightened, the lobster was dead wben boiled and should not bp eaten, Cbooao tbe smaller lobsters that are heavy for tbeir size, as tb larger ones aro apt to beeoarsesnd tough. Lobsters weigh- iug from 1 n to) 3 ponpds aro tbe best in size. All parts of tbe lobster are Wbolenomo and may bo naed except tbe stomach, wbicb is a small bard aack and contains poisonous matter and lies direotly under tbe I tea J, aud little vria wbioh run the entire length of rue taiL New York World. Gaxlow What is your opinion of say new novel? " -- BnW-kor I .nrrvt that I rani rive yon an unprendkod rpinion. Gazlow Why not? SnicWs Bceaase I've read it Roxbarjr,Gaatte - r THE RttlRED BURGLAR. TALES TOLD OF POACHERS. A Kla4 of tawMtlnc That Ha aa X Mslstibl Chans For Soma Men. Tbero is a charm in poaching on preserved bunting or fishing grounds or out of season that appeals irre sistibly to some men. There is a class of poachers in England not iound to any great extent in tbo United States save in regions whore much of tho land is leased by olnbs. These poachers are described by Aloz Innes Bbnnd in Badminton Magazine. ".-;v'.,;v ',,.- - Tbo typical ponober, who is a poacher because of the fun and clan gor in it, develops from tho plow man's boy, who knowa moro about birds' nests than about books; It wns tnese ponciiers tnac won toe battles t Creasy, Poitiers and otbor fields whero tbo bowman's silont weapon decided tho day. ' ' "Our stalwart yeomen never got their bone and mnsclo frpm tbo scanty produce of , precarious forest crops or from -convent doles tbey received in charity," the writer says. "Tboy fattened on the vonison and swino ilesb, on nettod wild fowl and snared fish" not to mention bares and rabbits shot by tho small boys under the very windows of oastlos. When the place got too hot, they took to tho woods and became Robin Hoods that dared man, king or devil. The story told of a poaoher ro'ontly doad is curious. Duncan Mobr was a man of mus clo, who in his old age put the best of ithe rising generation en their backs. Ho was generous of gifts of tho fish and gamo wbioh cost him only the powder or catgut, and sun dry widows and orphans wcro sup ported chiefly by bis bounty. Part ly from fear and partly from good fellowship, Ihe two keepers never touched bim, ovon when Duncan, anxious for oxoitomont, fired his gun in their oars. The big estate on which bo poach ed was sold, and a southern banker bought tho place, retired the old watchers on pension and put in their places a baker's dozen of strangers. They watched b house, bis friends, but it wns Duncan's delight to keep thorn from watching ' him. Rather than get bis friends into trouble bo slept on tho hillsides. But Duncan grumbled because bo could not give his frlouds meat without troubling them. One dark night Duncan found the bnnkor in a rocky gulch with bis ankle badly sprained, 'Duncan was delighted to call the neighbors and do the good Samaritan not The keepers wcro ordered to let Duncan do ns bo j lened. and then Dunoon found lifo po tamo that he borrowed enough money to tako him to west Canada, where ho went in spite of the laird's remonstrances. , Bandy Watt was n good Christian and a fa mens poacher. He listened faithfully to interminable sermons aiid got fined for poaching. Finally bo hired a cheap shooting, which gnto bim an excuse for taking out a license, with unlimited opportunities for trespass. One keeper bogged bim to spare a pet covey of White par tridges. Do agreod to do sdvbnfan other jxuicbcr netted them. Bandy was wild with raga Poaching on bis private jioacbiug grounds could not bo tolerated. So ho ran the guilty one down and had bim takon in band by tbo authorities. A search ing cross examination by tho defend ant s counsel got Bandy to give bim. self away. Bandy caught a chill on leaving tbe court and died in a fort night. In son thorn and eastern Germany it is "Hands B pi" whon ioaobor meets keeper, and tho man that gets the drop on tbo other pulls if there is any resistance or reaching for guns. If a man is killed fairly and squarely, that's tho end of tbe mat ter, but lot thoro be a siga of foul xtlny a gunshot wound In tbe book tbo lynchers bunt tho keeper down and to death or tho keepers kill & guilty poacher. Csiaaall rraasuts to tha Caasv Tbo nrjopession bavin-r passed, we went to loos' at tbo illuminations Sgain and to seethe beautiful rooms more closely and tbo splendid pieces af plate that bod been sent to tbe czar with tbe offering of bread and salt by tbe various governments of Russia. Perhaps tbe finest was one from tbe government of VIoooow a very baodaxnoo gold plate with enameled arms in medallions. . Tbe saltcellar with this plate was a tiny copy of tbo famous crown of Mono maebna, every detail exact and oven tbe bordering of fur Imitated in all its softness in silver, la the throne room the Insignia were spread eat on tbeir velvet easbioxr. Kwnnj more gorgeous than ever under tbe thousand of lights. Bat I preferred seeing thorn on tbe emperor end em prem Msry Grsos , Thorn tea hi Centory. . awsr Bat Ci "If you're a irood boy " tbe parent j Began. But the yontb interrupted: j I Cxoose trie, bat 1 know what yoa S ar going-to iy. I bave a new prop ortion to offer. If yoa aro real kind tome, 111 let yosj take sae to the eitens iustesd of Uncle Richard or Aont Jane or tbe gentleman wbc live next doer. Washington fetar. GRACE BEFORE MEALS. A fnaetloa That Berma to Bo Oat of la ' ' vor Is Fashionable Society. - ; Grfloe before meals is difficult . to manage nowadays, although there aro a fewexoellent people v?ho- are in the world, but not of it, who try to keep up the good bid custom and show their consistency even at din ner parties, to tho unfailing confu sion and discomfort of some of their guests. "These guests may bo taken unawares and may be talking or laughing or other wiso misbehaving . themselves at the solemn moment They are thus likely to be brought to a realization of their uninten tional irreverence "Try the sndden bosh that comes over the assem blage, an awful silence that makes tbe high pitched voloe of tbe nn. lucky offender horribly - distinot "Why didn't someone tell me that the G.'s said grace?" quoth little Mrs. Chatter plaintively. "I went there the other day to dinner, and I was never made so wretohedly un comfortablo in my life. Mr. G, took me in, and, as nsual, I went on talk ing, never giving bim a ehnnce to say a word. I sa w he looked dis turbed, and I noticed that every one was quiet, but thought it was all the more my duty to stir things up. So I called out to Nellie B., who was' sitting opposite me: 'Cheer up, Nel lie Why are you so solemn?'. My husband said afterward that bo was quite wild, and that everybody was tittering, until finally poor Mr. G. took advantage of my stopping for breath to begin, 'For what we aro about to receive,' etc. I was com- pletely taken aback, and they told me afterward that tho expression of my face was irresistibly funny. But bow was I to know?" "Tbe struggle at the Z. 's to keep their guests quiet for grace is one of the jokes of tho season, "said a map recently, "ond I really think under the present condition of society it would bo better to give it np. Tboy bave no end of dinner parties and always say grace, whatever tho number may be, for Mrs. Z. 'a people aro extremely strict In suoh matters. Aud I think she considers it to bo a sort of naive to her consoienco on account of goingout so much and allowing her daughter to dance and go to the theater, so she would not give it up for the world. I was there the other ovoning. There woro 18 at table. Those seated at either end in tho immediate vicinity of the host and hostess realized tho Situa tion and preserved a decorous si lence. But .tbo rest would go on talking. 'Ob, hang it alll said Har ry Z. at last in desporotion. 'Here goes.' And bo rattled oil something that was perfcotly inaudiblo, but which removed the emluirgofrom out tongues, and the dinner began. Perhaps you might put it in tho light of casting pearls before swino, but I really think it would be inoro reverent to discontinue wbnt can nevor beoomo tbo general practice, now that it is one of tboso old cus toms that is more honored, it strikes me, in tbe brooch than in the ob sorvanoa "New York Tribune, rightist- Flra With Fir. . One tif tbo great achievements of tho future is to bo tbe utilization of antagonistic baoilll in stamping out diseases of! various grados. It is thought that thore will in time bo discovered germs that will act as fpiders do upon flies and cats upon mice. Tbey will simply grnpplo with and destroy them. In a number of ins ta noes accidental inoculation of patients suffering from malignant tli son so with tbe gorm of some other equally sorions malady has resulted in tbe restoration of the patient to health. Just bow this is done, just why it is, no one seem able to un derstand, but fads justify tbi con clusion. In one case tho pationt was considered hopelessly ill with an in enrabte disease. A careless physician brought from nitolher uitient the bacilli of sn equally seriout ailinont, with wbicb the sufferer Wns shortly attacked. After a number of weeks of cxtromo"exbaq!ition and suffer, ing, to tbo astonishment of every body who knew the eircumHtanocH, the man began to mend and nltl BMtoly recovered bearing no evi dence of eitbr-r disease, wbicb seem, ed to bave sptmt their foree on each other awl left tbe system almost dean. Jt will be sn interesting ds for modica) seience when doctors can bring out sn army of erysipelas or other bacilli to fight the germs of equally lualisnant diseases. New Yutk Ledger. ""' . Javawllo Morgy was clistteriug away fo bcr aunt .about brr sent mato in school and brr motbi-r. "aitu Pert it." Fi nally the aunt remarked: "Yoa mean Mr. Porter, dear. Ebe is a roarricd woman, and married women aren't calk! Miiaav" Margy rrDijCt d for s nftHnrat, and tbon aba said trianiptahtly, "But suntie, ber baa band is dead!" New York Times. Mrs. Kimllcipb What dor yes wben yensre grren a nice. break f sal? Wiiey Wurdila I don't say ntrtb xt, an'ta. I Jot aa .v wed. . Highest of all in Leavening Power, Latest V. S. Gov't Jteport. IMmilltJps:': BSOLUTEfcY PURE PASSED THE JOB ALONG. Tha Story of a Copylnr and tho Pesarr :'. Poor Thaory. ..,. I remember onoe, at' a time wben I made daily use of the reading room of the British muscram a magnifi cent oommonistio Institution of the best typoI was offered 3 to copy a certain book or manuscript,'! for get wbioh. Being too lazy to think of doing tho work myself, handed over tho commission to a roan whose respectable poverty would have moved o heart of stone an ex ohoolmaster whose qualifications were out of date, and who, through no pnrtioulor fault of bis own, bad drifted into Salvation Army . shel ters. He was a sober, woll spoken, well conducted, altogether unobjec tionable man, really fond of reading Sjnd eminently eligible for a good turn of the kind I did bim. His first step in the matter was to obtain from mo an advance of 5 shillings; bis next, to sublet tho commission to another person in similar circum stances for 1 15s., and so got it en tirely off bis mind and return to his favorite books. i . This second, or rather third, party, however, required an advanoo from my acquaintance of Is. Od. to buy papor, having obtained which bo banded ovor the contract to a fourth party, who was willing to do it for 1J3& Od. v ' Speculation raged for a day or two as tho job was passod on, and it reached bottom at last In the hands of tholoast competent and least so ber female copyist in tlie room, who aotually did tbo work for 5 shillings, and then turned it into a handsonio investment by making it nn oxouso for borrowing endless sixponoes from mo from that timo to tho day I of herdoath, which each sixpenoo probably aooelerated to tho extent of fonrpenceand staved off to tho extent of twopence. She was not a deserving person. If she bad been, she would have come to no suoh ex tremity. Her claims to compassion wore that she could not bo depended on, oould not resist tbe temptation to drink, oould not bring horsolf to do her work carefully and wns thoro fore at a miserable disodvauage in tbe world a disadvantage exactly similar to that Buffered by tbe blind, tbe deaf, tbe maimed, tbo mad or any other victim of imperfect or in jured faculty. I learned from her that she bad once been recommended to the offi cials of tho Charity Organization so cioty, but tbey, on inquiring into her case, bad refused to help hor be cause she was "undeserving," by which they meant that she was in enpablo, of helping hornoJf. Ucte was surely some confusion of idensv She was very angry with tho society, and not unreasonably so, lor she knew that their funds woro largely subscribed by people who regarded them sS ministers of pity to the poor and downcast On the other band, theso peoplo themselves had absurd ly limited tho application of their bounty to sober, honest, respectable persons that is to Bay, to tbe per sons least likely to want It and most apt to bo demoralized by it Con temporary Review. Dlararll'a Idral of Omtaaaa, - - X When r: Disraeli wss ; curly and smart and comparatively troknowtf, bo visited tbo Royal Exohaneo of Liverpool in company with Mr. Duncan Stewart, a leading merchant of tho city. It was at bigb noon, and the exchange wns tbrongod by merchants. Tha scene so tmpresred I the young member of parliament that be said to Mr. Stewart: "My idea of groat na woald bo fhatainnn should receive, tl, apt plause of saeh anassemblairo as this that bo should bo cheered as he" on mo Into this r3in. " - Disraeli went in and enme out un ootieetl. bnt severs! years later hs- sgain visit sd the L4 vorpiol excb.inns to eonipnoy with Mr. Btewsrt His entrance was fnticteJ by a Cheer which spread into a roar and ended in an ovation. Tlio testimony to bis political proo:ino?ico dopply moved Disraeli, who. rrn Ilintr to Mr. Btaw srt tbo remark bo bad fnada yean before, said, "My Meal test of great ness has bue realized." Yontb 'a ComiKHtiort. , Tfcn!I)afrf.v Its fercn known fo follow a ship fnr two months with out STcr la-tng t rn to alight in tbe ttsu txt take a moment's nt It is Lelieved to aderp cn ILe viag. Gf cur.e you know bow disajrreo sblo it is to irr! s desire to aneezo in any ub;io j L.ca preMt bsnl upon your ft J r hp nd yen can. usually JvtTcorue tbia frt-hng. - , 1 1 ' , il T i an i i - A milrtwid wafcbrrisn in India re Jslvcaut II u iiM-alh. - subscribe for.TriB Gleaner . $lr SO a year in advanca , - - ' . mj'-i MACHINIST AND ' - . ENGINEER, ; BURLINGTON, ' -' N. C MACHINE, ' - , 1 BLACKSMITH SHOP, FOUNDRY, GEAloUrTING. ' Pipings, fittings, valves, etc; ' Southern Railway, PIEDMONT AIU LINE., ' J . . FIRST AKD SECOND DIVISIONS , In Effect Apr.l9.l8M, Oreensboro, Hulefgu and Ooklsboro. East Bound , " Ko. St. U I ' Daily. Dallr. tv Oroens'ioro Kntpm 130am - fclou Oolloge....... I2pm t , Jlurllnmou. ,., ma us t - fir!1. ?,n WW SIS " lllllalHuo 4 lInivorslty...w lio HI I'urhara tUSpm , ArlialelsU.. 1. 813" j . - ;' ' MfatMl " I .- -- Kz. hOOr Ly JtalelKh . . j jg too mm Clayton t . lute eolma 4 W II Ml Ar Oold.boro , 4t I SI) p m ' U - West Bound N.SS. Mixed - Daily. Dally. Ar OreenNboro .. lp m; imTta Jlnrllnicln...... tm Si , iah8iii ,. 1 IW 1 Jllllslioro..,...,.,.,, tM tta - ulverwty ..... M. g . f;6 purnaiu..........,.. ''. Lv. HaiWn..,--. ui IS , Ex. feuu. R?1'1''''1" ""' ' Ion pm ITUm it 7 60 t-fi?1."?". !H tto-. Ir Ooldboto...u....,. tOO tMI Ni. 85 nn1 as moke clnte connectkitt Ualvrlty to aud (row Cuajxd UUi, TMhOL'OH BCHEDCtS. Bouth Ko. at Dally. Wo.S7. Daily. lA Waalillnrtun (rharlot'.vilio Klotimoiifl II )a m Mil pm I Mass Lyiiclitfursl 12M (is SMiaos ( w - ;t4 am imnvia..,M, Ar OreafiatMira Wlns'iHoaleinJ tSuaal Huicisn... IfSaia: llaaui i.v An iiio...i ar Hot HjtiiiK.jj hs: si;aut p m CltatfeniifMiga ;hMrtMa. Ciluiiilila.... . Aiivii.ia Savannah (Central Time) JaukMntlHe WMpmi (Hianii am irtupm 41 4 St la St. Auvuatlrt 10 titfft Atlant..j HirmliiKliain- t B) a ml Ssspaa It M pm MM WeiniHil. K- VtHttum... 1J2 I Ttoai " It Horlb N'o. as. Dally, Ko. Imiiy, ' Ar Washington 40pm tii W '' IW ! isir.piii MiaPaml riiarlni'sliu tSaat : SW MWnst OiSaio) i 410 Jtlenrooinl l.yiwliiiiirg. lfctnvllle Mr (InieiMlifim Wln.'ii-MaJtraj Kaielirh AnMviifm ZZ, HiitSpiinKS.. - K rv villa .... S47 KJX0. rhatranoiigaJ i narMil ro ,Mftv! sfiOani 4 a .'J ll48aal trtau I oliltnlila... Savannah... (r.l Tlni JackS'HK Ills JVSV St. Aa(aune 3 Lv Itlrminirhaia. MmnltlB nit tm a f) Orleans, -J FLIEPfNU CAE BEaVKE.- 7,""'", '7"K'l limited. eonioont a '"J"' F"l'a ear.; nlnlmuru Falliaan rtUI 0.1 ettra faro. TtarOiwS mttmiTim Jew lork and NeaiHila, How torkanS Tampa aud Wairw,., Aa.Slea5 H-l Sprlnaj. Ala imrrW nnt-elao coach he ten WathlaabHi anrf J..t. ..... . a.-t as.. kS. nSFvSfe- "T"" "r """" lW York. Atlanta MontxtFinery, and Kew ork and Jmrk- IIW. AM 1M Nna It ami H "tH.r.ln. wJL.' boro ahd Itatelah-V- "i..,r"r,r and hld.o.l.". rnTO.ro. Thrntis-h tickrtm on sale st principal mim. It? '." ratr. oV7ilo5nI.rll; apply to any axeat ot the com(r'oro T ., .'II if I K, Put t, bt dlv V. w. u. a. w. A. t,m" TraMr. ahiataMd, od aS rw cmaactad Sw aieacaaTC me. fTet ' rwt u m. aATKTOTteT aa w rmm we.-. aia k aaa k-- Snanar trrxn W .ha-.-ot. .lT,i??-rJn " Wt Wra W adra; ralmala or trmr A eaarra. OwtaMaaiitMNHham. c.A-srioiv&co. Fartr - kumikrc x. c. ;

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