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sr.. -
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Ik
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A
m SWEEP Of PERIL
Tfefj.Vallefs of .Pennsylvania Aro,
rpi VaiieysJof I?eatli. ' ' -
t OTpXSpVS -TOD EEPEATED.
, N
MdU WWfd Overflow tb It 1 vert
T Itraaclic, and UowlrtU 'lliU. :"
tk WaV 'tiasHesV' ferrying
Iteafh JU IU 1'atU.
A JopfTOM, Pa.. Map 1. - The Cone
j ughf rivcf is civerflvin-, and people
r 'are'fleeine for ibeir liVaK The water
in front! 'ortfc Western Union Tele
. Vraph' oflKf- Wiree'aM ft ti. If feet
?The reservoir
. WiLUAMrinr"Va.. -May - ;
AVjrV .uo!ay niornin th trnJJi
fbiwia Vltfi1 yc unllliou 6f: Uollars worth
ot 'iihcll rSuhiber. jrarii w ay. and Wilf-
iautpofti awakened U7
irfwat fLnuncij4 Usuater. yiic tivct u
IN WAJf R tjjaqic? wak
r
k Urt
JohhrOM-H
Flood
to
It C1U
mkmimdHn lieztji and Iel rui'tlon
1 tl-
.nUJ.IAMDI'UKT. la..
Mty
With
Ibeii'Wiirs of the' disastrous
flooil u't
tru "thi-oirhoiit this vallt-v. '1
br6ujhl? to' memory by the (th'i eaiened
. danjiref'of u'sweejfcof water tha't proiii
'iaea io te as ureai as th.it 'of ;e'y.;ai"s
'uro, and" the people of this (iipyuhd all
throllph the west brancli- Ya.llty are' ih
V fctate of patifa.V ' - . '
' Sipce'r'f'ida'y niffht a steady' npd
jost contintioui downpour of rain lias
nwellinj ail oi tne-sire iius. ftnti
laJ -last tiiprht, numerous clyuil lursts
alOSifine ripe -.reeK ami oijer inuji-
J xaries of he we branch of the Huscjuo'
J iathJaaVc i)agde it iijuuossi'ble to eon-.
I )3n'eth4 wafe'f wilhtn'the banks of -the
treajs.'f 'Jt iuv therefore spread put
'oyerhe eoUni'and X7th 'every poilt
'is x,uriiig' ihhe'lbiain Viyer."
' "'' : 'Rain ana 't'lon'dlmrAtB.
Throufrho'ut'the day and liht the
;. . rainnas fallen here anjt" contjnu'es o
i ali. Adriees from alt io!iits 'p the
river ay the same conditionW-e'ist.1 A
'clud burst at Kea'tiiifrA-O m'les .bove
f . 'Kenovd'yesterday, raiw.d'lllj'jivtit'tnere
20 feel! and the tiver k. lnuvo is re
rte'djttlphSr.tha til flood of 13SU,!
'jwhe'ri'h'alf Ihe lon -as unler water.
' , Abpve, there iiul exte'ii'-lmjf to 'lie
.head-waters at le,ar5.el'l, pvery town
and hamlet has beep i'l ducod by water
to Mie conlitious thai p
'Albny tj
betwvfir
jtralfcha$ been practically suspiwled
since last ' night. Trains are running
'between Williamsport and Lockhaven,
f but ab6've the latter point landslides
and track washouts have practically
.swept the tracks away,
;will be very heavy.
and the
Joss
The &uqiirh.innii ICloln?. -"lh
Snsyehujjja here flows to he
9?th,?f Wl7 j?Cli vWt A has ljut
je jred the point if 'aiier', it is
ykwiijg up at Uie rate of :"a foot ah
Gratf us Run, a tributary which
envies into the river below the city,
'flow's porj.bcf Willia-mspprt. It over'
.Jlowetf its banks and spead over a coa
'Aide.bl portiQn of the city at noon
frlto foM. boding fnany houses and driv
jftg the occupant's from tlieir homes
AU of the honses were occupied by
ipoor people, and the rise was
yo sudden that "the V isuffers lost
'piuch of their personal prbpeVty. The
. 'fact that the water rushed down upon
the city in the dark, hours of the night
-adds an additional element of horror to
1 "!jthe situatiori. The rush pt' water V.hat
swept so much away in' 1V! came at
'daylignt, and the Work Of 'resetting- the
'people L-ottld be betteV ' prepared thaVi
feflef' dark. In antJcipaj.;ufi, hrnvcyr,
'ofnmas 'rAed 'the ' lire and
chiircH Iwlis'of'neity were rtfhir fit
10 o'clock yesrvTSySf)oruing to notify
the poople of the impending danger,
v Prjlnir tor Protection.
Since that hour tho work of pre.,
paring for the worst has been iu pror.
jivvS. in the hundreds of hi "pies' that
w ere su bmerged live years ago 'thfi eo-pie-are
moving out and storing ttfr
giMtds in the houses of those living'n
( the highlands. The business part'J
' the city was a complete wreck fivii
: jearMgo, and hundreds of merchants
-are moving their stock to places of
'safety. Conveyances of every decripV
jtion are hurrying through the streets
iof the city loaded with household gMxi4
nd merchandise, and the scenes begj
'gar description. The regular church
services were all suspended' yesterday,
'and in all of ; the houses of worship
'those rho attended confined tlieir de?
votion to the offering up of prayers fo
, ine assistance ot ITovideuce
present grave emergency.
in the
kief Jotle of Florida Iteten.
J A cksos v i.p. pa. , M ay 1 5. - Advices
Tallahassee,' Ha., state that lion,
ticge IVKaney, chief justice of the
supreme epurt of Florida, has tendered
fhia resignation to the governor, to take
Aeffect Jdnelst.' The caue4or his res
ignation is riot stated, lie has been on
the supreme bench nearly twelve years.
. uis-second term would have
in a few months."
expired
; SnmH;rattUnouiiaated.
CnATTASoooA, Twin., May is. 11. C.
Knotgrass was renominated for con
giress &V: 'o'clpck yesterday morning
ion lhe"3rth ballot. 1 '
vfjini' 'rom the convention on the
M-ani i;r.w. Uv GriHIths, 1 delegate
from .lasher. Tennl; 'was' shot and killed
by John U Stickley, a delegate from
Vhite county. Stickley' was very
drunk. ' " t ' .
Orer tbo liar W It hunt Toachlos
FrnxASDtNA. Fla., May 18. -The Brit
ish steamship Uellingliam sailed from
Mns poVf today With a 'cargo of ' 43oo
V.tyfr?! Pf?ne forjoprnhagen. She,
ire v fee 8 inches of water and went
pvnr the- bar without tbuclun This
1 the dev-pest laden vessel that hfc
SjtoS"!" tef:iir grounds
P SprTpyflehi 111., w iule exeavatinir f or
Aj.tooxa. ra.:"iT2i-
ml Kittsnannitifr Point, .vhich' supplies
; Jhia city1 wilV water,' ty-oke . this 'no'riv
I img ailtltnewater is nisninjr ii m'ijrhtjr
Avodon IloYiJaVxtnirfir ihd ,fa sport, '
revailcd in lSO.
t'itaderphi!tri; lt'rfe' railroad,
fjiis'' bdint ''and Itinnereum.
Phfl itiou building, unearthed the
-. of. thirty-two human bodies in
? js forgptten burial ground.'
f t . 1 '! i :
The Russian government has decided
to settle' 4. 4W) peksnntsfrom Southern
liuSsia' an t 100 Cossack families in
Jssv.ri. Siberia, during the summer en-i
;tirely at the expense of the gov,, ru
men t. '
v S inmr.l meeting oft the Lainson
.;-nsondat.. ".. ?tore Servit-e Company,
: . :? Hf t-4.0JO.OOU; whichv
. je..:r,tioIs h-. the patents. for cash car-
r!ef ia. ',t's. us hold in cwifc4.
' ' t 4' "
1
JUDGE WALTER CLAKK.
-
'
WALTiaCLABK. aocuEctic ' .
tatfeii; lean wfely reoomnwd t
SI
truly.
GfcN. PHIL COUK !AiX
Th Georgia Ker. tr of Stat fs
Away After Urjef I linen. ;
' Atlanta. May 21. On. , I'hil Cook,
iecretjiry of statf. da.l this Saorn
jnjC ut 1 o'cloc f. The' jfCHrraf ; was
nt Saturday' an I ths cl(l Wava'g'aTe
Ituniiiv It u i kiss :r
cold Which rsui ted In pal umo-
He waa 77 reari of asre amt .me
lira a
ui:i. lie va.s 7.i years oi age
of the moit popular men in the lyte.
Jen. Cook'n Life. .
Ucn. Took wna lorn at is father's
planthtiou, ia 1 wijjtfs county. Cieorpr.a,
twelves' miles below facon, in the year
, . !
Ills father. Major Cook, was an Officer
in the EiUtJi L'riitd ' tate in-
fantry and wa stationed for a
, .
Iftnjf- while a.t lort Hawkins,? near
.Mii con in tlw year -lbitf. ;Ud Alaior
General
who, at the .bepriu-
ain of the late war, was'tua pluest
.i. .
officer In the federal arm.v ak a young
captain in Maj. Cook's reginieht at that
time. ' 4 I 1 y
The greater portion of the early
je'a'W - of ''General Cook'sj iifelr; was
spent "on a ; farm, bu J atli the
age cf' "sixteen was se' t the
University of Virginia, wherp he de
voted himself to his studies. chief
among which was that of laM l
lie rose rapidly in his fprofession: j
was prominent during the war, and
was elected to jthe forty-second con1
gress. but denied the .right'' tofhLsjBeat.
lie afterward served in tne fortrfifth
and "forty-sixthi He was trnl'y a rteat
'Georgian. " : "' ' "
' : t. , . i. V:
STRIKERS TRE ASSASSINS.
Walter ;iover, a on-Krrikiijrj Miner
la
AUbaaia. Killed la Cold Jilood j j
IWrmingium, Ala- May t:.--Anther !
chapter has Ufjen addI to the ljst of !
outrages committed recently 1 in-!
ceus-d striking miners. Abiut3 oijlock j
yesterdziy morning a body of masked
miners wentto the house? of Walter '
Glover, a non-striker, and deliberately
assassinated h'm in cold blood. Hp was
asleep at hjs boarding place and! was
wakened by,repeatei raps upon a door
near his bedside, Awakingjaisj went to !
l i ii i . . . I
jue uoor, ana ueiore openiug asked who
knocked. The reply, came b5at Hi was
officers, when the door was hatf opfened.
lieports from shotguns, well leaded
with buckshot, and Winchester jfffles,
broke the stillness of the morning and
filled his body with bullets jandeshot,
producing death instantly.! 1 ThcHdoor
Vfas shot into splinters an his body
Viddred, ' Thert were
some ! other iri-
esbf the house, one of J whom was
slightly wounded with shot
tilover had been working all the time
and had been instrumental 'in obtain
ing other labor to fill the' pbes of
strikers. 11ns u the rmtni nwJlho.i
iuv w Jowamiy crime.
J.I A I - - , ' JPJ i W
hi
GEN. CUARK DYING.
Critical Condition of a CUtluffuUhed Sod
of MlMourU J i5 i
Washisgtox. May 21. Congressman
jJohn R Clark, of Missouri! is lyjng in
a critical coalition ih a privatesanita
yim this city. A week ago h was
compelled to submit to a serious gurgi
pat operation for "kidney tnbubles. It
js said to bp the first operation of the
Ttihf". ever performed in the national
capital. While tfce- physicians express
hope ol his recovery, his condition is
such that his family has not yet been
m'mitted to his bedside. Gen. Clark
was for six years the representative of
the Jedalia district ; and for the same
pumber of years clerk of the bottee of
representatives. After h'si defeat for.
re-election he remained i this city,
and lately was appointed a clerk -in the
supervising architect's offlce. R
GEORGIA TROOPS IN) CAMP.
The Set-on d Regiment at Orlffia
Day of Soldier Lif I.
t9f Tea
Gkiffix, Ga.. May 21,-The epond
Georgia regiment i! wentf in iCamp
orthen he today ; and will remain
ten days. The companies arrived Sat
urday an I yesterday, and it Is the
largest encampment . yet held- puring
mnrsiay nere every, preparation has
been made to
, oxu4c- mms a
; pleasant time when but of cam h ap4
( dutyr The companies' ofticers ar
, mostly here, and the camn nround ia
lively this morning. ; , s
MURDERED IN GEORGIA.
Beapeeted Cltlaen ofjrawklisvlltal killed
' HAWKIX8VIU.K. Gal, MaySL-Mr. F.
L. Caruthers, a highly respected gen
tleman. jas cruelly; murdered l&tur
day night at halfpast ifo'clofek bv
had
7j
his
victim. They became
difficulty abon Mr. Caruths betriend-
mg the negro, and it endedfby ths late
t ter suddenly stabbihe hia fhniiw.ts,
. Ihe knife entered about "three Whes
which death resulted at 3 o'clock Snn.
. ...vj uicaai, ui&King a wound from
1av. - ) jJ Al' i
vok. Kxoltwim trntury. Tb
kt twuii U a- auaai.
a'ak mm u4 Win tln-a
tl'bMt vlllit tSr k4 Vm
ibttihkulia. ib HMcblie"
1 i-h rf! -actr . -cp. t
fi r UMil, li.Mtf.ir CU nu.-
5 ! W bar found hi Hectwpob W 2
3 T cfAHr fbr chfldres. I got one U May. and I m far J 4
2 .. JVm. Vrom mr rxpiieiH with It, d pb- i
sea i
JUIJUUUUtJtJUUt
9
J
BOOK FREE.
Bleetrolibratio Co,
HCW YORK.
COXEYISM
AND M'KINLEYISM.
Th rroteetlna
rolicr Carried
to IU
" ; Logical Concloslon.
The secretary of the American pro
teetire tariff league writes to the World
'prottstinjf against the league's bein
held responsible in any w.se for th
j'. , . ' - ...
Coseyite formien " It is probab e that
.re mUtaken in naming the leagru
as the speciuc source l. om wiiicn ino
Coxeyites were receiving aid. Xercr
theless. a veak igo there were unmis
takable siffns" that th protectionists
were lending the movement aid and en-
couruiremeulof a substantial character;
iusl as mere are sicns now ihl tuev
just as tiu-re are sijjns ,1
-dropped it when public1
Vailed to he eurmur.es oi
'hipulatibii.
- - '
attention was
of
partisan mu-
pul
And in spite of protests and disclcim
or.i nothing is more obvious than that
McKinlcyism and (Coxcyisin stand ia
'the relationship of cause and cflect.
' For twenty years .The protectionists
htivo taught by 'speeches in congress
nnd oh the stump and through their
'party -press that when anj'thin'g goes
, wrong with businesVor even with any
particular industry, congress should be
, galled upon to set thiags righti "iTheir
'doctrine, put forward on all occasions,
has been and is that laws make pros
perity or bring disaster, and that the
remedy for industrial disasters' is more
'lws or changed laws.
I In what (joes this differ from Corey
I ism? TljJ Coney ites aro in distress.
I They claim to bo willing to wor out
; unable to obtain work, and to rupre
sent millions who are suffering pnva
I tion by reason of this condition oi
I things. They follow tho teachings they
have lieard for years and turn to Wash
ington for h?lp. They ask congress to
pass laws which they claim will bring
relict
Even their plan o presenting "a po
tition in boots" is borrowed from the
"MyKinlcyiU's. How many tiins dur.
Ing the last dozen or twenty years have
'the icapitol and Washington swarmed
with people who had gone there to aslc
congress to pa-is'Taws Or to levy ta:;cs
'for their special benefit? How long ia
it since the protectionist spellbinders
and newspapers wero shrieking in,
chorus because the democrats of houso
and senate refused to givo "hjarin;"
'to bands of people from all paf ts of tho
country who iusiste l upon telling con.
'gress what kind of laws and taxes they
'wanted for their own i ;nefii?
Loes the fot' that tlw MuKinloyites
had tiie money (or had it put un tor
'them) to go to Washington iu passen
ger coaches givo them any rights nut
possessed by the Coxjyites, who fur
lack of money mast walu or steal ridea
on freight train .?
The plaia truth is that Coxcyism i.i
simply Mclviulcyiiin r.:uucjj to an ab
surdity by being carried to its logical
conclusion. And though a burleuo
in its present phase it will have ouo
good effect We shall hear less here
after of eongress' and congress-inudo
laws as ihe remedy for industrial
troubles aud trado de.jressioa Wo shall ,
lee an end made of those 'petitions ia
boots" which t'l-5 palace car Coxeyite
have been thrusting upon congress year
a and year out We shall see the honesc
American doctrine of self help put in
practice more and more.
Hlindiy and unoonSciously, with hit
a nebulous idea of what ho is doing,
'the grotesque Coxey is a great reformer.
His absurd "army" will be turned into
a circus sideshow at tweaty-flve cents
admission and then melt away into tho
police station, almshouses and casual
Ireight trains But he hs taught a
lesson that will not bo forgotten, lid
has opened our eyes to the extent to
which our social structure has been
undermined. Ue has sot men to tliiali
ing, and as the first and surest result .
pf that thinking a halfc;will be called
upon that form of state socialism
known as McKinlevisn. N. Y. World.
M'KI.NLEYISM IN OHIO,
An Indication That Tariff Reform Ia Still
In Demand.
It is natural, perhaps, that the" repub
lican press should endeavor to belittlo
the democratic victory iu the congress
lonal eUction in Mclvinley's old dis
trict in Ohio, but the very effort they
make in that behalf shows that they
appreciate the full significance of the
victory. They may well do bo. Ther j
has been a good, deal of chatter in the
organs of the party about "reaction in
public sentiment" concerning the Mc
Kitiley tariifanl a good deal of exulta
tion over republican victories here and
there, but it is worthy of noto that this
election is the first that has been hel l
Since the revolution in JS'Ji. in which
the McKinley issue was fairly and
squarely raised.
The followers of McKinley realized
this and made extraordinary efforts to
Carry the district which he himself car
ried in the gubernatorial election by a
majority cf nearly six hundred. They
had in their favor the hard times, the
dissatisfaction so widespread over the
delay in passing the tariff reform meas
ure, the help of the American Protect
ive association and the customary "off
year" indifference. But with all these
advantages they were beaten by sub
stantially the same majority which tho
democratic candidate had in 1S02. Xo
wonder the republican organs are
whistling to keep their courage up,
for so long as the country clings to
tariff reform when tariff reform is in
issue the carrying of a few municipal
or even state elections for the g. o, p,
on other issues will be of small avail
The value of the election to the dem.
ocracy is in the ) indication it affords
mat the alleged '"reaction" has not re
acted and that the people have not yet
abandoned their hope of tariff reform
or their intention to secure it. Detroit
fc ree Tres.
- "yisin and Coxeyisra are
but twin offspring of thirtv years of
puUK-an legfclat-pn. N. V. WorLL
For Uilaria, Li7er Trou
ble, 3rIndige3tion,u39
SflOWU'S IRON BITTERS
7
Lessens Pain, Insures Safety to
. Life of Mother and Child.
My wife, after having used Mothers'
Friend, passed through the ordtal
with little pun, was stronger in omk
hour than in a week after the birth
of her former child,-J. J.McGoLDaiCK,
Bean Station, Tenn.
Mothers' Friend robbed pain of its
terror and shortened labor. I have the heal
thiest child I ever saw.
Mrs. L. M. Ahern, Cochran, Ga.
Expressed :o ny address, charges prepaid.
celptU price, :.(o per lxxile. For sal by all
on re-Drug-
ix. oook to Aiocners tnaiieu iree.
BJLADF1ELD RKGUI-ATOK CO.. Atlanta, Ga.
EDMUND YATES DEAD.
Tha Fnjf.Uh Author and Journalist
Striken with Apoplexy.
London, May 21. Edmund Yates,
author and journalist, was striken with
apoplexy last evening at the Garnet
Theater, where Lyttons "Money" was
playing. He was removed to the Sav
ory hotel, when he died yesterday
afternoon, mund Yates would have
been Co years old next July had he
lived.
pioican proTecTTon organs
which a few months ago were proclaim
ing that the troubles of the country
were due solely to uncertainty about
the tariff are now insisting that indefi
nite delay ia acting upon the tariff bill
can do no harm, and are demanding
that tlu republicans in the senate do
all they can to prolong that delay.
Louisville Courier-Journal.
When the McKinley act was
passed with its fie cents a dozen duty
on eggs, the f turner was told by repub
lican campaign speakers that he would
now receive a greater price than ever
before for the eggs he brought to
market and that the price would be
maintained. Instead of the five cents
tariff keeping up the price of eggs the
price is lower to-day than it was at any
time before the McKinley' bill became
a law. Owego Gazette.
Chauncey Depew's utterance
that because the democrats have not
freed the country from all the ills visit
ed upon it by republican misrnlc, the
people will fly to theg. o. p. fr relief, is
the kind of talk that would be sugges
tive of imbecility iu almost any other
man. Detroit Fre Press.
It is eminently fitting that the
robber baron and the tramp fraternity
should unite in sending delegations to
Washington to represent themselves as
living petitions to congress. The same
protective system that built up the
barons also multiplied the tramps.
Louisville Courier-JouruaL
Only the Scars Remain,
"Among the many testimonials which I
see In regard to certain medicines perform
ing cures, cleansing tue blood, etc.," writes
Uknuy Hudson, of the James Smith
AVoolen Machinery Co.,
Philadelphia, pa., "nouo
impress me more than my
owa case. Twenty years
ago, at the age of 18 years.
I had swellings come on
my legs, which broke and
became running sores.
iJ7 Our family physician could
do me no good, and it was
feared that the bones
would be affected. At last,
my good old mother
urged me to try Ayer'S
Sarsaparilla. I took three
bottles, the sores healedj
and I have not been
tronhled since. Only tho
scars remain, and the
memory of the past, to
remind me of the Rood)
Ayer's Sarsaparilla has done me. 1 now
weigh two hundred ami twenty pounds, and
am in the best of health. I have been on the
road for the past twelve years, have noticed
Ayer's Sarsaparilla advertised in all parts
of the United States, and always take pleas
ure in telling what good it did for me."
For the cure of all diseases originating in
impure blood, the best remedy is
AYER'S Sarsaparilla
Prepared by Dr. J. C Ayer b Co., Lowell, Mass.
Cures others, will cure youj
SI0YCUES1
acents. V7c sell from
L-aiultiguc at Uie-
ile fa-lcea. feltip far
:urui.itli on nrltre
Ourn at S4I anrrie
as agents ll f .r Tj, ours at f.u Bumf lis am-nt a ell
or I 'I. ur attnU wixnl-rima. 2T, ll,.. tuiiui as iinr
ROADSTER $55
Guaranteed namo as airents rell icr fT5 to 1100.
ACME ROAD RACER, 25 s. 00(1
WOOD-RIMS, OCUi
Perfect lines, perfect stesrtnp. perfect adjnstment.
Guaranteed same as agents sell for 1125 an $155.
Written warraBty with every machine ErerVtline
you burn bicycle tlinmehan fpentyou pay FM to (60
mom than our wboleaaJe price for ne aalltjr.
It cuts about os much to sell biocles throuirh
airenU and dealers as It does t make them. Let
prudence and economy snej;?t the hetter way and
buy from us dirert at wbulcsale prices.
Illustrated Cacalogua free.
Acme Cycle Company,
ELKHART. 1ND.
ELECTRIC TELEPHONE
Bold ontriaht. no rent, no roraltr. Adaotad
to City, Tillatre or Coon try. Needed in every
come, bof. More and omco. uraateat oonvea.
ienee and bert Keller onenrth.
Areata aaaake from S tSO per day.
One in a residence meana a sale to all the
neighbors. Fine instrument, no toys, work
anywhere, any distance. Complete, ready for
use when ahipped. Can be pat Bp by any one,
never out of order, no repairina. 1 wfm a lit
rime, narrantea. A money mei . n rite
W. P. Harrises 4 Co., Clerk 10, Col ambus, a
Whew Raby was sick, we rave her Caotorla,
When she was a Child, &iiN cHod for Castorla.
Vhen she became Mim, she clunj to Costoria.
When iho had Chii'xeu, aha gave them Cautoria,
W(nl:iufiL Mmfir.ii- ln:Uirinsllon an A
Eilii-uiicgs. tnke
liltOWX-S IUON KITTUKS.
It cures quickly. For sale by all dialers in
vwdkcine. Get he genuir's
i
H 0
Hi
iair nm ii, a m n
1 hsa
f and OrjtemE&tiRa
' Curwd at. kusa wiu
outpaa. Book of taf
tkmlanaeDt FREE. "
T tv rw v w .
'
aiiiueSi'f rape,, r.WsHuldeeper and
CONpliNSliD SCHEDULE.
X jeFJTECT AL'GVIST 13. lsya.
Lv Riehwona.....
tturkvuit .
&esvtM-'.'.. ...
vr Juuvike .
i.v iativtie
r Jt ceusboi o
UOluSWM-0 ..... .
r Ualeij.l)
uv i:aletgu
Lv Durham ,..
ArGreensoort)
Lv winsion-Halem.
cv vreenstMiro
Ar Wiiishary
AMiaiesville
r Ashevllle
r not swings
it ic v
r
4l A
9 U an
0 AM
. 1W AM
It. rM
1 OU A
tawAM
5A
4 4; AM
8 00 AM
145 AM
11 Mam
4 Oil FM
5 sera
9 AM
1 1 25
i &s tm
4 FM
10 13 TM
t54AM
S IS AM
i. .Salisbury
r''harloue
Ars-trtiinhurg...
.VrCSr-envllle
r At '.ml ii
i.T i"h,irl'te
A r Columbia
Ar Augusta
8 13 AM
i AM
1V AM
IJ-JtS FM
4 .5 ra
1 Sll
4 20 FM
Jo FM
Northbound nos.
; 38 & io.
DA IL
. 11
No
I .v A iv tlhtJi
I.v t'olunnhla
A r Charlotte
Lv. Atlanta
Ar Chariot rn
Lv oh:ir one ........
r Hnllsriur.v .... ,.,
Lv Hots r logs .....
I.v vshevll'e
l.vsr-iwnville
ArtUsbury
Salisbury
i-rcenshoro
Ar Winjuon-Salem
I.v Gret-nsl'or .....
Ar nrhsm... ....
Ar Raieljrh.
I.v Raleigh
Ar Goldsboro
i.v -ireefishoro ....
Ar ranvllle
r Kt.vsvile...i ..
Ar P.uifcpvllie
Ar Klchmond
5 tm pm
15 pm
n m
615 pui 9 50 am
ssoam 7 4t i m
1 on pm
4 so pm
s 1" pm
1 W) pm
R 1 4 pm
X 40 am f!f pui
s;4 iir
4 10 am 1" 03 p in 9 slpin
1 41 am .........
2 3tpin ...
7 H pm....
i . s no par
4 is am io ii pm 9 37 pm
io am 11 4 pm l49pm
s r am t2 jo nm
7 30 nm it oi am
gspm u.3.")!m
losopm 4 80 am
li 85 a
llii)pn
4 05 am 1) so pm t 4 pm
7 4om 1 3" nm s 7 am
10 so am 4 r. am 405 m
11 5sm 4 fl am 451 am
1 06 pm 7 o am 7 00 om
t D illyexce"
BtTWEEN
tSur.dav.
WEST POINT
RICHMOND
ANT
Leave West Tolut 7.50 a. M. diilly. and 5i' A, M.
lally except Sunday itnd Monda.; xrrlve i lch
luoiid .n an l M 40 A M. RHurmng leave Fcl,
'rnnd 3JC and 4.43 I'. M . dallv except Sunday; ur
rlve;VV'cst Point 5.o and 6.00 P. M.
BET-RICHMOND AND RALEICH VIA
KE YSVILLE.
1
Leave TJkbmonrt 12.40 P M.d.illv; leave Ke
vi:itia.4oP. M ; arrive Oxlord 5.65 P.M.; euder
on f.lo P. M . Durham 7.15 P. I.ai Igh .so Ar
10 , Returning l.nlelii 1 am. dally, Durham s.15 urn
UirilersoD 7.2 P. M.. Oxford .4 a. m.; arrive
Ke.vj.vHie lo.pi A.M., Mhhmoud 1.s p. M. Dally.
Mljcedtroin Nol e1 lenvi 8 Ki jsvHl.e il;ii)y exo'i t
Sutifliiy, 4 in a in.. Oxford, 9211 a m. and ar Ives
Imriiam 11 25 a m. Mlqcd iraln No. so leaves Dur
ham, ually eqcept Nunduy.o oiy m., Ox to id S 30 pm
an'l arrives KeysvJlie, 1 POP.M.
Mixed Train No. 43 leavfB Oxford, dally except
siinri:iy. 2.25 A. M , end amlves Durham 4.15 A. M
Mix' d Tr jri Nt. B" lenve Durlmir, diilly rxcept
sii.ul 1 7 J ., and 'rrlvp).xloii!. 9. if . M.
t rains no U. . 1 . 15 B.;'l?aves oxford 6 ' A .
ally except Sunday, 1145 A.M.. tfcilly, and e g P.
M., diillv except Sunday, and arrive llcndi rson
A. M , 12. to P. M.. and 7.10 P. M. lietui nlng;. leave
lit nrtrron s on ai d 7 so P. M., dull excr 1 Sunday
id r've r-xfnrv 9. . v , 3 .13 P M nnd 2." P. M
v - 'I : o "r.,t .1 i:i. 1 trri' rt fioir .Pd
SL:EPlf,GCAR 3 RVJCF.
On Trains Nos nsand.ia Pullm in tuffet Sleeper
ietwef 11 x ev Y"!-and Atlanta.
On No. .Ti a.d I'ulim n Sieooii R rnrsXcw
Yor '( Npa oile us. NewYoikto Auyula ami
. siitnjt-ii in Va mollis, aud Dining 1 ai New York
(0 MOIlHf.lllrTV
l r Ins N' s. 1 and 12 lun solid heiween ifhii
:oond and Ai !ani 1 and c rr.v I'ullinotiSWcplnsrais
vw en i.u'litno -d. Dn.vllle nd (in entxi-o
Tialus Xiis. m nd li, w, x. ('. Division, enrry
"nun ;in f nlcr CoH teiween Salisbury, Aslieviiiv
ild l:lll Sj
K DEKivLI'Y. J. S. B. T' O PsoN
run ei; U nt. Su, e I 'U-nent
ii.i-eeiisl-n o. N C I khmend, Va.
W. A. TIM.K ''ncr.il P.'issengcr Agent,
w si.iiicriop, l). .
n Mil)'
I K.
'sM. Gen'l Pass. Affpnt,
I
SI 1
I ' ' !
lil.i'i'li,
Sir in
1(1!
BOTANIC-
BLOOD BALM.
A household remedy for all Blood and
Shin dls as s. 'Curvs without fall. Kerof
ala.llrrrs. Kheamittxm.l atarrh. Kalt Uheam
ani every form of lllood Disease from the
simplcstmple to the foulest Ulcer. Fifty
years' use with unvarying" success, dem
onstrates Its parumoua. heal in p, purify
ing and building up virtues. One bolt e
has more curative'virtue than a dozen of
any other kind. It builds up the health
and strength from the first dose.
J3rfrrr for Book of Won
aerful Cures, sent free on uppli
cut ton.
Ifnotkentt v vour local dniretat- aend
PL 00 for a large bottle, or 15.00 for stx bot
tles, and medicipe will be sent, freight
paid, by
BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta. Ga.
Steam,
ft
Q
tr'
.52
unr7iiinrrin
.riiiyiiLi
M U
4 Pa
BJfl ns
7 Mi m
tK 16 rw
16 ra
3f rx
11 15 r .n
1 3'. AH
2 2 AM
7 1 AM
n 3'. rM
6 1" AM
5 45 AM
7A
TPffiiM
A g. CAMERON STEAM'PUMP WOEKS.
The
fill W ifiMllil
Ira cifiiii. R a
. i " ' . : - - i j! -A!'
: ! - v A
Renews its allegiance to
m.ocracy the Cause
of the people,
ulnd asks every friend of , good gov-
ernmeni, progress and enterprise
for support. Its subscription
price will be : !
To Single Subscribers. J.Cfi
To
of over Ten
.Site
"n tnenanas 01
Ty- .j
kinds of Job printing, ana aty
prices that will compare
favorably with any '
IPS
Ordsrs Solicited
LOST!
A 1 ire mount of "hp id v i l)
aim
nillv lv parli'S iiMrli.iii' rriii-
tieis. roses. Gf I Id ill from
firm H it urows 1 lieir own trrs. sends
1 out nothing lnt gooi slock 1 1
1 1 . i- .. ...
! sell
I lie
i!res of ever
farmer 01
a nl will
Write f
eal tlfAi r 111
your section
make ') U a
r 1 aii itiil.ir-
and orit-es at once. fceint .-t..jip ioi
(lesi rijitive Cataliiue.
Agents wanted every here,
Addiess, Clieii.-ktif iNnrs' ry
VVa) In'
i Mention this paper.)
Co.
. G ...
ii
Air and Vacuum Pumps, Vertical and Hori
zontal of every Variety and Capacity.
Regular Horizontal Piston.
- "-7
ly ;
Ihe most simj le, durable and ef
fective Pump jn the market for Mines
Quarries, Pef r.erte?, B ewetfre, Fac
tories, Arte K'an Well-, Fin Dity and
Gcpcral X ai. ulj.c tilling i i.rpose
3'1 ior Catalogue.
Foot of East 23d fctnet. w York-
1 year pay a
ul cira
7 7 17
tt
K
tfEtOfllttEl
: (A ) . .
an oia experience
a.
1
STATE.
WANTED
, A IMi ble IVikoh 141
j I tot take-lbe EeliiMe
v . t
j of Hip - r
: ''World's Columbian Expo
sition Illustrated
AUTH HTIJ ORGAN OF THE FA!?.
bTABI IKKBP W.
'( resit OpipTrtna ij t Make Somf fur
T the St si Year. "
Oiig Chance in a L.irreliinr .
' EiM'I'tse 15 ceirls in lan'S for IrnB
j j3e eojv nnl full arliciiliiFH.
at
Il
B. CAMPBELL, Frs..
59 Adams St-, Cnicago, 111-
JUS
S 2 Li h
- f
i g lipiSMfp1
A I 'S3 Wm-;mf. .
r ii
i ,
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