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8 THE WILSON ADVANCE: JULY 9, 1896. km And Three Lives Lost by a West 'Virginia Waterspout. IMMENSE DAMAGE TO PKOPERTY. Farm Houses Washed from Their Founda j tions, Stock Drowned and Growing Crops Destroyed JLoss in Ohio. of Life and. Property rHEELiXG; W. Va;, July 7.-Anotner waterspout in the interior of Ohio and Marshall counties caused great loss to property and a suspension of railroad traffic out of Wheeling on two railroads.' Sunday night the rainfall in the interior was very heavy, and about 2 o'clock yes terday morning there was so much rain that it approached a cloudburst in vol ume. The various creeks, including Big and Little Wheeling creeks. Little Grave creek, Jim's run, on the West Virginia side of the river, and Wheeling creek arid other tributaries on f the Ohio side, sent out an immense amount of water. The water was speedily out of banks. Farm houses were washed from foundations, stock drowned, growing crops destroyed, and there were many narrow escapes from death in the raging waters. ' j Wheeling creek put out into the Ohio so furiously that up bound1 tpwboats were CONFEDERATE VETS' REUNION " " : ! Governor O'Fer rail's Tribute to the Pres ident of the Confederacy, y' RiCHMOxb, Va., July 1. The Confed erate reunion opened yesterday with charming weather. An immense throng is present, and the exposition grounds, where the convention is held in a large au ditorium -erected forj the purpose, is crowded. The auditorium is handsomely decorated. 'As General Gordon showed his face on the rostrum a mighty cheer went up and the battle scarred veteran re ceived an ovation..; J Before the convention was called to or der General Gordon was! presented with a gavel made from a tree f from the battle field of Chicamauga! Bev. J. William Jpnes offered fervent prayer to the God of Lee and Jackson and Davis. General Gordon, without making a speech, intro duced Governor O'Ferrall, who pn behalf of Virginia' welcomed the veterans. He paid an eloquent, tribute to Jefferson Davis, concluding as follows : "In calmer years, when the- last ember of sectional feeling has burned out, and the last cord of love has gently bound the hearts of all Americans I together, fathers will bring their little children to this .spot and tell them , the story bf a pure, great man, who suffered for his people and for the right as they understood it, and how for this they loved him as they loved no other. Lonir as yonder noble river shall j,roil its tide to the sea it ! shall behold no ( man more kingly. May! the story of his it last nnahlft to srpm tho tirTp. and hn.d tn tin nn below the citv. The Baltimore and Ohio i'life be sweet in days to come, and fWnt. PYtm,k avW tWo tiproo'i f Oil men- come to understand Jefferson ana was soon seen to be m danger, as the water was carrying away the foundations of the pier at the north side. All cars and property of value were taken away and , the people warned of the danger. At 11 :S0 a. m. the east span went down, and carp ried with it the railroad bridge to the west. Further up the creek the trestle work .of the Wheeling Terminal road waj? carried away, and J. H. Rosenberg, an aged contractor, was carried down with the wreck. He was rescued by spectators! ' ' I - ..'.7 ' V 1 T I imiii V 1 I. 1 , lit -'.'. ville, the dainage was-quite, severe. The steel bridges of the Ohio river and Balti more and Ohio roads were carried away the current -being- so swift that the Ohir river bridge was sent to the middle of tho Ohio river, 'tip Little Grave creek, a hotelS in the oil field was carried off its foundn.4 tions, but no. lives were lost. Tho Ohio) river road is now using a steamboat -be tween Wheeling and Moundsville for haul ing passengers, trains for the south start ing at the latter point. The Baltimore. and Ohio is Llocked from Wheeling to Grafton, ana its east pound passenger .trams are going by way of Pittsburg. The loss to the On Pipe creek, in Ohio, opposite Mounds ville, two persons lost their lives. The home of John Perry was washed down the creek into the river and Mrs Perry.and her "mother were drowned. Mr. Perry had . . ."ill--... If V. . V . I k V . . . Information was received this' morning of another fatality. The 8-year-oll daugh ter oi jt-erer .tiicnie, living on lurKey run, was drowned early : yesterday morning: The house was swpt away, and the child was caught in the wreckage and killed. . . : Washington, July 7. The report that Bishop Falconio, of Accrenza, Italy, will succeed Cardinal Satolli as papal, ablegate to the United States is not credited by high Catholic officials here, who regard the ap pointment of Bendetto Lorenzclli, the in ternuncio at The Hague, ; Holland, as much more probable. All statements up to this x time,however, are practically mere guesses. At the papal legation no communication has been received from the pope since last month, when Sa.tolli was practically asked ' -to defer his departure -until his successor had been announced. Davis." .1 Nviiile Governor O'Ferrall was speak ing Wade Hampton camq in and was pre-, sented by General Gordon. '-He was re ceived with cheers, lasting several min-, utes. At the conclusion of the governor's address Mayor Richard M. Taylor deliv ered an address of welcome on-' behalf of the city of Richmond: Subsequently Gen-. eral Hampton made a rousing speech, which was loudly applauded. ; ; ; General Gordon responded to the address of welcome and received the building on behalf of the veterans, of whom he said": "These' broad minded men, broadened and ennobled by sacrilico, refined and purified in the. fires of affliction, embrace as a brother every true lover of their conn try," and acknowledge no superiors in de votion to the commonweal and in unfal tering support to the ..laws, the flag, the honor and the freedom of j this American republic." ; 5 ' A reception w;;s given in honor cf Mrs. Jefferson Davis and her 1 daughter, Mrs. Hays, in the Confederates 'Museum List night by the regents' of that institution. The museum is the builuirfg formerly the White House of the Confederacy. When the hour fixed for-Mrs, p.ivis and her daughter to receive arvivid there w.isa solid mass of humanity' jin the; streets about the house. So great ;was the crowd that" all could not enter the hou:e, and the tw ladies bowed their acknowledgments from the windows. j ' The President Keeps Posted. Buzzard's Bay, Mass., July 7. Private Secretary Thurber came over from his summer residence at Marion yesterday by rail, and will probably remain until after the Chicago convention, as the president will have considerable extra work while-: it lasts. The president will be kept in formed Of the progress and drift of the convention from start to finish, particu larly as - to the work of the eastern gold men. : ... ' Fatally Shot His Tormentors. Chatham, X. B. , July 7. -John McKane, of New Castle, X. S., and. Norman Mc Kenzie, a druggist, were wounded, the latter critically, by Dr. Baynon, of Xew Orleans, a guest ; at the Waverly hotel, Xew Castle, while they were giving the doctor a beating. The men were angered at Dr. Baynon' s request 'that they make less noise so he could sleep. Dr. Baynon surrendered and was admitted to bail. . Thought to be a Wholesale ?.Iurderer. Fargo; X. D., July 7. A' man giving his name as Frank Dal ton, arrested in this city about two weeks' ago, is thought to be Jaines Durham, the Calif ornian accused of murdering six people. He is at present confined in the county jail serving a thirty days' sentence for stealing a bicycle. He was traveling, under the name of Frank Dalton, of Boston. He will be held pend ing definite identification. Cornell Students Off for Greenland.: Ithaca, X. Y., July 3. -A Cornell party of six left yesterday for Greenland on. an exploration expedition under Lieutenant Pearv. Professors Tarr-and Gill, of the 'Cological department, are in charge. A pArty from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology will join them. They will leave Sydney, Cape Breton,; on July 14 for Melville bay, Greenland. The purpose of the expedition is to study the geological formations and to 'make natural history collections. I Consul General X.ee Protests, i Havana, July 8. t'onsui GcneralLee has '.entered a protest on behalf of the United States government against the prohibition jof the expoi't of bananas from the ports of jGibara, Xuevitas and Obeyes, which wag ordered by Captain General jWeyler on the jground tht the vessels engaged in this trade supplied resources to the insurgents, jso action has yet teen taken on Consul General Lee's protest. ! " j Throe Men IJuried Alive. Nashville, July 7, Yesterday- after noon, on a branch line of the Xash.vilie, Chattanooga and St. Louis railroad, near (jtentre ville, six 'men working on the road were buried by a slide of rocks raid dirt, caused by recent heavy rain.i Men were ajfc qrice put to work rescuing the buried men, aad in two hours three Were taken pjit air', but seriousiy injured and the other three were dead. ' 3 A WEEK'S NEWS CONDENSED . i , - , - : ,-.. . Wednesday, July 1. ..; National Chairman Harrity declares that Pennsylvania will not bolt the conven tion, no matter: what the financial plank of the platform may be. A Helena, Mont., dispatch says that the Cheyenne Indians have donned their war paint and are holding powwows, prepara tory to a general uprising. Owing to failure to agree on a scale of wages the tin plate mills throughout the country have closed. In ,the neighborhood of Pittsburg alqne 25,000 men are out. Officials of the Chicago and Alton rail road at Chicago have discovered that , a gang of employes, among whom are pas senger train conductors and station agents, working with Pullman car por ters, have robbed the railway company Of $15,000. , ; Thursday, July 2. - President Cleveland yesterday arrived at his .summer home, Gray Gables, on Buzzard's bay, Mass. , . Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe, authoress of the famous slave story, "Uncle Tom's Cabin," and sister of Henry Ward Beecher, died at Hartford yesterday, aged 84. Garrett A. Hobart, Republican candi date for vice president, visited Major Mc Kinley at'Canton, O., yesterday, and after ward conferred with Chairman Harfna at Cleveland. :'.-.;.' It is stated in Montreal that the Liberal government of Canada, when it secures the reins ofr power, will ask permission of the British government to send an ac credited agent to Washington. Judge Jenkins, in the federal court at Chicago, has handed down an. Opinion in Which he denies any property rights of the heirs of Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes to the the "Autocrat of the Breakfast Table." Friday, July 3. Fire in Galveston, Tex., last night de stroyed twenty-six freight cars and other property. Loss, 150,000. ; There were six heat prostrations in Chi cago yesterday, one. proving fatal: The dead man is Frederick Dedtetane, an aged Italian. . A prize fight between Billy Smith and Billy Gallagher, at San Francisco last night, wa stopped by. the police on ac count of slugging.- Henry Do wtm was hanged at Halifax. X. C, yesterday for the murder of En gineer Dodd Feb. 22 last. He acknowledged his crime on the scaffold. Strikers attacked A. G. Saunders, a non union workman at the Brown Hoisting company's works at Cleveland, O. In seif defense he drew his, revolver and killed Williani.Kettger. a striker. I Saturday, July 4. . The president has appointed David A. Minnich pttmaster at York, P$. Utah was admitted to statehood today, making the forty-fifth star on the flag. The late Austin Cor bin left a fortune of $0l000.t00,.kil of which goes to his imme diate family, i . . .While sailing on Aylmer lake. Quebec, Peter McRae, his wife and 10-year-old son were drowned by their boat capsizing. The motion for a new trial for James B. Gentry, the actor who murdered "" -Miss Drysdale, was overruled in Philadelphia, and he was sentenced to death. An important filibustering expedition has landed on the coast of the province of Pinar del Rio, Cuius,, with a large quantity of arms and ammunition for the insur gents. - y Monday Ju5y. (5. A strange bug is eating up the Monroe county (Pa.) clover crop. In a fight at the Delaware Water Gap George Overpeck was seriously stabbed. Falling from his bicycle, at Bristol, J. D. Heim, of Xew York city, suffered a broken collar bone. l:- -i ' '."- A Cairo dispatch says-it i reported there that there are :).KK) Mahdists in Dongcla,' and that they are resolved upon lighting. By a shutdown at the mines of the Met ropolitan Iron and Land comt'anv. Iron- r wood, Mich. , 1,500 men are idle. The cause ' of the shutdown is the light demand for iron pre. Tuesday, July 7. The pope has conferred the title of mon signor on Rev. Muehlsipen, Rev. W. W. Walsh and Rev. J. Hessoum, all of St. Louis. ' . ' . The . British hon?e of commons voted that Indi;i should defray the cost of send ing Indian troops on the recent Nile ex pedition against the dervihe-v Millinery at M. T. -Youncr's at half price. . -. . Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Ry. ! Vtlaxtic coast COI DF.NSED SCHEDULE ; and BkANciiEs and fu, ' rUc J.I0 VJJ COO St U. Of 3iJ U. NORTH BOUND. No 2. DAILY. ..... Leave vilmington. . Arrive Favetteville. . Leave Fayetteville . . . . Leave Fayetteville Junction Leave Sanfordl j - Leave Climax. ....... Arrive Greensboro. ... . . . . Leave Greensboro . . . Leave Stokesdale- U . .' Arrive Walnut Cove. ...... .: .Leave Walnut Cove. . . . ... . . Leave Rural Hall.. Arrive lt; Airy- . . . . . . - - .7.25-a m. 10.35 4 .; 10.55 " t i0 57 . 1219P m 2,56 3-05 3- 59 4- 3i 4- 3S 5- i" 6.45 1 i a . C I i ( TRAIN GOING SOUTH. ! DATED if - I June 14th, 15?i , 6H . . ,A.M.t'. M. Lv Weltlon. 1 11 .".5 j h 4 1 Ar Uocky. Mount.!- 1 00 1 10 ol . Ly Tarboro "is 12 j 4 it; j 1 07 i south bound: ' No I I DAILY. Lv Rocky Mouut. 1 00 1 10 oil L Lv Wilson...... ...k J Pi 11 l Lv Selma .t 53 Ar j; loience I 5 ! 3 U LvGoldsborOi... fiV Masmolia. ; . . . Ar 'Wilmington. . if 3 41,-, Leave Mt. Airy. 1 . . '. . .. Leave Rural Hall ...... . .'.-.. Arrive Walnut Cov. . .... Leave VValnut Cove. . . , ... . . Leave Stokesdale.' . . . ..... : . Aarive Greensboro. . ...... Leave Greensboro . Leave Climax, i . . . . . Leave Sanford. . Arrive Rkyetteville junction. Arrive Fayetteville. . - -. . . Leave Fayetteville. . . . .. Arrive Wilmington. . . .. . . . . 1 ( Q 35 a m j 11.05 " 11,35 " 11-45 4 1212 p m 12.5S 1.03 1-32 3- 19 4- 3q 4-33 4-45 , 7-55 .TIfAJNji;' GOING NOlcTi-ii .NORTH BOUND. No 4, DAILY it Leave Bennettsville. Arrive Maxton. . . . . Leave -INIaxton. . Leave Red Springs. Leave Hope Mills.' . . Arrive Fayetteville. . S 25 a m" 9.29 9-55. 10.35 -10.52 u it SOUTH BOUND. No 3 DAILY Leave Fayetteville. . Leave Hope Mills. . . Leave Red Springs. Arrive Maxton.L ... Leave Maxton.y, Arrive Bennettsville. . . 4.3S p m . . 45 '542 . . .612 -.613' ... 720 ft NORTH BOUND -No 16 mixed daily except Sunday. Leave Ramsuer. J . : Leave Climax. . . .'. . Arrive Greensboro. Le'a ve Greensboro . Leave Stokesdale1. . Arrive Madison . . 6.45 am S.-3&-9.20 " 9-OD i -10.50 " 11.50 " - -' ' ! - ! DATED '-i? June litii. - c'Z ' . 1 .;"'.' .- .-.-!-.: -.; X7i. Lv Florence ...... 8 40 i Lv Fayetteville.. 11 10 Lv Selina.. .... ...... 1 34 Ar Wilson.....;...: 1 20 Lv "Wilmington.. ..... LvMasrnolia J..-. j. Lv Golrlsboro. ..-!-- ' i - ! :P ' LvWii'son ; j t:u A r Rocky Mount. 217 Lv Tai-boro. . . ... 1 1 Lv Rocky Mouat. '2. IT Ar' Weldon ..... 'S .ii X t.l 73T: " - "7 in ..... ; I'll ;r ; -7(i- 3-., 1 nl-; i. i i, I.,1-' liw.ia io-l i 2-11 1 (11 .. 'A. M. p. m- 4Daiiy excepts un- SOUTH BOUND No 15 mixed Dally except ;Sunday Leave Madison . . . "T . Leave Stokesdale.! . . Arrive Greensboro. . . Lea v e Greensboro. . . . . Leave Climax. . .'.' '. .'. Arrive Ramseur. ...... .1225 p m . 1 2S " 2:-35 3 io-: 4 .05 5 50 . ( 1 'tDaily except. Monday. day. .". ! . '" Train on Scotland Neck liranc-h maa h-v'- Weldon 3:55 p m, 1 1 ali'fax 4:1.3 rii:' a rrivc'C land Neck at 5:03, Greenville t;:47 i in. Kin'f'm .:45p m Returning leaves Kinston T-ji'am Greenville 8:2 a m, arriving at llaliiav IH ) a in.. V. eldon ll:2f) a ra. dailv except si-biv T.rams on Washington branch lea e Wii.V msrton 8:00 a m, and :i:u0 m, arrh es ;fe:o0a m, and 3:40 p m, Taiior 'y 45 p Pl -jv turninsr leave Tarboro 5:30 p m. I'arnit'k'.' fA ' a m and 6:29 p.m. arrives Washm-tn n-"'v'r. and 7:10 p m. daily except Sundav. Couvn---with trains 011 Scotland Neck bran'eli. Train leaves Tarboro dailv,--at .5W n n'" arnves Plymouth 7:35 im.-.-Returninf leuvJi Plymouth 7:-i-) a. m, arrive' Tjrboro-.i:Kiani " Train on Midland N. C. branch le aves (ioUK boro daily, except Sunclav, ii:(0 a in. -a'Tiv'r" iVmithtieM 7r2'l a m; re.turniii": leaver Smith" nc id 7 ::U a in ; af rive at Goldsboro ..: 5 a m . Trains on Nashville branch leave lIoc-k-vMt'' at 4:30 p m--Nrliville 5:0.") p m: Snvi,-i-.r .lp..,e 5::W p m. lk-turni:i- leaves Spiin l!(,i,f S:iiO a m, Nasln ille 8:35 a ra... arrive at Uockv Mou-Kt l:(jo, daiiy except Simdav. :-- ... ' Train on Clinton branch leaves Vvara-fdr Clinton daily except Sunday, at - -; ;.. i:! . and 4:10, p. m. Iteturning leaves Ciintw vi 4-.00 a inland 11 30 p m. : Train No. 78 makes close connection at Xt- don for all points nrth daiiv, all njil'v.a Kichmond. and dailv. except Sunday via Port--rapuih and Bay . Line. Also at. Ho'ekvMotm'.- wit.li Norfolk and Carolina rail road tor Xor folk daily, and air points nort h via Norfolk . ' JOHN P. J)J VINE. (Jeiri Sm:.' J It. ICENLY. fit'n'l Manajrer. ;.T. M. EMEPtSON Trallic Mana-er. ' NORTH BOUND CONNECTIONS at Fayetteville with Atlantic Coast Line for all points North and East at Sanford with the Seaboard Air - Line, at Greensboro With The Southern Railway Company- at Walnut Cove j with the Norfolk &; Western Railroad I for Winston-Salem. SOUTH BOUND CONNECTIONS 1 at Walnut Cove "With the Norfolk. & Weston Railroad for Roanoke -and points North and West, at Greensboro with the Southern Railway Company for Raleigh, Richmond and all points North and East, at -Fayetteville with the Atlantic Coast Line for all points South, at "Max ton with Seaboard Air Line for Charlotte,. Atlanta and all i points South and Southwest. i . W. FRY, - i W.E.KYLE, Gen'l Manoger. Gen'. Pass. Agent JOHN GASTON, U Fashionable Barber, Nash St. WILSON, N C. Easy chairs, razors keen; Scissors sharp, linen clean. For a shave you pay a dime Only a nickle to get a shine; Shampoo or hair cut Pompadour You pav the sum of twentv cents more. Buy your laces and ribbons at M. T. Young's, j ; Hammocks at M. T. Young's. Sewing Machines, all kinds, MYT. Young's. j . Shoes, Shoes, Shoes, M. T.Young. X A JL i. X X X Jl X X X X X X X X X ' X SOUTHBOUND, hS CSS 2 fi DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE in- - Effect-'; .pril j 5th, so. 403 ?o. 41. 1; vr.crnT?T5r.TTiyT,n ' . 1S9S. Terrible Double Murder in California. Santa Barbara, Cal., July -7. A hor rible double murder has been committed here. The bodies of Mrs. H. R. Richard son, aged "60, and daughter Ethel, were found. The women had been stabbed and beaten with a club. Intense excitement prevails. There is no clew to the murderer. Disastrous Incendiary "Fire. : Deadwood, S. D., July 7. An incendi tiry fire destroyed the chlorine works of the Consolidated Mining and Milling company yesterday. The damage exceeds $100,000. The works treat ore from the Portland group mines, and the fire will re sult in the enforced idleness of many men. Shutdown to Curtail Production, FALL River, July 7. Eleven corpora tions representing about one-third of the total-number of looms in this city have shut down for a week or raore, under the ' agreement to curtail production. ;These mills employ 7,650 hand;,. ... i . Ly New York via Penn 11 U pmy 06 pm' Lv Atlanta, via S'AL.Con- Philadelphia - : ; 5 n .- llf am tral Time, : lialtimoro . " i 7 ;.i i 55 !- thens- ' -i Lv .Washington " 8 40 .. i oO. J ' F-berro ' Jiiehmond 12S6u-m" wV ' ji'. Abtieville. I"' Ly Norfolk "ia S "A L.: Portsmouth, V I Lv' Weldon. via S A L . ' i Ar Henderson, - Ar Durham, via S A L Lv Durham Ar lialeig-h, via S A L Sanford, - ' Southern Pine?, ' Hamlet, V.'auesboro, " ; Monroe, " Ar Charlotte, via S A L ' Chester via S A L ; Clint 'Mi,- . Greenwood, , Abbeville, " , Elberton,. " Athens. Winder. Atlantii, S A L. (UniorJ . llepot (.Cent. Time.) . -11 SO ; W U) 2 01 ni't 0 1j 3 05 a m l.l a m GrtenwoUd, Clinton, Chester, Opened' Up. I arid will be glad to have you call and see if our prices suit you. . . . . We have increased cur space and can accommodate you- " ' . v ! Try us and you will find that ADVERTISING PAYS. f, Advance Publishing Company. i I I i i y j. j - x.x m v i S3- m p m Lv Charhtte, via S A L 17 32 a m . -!i C p m Iv Moil roe, via S A L 15 0p mill 00 am'!- .- Haralet, , - outnc rn riaes, -PaleiMh. . i i i A r. Durham, via SAL LvUiirham l :.) ' !. i oi . ! Ar Weldon, via S A L . 13C3p m P)S2pmv.; PbilaUaila l O-p m 11 :-- h- New York, a At Portsmouth, jsori.oiic. : u 8 tOs sro' 0 52 1U . ll Hi. No 40? No H :45.';-av - - J" i - f, l -'l i ! . . i-- - '1 1". 20'pni.. -' -' --l-u vKiJ j ': ;i i i : : 3 :;; '6 00 4 00 r 10 e 45 3 3H CO. Wa'biiigt.on, via .Pa It K 1'J 45. 7 :.' 7.-0 i.i.i i-i : 'Ail No 403. '"The Atlanta Special," gelid Pullmrn.Vestibule Limited Train.'- vrith Vy.:. -,a,, ers and Coaches:(no extra fare.) Washington to Atlanta. "Congressional Linnt( u. . 1 l-,a Parlor and Dininjr Cars,. Sew York to Washington. Pullman Yestiiailed. Ira;.nnv bleepers. Kichmond, to Monroe, also Portsmouth to Atlanta (open to Kichmond a:-i mouth f p. m.) f . ' s ... ,,,:-- io. 4i, lne a. .Li. Express," ol id Tram of I'ullman Sleepers and uay v m.. -. - . mouth antl Weldon to Atlanta. Pullman Sleepers New York to '.Weldon and t.ai',;1;- Xo. 402, "The Atlanta. Special," Solid Pullman Vestibuled Limited Train with y"r Buffet Drawing Hoom Sleepers and Day Coaches (no extra fare. Atlanta to :'' ''f&rs Puilmarf-iSleepers, Atlanta to Portsmouth, also Monroe to ltichmond; Pullman 1 . Washiiifrton to New York. i ' J . t,e. No. 38, "The S. A. L. Expres?." Solid -Train with Puliman Sleepers an I)a.,,Vv( rk Atlanta to Wc4don, AVeldon tp New York, Atlanta to Portsmouth, Cape Charles t- ' '- Dailv. ; t Daily, except Sundaj'. :; :iOH2Ei:iii.TE ccititectiots. . .. Aac03. At. Atlanta For Montgomery, Mobile, New Orleans, Texas, Mexico, Calitornia, ;- Pensacola, Selma and Florida. , n , .-car At Portsmouth With Bay Line, coastwise steamers, Washington steamers an Charles Route," to and from all points North and East. " ' - NO EXTRA FARE ON ANY TRAIN. For Tickets, Sleepers, and Information, apply to Ticket Ag-ents, or to . . . n T.J. Anderson, General Passenger A0ti .J v.c-nc3mcuiduu ucu i manager, : ,f ?x. V. E. McBee, Gen'l Superintendent. HfV. B. Glover, Traffic Manager GENERAL OFFICES; PORTSMOTTH, V A,
The Wilson Advance (Wilson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 9, 1896, edition 1
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