8 THE WILSON ADVANCE: OCTOBER I; 1896. 18 ' September. 1896 Su. Mb: Tu.We. Th. Fr. Sa. ' l'2 3 4 5 77 8 9 10 11 12 13 M 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 I t " : : : : MOON'S PHAGES. -.17 ?..rv.. First t n 11:25 Full Keen Third Za p. tn. S:14 New Moon - I ust to !-'-- - jf iiiira nc ' m Jr Quarter 0 p.T-u ! ' k Ouaitcr p.m. i WO FAMOUS PRE ACHiiHS Express Opinions on the Political Situation, ; DR. PAEKHURST AHD.D2. TALMAGE The Former Preaches a Gold Sermon and Displeases Some of His Congregation. Dr. Talmage Opposed to Polities in tlio Pulpit. J New York, Sept. 23. Rev. Dr. Charles H. Paikhurst signalized hi, return from Europe to the' pulpit of Madison jSquare Presbyterian church yesterday by preach ing a sermon on the political situation. The church -vas tilled, a number of silver men who disapproved of the 'doctor's views being in the congregation. - Some of thec made unflattering comments on leaving the church after the sermon. When the .doctor was told of these comments he re marked : l "There is more in this thing than the silver question, and. some' Sunday- in the near future I am going to speak jn'y 'mit.nl. about the treatment ot labor by capital. I will not mihee word-;, either." One of the visitors to the church .Was. Treasurer William P. St. John, ot the Democratic national committee, lie did not vVait to hear all the doctor had to say. "Mr. St. John is one of our deacons," , said Dr. Parkhurst after th,e service :.vha.t hi WILLIAMS FOR GOVERNOR. fvfo Factions of Massaehusets Democrats Name the Silver Orator. BoSTOX,Sept. 28. The silver Democratic delegates who remained in Music Hall all Friday night held their state convention on Saturday and nominated George Fred Williams for governor. The state com mittee decided -to outwit the Williams nien, and though the state convention was sailed to meet in. Music Hall the committee GENTRY'S GREAT E iffe :.' Jl . m4mW -. : lapw Ee Covers the Distance in Two Minutes and a Half Second, CREATING A 1TEW vTORLD'S RECORD Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley fly. ! YTLANTIc o John Gill, Receiver I W A A A V V V- A V, . . ! A '' CONDENSED SCHEDULE I anfIhI In effect Dec. 8,1806. NORTH BOUND. Nd 2 DAILY. ... GEORGE FEED WILLIAMS . hanged the meeting place to Faneuil Hall. There too the Williams men were in the. majority, and -Williams was again nominated for governor. The balance of the ticket nominated in both conventions is as follows: Lieutenant governor, C. T. Callahan,; secretary of state, Joseph H. Potts; attorney general, General J. B. O'Donnell; treasurer, Thomas A. Watson; auditor, Maurice B. Cavanaugh. A num ber of gold men left Faneitil Hall, held an other meeting and named Frederick O. Prince for governor and a full state ticket. The Great Pacer - Readied the IXalf 3Iile Post in Less Tluin a 3Iinute, and Made the Last o carter in Thirty and a Quar ter Secoijds. Portland, Me., Sept, 25. John R. Gen try yesterday, at Rigby Park, paced the fastest mile ever made in harness, and. placed the world's record at 2.0014 The day was cold, and a light northwesterly wind was blowing tip the stretch when John Ii. Gentry rwith W.S.Andrews upon tr.e sulky, came out to go against his rec I ord of 2.01, made on Sept. S of this year, j at Glens "Falls, N. Y., in the second heat of a race with Star Pointer. Gentrv had been given two warming up miles during the afternoon, and when he came out for the third the sun was rapidly sinking. The famous pacer scored once or twice with the runner who was to pace him. and then Went up the stretch on what was to be the fastest mile ever done by a horse in harness. There was not a big crowd present, but what there was of them gave the pacer a great ovation as he came down towards the wire for the word "go," shouted by Starter Culbertsbn, and hun dreds of watches caught the pacer at his start. . The runner was at the pacer's throat latch as they made the first turn on the stretch. Gentry went steadily and with i i apparent ease, tne runner having, hard Leave vYilmington. . . . . . .-. . Arrive Fayetteville. Leave Fayetteville. .. .. .. .. . Lc.ive Fayetteville Junction. . Leave Sanford Leave Climax. .......... .... .'. . Arrive Greensboro. .', Leave Greensboro. ..... . . .'. . Leave Stokesdale... . ... V. Arrive VYalniit Cove.,;. ...... Leave Walnut Cove ....... Leave Rural Hall Arrive Mt. Air.y. . .... . . . ...... . . ?.'25 a m. 10.35 " -10-55" 10. 57. 1 219 p m 2.2 2, '6 3 05 3- 59 4- 3 1 4.3S 5 1 6.45 RailRoaI TlLUN -tinfv,; TATi:i) Sept.-;tl.,pf.(5 AST 1 H"Tl;. A. W. f Lv ei'Ion.. ... ', Ar Ubckv Mount. 1 ; V Lv TaUioro. SOUTH BOUND.' . No I DAILY. Leave Mt. Airy . ... . . . . . . . Leave Rural Hall I....... Arrive Walnut Cove. . ,;. ... . Leave Walnut Cove,,. ... -Leave Stokesdale. . . .v. A", .. Aarive Greensboro. . . . . Leave Greensboro. . .... Leave jClimax . . ............. Leave Sanford. Arrive Fayetteville Junction. Arrive Fayetteville. v ... . . Leave Fayetteville. ". . Arrive Wilmington. ... 1 i 9 35 m t' t ' - r 11.35 H-45 1 212 p m 12.58 " 1.03 44 i-32 " 3- 19 4- 30 ." 4.33 ' 4,45' " 7-55 NORTH BOUND. No 4 DAILY liryan's deception' in Iloston. Boston". S C)t - had , ine preacne.r icu . up to .wnac ne sav about the campaign hv an argument in whi?h he tried to slimv that it was im: Iossible to make anything witnobt ma: terial and impossible, to build a structure without a good foundation. Anion things he said: 'We'are building forward into the future without linowing what Aye are building upon, or knowing whether we are building upon anything in particular that contains in itself the indispensible elements of permanence. Materia 1 com modities in the shape of stocks and jbouds. products of the soil and manufactures have the same intrinsic value in the United States as they had six months ago. But the idea is in the air that all this is pres ently to be dumped upon: foundations' too fictitious to sustain themselves, and still less to sustain the enormous weight of our national economies that it is proposed to place upon them The audience which greeted Mr. Bryan on Boston Common was 1 the largest which he has faced since he started, on his eastern tour. No esti mate placed the number of people at less than f',000, .while many place it at ' 70.0UO. Mr. Bryan had addressed a big crowd at Worcester at 3 :ZQ s o'clock. It was very enthusiastic, cheering at every: telling point. . Gnu-element of discord was visible there, but Mr. Bryan did not seein to no tice it. It"vasa big red flag, with Bryan's picture upon it, hung on ' Willia-ni II. Burns' underwear factory, at the rear of the speakers' stand. Beside if hung an American llagN with Major McKmley's picture on it. At Music Hall last -.night Bryan and Sewall again spoke, the hall being crowded long before the meeting opened, and thousands were turned away. Tonight Mr. Bryan addressed two mon ster meetings at Bath, Candidate Sewall. Me., the home of Thacher Retires from the Race. Albany, Sept. 28 John Boyd Thacher, in a statement of 1,000 words as declined the Democratic nomination for, governor of New York. Senator' Hill wun ted Mr. Thacher to stay in the race. Mr. Thacher usually does . what Senator Hill desires, but this time his influence and arguments By some it is believed that Leave Bennett'sville. . Arrive Maxtdn .. Leave Maxton Leave Red Springs. . Leave Hope Mills'. Arrive Fayetteville.. . . S.25 a m 9-23 ; .9.29 " 9-55 " : 10.35 10.5.' SOUTH BOUND. No 3 DAILY ml Leave Fayetteville.,. . Leave I I ope M i 1 1 . r . . Leave Red Springs . . Arrive Max toil . . . Leave Maxton,. . Arrive Bennetts'ville. . 4.3S p m- , -V! ( . 542,. " 612. 613 720 -.! ... 1 i Lv Itoeky Mount: 1 1 u . j, Lv Wiisun........... ,' I i ii Lv K-lioa Lv Fayetteville;.. Ar j?Mo-enc,e ' Lv: O oHst?oro. Lv T tftifno.ia - -.... Ar yvilinir,rr.n.. . i DATF.D ept.'Tih, tfo A.M. Lv Florence .... S 40 . Lv Fayetteville..' 11 10 Lv Selina..... i 1" l Ar v ilson S.M Lv Wilming-ton . Ly Mapn-vlia LvGoldsboro. .. A. V I. , -. - - - -- i V .M i"-4ti ...... I 1 Id ' x -V a. v uv ft.-- S:Vt -12.01 ,,:.: . . i'.m 1 " HI 1.) -., .... . A.M.P.M- i'i ?ua- 1 .TO IIX work keeping his ca u g h t 1 1 v e quart e v and the second quarter;, was made ii seconds, 'making - the halt mile i:i ; NORTH BOUND -No 16 mixed daily except Sunday. P' i t ion. Tlie jud-cres "miie at 2, seconds, j had no effect. "There is a feeling that there are eternal 1 a possible outcome of the dilemma will be the indorsement by a branch of the De- princjples that it is proposed to mix with an alloy of chiefly human invention, and that this incoherent conglomeration is to be used in mortaring up underneath the terrific weight oCour national weiil and destiny, and stocks go down. Of course they go down, and they will continue to go down till there is restored the convic tion that the government is to be set up on a bottom that' will not give. t : "I am not here to argue financial ques tions, but the present situation in our country is an illustration on a portehtious scale of the truth I am trying to, drive home that you cannot move with Ivigor nor strike with effect except as you feel on the instant the everlasting fixity of the rodk your foot is planted upon. I "National prosperity will come back j when confidence comes back, and conn- ( dence will return when the nation gets its i feet out of the quagmire and back to gran- ite. Traffic not only, but all the relations t of our great communal life are conducted j on the credit system, on a system of mu- j tual ' confidence, and today that mutual confidence does not eziist. That is the .so- 1 cret of our disquiet. And" attempts are j being made deliberately and in hot blood' to crush out all lingering remains of that ' mutual confidence, and such procedure I dare to brand on "this altar of God as thor- ' oughly false to the spirit of the gospel and accursedly treasonable to our collec tive interests and national deitiny. " DR. TALMAGE ON POLITICS. He Thinks Political Sermons- Will Impair a Preacher's Usefulness. ' ; " Washington, Sept.-2S.--Rev. T. DeWitt. . Talmage, in his sermon at the First Pres byterian ehurch yesterday, made the fol lowing allusion- to the presidential cam- . paign : "During the last six presidential elec tions I have been urged to enter the po litical arena, but I never have and never will turn the pulpit in which I preach into - a political stump. Every minister must do as he feels called on to do, and I will not criticize him for doing what he considers his duty, but all the political harangues from pulpits from now until the 3d of November will rjot in all the United States change one vote, but will leave many ears stopped against anything that such clergy men may utter "the rest of their lives. " This statement was followed by a ref erence to the depression now prevailing 'throughout the country .and he said that never within his memory had "so many people literally starved to death as in the past few months." He believed the coun try better off after every crisis, and that ' the Almighty Would settle the controversy between the metals. - ', mocracy of Daniel G. Griffin on state is sues, and the indorsement of a Populist candidate by the silver men in the vState. Tammany Hall may insist upon its own candidate, and at the state committee meeting tonight they may fight for the promotion of Wilbur' F. Porter to first, place on the ticket and Elliot Danforth to second. ' '!-.! ; '. Perhaps a Wholesale Poisoner. Chicago, Sept. 28 Startling develop ments surrounding the mysterious death of Emma Bartels at the home of Dr. C. W- Winters, No. 108 South California ave nue, Sept. 10, has resulted in the arrest of the physician on the charge of murder anu jiis lucucuncnt Dy ine granu jury. Lieutenant Beard, of the Warren avenue police station, says that the evidence now in the possession of the police bids fair to develop conditions in the California ave nue house similar. to those of the Holmes castle, in Fmglewood. It is alleged that Dr. Winters advertised for servants, whom he poisoned. : Ulnrdered and Placed n the Tracli. TowaxdA, Pa., Sept. 2S. The body of J. E. Compton, of Waverly, X'v Y..r was found wedged between the ties of the Lehigh Valley railroad - bridge, at this place, and he died without making a statement. He attended the -Bedford county fair at East Towanda, and was - known to htave had in his possession and a watch. These were missing. A post mortem revealed that Compton had been shot in the back of the head and afterward placed on the track. A tramp giving the name of Phillips,'Svho says he lives in Chicago ia under arrest on suspicion. Four Convicts Escape. New Castle, Del., Sept. 2S. Four pris-' oners eseaped from the county jail' -here Saturday night by overpowering the guard. They were: Thomas Givens, alias Cleveland Joe, serving two years for high way robbery; Joe Smith, alias Chester Joe, serving two years as an accomplice of Givens; James Dugan, serving two years for felonious entry ; William Harris, serv ing three years for a similar crime. Harris and Dugan were recaptured. The 'runner, by the . ii.se of the whip, yas keeping up at .Gentry's -wheel, but was making hard work of it. The third quar ter was made in :-50 "il'seeond, making the three-quarters' l.'.10vi- - As they turned into the home stretch and caught the wind in the teeLh the crowd began to yell . wildly, and both drivers commenced to sing encouragement to their horses and to use the whip a little. With the shouting of the crowd, which was now cheering like mad, the pacer spurted for the wire, and considering tha t he had the wind in his teeth, made the most remarkable quarter of the heat, in 30, making the mile in two minutes and one-half second, just one second less than the former best record first made by Iliii-erp J. at Terre Haute in "1895, and e". ' ! led this year by John R. Gentry, When' Starter Culbertson announced the time, the crowd broke through the fence ami crowded out on the track' and around the pacer, cheering wildly. It is believed that had-Gentrv not had to con tend with the wind he would have madel the mile in tw minutes easily. After Gentry's great mile Robert J. came out to beat his record of 2.02), but only succeeded in making the mile in 2.03. - ; . - ' :...'.- 'The Reading Sold by Auction. Philadelphia, Sept. 21. The most ex tensive auction side that ever took place in this country was held yesterday in the train shed of the old Philadelphia and Reading Railroad company at .Thirteenth and Callowhill streets. There 'passed un der the hammer property of the estimated value of 250,000,000, owned or held by the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad and the Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron company. The entire property of tne two corporations was bid in nv j Charles H. Coster, of the New York bank ing firm of J. P. Morgan & Co., repre senting the rcors;aniza-tion committee.'. WERVOUS Troubles are due to impoverished blood. Hood's Sar saparilla is the One True Blood Purine! aud NERVE TONIC. Oflleers of th Tuj Dauntless Arrested. . Bruxsavick, Ga., Sept. 2(3. Three arrests of persons connected with the trip of the alleged filibuster tug: Dauntless were made last night on warrants sworn oyt by Spanish Consul Delago, charging viola lion of the neutrality laws. Those arrested sire Captain Lamm, Daniel Devereaux, ngineer, and Marshal Walker, fireman. The tug was released on bond. The pre liminary hearing was set for last night before Commissioner Lehman, but the prosecution failed to appear, and it will occur this afternoon. Mcjor 3iKinley's Uusy Week. Caxtox, Q. . '-SeptS'S. 2Ia jor MpKinley spent Sunday very quietly. He and Mrs. McKinley took dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. M. C Barber, Mrs. Barber being Mrs. McKinl.ey's sister. Saturday .night closed an eventful week and this morning opened up another. : . The appointnients for the week are about double the number arranged for last week. Major McKinley seems to be enjoying his usual god health and stands the strain remarkably well. Twenty-one delegations will arrive during the week, including an army of wheelmen from all' sections, who will arrive on Sat urday. ; -, V Ceneral Palmer's Speechinakiiijr. Washixgtox, Sept. 2S. Senator John M. Palmer, of Illinois, the presidential candidate of the National Democratic Y party, arrived in the city yesterday after noon from Philadelphia. The senator is on his way to his hoihe in Illinois, and stopped in this city to pay a visit to his marxied daughter. Next week' he has some matters demanding his presence at the meeting of ' the supreme court of Illi nois at Ottawa, and 'after that will hold himself in readiness to respond to calls for speeches that he may be asked to make by the national committee! Leave Ramsuer. . . . Leave Climax . Arrive Greensboro. .Leave Greensboro. Leave Stokesdale.. Arrive Madison . . 6. .15 a m C j- 9.20 " 9-35 " 10.50 11.50." L v w i 1 so n . . . . 1 1' Ar Rocky Mount 2 17 Lv Tarboro. J j Lv Hneky Mount. 2 17 ; Ar Weldon . .... ' 3 : ; ' i ..M., ' - - - - . i Daily except Monday, XI uav. . - vrn!,lrm'!r- r.v., u.,i;,-.... , . , .VL ;'J '."' I i'-t.es WnduNeck ar"):0.). i-ir.'cnvi!!..- ir ..... 7:4o p.m. Ketu'rnin IVaves' 1 iiin-','n vi iir-r. lliv ;i .m. avrivinij- at.-'iiaUi'-.x- '1-5-a m. y el.ln' 11:20 a ia. .lailv xo-j ; Suni'v 1 Trains on Wavhinrn n i -iai .--n -,. : , ::srtoa ":00 a m. ai..i -:' n:.' U;-i : . W.Oi m, and 3:40 i:u 1 ; rl. . ii ; !.i; i( .C, y,-, a yi ati(l,0;2J p ra. anivt s Wai-hiln n C'' .in .. ,1..,-... ;.. . . . L lrt"i t'l-iitlrSii i(t ' 1- n;: - a -r.i. hrriv'r SOUTH BOUND ' No. 15 mixed Daily except Sunday LeaveMadisori. . . . . Leave Stokesdale... Arrive Greensboro. Leave Greensboro., Leave Climax. 1 . . . Arrive Ramseur. . . . 1225 p m 1 28 " 2-35 3 jo 4-05 5.50 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 with the Norfolk & Western Railroad for Winston-Salem. ! SOUTH BOUND CONNECTIONS at Walnut Cove with the Norfolk. & Weston Railroad for Roanoke and points North and Vest, at Greensboro with the Southern Railu'ay Company for Raleigh. Richmond and all pjoints North &nd East, at . Fayetteville with the Atlantic Coast Line for all points South, at Maxton with Seaboard Air Line for" Charlotte, Atlanta and; all points South and Southwest.. . J. W. FRY, W. E KYI E, Gen'l Manoger. Gen' Pass. Agent. .with-train.on rk-otkUid Savii Irani leaves Jarbom da; arrives Plymoinh 7:-;." i 111. 1 riymovjth 7:40 a in, arrive Tfii'ir; ir.am on Midland V. ( '. bva: botM (lailv. execiJt Sainlav ('.: -Tin-m . ..1 .0,1 .- . . oiimuiii-:u.,j u in. U'i 1. 1 1 1 1; l:,-2 it i Vi' H;;m . titOd 1-M a m: arrive at CoJil.-.b-tro .:: a m -Trains on Xas-hvil le braiu-hi !.-;; (- i;11( ky Mt at 4:1)0 i m: ia.-ln iile .":''". i pr. i-r,u r, !,',,,e 5:1). P m.". lieturninr . leaves- SjiiHnsr'H-i'-e :(:0a ni. Nashville S;, a m.. .anive at Kuckv Mount y:0i. daii.v ext-ci.it Suia av. 1 ' I rain on Clinton branch lv iv. Waaw or Clinton daily e.eoj't; Svmdav. st-f'ui a; iil and 4:10 p. m. lictuvning- klavf Ciintt.nat T:'a m. and'll :x p m. s Train ' No. maks close connection at Wei fllll t'. oil ; ...int yli.if,- . 1 m ....,-; v.-,i, uii I'viiiiJ jij.iii 1 ; , cm l(tll:ii4 Kiehmond. and dailv except Suiulav via l'drts mouth and Bay Line. Also at liockv Mont with Norfolk and Carolina rail road 'for Nor folk dairy, and all points north' via Norfolk. JOHN F. DIVINE, Geiil Su?t. J R. K EN LY,' Gen'l Manager. s T. M. EMEKSON Trailic Mana-er. j ." JOHN GASTON, I Fashionable Barber, ' Nash St. WILSON, N C. j Easy chairs, razors keen; i- Scissors sharp, lihen clean. j For a shave you pay a dime - j j Only a nickle to get a shine; narnpoo.or ha'r cut rompadour . ; Y911 pav the sum of twenty eents more. Buy your laces and ribbons"". M. T. Young's. j Hammocks at M. T. Young's, j SewingMacliines, all kinds, M. T. Young's. ! , Shoes, Shoes, Shoes, M. T: Young. DOUBLEDAILY SERVICE ! J Bcli.ecl-u.le ,in Effect' .A.pxil 5tli, 1S36. SOUTHBOUND. r.0,-40?.! No. 41 . KOETHECUKr'." No :( 'i No 8 The prettiest line Shirts in town. M. T. Young. 5he fae simile Signature of V CASTOniA. is Cfl every wrapper. Uv New York vjiPen'n It L 3 :'.Q pm'-' 9 00 j-m: 1 l'hiladelphia - ' a 15 i 1:-(."' am Baltimore " T hi ": ! Lv Washing-ton 8 40 ' . 4 :i j Kiehmond ,H 0" , ! Lv Norfolk via SAL ll :0 fl 00 ! Portsmouth. '" " JlOlni't i l.i J ,Lv Weldon, via S A L J. 3 05 a m " 11 a m Ar Henderson, ( 4 3 ;i i.l)pm Ar Durham, via SAL 17 32 a m UTO nx Lv Durham " .. 5 20 p m -11 00 a m Ar Kaleig-h, via SAL. 5 55 a m 3 S4p m Sanford, " 714 : 4 5-S i Southern Pines, " ' 8t0 i 5 49 Hamlet, " ' 8 :() ; 55 . Wadesboro, " 9 52 ! 8 01 Monroe, 10 40am 8 55 Ar Charlotte, via S A L' 11 a a m 10 '-0 p m' : Chester via S A L j 12 03 pm; 10 32 pn Clinton, . " UOpm 11 5S 1 Greenwood, " 23 - 1 100am Abbeville, 3 00 j 132. , Elberton, . " 4 00 ' - 2 30 ! Athens. " 510 , 3 08 j Winder,' " 5-J 4 21 i Atlanta. S A L. (Union 6 45 f 5 0 I Depot (.Cent. Time.) I , ! tral lime, At hens. K!l crton, Abtevilie., CircenAvocd, Ciinto'n. .' Chester, Hamlet, So ut he ui Fine?, Ifaleih, II !.'.'!;! -Rr 1 Hi 4 ! 0 t.'ll r.:'i t" :.-" 7 : '.' ' : . i il . 15 j.iti l'.:-" " 11 a Lv Durham , Ar Weldon, via S A L lticbmond. I Washington, via Pa II It l1"' , Paltimore " -l---'1" :-' a 5 " 4 f .'. flit ; 40 Philadeirhia New York. . Portsmouth, Norfolk, ,2.0 1 11: 4 5:; . 7 :i i -11 1 -A' 12 4.'. affl 14'.;. -i:. l: ! -44:;; - r h i ; - -4(.(,r4 IP' 4" I- :.' 11 1" i; 1 ;.") 5 'J' I O .-; 10 . '; ! t . . . . rr i . , a , . - . . I 1- ! - I I ... I I . . , npt.Kii a I , vr, . 1 ... i - r. 11 i ii l . .. .. ersand Coaches (no extra fare.) Washington to Atlanta. ' onjrrepsional Lnrntw'- . ',ria Parlor and Dining: Cars, New York to Washington. Pullman VestiUikd Vi a - y Sleepers, Portsmouth to charlotte (open at Portsmouth 9 p. m.t . 'L'-. i(;rtl- " ao. 41. ine c. a. ij. express, coriu .iraiu 01 r uxiiuaii" .-Mt-fijers uwu , ; ... ri mouth and Weldon to Atlanta. Pullman Sleepers New York to Weldun aim No. 402. "The Atlanta Special."' Solid Tubman Arestibuled Limited Train Buffet Drawing' KoomMeepers. anuuay coacnes mo extra tare. Atmnun!'. r Yrs-, Pullman Sleepers, charlotte to Portsmouth. Pullman Parlor Cars Washington to . v No. 3S, "The S.A. L. Express." Solid 'Train with Pullman Sleepers ami .ia . ttIi. Atlanta to AVeldon, Weldon to New York. Atlanta to Portsmouth, Cape Charles to -.j- Daily. . Daily, except Sunday. Have, you seen our Straw Hats ? j M. T. Young, Big line Summer Clothing at M, T. Young's. See G. S. Tucker & Go's side 'boards. ' r -At Atlanta For Montgomery, Mobile," New Orleans, Texas. Mexico, CaJiforn-. - Pensacola, Selma and Florida. J,,1lirCare At Portsmouth With Bay Line, coastwise steamers, Washington steamers;!-1... Charles Route," to and from all points North and East. ' i NO EXTRA FARE ON ANY TRAIN. ? - For Tickets, Sleepers, and Infcraiation, apply to Ticket Agents. or to . j ! . V T.J. Anderson General Passenger nein. j E. St. John, Vice-President and Gen'l Manager. ' if er' V. E. McBee, Gen'l Superintendent. II. W. B. Glover, Traffic lanan , GENERAL OFFICES, PORTSMOUTH, VA.

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