Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / Oct. 27, 1892, edition 1 / Page 2
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12) J L 1 1 CURE 5 ALL 5KIN . AND BLDDD DI5EA5E5 nd preterit) It with grrat eatitfaction for the cnr of all f'nnt and it.y.j cf Pniarv, Siewi'lar' and Terttar- PK..i.i L. . ... V, aula, bypftlimc 1-ceua.alUin, braluiou Ulcere ud barn, lendu!ar bwelllng-i, Rheumatlim, Malaria, old ChroLle Clteri that have resitted all treatment, Catarrh, fcaiu D)uuu, i;iuii:a, Curoiiic iniialo CwLpiali-u, ilo.-. onrUl P,i'imi T.ti.. C...U li J .... ... r - i . i powanal tome, ana an excellent eppetllsT, buuauj up liitt kvtit-Ui rewdiy. Ladies whole sytlexuf are poisoned and whose blood la la an Impure cnnd'it'op. dug to menntrtial IrretrularUife., are LrculiailV btluUliil l)V W'JU.Ierlul tOUIV and bluud- cleaniW properties of P. P. P., Prickly Ah, Poke Root and Pot ixium. LIPPMAN BEOS., Proprietors, Druggists, Uppman's Block. QAVAHSASd QA' A Happy Welcome Is guaranteed to those who will call at my Saloon, which is stocked fit all times with the Choicest of Domestic and Tm ported Liquors and Wines All the latest drinks compounded and manipulated by skillful men. DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED CIGARS, And a large lot of fine Tobacco. SSfFoR Pure North Carolina Corn Whiskey my place is Headquar ters. James L. Dickinson. (At John Ginn's old stand. LIPPMAN BROS.. Proprietors, Druggists. Lippman's Block. SAVANNAH. GA, TYLER DESK CO., ST. LOUiS.MO Our Mammoth Catalogue of Bank Counters, Desks, and other Office Furnitlt.l, for 103 now ready. New Goods. New Stylos in Desks, Tables, Chairs, Book Cases, Cabi nets, &c, &c, and at matchless prices, is above indicated. Our goods axe yicTi known and sold freely in every country that -peaks English. Catalogues free. Postage 12c. PENNYROYAL VAFERS. A Sjec1fie monthly medlcino for ladies to restore an-i rtynlate ths uitnseji: producing frte, healthy tnj "puiidmss discharge- Nvj a' hes or imins oa up prouch. Now used by over 3",t)00 U.dies. Once usrd. vulluscunin. Invito, a't-s there oiyar. liuy of your druggist only thofe with our s-ig-nut'ire acrbsj lam oi luut-i. Avouisaiv-titui'j.f. bvulfti particulars mailt-1 :ic Munit;. 1 t.er bos. Address. iCKl.K A OlTKMlCAL For !3alQ by Dr. J. H. Fcweli. UOLDSUORO. X. C. KALAMAZOO I weed tt WILLIAMS MFG. CO. I tZ I KALAMAZOO, f ! 0 0 H CURES inr.rJiflODPMsoii I fm JmibFcI 3 $3 ijf I e Iftjft MALARIA S2i mm. 1 " saSlr A BAD RECORD. benjamin harrisox's admixistratioj under indictment extbava GAXCE, corruption and UTTEI DISREGARD OP SOLEMN PLEDGES. The issue in this campaign is the Re publican record of the last four years. It is a very bad reord. It is a record of wrong-doing, of unfair favoritism in legislation and of scandalous misconduct in administration, a record of reckless squandering; of the debauchment of the public service; of corruption in office and in getting office, and of shameful malpractices in tha attempt to retain power regardless of the popular will. The Administration and the Fifty-first Congress cima Into power by plain pur chase. The Republican Party in 188S secured its triumph by selling legislation short. Abandoning all that it had professed and all that its leaders, living and dead, had taught conceruing the limitations of right in tariff legislation it framsd a platform in Chicago ia whicii it offered to monopolists suca tariff rates as they should desire for their enrichment at the expense of the people, in return for con tributions to the campaign fund. The offer was accepted. The money was paid, and with it the notorious em bezzler and corruotionist. Matthew Quay, with his lieutenant, Dudley, whs set to buy the election. When the funds ran low John Waaamaker purchased aa option on a Cabinet office by securing an additional contribution of .400,000 from the buyers of legislation upon a margin. When the Congress thus elected came together the Republican majority was too narrow and uncertain to do the work rf had promised. It could not deliver the legislative goods it had sold to mon opolists without resort to further un fairness and wrong. It proceeded to un seat members of the minority whom the people had elected and to seat Republi cans whom the people had refused to elect, and not a man in all the majority was brave or honest enough to raise a voice in protest. When the time came for debate the majority decided not to permit debate, lest the truth be made plain to the peo ple. The rules of the House were revolu tionized. A dictator of peculiarly arbi trary will was placed in the chair who suppressed discussion, overrode all con siderations of fairness, changed the House from a deliberative body into a mere machine for recording his deter min ition, and thus enacted the measures of monopoly which the party had been paid ia advance to pass. In two short years this Congress squan iered an enormous surplus, reduced the treasury to the sorest straits, laid heary bur Jens upon the people and upon in 3u;try and made a determined, though fortunately a fruitless, effort to rob the several States of the right of free elec- tiens in order to secure for the Republi can Party a longer lease of power. It so'.ight to buy votes for the future by pension legislation of the most reckles3 ind unjust character, who3e shadow hangs like a pall over the finance3 of the country and must embarrass its prosper ity for a renfira.tion to come. The Administration thu3 elected de livered to Wanamaker the Cabinet office he had bought, put Tanner into the Pen sion Office, with hi3 exultant exclama tion, "God help the surplus!1' not upon his hps, and when his scandalous mis conduct made his removal a necessity, put Raum there instead, to work still larger mischief in les3 vociferous fash ion, and to fill the office with specula tions, peculations and scaudals so shame ful that even the Reed Congress could not be dragooned into palliating them. And, in spite of further and more fla grant exposure, Raum is in office still! The Administration came into power protesting most solemnly its purpose to enforce the Civit Service law in letter and spirit, and to extend its scope aad influence. It straightway set Clarkson at work to behead postmasters at a rate wholly unprecedented. The President openly farmed out the Federal offices as spoils to iiic'a bosses as Quay and Piatt, and quartered his osvn relatives and partners and chums upon the public ser vice. When the Civil Service Commis sion discovered the most flagrant and shameless abuses in Baltimore and urged the removal of numbars of persons by name for proved misconduct amounting to criminality misconduct perpetrated in the name and on behalf of the Ad ministration the whole matter was jauntily put aside by Wanamaker, and the President m no way interfered to re deem his pledge or to free himself from the shame of it all. Dudley was one of the agents in the purchase of Mr. Harrison's election, and he was found out. Mr. Harrison has since refused to hold intimate personal relations with the "Blocks of Five' statesman, but through his Attorney General and former law partner he has interfered with the administration of justice in Dudley's case, has caused a judge upon the bench to shield and pro tect crime, and has since rewarded that judge for his corrupt subserviency by eleratiug him to a higher judicial posi tion. And within these later months the country has seea the P;esident o;.: mize the Civil Servicu iato a po'Ltion ma chine, and with it compel his own nomination for a second e;c. From the very beginning Mr. Har rison has used the appointing power aa a means of securing a second term for himself. He resorted at the outset to a device justly denounced by the eider President of his name as wrong and dangerous. He muzzled the press of his own party so far a3 criticism of his administration was concerned. He made sure of the support of the prominent Republican newspapers for all hi :. ui biting bv putting their editors under obligations 1 1 himself for high office, carrying with it pecuniary rewards, ;ohticia! advautaei or so:ial distinc tion, according to the known need and desire of each of hi3 beneficiaries. In certain directions he filled the foreign servioe with incapable men to oblige unworthy interests. He sent Mizner to Central America, and kept him there long after the country had given expression to its disgust and humiliation with the conduct of an American Minister who, in the interest of a speculative syndicate, sacrificed the honor of the Nation and the flag. He sent Egan and McCreery to Chile, with results grievously hurtful both to the good name and to the commercial interests of the country. To Waoamaker he has added Elkinsas a Cabinet officer Elk ins, a political adventurer and speculator, who had grown rich out of politics without hav ing won respect enough auy where to make his name suggestive even of possi bilities in connection with honorable of fice. He made Porter the Suoerintea deut of the Census, knowing him to be an already discredited manipulator of statistics, a foreign adventurer destitute of convictions and in search of a market for his peculiar abilities, a man at that very time conducting business a3 a vul gar wine tout in combination with poli tics and ready to placard his advertise ments in the Executive Mansion itself. He permitted this man to falsify the cen sus of great States by way of robbing them of their just representation and thus increasing the chances of that party's success to whose service he had hired himself. It i9 a sad and shameful story of pledges broken; of fiscal legislation bar tered for campaign funds; of ejections secured by the purchase of voters; of high office made the subject of vulgar traffic; of the public service, including the most honorable place3, prostituted to the promotion of the President's personal ambitions; of a court converted into a sanctuary for the protection of a scoun drel; of judicial subserviency rewarded with high judicial place; of debate sup pressed iu Congress; of a surplus squan dered, and of the enormous increase of the people's tax burdens that the pro ceeds might flow into the coffers of favored monopolists willing to share their spoil with the political organization that made its collection pcs3ible. It is a grievous indictment that is here made, but it is perfectly true and it covers but a part of the truth. The specifications will come later in the course of these letters. The facts will be given upon which every accusation rests. The whole record will be laid bare that record which the people by their vote3 in November are to approve or condemn. And this is not a mere recalling of old errors, a recurrence to offenses re pented of. The courses that condemn this Administration have been continuous. Raum is still at the head of the Pension Bureau, and that bureau is not reformed or purified. Marshall Airey still holds office in Baltimore, notwithstanding Commissioner Roosevelt's report as to his organization of the postoffice and Custom House employes there into a band of political ruffians, his use of them to carry primaries in the Adminis trations interest by wholesale cheating and by actual physical violence, in which he personally participated. Neither he nor Postmaster Johnson nor any of their subordinates have been removed, though their conduct was fully set forth and their removal strongly urged by Mr. Roosevelt, a Republican member of the Civil Service Commission ; though some of them, according to Mr. Roosevelt's report, deliberately testided to lies; though many of them openly confessed to cheating; though all of them set at naught the law against political assess ments, and though they all professed with more or less of candor the creed of lying, cheating and ballot-box stuffing which the testimony showed thai they had practiced. These men who, as one of them put it in his testimony, believe "in doing any thing to win," are still in office by grace of Mr. Wanaraaker's favor and Mr. Harrison's neglect of duty. And they still constitute the Administration mi chine in Baltimore and Maryland politics. Iu brief, the Administration is what it has been. It profits still by the practices for which honest men in both parties have condemned it in the past. It pro tects its scoundrels and its law-breakers. It keeps them in office. It uses them ia politics. It sanctions their creeds and their performances. It seat them and such as them to Minneapolis to nominate Mr. Harrison icr a second term in spite of any desire the Republican Party might have for some other candidate. It still looks to the monopolies it has fostered for the money with which to carry the election. In their behalf it has not only made laws, but has neglected and refused to enforce such laws as there are on the statute books adverse to them. The coal con spiracy bj.s beea formed during this Administration. Without le or hindrance it has levied a tribute upon the people in face of the anti-Trust law. That law makes it the imperative duty of the Attorney-General, 'through tin District Attorneys, to bring criminal prosecutions against all the conspirators; but no District Attorney has moved, and the Attorney-General weakly protests that he has no information touching the conspiracy. Iu the interest of good government it is necessary to chastise official miscon duct by defeat. The men and the party now in power must be sent into retire ment for the public good. Oar public life is in need of disinfection. It is time to restore legislation to its proper service of all the people. Tne simple foots of thssa four years' history constitute the most conclusive rt:is.us lor refusing to intrust this Ad ministration or the party it represents with a further lease of po.ver. New York World. Tin Tiriff ntul t!i- Farm?!. A -Peirsylvania Democrat writes tht c.'ocr;er-Jii;rual for information upon the following pciats "1. How does the tariff affect the grain farmers as compared with the cot ton growers? 2. How are tariff rebates regu lated? "3. What articles of trade, either produced oa the farm or manufactured, can be sold in the English market cheaper than in the American market? I mean American goods." 1. The tariff affects grain farmers and cotton growers alike in this, that it robs both. It is true that there is a tariff on corn, wheat and oats, on the pretense of protecting them, but they reed no protection, because they are exported in large quantities and sold in competition with the grain of other countries. Whenever a commodity can be exported in large quantities, it is be cause it is produced more cheaply here than it is abroad. In the last fiscal year we exported 157,000,000 bushels of wheat, worth $161,000,000, besides 15,000,000 barrels of flour, worth $55, 000,000; also 75,000,000 bushels of corn, worth 41,500,000, and nearly 3,000,000,000 pounds of cotton, worth 258,000,000. We were enabled to do this because these commodities were cheaper in the United States than in the countries to which they were sent; the price abroad, less freight, commission and other charges, being the price re alized for them here. It is nonsense to talk of protecting cheap goods against those that are dearer; by the natural laws of trade commodities seek the mar kets where prices are best. Cotton is on the free list, while wheat is nomi nally protected by a duty of twenty-five cents a bushel , but cotton is as effectu ally protected by its cheapness as wheat, and neither is protected by the tariff. Where the robbery comes in ia in the tax on the goods which, farmers receive for their grain and cotton. We sent abroad last jear, in round numbers, $800,000,000 worth of products of agri culture of all kinds. What did we iret' in return ? Did we get our pay in gold I No; we exported more gold and silver than we imported. We had to take foreign merchandise in exchange, and on all dutiable goods the tariff exacted a duty cf nearly fifty per cent. Thus, of the $161,000,000 worth of wheat ex ported, the farmers, if paid in dutiable goods, would get back only about $110, 000,000 worth, the remainder being necessary to pay the duties. It is true that all imports are not dutiable ; but it is also true that the farmers pay to do mestic manufacturer much higher prices tor goods obtained from them than similar goods would cost abroad; so that a reduction of one-third from the purchasing power of our agricultural ex ports does not by any means represent the exaction which the tariff makes of the farmers. 2. When imported material is used in the manufacture of an article, ninety nine per cent, of the duties paid on such material is refunded when the article is exported. 3. Many agricultural implements, eew -ing machines, and many other articles, are sold abroad at lower prices than at home. This has been denied, but it has been proved beyond question ; and some protectionists admit and defend it as proper. The rebate ot duties on import' ed material contributes to render this possible; but it also happens in the case of articles on which no rebate is paid, because high tariffs enable the manufac turer to exact exce ssive profits at home, while abroad, where the tariff gives him no advantage, he is compelled to take a reasonable profit. Couri er-Journal. It Is a Stimulant. Mr. Mason, one of the Republican itumpers, declares that "the tariff is not a tax but a stimulant." A true word. The tariff stimulates campaign con tributions from its beueaciaries, the pro tected millionaires. The fat-friers know this. It stimulated Carnegie to buy castles in Scotland and to set up as a money lord in England while reducing wages at home. It stimulates manufacturers to shoddy ize their goods and raise their prices. It stimulates the tariff and the usurer to collect the debts of its victim?. It puts the stimulant of necessity upon workingmen to secure the extra co3t of their necessaries due to exactions. Mr. Mason is only half right. The tariff is both a tax and a r.tirr uiant. A Fly Killing Brigade. The last Siani Free Press says that an order has just been issued from Siamese military headquarters directing that the troops in garrison at Koh-si-chang should be employed in killing flies." Each man, said the oidcr, must exert himself to the utmost and capture each day at least a natch box full of blue-bottle flies, or be punished in default. Says the paper:( "Though the order reads exceedingly ridiculous there is no small need for thinning down the myriads . of imperti nent blue-bottles that bask in the smile of royalty at Koh-ai-chang. The Siamese! warriors will have their hands full, and are not to be envied. The pity is that the troop3 were not exercised in some evolution by. which the nimble enemy: may be annihilated at one stroke. How-! ever, with our new colonels we have sufficient military talent to guarantee the success of some strategy by which the grand army of blue-bottles might be destroyed, and at the same time a very coveted decoration weil earned com mander of the fly catcam in ordinary to hi3 Siamese Majesty may yet be eag erly competed for among Siamese military men. - A Mini-Ie Test for A Hit. The following test for watered mHk I simplicity itself. A well polished knit ting needle it dipped into a deep vesse' of milk and immediately withdrawn it an upright position. If the sample i pure some of the fluid will hang to the tcvic, uui ii water nas oeea aaaed t( i the milk, even in smail proportions, the j man win not aanere to the needle. XJoston wommercial. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTKIAL. liars is fire times as bright now aa he will be when on the far side of the un The average duration of life in the old climate of Norway is said to be greater than in any other land. The number of stars visible to average jyesight on an ordinary night does not nuclT exceed 4000 for both hemi ipheres. After considerable study a Connecticut icientist calculates that there are 43, 560,000 mosquito larva to an acre of iwamp land. An astronomer has figured it out that It would take a canrou-ball 3,000,000 ,Tearo, moving at its ordinary rate of peed, to reach Alpha Centauri, the aearest fixed star. Dr. Koch has expressed himself itrongly against excessive watering of jhe streets during a cholera epidemic, n the ground that the baciii thrive un ier the influence of moisture. Corrosive sublimate, in the strength sf sixty-four grains to the gallon of water, is found by the Health Depart ment of New York City to be the mo3t ff ective of the germ-destroying agents. The new sub-treasury building at Saa Francisco, CaL, ha3 an electric burglar tlarm installed between the rotv3 of ricka so that any interference with ither the bricks or cement will cause an alarm to sound. A fendsr for electric cars is made of sheet iron attached directly to the trucks, the lower platen coming within in inch of the rails, springs of great tiffness enabling the fender to throw uside any object before it. The difficulty of making an indelible marking on ivory push buttons has been, it is said, overcome by a London con cern. The process employed is called endolithic printing, and the markings are claimed to be indelible in any climate. The Swedish Government has adopted a new smokele33 powder, which is said to have the following advantages : It is easy of manufacture, produces no flames and does not heat the rifle. It gives the ball an initial velocity of 2100 feet, with a pressure of 260 atmos pheres. -" Jacques Inandi, the French lightning calculator, eays that it is sound which guides his mind in its process, and not the memory of or imagination how figures look. He was born with a gift for figures ; long before he could read or write he solved the most intricate arithmetical problems. The bones of the hoa 1 of some large prehistoric animal were taken out ot the ground at Ruby Creek, Washington, the other wesk, at a depth of 250 feet. The great mastodon, judging from the deptt at whicn the bones were fouad, must have lived in an early period and is a1 present extinct. The shape of the head resembles that of a cow, only it is much larger. The three single eyes of bees have been a puzzle a3 to their use. Mr. Grim ehaw, of England, starts the theory that they are not eye3 at all, but bull's-eye lanterns that emit a very feeble light to guide the bees ia their work at night. Such production of light i3 quite com mon among insects, and the source of th theory gives it some title of respect, f o: Mr. Grimshaw is an able observer. Mr. Romanes is expsrimentiug ii breeding rats and rabbits, with reference to heredity. Those now bred ars the re sults of experiments intended t1) dis prove what Mr. Romanes believes to bs certain errors made by some writers o: heredity. In the particular cases experi mented on by him the progeny have certainly taken cither wholly after the father or wholly after the mother. Mr. Romanes does show certain case3 ol commingling, or rather reversion, which are highly suggestive. a i WISE WORDS. Matrimony is hard work. Love is material pantheism. Women are great in small thing?. Most men outlive their usefulne's. Occasional defeat has a tonic effect. A good laugh is sunshine in a house. A bath is often times a great moralizer. The man who can't tell a lie is dead. A man will get fat quicker on paid-for board. If a family has no skeleton gossip will give it one. It is almost as difficult to stay there as to get there. A rose would not be half a rose with out a thorn. Cupid does not care whether he pavs house rent or not. In this world a maa must be either a hammer or an anvil. A good deed is better than gold, but not nearly so negotiable. Before a man hai begun to think a woman has begun to talk. Life is a campaign, not a battle, and has its defeats a3 well as it3 victories. . A woman with pretty teeth finds many things in this vale of tears to Jau-xh at. The intelligent have a right over the ignorant; namely, thj right of instruct ing them. The moie one endeavors to sound the depths of his ignorance, the deeper the chasm appears. If you have great taleuts. industry will improve them; if you iiivy uat m. Is rate abilities, industry will supply their de ficiencies. Language is the memory of the human race. It is as a thread or nerve of life running through all the a;es, connecting them into one common, prolonged and advancing existence. There is no happiness, there is no liberty, there is no enjoyment of life, unless a man can say, when he rises in the morning- "I shall be subject to the decision of no uawise judge to-day." YOUR CASE IS NOT HOPELESS AIDS NATURE IN NATURE'S OWN WAY. IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TO INVESTIGATE. A 40-fgr PatttphUt MA1LHD FREE upon afpiiiation. ATLANTIC ELECTROPOISE CO. 140S New York Ave.. Washington. D. C. CURE YOURSELFI rIf troubled with GonorrhcM.1 'Oleet.Whites.SpermatorrboBevl r cr acr unnatural dtKbarreuk' fyour druggiet for a bottle el iRitr 11. It curei In a few dflTB without the aid or publicity of ft doctor. .Non-pouonoui ana guaranteed Dot to atricture. l The Universal American Curt. Manufactured by Ivans Chemical INCINNATI, O. Atlantic & N . C. Railroad. TIME TABLE NO. 22. In Effect October 17. 1801. Going East. Schedule. Going West. No fil. PiHMenffer Twins.. No. GO Ar. Lve. Stations. Ar. Lve. V m 3 :i0 Goldsboro 1110 am 3 r3 3 5? B st's 10 a6 10 40 4 00 4 00 La Grange 10 22 10 25 4 3o 4 40 KiiBton" 0 48 9 53 5 Or, or, Dover 1) 28 0 28 C 00 C OS New Berne 8 17 8 30 7 38 p m Morehead City a in G 47 Daily. Going East. Schedule. Going West No. 1. f No. 2. Mixed Fr. & Mixed Ff & Pass. Train. SUt'on". Pass. Train, am 6 30 Goldsboro 7 20 p m 0 57 7 Or, Best'.s 6 '.'4 ( 3(1 7 20 7 30 La Grange 54 C, 34 7 4S 7 53 Falling Crick 5 24 5 04 8 11 8 30 Kinston 4 25 5 05 8 50 8 55 Caswell 4 00 4 Or, 9 15 10 02 Dover 3 25 3 40" 10 31 10 3 Core Creek 2 54 3 00 11 00 if 05 Tusenrora 2 21 2 30 11 17 1141 Clark's 2 02 2 12 12 15 3 00 New Berne 10 32 1 3 3 37 3 42 Riverdale 9 41 9 4tf 3 48 3 50 Croatan 9 2S 9 04 4 08 4 13 Havelock 8 59 9 33 4 37 4 42 Newport 8 17 8 27 4 51 4 5 3 Wild wood 8 00 8 05 5 0? 5 01 Atlantic 7 47 7 .V 5 Iff r, 21 Morehead City 7 17 7 2" 23 5 23 Atlantic Hotel 7 03 7 15 5 31 p m Morehead Depot a m 7 00 Reid Read Downward. Upward, Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. Trau No. 50 connects with Wilming ton & Weldon train North, leavirg Goldsboro at 12 10 p. m., ami with th; Richmond & Danville tram AVtst, leav ing Goldsboro at 12 15 p. m. Train 51 connects with the Richmond & Danville train arriving at Goldsboro 3 05 p. in., and the Wi'mnington & Weldon train from the Noith at 3 10 p. m. Train 2 connects with Wilmington c Weldi.n Through Freight Tiaiu. North bound ; leaving Goldsboro at 10 10 p. ro. S. L. DILL, Superintendent. & rVfbMflMnll Re R SCHEDULE IX EFFECT JULY 17.1892 DURHAM DIVISION. LEAVE LYNCHBURG DAILY 7 10am and 1 15 p m for Durham and intermediate stations. Leave Durham, N. C, 7:00 a m acd 2 55 p ra, daily. Arrive at Lynchburg 1 05 p m aad 7 30 r m. daily. All trains on Durham division arrive at and depart from 12th street station. Lynchburg, Ya. WINSTON-SALEM DIVISION. LEAVE ROANOKE DAILY 9 45 a m and 4 45 p m for Winston Salem and intermediate stations. Leave Winston at 7 15 am and 1 50 p m, daily. Arrive at Roanoke 12 15 p m and 7 00 p m, daiiy. MAIN LINE WEST BOUND- LEAVE LYNCHB I 5 20 p mforRoanoke,Radfcrd,Pulaki Bristoi Parlor Car to Roanoke,Pullmau SUeper from Roinoke to Memphis. 7 25 a. m. for Roanoke. Radford, Pu laski, Brhtol ; also for Blutfield. Pota honac, Elkhorn and stations Clinch Val ley Division; also for Louisville and Nations L. fc N. R R. via Norton, Pnll nran Sleepr i Lyrchburg to Louisville via Nort n. 2 35 p m, daily for Roanoke and in 'trmediate stations. Has no connection beyond Roanoke. east bji:nd le we lynciibukj -daily. 9 20 a in fcr Richmond. Petersburg and Norfolk. 11 55 p m. Arrive Petersburg 4 15 a a. Arrive Richmond 7 47 am; arrive NYrfolk 7 00 u in. Pullman Pa'ace S'eeptr lo Noifolk Al o PuUmm lM.ee Sleeper between I.jnc.bur SUM Ri('h:it''l:l. 2 55 p m for Richmond, Petersburg ind Norfolk; anivc Richmoi d 7 50 p nj. Noifolk 9 2 p in. Pnlhn.i-. Pil .r B;.fiVt Cr to Norfolk. "Wl into 1 and Ctattanooga Lim ted." a train of Pullman coaches and !ecp':rg cars run d-tily via Snen ndr.ah Valley r-Mite, stopping only at Luray, S!ien;u:doah, Bisic, Roanoke a d Ra i for.l. ALLEN HULL, V,. P.. BK.VU.L, Tr.iv. P.i- Agt. Gen. Pas-;. Agt., Roanoke, V'.
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 27, 1892, edition 1
2
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