Newspapers / The North Carolina Prohibitionist … / April 15, 1887, edition 1 / Page 2
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1 li PCSLISHKD BTEfiT FRIDAY BY Rev. W. T. WALKER, '.. Editor and Proprietor, . f .', 'Corner B, Market and Davit ' Streets V ' Greensboro, N. C. i FRIDAy;AMlIL.15.J837 "T""" "TERMS 115? " advance: -v.' - . j . ... i . v, it. - : One year " " $1.00 Six months, ,-,., . -9P i The Editor, js' not . held responsible for e View of correspondents. , erite wanted. A liberal commission 'mm bgivbriI:"WriUfortermsJz: -J A The' date on 'the label,' after your name", la to Inform yon "when ' your subscription XpittsW J t. , t. . , , t. ; f ' If your name is written a cross, mark "will be placed there to, let you !hdw.;; If you renew before the, expiration of your time you will be credited, from 'that time, ao yon. lose nothing . by tt.- i.-r r,rv, . : , I V , , Send fractions qf dollars in, one and tvo eent stamps. - -. . , , s The North ahoi.ina Pohibitjx- t Is entered at the post office In Greens fcoro as second-class matter.' - -i --f t adverttsutq hates. ,i t Space Imonth, i- Smo. 6m.- 12moi Column $1.00 --$2J50 $4.00 $7.50 i M $2.00 $5.00 $8.00 $15.00 f -$4.t -$10.00 $16.00 $30.00 l 'r m -$8.00" '$20.00 $32.00 $60.00 C3T" 'Advertisements to be inserted every other week and having special position eSt be chary ed 10 per. cent extra.- v nspTi oiaa,L notest -iieaew your subscription to the PSOHIBITIOKIST. .; . , .., "", Pr-diibitibn1 Club meeting night. 'Do not fait to attend. to- v Plant a wine-glass, be it ever so delicate, and you will,in harvest time, have a whiskey barrel. u , -Reader, do you owe us for sub- s ? ' scription or advertising ? if so please forward the amount at once. ' - To any one who will send us $1 'i. to pay for the Pbohibitioh-ist for one year, we will send the Heason. a ., Prohibition monthly magazine,! one ywAT free. This offer applies to those .Hyho are in: arrears and to those, who renew as well as to new subscribers. '.; The Reason is edited by. A J. Jut kins, one of the very foremost men in i . the Prohibition party., ? Send us dollar and get the Peohibitioist i and tha Reason both one year. Now islhetimei V-i , - . The first number of the" Student '' Staesman, an Inter-Collegiate quar terly, edited by Walter' Thomas Mills; is upon our table. - This num ber con tains,' besides the minutes o . the National Convention: of : College " Clubs held at Cleveland, O., nuin ' ; bertofMnteresting addresses, short " speeches and other matter l' specia , . interest. "'s ' : The "Sudent "Sfdtesmd isTpub lished by' J. T. Morrison, - Wooster, unio. rnce ou cents a year. . bj.-. I, - ' it .has.been eaid.that greater ca lamities are inflicted on mankind by intemperance- than by the three grea historical ' scourges twar, , pestilence and famine ' This is true for us, and it is the measure of our discredit and - our ' disgrace. Mr, Gladstone, in a . great rpeech in the Souse of Commons March jf A, 1880. f : ,i ,i :rr"ln the faoa of such a statement , 'from such a statesman as. .Mr. Glad stone, iit noteurpnsxnff tnat men " V'witli less than a tithe of his vknow ' ' ledge of anairs ahould.insist on the ' perpetuation of; the Jiqnor-trafllc ; on thegrbund that it is asourr'0 of ; na " tional wealth a blessing an ioa'iin - able right of private individuals.? ! . f... Here in., Greensboro . one after another of our young men , have fal t u r 1.1 1 u a ' has. - kept ..the record,', alone : knows h t a hojnuch misery,woe 8adness,heart- iKUi ache and stame our people have suf fered because of this fact There are I iyoqng' men here to-day . who are' , fol y.vr lowing in the footsteps of those who now fill drunkard graves. .Unless lit: a something, be , done i speedily some : -. rf thpjif will anon . be . nnmhercd with i i :i those who have gone, before. Whose boy will it be ? Let fathers and.moth u i .crt' ask themselves this qu'estion. The r;i Toters of this city have 5it . in their , power, to suppress this business. Will :; .they da yt ?. If they will . not , then I - they may say truthfully as, they ; wit ';m . Jness the effects of the business, , '.That is my work.", it.. y .v., .... ... "HELL AS A SEPARATE LO- f CALITY MIGHT AS WELL BE 1 AVTPTCTVnTTTV ' " ; ' ' . I.'J ...... i,'!;::-Mi;iiJX Brick Pomeroy's Democrat. 5 J I 'view' of what alcohol, can do : and does so cheerfully to, transform men : into brutes, and homes luto hells, wherein wives and children suffer rtUteid agonies, hell as a separate 1 cality might , as well be Aviped out The rum records- of erve i hour in this city wonld ntakea-man tired for life, could he see all the misery that one hour brings wliile the rum record oi one day would; if all bounced upon a man at once drive Iiim to 'insanity. ' The salooa keeper is compelled to pay to the high-toned public a cei tain price for a paltry privilege to dissipate, dtbauch, demoralize, . and destroy.?"! The: privilege "is "his. V He has a right to ,. world it'for Vli it 'is worthy .Therefore, z te warms , ins tlen, gets his poises,; ban gs'his volup tuous- pictures, rarraysv his v throat ticklers, .hides a big , club or a horse pxsuji ,uepuu uiH uar, uuu.mvires pne hight-toned and the ldwquartered to uiu kcii .waiLUtiu up. , - . JLjominiciv, .iiray,j; a professional ho4icai rier Jives, or did Jasi ! week livep, at jNo -440 West Forty-fifth street, in the reaiy Jor' fifteen ' years lie made the liie of his wife a one continued hell,, with herj and thei e a, short let-up till he could swing in for a new, hold. 1 1 Dominick has earn ed anavenige of. $756 a year ' for fif teen years; Of this sum $350 has gone for drink. More than , $5,000, that would have bought liim a good home, has thus gone to enrich the man who knows enough in a business way to work his license for. all it is worth. ! Friday night Dominick Gray went to his tenement-house of a home, drunk and ugly, as. '.usual. In the morning, he routed his wife out of bed early to , get breakfast . for him. She got up, and with I er baby in her arms,' kindled a fire and began to get ready to cook the trugal break fast He got out of bed andtried to throw . her. upon the nearly red hot stove Then he seized a heavy iron and struck her on. the head so fear ful a blow that she fell to the .floor and rolled out of the door with the blood streamingfrom ber wounds and blinding her. . She was found nearly dead. Then he took a heavy frying- pan and with it beat in the skull of the innocent baby, then seven weeks old, killing it ; ; 1 . Policeman C. J. Kelly, -called by the neighbors, hastened to the scene, broke into the room where the drun ken brute bad intrenched himself, and then found him sitting on the side of thebecb drunkenly indifferent He was taken to the police station where delirium tremens came on, so, that half a dozen men were required to manage him and strap him to a Cot ::' V J . U blessed angel of death! how much better are you to the wrecked, 1 1 - 1 1 , oroKen, Druisea ana aousea wives and children o" our land, than are all the churches, the Christians the society, and. the ; respectability that for a price gives to a man the, right to. thus rob and destroy families I Of the quarter ot a million, wives in New York city, twenty thousand had bet ter have died in chi'dhood, and then been eaTed the hell that is the lot of a drunkard's wife and children. THE, PRESBYTERIAN CHtJRCH . 1 SOUTH j ON , . THE QUESTION OF PROHIBITION. , Something more than, a year ago certain members of the" Presbyterian Church' at Granada, Miss.; signed a petition 'tori the' licensing of a;bar roomV whereupon the church adopted the following preamble and resolu tions: ' " f TlTt - . Trt- . ; i . 11 1 ueraus, xntj : sesaion 01 mis Church has, with sorrow and regret on several ' occasions, noticed the names of cammunicants of the Church, attached to saloon petitions, to the Mayor and Board of Aldermen, published in a Grenada paper, peti tioning them to grant license to par ties to retail vinous and spirituous liquors, and whereas we have with mortification heard this action sever ly : and justly criticised in public places ; therefore, be it ; I Resolved That- the sign ng of a whisky petition by any member of this Church is, in the opinion of the Session contraiy to the word of Go3, as interpreted in our Standards, de trimental to the cause of Cnrist, and a -"public ' offense" against this Church ; and congregation, s against which we enter our solemn protest f Resolved, That our pastor is ! here by requested to read these resolutions to the congregation, on two different occasions. - ! This action oh the part of the local church was considered by i the .Pres bytery of North Mississippi . in April of last year, and decided v as follows : HMWHEttEA8,The use of, intoxicating iquors as a beverage is an ; evil, the magnitude of which can scarcely be exaggerated ; and . : , I VYhebeas, JJrunkeness, so often re sulting from such use, is a sin which on the authority of God's word , ex cludes the soul from heaven; there fore be it - - --;' ; ' ? Resolved, 1. As the sense"-' of: this! presbytery, that it is the duty of all sa Christians to throw tLeir, influence against intemperance, and that the signing ; of a petitiont asking that a license'may he granted for the sale of intoxicating liquors, is a jiolation of Christian fidelity; and an ' act which merits the censure of. the church -Resolved, 2. " That "in the opinion of this presbytery the'action of the Grenada Presbyterian Church'- in February last, in" solemnly warning its members and: protesting agai their "signing liquor ' petitions was under the circumstances disclosed in the resolutions adopted,' timely and judicious, and is' hereby approved by tbis ju'diciatoryand the clerk of this presbytery 'is ; hereby -J directed s to spread the said resolutions 5 - on the Minutes of this body."- " : ' In May followingthe f subject was brought beiore'the General Assembly at" Augusta, Ga, by memorial.. The Assembly expressed itself in these words - - - - : ; "As the traffic in and use of intox icating liquors as a beverage are the prolific causes of so much crime, poverty, and suffering in our land, and as it costs the people so much nioney in criminal prosecutions ajid the support jf victims of drink, and as it is one of the srreatest enemies of the Church of C hrist in destroying the sanctity of the Christian Sab bath in its right observance wher ever its blighting influence is felt, and as we are warned against its ef fects in 1 Cor. vi. 10, therefore, in view ol ; these U -nble effects, this General Assembly bears its testimony against this evil, and recommends to all our people the use of all legitimate means for its banishment from the land." . Last fall the Synod of Memphis, in which the -Presbytery of North Mississippi is included gave utter ance to the following : "In view of the fact that the Gen eral Assembly, in session at Augusta, Ga , last May, bore testimony to the sin and fearful consequences of the tjajTfc in and the use of intoxicating fiquorsas a beverage,and recommend ed the use of all legitimate means for its banishment from the land, and, whereas, the liquor traffic in this country ,to day is conducive to sin and natural and spiritual death, therefore be it ' T&e&olved, That in the judgement of Svnod, a member of the Church who is engaged in" the liquor traffic in any of its forms, when it is the cause, or the ink ans, or the occasion 01 the immoderate use 01 dnnK or drunkenness, is guilty of a "public offense", in violating the word of God as nterpreted in our Standards. i R-aofft, That ministers m charge of Churches under the care of synod are requested to inform their congre gations f this matter." ;Now, in view of the expressions of the Presbyterian Church on thi3 sub ject, as above quoted, we inquire how any member r of that great, learned and influential . ; body ' of Christians can encourage and support the license system by their vote3 t Read the iirst resolution in the first quotation. How can a number of a church support such .a resolu tion as that and then vote for a .man or a party that U committed to the licence system? , Tho man who signs a petition simply uses his influence with those in authority for the ac complishment of an object, but the man who - votes in such a manner as to support an object, hereby uses both his influence and his authority for its accomplishment. If it is a wrong for one to use his influence in favor of a oertai n object is it not . a double. wrong for Jiim to nseboih his influence and authority for its ac complishment? j Read again the first resolution in the second quotation. Can a man j vote in such a, manner as to aid in the perpetuation of the present license system and at the same time be in harmony with a body which gives utterance to such a resolution f We think not - - The General Assembly not. only warns the membership of the church against an active support of the bus iness, but it goes further and rf com mends "the use v of all legitimate means for its banishment from the iand.w ; : ; . Does that recommendation include the" ballot ? Most assuredly it does. Now, if the whiskey traffic is what the Presbyterian Church says it is which hone will " deny, how. can ministers and church members sup port it "by voting for men and parties who are committed to it?- We' write in Christian kindness, in the interest of the church and of hu- manity. Reader, lay aside your party prejudices and consider calmly and deliberately jour relations to God, to the church and to humanity, and ask yourself whether or not you , can afford to be ' lpnger ""Tesponsible Jfor the evils that grow out of the liquor business. - - : THE FIELD AT LARGE. Close of the Michigan Campaign Some Plain Facts Plainly put Republican, Purpose to Beat Prohibition Sysj:e5iattc . and Inspieed Untruth. -. On the Train, April 4, 1887.- ; The Michigan campaign is ended. To-day at the polls faithful and pa triotic men aided, ; I hate no doubt, by more faithful and equally patriot ic , women are -gathering ' up ; it fruits. And now, wliile the result is yet uncertainlet me say some plain things about it all, and the term of strict 1 nori'partisanship being-over-setVirtain facts clearly forth . - Tlie submission of tjrfs Amerdmr;nt was conceived in political iniquity and born in part sin.' 1 ' a here can be doubt of this in the mindof bim'who has honestly s,stud led Michigan politics a month Rei publican leaders Jiad np wish to give Prohibition a fair chance before the people. Their purpose was to hand icap it as heavily as they could, and see it fall in the race at last v " When the Amendment was up for legislative action,' one member remarked that : --i. - v - 1" .; ;. L. -, . there was. no. exception in fovor of sacramental wine. "Pass it1 in this form,"i he' said "aiid it will" lose the entie Catholic vote of the State" And the answer made him by another member, and not rebuked or denied was, "That's just" what We want" There was not -the remotest idea on the part of Republican managers that the Amendment could carry. They did not'mtehd in should. Ac cording to their will and wish it was to be snowed under completely, and buried -with it was to be tho Prohibi tion party.' They believed submission could and would yield them a lever age on which to demand the with drawal of party Prohibition noini nees, if any were named, and the breaking of party effort for prohibi tion. When the Third Party men ran in otaie convention-theu up went a cry of Republican wrath. Good David Preston heard it in De troit and was . troubled. " A few other timid Prohibitionists were overtaken with doubt. Some stir became evident looking to the Third Party ticket's retirement It was not official ; it was foolish. But it did not avail. The contest has been fought" out Every Republican, daily in Michigan opposed prohibition. Few Republican leaders declared for it ' Is one oi widely acknowledged ; leadership labored for it The chief speaker against ic u. jsetnune l-'umeiu is a Kepubhcou. His 1 en tenant at the great anti-prohibition meeting in Detroit, Prof. Kent is a Republican It was a Republican paper at Grand Rapids that said; every Republican who should vote for t'.-e Amendment must be spotted and laid on the shelf. The writers in opposition mostqitot ed by liquor men are Republicans. The lie3 that have been most effective in liquor's behalf were spread abroad in Republican journals. The preachers who have arrayed them selves on the wrong side are all of Republican faith. Does any one say that the Amend ment, is carried, will win through Republ can votes ? I grant it But why is there a possibility of its de feat? Because Republican good will is lacking, and Republican support in high places is denied There are single Repubhcans in the State whose positive, outspoken declaration in iavor ol the measure would have removed all doubt - President An gell, of the university at Ann Arbor, is one of these. ' He has been enlpa bly silent if not actively hostile. Why ? , His fj institution is under State control, dependent upon State support to a-certain extent . I can not believe him in favor of saloons. If not, his duty ' was; plain at this time ; I do not say,or wish to imply, that he was muzzled by reason of per sonal interest I do fear party imper ialism ruled. : " Reading the : Republican press, noting the methodic fashion in which; falsehood has been dissemi nated "through it, and assault upon the Amendment has been steadily made by it, 1 find this conclusion irresistible, that there" was and is a central source of' inspiration and supply of, recognized authority and of ample, controlling power. Was and is it the liquor traffic alone? . I know how poten t this has grown. ; I know, also, that Micigan Republican ism hangs to-day in the balance, and that the power of said traffic is domi nated, when occasion- demands it by stern- party necessity. And it ap pears plain to: me that the liquor traffic's life, and the life of the Re publican party) in the estimation - of party ; ; leadeship, ' are j co-es3ential that surely, though it may be . quiet ly,1 the word his gone out that party papers can accept, liquor , money ,fo doinff anti-Amendment nartv ser- . a vice, that the defeat of prohibition to-day will satisfy party management, and retu't in the least possible -loss to party - prospects. ' . - , ; - . Why ; was Gov, St John barred out of Michigan ? He had generous ly offered a donation of five nights to the State Amendment committee, and would put m more service, if wanted, at regular, lecture rates. Prof. Dickie set about routing .j him. There was no trouble to find places wanting his help, A number, of excellent appointments were made for him. 1'hen ' suddenly Prof. Dickie began to recieve letters from local non-partisan comittees which had accepted,1: saying it was found best. to recall their acceptance, and cancel Gov. t John's engagement There vas apparent method, in this action,- - It may or may not have been dictated from some supreme -source ; it was inspired by supreme party spite at any rate, and was meant to serve ' party advantage. St John made but one speech-r-t Paw Paw. Special ' trains were run, crowds poured in, enthusiasm went wild The man more calumniated than any other in America stirred people rh a strictly non-partisan speech as none others of us can. Yet he. to whem more is due on this very Amendment line than to all others because -it was Kansas, under his administration t:at won the first Amendment , vie ry le, in a non partisan -''contest, was not allowed share and went out 4. . . of Michigan smitten once arain bv tho poidoued arrow of Republican h:ite. Mrs. J. Ellen Foster was nowhere denied a hearing, or even objected to, by our third party friends whom she has so viciously assailed. Indeed, she was brought into the State by Mrs. Mary .T. Lathrap. who first en gaged her for ten nights, at her full lecture price, and then kept her go! ug for a wee'i longer. Our partisan treatment of her is in such marked contrast to Republican outrage upon ift John that it should be everywhere :ield up for recognition. Mr. Albert Gnffiu was placed widely, by Prof. Dickie, and given a welcome by third-party men as if he never had said hard things about them Gov. Colquitt, the one prominent Demo crat, was not discriminated against by Republicanism. Ail the rancor, and wrath, and malice, of Republi cans, wen tout toward John P. St. John. : . No, I forget General Clinton B. r ibk. aoouc mm rue Detroit papers have ieea lying with the most perr sisteat energy. Ti) rough one Ire land, a whilom attach, of the Repub lican Trihun', theyhavo assalle l his personal habits, and spread broadcast an abscrd and malicious' story of a midnight champagne snpper in De trbit at whicli as thk. Ireland al leges General Fisk niada. .merry., with the rest &nd for which- he paid. Now General Fisk ate no such meal, paid for no such drin ks. , Ireland and another reporter One Hnbba d, just dead served him in a special telegraphic way once, and he went with them to a restaurant, ordered lunch, for them and two or three others, requested the bill brought to him for payment left tb?-m for other special business by telegraph, and neither ate nor drank In their com pany. When he paid tne bill "it did not cover drinks for any one, to his owledge. It was but for a modest amount. These facts the General stated, in an interview last Friday night which telegraphed to the Detroit Heics ; and Journal. The News most active : in disseminating the falsehood, refused publication to the facts, but came out with another lie, viz : that General Fisk stu iriped New York m 1882 for St John under Democratic pay, whereas, as happen to know, the General did not make a speech for St John in our State of r New "York, and did "stump", any State that year. uott I never saw more deliberate, wilful- methodic falsifying in my life, than the Michigan papers nave kept up these last four weeks.. There were never more atrocious ' utterances by any press than 1 4 could,, quote, were space now at command. J hey al most make me ashamed that ever I was an editor. , - Well we have mads the fjght,against greater odds than were over faced in a like contest .We have won; so far as an honest vote is concerned. The votes,a8 cast will, show a majority for Prohibition. -As -counted ? .There's the rub. I look for any desperate trickj any unfair device, to rob us of the victory we have well gained, v The election law of Michigan is as favor able to fraud as if the opposition had made it to suit their ends. No elec tion Board is obliged toadmit watch ers at the count Tf Detroit does not show what can be coae at counting out, I will confess to harsher opinions of the average politician and of all liquor men than we ; have right ' to oherish. -The Silver Lake quartette speeds on its way to some appointments in Ohio,.and goes thence for a few days into Pennsylvania Then it proceeds to Kentucky, and on into Tennessee, where the demand for it has become too importunate to resist Our -bust wishes linger with tbhost of Mich igan folks who have made iis glad, by their ' warm . greetings, and whose overflowing enthusiasm we can never forget ; . Whether victory , or defeat be announced on the morrow. God give' all the workers peace, and Test and the benediction.:, of great faith!, ' v" .A. A.-Hopkins : A house containing 7 rooms, with good garden, orchard and lotfor rent cheap. Apply at this office. . ? "YTTTcan live at home and make more X J U money at work for us than at anything else in this world -Capital not needed ; you are started free, z Both sexes; all ag 8. Anyone can do the work - Laree earnings sure from nrs start. Cosily out fit and terms free. 'Better- not delay. Costs you u thing to send us your address and find out ; if you are wise you will do so at on. H. Hallett & Co.. Portlana. Maine. ' PiedznontAir-Idne Richmond and Oanvills Systp. CONDENSED SCHEDULE IN EFFECT MAR. 13, 1887. Thais s Bun by 75. Mekipian Tix x. DALLY. Southbound No. 50. 4 45 am 7 20" 9 45 " 1120" . 385 pm 5 50" No. 52. Lt. New York . " Philadelphia " Baltimore " Washington ' 4 'Charlottes vile ?' Lynchburg 480 pm B57 943 11 W) " 3 00a m o 05 " "Bichmond 3 00 " 2 30" " Burkeville 4 57 4 25 " " KeysvUle 6 43 " 5 04" Drake's Br'ch ' 601 " 5 21 " " Danville 8 50 " 8 05 " Greensboro 10 44 " 9 48 u " Goldsboro ' 11 50 &m - 5 00 pm "Raleigh 5 30pm 100am " Durham 635 " 3 37 " Chapel Hill 5 30 " 11 " Hillsboro 7 08 ' 3-8" " Salem '- 7 45 " 6 30" " High Point 1115" 1016" " Salisbury 12 39 am 1123" Ar. Statesville, 13 34 p m Asheville, 6 15 " " Hot Springs - 8 87": Lv. Concord, 1 26 " 11 59 " " Charlotte ' 2 25 a m 1 00 " " Spartanburg T 5 89 " 3 84 " " Greenville 6 50 " 4 48 " Ar. Atlanta 120pm 10 40" NOTHBOUKD. No." 51. No. 53. Lv .Atlanta 7 00 pm 8 40 a m Ar. Greenville i 02 am 2 32pm Spartanburg 2 17 " 3 43 " .. 1" Charlotte- 5 05 " 6 25 " Concord 6U1 " 7 25 " " Salisbury 6 41 " ' 8 01 " " High Point 7 54 " 9 13" " Grevnsboro 8 32 " 9 40 " Saleju 1128 " 12 15 a m " Hillsboro 12 i8 p m f2 30 " " Durham 1J 47 " f4 45 " " Chapel Hill 1 2vJ " " Raleigh 150." f0 3 " "Goldsboro ' 4 45 " tH2" " DanviHe lu 10 a m 1129 pm ' ' Drake's Br'ch 12 45 p m 2 41am " Keysville 1 04 " 3 01 " " Burkeville 1 42 " 3 53 " "Richmond 3 50 " 640." " Lynchburg 1 15 p m 2 00 " ! " Charlottes v'le 3 4 f 4 10 " " Washington 8 23 " 8 10 " ; " Baltimore 11 25 " 10 03 " " Philadelphia 3 00 a m 12 35 p m " New York 6 20 " : 8 20 " . Daily, except Sunday, t Daily, except gaturday. V SLEEPING CAR SERVICE -On, trains 50 and 51, Pullman Buffet Sleepers between Atlanta and New York On trains 52 and 53, Pullman Buffet sleepers between Montgomery and Wash ington and , YYashingtou and Aiken. On trains 52 and 53, v Pullman Sleepers between Kicninond and Greensboro, and Greensboro and Raleigh. , Xanmgu. ticicets on -ale at principal stations to all poi -ts. , : , . Jf or rates and information apply to anr agent of the Company, or to HOI., HAAS, T. M or JAS. L. TAYLOR Gen'l Pass. Agen-, Washington. D. C. CAPE FEAR & YADKIN VALLEY RAIL ROAD COMPANY ! Condensed Tiub Tabije. To take fifecc at 1 p. m , Sun lay, Feb. 2'J 1886. MAIS LINE . Train North. Pass and - Freight - Alail and Pass. Leave Beniettsville, 8 45 a m 1 30p m Arrive Maxton, .T Leave Maxtn, Arrive FayetUville, Leave FaytrtJe ille. -1 iwrivtt Snnfnrtl 10 00 3 35 " 10 15 " 410 12 05 pm 7 50 " 1820 " 1100am 2 2Z " a 4 p in 2 45 it y '. -f 15 44 - 9 00 n Leave San ford, Arrive Grensboro, Leave Greensboro, 10 15i. m Arrive Belew's Creek, 12 30 p m Pas enger and Mail -dinner at Sanford Train South. Pass. --ind Freight - Mail and Pass Leave Belew's Creek, 2 15 pm Arrive Greensb ro, , 4 30 Leave Greensbor-, 10 00 a hi 130 p m 1 55 4V. 410 V 4 25 " 6 20 6 30 " 7 80am ; 2 00 p m 3 00 6 45 " 6 00 a m 9 22 "10 15 " Arrive Sa'1 ford, : L ave S nford, ' Amve r ay- tteville, Leave Fayetteville, . Arrive Maxton, L'.ave 'i-ix on, Arrive Bennettsville, .745 " 12 20 pm Passenger and MaiI dinner at Sanford Freierht and Passenirer Trm runs between Fayetteville and Bennettsville on Mondays, Wednesdays an-1 Fridays. Freierht and Passenger Train runs be ween Fayetteville and Greensboro Tues ays, Thursdays and Saturdays, and - be tween Greensboro and Fayetteville Mon- days, Wednesdays and.Friday-'. Passenger and Mail Trainans daily ex- cert Sundays - " . " ' ' The Norih bound Passenger and Mai trai.-i makes close connection 1 at Max'on with Carolina Central to Ch-rlotte. ;? ' ; W: E KYLE, Gen'l Fass. Ag't J. W. FRY, Gea'l supt. ' 'PROHIBITION ORGANIZATION ChAirttan-i-Wm. LoVe, j ' V Greensboro 5 Secretary. W.Albright " " ' x - . - - Qreeniboro. ' Central Ex. Committbes. W. S- Moore, Chairman, J. M. Wartl Rev. L. B. Gibson, Walter Greea David White. V Township Ex. Committees. Morehead Robt Siddons, Chairman, : J. R. M. Baxter, P. D. Weaver A. C. Wray, Orpheus M cAdoo Gilmer W. S. Moore, CLairman, W ' A. Coe, J. M. Ward, J. L. Hen - drix, Jas. Dean, ftigh' : Point E. r R ; Mendenhall, , , . Chairman", Joel Anderson, SoJ . . L Blair, Jonathan E. Cox, Moses -.' Naylor. Summerfield-r-F. S. Blair, Chairman, -t Rev. T. J. Ogburn, G. J. Smith, Green Pass, John Bunch, Rev. David Cornell. . Friendship John L. Woody, Ch ai x 7 man, L. L. Hobbs, Joseph S. . Worth, John Pitts, F. P. Green leaf, John W. Mebane. Madison Geo. W. Lemons, Miltn -T. Wagoner, Wm. P. Fields, R. C. Rankin. Fentress O. IL Russell. Roland Fentress, C. V. Harden, Harris Crawford, -Greene Dr. W. A. Coble, D. F Bernett, Dr. Wyatt McNairy Rev. J. W. S. Causey, A. G 1 Amick. ' Sumner D. L. Hadgin, J. II. Davis AiT.Millis. Oak Ridge W. E. Benbow, Monroe M. M. Awen. Rock Creek Dr. Jno. C. Clapp, Go Clapp, Simeon Clapp, Rev. D V. York, Frank Low. Clay John Bowman, Newton Woody. Jefferson Asa Clapp. Centre Grove C. L. Archer, T : L. Johnson. THE NORTH CAIIOLIIVA . PR0HIBITI0OTST PUBLISHED WEELKY Every Fridiy Morning, REV. W. T. WALKER, Editor and Proprietor. TERMS ; Hx months, " : .60 Any on sending- as the names of ten subscribers, with $10 in advance, sfcal LI li ER A L RATES ADVERTISING. AH2 jo: Done with neatness and Dispatch REV. W. T WALKr R , ' EPrron AND Phofkieto ' -..r c, : Greensboro, NJC.
The North Carolina Prohibitionist (Bush Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 15, 1887, edition 1
2
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