Newspapers / The North Carolina Prohibitionist … / Sept. 23, 1887, edition 1 / Page 2
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IBIIIOIT FUBHSIIED EVERY FRIDAY BY . Rev. W. T. WALKER, .. Editor and Proprietor, Corner E. Market and Davie Streets,) . Greensboro, N. C. FRIDAY, SEP1V16. 1887. V TERMS IN ADVANCE. ; One year $1.00 Six months - .90 The Editor is not held responsible for the views of correspondents. , tT Agents wanted- A liberal commission trill be given. Writs for terms. - ,The date on your label, after your name is to inform you when your subscription expires. . If your name is written a cross mark will be placed there to let you know. , If you renew before the expiration of "your time you will be credited from that time, mo you.lose nothing by it. Send fractions of dollars in, one and two tnt stamps. - The North aroxjna Prohibition ist is ejatered at the post office in Greens oro as second-class matter. v, ADVERTISING RATES. ' If pace lmonth, Smo.-Cmo. 12mo. I Column $1.00 $3.50 $4.00 $7.50 J $2.00 $5.00 $8.00 $15.00 . i : $4.00 $10.00 $1G.'J0 $30.00 1 . $8.00 $20.00 $32.00 $90.00 dfAdyertisements to be inserted every other week and having special position vilJ be charged 10 per cent, extra. .-." EUITOlllAL NOTES. Idiots have no opinions of their own. Kenew your subscription to the Prohibitionist. Cowards are afraid to give ex presaion to their opinions and convic tions when they differ from the common herd. - those of - The poor people who live around saloons in our cities get poor er and poorer, and sink lower and lower in morals. Christiun Advo cate. The saloonist is as good as the faaloon. and the saloon is as good as the law that protects it, and the law is as good as the Church member that votes for it. " What is now depriving Kepub lican politicians of their sleep, and causing them to look around in al directions for succor, is the strength which the Prohibition movement is i . i : : 1 1 : c Naio York Staats Zeituning (Ind, .German), Aug. 27. In the future as in the past, THERE WILL ' BE NO UNCERTAIN SOUND IN OUR COURSE IN EXPOUND ING THE GREAT FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES OF DEMOCRACY, ADVO CATING TEMPERANCE AND OPPOSING PROHIBITION.- Greensboro Patriot. (Organ of the Democratic Party in Guilford County.') ; "See the capitalists riding along in their fine carriages," yelled a Socialist, speaking at a meeting in .a Chicago suburb the other evening- "Where, I ask you, are our horses ;and carriages ?" - - S'loon keepers drivin mine ground," responded a maudlin and red-nosed reformer of society, with deep dejection ; and the orator chang .ed the subject -Chicago Tribune. In Favor of Prohibition. In the Supreme Court of Iowa, at Des Moines, on Saturday ' last, an' jopinion was filed in a suit against ihe International Distillery, in which the lower Court held that thfe ale of intoxicating liquors for ex port, for general purposes, was ille gal, and closed the distillery as a jauisance. The Supreme Court affirmed thisdecision, two Justices "dissenting. - Mr. Editor; . It may be of interest to the Prohi bitionists of our State to learn that a Township Prohibition Club was or ganized in Winston recently with thirty members, v Olfieers Jno. D. Pay lor,-President : jP. W. Dal ton, vice President, M. S.,IIamlen, Secretary. Jacob Tise Treasurer. These, with J. Q. A. Bar ham, Dr. S, J Montague and A. G. Hough compose the Executive Committee. There were but 2 or 3 votes . oast for St John in the last Presidential elec tion, in this Township so this looks like a good begin ins: for 1888. Since the organization four more fid and a-p-ood mmv nthfVra will , low in due time. Tnese are all vol er8 from both the old whisky parties, have turned their backs upon them, and I believe have all "burned the bridges behind them." Oar Com mittee will proceed at once to orgn ;ze every"Township in Forsyth Co., and we hope to hear good things " rwn other counties Let the ball roll on Du Phe. v. In Staunton, Va;, in less than 23 hours 126 signatures were affixed to a call for a Convention to organize the State Prohibition party. - Twenty six of these were colored men, while one-hundred were whites and include a judge, several physicians and many business men. The decent people of the land are welcoming the decent party, in their aim for a decent gov ernment v - V i - Says an authority: - . -.?. 'In less than a week after :the United States' flag was raised at Sit ka, Alaska, after its purchase by the United States, among other vices that claimed its protection Were 'two sa- oons and two ten-pin alleys'. Th first gift to Native chiefs by the com mander of the New departmen t was a Few bottles of whiskey !" .;, . ; : May God hasten the day when, no rum-lover, or rum-handler can hold the meanest office in this Govern ment. : Elect only Prohibitionists ! The W. C. T. U. army is not confined to these United States. Like Queen Victoria's empire, it knows no setting sun, for it encircles the globe. The tiny bit of white ribbon may be seen peeping out from the folds of a woman's dress in Canada, Alaska, the Sandwich Is lands, and many countries :n the Old "World. Its wearers speak divers languages, but, the little em blem, like the Freemason's grip, pro claims them all one sisterhood. Demorest Monthly. It is declared that universally : the Germans, the Jews, - the Mexicans, and generally the negroes in Texas voted against Prohibition and its defeat is laid at the doors of these classes. North Carolina has in it less for eign born population than any other state in the union. Taking warning from many of the states now drown ing beneath a flood of immigration, we would say to the North State, get Prohibition and every other good thing before your population changes! i There never was a greater mis take than to suppose a high" license whould rid the community of the low r saloon. JNintty-nine or every hundred of those who have sunk to the lowest depths of drunkenness, started in the high priced saloon. ne low saloon ana barrel uense is a necessity forced on society by : the cravings of the debased drunkard or in other words to use and expression more forcible than - elegant, the drunkard begins with "champagne and ends with soap suds and fish hooks,'7 The former represents the high license saloon, the latter aptlj describes the place of last resort. ; i Editor The Voice In reading the proceedings of our State ; Con vention, I am pained to find that the principal part of the proceedings and speeches were directed against the Republican party. ! A Prohibitionist ; The above reminds us that only last week a good friend of our3 ac costed us on the street and com plained that all our arguments and thrusts weie directed against the Democratic party. The fact is all bur arguments and thrusts are di rected against the whiskey traffic, and as that traffic has taken -refuge behind and is defended by the old parties, the old parties must get out of the way or take the consequences. ! " " " . " ' -. Dr. N. C. Whyte, coroner r of Dublin, says: "The jurors over whom 1 preside with ChirstSan chari ty invariably where they are not forced to do otherwise by the evi dencerender a veidict of 'Death by natural causes,! . 'Heart disease ' and so forth ; and therefore the registrar-general's return is made out in that way.' Now I say this advisedly and after full consideration of the subject, that in an experience of twenty years I have known of not a single homicide committed in this city that was not the direct result of drink. And I will also add: Of all the unfortunates -that I -have known to be criminally guilty of homicide, and have suffered the last penalties of the Jaw. their conduct has been exemplary. They were- not men naturally criminal, but, by in dulging in -drink, they brought themselves to their sad condition. Death of a Prominent Person. Ex-Governor William Aiken died join-'Sept. 7, at his conntry place at Flat fnl-TOCk, JN. V- aged SI. lie was UOV ernor of South Carolina in 1844. and a; Congressman froni 1851 to 1857, He was the largest slaveholder in the State, and was a successful .rice planter. He consistently opposed nullification and secession, and took no part in politics after leaving Con- gress. lie was also one ot the nrst appointed trustees, of "the Peabodv -id, ' .' : ' Sam Jones's Party. : Sometimes a man gets where he it afraid he will hurt his party. ; I used to be a Democrat I was born one, and raised one, and I-stayed one- as long as a Christian gentleman could. And then I pulled out; of course. And you Republicans need not be laughing. God bless jou I thank God I never, was a Republican, I belong to another party. The differ erence between me and the Democrat ic party, between me and the Repub lican party, if you will call it so, is that I am a mugwump" and you are a jugwump." ' . , .. ; Oaf Oreed Exactly. When the 'Liquor Convention met in Dallas Tex. last May it declared I that Prohibition is ''both - nnderflo cratic and anti-Pepublican." We could not have ' expressed it more aptly. That is just the reason why no honest tenrperance- man can pray, work and vote for the 'dry" ticket and stay in either of those rum- soaked parties. : In fact, - it is one whisky barrel, one head of which is branded 'Republican party, and the other head, Democratic party. ."! Their parties cannot be our party, our ene mies themselves being judges. Poor Keely ! Poor Griffin ! In Chicago the last week in August Mr. Albert Griffin, head of the Anti- saloon Republican movement, declar ed that to - his positive knowledge movements are now in progress in the Republican camp that will result in that party's taking . such- decided temperance stand at its next National Convention that all liquor men will be driven out of it. On being asked for some signs, he replied that the work was being done within the party so quietly tnat lew signs as yet ap pear, on the surface, but that before Jan. 1,1888 there will be such a man ifestation that no one.-icaii longer doubt, i ; " ' Poor Keely and his "meftor!"' 'Poor Griffin and his "movement!' Will our Democratic' friends please, sxpla".n a point to us ? -The Iowa state Democratic conven tion adopted 4 the following plank, We are opposed to all sumptuary legislation, and in favor of a-repeal of the present prohibitory liquor law and the substitution of a Local Op tion law." r ,; . ' Now is not prohibition obtained by a Local Option election just as much sumptuary legislation as pro hibition under statutory enactment or under constitutional amendment ? Please explain why the one method is in accord with Democratic princi ples; while the other is in opposition thereto.- 1 Do not both express the will of the people? : Do not both pro tect inalienable i rights of the : people from the greed and oppression of the saloonist? Look Oat for the Prohibition Party. In close writh this significant utter duceiroin Judge iast. in ausewer to my question he spoke thus: "No : we have not had a Prohibi tion 'party ticket in the' field, in - Ten nessee. J But I, who am not yet with you in thjs matter, say in all my ad dresses in this canvass that I'll not be responsible for the fate of parties who do not carry - this Amendment banner up the hills to victory, r We don't want to break the; old estab - lished parties. We have said we would be content to have this might ty moral question kept out of poli tics ; but defeat us and you will hear a different lauguage !"' I F.anus E.lWULarA in Voice. Wilson county, Tennessee, by means of the four mile law (not the 400 feet measure of our commission ers) got rid of all liquor selling, and as a result the costs of crime have fallen from $36,000 yearly to only $3000. Right snug sum for a county to save. i ''The Four-Mile law in Tennessee has been a mighty educator. Ten years of its who esome - sway have lifted up the people, and - the public thought of to-day is the statute of to morrow.:; f By .its original provisions no saloonhvas permitted within four miles of ah institution V of learning, btrt the late Legislature said itshould apbly to any school-house, closed or ope, empty or lull : and four men ciin organize a district and set a school going 'in short ' metre . As this law applies only to the area out side municipalities, 146 towns sur rendered their charters to the Legis lature, that they might share its be nefits, and three-fourths of the State are u n der it " ; Voice. t Denio rats ! would you favor or op pose a Four-Mile law in N. C. ? It is an invasion of the claimed rights of the citizen to make and sell the product of his foil. ; If you oppose it, you a 'e for free whisky, if you favor it, you are not Democrats, for Demo crats t'favor iemperahce, but oppose prohibition." , ' . .., A Distressed Mother Speaks. DISSIPATED SONS WITH MONEY AND . NO OCCUPATIONS ' . Editor Philadelphia Times. -- The writer "of this article is the mother of two sons, aged respectively 28 and 25 cars. -I - The younger is a confirmed slave to the opium habit, while the - other is a drunkard. - v . ' Is there no cure for such as they, or no phjee to put ;them.? -Their father is dead, t hey have their own money and no occupation..- Please 'answer through the ' col umns of your valuable . paper these questions of a Distressed Mother. The above is clipped from the Times," of this city r(Philadelphia) which proceeds to give the'Distressed Mother" cold comfort as best it can, but;annot see any thing in Prohibi tion of the liquor traffic as a cure for so many thousand such cases yet to come. - Spurgeon, the famous London preacher is in the - habit of testing the extempore eloquence of the more promising of the students in his col lege by handing to them as they mount the stairs of the pulpit a seal ed envelope containing the subjec on with he whishes them to address the congregation. On one of these occasions recently a student, on opening : the envelope, found this subject set: "Apply the story o Zacchaus to your own personal qual ifications and call." And he de livered himself in the following way; "My brethren, the subject" on which I have to address you to-day is companion between zaccna us ant my own qualifications Well, the first thing we read about Zacchaus was that he wa3 small of stature, and I never felt so small as I tlo now, In the second phice, we read that he climbed up mto a tree, which is very much my position now. Thirdly, we read that Zacchaus 'made haste to come down,' in which I joyfully follow his example." N. O. States How Local Option Educates Away from roiuDitioa, " In sjieaking of the late Texus cam paign, where every Republican Con utv voted against the Prohibitior Amendment, Dr. J. B. Cranfil writes the Voice : - " " One remarkable feature of the election was t hat every Iocal Option - county iu the State- went ag Prohibition. In Limestone County adopted Local Option by 1,100 in;ijority. A Tear later readoptedit by so:nej 200 majority and in the recent election it wen against the Amendment by over 1,000. The liquor interest concen trated on these c juntiesybut even that would not have affected the vote so largely as the returns show. Th lesson taught by these figures i3 per fectly clear. The Local Option law was so indifferently enforced tha tne people lost conndence in 4 any Prohibition whatever. The furtner lesson is that in order to the effect lveness of , 1'roliibition the law must be backed by; Prohibition officers and that means politics and a polit ical partr tnat lias i'ronibitjou m all of its platforms." PE0GRAM. For Mrs. Mary Bead Goodale. Saturday Oct 1st. Asheville ! Sunday " 2nd. " 3rd. 1 Monday Morgan ton Hickory Lincoln ton Charlotte Concord Archdale' High Point Greensboro Tuesday " 4th. Wednesday " 5th. Thursday" 6th. Friday. " 7th Saturday " 8th Sunday " 9th. ' Monday " 10th. Va., 12th., 13., 14th. Reidsville Sunday nigt 16th. Monday Oct. 17th. Carimel co. Con., Tuesday " 18th. . Winston Wednesday " 19th. : New Garden Thursday " 20th. : Randleman Seventh Dist. Convention. Friday " 21st. ". 'j : Fayetteville Saturday and Sunday 22nd. & 23rd. Laurinburg, ; Monday ", 24th. ; Maxton Tuesday and Wednesday 25th. and 26th. Wilmington, . r Thursday " 27th. Newberne Friday 28th. Kinston . State Convention, . ' Goldsbore Oct 31st j JNov. 1st. & 2nd. Mrs. Goodale will continue in the state ten or twelve ; days after the State Convention, -leaving in tim? for National W; C. T. U. Conven tion at Nashville, duiiag wh:ch time we hope she will visit Elizabeth City, Edenton, Washington, : Greenville, Oxford, Raleigh, - Durham, Lexing ton, Salisbury, Statesville, Newton, and other points. TWO VIEWS OF IT. Which is right? Which ; is Democratic ? Augusta, Ca. Chronicle (Dem.). " We take no stock whatever in sum- ptuary laws and the Compulsory En-l"S - - - " brcementof temperance. What a travesty prohibition is in any city orty community that boasts ol its- man hood and prides itself upon its civil ization. - " .... . ... .. . . Savannah Neics. (Bch.) No one will deny thaUthe Prohibi- tionists ' have .-plan aged wisely in Georgia. Ifthey- persne the same wise, course in the future as. they have li the past it is probable that the prediction of leading prohibitionists, hat at no" distant day every county in the state will have prohibition, will be realized and its beneficial re- suits witnessed. The Chronicle opposes all laws preventing the sale of alcoholic drink calling such laws "sumptuary laws." Is it correct ? Is it Democratic ? The Neics and many others approve of laws preventing the sale of alco holic drink when adopted at Jocal- option elections by localities proper y prepared for it. Is that correct r s . that JJemocratic r Uut pray wherein does a law forbidding the sale of liquor in a city or county dif- er from one forbidding it in the state or union? If the latter is a sumpt uary law, so is the former. When under the lead of Senator Colquitt. Dr. Hawthorne, Sam Jones, and other noble souls, every county shall have educated prohibition: by piece neal local-opiion, and driven the saloonist from their whole state, will they hypocritically sit in the Nation il Democratic Convention .and sol mny say with the Chronicle. "We are opposed to all sumptuary laws which vex the citizen, "and interfere with individual liberty." "We take uo stock wl atever in sumptuary laws, and the compulsory enforcement of temperance." Somethiiig for the North State,. Especially Editor Boyd. Dr. H. K. Carroll, Editor of the New York Indipendent, is one of the chief An ti- Saloon Republicans, and like all such good men in bad com I any, when talking on either side o the question he never opens his mouth without puttiug his foot in it. 'Up Nortn where four-fifths of the Prohi bitionists have been Republicans, he thus writes: "The Third Party can be brought again into the Republican fold, at least the ma;ority of them, wnenever the Republican party chooses to do so not by appealing to their old love for the party, not by denouncing them as an appendix to the Democratic party, but by taking an open, manly Stand, SEVEiiJNG ITS ALLIANCE WITH the saloon, and entering iuto an alliance with the people gai list the saloon (The small caps are ours.) In so many words, says the ; Voice, it is admitted that the Republican party has an 'alliance tcih the saloon which has not been severed. That' what we thought. That's why w ieit that party, it seemed to ns a pretty good reason for leaving it really did We don't like to be in alliance with the saloon. " And again says Mr. Albert Griffin the Anti-Saloonist whom all the great Republicans are secretly help ing with the left hand while hold ng the Rummy with the other : '"Most of our astute politicians al ready see, and even the most obtuse begin to realize, that thousands and thousands of true-blue Republican will never stand on another platform drawn to please the saloon-keepers. Another platform ? Then thev are already standing, we infer, on a platform 'drawn to please the saloon keepers.' And, of course, Messrs Keogh, and Boyd, and Douglass, and White, and Pritcbett, and Murrow, and Ball, and Yancey, and Un thank and all the rest, big and little, are standing there, too ! Hm r Your stom achs can stand more than ours could. GO OH WITH Y0TJE DYING! At the Prohibition state Conven tion of Massachusetts attended by 775 full delegates, held Sept 8, the chairman in his opening speech , to a body of men nine-tenths of whom had been Republicans, thus address ed himself to the Republican party, which bad failed to keep its pledge and submit a Prohibition Amend ment to the people :- v "Yes, the Republican party, I be lieve, has elected. its last President, and must die. And like many an other obituary notice, Ave shall read "Rum did it !" Did it by driving out its most healthy blood, and leav ing it bound hand and foot to the be hests of the liqucr traffiic - Any party which will legalize the saloon at any price, whatever . noble purposes it may have in other direc tions," does not deserve, and will not receive, any long continued support from American voters who put con science in action at the ballot box. I do not -wonder that the dear old party has some regrets about dying, but let it be comforted with the thought that 'thejgood only survives,' 'the evil will be interred with its bones'' Ali its really important work and worthy, purposes ; can be taken up and carried forward with no entangling alliances with the li quor traffic, much better by the clean, untrammelled rrohibinon - parly. nopeiul cniiaren we win auopi. T. A 11 .l-.J. ? jwar ami prumgai V . where pr0perly. belong. Uear ltepublican party, " don't worry about your family affairs. A story tola by our eloquent Mrs. : Montnan 3hould console you. An .Irishman's wife was about dying. " In her last momenta she revived a little,. ; and, ooking up to ' . her husband, said : Patrick, Avhen I am gone, will you feed the chickens and JookVfter the pigs ?' 'Yes, Maggie, and shure I will. Don't be worrying about that.' And then she sank back and was si- en t. At last, in her weakness, with a great effort, she rallied again and : Oh Patrick, when I am gone will you take good care oi the children and put them -inf their little : bed3 o' nights?' 'Of course I will, Maggie!' Now don't be worrying about all these little things but; Goon with your dying. And so we say to the dear old party, Don t be worrying what will become oi the tarin, civil service, or the ne gro. 'We will take care of these things. Go on Avitlr your dying. Whom do the liquor men fear? Here is what J. M. Atherton, President of the Liquordealers Na tional ; Protctiv6 Association, had to say at the opening of the last session ox that organization : "No re?pectsible liquor-dealer ob jects to the proper regulation of the tramc .nor to the imposition ot a reasonable pecuniary burden upon it hue all must unitedlv. as Dhe man. oppose the growiug; Intending danger of Prohibition. And still we hear it say that Tro- hibition will not prohibit ! Communicated. A GOOD W0NAK COMING. Mrs. Goodale has promised a month's work in JNorth uarolina. liere is what is said of her by Rev. W. C Black, D. D., in N. O. Christian Ad vocate: ..;. Mrs. Mary Read Goodale gave two addresses that were superb. They were learned without pedantry,logica withont stiffness and ornate without meretricious finery of speech. And Mrs. Goodale is withal a very pleas ing spesaker. A fine lace, a counten ance that bespeaks a candid, honest soul within, a pertect ease and self possession of manner, a voice soft and sweet and jet strong enough tofil anyanditorium, a thorough mastery of the primciples of the elocution ist sart, an intense naming zeal in that noble cause 'which battles for "God, home and native land" these qualifications make Mrs. Goodale, woman though she is, a .. foe to be dreaded by the hosts of Bacchus She is the I ranees Willard of the South. She has already dealt the rum traffic terrible crushing blows 'n No th Louisiana. ...Through- her instrumentality unions have been formed which have swept this hellish traffic form whole parishes. Ae look upon such noble wermen I have a more exalted estimate of our fallen humanity. To do the work which she is doing requires in the first place a vast amount of arduous toil to acquire a fitness for the work, re quires long absences from home, re quires the worry and manifold incon veniences oi constant travel requir es a hundred things that are no pleasing to a modest, refined,- home loving woman as Mrs. lioodale is. Yet all this she is willing to endure in order to save the sons of men from a drunkard's grave and a drnn kard's hell. AIL honor to such noble sell-denying, cross bearing God fear ing, humanity-loving women. They will never be appreciated at thei true worth until God comes to ''gather up his jewels.'' If ever mv soul has burned with holyindigna tion, it has been when I have heard 'men denounce and ridicule the?e heroic women" of whon the world i not worthy." I as much believe these Women's Christian Temperance Union women are divinely called to do the work they are doing as tha I am called to "minister in holy thing." - And not alone do honor these leaders of the hosts of reform ; 1 honor the rank and ..file as well. Not all can be leaders. Not all have speaking and organ rz ing talent. ' . . ' Not all can be spared from the borne circle for distant journeys. Yet those whose labors are more cir cn inscribed manifest the same spirit of consecration that ' characterizes their more widely known co-laborers. In a .great variety of ways the Chris tain womanhood of this land is working: persistently, energetically, heroically to banish from our heaven-favored land this vile traffic in human damnation. I thank God that I live in this age when in ful fillment of ancient prophecy he has poured out his - spiiit upon his "hand maidens" and and emboldened them to take their stand in the forefront of this warfare between heaven and heiL Naught but the spirt of God could have jmt wo man there, and naught but that spirit could hold her there. None, but the Searcher of all heart,can measure the true heroism, and self-abnegation, the soaring taith, the fervent piety and the pure philanthropy that are embodied in the Woman's Christian Temperance Union. till V bill E liJtilO thk pjt.or obUin estimate, jn (Cvertising space when i:. Chicago, will find on', a ar S " 49 Randolph St., fTfjn l.THftf?Be he Adve'itinj; Agency of LUIIU A li iiy T- 1 . Dr. GRIFFITH, Surgeon Dentist, Teeth extracted- without pain. Of ice on outn -Eiim street, vv uson & Sh ber Bank building. De 25. DR. R. W. TATE, : ; cticing Pnj uiuau, . (aietrtboio C, offers hia 1'iofefcfcional Sei vices o tha citizens ct Gieei storo ard .4urrounJif!g couuiry. Ofl3ce at forter&Dulton b ding btore. When lot thex can bo to ind at Lis re si lence on Aaheboro street, opposite 13. Keogh's. a!2tt Piedmont Air-Iiine Route. Richmond and Danville System. CONDENSED SCHEDULE IN EFFECT SEPT, 4, 1887. Tbains Run by 75 Mkkidian Time. DAILY. Southbound No. 50. No. 52. Lv. New York 12 15 am 430 pm "Philadelphia 7 20" 6 57 " " Baltimore 9 45 9 42 " " Washington 11 24" ' 11 00 " Charlottesvlle 3 35 p m 300am Lynchburg 5 60 " 5 20 ' "Richmond 8 10" 2 30 " " Burkeville 5 17" 4 23 " " Keysville - 5 57 " 5 05 " " Drake's Br'ch. 012" 5 21" "Danville 8 50" 8 05 " " (ireensboro 10 44 " 9 48 Goldsboro Raleigh Durham -Chapel Hill 330 pm 8 10 pm 5 50 p m fl 00 a m 52 V 2 37 " t8 15 " 7 25 " 3 32" 7 2 ) " 0 30 " 41 16 " 10 16 " 12 37 am 11 23 " 12 31 p m 5 38" 7 35 " 126 " 12 01 am 2 25 am 1 00 p in 5 28 " 3 4 " 6 43 " 4 48 " 1 20 p m 10 40 " No. 51. No. 53. 7 (Kt p m 8 40 a m 101. am 2 34pm 2 13 " 3 46 " 5 05 " 6 25 " 6 00 " 7 25 " 6 44 " 8 02 " 7 57 " 9 11 " 8 28 " 9 40 " 11 40 y fl2 34 a m 12 06 p m -t2 44 41 12 45 " - H05 " 8 15 " a 10 " 16 35 " 4 35 " 11 45 " 10 10 am 11 29 p m HiUsbero Salem High Point Salisbury Ar. istatcsvulis, Asheville; Hot Springs LiV. Ooncoru. Charlotte Spartanburg Ureenville . Ar. Atlanta XOTUBOUND. Lv .Atlanta Ar. Greenville ' Spartanburg Charlotte ' Concord . Salisbury ' High louit " (ireensboro Salem ' llilisboro ' Durham ' Chapel Hill ' Raleigh ' (ioldsboro Danville " Drake's Br'ch Keysville ' Burkeville ' Richmond ' Lynchburg Cnarlottesv'le Washington ' Baltimore ' Philadelphia ' New Yoric Daily. ; ' 12 44pm 2 44 am 1 00 3 03 " I 40 " 3 55 " 3 45 " 6 15 " 115 pm 2 00 " 3 4 4 i0 " . 8 23 " 8 10 " II 25 " f 10 03 " 3 00 a m 12 35 p m 6 20 " 3 20 " fDaily, except Sunday. SLEEPING CAR SERVICE On trains 50 and 51, Pullman BuSet Sleepers between Atlanta and New York. On trains 52 and 53, Pullman Bufiet sleepers between Montgomery and Wash ington and Washington and Augusta Pullman Sleepers between Richmond and Greensboro, and. Greensboro and Raleigh. Pullman Parlor Car between Salisbury and Knoxville. Through tickets on ale at principal stations to all poi ts. For rates and information apply to any, agent of the Company, or tOg SOL. HAas, T. M. or Jas. L. TAYLOR. Gen'l Pass. Agenf, Washington., D. C. or J. S.' POTTS, D. P. A., Richmond, Va., or VV. A. TURK, D. P, A. Raleigh, K. V. CAPE "FEAR & YADKIN VALLEY" RAIL ROAD COMPANY Condensed Time Table. To fake ffec at 5 00 a m , Monday, Sapt. 5 1887. : MAIN LINE Tbain Nurtu. Pass and Freight Mail T end Pass. 10 10 a m 5 00a in Leave Ben ettsville, Arrive Maxtou, Lettve Maxin, Am e Faj'etteville, Leave Fay e ilie. xirrire San ford, Leave iSanf ord, Arrive Gr ens boro, Leave Greensboro, 11 20 " 7 25 ' 11 30 " 8 05 1 30 p m 12 00 44 2 0 8 00 44 4 05 44 12 00 pm 4 15 44 1 05 4 7 25 44 6 50 44 10 10 a m Arrive Dalton, 2 15pm Pas cud Mail dinner at Fayetteville Tbain South. Pass, tod Freight. Mail a. d 45-. p m Leave Dalton Arrive Greensb ro. 7 45 44 9 50am 6 CO a m 1255 p m 12 00 pm. 1 15 1 30 44 3 20 44 6 00 44 3 30 44 11 00 44 5 15 44 3 05 44 5 25 4t 3 40.4 ' " R nft'.'" Leave Greensbor-, Arrive Sa ford, L ave S nford. Arrive Fay tteville, Lieave D ayetteville, Arrive Maxton, L ave . x on, , Arriv.- Beunettsville. Passenger and Mail dinner at fcanford Factory Bn an c g. Freight and Pass Tbain North. Leave Milboro, 8 05 a m 5 45 p m Arrive Greensboro, 9 35 44 725 44 Train South. Lea e Greensboro, 2 00 p m Leave Factory Jnnction, 3 00 44 7 15 p m Arrive Milboro, 3 45 44 8 00 44 Passenger and Mail Train runs daily ex cept Sundays. Freight and Passenger XTr in runs between Bennettsville and Fayetteville on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays; and between Fayetteville and Greensboro cn Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. :- Freght and Passenger train n n be tween Greensboro and Fayetteville on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fri i y, and between Fayetteville and Bei cetts on Tuesdays Thursdays and Saturdays. The Passenger and Mail train makes ;lose connection at Max'on with Carot ina Cent altoCh'rlotts and Wilmington. Trains on Factory Branch run daily ex jept Sunday. W. E KYLE, GenV Pass. Ag't J W FRY ,Ge 'J snp't;
The North Carolina Prohibitionist (Bush Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 23, 1887, edition 1
2
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