Ml!liPROHflO:!iSi
I
t
FDBLI3HKD EVKEY
nsv. W. T. WALKER.
" Editor "and Proprietor,
yCtrner B. Market and Davie Streets,)
Greensboro, N. C.
EMDAYIAll. 2 1888.
TERMS IN AD ANClu.
uejear $1.00
&X months ;(jq
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we Tiews of correspondents.
Agents wanted. A liberal commission
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If your name is written a cross mark
be placed there to let you know. Ii
sme you will be credited from that time,
wyoa lose nothing by it.
tod fractions of dollars in, one and two
stamps. " "
: TX NORTH AROLINA PBOHIBITION-
tmt is entered at the post office in Greens-
i as secoad-class matter.
ADVERTISING BATES,
fipaee lmonth, 3mo. 6mo. 12mo
Column $1.00 $2.50 $4.00 $7.50
I 44 $2.00 $5.00 $8.00-$15.00
$4.00 $10.00 $16.C0 $30.00
1 " - $8.00 $20.00 $32.00 $90.00
Advertisements to be inserted every
other week and having special position
Will be eharged 10 ner cent, extra
cnrTORlAL NOTES
The prohibition of the liquor
traffic would greatly reduce our taxes.
The prohibition of the liquor
wa JsaLuLL jeduce insan it j one -
half.
TEE HUHDEfc CASE COjJTIKUED.
We promised our readers last week
o puDtiMi t it44jiir f,1f' ft - to the
county of this case. As nearly as
we can get at t from the records, it
was $417. This estimate is below,
rather that above, the amount, as
there are some items of cost, such' as
extra guards tc, that cannot be cer
tainly determined. The whoh
amount paid into the ounty treas
ary by Ii hman for the privilege of
selling liquor for the year 1887 was
$77.47. I This does not include the
amount recieved by the State, which
was $80.77, and which went into the
shool fund, nor th amount recieved
by the city,neither of which, however,
paid a cent of the expense of the pros-
Substracting the $77.46
aid lHfoTSe" cicrmtty-fAsujyJayth at
establishment from the $417 paid put
for this one case, to say nothing of
nny oilier, pnts 1h onnnty out of
pocket $339.53.
And yet we are told that we can
not afford to suppress the liquor traf
fic because it is a great source of rev
enue.
Who says this miserable .business
ought not to be stopped ? Awav
with the; political par ies that favor
and fostar it!
A Prohibition Towii
THE FIELD T L A.RGE.
,j The. land of Kansas is a wonder A-
town no bigger than a voting: pre-
tfevstreet cars and elec
trie lights and cfrner lots. It just
makes a man's back ache to look "at
Wichita. Street car line running
twenty miles out into the country.
Six universities going up. The very
ground aquiver with excitement and
growth Different i from anything
you ever saw in all your life Every
thing booming except the saloons
Shos that you can boom a town clear
up into the millions without the aid
of one whiky hop.'. Tin old- idea
was that when you boomed a Western
town you started in with a saloo.i
every other door and a cl-iurch or two
came along by-and-by. In Wichita
you stumble over the ; churcaes and
tangled up ! among the colleges
andjbst in the labyrinth of "homes"
and reading rooms, but you have to
ndandearn the ropes arid
he a little to get a drink. And yet the
Doom goes on.
Bob burdette.
A Good Motto.
Can you not do something for
the spread of Prohibition literature?
Try it.
The prohibition of the liquor
traffic would reduce crime three-fourths.
Away with the parties and the
politicuns(?) that favor the greatest
curse that ever afflicted mankind !
The' prohibition of the liquor
traffic would carry sunshine into
more darkened home3 than any othr
-legislation possible.
it ill
ex Cue liquor
:
For more than twenty years the
Republican party had the power to
repeal the Internal Revenue, but they
didn't do it. Then, thev had the
offices, and the revenue was a neces
sity. Eow, they are ou, and thev
cry lustily for its lepeai
For more than twenty years, the
Democratic party cursed the Internal
Revenue, called its officers Red-le
ged Grasshoppers" and "noseis," and
ilejnanded its repeal. Then, thev
were out of power. NowftheyTl The n flnnr t1lP worf1
offices and insist on its perpetuation
Let?s kill the Internal Revenue and
both these consistent(F) parties with
one blow. Away with the Internal
Revenue, and away wul Internal Rev
enue parties ?
HOW TO C0UBT.
Advice to Old Bachelors,
The prohibition
would do more to ligh
gardens of the labjirieglasses
Sgislation possible.
Go to work at once and organize
a Prohibition Party Club in your
community. Do not wait for another
to lead in the matter.
See the call for the State Con
vention in another column of thia
paper. Make your arrangements to
attend that meeting.
present, gave
"Go
met
Five Hundred delegates from all
over yebraskaattpntlod theirState
"Prohibition Convention to nominate
delegates to Indianapolis . Hurrah !
HurfihTr
J. ne countrjjs--tm the very verge
ofdejlxtKrtionagain, to hear the po
fitical demagogues and office seekers
JeII it. HoirrjfteTr-it hug ' been
this condition and yet saved !
The man Avho votes for either of
the old parties, votes for the perpetu
ation of the Saloon.
There is no longer roouj for doubt
a3 to their position on this question.
A few days ago the suoject of
courtship was being discussed oy a
social gathering around the fireside
of a gentle man in county,
when the hosffc for the benefit of a
nrtijijoMbalchelIr
court?h?n uafrrTT as follows!
ig the road one day I
I said, 'Have pitv on a noor
old tofiom bachelor, marry him and
put him out of his misery Aill you?'
at the same time slapping her s ight
ly on the arm. She said, 'Y-e-s!' "
That was all. They were married,
have twelve living children and we
do not know how many grandchild
ren, but several. A happier old con
pie, seemingly, Ave do not ! now. We
publish this for the benefit of the
great army of old bachelors who
cannot make their months go off at
the light time, with rhe injunction,
'Go thou and do likewise."
The first experience of a millionare
merchant in Philadelphia on his ar
rival in this country Aptly illustrates
what push can acco:.ipl sh. When he
stepped ashore from the sailing vessel,
he said: "I was without money or
friends. I spoke to a man on the
wharf, and asked him what to do. He
replied: 'Work young man. Have
yon any motto?' 'No,' 1 said. 'What
do you mean:' He said: 'Every man
must have a motto. Now think of
one. lio out and hunt for work.
"I started thinking of a mott As
I walked along the streetlsaw painted
ipush I said
'That shall be my motto.' T did push
at the door, and entered an office,
was asked what I wanted. I said
'Work; and the word on your door
gave me not only a motto, but confi
dence.'
"Mv manner pleased the man. He
asked me many questions, all of which
were answered promptly. He sa d at
last: I want a boy of 'push,' and as
3'ou have adopted thas for your motto.
I will try you.'
"He did. My successs followed, and
the motto that made my fortune will
make that of others."
The Avoid is old, short and crisp,
but it expresses everything, and has
carved out fortuue and fame for
hundreds of thousands of poor and
o s;ure bovs. Urv Goo&s Chroni-
e.'
SOMETHING
ABOUT SAL00H ETJLE
CHEST.EE.
Ho w Good Men and Bad All to Perpetuate
It The Bold Insolence of the Brewing
Interest A Great Municipal Shame Des
cribed Others Matters.
A Sarewd Eaeray's Candid View.
Some Questions
1 In the light of Scripture, ij the
iquor tiafli rigth or wrong?
2. Should not Christians hike God's
word as the standard to guide toem
ia their treatment of all the questions
involving moral principle?
2. Is the theorv of rpomlnf;
al crime by statutory enactments
consistent with the teaching of Scrip
ture ?
4. Is the exercise of franchise a
moral act, and will God hold the
voter accountable for his vote ?
5. Can Mien who are the professed
The frankness of the W.'.shinqton
D.. r i -i .
j. ujs i uxm.) wnen STeaKinor nt nur 't::i , .. .
p-m,,V, T7- jvutocipieB oi v.nrist vote witn a party
Jrronibition ruirrv iam cr m-Q .f xr . i J
x o ' v' mv. tt ii v t
' : (Special Correspondence.)
rocHESTER, March, 5 In Ohio,
one day la summer, I was making a
Prohhibition party speech, and a
Republican politician of some local
fame itterupted me. He was irrita
ted and displeased. Decidedly sho -ing
it, he said:
"Will the speaker allow me to ask
him a question?"
"W-th pleasure," was my reply.
"You reside iu Rochester, 8. Y., do
yju hot?''
"I do."
" Vell,sir,Iamtold that they make
more beer there than in any other
city of the size in An. erica; is that
true?"
"7ery likely 't is."
'Then, sir," he went on,witlt a sort
of overwhelming air. "what I want
to know is, if you go about making
such speeches in Ohio as you are n a
inghere,when will they stoi) making
beer in Rochester?"
"When the bad men in Ohio stoy
selling it," I answered, "and when
yo and other good men stop voting
that they may sell.1
He seemed hurt by my rejoinder;
but what was there in it to offend? If
good men did not endorse the traffic
it could not exist. We are beer rid
den in Rochester, because outside our
state, as in it, good men tolerate the
po rer of beer in politics by contri
buting to the financial power of beer
from their purse; and because good
men who refuse to beer the patronage
of their purs? concede it tha patron
age and alliance of i,heir ballot. We
haA-e had numerous proofs of this
fact heretofore, and another impends.
This week Rochester elects her .May
or for the ensuing two years. The
mavor of to day will be rechosen. as
all signs now indicate. He has been
six times elected already, and by open
co-operation of good men Avith tne
saloous. TVelve -ears he has been
our chief executive by equal grace oi
bad men and good; and under his
rule the liquor traffic has prospered,
waxed fat, nd kicked with contempt
at every purpose of a few to curtail
and suppress it. Oue-ha'f his 1 ng
term as mayor he ha3 been under in
dictment for malfeasance in office
during the other half; but, spite of
this, he wins renomination through
sa oon influence, and re-election by
church inviorsement, and through
his alminis ration. beer abrogates our
Sabbath, dominates in the city coun
cil, bn dozers moral conviction ai d
ch'oroforms Christian conscience.
Are the?e declarations too sweeping?
Would that they were! But they are
too painfully, too awfully true!
What is being done co check or
change this order of thing? There
is talk of an independent candidate,
but wh-t does it mean? Simply that
the good men who rebel at saloon
rule by a Republican mayor, are un
willing to vote tor a clean rnemv of
an.liio rare a com .Ijshments, excej
the 'actio win and hold -popularity
amsng liquor men, viol .tors of" law
and the doubtful array of those ayih
waive -saloon perpetuated for their
own gun. 'He, is gxl natured,
clever and of fair personal habits.
But he can be rnsd y jiquur men.
So other men eJecfr him to a place of
truss. '
In v ew of such fact, I ge half dis
couraged, sometime, over our large
cities. Yet t ight here in Rochester
there are sign?" of a better condition
by and by.. Public sentiment is
changing. Prohibitionists' are multi
plying, and are respected. We haAe
a live party cl u b in each v of several
wards. We had a large yty con'ven
tion recently, which put in nomina
tion a strong ticket, and declare! aga
inst all compromise Our party vote
is- growing every year, and we have
now, to help it on, a bright, aggres
ive Prohibition paper, The Weekly
News, that is Avinning good Opinions
and, I hope some degree of sucessful
support- "We'er not so lonesome as
we ustd to be!" Besides, the C ty
W. C T. U. is strong and active, and
has come into such popular vor that
i,s fi; -si annual donation, help last
wtek, Wednesday, netted over $800
a surpri .e to some, and a great en
couragement to all inter sted. The
day wj 11 come when beer sha 1 no
longer be"on top." When may we
see it ? Not while good men support
b.er candidates, and dodge an issue
by running "independents" not open
ly and agressively hostile to beer.
'The Temperance Dodger " as sung
about bj the Silyer Lake quartet in
meir new soug uook, is a very nu
merous man, now ; he will decrease,
let us hope, in the near future Says
the song:
Yes I'm a Temperance Dodger!
The saloon I think a sin,
And I pray against it often
With an unction that should win.
I believe in Prohibition,
When to God I make appeal ;
Tis only at the ballot box
My faith I do conceal.
Oil, I'm a Temperance Ddger !
The saloon I think a crime,
But he :s a mad fanatic
Who condems it all the time ;
So I stand for Prohibition
On the str et and in the church,
Tis only at the ballot box
I leave It in the larch.
Oh, I'm a Temperance Dodger !
There's my wife, a worker true,
In the ranks of noble women
Known as W. O. T. U.
I will help her all I can, sir,
In t e church and on the street.
Tis only at the ball t box
I aid iu her defeat
That isn't quite all the song,
it lacks the pointed chorus.
A. 7
there's enough to accentuate
thought in mind.
Oar state Avorkers are bestirring
5-Mi
ffc vl fci BackacUe. O
ttri- Oil Sciatica, w
am Toothache,
" Richmond
Burke vi lie
" Keysville
" Drake's Dr'ch
Danville
" Ureensboro
" Goldsboro
" Raleigh
" Durham
Chapel Hill
" Hillsboro
Ar.
and
but
the
to
the saloon in the person of our Pro
- . . i -C " m-r - ' V. llfl III ir lit-' T I Will ...
th the ignorance or sneers of perpetbv of the Honor ir tffi , ni ij nominee, and can satisfy
R f I . i , , 1 TO 4- U n. ,1 , i. ; , 1
iuai uuuiaui uuusoieuue avicii a com
promise candidates. The liquor
the smaV fry Democratic countv pa
pers that it is a delight to read ltslu-
,0
Every penny that gots to the sa
loon is taken from the home. In
other word3 the saloon lives on the
wreck of the . borne. If the home
prospers ti0M6ts fails ; if the sa
loon prospers the home fails.
The party that is so stupid as
not to know that the liquor traffic
should be suppressed or so cow rdly
s to-be afraid to to espouse a cause
which, it knows to be right is unwor
thy of the support of any class, much
afl of thn pftiriotio and rrliionn
classes;
- The sound of your hammer at
fire in the morning or at nine at night
heard by a creditor, makes him easy
. 1 . 1.1 i i l t. , '
six montna longer; oucu ne sees yon
at a-bil lard -table or hears your voice
atr a tavern wnenvou8hQnld te at
work, he sends for his money the nex
day. Frankir.
Democratic organs tell Ncai Dow
that he is "on the right trail" when
he goes for taird-party-prohibition.
A. f H .1 . i -ri . ' 7
mey are au snouting democrats,
third-partyites, and whiskeyites.
Detroit Tribune, (Rep.)
: There they've classed us together
again Jiro Age. Can't you cud
"f'robably the most thoroughly
honest political organization in Mia
United States to-day is the Prohibi
tion party. The Post is opposed to
l s re dandhas no better Av.sh for i!s
enorts than that they may result iL
failure, so far as prohibitory amend
ments and statutes are concerned, for
the lesson of experience is that such
changes of law invariaoly injure the
gooa cause oi temperance. Untit is
impossible not to respect the sinceri
ty, the earnestness with which the
members of this party adhere to their
convictions and work for the advanc
mant of a policy that their consciences
approve. Undismayed by defeat, un
disturbed by abuse, indifferent to
malice and detraction, they address
themselves to what they believe to be
their duty.
Bro. Age ! Will you say Amen !
to that?
consistent ?
6. Can men who have
covenanted with God, to take His
gj em-Y Democr acyare content with the Re
;lIvH Ti ia ...
vuxu as tneir guiae n all things, vote
for h. law that lega izes, sanctions,
perpetuates, and protects the Lquor
t-i '
'Disorderly.
ghontfng Democratic organs, are you
not?
Q-tIa.tethere have been some casas
of disorderly drunks on tEetreets
urver iu oruer 10 get urunKS on
the streets. It is never in order to
get drunk, but those who get drunk
here have usually been forced to keep
order. Recently th- law has not been
promptly executed, for some cause
are'tw-salowsfrnolvTnot-
irith standing the fact that the Legis-
ature passed prohibition of the liqu
or traffic i'n "San ford
These saloons, unless the law is pro
mptly executed, are a nuisance and
must ga TheExpress does not im-
dertaketo dictate to anybody, but it
is going to: do its best to arouse the
moral sentiment of this community!
lit I
against tnese saloons, unless there is
traffic and be consistent iu so votin
(. oan mat which is morally
wrong be made morally right by
legislative sanction ?
8. AV hat constitutes a temperance
not temperate) man m the fullest
and truest sense of ihe term? And
h-sw may such a man surely be
known?
9. What is he differenceCif there is
any dinerence) betwten tje monev
Judas received for etarvin Jeans
me fi
into the hands of his murderers, and
the license and tax money received
by the Government from liquor deal
ers :
10. Will the license theory(as advo
cated by the Democratic party) or
the tax theory(as advocated by the
Republican party) settled the liquor
question as it ought to be settled ?'
11 Are the men who sell liquor,
and who, by so doing, incur the di
vide curse for ' putting the bottle to
their neighbor's I lins and
em drunk" any moreguiky,in the
light of S ripture, than the men who
vote to legalize, the traffic and make
liquor selling both legal and respect
able?
12. Ae not the' men Avho(!:y iheir
i. 1 A . .
vuLc;uih.yuuuBfsra;u iviS uui..orizj
hndjijmzcting Jje.ule of ihioi
icatiag liquors e; aiiy gniiiy L.'ibrc
God with the iuea'wiio 3a ;h ii
quois - t
themselves, and we have faith
count upon good party progress diir
ing the next few months. New York
is generally looked upon as the pivot
al point of this year, as indeed it
must be. For if the Republicans
a.
begin by conceding New York to the
Democrats, they virtually concede all
I canno agree with some wno tbmk
this state U given over as hopelessly
JJemocratic, and that we are to have
an easy campaign here because
of
It
such Republican abandonment.
will be, on the contrary, bitter, des
perate ai.d pers stent. We shall
neeilall possible service and wisdom.
Against us the Republicans ili wage
i special warfare, unrelenting and
vengeful. Thev will be helned bv
l -j
high license as the party basis, and
by the success of saloon effort in this
city and at other politically strategic
points. The "dodgers" will be mass
ed in force upon the liquor side. Tue
issue is already made, and must be
met.
A A. Hopkins.
WASHINGTON LETTEE.
(From Our Eegular Correspondent.)
i publican incumbent and want no op
position to him; and the te nperance
Democracy are so few that they have
no control. If the Christian man
nood of Rochsster would assert itself,
withoat compromise or fear, and fight
this battle out squarely on the issue
presented by the Republican and the
Prohibition tickets, we could redeem
our city from her widening shame.
Why am I saying all this? be
cause the facts implicate good men
elsewhere than here, as I intimated
to that Ohio politician because the
facts can be remedied only as good
iCu rvt-ry wuere agree a a on; m to Washington, March 5th. 188?.
remedy them. Koc hester bear h ma le The most interesting ev- nt at the
oecause outside ot Kochester and of Capitol during the week was the ad
iew lerk state that beer is b ougnr. I vent of the long looked for. tariff bill
Because it is thus Avidely bonght our ; formula ed bv the democratic maiori
thirteen big breweries groAv powerful jty of the Ways and Weans Conimi'tee
their big bellied proprietors grow It was in a secluded loom of the I'rea
proud and the sa oons wl ih repre-: sury Department that the bill ,ook it
sent them grow insolent. One of shape Much night work extending
these brewery proprietors is secretary! through many ueks has oeen exven-
ui Mate, aim o ners oi tiiem w.eld ,ded xr. n it and a room in ( he
ia ge persona: innuence political v. urv was seiec ed demise
oeo.eiary uoo.i is a German auu a icessibiii y to most of
jmocrac; mayor rarsonsis aKepub- whose hotels are nearer to that )ii..
acan antj an inencan. Both court ; in ' th-n 1o the
and curry the s loon favor; both are
elected by ihe
fement of discords . The wool men
nd the sugar men ar greatly dissa
sflpil with tht- condition' in which
they find these itenWm the oid, and
party line is sore to be broken i n
shese questions. .Still it. is by no
means that those .-who -. 'ire disaffected
by the ti.'atmentof tiiese industries
would vote against the. oil 1 when
Lbrought to fma! act.on because thete
items Avcre still retained. -
It is said that the bill has the un
qualified apiOoval of the President
and Secretary of the Treasury, and
the key to the situation lies in tie
hands of a small minority of v ei.her
ptrty.
One criticism of the 'bill" which
came particularly from Senators and
Representati e of tobacco-groAving
SLULfd WHS UiUU IU UUlillCU : jUlCiuai
revenue relief To this - the
committee replied that they now - ex
pect to go to work and frame an in
ternal revenue reduction bill and re
port it to the House veiy soon They
deem it prudent to keep the questions
apart this time.
And noAv that the light has fairly
begun, AA'e expect a lively time on
Capitol Hill from this time on Tar
iff talk and tariff debates
will follow each other unceasingly'
and tariff literature will deluge the
country from now until the cad of
the Presidential campaign.
A sensible thing has just been done
by the House Committee on Invalid
Pensions. It has authorised a favora
ble report on Mr. r Matson's bill to
provide that the pension money of any
pensioner who in is the habi; of get
ting intoxicated and Avho neglects to
support those lawfully dependent on
him, shall be paid to the Avife of
such pensioner, if she be a proper
person to receive it, or to a legally
qualified -guardiaa.
It looks as if the people of the Dis
trict of Columbia would be given an
opportunity to 'lec.t'e bv their own
votes the liquor question which eti
tioneis tro - ail over the country ave
been trying to decide for them, th i
is whether they shall hav a prohi' '
torV law, a high license law, or no
change in the law 'at all. At least
the Senate District Committee took
a step in that direction on Wednes
day Ah?n it killed the Piatt
Prohibition bil . It is proposed to
substitute a local-option-measure in
its stead, submitting the Avhole liqu
or question toadirect voteof the peo
ple of the District of Columbia.
he temperance people of the Dis
trict have never really expected any
better fate for their bill, and re de
lighted that they have succeeded in
putting the republican party equally!
on record as opposed to prohibition
1 L 1 M. i i 1 ii
so ujul iio proniDinonist snail ever
nereafter have any excuse for rem ain
ing in the republican party.
There was little opposition to the
reselution passed oy the Senate re
questing the President to negotiate
with the Emperor of China a treaty
providing that no Chinese laborers
shall enter the United States, except
to point out the nselessness of such a
treaty, unless treaties to the same eff
ect Avere made with England, France
and Mexico. Senator Ca 1, of Florida,
criticised theresolut on as a declara
tion that the Avorld Avas made Avrong
and that the 400 millions of Chinese
oug.it not to be in it
- As regards the aroroa d Wash vtr'nn
o
Exposition in theSpring of 1889, com
iemorative of the centennial of the
Constitution of the United States, t Leave Ben ettsville,
' 1 rt rr vh i aTT.an
will ji.st mention that the Senate se-j Leave Maxt.a,
lect committee ha-e taken favorable fri eJayeteT1ile
i , . - , i t a- u - c iii&
t'H.iuu tipuu tut; uill.
1
v ;
if,
The Greatest Cure on Earth for Pain.1 Win
Boms, Scalds, Cuts, Lumba-
lumsy, Sore Throat
ounda. HMii.oh.
Sprains, etc Price
otlle. Enid W n
fidrugrfstSL Caution. The iren.
1i?siS' Mnf Sahxitton Oil bears eur
n-'siaierea lraae-MarK. and our
facsimile riCTatnre. A. C M?yer & Co., Sole
Proprietors, Baltimore, itiL, D. 8. A.
Siuoke Lange's Cubeb Cigarettes, for Ca
tarrh I iTico 10 Cta. Sold by all PruggisLs
Piedmont Air-Xine
out 3.
Rictand and Danville Svstcm.
CONDENSED SCHEDULE IN EFFECT
" SEPT 4 18875
Txii xns Run ey 71 Meridian Time
V DAILY
SOtTTHBOUXD No. 50. No. 52.
Lv. New York 12 15 a ru 4 0 y m
" Philadelphia 7 10 " 6 57 "
" Baltimore 9 45 " 9 42 "
"Washington 11 24" 11 t "
' Charlottesvlle 3 35 p m 3 C8 a m
"Lynchburg 5 50". 5 20 "
Salem
High Point
Salisbury
otatesvilJc,
" Ashevillo,
" Hot Springs
Lv. Concord,
" Charlotte
" Spartanburg
" Greenville
Ar. Atlanta
NOTHBOUND.
Lv .Atlanta
Ar. Greenville
" Spartanburg
" Charlotte
" Concord
' Salisbury
" High Point
" Greensboro
" Salem
" Hillsboio
" Durham
" Chapel Hill
' Raleigh
" Goldsboro
" Danville
Drake's Br'ch
" Kr-ysville
" Burkeville
" Hichniind
" Lyuchburg
" Cliarlotteav'Je
" Washington -"
Baltim-re
" Philadelphia
" New York
Daily
3 10 "
5 17 "
5 7 "
6 12 "
8 50 "
10 44 "
3 30 p ni
5 50 p m
G 52 "
t8 15 "
7 25 "
A7M "
11 16 "
12 37 am
1 26 "
2 25 am
5 28 "
6 43 "
120pm
5To. 51.
700 pm
1 01 am
2 13 "
5 05 "
6 00 "
6 44 "
7 57 "
8 25 "
'11 40 "
12 06 p m
12 45 "
t8 15 "
2 10 "
4 35 "
10 10 am
12 44d m
1 00 "
1 40 "
3 45 "
115 p m
5 4 "
8 23 "
11 25 "
3 00 a m
2 0
4iS
5 U
5 21
8 C
9 48
8 10 pm
tl CO a m
2 37 "
3 32 "
6 30 "
10 16 "
1123"
12 31 p m
5 3S"
7 35 "
12 61 a m
1 00 pm
Q OA (
4 48 " -
10 40 "
No.., ...
15 l t in
2 14 ! n
3 46 "
6 5 "
7 25 "
8 (2 "
9 11 "
9 40 "
tl2 34 a m
t2 44 "
t4 05 "
t6 S3 "
11 45 "
11 29 pm
2 44 a m
3 03 "
3 55 "
6 15 "
2 00 "
4 10 "
8 10 "
10 03 "
12 85 p m
3 20 "
0 20 "
fDailj', except Sunday
SLEEPING CAR SERVICE
On trains 50 and 51, Pullman BuCet
Sleepers between Atlanta and New York.
On trains 52 an i 53, , Pullman Bufiet
sleepers between Mcntgomery and Wash
ington and Was rngt.n and Augusta
Pullman Sleeper between Richmond
and Greensboro, ; and Greensboro end
Raleigh. Pullman Parlor Car between
Salisbury and Knoxville.
Through tickets on tale at princira
stations to air poi ts.
. For rates and informatien apply to any
agent of the Company, or to
Sol. HA as, T. M or Jas. L. TAYLOR.
Gen'l Pass. Agen Washington., P. C. or
J. S. POTTS, D. P. A., Ric'.mond, Va.. or
W. A. TURK, D. P, A. Raleigh, N. C.
CAPE FEAR & YADKIN VALLEY
RAIL ROAD COMPANY
Condensed Time Table.
To ake iTec at 5 00 a m , Men lay, Dec
19 1887.
MAIN LINE.
Tkatn North
Pass and
Mail
8.30 a m
9 40 "
9 67 "
Freight
i nd Pass.
1 3(!p m
3 35 "
4 15
vrrivG Sdiif-rd.
Leave San ford,
Arrive ensboro
Leave Greensboro
11 50 " 8 10 " .
12 CSp m 8 20 a m
217 " 12 20p m
2 40 " 1 3 "
6 C O " 7 45 "
10 10 a m
! rtja-ac-
t 'e committee
The Cram resolution also, propos
ing Constitutional a Presidential
A I s . .
term and chanffinsr the date for thp!rrive I'liotjv'ountaim, 3 00 p m
w . ; H"j1sij nrl Moil 1 ,J : i o c t
commencement of the Presidential V"
term ana cnanging the elate for the ,, .
annual meeting of Congress, has been i rain South. .
favorably reported to the House- Pass. nd Freight
I must note a new departne. In Leave Pilot Mountain 4" 10 pm d P5S
the line of evansreliaintr thp. wiVk1Arrive Greensb ro, 8 3) "
. e xv u- T ... . Leave Greensbor-,
city of Washington; some of the good ArriveSa for,
women worxers have secured the use . a7e b nrrl
ffi - .; ,. Arrive Fay ttevill
iuc juuuc uurLroora ior reilg eus Leave Fayetteville,
services on Sunday afternoons ;AW1T iMaxtorr,'
L ave 'x on.
-f Arriv.- Tijint t will r t
rr " uu . j vj
x w . ui it-u new suosenners we Jrassenger ana Mail dinner at
will send the Noetii Oakolina Prohi
'5ITION1ST one year for $7.50
10 00 "m 7 45 a m
1 3p m 2 15 p m
oo " 3 15 '
415 " . 7 05 "
4 30 " 5 80 a m
6 27 " 9 00 "
6 40 " Q as
12: 0 "
Sanford
of il
part, though the
tian backi-.;. w .
state lv. ; . i
SldoOn j 1 .'.
look at tlkW i7i
tiie i wo grta ::
:. .vo: Of . '
GU!;e men in largeled
ayor has a Ciiris
; ' . i' , e';.ry of
pitoi.
Coiiir.ients upMU tiie .:aeasir. e vavi-
i,,
e d ulis
io ;,. y l.-t
reprt'i.e-.
i o Ls chosen
' '' 0".
ti.-e
1 j
.CCOi(i:ni; TO ilt'W
.. iic;;i:s. lor the r.
: ili'S 'iWlli l.S
onrci-.
t ; .r,
...ur friends in various sections of thetate
ia a:s-er t: this f.-roposition. Oulist isf
ijrowiitg. rapidly, but we want it to grow
more rapidly. We want 10,000, names on
our list by th? 1st of Nov. 1888. Shall
we have them? The answer to this
question depen. Is in larg3 measure upon
the fria Is of tac ciuae. Vith the prop
er effort ox the pa.rt of these the 10,000
Ki - lv. ertrollr-d. i
Faotoky Braxch. -Freight and Pa?s
" Train North.
Leave Milboro, ' 8 05am 4 25 pm
Arrive Greensboro, 9 40 " 6 00 " -
; : m9 1 . .. ,i
Train South.
Lea' e Greensboro, 130pm
Leave Factory Jnnction, 2 30 " 5 35 d m
Arrive Milboro, 3 15 ' 6 15
cept Sundays. -Freight
and
- - T
Ll
X
rty-ill
:t
1
did. us a bit ? You are one of thosejbetter behavior on the pars of the men 1
;iil
whom they make drunk.
v r- d ntral Express,
n by their
,he
Mark that.'! ',l'a&fc reconcile their votes' with'
phsians:j 5: 11? Kern Era,
Las neither.' lie is but an
man pf afluirs; v ith moderate brain
average
i': cuulo.' ej.eali j.'sit-'xe.-v
xiiU.- There ic nv to be ii :c
tiui; in the democratic party over the
proposition to put wool on the free
list, and the sugar, item js another selling thgni cheap
!i u-p pUsiO or .-organ.
etl.' t 7u l Afa,e,Sh has al ins on FoTtaetory Branch unlsup
Passenger Tr in mm
between Bennettbville and Fayetteville on
Mondays, Wednesdays an 3 Frida , and
between Fayetteville and Greensboro ob
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.
Freght and Passenger train run be
tween Greensboro and Fayetteville on
Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and
between Fhv Seville and Rennets
on .Tnes-'ajTLnr-iays'iPd tordays.
; Tire' Pa erjer and iiJU trai makes
. close conueetioii at Max on with arot
jlina Cent-altoCh-rl.-.tt "and Wilmington
Gen'l Pass, ag't
W ,Fry,. Gen'l pup?.