Newspapers / Marion Record (Marion, N.C.) / Aug. 24, 1894, edition 1 / Page 2
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Di Ii Waot? Any Information About .Farming Lands, Tim ber Lands, Mineral Lands. Town Lots, Houses and Lots, Factory Lots or IJm: iness Locationsl If so, write to tho CAROLINA IMPROVEMENT COMPANY. MARION, NORTH CAROLINA. Do you want to Live? IN A HEALTHY COUNTRY, A GOOD FARMING COUNTRY, A PROGRESSIVE COUNTY, A RICH MINERAL COUNTY, A GREAT TIMBER COUNTTI tW Write to the CAROLINA IUPROVEMEM CCMPANI About Marion and vicinity. J. H ATKIS, Gen. Manager. tyCome Here for Health, EyCome Here for Wealth, KlJ-Come for Cheap Land, tW Come f jr Beautiful Home, lyCoie foi B-i-iuos ljpoituni'itb. McDowell County is ia the hialthitst, richest and best part of the Piedmont section. We luve gold, iron, mica, timber, gooJ farmers, cheap farms, goi railroads, good churches, two trunk lines of railway, good hotels, good people. Come, and see. Carolina Improvement Company, isr. c Tho Marion Record. DEMOCUATIC NEWSP AftCR. MARION, N. C. HELD TO BE UNCONSTITUTIONAL. Judge Adrich Decides Against the Dispen sary Laws of 1893. Aiken, S & The South Carolina dinpetisnry cane met with defeat again. The argumenta on the application of J. V. George and O. T. Holler, dis penHer und bin clerk, for & writ of pro hibition agairiKt the mayor of the city of Aiken to prevent him from trying said dinpenser and hit clerk for viola ting an ordinance of the citv relating to the wile of liquor, wa lieard on Tuesday Innt. The iMs of the conHtitutionality of tho law was squarely made by both par ties and uh squarely met by Judge Ald rich in an opinion of twenty-eight puges, in which he fully diHcusses the law bearing on the issues before him. After plainly and equivocally de claring the law f 1593 to be unconHti tutional ho discusses the right of the city yt Aiken to pass any ordinance Regulating the sale of liquor, spirituous, malt or vinous. The judge further decides that the city of Aiken has no right to pass any ordinance re gulating the sale of the liquor above mentioned, and consequently that the mayor is without power to try the dispenser and his clerk, and enjoins liim perpetually from po proceeding. This givt'H nceideiilul prohibition, fUK? and simple and will enable the mayor to close the dispensary here by injunction from Judge Aldrich, the judge of the circuit. A NEW RAILROAD. Abbeville, Pelzer and Piedmont to be United by Iron Links. Belton, S. C A meeting of the ex ecutive committee and promoters of the proposed Abbeville, Pelzer and I'iedmont Railroad was held here. About twenty-five prominent citizens from the points interested were pres ent, among them being Col. J. L. Orr, of Piedmont, Capt. E. A. Smyth, of Pelzer, and a strong delegation from Due West, which town iB anxious to ba embraced in the route to be selected. The meeting appointed a committee of seven to confer with the authorities of the Georgia, Carolina and Northern Railroad in regard to making a survey and taking charge of the road after the grading shall have been completed. The members present obligated them selves to pay all the expenses of sur veying two routes, one from Piedmont, Pelzer and Belton to Abbeville by way of Craytonville, Annie and Autreville, and the other by way of Honea Path and Due West, the most practicable route to be selected. It is understood that the Georgia, Carolina and North ern Road will take charge of and oper ate the proposed line if the communi ties through which it may pas will do the grading, and on account of the level condition of the country to be traversed this task will be a compara tively light one. Committees were also appointed to draw up a petition for presentation to the Legislature asking that the power of taxation for this purpose be con ferred upon the communities interested, and to secure a charter and advertise the project as required by law. Ine men interested in the road are very much in earnest, and the prospects ot successful work are very good. JAPAN AND CHINA Borrowing Millions of Dollars to Conduct Their wars. Yokohama, Japan. The Japanese are blocking the passes' in the north of Corea with the view of preventing the entrance of Chinese troops. The Jap anese fleet is seeking the Chinese fleet. Up to the present the search has been unsuccessful. Berlin, (Jekmany. The Berlin Post says that a Chinese loan of $5,000,000 hits been undertaken on the security of the Chinese maritime dues. China wants to raise 12,500,000. LoN im)n, England. The Shanghai correspondent of the Central News says that, by Imperial decree, the Japanese Government has authorized the loau of $50,000,000, which will all be raised in Japan. Pardon for Coxeyites. Baltimore, Mr At a conference between Governor Brown, Attorney General Poe and counsel for the one hundred imprisoned Coxeyites, it was agreed that the government would par don all, except Christopher Columbus Jones and "Marshall" McKee, who will be held for the purpose of testing the right of the Stute to take them from their employment and imprison them without trial. McKee refused to ac cept the pardon offered by the govern ment, conditioned upon their leaving the State. Another Big Timber Sale. A special from Asheville, N. C, states that the latest real estate trans action in which Wei-tern North Caro lina is interested involves $144,000, the deal being consummated on the 9th inst. The lands sold comprise what is known as the Whittier tract, and con sists of 78,000 acres in Swain county. The purchaser is the Foreign Hardwood Log Co., a New York corporation whose purpose is to erect mills and carry on an extensive lumber business. The Whittier tract is recognized as one of the finest hardwood boundaries in in the South. Gor.dictor Goodman Gets 18 Years. A special from Covington, Va., savs: Conductor Goodman, the slayer of Col. H. C. Parsons, was found guiltv of murder in the second degree, aud given eighteen years in the penitentiary. The prisoner bore up with remarkable courage under the heavy blow, but his wife, who stood by him through his trouble, was completely crushed. Trying to Burn a Town. Three incendiary fires on Fridav night at Florence, S. C, were put out with only $2,000 damage. Thirty three men, with dogs and guns, killed three bears iu Cartaret county, BAST FIBERS. tHE UNCUL TIVA TED ONES OF THE UNITED STATES. The U. S. Department of Agriculture Issue Something Very Interesting OnFiber Culture. COTTON-BTAIik t tfiEfi. The cotton piant of Southern agriculture, Oossypium herbaceum, also belongs to the Malvacece, and it may not be known, generally, that its stalks contain fiber of good quality. In the collection of fibers sent to the Taris Expoition of 1889 was a fine ex ample of the fiber of the cotton stalk, from a plant grown by Rev. J. B. Gor don, of Georgia, prepared by the American Consolidated Fiber Com pany, from a green stalk, sixty days from date of planting. In the letter transmitting the specimen it was stated that "the fiber is not only good for thread, but for a thousand other pur poses; it is a splendid fiber for paper also', as it will not tear as easily as that made from wood pulp or rags." There is no doubt that this fiber w ould make an admirable twine, though its use in "thread" is somewhat over stated. It possesses fair strength, specimens I have examined by hand tests appearing somewhat stronger than jute. The liber of old stalks that have stood in the field is of varying shades of russet in color, while that from fresh stalks is a yellow white. The antagonism of the farmers of the South to the jute trust, in 1890, called renewed attention to unutilized south ern fibers for the manufacture of bag ging with which to Jjale the cotton crop, tho price of bagging having been advanced from 7 to 12 cents per yard. Yarious fibers were suggested as sub stitutes for the India product, and umong them the bast of cotton stalks, which, it was claimed, could be supplied "from the 18,000,000 acres of cotton fields" in cultivation in the Soutn. Among those who experimented with this fiber in manufacture was William E. Jackson, of Augusta, Ga. , who gave considerable attention to the enterprise, a" company having been or ganized to carry on the work. Accord ing to statements made by Mr. Jack son, the fiber was separated "on a ma chine which was patented and perfect ed for South American fiber experi ments," the name of the inventor not having been given. The principle con sisted in "running the bast between a corrugated drum revolved by an ec centric attachment on a similarly cor rugated concave bed, the charge be tween bting washed by a flowing stream of water to wash away the residue of gum and bark." No statements were made as to the method of harvesting the stalk, al though the sample of fiber submitted was said to have been nide from stalks that had been gathered late in Febru ary, after exposure to the weather for several mouths. The fiber produced from thc-ie stalks was sent to J. C. Todd, of Puterson, N. J., for manu facture, a few yards having been pre pared experimentally. During a visit to the factory in raterson.a few months later, I was able to secure from the loom whence it was made a small specimen of the bagging, which is pre served in the collection of the Depart ment. The fiber, which showed fair strength, was reddish in color, or a bright russet, though the sample ex hibited at Paris approached nearer to straw color. Naturally the proposed new industry created considerable interest in the South, and the prediction was made that when properly developed it would become a 6ource of great wealth to the Southern people. It was proposed to place the decorticating machines in sections of the country convenient to the bagging mills, that the liber might be prepared, baled, and shipped as economically as possible. It was also claimed that the wt jtr or steam power employed in running the gins could be used to operate the fibre machines. Like many other similar enterprises, the anticipated results were not re alized, whether through the failure of the decorticating machine to turn out the fiber at economical cost, or for other reasons, can not be stated. I do not think that the machine question was altogether at the bottom of the difficulty, considering the kind of raw material that the machines were ex pected to work upon. A machine constructed to operate upon straight, clean stalks half an inch or more in diameter, grow n rapidly and close to gether in the field, like hemp stalks, could hardly be expected to work smoothly upon the rough, irregularly shaped branches and often crooked material that would be yielded by cot ton plants grown primarily for lint cotton. I am of the opinion that the harvesting of such rough and uneven material could not be accomplished at economical cost, even if such stalks or branches could be successfully cleaned. In a recent letter I am imformed that the enterprise has not been altogether abandoned, though nothing has been accomplished for several years, so far as I can learn. (To be continued.) The Strike Called Off in the Pennsylvania Coke Section. Connellsville. Pa. The Slav coke workers who have for so long a time continued the strike in the face of cer tain defeat, have given up the strungle for higher wages. They now denounce their leaders, who they say have kept them out by false representations and promises. The Slavs are now hustling for their old positions and many are securtng work. The operators will at once tire up all idle plants in the coke region and place them in operation as fast as men can be secured to work them. Two Thousand Men Discharged. Omaha, Neb. Over 2,000 men have been formally discharged from the Union Pacific as a result of the groat strike, and others are being replaced daily. Two hundred and fifty en gineers and firemen are included in the list. Some of the engineers and fire men were with thecompany for twentv years and upwards. In most cases the men do not blame the company for their action, saying they were misled by the American Railway Union, and that they made a mistake bv going out at alL Only eight per cent, of tha popula tion of St. Louis, Mo., live in tenements. APPROPRIATIONS FOR THE SOUtJf. $12,000,000 for Southern River, Harbor and Other Improvement; Washington, D. 0. The present (second) session of the Fifty-third con gress, now drawing to a close, has been fairly productive ef legislation of ben efit to the South, particularljr in ap propriations. The total apprdpria;1 tions for the fiscal year 1895, including the permanent annuals, will foot tip $490,500,000, as against a total of $519,500,000 for the fiscal year 1894, showing a reduction by this session of congress nnder the aggregate of thtj second session of the the Fifty-second congress of $29,000,000 a record achieved under the leadership of Hon. Joseph D. Sayers, of Texas chairman of the appropriations committee in the House, and of Hon. F. M. Cockrell, of Missouri, chairman of the appropria tions committee In the Senate". The principal appropriations grant ed for Southern objects during the session aggregate $12,060,692, Of this amount $10,049,450 are for river and harbor improvements. We give here with those for North and South Caro lina. Harbor at Charleston, S. C, 1150, 000; harbor at Norfolk and its ap proaches, Virginia, $100,000$ hafbor at Winyaw bay, S. C, $110,000 s Inland waterway front Chincoteague bay, Va. to Delaware bay at or near Lewes, Del., $25,000; Patapsctf river and chan nel to Baltimore; $15,000; Appomfilldx river, Va.. $5000; Nansemond fiver, Va., $10,000; James river, Va.; $100; 000; Mattaponi river, Va.,$4000;Nom ini creek, Va., $5000; Pamunkey river, Va., $2000; Rappahannock river, Va., $10,000; Urbanna creek, Va., $3000; York river, Va., $20,000; Aquia creek, Va., $3000; Occoquan creek, Va., $5000; protecting Jamestown Island from the encroachments of James riv er, $10,000; Lower MAchodoc creek, Va., $3000; Koanoke river N. C.O; 000; Waterway between Beaufort har bor and New river, N. G, $2,500; Trent river, N. C, $4000; North East (Cape Fear) river, N. C, $5000; Pas quotank river, N. C, $1000; Cape Fear river, N. C, above Wilmington, $14, 000; Cape Fear river, N. C, from Wilmington to its mouth, $200,000; Pamlico and Tar rivers, N. C, up to Rocky Mount, $10,000; Contentnia creek, N. C, $10,000; Black river, N. C, $2000; Lumber river, N. C. and S. C, $4000; Neuse river, N. C, $7000; Inland water-route from Norfolk har bor, Virginia, to Albemarle sound, N. C, through Currituck sound contin uing improvement $10,000; Lock wood's Folly river, N. C, $10,000; Great Pedee river, S. C, $6000; San tee liver, S. C, $10,000; Waccamaw river, N. C. and S. C, up to Lake Waccamaw, 6000; Wappoo Cut, S. C, $7000; Wateree river, S. C, $2,500; Congaree river, S. C, $1000; Mingo creek, S. C, $1000; Little Pedee river, S. C, $1000; Beaufort river, S. C, $5000. In addition to the foregoing appro priations for Southern rivers and har bors the Secretary of War is directed to cause preliminary examinations of rivers and harbors to be made at the following Southern localities with a view to future improvementsif needed: NORTH CAROLINA. Core sound from mouth of North river to Beaufort harbor and Cape Lookout harbor of refuge, with a view to improvement of navigation; Drum inlet between Portsmouth and Cape Lookout; Tar river from Washington to Greenville, with a view to obtaining a depth of three feet ; South creek from month to head of navigation; Turner's cut, a brach of Pasquotank river; Scup pernong river; North East (Cape Fear) river, from the old county ferry to Juniper swamp or creek, a point about one mile north of Hilton railroad bridge, with a view to obtaining an in creased depth of channel; Alligator river; Cape Fear river above Fayette ville. SOUTH CAROLINA. Steamboat channel, seven feet deep at mean low water, between Beaufort, S. C, and Savannah, Ga. VIRGINIA. Deep creek branch of Elizabeth river, with a view of obtaining a depth equal to that of the Lake Drummond Canal, formerly the Dismal Swamp Canal, and the western branch of the said Elizabeth river; Harris creek, prong of Back river; Lyons creek; For internal waterway, extending from Franklin City southward to Cape Charles. The chief obstructions exist in what is known as Bogg's bay, Cat creek, Kegotank bay, Weir passage and Burton's bay; Jackson's creek, near mouth of the Piankatank river; Ware river; Quantico creek; Great Wicomico river from Cedar Point to to Indian Toint; Little Wicomico river at its mouth; Hunting creek from its mouth to head of navigation; Bar at the northwest entrance of Milford Haven from Piankatank river; Mouth of Crane's creek, a tidal esturary of Great Wicomico river. VARIOUS SOUTHERN APPROPRIATIONS. Atlanta, Ga. Cotton States and In ternational Exposition,$200,000;Hamp ton, Va. Soldiers' Home, Southern branch, $323,950; Hampton, Va. In dian School, $20,000; Cherokee, N. C. Indian Training School, $17,500. Charleston, S. C.. Public building, completion, $50,000; Hog Island, Va. Light station, completion, $75,000. Fort Monroe, Va. Artillery school, $5000; Fort Monroe, Va. New sewer age system, $37,500; Norfolk, Va. Navy-yard, $125,126 for clerical force and $110,365 for improvements, elec tric plant, quay wall, new fire-proof storehouse, et?. ; Tort Royal, S. C. Naval station, $18,368 for repairs; Charlotte, N. C Assay office, $2750 for salaries and $2000 for incidental and contingent expenses, including labor. A New England Company to Build a Mill in the South. The Massachusetts Mills, of Lowell, Mass., which decided more than a year ago to build a mill in the South for the manufacture of coarse goods, is about to arrange for carrying its plans into effect. A meeting of the stockholders of the company was held on August 16, when tbey voted to increase the company's capital stock by $600,000, and to authorize the directors to erect the proposed plant. NEW ENGLAND STRIKE. 000 COTTON 4ULL WORKERS AT JEW BEDFORD IDLE. they Have Qjite Large Sums of Money Draw ftoHi and can He'd Ojt. Mass. The cTrtfcrrt operatives have inaugurated their ..IV- and nearlv 11.000 are idle. The machinery of but five of the twenty-seven rmlto M ne my is " .onn And it is thouebt that theae will soon be shut down with the others. The manufacturers have nothing f sav. Secretarv Ross, of the Spinners Union, stated 'Monday morning that the members of bis union have lined f... o inntr atrno-,Tle and coftfiaently expect tLat it will be of six momthef duration. afrilro nrnmises to be the most important that ever occured in the textile industry in juassacnuseiis. iu Q,,fafPf mnst fiebt perfectly or ganized unidns; sfimg df wbicfe are fairly wealthy. JNotauie in mrs par ticular is the Spinners' Union"; wlricb has a fund in its treasury aggregating at least $30,000. The spinners have voted, however, not to touch any of this money for a month. The situa tion in New Bedford is quite different from that in Fall River. Inthe latter txr nrini ninths are manufactured for the most part, and there is a larger STOCK Ol gOWHI 0D JlHIlll. line, uun- the mills manufacture a liner grade of gocds and some of then! have orders wliicfl wud Keep tne niius Dusy for several months. Coming IS Bed's Country. A Raleifirh. N. C. dispatch Sv that a great influx of Westerners iB looked for in North Carolina during the next three months. H. H. Stoddard, of Kearney, Neb., has just arrived at Raleigh as the advance agent of a large colony of Nebf askatts who intend coming in the: fdllj most of whom will follow the dairv business": These peo ple say it is too cold out there-,- and that they have become satisfied that they can do better in the South. George K. Sherwood, of Kearney, Neb., writes to the North Carolina commissioner ef agriculti fa: "You have no idea of the number of farmers in this section who have decided to ge South. We have had a failure of crops Out here for three years in succession, and the failure this year is complete. If our Western farmers could buy some of your Southern farms on easy payments, you would be surprised at the large number that would go." From Mrs. Jefferson Davis. Raleigh, N. C. James H. Jones, colored, who was President Jefferson Davis' coachman and who drove the four horses to the catafalque here in May of last year when Mr. Davis' body was here, has a cane which Mrs. Davis sent him. The head is of stag horn, from a buck killed by Mr. Davis on his Mississippi farm. Jones, who for many years lived here, how lives at Washington, having a place in one of the Senate document rooms. He was a few- days ago offered $200 for t'ae cane but said he would rather go in the poor house than sell it. On the cane is this inscription: "In grateful memory. From Mrs. Jefferson Davis." New York Popjlists. New York. The Populists of the city of New York have determined to nominate their own city and county ticket, and have asked organized labor to enter the field of politics and unite forces under their standard. The Pop ulists of the State will also hold a con vention and put a State ticket in the field. The convention has been called to meet ' in Saratoga, September 11th and 12th. THE MANUFACTURE OF COTTON. The Sojth's Proportion of This Interest Interesting Statistics. New York. The executive commit the of the Southern Exchange Associa tion held its first meeting in the office of R. H. Garden, the President. The ommittee heard the report of R. II. T.dmonds, chairman of the committee. for the collection of information on 'he Southern cotton manufacturing in erest. This report stated that there are about 15,000,000 cotton spindles in the United States. They represent an investment, including all classes of cot ton manufactures, of over $400,000,000. Of this number the South has in round numbers, 2,200,000 spindles, and the capital invested Is about $97,000,000. The world has about 85,000,000 Rpin dles. "The South produces nearly 60 rer cent, of the entire cotton crop of he world, and if it manufactured this t would need over twenty times as many spindles as it has, or about 50, 000,000, and the capitar- needed would exceed $1,300,000,000- The total an nual value of the product of these mills would be equal to the present value of three full cotton crops. In the last eighteen years the cotton crops of the South have sold for an aggregate of nearly $6,000,000,000. Before they reached the consumer their value had increasatl to $18,000,000,000 or $20, 000,000,000. This enormous business, creating wealth wherever established, is the prize for which the South has now commenced to contend." Two fishermen were drowned off Wilkerson Point, near Newberne, N. C, during a gale Wednesday afternoon. President Cleveland is'at Gray Ga bles, Massachusetts, ill from malaria and overwork. The largest walnut tree ever known in this country was felled in Leaven worth County, Kan., and taken to tha' "World's Fair. It was seventy-five feet high, and two carloads of lumber were1 taken from its limbs alone. J F. MORPHEW, ' Attorney at Law, Practices ia the Courts of Mitchell Yanc-y, Buncombe, WaUugi, Ashe; 8upreme an 1 Federal Cruris. G O. EAVES, Att roe at Li, and U. S. Comm; siooer, Har'on, N. C. 37OfBce on Main atrcet opposite Edfcle. Hotel J". L- g-olax & scosr Jolimont Vineyards, Grape Xurserie, DISTILLERY & MANUFACTORY OF Pure Native Wines, French Cognac, Brandiei And FINE LIQUORS. Awarded Fi st Premium at Exposition of New B-rcc, N. ('., Feb., i? Old Fort, N. O. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. (Piedmont Air Link.) In Effect Ju'y 10, 1834. This Condecs?d Bohelule i pnblutoM as informatiott aud U sulgect to change wllboat notice to th? ptiblfc; . riOUTHHOURi' UAltY. tftm 35 & . STJNUjL LTNewYoriTl 15 n ght 4 30 p m L- PhilMplii 7 VO am fi 55 p m Ax Wasbingt'n 10 t'l am 10 25 p m Lit tVashlnnt'n 11 01 a m 10 43 p m . LTrtuamuiil. I P Wam Lv u-kevtlle, 2$)pm 240am I,v Danville 5 51 pm 0 40 m W Ar Greensboro. 7 23 p a dMam 8 40am Lt txlrtsrro, 2n" pm VS Ar Raleigh, 4 05 p m 8 20 Pra Lr Raleigh 4 10pm 45 a w l.v Durham 5 I5.P m Ar Prenaboro 7 20pm 885 am Lv Winston Balem ig 05 p m t6 05 p m 5 40 a it L Urwnsboro 7 35 p"m ft8 a id 8 45 a m ArBalfabttry. 90S pm 8 Ham 10 25am ArStatesvuleT VamZ At Aaheville, P Ar Hot Hnrinea. 5 3 p m T . U.liohnrw fl 15 m 8 11 a CD 10 tl I a El Ar Charlotte. 10 40 p m 9 25 a nr 13 Oil m ArSpartanbmTam "37am At Ortenville. 152am 12 28pm 5P ArAtlanta.C.T. 5 20 a m 3 5pm 930pm LvCharlotw 10 5J p m 9im Ar Columbia 2 15am 1 pn Ar Augusta 845am 4 02pm Ar Charleston (S. C ) 11 30 a m 8 45 p m Ar Bavannali u C . &P 53)am 4 30pm Ar iacksille 10 10 a in 8 35pm Southbound daily jtoU0&30 tHo. 12 Ho. as. Lv Augusta ET.7 OCpm Columbia 8 28 a n Ar Charlotte 6 10 a m 130 pm 5 10 pm 880 pm Lv Atlanta C.T.9 CO p m ArCbt rlotte, tS 30 a m a no m 12 CO m 6 43pm S3ipm Lt Charlotte 7 00 a m ArSalfabnry, 888am n o l r. m 8 3Dnm 8 2ttn 9 49pm 12 41 p ir 2 30 p it 7 11 p 800 p m Lv Hot Springs Asheville Btatesviue Ar Salisbury Lt Salisbury 8 33 a m 8 30 p m 9 49 p m ArOresnsboro 10 t'5.am 10 0? p m 11 09 p m ArWinton- .n . Balem, 1115am -9 25 am t9 2jam Lv 4reenab'o. 10 10 a m I2 Hi a m Ar Durham, 12 00 m 3 35 a m u D.l.;nli l no m m 7 SO a m Ar OolJaboro. 3 00 p n 1 00 pro fT Ooltla' oro tH ( 0 p m 2 00pm 200pm Lv Raleiith '5 45am 4:0pm 410pm ArGre-nsb'o 8 35 am 720pm720pm L Omnt'o 10 10 am 10 10 p m 1" 19 p ir Ar Danville H4am 11 4" hp m 12 27 a m " Keysville, 2 18pm 3 21 a m 3 20 a iu " hurkevuie, 3 uu p m uo ro 'iu Richmond. 4 50 p m 6S0am 020am r W. Bhino-f n SSOnm 7 13 am Lv Wahhinct'n 10 00 p m Ar Fliiln.lf lphia 3 00am Ar New York 0 '20 a m r B ton 3 00 p m 7 20 am 10 4 1 a m 1 23 pm 8 30pm Imi'.T. ezcept Buu1v Bitwssn West Point and fllchmond, Ijeave West Point 7 .'0 a. m. daily and 8 0 a. m. daily exce t Sunday and Monday; ar rive Richmond 9 05 and 10 40 a. m. Return ing leave Richmond 3 10 p. m. on 1 4 45 p. m daily except Sunday; arrive West Point 5 00 and 6 03 p. m. Bitwtin Richmond and Raleigh, VIA KEYSVILLE. Iieave Richmond 12 40 p. m daily; leave Keysville 3 40 p. m. ; arrive Oxford 0 05 p, m.. Henderson t7 OJ p.m.. Durham 7 4') p. n., Raleigh 7 30 a. m. Returning leave Raleigh 5 45 a.m. daily, Durham 10 00 a. ra., leave Hend raonO 3 a. m , Oxford 1134 a. m. -. arrive Keysville 200 p. m., Richmond 4 50 p. ra. daily Trains on O. & H R. R , leave Oxford 5 00 and 6 00 p m daily except Sunday. 1 1 40 p m, daily, and arrive Henderson 5 50 a m, and 7 00 p m daily, except Sunday. aod 12 30 p m daily. Returning, leave Henderson 0 30 a m, and 7 20 p m, daily except Sunday, and 4 30 pm. dily, and arrive at Oxford 7 25 a m, and 8 10 p m daily except Sunday, and 5 20 pm daily. Nos. 35, 36 at d 33 connect at Richmond from and to West Point and Baltimore daily except Sundav. E BERKELEY, J. S. B THOMPSON, Superintendent, Superintendent Okkknbboro. if. C Richmond, Va. W. A. TURK. Gen'l Pass. Agt, Washington, D C. a H HARDWICK. Ass t Genl Pass. Ag't, Atlanta, Ua. W.H. G RE EN, SOL HAAS, Gen't Mgr., Traffic Manager, Washington, D. Washington, D. C SCAB ARD AIR LINE R. R. NEW LINK. New rjute to Cbatl)ttr, Rdeih, Wil rairg od, Rich-nond, Norfo'k, Wa-hing-on, Bultimire hnd the E. A's t Atlanta, New Oilctas aud all poii.ts in Txas and the Southwest. Memohi, Kaosus Ci'y, Dnvr and all points iu the Great Wtst. For Maps, Folder, Time Tables aa 1 lowest rates write to B. A. NEWLAND, GeD. Triv. Pass. Agent, Charl f.e, N. C. Leave Marion C. C. & C. 6 45 a m Charlotte S. A. L. 1 1 50 a in Arrive Raleigh C 00 p m " Wilmington " 6 21pm Atlanta -3 o p m B. A. Nkwland, T. J. Anderson, G. T. P. A. G. P. A. Tonsorial, WM. SWEENEY, Practical arid Scientific Barber. Over Streetmin'a drug store. Call and see ne, as I promise Sdtisfaction ia all ia- Newton rid Statesville Copper Works (ESTABLISHED IN 1882) A. D. GpODNIGHT, Pro. A full lino of Stills, Caps aod Worms kept at each place. Reparing and fitting up registered Distilleries a specialty. Ad dress me at Newton, N. C. CASFI PAID FOR OLD OOPPEa. " THE Marion Hecdra lithe only Democratic ewspip,, McDowell county, and has larg9 culation in adjoining counties, it. lishts all the cews without fey ISTUr, BU w " vigau Ul DO fiBg j cl'que. It ia the hold champion of the ple't rights, an earnest advocate 0f tfc best interests of the county of McDow ell and the town of .Marion. Id titing rates are reasonable, andthg sctJptioD price is $1.00 fer year j tance. If you want tha best newspaper! country brimming lull of choice reidtnj matter for business mea, farmers, 1 ch&nics, and the home circles ol classes subscribe and pay for tin Record. If you don't, why just ios and the paper will be printed en Thursday evening as usual. If you haven't enough intereit in county's wellfare to sustain the best id. rocate of its diversified interests, and jfe truest friend the newspaper jom not expect a 2-column obituary aotici when your old stingy bones art hi from the ejes of progress ia th ground. 0 Ml who owe subscriptions to tts Ricobd will be dropped from out IU unless they pay up at once. Tours Respectfully, The Marion Record, ' --w j. 11. ATm, Editor and Proprietor. Professional ark J L. C. BIRD ATTONKT AND CotJKSELLOR AT LiW. Ma'ion, - N. C. Practices in all courts, State andFei eraL Special attention given to inves tigating land titles an i collecting claimi. jyOflke on Main Street. JUSTICE & JUSTICE, Attorneys at Law, Mrrion, - N. C. E. J. Justice is located here. Office II upper room of Flemmiug Hotel. JAMES MORRIS, Marion, N. C. R. S McCALU Asheville, N. C MORRIS & M'CAI.L, Attorneys nt Law. Traclice in DcDowcll, I5utli'rf. Polir. Yancev and Mitchell ctu.tm and in the United States' C ircuit Court at Asheville and Statesville, and in b Supreme Court of the St te. C"3'" promptly attended t. M A. KEWLAMD, ArronsET at Lrt nr.. 1 w. -n: c tJ;. ; 4k'in'l, .l 12th Ji cial districts, the Supnme urt N rth Carolina and th Federal i.o of the Weitern district of Noith Ctt lina. D. E. Hcnorvs, Mariou, N. C. Eurr.svi:i v HUDGINS & WATSON, Attorneys and Counsel ors at Liw. BAll business entrusts to them receive prompt attention. R. J. Burgin. Dentist. Offers his professional services to friends and foimer pstrons 01 Marion and vicinity. All r guaranteed to be first class, sna as reasonable as such woi k c be afforded. Office opposite the Flemmin? H Horner Military School. OXFORD, N. C. . Afodern buildiugs. heal hful ndr ractive location. Effic'ent n-5truC Namber limited. A beautiful routt Iloma for Bovi. Catalogue seot ot T plication.
Marion Record (Marion, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 24, 1894, edition 1
2
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