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STATE OHKONIOLE, WEDNESDAY, DEOEMBEB2 BY CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. Every Morning Except Monday. THE CASH PRICE OFCHRONICLE Id .00 per year; $3.00 for 6 inouino; $1.50 ior j muutiiB. THE BUSINESS OFFICE and Editorial Rooms of the Chronicle are on the second floor of No. 216, Fayetteville bt. COMMUNICATIONS RELATIVE TO the Business Department of this paper CLB, Raleigh, N. C, and all Drafts, Checks and Postal Money Orders should be made payable to "The Chronicle Pub. Co." JOSEFHUS DANIELS, - - Editor. D. II. BROWDEIt, - Bus. Manager. Asso. Editor. UAL. W. AVER - Equal and Exact Justice to all Men, oi Whatever State or Persuasion, ite ligious or Political. Thos. Jefferson. WEDNESDAY, DEC. 21, 1890. GREAT SPEECHES. We surrender our editorial spac9 to day to the publication of the great speeches made last night at the Reform Club dinner, in the banquet hall of Madison Square Garden, New York City. It was a great occasion and at once an appropriate celebration of the ..recent Democratic victories and the merry Christmas holidays. The following is the full text of the can bill ana win uo parson uy x. lican votes." It counted its own quo rums in its own revolutionary way, and made that way more easy by vacating the seats of duly chosen members wherever contestants could be found to a&k lor them, witn equai reuh.ie neas it threw open the doors of the American Union to rotten boroughs, balancing in Senate by the votes of three States whose combination population is less than that of my own Congressional m t A District, the votes ot states mat contain a fourth part of the population of the en tire Union. Nor was it satisfied with this catalogue of mis-deeds. Look ing to the remote future and foreseeing the resentments of an outraged people, it devised its crowing infamy, the Force bill, whoso ieal purpose is to strip the people of power to resist its exactions, and to turn popular elections into sham battles that decide nothing. Such is an incomplete list of the flagitious doings of the present Congress. Who that reviews this list can marvel at the tremendous explosion of popular anger last November? And if the con demnation was not greater than it de served, what is the plain duty of the Representatives whom the people have commissioned to succeed it? Undoubtedly the fifty-second Congress will beam its work, with one lesson that none of its members can mistake, and that lesson is that its shortest road to ir retrievable bankruptcy will bo to follow the footsteps of its immediate predeces sor, and its surest road to popular ap proval wili be to offer as clear a contrast as possible to the temper, the methods and the legislation of that predecessor. n this one lesson it will find no small part of the justice, temperance and fore sight, we invoke for it to-night. It has been a favorite saying of the leaders of the present Congress, when shall be made good enough for all others and plenty enough to preserve a just equality between its value and the value of the products of labor in all legitimate kinds of business. That Doth the nation and the state shall exercise over lines of transportation a reasonable and just con trol, to the end that their products, the most bulky compared to their value of any produced, shall not be subjected to charges out of proportion to such value. It is because the .Republican party in a line of succession but once broken in .i - i . i i iu.:. a tniru oi a century nas ignureu iueu reasonable demands, because in all that time but one voice in high places has called attention to the most essential of their wants, and that voice was the voice of a Democratic President, that they turned to his party in the election, the results of which we are assembled to celebrate. If the Democratic party is true to it self it will be true to its new allies in the northwest, and henceforth the union between them is complete. MilMMOI, M0I2LIY & MsSSL NINO OP :o: U COMPILATION : OF : XMAS OF HOLIDAY -GOOD YOU ARE INVITED TO INSPECT THEM. PRESENTS FOR address of Hon. Wm. L. Wilson, of wt. Virginia, who stands amoner the arraigned for refusing to allow consider- ablest of Democrats. His great speech M" or public disn of their meas- at Wake Forest last year has made him a prime favorite in North Carolina, and the people in North Carolina will be glad to read his words of wisdom. In response to the toast: 'The 52nd Congress May it be just, ures, tbat the American people demaud of Congress the transaction of business, business being, too often, a name for some kind of class jobbery. That mav be true, but it does not fol low that they demand or will tolerate the transaction of business by bureau cratic or revolutionary methods. In temperate and far-seeing," Mr. Wilson deed the methods of transacting public said: Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen: -The Democratic party is rejoicing over the most notable victory it has ever won in its many political contests. But it is al ready confronted by the sobering truth tbat it is one thing to win a battle and another, and often a more difficult thing, to make sure and perma nent the fruits of victory. The great ness of its triumph in the recent election was not due to the skill of party leaders or the popularity of party candidates. It was the spontaneous and unheralded uprising of the people against the poli cies and methods of its opponents, and business is of the very definition of free government. All governments must levy taxes, but it measures ali the way from despotism to ireedom whether tax es are levied bv arbitrary decree or through the free and deliberate action of the representatives of the people who pay them. If, then, Mr. Chairman, the protec tive principle brings in its train a cor runted ballot, a perpetual lobby, an un numbered brood of bouuties and sub sidies, paternal government, despotic methods of legislation, and a standing menaco to free elections, must we not look to the rescue of our taxing system the Fifty-second Congress will be judged rom Pr.ivate cont1 tRd- lt? dedlftln in hfeftnre bv its aiWss in directing this to Pubho us.es as the beginning and only uprising to the complete and lasting POWDER PRESENTS FOR GEN PRESENTS FOR GIRLS. iL :o.- cnrthoThoiissnd! Greatest Varimvi Finrw i wi . ssyl!3'! LOWEST P R J 0 . -Hi TO HOLIDAY :o:- SHQpppp i.-r Aa.M an Abb in the tide of MerchandiBin? nt r. 1 ilirifiliiiao o vui BLGrfi tn i - - v vac n . We are showing a great variety of handsome, useful and serviceable, that vou care to see. Gifts lor the Rich and Poor alike our store f 9 Chr- tat tSands evidently think so. The Christmas Gift 1 What goU jure up in after years, outs are me reue oi iove ana good cheer .V20! rV spontaneous offering of the generous heart, carrying with them no ohhl rrrafirirlA the atio: y v In brief, the genuine Christmas Gift comes from the ready and v. Ia mnrA bleased in eiving than receiving. J u c&eerfc ion at our store, and in the morning, when nnaai I riUlluajTB, ouu uaxgaiuo n m uicev jroil m every rif-rv made more blessed in giving Make vour select: right and "leit lor the PRESENTS FOR BOYS. PRESENTS FOR EVERY ONE. 129 and 131 Fayetteville St. IFTY DOZEN FIVEST ENGLISH PERCAL Shirts irRe Collars with Each Shirt, Avorth our Holidnv n.r.. Three Collars with Each Shirt, Avorth our Holiday pr; pratpC JSILIC AND CASHMERE J1U'F1.EKS-Reduced 0 Se 0. 5" $1.50, $2.00; iormer price oc. xo M.uu. LINE OF BE RW ANGER SEE TIIK IMJKiv ljinn ucniTAflucu xjc. SErifu.. ome Collection. They are at other houses 50c. good. nEfL OT AN U VDESIKABLE riCKSKM I A. Tiic Watr Prom w : NO. 305 ;Favettenlle St.,: : lialeigh, N. C. : so. 305 : :Fay-tteville St.,: : Raleigh, N.C. : Opposite the 1'ostoffice Absolute! Pure. A cream of tartar baking powder. High est of all in leavening strength. U. S. Government Report, Aug. 17, 1889. D. S- WAITT, -AGENT -Complete line of- FINE CLOTHING. Newest styles Soft Hats, Siikjats, Stiff Hats. Perfect Fitting White Dress Shirts. ALMOST HERE. Carnel'riHair and All-Wool font: hive 'em in Sinjrle anrt ilouble-breasted lexlnrp. Reduced to 88.00, and you'll be sure to please Pa and Broil time. You know a nice Hat makes a suitable Xms present it Doz-n ot th Hoffman House Urusuer liats. I hey are the hann kind, 1.50 each, and nice enough to wear any time. nlv These are only a tew of the many Amas uooda we ar pellin crowd that thronged our store last week is evident enough that ( ; City and Our Tricea are tue Lioweat. we close oy wishing all a i ' on!v ... : 1" V-i. I it ' w S. & D. BERW ANGER. dec7-tf. HOLIDAY GOODS! WHOLESALE OR RETAIL -AT- D. T. JOHNSON. Ag't. 1S000LB3. PLAIN AND FANCY CANDY. 1,000 lbs. New Crop English Walnuts, Al monds, Brazils, Filberts, 4c. &c. 1,000 COCOANUi S, Fine and Large. ONLY THREE MORE DAYS -FOR- secss to overthrow of those policies and methods. The "phenomenal capacity of the Dem ocratic party for blundering" has long been an article of faith with its enemies, to which they turn for consolation in timoa of disaster. But, Mr. Chairman, if we look to the only two Congresses that have been fully controlled by Re publicans in tho last sixteen years, we cannot regard as merely accidental that both of them have been swiftly over whelmed by "tidal waves" of popular displeasure, and that each one has legis lated in its closing under the ban of em phatic rejection by the people. If the blundering of a Congress is to ba measured by the condemnation it has provoked, Mr. Reed's Congress has not only outstripped Mr. Keifer's Cougress in blundering, but has achieved for it self a pre-eminence unapproached by any of its fifty predecessors. And if recent political experience proves any thing, it shows that the Dem ocratic party never blunders so fatally as when it abandons or palters with its true principles, and that the Republican party as now dominated, never blunders so effectively as when it has free scope and opportunity for the application of its principles. Of this fact, the late campaign was a signal illustration. The campaign, Mr. Chairman, was not fought on any obscure and minor issues, but upon the question on which as Mr. Burke truly said, all the great contests of freedom have been waged ; the ques- sure basis of every reform that overthrow these dangers to free govern ment ? Bat deeply and sincerely as we may believe all this, there is a wise states manship, learned in the school of ex perience, that bids law makers remem ber that temperate reform is permanent reform, having in it the principle of growth. LookiDg, therefore to the 52nd Congress as holding the key to igno minious defeat or stable victory in 1892, we cannot give better expression to our hopes, our wishes and our anxiety, than to pray that it may be "Just, temperate and far-seeing." And why should it not be? True the majority that shall come up to maintain the people's cause in the next House, may be hindered by its unwieldiness, but among both the old and the new members, will be found not a few, who can claim with the old reformers, that they have earned a right to share in the work of the harvest, by having done, to the best of their ability, their duty in the seed time. SHOPPING. NOVELTIES FOR THE HOLIDAYS IN Hosiery, Suspenders, Gloves, Neck wear, Collars, Culls And Go and See his New Goods in his New Store. Big Lot California London Layer RAISINS. Florida. Orstnge! NORTHERN AND N. C. -V ABE- PREPARED D. S. WAITT, Agt. 50 -WITH- -FOE- EVERY ONE. W. H. & R. 8. TUCKER & CO., . Raleigh, N. C. SHORT A NO POINTED Not a Pin, but our talk. We are too busy say more than we are opening daily a new lot of VOY. BOIES'S SPEECH. In response to the toast "Our New a : il. "vt .i . mi a Aiues m me normwest ; vvnac our n a i hi i' OL. Farmers hare a Right to Demand," Gov- U fy bOOuS, ROtlOnS, SHOeS, ernor JBoies, of Iowa, made a strong speech, in which he showed that the Iand Sale. By virtue of an order of the Superior Court of Wake county, made in special proceedings, entitled J. R. Nowell and Riley Privett, executors of W. A. Rhodes, deceased, I will, on londay. the 19th day of January, 1891, at 12 o'clock M.f at the Court House door of Wake county, sell to the highest bidder for cash the following described real estate in Mark's Creek township, wake county: 1st. A tract of land containing about 60 acres, adjoining me musoujonn y tnoaes, Kliey 1-Tlv ett, Uastoa Khodes and others, being the nome place ot the late Wm. A. Rhodes, de ceased. 2d. Also two other small tracts adjoining the above tract: one of abont 11 acres, and the other about 6 acres, all be- iuugmg to tne estate oi tne said w. A. Rhodes, deceased, n articular! v dpsnrihrl in above proceedings, and sold by the said executors to make real estate asset Tho first described tract is sold subject to the iilc estate oi tue wiaow oi vv. a. Knodes. ucctweu. W . IN. JUJNUiS, decl9-tds. Commissioner. Fancy N. C. Peanuts, &c, Ac. BOXES I FIRE 1 BOXES BOXES I Crackers. BOXES Daily Consignments of 50 APPLES, BANANAS, ORANGES, CABBAGE, lurKeya, unicfcens, .Eggs, JJutter, Birds. &c, &c, received. LOW TO THE TKADE. a AUUein. tTI 1 rrs 1 Oil vieuK .township, On Monday the ith dav , T 1891. I will sell at. rmS;?0 ' Court Honse door in thTtfii1 a tract of land situated in JE J.D. Franks, Jones, Calvin Br others, known as the land f n.St , vwvvv. uam baie Will pursuance of an ordr r.f . Gourt of Wake county, in g Jf ings, entitled A, D. neirs-ap-iaw of Dolly Hunr partition araons the rir t,.; One-half cash; balance in twe ;l with interest at 8 per cent I Title reserved until nnn-har S I paid. Time of sale 12 M. V. H. decl8-tds. CmA INSTITUTE, RaleleUrl The 54th year of this oM its I8th year at Raleigh September 3d, PiiuFE- i Baumax N, who nee no cczra dation anywhere in toe ostiini continue as Dirkctue of fii; and Miss E. G. Buck. wbot tation is unsurpassed, vl'A co::i- ue to preside over the Ae: Di PAKTMENT. Every TeacL?: i the Faculty is a Rscialls 2 ner aepartment. 3l es- If yon have anything to shiD to this market write to me for prices and how to ship. D. T. JOHNSON. Anr Phone 28 1G HAaom Ht Richmond & Danville R. R. Go. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. Ill Effect Aug. 31st, 1890. SOUTH BOUND. Daily. GENTS'- farmers were raisiDg produce at a greater cost than they could receive for it. He says : It is estimated bv those makincr ra tion of taxing. History is, in the main, ports that the cost of producing an acre a record of the successful attempts of a of corn ready for market is $8.00; that small class, among every people, to get the average crop for five years has been control of the government that they may 33fr bushels, and statistics show that the use tno taxing power for their own ag- average price of this corn in our local granaizement. I he growth of free m- markets, soon after harvest, during such Furnishing Goods, &c. IT" IS A FACT THAT YOU WILL FIND AT KII!G & RficCEE'S ALL THAT GOES TO MAKE UP A First Class Pharmacy? No. 50. Lv. Richmond 3 00 p m Ar. Greensboro 10 27 d m xjy. ijoiasDoro 2 40 p m Ar. Raleigh 4 40pm ajv. rvaieign 4 45 p m Lv. Durham 5 48 p m Ar. Greensboro 8 20 d m Liv. Vmston-Sal2m. 6 55 p m Lv. Greensboro 10 At Tt Til Ar. Salisbury 12 26am at. totatesviiie 1 49 a m .none v Hie a a m Hot Sprines 9 ju a m Lv. Salisbury 12 32 a m Ar. Charlotte 2 05 am Atlanta. 1100 am Lv. Charlotte 2 20 . m Ar. Augusta monam - - -w 4Xjl PRICES TALK. NORTH BOUND. No. 52. 2 30am 9 42am t8 00 p m 11 59 p m 1 30 am 2 55 a m 710am 630am 9 50am 11 19 a m 12 08 p m 4 22pm 5 55 p m 11 24 a m 12 40 p m 940pm 1 00 p m 9 07p m stitutions has been tho slow and falter ing recognition of the tiuth that the power of government ia not the private property of those who wield it, but the highest trusts for the cxd of all the peo ple. Protection.or the taxing of the many for the benefit of the few, whether tnrougn tarins, Bounties or subsidieor other schemes of class legislation, wage penod has been 22 cents per bushe), making the entire value of the crop when marketed, $7.33, or sixty-seven cents less than the actual cost of pro duction at market rates of labor. - xt is mnniteiy Detter tnat tnis nation should remain poor with its nronartv. such as it has. distributed amoner all its classes, than become the richest on the Bring us your email change. That our facilities for prescription work are uiioui paeaea, me raeaicmes used being guar anteed as to purity and accuracy ot nrennrn.. ration and as being strictly iu accordance itu me puysicians' prescriptions Lv. Ar. Lv. Augusta a never ceasing war on this fundamental, globe with its wealth concentrated in the ptiruipio ui iree auu euuai ciuzensQip,f nanas OI a I9W. and never lacks for support, because it appeals directly to the selfishness of those who see in license to tax the peo ple, the surest and speediest road to wealth and power that has ever been discovered. If after twenty-five years of baffled struggling the American peo ple have declared war on this false prin ciple, we owe it quite as much to tho ar rogance of its own defenders as to the unwearying onsets of its foes. It is one of the safeguards of our freedom that an evil principle, introduced into our polit ical system, works out its own extreme and dangerous manifestations, and brings its own train of abuses, all tend ing to arouse attention and to kindle in dignation. The protective principle not only gave an extreme and dangerous manifestation of itself in the McKinley bill, but it was the evil spirit that tempted or compelled the fifty-first Congress to that career : which insures for it a sinister name in our legislative history. Look, but for one moment, at that ca reer. In its haste to extort new tribute from the people, it refused to await the orderly and traditional course of legis lation; overthrew the rules of parlia mentary procedure, framed and sanc tioned by all past eipenence. and announced its readiness for action by the exultant proclamation that the House of Representatives was no loncrer a delibera tive body. As the most striking proof it -could offer of this fact, it rushed through the House a general tariff bill. increasing taxes, with a hundred pages not considered, wtu a hundred of pro posea amendments not voted on. and deigned to give to all appeals for time uu upponumiy io consider mem no other answer than "This is a Republi- Our Extremely Low Prices WILL INTEREST YOU. If you want big values for 3 our money give us a call. W. G. SEPARK, AGT., dl-m 13 E. Martin St. For Sale. No. 51 6 20 n tt Charlotte 3 13am Atlanta fi on m Ar. Charlotte 425am i , u a in That our stock of Drugs, Chemicais, Patent .7 sPrings 11 10 p m Recalling tho sentiment of my toast "What our farmers have a right to de mand," permit me to add they represent aa industry as old, at least, as the civili zation ot man, as laborious as any that A iaji Ulf (iUUD, DRY PINE WOOD has ever lallen to his lot. without the successful prosecution of which the whole human familv would laDse into barbarism and end in decav. A busi ness that forms the base of every other, without which the channels ot trade would run dry, the cities of the earth moulder into dust, and the wealth of the world disappear. Considered apart from their business they are the bone and sinew of this na tion. With their own calloused hands they have produced the bulk of its wealth; in times of war thev have hepn its sturdy defenders, in times of peace the promoters of its welfare. Who shall set the limit of their right ful demand upon a country they have made and preserved? Surely I cannot do this to-night. Brief indeed must be my reference thereto. They have a right to demand that in the future policy of this government no discrimination be made in favor of other industries at the expense of their own; that the power of the government to levy taxes be limited to the single purpose of raising necessary revenue to be economically expended; that ali property bear its just portion of that burden; that markets broad enough to At Robt. d eel 9-1 m E. Paeham's Stables. Higlity Mules for Sale for Cash. Medicines, etc., is complete ? luaiwe nave the finest line of Extracts, loilet Waters. Colognes, Face Powders and otlier Toilet preparations at all times, and V? "-sBurea oi lair and courteous treat- rf, r 11 you ao not know these things, we tell you now that it is so, and ask you to give U8 trial and be convinced. Ve tr to meet the wants of our customers and hope to ivm" j i FtiuuaK uy serving tnem laith- auu uonesuy at an times. Very respectfully, KING & McGEE, DRUGGISTS, 101 FavettevillR St.. Asneviile 19. An a " Statesville "smo Ar. Salisbury 5 53am Lv. balisbury 6 07 a m Ar. Ureenshrim r At .. Ar. Winston-Salem. . 11 25 a m L.v. Greensboro 7 55am Ar. Richmond 315pm vxiceusuoro 9 50am Ar. Durham 12 02 d m tvaleiffh 1 IHnn, Ar.Goldsboro 2 55pm Lv. lialeigh Ar. Selma Wilson Lv. Wilson Ar. Rocky Mount... l Iqiitp in'i DaUy. fDaily except Sunday. Daily. No. 53. 8 00am 450 p m 710am 530pm 7 05p m 12 24p m 202pm 538pm 6 42pm 7 12 p m 8 40pm 11 47 p m 8 50pm 4 55am 11 15 p m aooam 735am 9 00am 12 40pm t9 00am 1100 am 12 10 a m 12 38 pm 117pm .11 Address JAMES DINWIDDIE,!- (University of Vlrsiata) Pasevf! d-w-tf RekU t ii C R LEIGH AND GASTON" RAILIIOil in effect Sunday , Dec. "xh, i- TB.VISS MOVI'fl No. 31. T-ae. Daily Kaleigh.. . 5 00 pm 515 5 3V f 01 ll.'iX Leave Mill Brook. Wake Franklin ton., Kittrell 6 13 Henderson " 3 5 Warren Plains 7 H lacon 7 22 Arrive Weidon. 8 33 p n 2 : XRAIXS MOVT"U SuUTH. No. 41. Pass, and Mail. DaiIv pt. Sun. D J 'J Lea e Weidon. . ." . .12 15 p a Macon 1 13 Warren Plains 120 pa Henderson 2 22 Kittrell 2 39 Franklin ton 2 5C Wake 3 17 Mill Brook 3 40 Ariri Baleigh 3 55 t nTTTviP.riir;. Leaves Louisbur? at? 35 a.m.," Arrives at rraunuuiuu v - Leaves Franklinton at 12.30 p Oi Arrives at Louisbnrg at 1.0a P m JOHN C. WINDEU, Gen'l H Jj. T. MYER. Geu'I Supt. WM. HMlTH.Superintecdfcnt. Tl or X r.5 9 3C , -1 RALEIGH AND AUGUSTA AI;' In effect Sunday, Dt-c 7th, i-J- octl5-3ni. COLD WEATHER GOODS. Eighty Choice Young MULES, ranjnnt? irom ii to ibh Hands hierh. can b TTTi a m-r-m.T-. Maj.Tucker'smeadow.at'thefootof Favett: A. A X 1 ix TC VkS UU 1U COOfJ BETWEEN West Point, Richmond and Raleieh. " ' wAium ana uprham 54: & 102 STATIONS. 55 & 103 ville street, condition. nov26-tf. All well-broken W. R. TUCKER. For Coal and Wood AH Sizes. TT7 50 9 15 Executor's Notice. Havin? qualified as executor of the es tate of Mary F. Jones, deceased-notice is hereby given to all persons having claims against the decedent to present them to me for payment before December 6th 1891 All persons indebted to the said decedent will make immediate payment to me V. S. WOODS, This Dec. 6th, 1890. Dec 7 6wr. .A. T Portable and Stationary. FIRE DOGS. SHOVELS AND TONGS COAL SIFTERS. Fancy Zinc Stove Boards. FIRE SETS, COAL HODS COAL VASES. am Lv.. West Point, a i m V--itol.mond" .Ar 430pm 100 pm ..Burkevillo. o5ii:r: pS ..::SSS&- :,"p 2 05 243 3 15 425 pm 525 p m V W.Sford Ar 10 15 a m ..Henderson.. Lr 915am 4 09 p m 6 47 pm Lv. Ar. 'ff-r(l"-Ar 5057am Raleigh.. .Lv 8l5a tDai'v except Sunday. Dailv ITDaily except Monday. y- Aaaitional A CARD. Yanceyville N. C, Dec. 8th, 1890 I hereby announce myself a candi date for door-keener of fVio ate of the next General Assemblv of North Carolina. I have served the Democratic party as a member of the CoUntV Executive! nnmmirr o.l A, consume the products of their labor and wise of the county of Caswell for the laS capital at compensatory prices, be as fifteen years, most of the time as Secreta- carefully looked after and nurtured as S??,1"?6 and ? the last cam- those that consume the productions of SSrSM ISS labor and capital employed in otlier my party in the Senate to SvSmS'ffS lines of business. most humble, yet honorable position uoj may aiso aemana mat a curren- SritiZaT ioauiUl penormance of its cy wnicn is good enough for odo man Largest Stock of Cook Stoves in the State. Respectfully, J. C. S. LTJMSDEN, Raleigh, N. o. dec9-Sm. Kotice. Notice is hereby given thAt nnni;n H. F. Brandon. I Dec 7, 30 ds ALF. A. THOMPSON Mayor. except SundavliTn ;r 2 son 12.10 d m rtn,i' i rive render son 2.35 p.Pm dailv erS iI Hender rw a o uaiiy except Sundav nnH r,?: ving Goldsboro Vsn xwueign 4 45 n m rioilTr ,i f - Ai.. auu at Durham JiVPiai& akea connection ana b. & m. Roads ' - a u Richmond Baltimore on from Rnd r"V "?ect Haiir. "M1 i-oint and at daily except Sunday, A. TlfAir. nr Agent. ii l- Agent, raleigh; n.o. 5: i 5 - v: Xi GOI0 SUCTH. No. 11. Passenger & Mnil. Le'v Raleigh, 4 ( pm Gary, 4 17 Merry Oaks. . 1 - j Uoncure 5 0" Banford 5 2S Cameron 5 H P n South'n Pines 6 21 Ar'ive Hamlet 7 20 Leave " J v " " Ohio, 7 5J Arri- Hbaop, 8lPu G0X'O sourH. No. 3-5. A Mail. Leava Gibson, w a-Jl " Ohio, 713 Arrive Hamlet, 7 33 Leave " w Southern Pines 8 Cameron, 'J 2' Sanford, Moncure, 10 'i Merry Oaks 10 Cary,. H M Kaieign " - n CARTHAGE lUlLKW, Leave Carthage 8:W a- Vi't- o-:i1 a.m. a-1: : Cartha ?e 10:) a. Leave Pittaboro tf.lu u- k : Arrive Moncur 9:55 a. xa. - . Leave Moncure 10:25 a.w- a-;d 0 : -Arri. Pittaboro 11:10 a. n-- . J. C. WINDEK, GenlW L. T. MYERS, Gen && HI 'si' Arrive Cameroi Leave Cameron Arrive RALEIGH DYE WO n. W. C. Harrier and, reCc Dyinff and cleanmg " lor, j and wai ranted not to hcti ' Work done by tne - most approved plan. utli. Glovea, curtains, P"' d ren . fact, everything cleat ea made as bright and eoit as Special attention to oraej Call on or write to trnB may 10
The State Chronicle [188?-1893] (Raleigh, N.C.)
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