V::; ALASKA. .- ":; Six ileeDS in a ileeoer from Montreal. And a moon or ao from the bend of the line. And you stand at the foot of the great .. white wall That Is white with mows that fall, and fall. O'er the cedar dwarfed and the droop Ins pine That grow at the feet of Alaska. Old and wrinkled and cold and gray. With her white pall pulled o'er her stony breast; Frowning and frigid and far away, 6he has ever stood and stands today, In the desolate wastes of the wide Northwest Stands this hoary old woman Alaska. Unmolested for thousands of years, Isolated, remote and alone; Her hard face glacial with froien tears. While over her shoulders and in her ears The winds of the North Land wall and moan, In the ears of old mother Alaska. A party of prospectors passed that wav. And they thought the old face ha.d fomolten Its frown, And, pausing, thev pulled her white robe away And found her treasure: "Ah, q'est que e'est?" Bnld the French Canadian, kneeling tli.wn At the feet of old Mother Alas ka. They told their story and men went wild. And pawned their chattels and Joined race. The old croon llngled her gold and smiled, And the gnld-mad men of the world beguiled With a promise of fortune in that far place, At the feet of old Mother Alas ku. But O, the rivers are wide and deep, And the north wind breathes with a killing breath; And over the mountains so rough and steep The old dread reaper shall come and reap; The rime old reaper that men call Death Shall reap the white fields Alaska. Atlanta Constitution. of WHY WAR IS IMPROBABLE. There is Nothing to Gain by a Resort to Arms. New York Commercial Advertiser. The point Is well made and sustained with some detail of ilustratlon In a dis cuslon of the Cuban situation, said to have been approved by a member of the Cabinet, that we could dbtaln no Just reparation grom Spain by war for the loss of the Maine, which may not be obtained through the simple, ordinary routine of diplomatic negotiation should we prove her reprehensible for destruc tion of the ship. This view Is now gen erally now taken and the Maine inci dent is losing the importance first given to it. But the same principle applies to the larger relation of thevbgkqj vbb to the larger issue of the relations of Cuba to Spain, and our n itional Inter est, to which we must leturn as soon as the question of the Maine is out of the way. We hnve nothing to gain either for Cuba or for ourselves by making war on Spain, which cannot be obtained, with patience and resolution, in the ordinary routine of peaceful ne gotiation. We have no desire to acquire Cuba. There Is almost no difference of opinion In the United States on that point. Some of us desire to see Cuba independ ent, but the more thoughtful, while be lieving that u'titr.ate Independence is inevitable, realize that the Cubans are no more fit for it than for American Statehood, and that the political, social and Industrial state of the island popu lation probably would be changed by it without being greatly Improved. It I." certain that we would make war on Spain no more for the bare object of independence of Cuba than to acquire it for ourselves. What then? We want to put an end to a bloody and exhausting war, which has injured American trade ami ruine I American property. We want to relieve the distressing sufferings of the Cuban people, loyalist, insurgent and passive alike. And we wish to see the Cubans under autonomous government, suited to their needs and capacity, relieved of the burden of Spanish extravagance end corruption and tne industrial re straints of Spanish colonial policy, so thMt they can exploit the fertility of their soil and obtain products for ex change with our own, for the mutual advantage of both peoples. This Is the sum and limit of what we want to do in Cuba. Not one of these objects would be advanced by making war "i- Spain. Every word would be retarded. The war, which has worn itself out, wouid be revived and extended. The suffer ings of the Cubans would be inteiisilled and our relief, which could rescue ev ery Cuban from privation at one-hundredth part of the cost of war. wold be cut off. Autonomy wouid be made out of the question and tne only result oi victory would be the Independence or onnexation, which prudent Americans regard as disagreeable alternatives. The most we could gain by war Is less than we can reasonably hope continu ance of negotiation on the present lines. From the Danville Register. THE BUSINESS SITUATION. The unnecessary war scare of lasi week naturally had some effect upon stocks, especially upon those stocks which are the footballs of speculators, but, as a whole, the market was re markably steady. The reason for this steadiness is not far to seek. Business has been steady Improving for several months. There has been no sudden boom, but the general return of busi ness activity with corresponding gains to the great transportation lines. The report of railroad earnings shows not only an Increase over last year, but an Increase over the corresponding period of 1892. There have been enormous shipments of flour and grain to help the trade improvement. The shipments of flour and grain have exceeded 151,300, 000 bushels since July 1, against 114,200, 000 bushels last year, and corn ship ments have also shown an increase from 102,800,000 bushels last year to 116. 000)000 since July 1. The woolen mills of the country have been doing a steady business with wool bought at prices lower than are now ruling, but whether they can continue after their supplies of raw wool have been exhausted re mains problematical. Cotton manufac turers have suffered from a variety of causes, but some Improvement is noted. . The Iron and steel Industries have been greatly Improved, business increasing, ' notwithstanding the advance In prices. The boot and shoe trade is also active, the general Improvement in all of these Important lines being reflected In pay- - ments through the clearing houses, which were nearly 50 per cent greater la February, 1898, than In February of last year and 12 per cent, greater than In 1892 the year before the period of depression set In. There has been con siderable foreign demand for American securities, which probah'y accounts for ml it hlnrrx.nl trnm .1 s . a part of these ahipmenta may be due to the Increase In our exports,, which has been considerable. The outlook, if war ahould be averted, will be quite favorable, for when the wheels of in dustry get working right they keep on moving, not as In a piece of machinery Impelled by an outside force, but be cause each wheel helps to drive the others. If there are a million more men at work in February, 1898, than in Feb ruary, 1987, there are a million more men who have the week's wages to spend on Saturday night to keep other millions employed. The small econo mies practiced during hard times, when men are out of work, greatly curtail the demand for supplies, and help to produce the dull times of which they are the expression. On the other hand, when there la no longer need for indi vidual economy, money circulates free ly and business becomes brisk. The nation appears to be slowly but surely getting back to normal conditions when there will be work for all and when the expenditures of the workers will help to keep tne mills going. For this we are indebted more to a restoration of confidence in the monetary situation than to any tariff or other legislation oy congress. A REMARKABLE WOMAN. This Lady Married Thrice Before She Was Sixteen. The worid is full of wonderful women nowadays, but, in the opinion of a con tributor to the New Illustrated Maga zine, not one of them compares to a certain little maid who lived two cen turies ago in Merrie England. She held six baronies in her own right before she was three. She was the richest womun in the country at the same age. She might have become a King's daughter-in-law when she was twelve. She married a Duke's heir when she was twelve. She became a widow when she was thirteen. She married the richest commoner i.i England when she was fourteen. He was murdered in I'all Mall when she was lifteen. She married a Duke when she was fifteen. She brought thirteen children into the world. She was lampooned by the creator -if 'Julliver. And died before she was fifty-six. This marvellous woman was Lady Elizabeth Percy, daughter of Jocellne, eleventh Earl of Northumberland, who tlied as the Duchess of Somerset. When she was 2V4 years oid her father diea she came into six of his titles; the an cient baronies of Percy. Lucy. Poyn Ings, Fltz-l'ayne. Bryn and Latimer, to say nothing of an enormous fortune and an historic heritage, dating back to the Conquest. The scramble for her honors and hand soon begun. The King himself. Charles II. entered the running by offering her the hand of t.ne of his "natural" pro geny, the Duke c f Richmond, who was Just 7 years old. wl-in- she was 12. lint her grandmother , ho was a daughter of the Earl of Suffi.tk. and who brought her up, made her decline the Duke, and a few weeks later she married Henry Cavendish, Earl cf ngie. a puny b v of 16. w ho died a year later, leaving Lady Eliyalieth a widow fur tirst time. She had nut leng to wait for unnth.-r partner. Six mouths afterward her grandmother l- sto-v e,l her hand on Thomas Thymic, a yciing gentleman of notoriety, who was p.abahly the weal thiest commoner of hs tini . lie was known everywhere ;s "Tcin of Ten Thousands." and n. b. dy short of princes were his fiieads. rhynne was married to Ludv Eliza beth in the summer of As she was Just 14. the ceremony, as in the case of the former marriage, was slniplv for mal, and when It was celebrated the gill went across to her fri-nd. Lady Temple. at The Hague, to wait until her un permitted her to take to her position as hostess at Longleat. She had biu.lv landed in Holland when a notorious li ke, Count Koiiiii.;.-niark. well "skille I n amours." lit ( tunc prodigiously enam ored of her. lie v. ;.s cuing oulv t wo und-twenty and ! :-n.:y. ii, and daring mil the fact thai she :n married add ed an additional reason i',.r his pursuing her. 'I he girl a-' lino cud flrmlv the unt resolved 10 j i rid of her hus band. He got hold oi' as i I a hlaek- runrd as Kim n M'M ofter, a I'onie anian high v ,t man named Vratz. w ho vent to England, and in company with two accomplices, shot Thynne to death February 11'. liM!. while the latter was riding along i'all .Mall in his gor geous coach early in the evening. The three assassins were captured, onvictcd anil hung, hut Count Koli nc.Ninnik. although arrested, was ac quit ted. contemporary gossip declaring that the Curt had been bribed. Mv Lady Elizabeth was by no means inconsolable, though she had buried two husbands already. Shi' was handy fifteen and a half v. lien, in Mav, lvj, lour mouths alter Thynne's death, she espoused a third Charles Seymour, sixth Duke of Somerset, who was com pelled to take the name of Percy until she came of nut: The Inike was live years his wife's senior, and survival her more than a quarter of a century. He was an exceedingly handsome man. mil whs always a prominent figure nt State functions. He appeared as chief mourner at the funerals of three sover- lgns--Clinrles II,. Mary II., and Wil liam 111 and he bote the orb at the nr.. nation of .lames II.. William and Maty. Anno. Ceorge I., and Ceorge II . while his wife was chief mourner at Mary s funeral. The career of the pair is largely u matter of Imperial history. omerset held the highest offices in in state, and w hen his spouse sm i ceded the Duchess of Marlboro as Mistress of the Robes In 1711, Swift caricatured her in his "Windsor Prophecy," lam pooning her beautiful red hnir in the line Beware of land. carrots from Northumber- Despite the fact that she bore her last husband M children, ihe Duchess long remained a beauty. She died on November L:i. 17J2, at the age of r.5, A MOST IMPORTANT CASE. Inter-State Question Involved in Con stitutionality or Fertilizer Tax Case. The Fertilizer tonnage tax case.which is being argued before Hie United States Supreme Court this week by North Carolina lawyers. Is one of the most important cases on Ihe docket. The attorneys In the ease are Col. Johi W. Hinsdale and Mr. Thomas N. Hill, for the fertilizer manufacturers, and Messrs. K. H. Battle, F. H. Bus bee and J. C. L. Harris, for the State of North Carolina. Col. Hinsdale will close the argument today for the com plainants. The decision In this ease will affect the laws of North Carolina. South Car olina, Virginia. Georgia, Alabama, Ken tucky and other Southern States. In this and other States there Is what Is known as the "Commercial Fertilizer Tax, Imposed by the State on ferti lizer companies selling products In these States. It Is claimed by the State authorities that the tax Is Imposed merely for in spection purposes, but the companies claim only one-fifth of the amount col lected Is really necessary for such In spections. The claim Is made that no articles shipped from one State to another can be taxed except by the United States. The State of North Carolina last year collected between j:i0,000 and J 10,000 bv this tart. The case was argued twelve months ago before the Supreme Court, but the court ordered a re-argument hefnre a fii bench 1,111 Oencn. A good camp meeting brother whose religious seal knew no bounds, had not unfamiliar habit, when praying, of "beating the air his heavy hands flying out and coming down in all di rections. During a revival meeting the brother succeeded In getting one of the toughest characters in town to go forward for prayer. Then he knelt beside him and began to pray for him, and every few seconds, in the energy of his efforts, he brought his hand down on the man's bead and back. The fellow stood It calmly for a while, but the blows continuing to fail heavily he got to dodging them and wobbled out of reach on his knees. The man who was doing the pray ing had his eyes closed, but, missing his man, he wobbled after him, and con tinued to emphasize his periods on the sinner's back. Finally, winding up his rather long petition for grace, he asked: "How do you feel now, brother?" "Plum knocked out!" was the reply. "Ef you had anything agin' me, why did you coax me up ter take it out o' me? Why don't you come outside, like a man, an' give me a fair show? You've knocked the devil out of me you has!" "Thank the Lord for that!" exclaim ed the praying brother, "that's exactly w hat I starleu out to do. Toe Lord be praised!" WHOLESALE ROBBERIES IN S. C. Prominent People S .Id to be Implicated Jn Looting Railroad Wan houses and Stores. Columbia, 8. C. March 4. Detectives are uncovering a gang of outlaws In New berry county which has been oper ating for several years. Fully forty farmeiB, some of them the wealthiest In that region, are Impli cated. Seven arrests have been made. The plunder was stolen from stores and depots. One item was forty kegs of giant powder. For a long time the stores, railroad stations and cotton houses have been robbed and railroad stations and gin houses burned. But no threat efforts were made to capture the criminals. Many citizens saw men whom they knew driving out of town with wagon londs of goods taken from the stores, but feared to report them, because they would be killed. Southern railroads have suffered much from the robbers, and have threatened to cease to deliver goods In some places. The recent robbing and burning of E. R. Hlpps' store was followed by the robbery of a car load of goods. As the immediate result of detective work. James A. Riser and his three married sons, John S. Hickley and H. R Anderson and three negroes have been committed to pall. How to Look liood. Good looks are really more than skin deep, depending entirely on a healthy condition of all the vital or gans. If the liver be inactive, you have a bi'ious look; if your stomach be disordered, sou have a dispeptic ol. :if our kidneys be affected, you have a pinched look. Secure good hca'th. and you will surely have oocd looks "E'ectrie Bilters" is a "d a'terati ve and tonic Acts di reel y on the stomach, li v r ai d kidenvs Purilies the blond, cures pimples, bhdehes and boils, and gives a good complexion. Jt,very bottle guaranteed. Sold at any drug store. 5o cents per bottle. $10,000 nTTTTTTnr(Ttr(ftTTTTTT!TTTTTnnTTTTTinTTTTttTI!ITItTIT!tTlt!ttTTnTTTTTTTTTTTTTT Worth of Furniture Jo Be By June the First. We have moved our entire stock of goods 10,000 worth into our house we occupy next to Woollcott's & Sons. We are crowded for room and by the time we get our new building completed June the 1st, we intend to sell every dollars worth of goods we have. Bed Room Suits, PARLOR SUITS, Chairs, Rockers, Wardrobes, Chiffoniers KITCH1NG FURNITURE Of every description. A large line of fane CENTER TABLES, Pictures and casils to he sold at some price. DON'T FAIL TO SEE OUR LINE OF NEW MATTING AND FLOOR OIL CLOTH. We have bought the prettiest line of Baby Carriages ever shown in Raleigh. We cannot make room for them and must sell them out at once. A full line of Cook stove. All goods will be sold either for cash or upon easy weekly Thomas & 9 a.-d 12 East Martin To i urt a Cold In One Pay. Take Laxative Brotno Quinine rab ets All druggists re'und tLe D-oney it it fails to cure !ii"c The .ciuine has L B. Q. on each tablet. I or (' Hr 9 Yenrs '"rs Wii slow s, Soothing S tuples been used lor over litly years bv millions of mothers for tl,cir chil dren while teething, ih perfect success. It soothes thc hi Id, sol tens be L'ums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is tLi; best tctuedj for diarrhoea It will relieve the poor .iitle sufferer immediately . Sold by til druggistt in every pari of the world. 25 cents a butt e lie smeandask ;'r Mrs. Winsliws othing Syrt.p. ami lulu pi. ler It d They Offer SI00 For any Case uf Nervous or sxunl Weak, oess in Men they Tivai an J rail to ( ure. No fake cure, but a scientific trv-it-ment administered by ph s.ci,in.s in j,xil siaiiUiiii;. and .specialists in their line. The Ptate Medical Owmpiuiy cures Lust Vitality, Nervous ami Sex ual Weakness, ami restores life fnrco iu old and young men. They will guaran tee to cure you or forfeit $HM) should they fail, where their medicines at' taken according to directions. No MONEY REQUIRED IN AD VAN 'I'. Deposit the money with your bank-T t be paid to them when you are cured not before. The State Medical Cuiii pany is an incorporated company iin a capital stock of $210,000. and Hn ir guarantee is worth 100 cents on the dollar. Their treat men t is truiv a MACirAI.. TUKATMKNT. and may he taken at hum.1 under their direi-tinns. or they will pay railroad fare and lmiel bills to al w ho prefer ti go to headquar ters, if they fail to cure. This tym pany dues not supply anything free; they charce a reasonable price if th-y effect a cure, and nothing if they dn"t. and they will tell you exactly what it will cost before you take It. Full information on request. Write today. STATE MEDICAL CO. OMAHA, NEB. nif." 644 R.ingi' Hlk HiMiluiiun of I'lrin. Notice is hereby l'Vi'n th ' In firm, compneil of L I' Sorroll :mrl ,T T Hnlloway, luv - been dissolved bv mutual consent ai d J T Flol'i:ty i- authorized to n-ceive all pi luenvs due thp firm and he will also pav any indebtedness the firm owe. L P Soitim.i,. Ralegh, Feb 5, 18!)?, if Sold. payments. Street. Phone 261 C 5- , - I mi Campbell FARMERS' B. I : u 91 DEALER IN ? Agricultural 3 O I5ICYCU''.S, HARDWARE, STANDARD SEWING MACHINES. RALEIGH, N. C. OVER $100,000,000 ll mMmii-1 J 55B5aifi?5 '&-"''' Typewriter,, liihint und (lent rut Supplier. T l. HEARTT, Agt., Sov. Vi tf RALEIGH, N. V. NEW MACHINE SHOP. Equhm'F.d With Latkst Jmi-koved . , . m.u'iiinkkv and tools . . . P. D. G. Machine Company, SiL209 Salisbury St., Raleigh. PRACTICAL MACHINISTS & ENGINEERS. W( iId all imr nu n work and knmv it is done riht. Uur prici-s arc rilit. tiiifuction (tiiiiranu-wl. StcamanilgasKniriiits.il ilrrs ami pumps, saw mills, hangers, pulleys and shafting, pipe and pipe lit-tint's. p STEAM AND HOT Kinds Repair Work II. G. KLONDIKE! Don't go there unless yon are well supplied wi b Simpson's Liver Pills ! You are more man likely to t- trouble.! with Nasal Catarrh if yon don't use Simpson's Ointniei.i. w I-p 1: is a sure cure. Send Your Work to the OAK CITY STEAM LAUNDRY. And secure the sil)le Como, Wis., Jan. 10, 1898. I would not be without PISO'S r CURE for C0N- onuiPTTnW for flnv IHIUCC UiUkUC Beat CouKh Uyrup. thing. For a bad s1ii.M:JMg: Cough or Cold it is beyond all others. Mrs C. REYNOLDS. in iimo. mwn "The Best Cough Medicine." sulc of YuliiiiMi' l'crmiul Hrepcrty foi Tu.cs Bv virtue i f the authority vested in me In See. 52 c f theeliarlerof t! i' c tv of ll deifh aid in nursuanee of a jew made liv me February li. 1898, on the properly ln'ieieafier described. 1 will sell a1 public aue tinn in trip hinhest holder for cash on Thursday, March 3, 18!W. at 1 j ii clo3k p m , al Ihe print mi; shop ul E. M. Uzzi in said etlv,tliefo low inj personal property, to wit: Print iiir presses, type and bindery in said printintr s op, Ihe same heiiiL' the property of said E M. Uzzell, said sale heinir for taxes due said eitv bv said ll M.t'zzeli Tor the vear 18!7, amounting to $i7.35, at.d also for the penalty authorzed by the charter of said city, and the costs i f levy, salt and advertisement, C F Litmsden. Tax Collector. Raleigh, N. C, Feb 19, 1898. SUPPLIES! R B Y, w Implements, CD IZli'S, i .1 u iu. ul lii Fumed by Opera ( i re.- of the Remington Standard Tvnflwritor ",irk o, ,! M,;. Il,.u, J THE UXI IEI STAT I . "' ""!' "" 'Ines the iiiriuiij of Ihe irm ld. Estimates and Plans Turnished Without Cost. WATER HEATING Slate Airents Clark's t 'omp'd Lining Metal a Specialty. DEWEY, Sn-KKINTKX.IRNT. best hiundry work pos- J. K. MARSHALL. I'KOI'lIlKTOi:. (bnSUiuptioi. Hyannis, Nelir.. Jan. 2, 1898. I regard PISO'S C1RE FOR CON SUMPTION as the best Cough medi cine on the market, having used it for 1,1 years. J. A. WEST0VER. Al I CllC IM1C Taie uhm1. Cse ny nnistjiirMs. Htlinqiieiit Inxr'iy-rs lnt.c Nutice. 1 am compel i d to close up the tax books as speedily as; possible, but -U sir pi; to avo d resoi tinr; to harsh measures or atlachitiir p:-nalt ies and costs. 1 hope all those who have failed to pav their taxes forlS97will come al oto p to niv i Dice and pay :,,nP,v, or before Kebruarv lnth, 1S'.S. After thai da'e 1 shall co lect as la ' dir. c's, which will involve costs . 1 h;ne granted tie fullest, indul-t-ence and ihos- not payin-r hy F"h 1 -ill cni'ioi shift the tesponsibilitx ution the law or i llicers in enforcing the law. F: bruarv lalh. 1SSIS. is positively the limit of indulgence If you want, to avoid costs or beinn garni s heed, pai up at onee H T Jones. feb!2td Shei iff Wake county. SEE THIS! From now on we will keep a full line of rooeu. carnations and other cut llowcrs Mouqutta and Uoral desiriH made up in Iwcit style at shortest notice, (.all on us for palms, ferns, and all kind of plants and bullis Shao tree and ever greens to order. Plants kept reason able. J.L.O'Quinn & Co Ruicih, N. C TELEPHONE 143. MOItTG.tGK S.1,K. II y virtue of authority eonfi rred in a morteat-'c executed bv J i n l-d wards 'ieee.isefi. and rtc'.rued in Register's I'llice of Wal.e county, N I'., linnK jmire .-Hi; liuteil Jan Nt, ISiCi I -il' on Monday the L'Sih lay of Feb . 1.-9H at the con it iiou.se door in the city of Kal- gh at 12 I'cloek M. sell to t he hi e,n-st. bid -dor for cash 'he property described n said morl oaoe iid joi nilii; t he lands of V CI Glenn. W A' Lamb, and oth t'is, beiiif lot with brick cottare corner of Blood won h. and Pace streets, conveyed by W C Stronach o said John Ed wards deceased. At same time and place one hundred icres more or less adjoining the lands of Mary Ann Rogers. Stafford Wulder, ai d others more fully des scribed in mortirnyt" execu'i d to VV '' and A U Stronach bv Duncan Morintf dated. March 22nd, 18S8, and recorded in Hejjister's office of Wake county, Hook H4, paye 88, beintr tract of land on which Jacob MorinfT formerly icsidrd V 0 Stkonach, Mcit'toaejee. jan 2H odds IS ESu PATENTABLE? Send Sketch, description and f voo tor exam ination and GUARANTEED report. Vrlnt.a Information about PlTfNTS. TBlnr.lllBlfQ rjFSIGNS Bnd business before the Patent Office FREE. EUGENE W. JOHNSON, Attorney, Established R6S warder liunomir, upposiLi Fateut Office, Washington, D. C. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. inlenfeil Schedule in .-ITeei Feb. I'7.'!i7. TWAIN'S l.KAVK KA1.K1UH DAILY. 1.1 iSlii U:o A.N'H I'MATTAXoflCA I.IMITKR :: In .. in. Dai'y Ian:.:. I train rr..:n I : , 1 1 1 1 si m ,p i 1,. 1 '!, 1 1 a li" i -:a . Tenia. ill Salisbury. .Moja:::iil,ui, ll'I Sn i n s a nil Knoxville. ( 'iniiu'i ls at I ui lia in t..r ixf.il '1. i 'la rksvil le anil Kejsvii.e , e.t Sue day. Al I ! l'eensb"! v:ih lb" WasbiniT ton ,'iml Soul h v .-si, in Yesl.tel -.! il.un iteii) train for all ; -sin- Noil b anil ,ith main line train N 1.' f"!' luuville Kielimonil ami ii.o-in.. 1 b eai st:i liuns; also has eeiine- t : i n .e Wns'lon Saleni and Willi nauli line Ira n No. Tllite,! Stales Kasl .Ma,!," rr I'liar .olte. Spartanbui lo-ewi!',-. Allanta and all points S.uih .,'s., i a.inibia. Aurnsta. I 'lia i leso n, Hr ooi: li. .laeli sonville and all peons m l-'a.rida S.ee inK Car fur Atlanta. ,lae)..s.,ii iMe. and al llreensboro with S!e.p:im i'ar for AiiKiista. 11::t7 a. m. Tiaily -Solid nam i;nns buro to IJoldstmio. I'iinnecls al Selma for Wilson. Itoeky Mount. Tarlioro. Ciehniolnl. Wa.stiinu loti and Fayeileville and intermedin!!' stations nil the Wilson and I'ay ettteville Shorl I'm. daily. exeept Sunday, nt ( loldslioro fur N'e hern and Morehead City, daily for (loldsboio and Wilmington and inlermedialt1 sta tions nn tile 'ilinint;liin aiul Wcldon Kr.ilroad. KXI'RKSS TKAIN. S :r.n a. ni. Ii.-oly -I'ouneets at Dur ham for lixfoid. Keysville. Kielimonil; at ( li eelislioio foi W'asliintoii and all poinls Neilh. Kri:i:ss tkain. 3: til p. in. Iail F"i i ;..'.lr lioro and ;iilel lliediale slat ions. Ni'KFiil.K AND ill :ns i a Obi. 4 aC, a in. - i 'leini- i s :: i i ; : , 'i 0! p.un: - f, r N"M I' o.o o. itisp.n Sa en, ; mi :. .':.-- Noil I eslei ii Noil, i ' i . 1 i.a 1 i Sa lisbui : a a i : p" !.: s n Nol l li i '.ll .eoi:,. Is i!.. I-. i'e! i innali and West- ri. I'" a" n ,olle for Sp.il lavlei; " ill Athens'. Alio:", and al' p.. oil: , r,,r and 1 . I ill- . 'll 11- nvi"-'. ran, ill. I. are. i N. 1" . ( 'hat - "Pills IS Nov I.. I 1 TKA1NS III'.U la. IT -1 . I :: : ,0 p. 1:1. :,;ix K-i- '. ! lale-otia. 'liar . ii- . .:i. s'- po.llls Siattll. NI U!F d.K' AMI i 1 1 A I l.lMITr.li 4. Ii.. a. in. 1 'ally I', ' . laast, Noltolk. Tail...!". walcr lines. (ilKKXSItti;i A Nl 'I I all : A P .-ins .li and i.l i.-IH i:i ' 1 1 : .".7 a. ni. UaiA Fr-ni N- V.n k, WasliiliKtoli, I.yne'ilii.ru. I lite mi.l 1 I I't't'l isl .ol'o, I'llallanooa i I-. n ,x . :'. le, Hot SprillMS and Asii- vi. e l.Xrl:laSS Tl:.!N. s:r.3 a. ni. Uaily Fioin ' ;..:-!sl. n o and inlerniediate stations. I.l ii 'A I.. 1:4(1 a. m. Hailv Ft.. n ' i i ' elisl.oi n and all points Nollh and Souili. Sicep-iiiL- i'ar from Creeiisl. p. Norfolk. !i:0 p. ni. Daily ex.-cpt Suinl ay From (ioliisboro and all poiins Fast. Local freight ikoiis a!:.- .any pas sengers. l'ullman I'ars on nii;lit train from Raleigh to Greensboro. Throuph Pnllniaii Vest ibuled Draw ins Koom Buffet Slc-piun Far anil Ves tibuled Coaches without ebance on Norfolk limited. Double daily trains between HaleiRh, Charlotte and Atlanta. Quick lime; un excelled accommodation. For rates, maps and full information, If you are going to travel, write or call on THAD C. PTUROIS. T. A. So. Uy., Union Depot. No trouble to answer questions. FRANK S. GANNON. Third V.- P. & G. Sf. W. A. TURK. Gen. Pass. Afrent. Washington, D. C. J. M. CUL.P, Traffic Manaeer. J