Newspapers / The Raleigh Daily Tribune … / May 19, 1897, edition 1 / Page 7
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'THE RALEIGH DAILY TBIBPNE, WEDNESDAY MORNING . x,uJCJUA1 JlUKNIKGMAY-lO. 1 T I I - M-BBHMaiiiMBiJiJiJHl 111 ---v, 4r. -- Otf-. ' I . 1 ' E II Better Also Crop Pros pect Better Than for Years. R6AH RESO LUTION -,rc PROMINENT FIGURE IN BUSINESS CIRCLES, WHILE THE PASSAGE OF THE TARIFF .... c,i-vs Movements In Sugar- tin Xhe Tobacco Market Affected by a - r- . J . . . Was Adverse 10 cxisimg uws. V- A Hi' in-'. - ii' .. ( : ; ,rk. Ma.v IS. Although there t;ttt' increase, in the outside iht-re was. a better undertone .iaikt the close than foi" The improvement was es , in-able in the Grangers. k Kxehanse point of view,- , ... warranted by the fact . a onsiderable short in ,- market, whereas-the dis , liquidate is conspicuous by ne particular house is 1..' not only heavily short inn io aiso nave out a.T;.. lines f St. Paul and C..;P. mtj-id'- f the-vtock market .there t'. !.a"tis for the strength of jii" v. As lias been stated over . 'i;nn. t ru roi snuaiion ir js l.t-tt'-r than for manv V. .. . on tli- horizon is of r-oursV ,,-;..n ..f th Morfran Cuban Thi-- discussion promisf.s .'Uimt prolonged, and al il,.- resolutions will no doubt ,vl bv th Senate, it will take . .. f..r th House to set to work m nnd thve -4s good reason for ri- tliat tlvy may be lost in the . aii-l never come io a final vote. ..M'Ht at the close was, dis l.nllih. and a higher range of '....kt-d for t-morrow. . t,,!- w !o lias crood informa Siiar savs "there will be no , ,.t mmo in the ctock pen dins nf the tariff bill. Proba. , human beins knows what sehed iM lie adopted."- Suf-ar Cotnoany will m;ikf som ..; its nurelnse of raw susrar. but !.,... r...t enter into the ouestion of afforded. It? bearing !,-v that the ttrofits thus oh- jH hem piuintam itivni-iniH u .,im- should not be abl o earn h Mend on account of the new .jlif ::'! ,.- ..t. j.-i-sev CVntral said last j (, -old Jprspv Central n i.if.,, i.-.i inn that the noatins . v, i- t.?, r.iMi non. . t increase . .iii r ::i having been caused .hi1! oal trade. Frirthernior. i :.tit'.-i ihat somethiner over ..f i.ii'r ctocV canip on the - il-. t .lurincr 'h- decline from U :.i ;iv 1 :i r.-nsiderable PTt of this c,...t.- l...n transferred and dellv-;.-.! " : J; nvv v.-t ii.ioed that short r..,.S VA. ifven rl mnteriallv. Tn l..ai. veil to hav1" an amount ,:u U ixhi. h mieht be a er11 imnor i'f f.n t,,r in th loan et-oy.d. TJie con- . ij,.i ivi re.itn'7 with t he action of 'H. vte. U viz.. that prolt in Jercev '')t!;i! ;)t jufs- nt lie chiellv in' short . Th.- ,i.,i;..n l,v .Tudee Tibbons -li.-vrst !.h.. Tolme.-o Pompanv broii-Vit r ;'iz:n2 injt alo obvions supnort. Thfr irif,'T checked the sellinc" tendency a? 'Vr-. T 1 !,.; the footn wa concerned., but ,o iinpresirn that the wish inu-ht continue lonsrer than thought wise to support the " It a- statf.l in tlie trppj. last uisrht i . -e i.i-i jj,t hai been mde to !! ' h-i i-.l the r-hnirmnn of thp T-a"!e -s,,riation. that th-' .r -r-v, i;:,iirr,H( ,vas guilty of .l'.T Ml' V:i'. lictw-fpn Xw "Vork and ' e. T h-iv.. VcrKfin ti" lotif-p tViflt ls founded upon facte. N-an uneasv feeling" in rail- ''e tbat something- of a . rat? n "" i'liminent ' " ' 1. - i- eninsrs: V,,v fit V ..1 .1 Paul, second wek 'v in. .is-.l S14.94S: Canadian Pa 's -week in -May. increased " -Mio-p-i Kansas and Texas. in Ma v. increaed $-2!.4Srt. i American's closed 1ii1i i T th. open ins-, and are !). ,,f '! -on tinned decline iri ; very disappointing to the ! 1: (!-'.. ''ton. Private advice from 1 rate that the weaker feeling ,hte in part to the fears of " ''Mnplications as a result ot t-'-'fifiue .f the powers in the ' ' ! f 'lie" indtMnnitv for the war Turkey and Greece. There I'pe.ir to l,e any bullish fac Miark. t just at the moment. j r- a ie several intluences at work Th.- if;(i.-ing of lower prices. The 1 m..st important of these is the ' essati,, H1 tn-e demand for '?-m. hMth at home and abroad. iHy f -'things of spots by" Manches - :! s.tp1(- time shown a disposl . ' C!'-v less and less, and does ' I for continued activity " ;i'k. t. TTere the demand ha 1 a t indstill. but -will be revived ""s i'i 'icrs-?fo' much lower. An-''"'arK-h ' factor is the improving ' r f r-i-opp. A third is the ac s 'iith.-cn spinners, who have ' ! : v.-in ion and proposed an ! ' binding- all of them to cur " p'o.luotion twenty-five pel - agr-fment. it is proposed. ' effect on the lSth of next time intervening; is thought i' v to perfect a working ar- f the scheme. The tradft that the quantity of cot 1 bv this decision would be 1 ah s in any event and opin- "';ent that the movement is - meet -with success. Tha n for the proposed reduc t the spinners are desirous of active operations until they cotton, old cotton heins and high in price. t here closed steady, with Hh feeling, the most ac hoving five points abova t figure touched during the tc-tal sales were 77,40 hales. " b r-Mi A m. Stocks. its Mfff Co .-. Atf ,,-.. pref'd. rv , "ltrif.an Cotton Oil... prefd: lrp,. pref'd 10J 10 ... "1 . ... 102 m Bay State Gas " ; C. C. C.&St L . ..II..." 28 Canada JSoutharn 4G! g.&o. ig B. & Q -4' Chicago Gas .. slf Colorado Fuel and Ironl" I'CJ Canadian Pacific ......... .... 54 f Consolidated Gas. 100 Del., Lack. & W 7 14? Delaware & Hudson.. 104J Denver & Rio Grande ..... i4 prerd . 37f Erie. 12 General Electric " o nocKing V alley Illinois Central. J. Central It 23t 24i 162 L.&N - . , ... 'iO Li. Xj. K VV . , pref'd.. Laclede Gas...... Leadl " .11.11. prefd V. Lake Shore Mobile & Oliio I"IIIIZZZIII 17 Manhattan ' 34a Mo. Kan; & Tex '..."Z" 10 prefd " orj. Michigan Central ...ZZZZZ 05? North American... " 49. KT - ... nonnern racinc 12 J - prerd.......... mi N.W.. ...... 104 prei a .... N. Y. Central. Omaha pref'd... Ontario & Western Pullman Palace Car Co . . Pacific Mail Rock Island.. ... Heading. . Sugar . prefd St. Paul. prefd. , Standard Rope & Twine.. Southern Railway prefd... Silver Certificates Sus. & Western : prefd Tenn. Coal iIrou Texas Pacific Union Pacific ;. U. S. Rubber prefd 154? lilt 5H Via 141 157 20 J --; ii li:U --.. 10:Ji - 74 i:Jl .- U. S. jiather Wabash 25. nil 18t 12 i2 prefd prefd AVestem Union prefd ... 1 5 12; 77f gTf-t-n eofiee, 1220c. Butter Best countryt 25c; country, 20c; western creamery, Cc. Kggs 1214 c per dozen. Dried Fruit Evaporated peaches. 12!c; unevaporated, 10c; evaporated apples. Sc; unevaporated. 5c. Chickens Spring, 15&0c; old hens, 2530c. Cabbage Per crate, 52; per head 5 10c. Beans String, per crate, $L75; pei quart, 1CK. Squash Per- crate. $1.50. Potatoes Old, per bushel, 75c; new. per busnei. z.-o. Sweet potatoes? Old. 50c tier bushel:! new, $5 per barrel. Lettuce Per head. 5 10c. Radishes Per bunch, 25c. Strawberries Per quart, 10c. Peas Per peck, 25c; per quart, 5c. Tomatoes Per dozen. 50c. Onions Per bunch. 5c; seven hunch es for 25c. Spinnage Per bushel, 60c; per peck. 20c. Bananas Per bunch. 75cJ1.50. Lemons Per box, S50 to 360 in a box, $2.7513.50. Peanuts Per pound, 24c, acocrd ins; to grade. Pineapples Each. 12(5 25c. Oranges Messina, per box. $2.50 4.00; California, per box. $3.50tf?4.50. Apples Per barrel, ; $3.504.50, ac cording to grade. Hay Xo. 1, straight timothy, $16, No. 2, mixed, 15. Bran Per ton, $17 18. Ship stuffs $1920. Cotton sed meal, S21S22, NEW YORK TRIBUNE 1897, Recognized as a Great, Safe. Clean hamily PaperA Force in Public Affairs and Potent for Enter tainment and Culture of Every Member of the Family. Chicago Produce Market. Chicago. May IS Leadimr futures ranged as follows: A COLORED SUPPLEMENT WITH THE SEMI-WEEKLY. LONDON STOCK CLOSING. London; May IS. The stock market for Americans closed dull, at the fol- owing quotations: Southern Railway pre! erred .?4, St. Paul -s, New ork Central ,y9U. Union Pacific 6, Read- ins- lSVst Louisville and Nashville -41. WHEAT July . . . . . . Sept ... CORN July Sept OATS July Sept .... PORK July ... Sept LARD July . Sept . RIBS Julv ----- Sept Opening. - T0J -- CO, - 24 Closing 70 J Mi 24 0-)- IT, 18 $8 17, . 8 27l 8 87 1 4 no 4 52; 17. $8 22j 8 5 a en 4 4-H 4 45 There is a place in the United States for a weekly of really high intellectua quality, and the American people have given THE NEW YORK TRIBUNE the compliment of a lavish welcome. During the" past year THE WEEKLY was taken in over 245,000 families and read by about 1,250,000 people. Every effort will b. made in 1897 to brighten and enrich the paper and make it ne cessary to thousands of new friends. Patriotic, self-respecting and enter prising, THE TRIBUNE is fearless and scholarly in editorial comment on public affairs, steadfast in principle, and not whirled about with every gust of passion; and it exhibits in every issue the truly American qualities of quickness, directness, brilliancy and force. It has won from Democratic rivals, by its thoroughly -American spirit, the admission that it commands the resoect of all parties." In directing attention, early and pointedly, to the availability of Mc Kiiile v and Hobart for the Republican nominations in 1896, THE TRIBUNE played a now well known and impor tant part. . , THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE minis ters to all the sweet and wholesome interests of life; and it is distinctly a paper for families and for those who want the. spirit and the editorials of the leading Republican paper of the .United States. It has an excellent Ag- -t ric-ultural page, a page of Science and Mechanics, a charming page especially i for w omen, a strong array of market j reports of unchallenged excellence, j and book reviews, foreign letters, and ! bright miscellany, in addition to the j news of the week. j j It can usually be subscribed for with j local county Weeklies. Sample copies free. TWOETES. TWO EYES. TITO EYE. DIFFERENT REFRACTION in the two eyw of the same person is quite commom. One eye may be correct and the other long-1ghted or far-sighted,. or they, may haTe different degrees of same defect or one eye may be far-sighted and thf other near-sighted. No charge fortesting eyes. M. HAHLER'S SONS, Jewelers and Opticians, RALEIGH. C. TWO EYES. rvrirJLnJin-Tf-fTr- TWO EYES. I TWO ETES-4 u--lt.-..i.------ii--.- I II w V FjALElGH. jM.L. Something that needs nicklc plat ing, if so, .end to us and wc will give you a first-class job at reason able rate. Send us your Bicycle when it needs repairing. We have a first class workmau in this de partment. We rent first-cla wheels, and sell the prettiest and best wheel; you have seen, The - Owhr. Call to sic them,' O-AJK! CITY -STieAIVX LAUNDRY, 216 Fayetteville St., Kaleigh.N. GY PACK 4 31 A IIS HALL, rroprietor. C. F. & Y. V. RAILROAD. JOHN GILL, KcceiYer. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. SOUTHERNJAILWAY. COXDENSKI) SCIIEDULE. LONDON MONEY. London, May 18. 12:30 p. m. Money Consols 1138 for money and 113 7-16 for the account. Bar silver steady at 28 l-16d. Itate of discount of the Bank of England 1V per cent. liECEIPTS AT THE PORTS. New York, May 18. The following are the total net receipts of cotton at the ports today: Boston 209, Charles ton 263, Galveston 2S7, New Orleans 1.935, Norfolk 270, Philadelphia 339, Sa vannah 159, Wilmington 4, Augusta 14, Cincinnati 1,269. 'Houston 515, Memphis 69, St. Louis 319. ' CHICAGO RECEIPTS. Chicago, May 18. Receipts for today are as follows: Wheat 11 cars; corn 148 cars: oats 291 cars; , hogs 17,000. The following are tomonow's esti mated receipts: Wheat 6 cars; corn 25 tars; oats 200 cars; hogs 31,000. Private wire of John A. Duncan, No. 307 Wilmington street, Raleigh, N. C New York, May IS. In response to tbe advance in the Liverpool market today opening quotations in New York w5re 4 points up on the old crop months and 1 to 2 points up on the distant months. The advance, however, did not hold. At 1 o'clock quotations had receded until the measure of the im provement over last night was only 1 point. While the tone of the market at the opening was fairly strong there Lwas very little business doing and the volume of outside business was noi sufficient to maintain the advance. Private cables from Manchester report that there is a better demand there, and the belief is indulged iat bot tom prices have been reached. There ha not been anything occurring on this side the water today to affect prices in either direction. The weekly weather report is good and bad In spots on the w hole shows something of an improvement over that of a week ago. It looks to us as if both Liverpool and Manchester would show something of an improvement tomorrow in view of the better political outlook in the East. PRICE, McCORMICK & CO. NEW YORK COTTON FUTURES. Njew York, May 18. Cotton futures closed steady with sales of 77,400 bales. May 7.35; June 7.35; July 7.39; August 7.33; September 7.03; October 6.84; No vember 6.83; December 6.86; January 6.S9; February 6.93; March 6.97. LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET. Liverpool, May IS. 12:30 p. m. Cot on, demand' moderate; prices lower; American middling 4d; sales esti mated at 7,000, speculation and export 300; receipts 20.000, American 15,300. Fu tures opened quiet with demand mod erate. June 4.03; June-July 4.02; July August 4.01; AugUst-September 3.61; September-October 3.54; October-November 3.49. 3.50; November-December 3.48;' December;January 3.47; January Fehruary 3.46; February-March 3.47. Futures quiet but steady at the decline. 2 p.' ni. Cotton Sales of the day 7.000, American 6,700; American mid dling 4i-8d.-. Futures steady at an ad vance. May 4.04, 4.05; May-June 4.03, 4.04; June-July 4.02, 4.03; July-August 4.01, 4.02; August-September 3.61, 3.62; September-October 3.55, 3.56; October November 3.51; November-December 3.49; December-January 3.47, 3.48; Jan-uarv-February 3.47, 3.4S; February March 3.48. 4 p. m. Futures closed very steady at the advance. May 4.05, 4.06; May June 4.04. 4.05; June-July 4.03, 4.04; Julv-August 4.02, 4.03;, August-September 3.62, 3.63; September-October 3.55, 3.56; October-November 3.50, 3.51; November-December 3.48. 3.49; December January 3.47, 3:48; January-February 3.47, 3.48; February-March 3.48. Raleigh Cotton Market. 7 to Strict good middling. ... Good middling 7 to 7 Strict middling 1lk Middling .7 to 1V2 Cotton receipts on market yesterday, 71 bales. - Prices firm. Local Stock Market. Bid. Asked rir;7(ns' National Bank.... 123 125 National Bank of Raleigh-116 Raleigh Savings Bank 130 Commercial & F'm'r's' B'k.122 Raleigh & Gaston 8'sv IO!1,. N C Ag Society 6's - North Carolina 4's .....104 North Carolina 6's.. .. . ..127 Caraleigh Phosphate W'ks..l05 W N C R R 6s.... 113 Raleigh Cotton Mills 90 N C R R stock .-121 Raleigh & Gaston R R Seaboard Air Line K R.. City of Raleigh 6's 1907.... City of Raleigh 6's 1S97... The Mills M'f'g Co pfd Caraleigh Cotton Mills... N C Car Co The Mills M'f'g Co 117 135 123 105 40 105 12S 105 114 93 122 106 107i 101 102 M .. 70 .. 90 95 RALEIGH PRODUCE MARKGET. Flour Best patent, per barrel, $6.00; straights, per barrel, S5.50; clear flour. $5: low grades. $1.50-. Lard Best, per pound, Sc; medium, c. Bacon Western. 7c per pound. Hams North Carolina, llUc; Balti more, 13c. ' - ' . . Susrar Granulated, 6c per pound; cut loafsc; pulverized, Sc: brown, oc. Coffee A rbuckles, l20c per pound; Chicago, May 18. Liverpool again es tablished a penny decline in wheat,,the reason given being the weakness caus ed by large arrivals of California wheat. The world's shipments also show a much larger movement from Russia. Paris Was only fractionally and higher and dull, their alarming crop advices evidently being intended only for this market. Berlin expe rienced a sharp decline. Advices from the Southwest indicate early harvest, possibly next week in Oklahoma and Texas. The Oklahoma crop . is placed this year at about seven million bush els. A very reliable crop expert places the .Kansas crop from fifty to sixty million and the outlook for Nebraska never better and predicts that the surplus west of the Mississippi River will exceed the shortage in Illinois In diana and Missouri. Foreigners bought some wheat here and at New York and about one hundred thousand cash wheat worked here for export and an attempt was made by speculators to bull May wheat, hut it declined at the close only 1i over July under small offerings. Clearances at seaboard were eoual to nearly 500.000 bushels, but the Bradstreet weekly renort of world's visible showed a very disappointing decrease and a larere increase in Eu ropean stocks which invited free sell ing of long wheat and heavy short selling by a large local operator. The market closing around, put the price for the - fourth 'dav in succession and with indications of further decline. - Com and oats were depressed hv weakness jn wheat and by continued country selling. The long promised larsre receipts, however, are not. yet in siedit. Provisions were easier e?rly. hut rrW with srood buying support from the packing interests. Receipts of hogs continue larsre. 1 KENNETT, HARRIS .& CO. THE SEMI-WEEKLY is printed on Tuesday and Friday', and gives twice as much matter as The Weekly. The craving for color on 'the part of the young, and even of other mem bers of a family, has now been recog nized by THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRI BUNE in the publication . of a colored supplement of 16 pages, with each Fri day's paper. If not gratified in a pro per way, the liking for pictures and innocent bright reading matter will in cline many to seek in less desirable publications that which they cannot find in their favorite paper. The jokes and quaint paragraphs, and the fifty or more political cartoons, humorous sketches and half-tones, and other amusing contents of the colored sup plement will prove a welcome addition to the wiser and weightier parts of the paper. It is printed on superfine paper. There is great need for a low-priced popular humorous weekly in this coun try. The present pictoral weeklies, whether printed in black or in colors, all sell for 10 cents a copy, or for $5.00 a year. THE TRIBUNE'S colored supplement is virtually a 5 cent pic toral weekly, in several colors, worth $2.50 a year. At this price, however, it would be expensive, if sold separate ly, but it is to'be sent free to every subscriber to the SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE who sends to THE TRI BUNE direct the regular price of $2.00 a year. This is a bargain, considering the fact that THE TRIBUNE is incap able of sending into any family any thing which is unfit to be read there. Sample copies of Friday's SEMI WEEKLY (with colored supplement each Friday) will be sent to those who forward to THE TRIBUNE direct the regular price of $2.00 a year. Those who do not remit $2.00 to THE TRI BUNE direct will not receive the col ored supplement. DAILY. $S.OO a year. SUNDAY TRIBUNE. $2.00. SEMI-WEEKLY $2.00. WEEKLY, $L00, TRIBUNE AL MANAC for 1897, with full election re-, turns, out in January, 25 cents a copy. THE TRIBUNE, NEW YORK. THETVVICE-A-WEEK In Effect April 4, 1S97. Why the Beer Tax Is $!. 44. Cb'cacro Record. ' There ?s much curiosity s to why th-3 tax on b-- as made S1.44 a barrel, instead of J1.45 cr Sl.fA The rate ?.dort ed sounds a erood dal as if the Senate committer vis imittins- the bargMn counters in the department stores, but there i a deer rnd important ; 'srniT canc to th? fieurc. Thev we-ecadont ed for tho sa-"f of convergence in mathe matical calculations. One hundred and fortv-feur i" the- multiple of 2, 3. 4. 6. and 1. which re the divisions us-d bv the bewerc in the sale of beer. In estimf'tin and computirsr the taTe upon fractional parts of p barrel, 1. 4? i much mc"e nvep'-nt than $1.5'" or V.in or St. 45. Th" th1 tx on half a barrel of her .will he 7 e-n. the tax on t nuartr of a barrel Hfi cent. on a third of " birrel i? cnt -r--n --iytb of n hswl ?t re"tt;. "U r n -irp .of ,a ir rel 18 cents. F-en cent- p- frac tions, enter into the calculation. One Dollar a Year. Issued Wednes day and Saturday Mornings. North Bound. - No. 2, Daily. Lv. Wilmington 8.00 a m Ar. Fayetteville.. 11:10 a m Lv. Fayetteville ..11:27 a m Lv. Fayetteville. ......11:21 a m Lv. Sanford 1:00 p m Lv. Climax 2:55 p m Ar. Greensboro ..3:25 p m Lv. Greensboro..... 3:35 p m Lv. Stokesdale. ..4:23 p m Lv. Walnut Cove.... 4:55 p m Lv. Rural Hall ........5:26 p m Ar. Mt. Airy ......6:50 p m South Bound. No. 1, Daily. Lv. Mt. Airy 8:40 a m Lv. Rural Hall .....10:04 a m Lv. Walnut Cove... 10:32 a m Lv. Stokesdale ... 11:07 a m Ar. Greensboro........ .11:55 a m Lv. Greensboro... 12:15 p m Ly. Climax 12:43 p m Lv. Sanford.... 2:40 'p m Ar. Fayetteville Junction..... 3:55 p m Ar. Fayetteville................ 3:58 p m Lv. Fayetteville. .....4:22 p m Ar. Wilmington............... 7:30 pm' North Bound. No. 4, Dally. Lv. Bennettsville 8:10 a m Ar. Maxton 9:23 a m Lv. Maxton...., .... 9:33 a m. Lv. Red. Springs.. ....10:04 a m Lv. Hope Mills.. 10:52 a m Ar. Fayetteville .......11:16 a m South Bound. No. 3. Dally. Lv. Fayetteville 4:5 p in Lv. Hope Mills..... . 4:46 p m Lv. Red SDriners 5:35 p m Ar. Maxton 6:10 p m Lv. Maxton. 6H8 p m Ar. Bennetts viUe 7:80 p m North Bound. No. 16, Mixed Daily, ex. Sun 6:45 a m 8:25 a m 9:20 a m , 9:35 a rn Lv. Stokesdale.. t 11:07 a m Ar. Madison .' ......11:55 a rr South Bound. - . No. 15, Mixed " Daily, ex. Sun Lv. Madison..'. ...12:30 p m In Effect June II, lSiJG. Lv. Ramseur.... Lv. Climax Ar. Greensboro . . Lv. Greensboro.. Beginning January 1, 1897, the Weekly Courier-Journal was changed to the Twice-a-Week Ccurier-Jour-nal. Publication days are Wednes day and Saturday. The Wednesday paper will be devoted to news and po litical topics. The Saturday issue will be devoted to stories, miscellany, pic tures poetry, etc. a perfect family paper. Each issue will be six pages, or twelve pages a week an ncrease of two pages a week, 104 pages or S32 col umns a year. The politics of the paper will not be changed ,and the battle for pure De mocracy and true Democratic princi ples will be continued successfully in the future as in the past. In spite of the expenses involved in the improve ments noted, the price of the Twice-a-week Courier Journal will remain the same, $1 a year. A feature during the coming year will be the editorials of Mr. Henry Watterson. on political and other topics of the day. Dail- Courier-Journal, 1 year .$C 00 Daily and Sunday, 1 year.i. 8 00 Sunday alone, 1 year 2 00 Conrier-Journal AND THE RALEIGH WEEKLY TRIBUNE BOTH ONE YEAR FOR ONLY Golno FrpftfilvP'-Ore Patter. From an interview with ex-Gov. Waite of Colorado in the Kansas City Jour nal. -What will help the country. .-, "Plenty of money." "Free silver?" "Free silver would not help it enough. Legal tender greenbacks is what we want. Money should be plenty enough to make all staple pro ducts pav a profit to the producer. Mr. Waite still believes the "Boy Ora tor of the Platte" is the logical lead er of the Democracy. ' $1.25 We have made a special clubbing ar-t rangement with the Twice-a-week Courier-Journal, and will send that paper and ours for the price named to all oui subscribers who will renew and pay in advance, or to all new subscribers who will pay in advance. Sample copies of Courier-Journal sent free op applica tion. All subscriptions under this -offer must be sent to THE TRIBUNE, Raleigh, N. C. Lv. Stokesdale.. . 1:28 p rr Ar. Greensboro 2:40 p m Lv. Greensboro....... 3:25 p m Lv. Climax... .. 4:20 p w Ar. Ramseur 6:05 p re Meals. North Boun'd Connections. ' At Fayetteville, with Atlantic Coast Line for all points north and east; ai Sanford, with the Seaboard Air Line: at Greensboro, with the Southern Rafl way Company; at Walnut Cove with the Norfolk & Western Railroad for Winston-Salem. ...... South Bound Connections. At Walnut Cove with the Norfolk & Western Railroad for Roanoke and points north and west; at Greensboro, with the Southern- Railway Company for Raleigh, Richmond and all point north and east; at Fayetteville with the Atlantic Coast Line for all point south; at Maxton, with the Seaboard Air Line for Charlotte, Atlanta and all points south and southwest. J. W. FRY, W. E. KYLE, Gen. Manager Gen. Pass. Agt. TRAINS LEAVE RALEIGH: "NORFOLK & CHATTANOOGA LIM ITED." 1:40 p. m. dally Solid vestfbuled train with sleeper from Norfolk. Va,, to Nashville, Tenn., via -Salisbury. Morganton. Asheville, Hot Springs and Knoxville. Connects at Durham for Oxford. Clarksville and Keysvllle, except Sunday. At Greensboro with Wash ington and Southwestern Vesti buled (limited) train for all points north, and with'maln line train No. 12 for Danville, Richmond and in termediate stations; also has con nection for Winston-Salem, and with main line train No. 35, "United States Fast Mail," for Charlotte, Spartanburg, Greenville, Atlaa and all points South; also Coluru bia, Augusta, Charleston, Savan nah, Jacksonville, and all. points In Florida. Sleeping car for Atlanta. Jacksonville, and at Charlotte with Bleeping car for Augusta. "CHATTANOOGA AND NORFOLK LIMITED." 11:45 a. m. daily Solid train, consisting of Pullman sleeping cars and coaches from Nashville to Nor folk, arriving at Norfolk at 5:20 p. m., in time , to connect with 'the Old Dominion, Merchants & Miners', Norfolk & Washington, and Balti more, Chesapeake & Richmond Steamship Companies for all points north and east. Connects at Selma for Fayette ville and Intermediate stations on the Wilson & Fayetteville Short Cut daily; daily except Sunday for Newbern and Morehead City; dally for Goldsboro and Wilmington and intermediate stations on the Wil mington & Weldon Railroad. EXPRESS TRAIN. 8:53 a. m. daily Connects at Durham for Oxford, Keysvllle, Richmond; at Greensboro for Washington, and all points north. Tfie utu EXPRESS TRAIN. 3:40 p. m. daily-For Goldsboro and m- ! termediate stations, j LOCAL. 1 2:00 a. m. daily Connects at Greens--j boro for all points north and fouth S and Winston-Salem and points on- the Northwestern North Carolina Railroad; at Salisbury for all points In Western North Carolina, Knox ville, Tenn., Cincinnati and western points; at Charlotte for Spartan burg, Greenville, Athens. Atlanta and all points south. Sleeping car Raleigh to Grefnsboro, . TRAINS ARRIVE AT RALEIGH. EXPRESS TRAIN. 3:40 p. in. daily From "Atlanta, Char- The first of American News papers, CHARLES A. VAX A, Editor. The American Constitutional - j the American Idea, the Ameri- can Spirit. These first, lastand all the time, forever. lotte, Greensboro and all points south. 1 LOCAL. 7:10 a. m. daily From Greenboro and j all points north and south. Sleep ; ing car from Greensboro to Ral eigh "NORFOLK AND CHATTANOOGA LIMITED." ! 8:40 p. m. daily From all points east, Norfolk, Tarboro, Wil.on and water ; lines. From Golsbofo, Wilmington, Fay etteville and all points in Ea.stern ; Carolina. "CHATTANOOGA AND NORFOLK, j LIMITED." ' 11:45 a. m. daily From New York, ! Washington, Lynchburg. Danville and Greensboro. Chattanooga, I Knoxville, Hot Springs and Ashe i ville. j LOCAL. ' S:00 p. m. daily, except Sunday From i Goldsboro and all points eapt. ! EXPRESS TRAIN '1 8:53 a. m. daily From Golds'rw For tickets, routes and rates, or othe. information, call on or write to THAD. C. STURGIS. Ticket Agent, Raleigh, N. C J. M. CULP. Trade Manager. VV. H. GREEN. W. A. TURK. Gen'l Supt. G. P. A. Dadlr. by mail. - - 0 a Year Dally and Sunday, by mall, 9S a Year The Sunday Sun is the greatest Sunday Newspa per in the world. Price 5c. a copy. By mail, $2 a year. Address THE SUN. New York. I FOB Commercial Printing County Supplies; Blank Books WRITE CAPITAL PRINTING CO. - RALEIGH 1 '
The Raleigh Daily Tribune (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 19, 1897, edition 1
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