Newspapers / The Elkin Times (Elkin, … / Sept. 12, 1895, edition 1 / Page 1
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C'om vi ere i a I 1'r t 11 t i it tf Lottur ICoiuIh, Ei',1 Heads, Nolo Hi-nilH, Statements, Bit wine rh Cimle, Envelopes, Executed Neatly and Promptly, - It Pays to Givb mm an invitation to Wile with Ton. . El The beat way to invite them is to ad vertise in THE TIMES. 8iH'fflK&t?.H ELKIH, N, a, THUHSDAY. SEPTEMBER 12, 1895. HUBBARD I mi FaUto NO. 48. VOL.111.- WALTES. 8. SELL, Editor, 1 n A "DEFENDER" INDEED. YANKIiE DOODLK COMES TO TOWN, AND UKITANIA DOKSN'T RULE TIIK WAVE. COMPARISON F THE TWO YACHTS. - Defender Heats the Valkyrie Over Eight Minutes. The Race an Exciting One. 1 . The contest betweon the Defender and the vaucyne iii nrousou more interest on Doth sides of the water than any similar tussle for llin America's Cup slnec thu g.illiuit o'd Ynu ki'fl sohooner came soiling home forty-four years ngo with brooms at her mast-head, to show how she had swept the British seas. The two creek yachts of two continents that DEFENDER. builUttxpre'Sly ti contest for interna- tlotial hoii'tf m or i cloioly resemble each ""llher In desiitu tin nuy two boats tnnthave L lot met lu i series. Iu tan Defender's nines the Kn-jlU men see only a clear np- prt'tuiu 1 ' l " irui!n itii.-t'., nriuw urn V.i kyrie .i"ns W'.r!SJWJlirei3 c:re thit b s i1.i;im hs.e been boldly liliit.l. I'ron i iy the fact ts there has been mi unwiltiirj coming together of ideas one to the ex g'u m-s of the contest. Watson figure ! o i 'H iding a bout to beat the Vigl laut, and Jlrreaolt Iriel to got a faster t.i t tli. in the Keglisi liritaiinla. This mix up is union te.ily due to the Vigilant's visit - lint year to JS 'iginnd, when she showed to John B ili'. b 'Jii--Hi. Mers the lines on which the Amcric imd I their boats. 8o close l were the ra -cs exnccie.1 to be that neither Biile.'viV" iiwi." any information that might lie of a iv ntHge to the other side. VALKYBIE , niuuiimiiouu ui i u n uinu in iniflnwiini. 1 ! .V- ... aiKyne ill is leet over all. with 26 feet of beam, IS feet draught and 77 tons of lead jin the keel. Her water line measurement is u ieei. ene is nnut from lines laid down bv G. L. Watson, England's foremost naval i architect and designer of the Thistle, Val ! kyrie II, Queen Mab, and a host of equally ;weil-known yachts. Valkyrie, like the De fender, is syndicate built, despite the fact that she is always referred to M Lord jDunniven's boat. Her syndicate to oom j posed of Dun raven, the Earl of Lons- n.le V'n nurnr William' .hnm . n.m Xf moner of England," and C. B. Eobln on. Boughly speaking, she is flat, GHASTLY TRAGEDY. dam Beheads His Father-la-Law --rBrokSer-ln-Lavr and Suicides. moat horrible tragedy in the history hern Indiana occurred at Sullivan lay night James Ward murdered -In-law, Aron Hunter and bis brc- w, cutting off loeir heads and etn around. Toe tragedy occur- he party were coon hunting. The was pursued by a mob and Just out to be captured took bis own i V 1 i I shallotf boat, with a donp f!n keol or flxn.l eenterboard, lustra 1 of n movable on, M on tho Vigilant, ami roltos, like the be fender, on tho enormous amount of laid, placed very low down, for power. Hho It-is a tremendous overhang nnd a great MWwl Viewed us a whole, she might be balled !l modified composite nil Iteel cutter of great beam and enormous sail poweri Bhe is the ninth vessel built expressly to capture the America's Cop.' Hor sail spread is the largest ever carried mi a slntrld sticker and contains about 12,ot)0 square feet of duck There are many new wrinkles id her con struction, in rtvetlnti ami bracing; of in terest only to boat-making experts. Her most from deck to head measures 90 feet. The staff is 6!) feet loniri and her main boom Is 105 feet. Hhft hai a steel mast ready to ho put up lr necessary. It is a tleolued novelty Oil racing yachts. It Is JO'i.foot long and 22 Jnohes ill diameter. The Valkyrie III; was built especially for the light winds which prevail oft herd during the fall.. In light winds she is a decidedly superior bout to the Jiritaunia, which so signally defeated the Vigilant, but in' heavy weather she showoJ sitoli Instaoiiity ftiat there' was hasty addition of from, twolve to fifteen -ns of outside lea 1 on her keel. The Defender is a disappointment at first glance oompared with the Valkyrie. She appears much smaller, and renllv us. For the tirst time tho Ynnkee boat is the under sized craft. Americans had hoped Herreshoff wrnui nunoi a mountain or sails and spars, but ltpnnv.l W ,!vi. ..Li-wJ hu hu t reivhed the limit ot practicaoie suu ri,nn. has sought speed iu an easier driven body an I finer lines witnout material uaL-maso i Her dimensions are, wron all. 126 foot ili .m11".....!.. u lotd draught. 19 feet, load water line, 00 feet. Her gnff is 65 feet, her boofu 105, and mast, from deck to hounds, 72 feet. She is without doubt the most costly raolng.craft ever built. This faot doesn't botder her syndlonte, which is composed of V. JC. Vanderbllt (worth J70, OOll.OOD), E. ' D. Morgan and 0. O. Iselln. Her weight h03 been reduced by the use of manganesn bronze and aluminum, Deln; several feet narrower than the challenger. nnd lighter, she nneils less sail to drive her, nnd has only about 11,500 square feet, a thousand HI. feet less than the Valkyrie. The Defender nost fully 20,000 more than the Vigilant The contract price was 75.&JO, But with the change and additional items the cost ,p proaohes f 100,000. This great cost has oome from the dciteate blending of copper and aluminum. The Defender Is totally unlike the Vigilant in that she has uo centreboard, but is an out and out keel boat. Her stabil ity is due to her lightness above water, and herthlrty-flve-foot lead bulb, weighing sixty tons. The total saving made 1 the use ot aluminum is estimated at seven tons. If the America's Cup were melted down and aold for old silver It would not bring more than SS. It cost, nearly half a cen tury ago. 525. It was not, as is general I v No Labor on Sunday, t The Secretary of the Interior, Mr. Hoks Smith, has ruled that fay cannot be givea for work done by department clerks on Bon day. -ie secretary reasons that a govern ment elerk has no more right to work on Sanday than a grocery clerk, and that the tJnited States cannot become a lawbreaker jby having mea to work on Snnday. The Order of Railway Telegraphers p.v to Its grand officers aloso 10.0j0 salaries each ver and feels that It gets the money back in peneurs. was )u...u. wj . iivjni kiii,iitji ,u, nuu given by tho America's owner to the Now and York Yacht Club, yet this little cup hns cost HANK HAFF. (Captain of the Dofeuder in all her races.) the twd Nations' quite $2,00fl,00rti America hss expended 900,000' of this to hold the trophy. , The Defender is hahdied bv rt genuine Yankee crew from "Down Eait,'1 under Cap tain Hank,JJ tff, rind, not as the Vigilant wn.i by a Crew o"f all Nation". The Valkyrie's oantains are Craaileld and Syo.tmore. Lord Diiuraven went on his boat in eaoh nice: and Mr. Iseliu was aboard the Defender The Uurresuqff. or Prlatol, B. I.j. are (he most fuuioui pinall boot builders In America, an I into thu De fender put the experience of years wit 1 the building ot other cup defendery. The history of the cup ra ing dates back to 1850. when Commodore Stevens, of the N-jw York Yacht Club orJered the America from George Steers, of New York, the first nnd one of the most famous of America's designer?. The America was a schooner, a two-master, while 'the defenders of to-ilav are oulv sloops. With a single mast.- Stevens took her broad Arid beat . everything in English waters In 1851, She was sold to au English man shortly after her epooh-makiu t victory, and was turned into rt blooka !e runner dur ing the CiVII War, tfhe fully I iu this, an 1 to escape capture was sunk iu the St. J.ihn's Biver. Florida.' After the war she was raised by the Government and put into commission as a training school for naval cadets. When the Cambria cane over to race for the oup in 1870, the America was an I com pl.l"C, wlillo refitted Ms it yacht peted, winning fourth tho Cambria cot onlv tcmu. Miie was finally sold to General B. F. Butler, of Bostou, an I is now In possession or his son Pau'. AU the defenders iu the races of 70, '71. '7 nnd '8t were vachls built for their owners', pleasure, w tli no idea of de fending the cud. The ilrst trial ra-vs t ) choose a'derender were held in 1SSI. Since then so much money has been spent on the yaohis that now they are merely racing machines, there b.dng scarcely auy uccommo lotions on binr.i. A reaction from this "machine" style of yacht is looked for beforo long. Here tiro the names of the ohnilengers: 1H70, Cambria, keel schooner; B. IIEHBESIIOFF. (Of the Herreshoffs, Bristol (B. I.) shipbuild ers, who designed tho Defender). 1871, Llvonlri, keel schooner, 1876, Countess of Dufferin (Canada's representative), center board; 1881, Atatantn, sloop, 18S5, Genestii cutter; iaa. Galatea, uttcr; 1S87 Thistle, outtor; 1803. Valkyrie, cultor. Up to this year only one race had over been won by a British yacht iu any of the serlis, that was by the Livonia iu 1871, when tli1 Columbia met with an accident, her place being taken bv the Sappho. It is only of late years that Uncle Sam h;ir gone into the building of yaubts expressly to defend the cup. Willi the Livouiii, Countess of Dufferin and Atnlanta were built expressly to capture the enp, they were easily beaten by the yachts built only for pleasure. The Counters of Dufferlu w.v Canada's brave but ill-starred effort to get the cup. It cost both countries a good sum in thousands, and sho made a most pitiable exhibition. Since the days of the Volunteer American yacht designing li undergone n revolution, and, compared with tho new class, the defenders of the 8r)'s- seem as an cient in tholr lines as at that time those of the 70's must nave appeared. The defenders have been: 1870, It. i gi eenterboard schooner; 1871, Sappho, keel schooner, and Columbia, eenterboard schooner; 1876. Madeline, eenterboard schooner; 1881, Mischief, sloop:' 18S5. Purl tan, sloop; 18S6, Mayflower, sloop, 1887, Vol unteer, sloop; 1893, Vigilant, sloop. DEFENDER WINS THE FIRST. She Led Valkyrie Nearly Eight Min ntes In Saturday's Races. In ths first of the sr.iies of international yacht races for the America's Cnp, on Satur day at Naveslnk Highlands, the Defender won by serea minutes and eighteen seconds, not including her time allows uea, The re sult was M follows: Defender won; time, S:.l SO; Valkyrie, 6:28:48. As both boats went over, steam whistles sounded for many minutes. 2,0e0 people, on the greatest flotilla that ver assembled off Sandy Hook, witnessed ths race, and there was a scene of hilarous joy when the Defender crossed the line fuliy two miles ahead ot Lord Dunra Tln's boat, the Valkyrie. Cover Your Cotton Well. J is well that our farmers should under stand that they will be required to pay mors attention to the covering of their c ,tton In the future1 than they have In the pat. The Liverpool Cotton Association, autocrat of ths cotton world, ha passed a resolution that after the expiration ot the coming season of 1895-96 all bales not packed in accordance with the regulations of the Maritime Con vention held in New Orleans last February, and the regulations of the Galveston Cotton Exchange, endorsed by the conference, es pecially so far as the weight, eloseoess of wearing, calendaring of Iwjging and weight and size of bands are concerned, shall be subject to a realty of a bale, or Bnch amount as ma; -i fn the opinion of the di rectors, provi toac.:en on delivery at liverftfoi. I thought, a cup offered by tho Queen, but I fr..M..l Lu i I,. ll.iiri.l Vul.t u I-.... NORTH STATE CULLINGS. INTERESTING ITEMS FROM . OVER THE STATE. ALL The Greensboro Cotton Still Purchased By Cone A Gatsdi tlie cotton tnill of the OreonsWo Co-opetatit6 Mill Company bits been purohasod by Cone k Oarsed, who will at oilco ctluip it with improved ltlrt- - chinory and will opwate it oh full time. There is Hot an idle mill in the- Btatej 6ate two reoently plircnased" which are to be te-eduippedi ' . . r Sliox Three Negroes: For several mouths A. P. Tanner, leader of the new sect of negroes'; has been preaching on the streets at Aabe vilJe doctrines which aronsed foeliDg nmonr; the negro population. Meetings protesting against Tanner Lave been held and Thursday night a mob of two hundred negroes wont to' Tanner's, preenmably to run him from the city. The Tuflneritea fired on the mob which returned the fire. Three negroes wer shot dangerously. - Big Tobacco Sales at Winston. Winston shipped 1(J47,7S5 pounds of manufactured tobacco during Au gust, an increase of 340,443 pounds over the same month last year. The stamp sales for last month were $68, 865.32, an increase of $20,426.56, over the same month last year. The sales of Jenf tobacco on the Winston market during August aggoegated 430,816 pounds, a decrease of 581,588 pounds below August, 1804, . ' Salisbury's Population. The census of Salisbury has been completed. The population of the' town within tho corporate limits is 4, G19. The cotton mills and other small villages juet outside the corporation raise the population to the grand total of 6,208. The census of 1890 gave the town (within the corporation) a. popu lation of 4,430, Salisbury has, as shown by this census, gained 10 pet cent, since that timet : A Capt. A. II. A. Williams Dead Capt A, H. A. Williams, ex-tiorl-grcssmau from the Fifth district, died at Chase City, Wednesday evening last. He had been sick for quite a while with Bright's Duease, and had gone to Chase City for he benefit of the mineral water, Heteemedto im prove siigutiy under f e treatmi there, tie naa a reiif ha aoa ciiea witnin a iew Tobacco Stiles a! During the month ol ii'in-ii w,t,?i ..JJimMVAr' Wilson 975,000 pounds $105,000. There were issued 8,1 checks to farmers, which represent as many loads of tobacco. These figures were reported at the meeting of tLn tobacco Board of Trade Tuesday night, and are correct. Many of Winston's and Salem's bus iness men are interested in the Eoan oke and Southern railroad, between Winston and Boanoke, Va. Many are now of the opinion that the Norfolk and Western, which leased tho road several years ago, will give it up by tho non-payment of interest .due on the bonds. It looks now like the Baltimore and Ohio will get control of the road . Two bales of new cotton were sold in Waxhaw on Thursday, bringing 7.90 and 8 cents respectively. The first bale on the Monroe market was brought in by Mr. J. R. Rollins. ' It weighed 520 pounds and was - sold at auction, boing purchased by the Monroe Cotton Mills for 9 cents. The crop is late and jyt very large at that " : The Clinton Democrat says that the decrease in land valuation in Sampson sines 1894 is $52,998. There are 18, 810 acres of land unlisted in 1895 and this will very nearly if not quite offset tho decrease. There is a deoreasein the total valuation of all property, ex cepting railroads, since 1894 of $61, 022. The Farmers' State Alliance has pur chased for $4,250 a large brick building at Cary, a village nine miies from Raleigh and in this will have its general offices and , business agency, e.'so a roller flouring mill and a shoe factory. - 4. farmer and bis wife, living a few miles northwest of Winston, canie near losing then lives last Saturday evening in their attempt to cross a swollen stream in a buggy. The vehicle was not pulled out until Sunday. A special from Fayetteville ; an nounces the sudden death there of John D. Williams, Sr. Mr. Williams had keen one of the most prominent business men of the State in mercan tile and banking circles. Nine, ten, twelve and thirteen thou sand dollars respectively have been the amounts paid out to farmers for to bacco at Rocky Mount during four of the beet sales days since the market opened. i The property listed for taxation in Buncombe county this year shows an increase of $546,560 ever 1 apt year, ag gregating $9,289,072. j Tremendous Rain In Baltimore. Baltimore was Visited oa 1 Friday by the he,ivi(t downpour of rain in twenty-five years. Starting at 3 o'clock in the morning, there wns !'ttle teesation until 6 o'clock at night, ana 4 7C incues Is the record ,of the precipitation. The sewers were Incap! ble of carrying off the vast quantity of ww that poured into them, and In I'lacea wi-h-outs and enve-ins r-- v One death, the rult it ' re ported. Mrs. Annie i son K-ere washed off the lit -ant Jones ialls at Mount flu voung man succeedd Ji. hut hw mother was drovt I IT , oOUn sims Is an Insane mAS; He Will lie Sent to the State Ilosplta at Sloigantoii. If lie Ever (lets Well He Will Be Trie J. Weduesdny morning early the court room at Charlotte was packed to hear I one of the most interesting cases ever tried here in tho Criminal Court. The question of interest was, "Is John Sims Insane at the present time?" It wi'l bo remembered" that he in the man who, iu a lit of anger, killed his wife near HulltefRVille Just July The first witileos pindod fl the Bland was his mother; She swore that he had beeh restless rind strange all his life. He was full of notiofl He would tako long tramps awiiy from home to Arkansas; Texa", cto. ' He would say that be had nd friouds and-; would tako poisons trt cnfflna life, lie' is an illegitimate child. His mother first noticed his peculiar mind when he heard of Garfield's 'atiaaseination he feared being hanged for it. His father was put on tho stand. He said: "He was unbalanced wliefl ft boy and is stiVjj Ho would kill .toads, harrow in oats the wrong way, and get mad easily and leave home." .Tie came Mr. Tbos. Stenhouse, who said that ho hud known .Sims all his life to be of a melancholy and despond ent nature. James Stetibouao was.. then placed on the ctund and said: "f lived with him lafct year and havo ki.own him since bojhood. He did peculiar things, such as go out in tlio woods und stay all night if he got vexed with anything. Once he cooked up ull tho brc id and meat ho had nnd gave it to his dog. When tho dog had caton to great re pletion and laid down, Hims "stretched out and 'laughed nt him, knowing that ho had not another mouth Tul , of breii. 1 to oat in his house. I once told to make 600 rails; lie cut enough timber to make 3,000 nnd sorao of the trees wf twisted and unfit for rails. He won ell mo that ho was not contenti 'd would go out in the woods Ami pVl' and complain of ghosts being pTiout his house. Ooco I was in his house when he was mak ing mush and a spark fell in it. He threw mush, pot and all into the yard and then threw the cat afte it. He always did his work well, taking much pains with it. I think him unbal anced. Then Dr, Wilder,, county superii tendent of health, who has bad to do with severnl insane persons, suid: "I am perfectly satisfied that Sims is an insane man. I do not believe that he is capable of making any defence at all. The state of his mind is such that he would not set up a defense. At 'fBi"1138 M seems sane, but when excited i j j t i right," other expert physicians testi- thft HftmA'4ine. Tt n-na than iajisjs insane. aver- ad Broad jiTsm. the head, but it grows si ed toiward the top. He weai colored mustache and his eyes are deep set and weak looking. In conrt he sat with his hands folded and his head resting on them never raising his head at all. Sims will bo sent to Morganton; if he gets we'll he will be put upon trial for his lifo to answer the charge of killing his wife. 'NORTH CAROLINA FACTORIES. The State Has Twice ns Many Cotton Factories ns In 1SJK). - The State Agricultural -Dcpai tiStit ot Raleigh isofted a specially valuaMu bulletin giving linta of all inaunf -tnr-i,n g .enterprises in North Carolina. Thpt portion of it which is of gre-itett inttretit is in regard to cotton mills. This shows that eleven mills nre now iu course of construction, that tho stock in cipht moro has been sub scribed anil that 119 nre now in opera tion, spinning or weaving. Bccidcs these, there are twelve kuilting mills, one silk mill, ono towel mill, four bog mills aud ono manufactory of sash rord nnd cording. Thero nre thirteen voolen mills in operation." Tho total of all is 192; Alamance county leads, having 22 cotton mills; 0 an ton has 21, Randolph 15 and Mecklenburg 13. There are mills in 41 of the 90 conn -t ics. There are reported 19,000 looms aud 756,000 spindles. Henry G, Hester, secretary of the New Orleans CoMon Exchange, has sci.t Oovornor Ourr tho following tel egram: "I congratulate you and tho people of North Carolina on her re nin ikable progress in cotton manufac ture. Slie ia now practically equal to South- Carolina, the largest cotton consumer in the South. By the actual census of mills North Carolina has consumed of tbij year's crop 227,000 bales, an increase of 55,000 over last year. She has new apindles which may be brought into play in 1895-'96 which, with fair trade condition, Bhoold increase her total to at least 250,000. In 1S90, Norih Carolina consumed 114,000 bales. So your State has prao tically doubled her cotton manufac tures within the past five years." Death From a Runaway Locomotive. At Brooklyn, N. T., one man died Tuesday morning, and thirty-four men and women and children lie in the hmritals suffering from injuries caused by a runaway locomo tive crashing in'-o a Coney Isiacd Excursion on tbe Hea beach Road on Monday. Several victim are likely to 1 so limbs. They are grave fears that they will n,-t survive opera tions, William A. Pointer, Kewark, N. J-,9 victim d'ed. Cotton Statistics for the Week. The Liverpool weekly cotton etiitisi i"B aie as follows: 8i!c, total 00,000; i!e Aneri. can 80,00D; trade takings 46,000; actual ex port 9,000; import total I2.0e0: Import American il.OWl: t'.k t-tai ,lsi.i.'ii.i; st'.r-v. ATi'Ti.-ati J.OSe.O'-); aOo.it, total 'i ! afloat, Amei-K-an 1 4.000; sales for sjwculaU.i.-i. S,W0; purchases for export 4,100. -m jtne !ck TllK DKIlT STATKMICFT. . Tho tsfiel f)eerenso Shown. A De crease Iu Both Gold and Silver. The debt statement issued fit Washington Shows a net lucreaso In tho pulillo debt less cash In the Treasury during August of J2, 815,418. The intepvrt-benring dobt Increased 210; the noh-lutorest lieafiftj 'lebt decreased 298,100 and cash in the Treasury dwensod 3,110,974. The balances of tho several classes of" debt the olose of biiHinccs Ailgust 81st, woro: Interest bearing debt 747,!l60,C10j debt on Which interest hna ceased since maturity W(50i debt benrint r.o lutcrcst 4377,069. Mh total 1(12G,!I;,1)47!. The conillcatca anil Treasury notes offset bt rtft e(jnnl amount of cjimIi in the Treasury at the end of the month worn w,siifii. Nil increase ot 1 20, 6H6.000, The total cash hi tlie Treasury was tHafl.930,8 15. Tlio gold rcScre Wne JlOO.uOOHJ.) Net cash balance .indiilf-ilie month thero was a decrease in gold i!olu nnd bars ol $5,94,1,13!), lite total at the nlose being 14'.l,410,9'.'fl. Of silver there was a decrenso of H,a'.)(l,K04. Of the surpltlf there was lu national bank de posit ries tl5,Bl7,5!f! ugalnut tlO.920,823 ut the end of the preceding mouth. ,v. August a .... . " Urantltv.ille, . " Trenton " Johnstons.... Ar C'blumtila. ... Lv Columbia. ... " Winnsboro . . " Ci enter " Hook Hill...,, C'hiirkitlo. ... " 1 an villi) " Klchmond.. Washington . " Haltlinoro. ... ' Philadelphia. 1 Now Ynrlt. ... Southbound. No SS No 0 Dally Daily N.i S7 Lally Lv.New Yorlc " Phitadolphla,.. llnltimore liV.Wnstiinston.... 12 Tint 7.) ft t.42 a 11.15 a t?.15nti 7i0 O; 4.:m p e.r p fi "ft n 0.-U a 11.13 aj 12.55 p 10.43 u Lv.Iiiviiuiond 12.55 p 12.05 a I Lv.DnnvlUe........ LvChar'otte..,.,,. Kooli Hill... ... " Chos'er " Winnsboro Ar.Columbla. ...... Lv. Columbia , " Johnstons " Trenton - " Oranitovtlle Ar. Augusta- 0.10 p I'D p n.M p r2.::5ni 1.11 u C.ID p 11.05 p 5 50 a 0.:6 a u.i p: 10 27 a 11.13 a 11.54 a l.oo p 1.87 p 8 10 p 8.2:! p S.45 P 4.16 V 1.14 a 2 20 a 4.8(1 a U a 0.41 a 7.IS a 8.03 ttl I.v.Columb'.a Ar Charles ton 7.00 n 11.10 a 4.(0 p e.oo p I.V.Columbia Ar.Savannah " Jaikionvllla 1.30 a 5.4: n 12.10 4 51 10.K0 n I BLEEPING car service. sfos. 87 and 88. AVashlneton and reslrn T.tmited. enmnosed of Pullman mm fuliman rate z.uu; no .ejeira ianv nHaahIii, riftrq lietween New Ynrli -Si-r o . .-'- K. ins, New lorn ana niempnis, vUleandhOTTaswArseua 11 coach between linn liurTi i i '"nl T 1 pining Car between Greensboro gomery. Kos. 35 and 88, United States Fast Mail. Pullman Sleeping Cars between New York, Atlanta and Montgomery, nnd New York and Jacksonville. Also has Sleeping Car between Charlotte and Augusta. No. 12. Bleeping Car Greensboro to RaV elgh. s No. 88, Sleeping Car Balelgh to GreoVs- birn. Tkrinffh tfabAtann ftAlAatnrinc.iMl.tattoalC to ell points. For rates' or information ap! ply to any agent of the Company. N. 3. O'BRIEN, Superintendent First pi. Vision, Danville, vs.. W. B. RYDEIt, Snferlntendent Second Di vision. Charlotte, N. C. W. H. GREEN, General Superintendent, Washington, D. C. W. A. TURK, General Passenger Agerl Washington. D.'O. I7hat B0BTHKRN RAILWAY CO. FT J TW'JlS ' rnifsra lime at olumblo Norlhtxiund, No I iliily XSili, 18D5. DailV Lv. Jacksimvllla... ., eil A Lv. Savannah.. .. . i . 10.41 Ar. Columbia 2.(3 a . js I,v Charlenton 0.03 .17?. Ar Columbia.., 10.15 p pjasaw ::::::: 1 . wbsouivsk .li.4i p W'P (IVearTV 'vi" a til p XlAttT OBSMVlR,-j6MonthsA iinii'a 400 a 4.4H u . " V " ....... 4 57 a 4.M a 6.0-1 p 1 1 Year ll, ::::::: :. l?3l ?.S5 wLTO.av.B, Month. A 7.. 0 n T.o a v ' i 1.40 a i M0a I2hu Fun Telegraphlc 8ervic, ftiWl large cbrpT-y 4.41 p 4-10 r g oo ' Ooreapondents. C '( . HTO pTniTr Best advertising medium betvecil waahlnj- I Z'.'.'.'.'.'. ll'.2J pliil i H.nfl a ton, n. C, and Atlanta, O. A. . . . I 301 n a.oo u -O.in a Address, OBSERVER, ' ' I" Q.ttal8.1ilal.Mp ' CIIARLOTTWsP STSSBSX. "X. Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants and Childr x. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor ftthftr Nfireotic substance. It for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and astoriJ. It Is Pleasant. Its guarantee Is thirty years' ns by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms aivi allays feverlshness. Castoria prevents vomiting Siir Curd, cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves teething troubles, cures constipation Jid flatulency. Castoria assimilates tho food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and itturai .-sleep. Cas toria Is the Children's Panacea' Mother's Friend. Castoria. . . . ,... Ji.l t. !, "Castona IS an eyecucm meuranc "r "' i.nxoame Attn. Mothers have repeatedly told me of "' known to , sood effect npoa their children." rr . l I UI1.4 I Da. G. C Osgosj, Ur- " ren of "Castoria Is the best remedy fay S Bot which I am acquainted. I BfT.-onsiderJ'-'' far distant when nothr- ; UP leallntereit of their cbiW instead of the variflu . v " are destroying tWrir .' cplutn, mot-phin too; " sending them to 7 i r . Tapnncso postilion whoso ioulei carry tlioni iuto the' country mm bicy cles, Their wheels are mudu l).y local maunfaolurei'R, who have appropri ated improvements from botii JJritittb and Japnneso mautifacttiroi . J lio Oidesi, i-'.i' At Uutliluhoin, Pn., Tctcr Rtycr.'i, said to bo the oldest engineer in tho country, who has been frequently honored by t!ie Brotherhood of I.oeoiMotlvo Engineers, died, aged 73 yearn. Ho run engines on tlio Lehigh Valley, iho Heading nuil Jersey Central linos, for forty-six years and never had an accident. Kailronilors have computed that Jio ran lo comotives i distance equivalent to forty, times around tho globe. J. F. HENDRETJ,. ATTORNEY AT LAW. ELKIW,N.C.' Practlues in tha State and Federal Courts and collects Claims. Insurance placed Id ttandard Companies upon Llbcial terms. V. ft-. UUUUssM 53 SnQE&TSSXSb ). CORDOVAN FRENCH 4, CNAMCUXD CALF.V VJ. rlNE. tALfiflKSiU. 3.5PPOLICE,3SOLESJ( EXTRA 19 , to i 7aDnvc'l V-1 -..T 1. mi-ig C3 n0S9 Sit: j cAVEATSJRAUtiv Innnrvvi COPYRIGHTS. ' CAN I OBTAIN A rATF.V-ror a Sromnt answer and an honest or. , a lte tor I IN N Ar CtO who have hud nefvrifty yen in' experience In the patent DQKinrjw Comninnica tlous strictly oonfldentlat. A linndbnnk of In formation concerning Patents and bow to ob tain them sent free. Also a catalogue of mechan ical and scientific books sent free. Patents taken throntro Munn ft Co. receive special notice iut6 Helen II lie America n. and litis are Drouirnt widely before tne pitMicwitn- mm i.o uio invenLor. j nis apiunaia nniKT, twucrrgccKir. eleRnntly Illustrated, ban by far 1 lie largest crTHltlation of any scientltlo work in tho world. S3 arcr- nanipia oonios aent free. Buildlnii KdittePi monthly, t50 a yoer. Blnate copies, 'J.fcenta. Tiyery number contains beau tiful plates, in oolorswand photOKraiihs of new houses, with plans, enaulmis ltuildcrs le stmw ths latest dnsiuns aud setmre cotltracta. Address MUNN Js CO, Nkw Yohk, iiwl BlieiUWlT. is ,(j.r- Is a harmless suDstixiu Castoria. .(-astorl s to well adapted to children that it as superior to any prescription H. A. Arcbe, M. E., 11 t Oxford St.. Brooklyn, N. Y. sicians in the children's rirpart i spoken hkbly of th-tr exp":i ir ontiide practice wiih Cps-o-:s. ' gb we enly tve gaiarg cur r-es vbst i known ss r- ' -: r t we are free to copies t'it t- a-toria feas wrn us to look w-:'h ,t." a xlosr-ntt. ajen r rp-st.v. ; 5m:ts, Pres. est, r.'ev Vest C ; ' .ssns 7aBk SK r I AJ t 3 - f ! ! L V SO
The Elkin Times (Elkin, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 12, 1895, edition 1
1
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