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the carolina watchman rt0l xxl-tiiird series salisbury n c thursday november 28 1889 piedmont ats-line route i s danville railroad 3 3 t s3d b0s3dtjlb "'.■. feci sept tf looi . ; -, j ; m eridian time ilj.ml.l s0u t sound n ., > .,,. am 1 3u 1 m j •- ; i uii p m 3 00 a m u t - ... •• 7 r 1 29 9 12 \ ■" p m i 46 •' 9 "" c m i i'll a m 7 30 a m i is '■: 01 •■m2 12 p xi 4 g it 1 •• f iii 12 32 '• m 23 a m jui •• 12 4 p m i 61 " z ■>■& b z6 " 4 is g ;,, a m m bo p 51 5 iu 9 0 ualli . northbound pm • am i p m a m 5 15 p m i 10 a m \ l i 1 p \| : - i m •: p m 12 - r p m i i \ m .• ; •; 1 - 40 ii iu ■• 112 34 \ m • ■r ■•.: 00 p m p m 5 2 • a m 7 0 j ■am •: 50 a m •- 50 1 m \ m !' 1 :-' 20 p m ! 50 a m i 13 '• 4 r •-, 6 :, \ m 10 47 i 20 p m . ■:■m arrives ■- i i p m ; henderson 9.2i ■■;. 3 i r . p i-i : kalelirii i i 00 p m ves 1 \. m : i mil nn , . ■. m ; oxford 1 i : kei - . !■_■-.;. p m i m , d.iu.v b ■: v.-.-ii hich . ■1 k --. hie 1 1 1 i-.-r ii hniond hill p 11 , - -. . k svllle i :-.">. \ m : re ■hi a.m nrrlv n : dur inl an 1 baltlmi re via y01 , x .,,,,. illi so r.n for i lie soul i ■born « lib t rain ■-. iup ..- ■-. ,--., ro for 1 1.1 eii ile nn x c hi - rains to and from t'lia el iltll sleeping-car sfrvice . 1 "•: . p iiim . d luffi ' sieepei . vori . to pi -) - ity ashevilli . and mor - m in r.urr.-t sleeper be i neworli • ■■■was ilngm 1 11 a na : !..■:.!: anil cnens -'..'. u ecu salisbury . i charlotte nrd augusta .-! oa s lie ai prlnc >..! si tl p ' ■. inj igeul of solh.\\s jas l taylor gen pass agen . w a tu^k ■ass acri nt kali igh n c bicbmond and danville railroad cc v n c division enger train schedule . ■may lhth 1sss train no last bound id no sew . 1 lelphia l ■<■< 11 li 10 03 a ill s 10 .... • :. tiburg 2 iii 1129 p.m g 15 a m iteidsville 1041 p in 11 4r a n 6 ;,.'. i 30 - ;.: tin ensboro a 50 p m 1 h 1 ml 5»uthnr ito *■> ' ? %—% taiwrttl • it il f m ctltflt i tt »• f«-|»i 8*7 hickory i it rennellj s irlafa 1 4c morjanton 4 30 • - uplne 4 17 : >'■m 1 2 44 3 13 knob 2 35 . mountain 2 00 ar ille 1 ':■> i-v ville 1 16 12 4'i v m m trshall 12 19 noon i i 40 a rr - sr rlllc 7 15 1 1 5 i m . svllle 7 0 p m 4 ii p.m p m st p ml a 00 p m •:. si i - l 111 - 25 p 111 murphy branch exi epl suxday traixxoit i air 450j).m 4rr waynesville .... 280 charleston l fl i5a ni jarretts lea e : u a & s road • \ epl sunday - ii traix sou : i . • spartanbitrp arrive 2 10 p m arrive riendersonville '•' r - s a m ashevllle leave mo llan time used to llni sprlnps .. west of hot springs - • • i washington & salisbury rlchniond-a oreensboro ]; uelgh v ••'■< ensboro knowiiio.v louisville salisbur a knoxville raylor i p a v a wini'.ll n act'ed p a tltt p 1 pt?t tnav ik foana en file a geo 1 ulo rtlrilix p v co-s kewsutyer i-iuk bur.-au 10 spruce st-1 when advertising .-, 1 luadc 1 .. :.. u v i absolutely pusre this n.v.ler nevei i iri -. amarvflol iur.tj strength and k'liolesomencff more economical c lrdlnnn klnrts - be 3old la onip ti inn wit in em<ililtiit n low tes ' - " : i pliospli ii lowciers si i ans itoy.u hakim powdkk co.,iot wallst n y for sale h biiildi in & co . young & bos tiaii an i x p mm pli . ip a body meet a boot the result is n collision whether coming thro the rye or not life is full of collis ions we are constantly colliding with some body or something if it isn't with our neighbors it is with some dread diseases that knocks ua off the track and perhaps dis ables us for life women especially it seems haw to bear the brunt of more collisions and afflictions than mankind in all cases of nervousness bearing-down sensations ten derness periodical pains siek headache . con gestion inflammation or ulceration and all '• ti-niaie irregularities and weaknesses iir pierce's favorite prescription comes to the rescue of women as no other medicine docs it is ti only medicine foi women sold by druggists under a positive guarantee from the manufacturers that it will give satisfaction in every case or money paid for it will be refunded see guarantee on bottle wrapper copyright 1888 by wobld's dis mep as-'.v or pierce's pellets regulate and cleanse the liver stomach and bowels they are purely vegetable and per fectly harmless one a dose sold by druggists 25 cents a vial d a atwell's hardware store where a full line of goods in his line may at win s he found isav n jo ; c a ' q-tw a22j | for sale by jno 11 enniss druggist kerb craige l l clemex1 craige & clement attorncvs a lrnxv salisbury x c feb 3rd 1881 : qr j c mccubbins sui'scou 3dci\tist - salisbury - - - n 0 office in cole hail line second floor next to dr i'am|>i.cll opposite d a auvdl's lirdware lore main plrect 9:1y subscribe fob the carolina watchman ja:k frost from over the hills with a breath of 1 atne from over the hills old jack frost came cam ■j soft'y that nohody knew till lie land a beautiful picture rcw liie elm leaves turned toa golden brown each willow was decked with a golden crown the thistle-down broke from its prbon cell , and the nuts from their clinging burs as well the maples flowed on the green hill-side and color ran wild o'er the country wide as over the hill with a breath of flame old jack frost the ice-king came /.'. s thomas in frank leslie's weekly tildsn's enemies what became of the senators : who counted tilde ou 1 . nov york star it is said that retrospect is not al ways pleasant but that it is alway ' profitable in an intellectual sense if this be true then it is well to look bal-k to an event in tin history of this nation that will always be fringed with black lines the result of the recent elections provokes me into recalling and telling the story that reverie brings up henry b payne the pres ent democratic senator from ohio who will next year give way for an fither democrat as the result of the recent political cyclone was one of the electoral commission which made rutherford p h.iycs preside t of the united state in speaking of thai work mi payne once said five hundred thousand men stood ready n march 4 1s7 to do battle to the death and tin seating of m haves saved as from an armed conflict of the most deplorable character as mr payne was the chairman of the com mittee that framed that electoral commission bill and was o:i the inside of tii events then agitating the whole country it is supposed that he knows what lie is talking about his posi tion as a man of the highest character makes his word accepted without ques tion how wonderfully then have we traveled since those days it is only twelve years ago and yet we are more than a generation in results away prom that dangerous condition outlined bv mr payne which was the outgrowth of the armed conflict be tween the sections after the first spasm of singer which the seating of 1 hayes aroused the country started toward a new and a better life that event laid the cornerstone of a new democratic temple which was so well built hat eight years later on it over shad i wed the republican barn well tacked with ears of experience and control again the democratic party has triumphed and its powers for the 1 future are so well defined by it that i am led to revive an old story yet one that should silways be kept new these reflections bring up some very appropri t thoughts of the conflict of 187g and 77 they were recalled to me to-day in a very forcible way some malicious man not having the fear of the lord before his eyos but being possessed bv the devil as the lawyers say in their indictments has ! seen tit to preserve iu enduring form : on a broad piece of parchment the '. signatures of the legislative executive : and judicial officers of the government in 1 s70 77 it is perhaps well that it iias been done for it will for all time call attention to an event in the his : tory of the nation that will forever stand to rebuke those who may in the future for a^imilar purpose feel like testing the temper of the people and of again stretching the powers of the i government almost to a breaking point it seems as though the republican i party began to decline from the mo ; nient it lent itself to chicanery for the : purpose of keeping itself at the head of affairs by elevating a weak and unde serving man to the highest office in the ! gift of the people to which he was : never elected naturally his admin : istration sowed the seed of discord that , ripened with the election of garfield : into an opened revolt that has never | vet been quelled even with the accident of harrison's election what wonderful changes have taken place in the legislative branches of the | government since those days the ! chart upon which 1 am looking bear ing the signatures of e-'.ch and every member of both houses of congress : tells a most remarkable story and one that men both in public and private | life may read with profit the com i plexion of the senate has been radical ly changed since those days and the devastation in the house has been even more marked when we come to take into consideration the number of its members it is astonishing to note them to-day after the recent tetrible defeat of the republican party where it should have won perhaps the sen ate is the best pb.ee to ! egin to illus trate the ravages time and political re venges have made among prominent men some reminiscences of the per sons who were ill the focus of the mighty contests or those year and made their records for good or bad as each of us m y make a gauge of their conduc will not it seems to me be amiss at this moment the first name o.i the roll to follow that of i . s grant is not very assur ing it is that of thomas w ferry who sign himself as vice-president and presiding officer of the se late he declared hayes elected he was and is a weak man and in those trying times it took the best and bravest of hi party to bolster him up to the final duties if declaring the result as the electoral commission had found it for him lie was then a senator from michigan and reputed to be a wealthy man he failed in business s-jon after and was beaten for re-election after ward he wi nt to europe and was pra tiiallv an outcast from the country < his birth and upon whose history 1 has made the impress of some question able acts for several years he has now returned to grand haven on lake michigan and is a country postmaster talk al out time setting all things even ! old senator christiancy was his col league then but he resigned in a close bargain with president hayes so a to allow bluff and hones zach chandler to be elected to the senate chris tiancy got a mission to south america - e price of his resignation but he did not remain there long he re turned to this country in serious trouble with the young girl he had married in washington she was a treasury clerk and lie a senator an unfair match and she g.it the worst of it she died after years of heartburn ings and scandal he still lives at lansing mich in those days george e spencer and g goldthwaite represented the state o alabama in the senate spencer after his term expired married an actress known as may netinez and became a mine speculate r in nevada now he is called a political tramp he really never had any residence in alabama and when his life its a carpetbag senator ended he drifted west goldthwaite was a curious old character who looked a good deal like the pictures of a coun try parson you find in comic almanacs he wore a pair of gold-rimmed specta cles always down on the tip end of his nose and was so absent-minded that he would pay his carfare every time the conductor passed him between his boarding house and the capital they used to have to tell him when thesen ate had adjourned he is now on the golden shore the state of arkansas was then represented by stephen w dorsey and powell clayton dorsey was in those davs a very prominent man in the re publican party and was a still more prominent one iu tin 1 moral cam paign when general garfield was elected president dorsey has a ranch now down in new mexico having es caped the clutches of the law bv an accident but spends most of his time in new jf ork as a promoter pow ell clayton is still browsing around in i politics but has no place in the high lite 4)1 the republic five years ago a negro beat him for chairman of the national convention put he makes money out of eureka springs in his state and he still has some influence newton booth and a a sirgent were then in the senate from califor nia they were simply two pliant republicans sargent was a much stronger man than booth although the latter had a good deal the most polish booth has gone back to san francisco ■and sargent after having been minis ter to berlin was two years ago bea'en for re-election to the senate by leland jerome b chaff e and henry s teller then represented colorado chaffee who was a power in party management for several years is dead teller was secretary of the interior under arthur and is back in the sen ate connecticut had two democratic senators in those days — w w eaton j j and w h barnum two republi cans now sit in their places eaton has been in the lower house since then but is now in private life living | at hartford barnum remained a ; great figure in his party as the head of j the national democratic committee i but died soon after cleveland was beaten delaware had bayard and s.tulsbnry in the senate then mr bayard has been secretary of state since and has just taken unto himself a new wile ! saulsbury was beaten last year by a i republican george gray and au j thony higgin are now the senate ' florida had jones in the senate then ( he got crazy over a girl and is now in ! detroit looking after her s s con over its republican member in 1870 i has gone back to his original business ( as a doctor and is now in florida i for several years after he left the sen ' ate lie occupied a minor position in the ! ' marine hospital service at phil.tdel ; phia that gave him just about money ! enough to keep himself and family from want he was simply picking up the threads of his old life in the ai my from georgia there was then gen eral j b gordon and t m norwood both democrats gordon is now gov i ernor after a few years of effort to get 1 rich developing bis native state nor wood went back home when his term expired kicked out of the democratic . party he ran as an independent caudi-j date for governor and was defeated he then wrote some novels but is back again in congress ben hill suc ceeeded him in the senate and after a i few yers of brilliant service died from cancer of the tongue general logan was then in the sen ate from illinois and had for his col league dick oglesby who has since been governor of the state the first is dead and the latter looking for new honors j e mcdonald and 0 p morton represented indiana and about equally divided the honors in intel lectual power the latter died some weeks ago but mcdonald still lives in indianapolis allison and wright were from iowa wright quit politics in disgust at the end of his term because he preferred | the law but allison is still there james m harvey a dull ordinary i man with lug ills,.was therefrom kan j sas harvey gave way to an ordinary | plumb who got rich in railroad specn j lations he is now there and so is j who will not remembr that curious : old character t c mccreery of ken tucky he was the laziest yet one ol e most brilliant men in the senate e never opened his mouth except to ite only when a senator died or then is some unusual occurrence to arons m from indifference then he alway oke with power and in the choicest nglish he had for a colleague j i stevenson now dead there is a difference between these two men he past and beck and bluckburn tucky's present representatives in senate 1 the days of which i am writing isiana was represented alone by .!. vest that state had not bee instructed then and there was a ' decided quarrel going on over the mt senatoiship and the status ot state generally it was perhaps worst of all the examples of the petbag era west was put out at end of his term and was made a lmissioner of the district of colum and still lives in washington he state of maine perhaps shows most wonderful changes of them hannibal hamlin and james g blaine were then its senators while hale and five the present senator were in the lower house old mr i has retired from politics and s up in bangor on the peuob er the silent observer of cur nts blaine still has his hand rigger land had w p whyte and r dennis for senators during es contest whyte was beaten ection by a p gorman wl red so prominently for the nt s every campaign since has since been mayor of bait id now lives there quietly prac iw dennis who was there n is dead e s bontwell and dawes rep massachusetts in those days er holds on while bontwell is o make a living practicing law epartments at washington am windom of minnessota s a most creditable senator be irfield's secretary of the treas 1 is there again with harrison j frozen out politics in his own y sabin the lumber mm in he quit public life in 18s7 . cockrell and lewis b bogy lnocrats then spoke for mis j bogy was a curious character j from one of the old french i that settled st louis and is tad while the breezy george ts in his place general cock • i holds on wonderful changes that have lace in the senate within the elve years can be seen from the it in the days when a president sted by a commission b k : nd j l alcorn represented ppi they were both repnbli | id bruce the same colored man j is register of the treasury . rthur revels of mississippi first negro who sat in the sen . bruce was the socend both were exceedingly creditable itatives of their race alcorn ! l.in of means and fair ability ; jw a planter in the state he then represented i.i the senate iaska had a s paddock and p j hcock both republicans both aten for re-election but paddock back last year by a com prom i.-e iestive sharon who was in the i from nevada at this time was ver in his seat john p jones , r one always attended to his l and lias been returned ever j both were republicans sha ut the greater part of his time j ney in law suits with his various j es then died the recent death j e terry was an outcome ot u i s i has been a great change from i ampshire b wadleigh and raign have both been passed their constituents the former iston practicing law while oid agin was not long ago employed patent right business when j re in the senate trying to help into the presidency f t fre rsen who was arthurs secre ritate was the republican sen m new jersey t p rai .- j i democrat was his colleague re now dead le list of signatures of men who the united states senate i i ipe ar those of roscoe conklingl nucis kernan as representatives the state of new york the n of these two names recalls the that was begun with mr conk march 4 1 which ended n racism by g irfield and sua iwal fronj politics erua|i was succeeded by a republican and now lives'at his home in utica enjoying his declining days in per.ce and quiet m w ransom and a s merrimon both democrat represented north carolina merrimon irive place to governor i i vance and general ransom is still there a g thnrman and john i sherman represented ohio until sh^r ! man vv hs called into mavos cabinet < after v rions changes sherman is back < in tin s u ite again while thnrman ■after b ing a candidate for vice i president remains in private life i and always will from choice j h i mitchell republican and j h kelly < democrat represented oregon kelly s is out of the senate and mitchell was for a long time a sort of a railroad law yer about washington he is now , back again . ii change in pennsylvania's | itiou in the senate since those ; ieii simon cameron was there , his of his party's success as , le william a wallace was as , d unvarying in his support of , icracy cameron got tired of . iring the dreary alid monoto j cs administration resigned . his sou don in his place al lace's term expired by a le party which mr blaine . john j mitchell ljot in but ii mr wallace's place be . 5 to j i iay poor old general and u b antony who were n rhode island are both dead ' eison who tried to steal the 1 f j robertson also a re were there from south caro ! atterson lives in pennsyl d robertson has fallen out of rely 1 m key and henry democrats represented ten cooper was murdered and j y after making a failure as | er-general under hayes set n in tennessee as united , itlge m c hamilton a re was then general ri b max ague from texas hamilton never of much account has ; ice to the democrat coke nown as the texas steer '. edmunds and j ri morrill ators from vermont then as now and will likely be as long ive ains for \ irgini i to illustrate est change of all general r irs and 1 w johnston of the i 1876-77 were succeeded bv mahone and h h riddleber acted with the republican l.ih-me gave the senate to the ans four years after withers istou wrote their names on ter from which i am drawing snees of the wonderful changes e taken place in the highest e branch of the government and daniel now speak for g davis who at the same resented west virginia has , and is making his millions muel price who was then his colleague is dead keijna and faulk ii their places howe from wisconsin after ostmaster-geiieral has been his final account and angus . who was with him in the i ist'5 has quit politics for ' the seventy-five senators who ed the senate of the united hen mr hayes was made t and the democratic party by same injustice was started on toward the election of grover 1 only eleven will now answer ii call sixty of them have their final political rest the the south shows that recon was made complete by the 1 that put mr hayes into the v and there are many who ' , dear as the price was it was oest that it should have been is impossible without going name carefully as i here ie to appreciate what n great revolution has been g'>ing on a vision rechjflcal ki ccation iking of what the state of irolina is d ling for her boys ' ■is leaving her gh s to tight ies alone and unaided a sort of i it were came across our mind j is such a sad one that we can in from telling it uigined that we saw a young a vouug woman both without pproach the state house and its portal they were met at shold by a ljre.it dignitary n the purple robes of state i them their mission sadly h told him that they were with ation and without the means ling it ; the young man was nd robust wnile the girl was the great slate dignitary the young man warmly by the 1 p liuting him to the grand ty told him to enter there its wide open doors and be ed nd trained and fitted for his i or if he preferred he could go tadel in charleston and be there all at the ritate's ex • listening to all this the eyes lir young girl sparkled with 1 expectancy but alas for hu ies the great state dig»itary o her and iu tones of affected sympathy and tenderness told her that he was sorry but the state could do nothing for her but that she would have to look out for herself as the best she could that the state could not aid her girls in preparing themselves for the battle in life that she proposed to give hei boys the best training pos sible for the different avocations but could do nothing t aid her girls in obtaining instruction in the industrial nts and sciences he told her how ever in a sort of apologetic tone that if she could manage to get an educa tion herself and then wanted to be ouie a teacher she might possibly get » year's scholarship in the winthrop training school a few years afterwards this young man seeks a position in the industrial pursuits or wishes to establish himself n a chosen profession and he goes irrned and equipped with the state's reat professors the young woman is forced to make her own living and seeks from place to place without suc cess all the industrial avenues of life lire closed to her for she has not been trained and equipped everywhere she seeks employment but is forced away by the young man the state has educated and trained in dispair she goes away ; the bright sun of life sets almost be fore it has arisen her brain is on tire he reel and falls and those who come to pick her up pity her the state dignity passes along and miya poor girl never once stopping to think that the frail creature has been literally killed up by the state's injus tice.—sw/m^rfer ad ranee this not only apply to south caro lina but its truth conies down upon this state like an avalanch crush ing down all opposition in its way our girls need the anvantage of higher technical education as much us tho boys and youth of the state our state should not pause with the agri cultural & mechanical school foryoung men at raleigh but pursue the good work thus begun and prepare an insti tution on a broad liberal and econumicul basis yet of such thoroughness as tu admit of technical instruction iu all the industrial arts suited to the physi cal capacity of our girls every con sideration of reason demands that some such liberal course by the state bo taken for the young women of the country o ir state is becoming dotted over with factories of all kinds and much of the tedious labor is erformed by girls and women who have had no training and who have gone to work for almost nothing until the dull rou tine of the task assigned ia accomplish ed when they can begin to draw fair compensation for their time there are thousands of things to which they could turn their attention if their hands had only been trained for the purpose on the farm butter and cheese making are works of art - - the product increases in price solely on the management or make at the farm the materials in each instance cost ex actly the same well made butter for instance is worth from 2o to 85 cents while the same material may he used or misused so as to command only lot 20 cents per pound the difference ill price is the difference between success an 1 failure but this ia only an in stance there are ways without number in which the girls may be trained so m to become independent and in the heart of every true woman there is that longing that one supreme ambi tion to become independent and to lean upon her own exertions for th n.-eessities uf life the more one con templates the advantages of such edu cation th niore arguments bubble tip in it favor to our salisbury people this fatter should be of supreme interest we have the climate a central healthy lo cation cheap living and a large agri cultural und manufacturing country adjacent our people should think thi matter over and if state aid through the legislature cannot be obtained then let the municipality take hold and b gin in our graded schools kaieigh has sent the superintendent of her graded schools to various educational centr.-s for the purpose of getting die best information on the subject rd manual training iu common chools it is quite probable that kaleigh will become the pioneer in this work but there is no good reason why salisbury should not follow suit in k good a cause what do the teachers in our graded schools think of the subject of course we mean as applied to male and female pupil in the common nchoola of the towns the idea of having an old slipper especially made to order to throw after a bride appear to lie a new ork fancy no &
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | Carolina Watchman |
| Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
| Date | 1889-11-28 |
| Month | 11 |
| Day | 28 |
| Year | 1889 |
| Volume | 21 |
| Issue | 6 |
| Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archivial image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was |
| Creator | [J. J. Bruner and T. K. Bruner] |
| Date Digital | 2008-12-29 |
| Publisher | [J. J. Bruner and T. K. Bruner] |
| Coverage | United States, North Carolina, Rowan County, Salisbury |
| Type | Historic Newspaper |
| Source | Microfilm |
| Format | JP2 |
| Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive |
| Description | The Thursday, November 28, 1889 issue of the Carolina Watchman a weekly and semi weekly newspaper from Salisbury, North Carolina |
| Rights | Public domain |
| Language | eng |
| OCLC number | 601553895 |
Description
| Title | Carolina Watchman |
| Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
| Date | 1889-11-28 |
| Month | 11 |
| Day | 28 |
| Year | 1889 |
| Sequence | 1 |
| Page | 1 |
| Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archivial image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was 5310359 Bytes |
| FileName | sacw16_18891128-img00001.jp2 |
| Date Digital | 12/29/2008 8:30:32 AM |
| Publisher | Hamilton C. Jones |
| Coverage | United States, North Carolina, Rowan County, Salisbury |
| Type | Historic Newspaper |
| Source | Microfilm |
| Format | JP2 |
| Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive |
| Description | An archive of the Carolina Watchman a weekly and semi weekly newspaper from Salisbury, North Carolina |
| Rights | Public domain |
| Language | eng |
| FullText |
the carolina watchman rt0l xxl-tiiird series salisbury n c thursday november 28 1889 piedmont ats-line route i s danville railroad 3 3 t s3d b0s3dtjlb "'.■. feci sept tf looi . ; -, j ; m eridian time ilj.ml.l s0u t sound n ., > .,,. am 1 3u 1 m j •- ; i uii p m 3 00 a m u t - ... •• 7 r 1 29 9 12 \ ■" p m i 46 •' 9 "" c m i i'll a m 7 30 a m i is '■: 01 •■m2 12 p xi 4 g it 1 •• f iii 12 32 '• m 23 a m jui •• 12 4 p m i 61 " z ■>■& b z6 " 4 is g ;,, a m m bo p 51 5 iu 9 0 ualli . northbound pm • am i p m a m 5 15 p m i 10 a m \ l i 1 p \ : - i m •: p m 12 - r p m i i \ m .• ; •; 1 - 40 ii iu ■• 112 34 \ m • ■r ■•.: 00 p m p m 5 2 • a m 7 0 j ■am •: 50 a m •- 50 1 m \ m !' 1 :-' 20 p m ! 50 a m i 13 '• 4 r •-, 6 :, \ m 10 47 i 20 p m . ■:■m arrives ■- i i p m ; henderson 9.2i ■■;. 3 i r . p i-i : kalelirii i i 00 p m ves 1 \. m : i mil nn , . ■. m ; oxford 1 i : kei - . !■_■-.;. p m i m , d.iu.v b ■: v.-.-ii hich . ■1 k --. hie 1 1 1 i-.-r ii hniond hill p 11 , - -. . k svllle i :-.">. \ m : re ■hi a.m nrrlv n : dur inl an 1 baltlmi re via y01 , x .,,,,. illi so r.n for i lie soul i ■born « lib t rain ■-. iup ..- ■-. ,--., ro for 1 1.1 eii ile nn x c hi - rains to and from t'lia el iltll sleeping-car sfrvice . 1 "•: . p iiim . d luffi ' sieepei . vori . to pi -) - ity ashevilli . and mor - m in r.urr.-t sleeper be i neworli • ■■■was ilngm 1 11 a na : !..■:.!: anil cnens -'..'. u ecu salisbury . i charlotte nrd augusta .-! oa s lie ai prlnc >..! si tl p ' ■. inj igeul of solh.\\s jas l taylor gen pass agen . w a tu^k ■ass acri nt kali igh n c bicbmond and danville railroad cc v n c division enger train schedule . ■may lhth 1sss train no last bound id no sew . 1 lelphia l ■<■< 11 li 10 03 a ill s 10 .... • :. tiburg 2 iii 1129 p.m g 15 a m iteidsville 1041 p in 11 4r a n 6 ;,.'. i 30 - ;.: tin ensboro a 50 p m 1 h 1 ml 5»uthnr ito *■> ' ? %—% taiwrttl • it il f m ctltflt i tt »• f«- »i 8*7 hickory i it rennellj s irlafa 1 4c morjanton 4 30 • - uplne 4 17 : >'■m 1 2 44 3 13 knob 2 35 . mountain 2 00 ar ille 1 ':■> i-v ville 1 16 12 4'i v m m trshall 12 19 noon i i 40 a rr - sr rlllc 7 15 1 1 5 i m . svllle 7 0 p m 4 ii p.m p m st p ml a 00 p m •:. si i - l 111 - 25 p 111 murphy branch exi epl suxday traixxoit i air 450j).m 4rr waynesville .... 280 charleston l fl i5a ni jarretts lea e : u a & s road • \ epl sunday - ii traix sou : i . • spartanbitrp arrive 2 10 p m arrive riendersonville '•' r - s a m ashevllle leave mo llan time used to llni sprlnps .. west of hot springs - • • i washington & salisbury rlchniond-a oreensboro ]; uelgh v ••'■< ensboro knowiiio.v louisville salisbur a knoxville raylor i p a v a wini'.ll n act'ed p a tltt p 1 pt?t tnav ik foana en file a geo 1 ulo rtlrilix p v co-s kewsutyer i-iuk bur.-au 10 spruce st-1 when advertising .-, 1 luadc 1 .. :.. u v i absolutely pusre this n.v.ler nevei i iri -. amarvflol iur.tj strength and k'liolesomencff more economical c lrdlnnn klnrts - be 3old la onip ti inn wit in em |
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