Newspapers / The Wilson Advance (Wilson, … / Sept. 5, 1889, edition 1 / Page 2
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The Wilson Advance. JOSLl'Iil SsiikI ('.,I)AMELS, Editors :iu1 I'roprietors, rVYhn Ai'V M-i:-wli'Hiirs to wn tion t, faithful nut mi inn i nil vlironUMi-r of the Hewn, .l.-.iiiu Hpoi nil intention to the section n which ii i.s Vinli.-luil. IMS Democratic to the for nn.t lil upare neither friend or foe who is in lin-iuity tn DenKHMRtic success. It believe the lust interest of the Na tion '"i.l tho Suite imperatively demands the r irntt"n of the Democratic party in pow ! will spare noctrort to accomplish thai i ( will seek to promote the itl- dint r i : i . lopmcut of the Main and section and ni i:i'e i-u it- in doitiL' whatever lies tn its p ..i i ; ',1 tln fanners and laboring ai.rn In their i llorts lo t etter their condition. Svorvhonoi-t s in ol toil will find in the AD VANCE a sincere friend. Kvery effort looking to tho eslaiilismnenl-of more ami better edu CHtionnl insimit nuts will receive our hearty oo-npcralH'ii mi I 1 mlorsenieiil. The Ahvasi k crciilntes lareely tn every rounty l-.u-t t il;iieii.'ii, fnn is tnererore Dlendid ilw . . resins metli inn. Katea liberal. A llrst-i ; i .ioiioili c is run In connection Willi tin' iM.vrund w,i will be pleased to n eeive or i' i i- i ur ni'iee is "no of tho heat euiilpped i'i ll.is section of tho State for com niereiai w-.rU mid wo will do as Kood work and at aa low li-rnn s us anvoudy. Knti as sec. red ii. i he 1' st OIHco at Hid chlss mail matter. Wilson. N.C. Wilson, N. ()., Sept.. 1889 Tin: Trusteed of the Univer sity have clfCterT Prof. W. E. Cain as-' I'rofeor eft Mathe matics. Tin: man who has no usa for any one who does not agree with 1 a i ii is either a fool or a tyrant. Tin; Trustees of the Agricul tural ami Mechanical College have elected Col. A. Q. Holli day president" of that institu tion. I If is li t present presi dent of :i. similar institution in Florida. He lias two elements of success he is not a North Carolinian and he has experi ence. We hope the Trustees have elected the right man and judged by what the papers say there ran he but little doubt of it. "Wk are pa ined to learn of the death of .Mrs. Julia Jackson Christian, wife of W. E. Chris tian, editor of the Charlotte Democrat,which sad event oc curred Saturday in Charlotte. She was the only daughter of Gen. T. J. ("Stonewall") Jack pun, and was known and loved by our whole Southern people. Iler remains were taken to Lexington, Va. , Sunday and in terred. To brother Christian we extend our sincere condo lence. Tin; hardest worked human or animal that treads the earth is the average farmer's wife. Her life is filled with few pleasures, while the pain she suffers and the work she does would kill nino men out of ten. It is killing the women, too. It saps all the color from their cheeks. It deprives them of the elasticity of step and makes them prematurely old. It makes beasts of burden of them instead of making cotnpauions and luli jtjyits (in a broad sense) out of these delicate creatures. ! At the meeting of the Board of Health last Monday Dr. R. W. King was elected Superin tendent of Health for the en suing year. Dr. Nathan Ander son, the retiring official, made a most worthy and efficient one. He ably and conscientiously uiscuargea me auiies incum bent upon ths office and has the thanks of our people. Dr. King will have'to keep wide-awake to sustain the excellent reputa tion ot ins predecessor. That he will do this the Advance doubts not, for he is a physi cian ot experience and skill and a man whose popularity is un surpass! in Wilson. He will do his duty faithfully and satis factoriiy. THE I1TT2RITAL REVENUE. The Advance has never fav ored the repeaj of the internal revenue tax because it objected to taxing the liquor and tobac co. Our reapon for opposing the-system and along with the system as a necessary conse quence, tli tax has always been that it demoralized and degraded the men who came under its operations. . It is a sneer impossibility to distill liquor except a man use his own fruit or corn or rye, and make money out of it, we've been informed by men who know the business. It is an open secret that the men who make the money out of the -business are the men who vio late the law are the men who bribe the revenue officers. It is this demoralizing and de- grading business that causes us to say away with the whole in fernal system. Its blighting hand has wrecked many a life and we believe the whole sys tem tdiould be done ajivay with.' A 23ASD oTtRADE. Freight rates have recently been reduced twenty per cent, at Kaleigh aud Durham. These towns enjoy the blessings of competition. If Wilspn pro poses to go forward as she can, her citizens must secure, by some means, better freight rates. Another line would be of vast advantage to our people. Freights would be lowered ; losses would be promptly ad justed and the officers of the road (including even depot agents), would be more accom modating and polite. The Ai vanck proposes an organiza tion of our businessmen to look al'Jer this question and others that concern the welfare and progress of Wilson. We are on the threshold of the most pro gressive period in the history of the town, we believe, and our business men must do their ut most to speed the time. What say our business men to organizing a I'.oard of Trade, who will devote itself to any thing tha t promises good to the town ? Let ns hear from you through these columns next week. The time hns com" lor ac tion. "Vl-, -p is a tn!,' in the alt'uirri if inn:. iiii.li, tul.en in lh(i Homl, k'Uilsou j loiUii uini in faiiie." SENSATIONALISM. -The desire for notoriety ap pear! to be the craze of the age. A fellow by the name of Gra ham swam over the Niagara Falls a few, days ago for the purpose of seeing his naraa herald all over the country as the most dar ing fool of the age. Every day men Piid women of all classes and conditions are do ing and saying that which will cause people to talk about them merely for the purpose of becoming famous even though it i is infamous. The desire to be known to become famous inspired Sullivan and Kilrain to fight the "mill that has caused them both trouble since. This eame de grading desire to be known of all men and to be remembered differently ifrom other men, makes editor Shepherd, of the New York Mail-Express, put at the head of his columns each issue a quotation from the ' Bi ble and then denounce and abuse the people of the South with a venom and hatred that is not surpassed save possibly by one eminent North Carolin ian. A low, grovelling spirit prompts these men to seek notoriety and the press is the great means by which their ambition is gratified. The newspapers pander to their wishes and they do so because tne people who buy newspa pers desire that they should Such evidences of the taste of those who read speaks not well for our people. A higher type of newspapers could do much to stamp out this spirit The press has a great power it is largely responsible for the development of the depraved taste that the people appear to possess on these questions hat we need is newspapers edited by men of character men of brains whose first and central object is to publish newspapers that shall make those who read ,themnobler and better. We need newspapers of character and life not dead moralistic ' corpses. One rea son why newspapers that en deavor to build up the tastes of the people are not read more is that they are usually .edited by men whose brains went to sleep twenty i years ago ana have not woke up yet. We need live newspapers. FREIGHT BATES. Suppose Wilson could spend titty thousand dollars and thereby secure a competing ! line of Railroad which would leave fifteen thousand dollars Bere each year that now goes to the Railroads. TFould it not be the part of wisdom to make that expenditure ? The Ad vance believes it would. We believe a competing line of Railroad would save to the people the men who sell the cotton and tobacco and who buy clothes, provisions or any thing else- far more than fif teen thoasand dollars. We must have cheaper freight rates for W ilson and if we cannot get them in one way we must in another. The people of Wilson have paid the Wilmington Ar Weldon Railroad moje enough in the past five years in freights over and above what cempeting points pay, alone, to have built a narrow guage road from here to Tarboro. Freight rates have recently been lowered, atal most every point in the State save Wilson. All these towns are more highly favored than we. The Lord helps those who help themselves and the Rail roads in this particular, pat tern at ter the Lord. OHIO DEMOCRATS. The Ohio Democrats do not propose to "cut" any "backstep.". They have nominated James E. Campbell for Governor and adopted a platform which is squarely and unequivocally for tariff reform. They propose to fight it out on that line and good "Democrats everywhere will wish them Godspeed. Foraker the miserable South hating wretch, who appears to carry the Republican party of that State in his back pocket is the Republican candidate for Governor. II is stock-in-trade is the oft' waved and bespattered "bloody shirt." The people are tired of that old garment and we hope they will have the manhood to say so by electing ACampbell and thereby declar ing their change of faith to the only hoijest doctrine of tariff for the actual needs of the gov ernment only. ' , NEIGHBORHOOD SCHOOLS- ' The public school is the ground-work of edacation in the country it must he so in the very nature of things. We must have better schools in every school district in the State and the way to accom plish that end is by making the public school the basis of our neighborhood schools. If the people who have children to educate and who are able to do so, in each school district, would ' co-operate with the School Committee, there are very few districts iu the State where agoodschool might not be run eight or ten months in the year. The thing that we need is the hearty co-operation of the people , of every neighbor hood.. Whenever that need is supplied, education will be at the very door of every child in the State. We have received the first num ber oi thej Wilson Institute Mes senger, puphshed monthly by Prof. Silas E. Warren in the interest of tl.f Collegiate Institute. It is an eiTu',trioual journal and will dicuss education iu its various phases. We wish it success. WILSON TOBACCO. The Advance believes the farmers of Wilson county have source of much money in their reach in the tobacco lands of the county. There is no soil in North Carolina that will produce better tobacco than will much of the land in this county, and as a consequence our people are raising the weed. They have trone about it right, too. They did. not neglect tneir other 'crops for its cultivation, but they work ed a little harder and cultiva ted a few acres. They have, many of them, mads tobacco that will bring them in several hundred dollars as the result of a few acres. This is the way they should have done. There is as little sense in rais ing all tobacco as there is in cotton. We hope every farmer who can raise a few acres of tobacco will do so next year. The town of Wilson is destined to be a tobacco, as well as a cotton town. FROM CAST ALIA. A Batch of Interesting Items From our Regular Cosrespondent. CasTAlia, N. C, Sept 1st, 1 88'.). Editor Advance : The farm ers are busy saviug fodder aud cur ing tobacco, there being some of the finest bright tohacco ever be fore maup. They are thronging to Henderson, which claims the cake as the champion market for fancy prices, a:id sends the Nash boys home with heavy purses, al though thousands upon thousands of dollars of our money are left with the Henderson merchants, an nually. I hope some day to see a home market established that will come to stay, for the area is not only increasing in our borders bat our eastern sisters are emulating as, and It is high time that men of money and experience were sternly fixing their minds to have a mar ket that will vie with Henderson, Oxford or Raleigh. I heartily concur with "Occasionally," of your county,in attempting to infuse new life into the minds of improved cattle breeders. Nothing could engage the thoughts of Alliauce men Detter than improving their stock. Messrs. T. R. Braswell and R. H. Ricks each has a herd of registered Jerseys. They are wealthy planters and say milk and butter pays better than cotton. They will doubtless have fine ex hibits of Jerseys at the Rocky Mount Fair. We are in need of a good school at this place. We have a high and healthy locality, and there are many children who ought lo be educated. I hope the older heads will look into this matter and go lo work to secure a good and com petent teacher for the coming year. Our public roads are greatly neglected and remain in a rouen and deplorable condition all the year. Not a single overseer has reported to the Supervisors accord ing to law. I am greatly in favor of good highways and hope the day is near when the roads will be in a much better condition than now. l found many people from all portions of the county yesterday at iNashville. Messrs. Braswell, bmilh, Barnes, Westray and btricklaud, our'excellent Board of Commissioners, were at their post looking after the best interests of the county. tjrops throughout the entire county are short, especially corn and cotton. " Plai v Tot. Just a Pointer, .The Call says hay made two miles from the city was sellina in Raleigh for 81.00 per hundred last Friday morning. The farmer who sold it has received $200 for what he .took off of one acre of ground. We publish this item for two rea sons. First, because it is news, and secoud, because we desire to call the attention of Wilson county farmers especially to this fact. Now, we hear from almost every source that the crops this year are bad very bad in most cases. Some few farmers perhaps have ;.good crops. Ouly tobacco is any thing extra. This has been an excep tionally wetyear.( The amount of rain-fall up to the middle of July had almost equalled the amount of an average year. This may, in a measure accouut for the sorry crops, we hear about this year. But, lay ing all this aside. Suppose the seasons had been as propitious as possible, suppose everything had been favorable, how many acies of laud in this coanty planted in cot ton would have cleared over 200? Oue hundred, fifty, twenty-five, ten, or one 1 There is no one in the county, we assert, who can claim that a single acre of cotton has produced as much. Day after day the year around Western hay is hauled from Wilson by Wilson county farmers to feed Wilson county teams, when every pound of it could be raised at home as a money cron. The corn and cotton crops on the rich bottom lauds of our county this year are a failure, because they were drowued out. (There is no question about that. -It is a well known fact that such a crop is never sale. What can bo done wiiit mis lauu men r tow in gras ses by all means. Water will nev er hurt it, aud it will pay better than any crop that can be planted ou it. There is uo necessity for the farmers of Wilson county, fa vored as they are by natural ad vantages, to . send out of the county for a single ton of hay. We should export hay, instead of im porting it. How long can such a state of affairs continual Not long. The man who raises what he needs at hbme is the man who succeeds and has money to loan. We have in nnud uow, a farmer in this county, who in about seven years ha- bought and paid lor three tracts of laud aud to-day has moaey to loan. Howdldhedo it. T Sim ply by raising what he needed tor home consumptiou and something t sell. Any time during the year if his neighbors want egg, chicu ens, corn, potatoes, meat, peas, or any article of farm produce they know they can go to him and get it at market prices. That is an ideal farmer. Hardly a week goes by but that his sales in this way do not run up to ten dollars and over -more than euough to run big farm so that everything he makes is a clear profit. The moral is plain. NEIGSOKHOOBD NEWS What Th9 People in This Sec tne State are Doing- of Nashville Argonaut August, 2Hh, The dwelling house cu-cnnied by Joshua Abernethy, near limits m this county, was destroyed by tire ou last Friday night, Mr. Anerne thy losing all his furniture. Mr. Jordan Winstead, of Coop ers' towusbip died last Tnursday, agod about 65 years. Mr. Win st.eatl was a valuable citizen aud will be missed in his community. A very intelligfii.1. gentleman who has traveled all over the couuty tells ns that his 0iaioo is that all the crops ia Nash will be better tins year man they have been in several years past, lie say's wher ever the land is good and there has been fair cultivation, the crops are good and in many instances ex cellent. A fatal accident happened at the Mann Airingfon Gold Mine last Friday ntglit. The boiler at the shaft No. f exploded killing the fireman, J. 11. Evans, and. throwing fragments of the boiler several h'liidred yardt. It is supposed the fireman wet.it to sleep and let the water get too low in the boiler, and ui rued on cold waier when the boiler was hot. it. Ii. Done sold tobacco in llen- lerson lust Frniay, his hi-st fancy leaves selling tor $1.25 to 1.25 per pound R. J. Stallings sold at the same time and place for $3 50 per pound aud W. S. Evans at from SI to $5 per pound. James Frazier at $4.25 per pound. J. U. Jordan ! gold one lot, all grades, for an average, of (')2.74 per hundred. His highest price for his fancy leaves was $000 per hundred or six dollars per pound. Weidon News, August 20th. Mr. George Lawrence, the youn gest son of John T.Lawrence, Esq., oi tnis county, aiea in Texas ou Tuesday last of fever. Mrs. Moore wile ol Dr, J. L. Moore, of Aulander, died last Tues day at the residence of her father Judge Malloy of Brunewick county Va., of malarial fever. Sneriii Alsbrook, duputy shtriffj Keid and W. R. House on Tuesday ioiik 10 ine penitentiary six nego men sentenced to terms of various lengths by the Inferior Court last week. There are now eleven inmates at the j ad awaiting trial. The total value of property iu the county this year, is ?3,;i92,7r.S as against $3,440,500 last year. The taxes this year amount to 30,051,- 0.1 as against Tj.J4,y3 last year an increase of 54,2 Ifi. This in crease is owing to the awarding of pension to ex-Conlerate soldiers. On Friday last Mr. W. S. Collins employed in the drue store oi air. j. rs. l'.rown. at Halifax, came near being serious ly injured by an explosion or spon taneeus combustion of druers He wa3 engaged in compounding mixtrue oi some kind in a mortar when it exploded as if it had been powder, burning his face aud hands painfully. 1 Tarboro Hanner, August :d)th There is a time for planting, time ior cultivation, and the time for the tarmers- to buy western meat is all the time. I he pic-tnc to be given at Ed monson's Grove, on the Gth, prom lses 10 oe very pleasant and enjoy able. Misses Bettie Edmonson and Ida Mayo are the managers At a test run baturday our tire man ran with the hose reel seventy five yards, unreeled the hose, made the connections and were throwin a stream of water in forty-five sec onas after starting. The addition to the cotf on facto ry is nearly leady for the machin ery to be put in. Mr, Terrell is put ting on the roof. The entire build tug is auuut iour uunareil and titty feet long. The main shaft will be about iour hundred 'and fifty fee long. In a difficulty between -the over seer, blowers of the Shiloh farm man. and Watson the negro milk aioun was trying to use a pitch fork wh,n Flowors "knocked him in the head" with a stick. Xegros who wituessed it lied and Watson lay as dead for a short while. He receivetl a good blow just over his his eyes. Gus Evans, near Greenville, has twenty acres in tobacco for which he has refused 3,000. Mr. Evans raises fine tobacco, having taken the the premium at Henderson a year or two ago when forty-seveu counties in North Carolina and Virgina were represented. It was the Golden Leaf that took the premium. Mr. Evans has tine to bacco tana. That sectiou of Pitt is coining to the front iu tobacco. Many farmers raise it. A lady in Pitt county prepared for churning, leaving the churn open to attend to something else. Returning after some time, she foundalrog in the churn sitting on a cake of butter. The frog had A - X . gotten into the churn and In strntr ghng to get out had made the but ter come and his continued strug gling lumped it so he crawled upon it aua was taking a rest. The husband "gave it away." We'll wager a years subscription to the Advance that Andrew Joyner told you the above, brother Kine Eds. Bocky Mount Phoenix, Aug. ;i0th. The farmers on the river Doehead. are complaining boll worm. below of the The surplus grapes in Mr. Hack ney's garden made for hir over 40 gallons of wine. We regret to note the death on last Saturday of Miss Elbe Proctor, daughter of Mr. M. W. Proctor. Walter Hart cut Edith Thorpe on Tuesday night in the shoulder blade and on the arm. Walter has skipped. Mr. J. H. Burnett went to Texas on Monday. Joe is a young man of energy and push and we have no doubt will do well in the Lone Star State. ELYS CatapbH cream uurTasssi Cures IJSKJtofflMS'S' HAY- TJW tULrim? VliiKnifky. Su A FEVER AND COLD IN HMD. HAY-EEVER A particle Is applied Into each nostril and is atrre aable. Price 50 cents t lru(f(fl: U: t.y mail, registered. (SO cts. ELY BtlOTUEHS, 4 Warren St., New Tork DIE IK : At his home in th's place! I yesterday about twelve o'clock Mr. James Murray, aged seven- ; ty six years.' He hart been in I failing health for some tiuif I and it was known that ht soon die, yet hi death was ! shock to his many friends lie? , who hear of it with .sine rn regret. Mr. Murray was burn in Mecklenburg county Va , n. 1813. He graduated at Wake Porest College and moved to Greenville about 1813, taklrur charge of the Academy at that place wherehe conducted a flour ishing school lor several year-. n 1845 he married Mbs Jane Davis and in 1847 angaed in a mercantile business at Stantons- burg. In 1848 he airaiu took up the vocation f ii-itching ami or two years taught in Wils wi n a small frame building that .stood near the county road ii '.he soot now occupied bv our jail. He returned to Pitt coun ty in 1850, where he taught school aud followed agiimltiir al pursuits until 1870. wh.-n he returned to live in Wilson. In 1880 he was elected Sunerii.- endent of the public scho is of the county, which position lie OCCUpiPd to the day of his death. There was ik .rtereptlon ,,r shadowjof hypocrisy iu his dis position. He had no patience with laziness or the vices, and condemned them upon every occasion. To the world he was seemingly a cold, stern, austere man, yet to those who knew him, he displayed a -warmth of olfction and wealth of gener osity that won lifelong friends. He was a member of the Wilson Missionary Baptist Church and of the Masonic fra ternity. He will be burled to day at ten o'clock with Masonic ceremonies. A truly good man is trone The work he has done will live long after he is forgotten, pave for his deeds of kindness. To the bereaved relatives we offer our sincere sympatliy. He had uvea over three score years and ten and his life was full of use fulness. STARTLLNfi EVIDENCE. Orine Care cf Skin Diseases when all other Methods Fail. Psnriasi S year, covet in-- f;,riv Iiritil. skin ami entire body with tthitr ,;,!, red, itchy, ami bleeding. Il.tir all .. Spent hundred "or dollar, l'rononii ced incurable. Cured hy (utieiii: Kemedies. My disease (p9oriasisi tlrst broke out mi n-v left cheek, sprerditiif aeross my mwe. an'.l altnos.cove.-iii'r my face. It ran into n,y ejus, and tho physician i afraid I w.i'iM 'oe my eyesight alto .-ether. It spread il. over my head, and my h.-'r all fell out. mt' i I was bald-hea'icT it then bn ke .mt on Miv.iiin ard shoulder, until my anus wen- jut odo soru. It covered my emiie lody. my f;i, . In-ad. and sliou'.dtr beinif the worst. Ti," white scabs roll constantly from mv hea l shoulder, and arm: the sk n would thicken and lie red and ve T itchy, and would crac . aod bleed if scratched. After spondimr man . hundreds of dollaii. I wa- j'ronoiuu.cd curable. I heard of the CI ril l K. i:i:n . DI ES. and after usinif two bi.tlc l Til ' I; , HESOLVEST, I could a-ea chaiuri : and alter 1 had tl en four bottles, I was almost cured and when I hail used six bottles of Vl'Tl" Cl'KA KK-OLVKN r and or,.-'. .x of ( I ,. CCKA.and one cake of tVTICCltA Sol' I wa-cored of my dreadfuldiscaso from which I had sullered for live Tears. I ti:ht tin disease would leave a ve -y dorp-scar. but the CCTICI KA KEMEOIKS cured it w.thout auv scars. I canrot express wnhaicn whn i suffered be ore usinir the TTIi T KKML 1IE. They saved my life, and I .Vr ,i , "v duty to recommend them. Mj- 'lin, rc-tored " "i,n' c ,'.y , iftn. 1 know ofanumlH-r of different person who ,1V. used tho crflCCKA KEMEDII-S. and an uve received irriat re lctlt troin their Use , Mks. liiiSA KKI.I.Y1 Kockwell City. Calhoun County. Iowa ii I icil rn Itemed ics Cure every species of au'onizimr. himiilint im. itchinv. blecdinif. burnmir. seal v. I. lot. hy and pimply diseases of the i-kin, scalp, and tjimsl with loss of hair, from pimples and scrofula' except p-ws'l'ly itch, thyosss. Sold everywhere. Pri-e. cr'TKT it Vie -SOAH.25C.: RESOLVENT. 1. I'repar 1 l v t,?e,FnJ7E.-K ."Hl U AN " C" W-'-U CO,;. I'OKATION. Ifcwton. Mass. end for "How to Cure Skin l)ises -C pmres. . illustrations, and l-t tctiiuori.ao. piuPI.ES, blackheads, red . eh in : 1 im and o iiily skin prcventc id IA SUA 1'. IT STOPS THE PAIS. Hack ache, kidney pain-, w. ak- iicn rheumatism, and miisciimi naillS ItKMEVEO IV ovv uivi'-il- i... i net l llOt KA AM 1-AA IN 1M.AI" the first and only instant) nous p:'ni-.ilim plaster. I r t " A Collection of Popular A irs. i. ; ar ranged and played by Mrs..loe l'i r son, at the Southern Kxom tion?" A rare collection of old Virjfiniaand Carolina melodies, includim?: "Wiord Waltz and Polka.' "Italian Walt.," "Dance, tho Itoatninti Kauce. ' "Hilly in the Low Grounds." "iii,.." and many others, in all fifteen pieces. Sheet music form. Price of the set, ONE DOLLAR. For Sale by all music dealers, and by MRS. JOE PERSON, Kittreil, N. C. ; Important Notice to Draijists ! A Chance in the Style ol the Gen eral Fut up of the Re rued v. My Remedy is now put up in plain, round pint, packing bottles, no name blown insi, -,d' of Phil, oval with name, blown - the cartons of new style are printed altogether in blaek ink, instead of black anil red, as formerly My signature is written on each lalx I with eii null ink, instead of beinc lithographed, as hereto fore. Kvery latiel and carton are numbered as in physician's proscriptions. Inicx'istsa,j Jobbers will please aec that the new style is furnished them, as I will not .-iiarantcc any other to tie trcniline. Any Kcnicdy thai wui euro Scrofula, is bound to be a irood hlo.ni purifier. Mr. Samuel A. Jtarnett. Cello, Per son Co., N. C, says : I used Mrs. Joe Person's Kerned)- on a ni ro boy livin? at my house, who had bi-cti allliete 1 from an infant. All who saw the boy at fie time he commenced tho Homely th .ot.-ht tie could live but a few davs. Hcwastoially un able to walk a step, lud four or live hirj-'e rim Dias sores which wer" v-ry olletisive. Th.- in side of hia mouth and his tongue were perfe, i ly raw, lips so swollen they appeared to l turned outwards and were also raw, both i.l( h had been closed for Weeks. Tim iv is v, wki.u was in the toluieco held a few .lavs a "o at work. Kiifht lxittles of iteincMV ina.i,. n,., cure, and it has been a year since he was eur cd. BAM LA. UAKNErr, J. P. t3For88le by Wilson Druirirists Pri-e j lerlK)itle, t' per half-d.v.. ii. Wash, i-. per paukaire. f'.'. per half-d"cii Mud ;.ir pair.pnicl. Address, MRS. JOE PERSON, Kittreil, H. C. Administrator's Notice, The undersiL-ned havi' e inalith-d asndmin istratrix of James Rose, decciixs!. h rel vcives notice u all parties indebted to the estate i l the same to make immediate payment, and to all parties hohlini; cln n.s airuiost the estate to present them for tiaviiieot on or lK fore ihe 30th day of Auirust. Ini, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. St'P.5-;t ELIZAIIKTII KOSP.. HAVE m GC l""l"tti1lMlllilUM'MlMMUMMtiiillrli o jl H E N AVc in CO W i MPT C. A. NASH & CO., Manufacturers And Dealers In Sashes, Doors, Blindn, Mantels, Moulding Hardware, Paints, Oils, Brushes, &c.f Ac. 8 West Market Square, Norfolk, Va- CORRESPONDENCE SOUaiTED. ' OU Want of anv D seriplioii of BOOK OR JOB WORK You Will Find it to Your Interest to Patron ize u. U Q eVV wo' g M I 5 rUe? a. -riiet' Vie -BYMATL- Will Receive ATTENTION. WE ARE CONSTANTLY AD DING TO OUR ALREADY LARGE ASSORTMENT OF PRINTING MATERIAL. Estimates made on large or small orders. Send for samples. JiC. 0.DMIELS, Proprietors, And Stair Work h h tepi i .iii ? - . f. i ; . . f r i i ii Jl L I It I Wrenn, Whiteliurst &, Co I U lib- an 1 . . M4ti. PURE DRUGS. - PERFUMERY CF THE BEST. i DRUG- STORK Is hie n.At r. r M r;:t tin; ruaiT or duuus, toii.kt THK.VKRY i:iT, Ti:r.sM. Ar. At the lofrest pritv at trliich thfsr thing j-s .lily U- s,.;,i o; Supply of Proprietary rcdiclncs in no' surpaasttl in tlie torn n, ami ji.ty i-'.it '! att-iiioa ;v,n inc on our ntock to nie-t th lm.tntU o( iw :!! ,-. j.; i nnm. Our rs(M:ilTION IHCrAUTMENT i. tt c :tn, bamlo, ami either Dr. W. ti. or found riniHTlDtendhig thi !artm-t ; u wi. SODA WATER FOUNTAIN. Oar S1! Water fi.nnt.iui i ntw Waters of all kinds, MiIk S!iaU-s inings 10 urine OUR LINE Snch ax the SeaHiilo. Ixtwll am! ot all the latent pohlicttiotM of thu rlnt.n U-r k ; : ..i nt.M-U. When in neetl of anjtihitj; in ir I t ', ti a r.u Wilson. N. ('. NEXT 1MK)H TO Til K I'OSTt I I il T.. O I (ASH MTHIESTilE mm. ' - I - i if xuv i)i:.T it;E.3 rrt i: it : . .ICSri'Al.L.vl - THE CASH RACKET STORE, j : NASI I STHKHF wilsow ,; QIAUTV vi E W ils Go:is, JUST RECEI VED. 1889. 1889. II ifi. HADLEY& BRIGUS. ! tlHVf jllsl 1.14-IKtl .t) Entirely Jlew Stockof COO DS, At the nM Mi ,,r i. ,...., - -Briccs anj ext4.,i ,.,.r.i( 4, ; ,x .. ( tionto all vhetluT ii.- .,!,. or not to com' i 4. v Uk WAS lh,J,;l,t f.,r will U ,u i. ,,,Mi .s would o well lo rl ,, . ,H. lorf placing tt,.ir ira .. !,.r , , year. CVtontrj ro.l.ic i,.,, 5u change for ichhk. J. C. H ni FV ii!,Ti.r;i ft: -:7VKfe Juices .ii' V'-r- ,t i ... .'..'...-.St.. ;.' N I' Anrin.i. i-kui tmi::.7 j Dr. A!! tr Au. fMut r.i.i .i1.tt. u fnll li'.-.s'. i Vjii-r. V.-ri Mrtii it.! !!': 'mi f nl j J OF EOOKS, tn r tiln ari. n 2J an-:i i, d uut ...o EXAMIJi: THE 'xyu i OFOUiv SIT a OK ktk, )m, ii:., PN!;;n,. ;.saw ?.;jm.s aM I J V il ltN lMZKSS'JS. . -. v. t,. . ;,. , ,, i ' "-. .(-. .'.vi i,. . mhI v. H ":: !.., .. , , 1 ! '1 . 1 ',;!.. 1 - . 1 '. 1 1 1 i i. i Ai'i j; .'. lvi-rsltir, V. o u I I,J . I . C , i ; i I . , i-- -: i . 1 Adm.a-utrator Notice. 'I Ur i m-s,.-.J lia in- filt ! -i tuiT of j!, 'r"1 i.'. : c ji..o. !.!!., ,'i i..,t . ...I .. -- " -. - , - ... U it." .lil.- - iii. i.-c: ...j ..ti : m 1 v :.;':;. . . ,:: t At:-. . s ! t or f I. n'.U. " If I... :. . ; ,si i heir If"1"'1.'' 1 .... .......... L-.' January 10, ISS'J. 1 A ..:!. I--. ,
The Wilson Advance (Wilson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 5, 1889, edition 1
2
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