The Wileon Advance CLAUDIUS F. WILSON, EDITOR & PROP R. "LET ALL THE ENDS THOU AIM ST AT, BE THY COUNTRY'S, THY GOd's, AND TRUTh's. $1.50 A YEAR CASH IN ADVANCE. VOLUME XXII. WILSON, WILSON COUNTY, N. C, APRIL 7th, 1892. NUMBER 12. Hats and Caps! A Drive in Hats ! We are making a big drive in Hats and offer Nobby Thatches for the dome of thought at prices that paralyze competition and popularize our hats. We are selling Fur Crush hats at 50c,, worth 75c, and the $1.25 quality we sell for 94c. We have a Settled Man's Black Fur at $1.08, sold elsewhere at $2.00. Not At Cost. Oh! no ! We don't work for glory, but we guarantee our prices to be the lowest. Underbuy and undersell is our motto. The Cash Racket Stores. Nash and Goldsboro Streets. THE WASHINGTON LIFE Insurance Co. OF NEW YORK. ASSETTS, - - - $10,500,000. The Policies written by the Washington are Described 111 these general terms: Non-Fortettable. Unrestricted as to residence and travel after two years. Incontestable after two years. Secured by an In- ested Reserve. Solidly backed . bonds and mort gages, first liens on real estate. Safer than railroad securities. . Not affected by the Stock market. Better paying investments than U. S. Bonds. Less expensive than assessment certificates. More liberal than the law requires. Definite Contracts. w 5C T. L. ALFRIEND, Manager, Richmond, Va. SAM'L L. ADAMS, Special Dist. Agent, Room 6, Wright Building, fr-30-1 y. Durham, N. C. HorsesjMiiles. I have now on hand a select lot of fine Horses and Mules at my Sale Stables on Goldsboro Street. The lot consists of Fine 5 V Farm And excellent driving, and draught horses. It is to your interests to see these animals before purchasing elsew here. I wilrbe glad to show them to you. Respectfully, t. D. T C. LANIER. PROPRIETOR Wilson Marble Works Wilson, N, C. Mules FAIR OR BILL ARP'S LETTER. THE OLD MAN GIVES THK SCIENTISTS SOME HARD LICKS. We will do Well to Stand by the Faith of Our Fathers Their Faith and Works Have Saved This Wicked Old World. The scientific world is still perplex ed about Adam and Eve. Darwin hasn't settled it nor Dr. Woodrow Mark Twain thought he found the grave of our illustrious ancestors, but according to late discoveries he shed his tears on the wrong tomb. The book of a learned Frenchman has come to the front and created a sen sation in scientific circles. He says that Father Adam was 123 feet high and Mother Eve was only five leet lower and that ever since they evo luted into existence the human race has been on the down grade, getting shorter and smaller as the centuries roll on. Well, it looks reasonable that folks 900 years old 'should be 900 years big, but they were not. The largest men are not the longest livers in our day. In fact they don't live as long as the medium size. Among animals we know that a goose that is of no consequence, lives five times as long as a horse. A turtle lives longer than a whale. I wish we did know more about Adam. I wish that Moses had told us more. He gave us thirteen chapters about the history of Joseph and only two con cerning the creation of man and the universe. I was talking to a learned and scientific gentleman about this and he said he supposed that Moses told all that he knew, and that he could not have known much about what happened before the flood, for there were no books nor anything in writing, and all that he knew was by uncertain tradition that came down the centuries and gathered some and lost some on its journey. He said he thought it very probable that the people who lived before the flood were of very large stature, for Moses said there were giants in those days. Well it is astonishing how men of science ignore the Bible not all of them, but most of them. They de pend on science to unravel all the mysteries, and what science does not prove they do not consider proved, even though Moses wrote it. Now here is this Frenchman who has de voted years of study to prove that Mother Eve was one hundred and twenty-three. feet tall and large around in proportion. Why, thebld preacher that Henry Grady told about at the banquet made her only thirty cubits high and lined within and without with pitch. I asked my scientific friend if he didn't think that great height was very inconvenient to Adam, and that the limbs of the trees-jyould be very much in way as he and his wife took an evening., walk through the shady avenues. "Oh, no," said he. "Of course the trees were larger and taller in due proportion. Something like the red woods in the Yosmemite Valley that are 300 feet high." "How about the animals," said I, "tor instance, the horse and the cow and the dog." How would Adam manage to ride one erf our horses or Eve to milk one of our Jersey cows. He smiled and said, "Well the animals were no doubt of a corresponding size." "Ele phants and camels and giraffs, too," said I. "Of course," said he. "And boa constrictors and rattlesnakes, too." "Yes," said he. But I thought he was weakening. "Well, but you know the ark was only thirty cubits high and was three stories, that is, ten cubits or about eighteen feet for each story. How did those elephants and giraffs get in there ?" "Oh, I sup pose those cubits were very different from what we call cubits now," said he. He reminded me of the fellow who came back from his travels in the unexplored West, and said, among other marvelous thing, that he got on the borders of a valley where everything was petrified turned to stone and that he didn't dare to venture in, lor he saw stone horses and cattle and goats and serpents and panthers bears. Jn fact everything was petrified, even the trees and the grass, and he saw a hunter standing erect, with a gun in his hands, point ed to a eagle in the air, and the hun ter and his gun and the eagle were all petrified all turned to stone. "Oh, pshaw ! Jim ; that won't do," said on of his hearers. "Don't you know that gravity would have pulled that eagle down?" "Gravity, the dickens !" said he, "why gravity was petrified harder than anything. I saw a streak of it from the eagle to ground !" But our Frenchman says that every generation fell off a few feet, and I suppose that, as Adam lived to see Lamech, of the ninth generation, it was like Gulliver in his travels ; when Adam wanted to talk to Lamech and tell him about the Garden of Eden and the apple tree and about Cain and Abel, he didn't stooo down to talk, Kfifc. iust lifted Lamech up on his little finger and set him on his shoulder and told him all about it. How scared Lamech must have been, for fear that he would fall into that great mouth, that was five feet wide, or into that ear, that looked like a cave with "boogers" in it. And then just to think what a time they must have had in burying the old gentleman when he died;- What a long deep grave they had to dig and what a coffin, for he was fifteen feet high when lying down, and how many levers and hand -sticks they had to prize with, or, maybe they had to put up a great derrick and have a block and tackle to swine him down I into the grave. Mark Twain wasn't looking for such a grave as that, and if had found it his tears would have been out of proportion. Now it does look like Moses would have mention ed it if Adam had been any such giant. He tells us about the age of man being reduced after the flood to 120 years, and is very particular about the size of the ark. But what reason is there to believe that those people who lived before the flood were not educated. Josephus says the Lord taught Adam language and letters and figures and all science that was necessary for man's comfort, and Moses says that Tubal made harps and organs and Tubal Cain was an instructor in brass and iron. Noah could not have built the ark if he had not been a good mechanic, and hence it is reasonable to suppose that Noah wrote an account of the Hood and handed it down to posterity. But to come down to facts, what was the trouble about Moses receiv ing the truth and writing it down even though there was no inspiration in the matter. For certainly Adam told it all straight to Lamech and Lamech was Noah's father. Of course, Noah was a truthful man, and he lived to see Abraham, who was nine generations further on and must have told Abraham all that he got from Lamech. Now, that that makes twenty generations, compassing 2,000 years of time and history, and the facts of it passed through only two persons, Lamech and Noah. So that we are obliged to believe that Father Abraham got it straight and told it straight to Levi, his great grandson, and Levi told it straight to Moses, his great grandson. I don t see any trouble about that. Now, if these scientists were all ike Dr. Woodrow, and would study the Scriptures with a reasonable fiiith, then would science become the hand maid of inspiration, and not its ene my. Instead of that they seem to have a desire to pull down the Scrip tures and they are encouraging scep ticism and agnosticism and all sorts of infidelity in the minds of the young. Young man, you had better stand by the faith of your fathers. It sus tained them and made them good men and women. They lived by it and died by it. It doirrSnatter how high Adam was nor whether he evo luted or not. Do you take the Bible and study it and live by its principles and you will be happy. Go to church every Sabbath and listen with humil ity and reverence to the teachings of the men of God. The church and the preachers are the hope of the world. When the flood came there was but one preacher, and the earth was filled with violence. And just so it would be filled with violence right now if we had no church and no preachers. Ten righteous men would have saved Sodom, and it is the preachers who save us. Hii.i. Arp. THE BABY. Pert and Pretty Definitions of the- Tv r;i lit of the Honseliolil. Tid-Bits has just awarded a fwo- gumea prize lor 1 ne riest Lennt tion of a Baby." The prize was won by Miss Nellie Braidwood.ot Girvan, England, who sent this answer : A tiny leather from the wing 01 love, dropped into the sacred lap of motherhood. The following is a selection from some of the best definitions submitted : The bachelor's horror, the mother's treasure and the despotic tyrant ol the most republican household. The latest edition ol humanity, of which every couple think they possess the finest copy. A native of all countries who speaks the language of none. An invention for keeping people awake at night. A mite of a thing that requires a mighty lot of attention. A diminutive specimen of perverse humanity that would scarcely be endured if he belonged to some one else ; but being our own, is a never failing treasury of delight. The unconscious mediator between father and mother, and the focus of their hearts. A daylight charmer and a mid night alarmer. About twenty-two inches of coo, wriggle, writhe and scream filled with suction and testing apparatus for milk, and automatic alarm toregulate supply. A curious bud of uncertain blos som. The prince of Wails. The one thing needful to make home happy. There is only one perfect speci men of a baby in existence, and every mother is the happy posessor of it. A mite of humanity that will cry no harder if a pin is stuck into him thanhe will if the cat won't let him pull her tail. The morning caller, noonday crawler, midnight bawler. The sapling of the tree from which will be. built the bulwarks of our nation's future greatness. A bursting bud on the tree of life. The only precious possession that never excites envy. A bold asserter of the rights of free speech The best devefoper ol the most heautilul part of woman's nature, "unselfishness." I popular Government. Those who A tiny, useless mortal, but without believe in tariff reform for the sub which the world would soon be at a stantial good it will bring to the mul standstill. titude who are neglected when selfish The most extensive employer of greed is in the ascendency ; those female labor. A padlock on the chain of love, A soft bundle of love and trouble which we cannot do without. London Tid-Bits. GROVER CLEVELAND. HE TAKES PABT IN THE RHODE IS LAND CAMPAIGN. His Speech at Providence -Tarift" Reform the Pledge of the Democratic Party to the People and to be the Issue in the Coming Campaign No Side Ismie to he Substituted. The State election in Rhode Is land was held yesterday. On last Saturday Grover Cleveland, Esq., spoke at Providence. He was lol lowed by Ex-Gov. Campbell, of Ohio. Both Democrats and Repub lican parties are making strenuous efforts to carry the State. Mr. Cleve land spoke as follows : Fellow Citizens : I have found it impossible to decline the invitation sent me to meet the Democracy of Rhode Island. I have come to look in the faces of the men who have been given the place of honor in advance of the vast army which moves toward the decisive battle field of next No vember, i have not come to point the way to consolation in case of your defeat, but have come to share the enthusiasm which presages victory. I have not come to condole with you upon the difficulties which confront you but to suggest that they only add to your glory if you triumph.. I have come to remind you that the instru ments of spoils and patronage cannot avail "against valor and right ;" that corruption and bribery cannot smoth er and destroy the aroused conscience of our countrymen and that splendid achievements await those who brave ly, honestly and stubbornly fight in in the country's cause. Let us not for a moment use the inspiration of those words: "The people's cause." They signify the defence of the rights of every man, rich or poor, in every corner of our land, who, bv virtue of simple American manhood lays claim to the promises of our free Govern ment and they mean the promotion of the welfare and happiness of the humblest American citizen, wtio con fidently invokes the protection of just and equal law. The covenant of our Democratic faith, as I understand it, exacts constant effort in this caiife and its betrayal I conceive to be a crime against the creed of true Demo cracy. The struggle in which you are en gaged arrests the attention of your party brethren in every State, and they pause in their preparation for the geneal engagement near at hand, in which all will be in the field, and look toward Rhode Island with hope and trust. They read the legends on your banners and they bear you ral lying cries and know that your fight is in the people's cause. If you should be defeated there will be no discour agement in this vast voting army; but you will earn plaudits and cover yourselves with glory by winning suc cess. Large and bright upon your banners is blazoned the words "tarift reform," the shibboleth of true Democracy and the test of loyalty to the people's cause. Those who op pose tariff reform delude themselves if they suppose it rests wholly upon appeals to selfish considerations and promise of advantage, right or wrong, or that our only hope of winning de pends upon arousing animosity 14- tween tne amerent interests among our people. While we do iu t r se that those whose welfare we chain pi" on shail be blind to the advantages accruing to them lrom our plan of tariff reform, and while we are deter mined that these advantages shall not be surrendered to the blandishments of greed and avarice, we still claim nothing that has not underlving it a moral sentiment and consideration of equity and good conscience. Because our case rests upon such foundations sordiness and selfishness cannot de stroy it. "The Government of the Union is a Government of -the people ; it emanrates from them ; its powers are granted by them and are to be exercised directly on them and for their benefit." This is not the lan guage of a political platform. It is a declaration of the highest court in the land, whose mandate all must obev and whose definitions all partisans must accept. In the light of this exoosition of the duty the Government owes to the people the Democratic party claims that when through federal taxation, burdens are laid upon the daily life of the people not necessary for the Gov ernment's economical administration, and intended, whatever be the pre texts, to enrich a few at the expense of the many the Governmental com pact is violated. A distinguished Justice of the Supreme Court with no Democratic affiliations, but loved and respected when living by every American and since his death unusu ally lamented, has characterized such proceedings as "none the less rob bery because it is done under forms of law and is called taxation." Let us appreciate the fact that we not on ly stand upon sure and safe ground when we appeal to honesty and mor ality in our championship of the in terests of the masses of our people as they are related to tariff taxation, but that our mission is invested with the highest patriotism when we attempt to preserve from perversion, distor tion and decay the justice, equality ana moral integrity which are the 1 constituent elements ol our scheme ol who believe the legitimate motive ot our Government is to do equal and exact justice to all our people and grant special privileges to none ; those wn believe that a nation boasting that its honesty and conscience cannot afford to discard moral sentiment, and those who would save our institu tions from the undermining decay of sordidness and selfishness can hardly excuse themselves if they fail to join us in the crusade we have under taken. Certainly our sincerity cannot be questioned. In the beginning of the struggle we were not only bitterly opposed by a great party of avowed enemies, but were embarrassed by those in our own ranks who had be come infected with the unwholesome atmosphere our enemies had created. We hesitated not a moment boldly to encounter both. We unified our party, not by any surrender to the half-hearted among our members, I mt by an honest appeal to Democratic sentiment and conscience. We have never lowered our standard. It surely was not policy nor expediency that ; induced us defiantly to carrv the banner of tariff reform as we went forth to meet a well organized and desperately determined army in tiie disastrous field of iSSS. A time serving or expediency hunting party would hardly have been found the day alter such crushing defeat un dismayed, defiant and determined, still shouting the war cry and anxious to encounter again in the people's cause, our exultant enemy. We had not long to wait. At the Waterloo of 1 890 tariff reform had its vindica tion and principle and steadfast devo tion to American fairness and good faith gloriously triumphed over plausi ble shiftiness and attempted popular deception. The Democratic party still cham pions the cause which defeat could not induce it to surrender; which no success short of complete accomplish ment can tempt it to neglect. Its po sition has been from the first frankly and fairly stated and no one can honestly be misled concerning it. We invite strictest scrutiny of our conduct in dealing with this subject and we insist that our cause be open, fair and consistent. I believe this is not now soberly denied in any quarter. Our opponents too have records on this question. Those who still adhere to the doctrine that the important function of Government is especially to aid them in their busi ness ; those who only see in consumers of our land forced contributors to artificial benefits permitted by Gevern mental favoritism ; those who see in our working men only tools with which their shops and , manufactories are to be supplied at the cheapest possible cost and those who believe there is no moral question involved in tariff taxation of people are proba bly familiar with this record and abundantly satisfied with it. It may however, be profitably received by those who believe that integrity and good faith have to do with Govern mental operations and who honestly confess that present tariff burdens are not justly and fairly distributed. Such review may alsol be ol interest to those who believethat our consumers are entitled to Ve treated justly and honestly by the Government and that the working man should be allowed to feel in his humble home, as he supplies his family's daily needs that his earnings are not unjustly ex torted from him for the benefits of favored beneficiaries of unfair tariff laws. This then is the record. When we began the contest for tariff reform it was said by our Republican op- pi tnents, in the tace ot our avowal and acts, tnat we were netermineci on 1 m 1 1 1 . 1 1 1 free trade. A long advance was Ion made 111 their insincerity and impud ence when they accused us of acting in the interest of foreigners and when they more than hinted that we had been bought with Brittish gold. Those who distrusted the effective ness of these senseless appeals insult ed the intelligence of our people by claiming that increase in the cost of articles to consumers caused by tarifl was not a tax paid by him but that it was paid by foreigners who sent their goods to our markets. Sectional prejudice was invoked in a most out rageous manner and the people of the North were asked to condemn the measure of tariff reform proposed by us because members of Congress from South had supported it. These are fair samples of the arguments sub mitted to the American people in the Presidential campaign of 1SS8. It will be observed that the purpose of these amazing deliverances was to defeat entirely any reform in tariff, though it had been enacted at a time when the expense of ,a tremendous war justified exaction of tribute from people, which in time ot peace be came a grievous burden, though it had congested Federal treasury with worse than useless surplus, inviting reckless public waste and extrava gance, and though in many of its features the only purpose of its con tinuation was the bargaining it per mitted for party support. There are those, however, in the ranks of our opponents who recognized the fact that we had so aroused popular attention to the evils and justice of such tariff reform that it. might not be safe to rely for success upon bold op position to its reform. There were grave ffid sedate Republican statesmen who declared that they never, never could consent to subserve the interests of Eng land at the expense of their own country, as the wicked Democrats proposed to do and that they felt constrained to insist upon tarift pro tection to a point of prohibition be- j cause they devotedly loved our workingmen and were determined that their employment should be con- stant and that their wages should never go to the disgusting level of the pauper labor of Europe, but that in view of the fact that war in which the tariff then existing originated had been closed . for more than twenty years and in view of the further fact that the public treasury was over burdened, they were willing to read just the tarifl" if it could only be done by its friends instead of by the "Rebel Brigadiers." 1 I will not refer to all means by which our opponents succeeded in that contest. Suffice it to say they gained complete possession of the ( o eminent in every branch and the tariff was reformed by its alleged friends. The consumer has found life harder since this reform than be fore, and if there is a working man anywhere who has had his wages in creased by virtue of its operation he has not yet made himself known. Plenty of mills and -factories have been closed, thousands of men have thus lost employment and we daily hear of reduced wages, but the bene fits promised from this reform and its advantage to the- people who fealty need relief are not apparent. The provision it contains permitting rec iprocity of trade in certain cases is an admission, as far as it goes, against the theory upon which this reform is predicated and it lamely limps in the direction of free commercial ex change. If "hypocricy is the hom age vice pays to virtue" reciprocity may be called homage prohibitory protection pays to genuine tariff re form. The demands in your platform for free raw materials ought, it seems to me, to be warmly seconded by the citizens ol your State. The advan tages to the people of Rhodes Island of such a policy do not seem to me to be questionable and I am not here to discuss them in detail but all I have said as to the unchanging con duct and record of the Democratic party and its opponents in regard to tariff legislation is in support of the proposition that all who desire special relief referred to in your platform or any other improvement in our tariff laws in the general interest of the people must look to the Democratic party for it. The manufacturer, who sees in free raw material reduced cost of his production resulting in increas" ed consumption and extension of his market and constant activity and re turn for his invested capital, can hardly trust the party which first re sisted any reform in tarift, then jug gled with it and at last flatly refused him the relief he still needs. The working rr.an, who has been deceiv-. ed by the promises of higher wages and better employment, who mow constantly fears the 'closing of the manufactories and loss of work, ought certainly to be no longer cajoled by a party whose performance has so clearly give then to its -professions. The consumer who has trusted to the reformation of tariff by its friends, now that he feels increased burdens of taxation in his home, ought to look in another direction for re lief. If the1 Democratic partv-does not give to the State of Rhode Island during the present session of C in gress the tree raw material she needs it will be because the 'Republican Senate or Executive thwarts its de mand. It doubtless would please our ad versaries if we could be allured from 'our watch and guard over the cause of tariff reform to certain other dbiccts thus forfeiting the people's trust and confidence. The National Democ racy will hardly gratify this wish and turn its back upon the people's ause to wander after false and un steady lights 111 the wilderness ol doubt and danger. Our opponents must in the coining national canvass scene accounts witu us on tne issue of tariff reform. It will not do for them to say to us that this is an old and determined contention. The ten commandments are thousands of years old but they and the doctrine of tariff reform will be - 'taught and preached until mankind and the Re publican party shall heed the injunc tion : "Thou shalt not steal." As I leave you let me say to you that your cause deserves success and let me express the hope that the close of your canvass will bring you no regret on account of activity relaxed or opportunities. lost. Demon strate to your people the merits of your cause.and trust them. Above all things banish every personal feeling of discontent and let every personal consideration be merged into the de termination pervading your ranks everywhere to win victory. With a cause so just and with activity, vigil ance, harmony and determination on the part of Rhode Island's staunch Democracy, I believe you will not fail. The I'loper 'l limn to Say A special of the 19th from Laurens, S. C, to the Greenville Democrat says : Col. James L. Orr addressed the meeting here to-day, and gave Gov. Tillman hell. This is hardly diplomatic language. The late lamented Judge Greasy Sam Watts, of this State, who regarded Jo. Turner much as the devil is said to regard holy water, once had a bull which he named Jo. Turner, and he gave specific orders to his driver that he was to "give Jo. Turner" the thing that Col. Orr is said to have given Gov. Tillman. Ever after that jo. discarded the use of the word m his paper always spoke of giving a fellow "the thing that Greasy Sam Watts ordered fur his bull.'' Char lotte Observer. .1 nvand content is a home with The Ko :facster;" a lamp with the light of the morning. f-crcjaiue, write Kochettcr Larqji Co. NrwYork. 892. New Sdim We lead, others follow . doing things, and so I t be set, we set it ou for us. We buy cro . - buy cheaper than other te give our customers the benefit of our bu cheap. We keep nothing but the best goods, we ask is for you to look at our goods and prices. SHOES. Our Mr. Young bought in New York a very large stock of Shoes that we shall sell at New ork cost, the best makes of Burt & Packard, . Faust cv Son, St. John Kirkham & Co., Ztigler's, and others. Look at them. rvt i vttvi i ivn i A larger line than ever before. HA; I I I 1 JNlx.! it will Set you to thinking. Set you to talking. Set you to buying. Set us always in the lead. itatsJ Think It is time for you to change that hat. And we are prepared to suit you in wife.! Think She wants a New Dress, and You-want something to suit her. You-want it the latest Fashion. You-want it the best material. You-want it at a reasonable price. You-wfll be pleased in all of Your-wants by looking at our stock. Shi rts. Think Yo-need some Shirts. You-need some suspenders. You-need some pant-cloth. You-need some shoes. You-need Yonng Brothers who will furnish you any of the above goods at 20 per cent, cheaper and better quality than any house in Wilson. YOUNG BROS, Cheap Cash House. - W. E. IS &C8: FIRE INSURANCE AGENTS, (Successors to R. F. Briggs & Co.,) OFFICE OVER FIRST NAT. BANK WILSON, N. C We purpose giving the busi ness intrusted to us by the citi zens of Wilson and neighbor ing territory, our close and per sonal attention. We represent some of the best companies in the world. We want your in surance. Come to see us. Tin ! Arc Lols.Iiiftt Like Him. This is what Mi. Gall wrote on a postal card one evening, and then went five blocks to drop it into a letter-box, after addressing the card to the editor of the Daily Bugle? "Mr. C. Charles Gall, of "the well known anil justly popular firm of Gall & Gritt, leaves to-morrow even ing tor an extensive Southern trip, 1 accompanied by his estimable wife." 1 And this is a bit of conversation Mr. Gall had with one of his neigh-1 bors who met him in the horse-car the next morning : "Hello, Gall," said the neighbor;' "I see by this morning's Bugle that you and Mrs. Gall intend going on a trip South." "Ha ! so the Bugle fellows have got hold of that, have they ? Hang these newspaper reporters, anyhow? There's no keeping anything from them. I haven't seen a Bugle man foramonth and haven't spoken about our trip to i three persons, and yet those Bugle j fellows have got hold of it. Hanged ! if I ain't a mind to send the editor a note, and tell him I wish he'd let me and my private affairs alone after this. It's a little annoying, you know, to have one's name bandied around so common like in the papers. I hate publicity of that sort." A Good Idea, Too. The fact that Senator Stanford has refused $110,000 for his horse Ad vertiser, suggests the idea that a good adveitiser is generally worth some money. Charlotte Observer. Highest of all in Leavening Powe. Rcfol ABSOLUTE!?? PURE 1892 Goods ! You have your ojwn vvrv oi j we. If there is any 'race ves. We let nobody uc.. i. i Five Stores, and ofcf.v sc :"-srchants. We are v "no mg A It of Your Head ! price and quality to a I rp of Your Wife ! of Yourself ! To The Ladies Of Wilson and Vicinit : Miss Trskine and Mamie f lines -rnied a co-partnership, an. r nn-time they have been in I rk making themselves far th the g and Summer .Style i that headquarter: of f.i .. .ey have seen many new styles actual wear, and will be pleased to give ladies information ol (hem On their return they have brought with them a complete stock Of Seasonable Millinery, all at prices very reasonable Give Them a Call. Under Briggs' Hotel Scotland Neck Military School, SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. Spring Term Begins January 25th, 1892. THE IDEAL SCHOOL FOR BOYS Two things aimed at : Health of hotly and vigor of mind. Charges reasonable. For information address, W. C. ALLEN, Supt. JOHN D. COUPER, J MARBLE & GRANITE Monuments, Gravestones, &c. TTT f I. ind T T c Tionl- tit NORFOLK, VA. Designs free. Write for prices. ' 5-M-iy- DR. W. sTaNDERSON, Physician and Surgeon, WILSON, n. c. Office in Drug Store on Tarboro St. DR. ALBERT ANDERSON", Physician and Surgeon, WILSON, n. c. Office next door to the First Nati ona Bank. DR. E. K. WRIGHT, Surgeon Dentist, WILSON, N. C. Having permanently located in Wib son, I offer my professional services to the public. t-Office in Central Hotel Building. U. S. Gov't Report, Aug. 17, 1889, Baking Powde. I