The Wileon
CLAUDIUS F. WILSON, EDITOR & PROP R.
AND TRUTH'S."
LET ALL THE ENDS THOU AIM ST AT, BE THY COUNTRY S, THY GOD S,
$1.50 A YEAR CASH IN ADVANCE.
VOLUME XXII.
WILSON, WILSON COUNTY, N. C, SEPTEMBER 29th, 1892.
NUMBER 37
AdvancG.
The-:-Sweetest-:-Song
You ever heard is the song of
MONEY SAVED. Our
buyer has just returned from
Hew York with the largest
stock, of
New Fall Goods
SEN. VANCE'S LETTER.
WRITTEN TO; THE PEOPLK OF NORTH
CAROLINA
In Response to the Following Letter From
Mr. Simmons. Senator Vance Issues the
Accompanying Address to the People of
North Carolina.
Raleigh, Aug. ioth, '92.
Hon. Z. B. Vance, Gombroon, N. C. :
My Dear Senator : In com
mon with all the people of North
Carolina, I greatly deplore vour ina-
bihty to take part in the pending t, . ...
T, - lit 1 .1VV.HV'11 UI
it is an inestimaDie loss
it has ever
to handle,
rive were
DRESS
been our pleasure
The first to ar
011 r bargains in
GOODS. Hereto
fore we have not been enabled
to secure very many nice things
in- this line, but this trip we did
find a line of Dress Goods that
is worthy of your attention at
prices away down below their
value.
Next we invite you to our
choice selection of Smyrna &
Moquette RUGS. The prices
are lower than ever which is
savin volumes.
Spring Roller Window Shades.
No dealer in our city nas ever
sold such o-ood values for the
o
monev.
See our FALL CAPS for
habies. Beautiful creation of
fancv and vast in Plush, Silk
and Cashmere. We pay- a
great deal of attention to this
line. You should see our
prices.
HOSIERY. It is a line we
pride ourselves on as being
the best and theurheapest. We
have a full regular made La
dies Hose in black absolutely
fast at i2 c.
Our stock of HATS,
SHOES. FANCY GOODS,
and .NOTIONS, caps the
climax. Truly "Cash Catches
Bargains. "
campaign, it is an
to the party and the people, for I
need not tell you the confidence and
affection which the people of North
Carolina entertain for you would se
cure for you from them a hearing
such as they would accord to but
few in the State.
It occurs to nre, while your health
will not permit you to meet the peo
ple face to face upon the stump, a
letter fom you, reviewing the whole
situation, and discussing the questions
which are uppermost in the minds of
the people, especially the causes of
the agricultural prostration now exist
ing, and the reliel which would be
afforded through the enactment of
such tariff and financial legislation
as the Democratic party proposes,
would be carefully and considerately
read by all the people of North Caro
lina and would do a great deal of
good at this time.
Such a letter, I am persuaded,
would have immense weight with a
large number of people who are now
honestly wavering as to what course
to pursue in the coming election. Of
course I do not want to overtax you
even to do this great service to the
party and the people, and I trust you
will not undertake it unless your
health is fully equal to the task.
Sincerely joining with all the peo
ple of North Carolina in their anxiety
about your health, and in the earnest
hope that you diay be speedily re
stored, I am, yours truly,
(Signed) F. M. Simmons, Ch'm.
No true friend of this commonwealth,
I am sure, will contribute to this re
sult. It is reported that a prominent
candidate on the ticket of the Third
Party says he had rather submit to
negro or any other kind of rule than
such as we have at present ; but I am
forced to believe that if this be true,
there are very few other white men of
North Carolina who are outside of
the penitentiary and who ought to be
outside, who entertain sentiments so
foul and brutal. Our people know
the right to control , that under Democratic rule they have
own representa- had good laws, low taxes, economy,
the chief bulwark of and purity in the administration oi
affairs, and 1 hope and believe
which our people are mainly divided
are once more in the field with their
platforms of principles and their can
didates, State and Federal, thereon.
The Republicans profess all of their
old doctrines from which have come
the evils of which have come the
evils of which the people complain ;
they glory in that abuse of the taxing
! power which has made a few rich
I and millions poor, and seeking new
! fields of iujustice and oppression, they
I openly declare their intention to take
from the States
is
My
The Cash Racket Stores,
WILSON", N. C,
Nash and Goldsboro Streets.
Greene County Insurance Agency,
w.
T. JORDAN, MANAGER,
SNOW HILL, - - - N.
C.
This Agency has been in successful
operation for about three years, and
the manager has paid out thousands of
dollars to beneficiaries ; and his com
panies hold in trust millions more to be
Daid when due. The manager is mak
ing big offers to make Snow Hill the
most desirable and cheapest place for
the people to get insurance.
Should you want to carry an accident
policy you can get as liberal policy in
as good, sound company as can be
obtained anywhere.
If you have a -Cotton Gin, Store
House or Stock of Goods. Steam or
Water Mill, Dwelling;, Barns or other
Farm Property, you wish insured, you
can get as cheap rates from the Greene
county Insurance Agency, as can be
obtained anywhere, in first-class com
panies. Cotton gins and cotton a specialty.
Particular attention paid to corres
pondence, so if you desire insurance
write to the manager and your wants
will be supplied.
Credit : Thirty day's credit given
on policies when desired.
Yours to Please,
W.J.JORDAN,
Mgr. Greene Co. Insurance Ag'cy.
?.0. Box No. s. Snow Hill. N. C.
DR. W. S. ANDERSON,
Physician and Surgeon,
WILSON, n. c.
Office in Dru Store on Tarboro St.
DR. ALBERT ANDERSON,
Physician and Surgeon,
WILSON, n. c.
Office next door to the First Nationa
Bank.
DR. E. K. WRIGHT,
Surgeon Dentist,
WILSON, n. c.
ermanently located in Wil
Ha
son
PUblir
WOffic! in Central Hotel Building-
Fellow Citizens : For
many years past I have been in the
habit of visiting you in person during
important campaigns and addressing
you upon the political issues of the
times. Being on this occasion pre
vented this privilege by the condition
of my health, and earnestly believing
that the questions to be decided by
our November elections are of vital
importance to the public welfare, I am
induced to contribute in this way my
share in the discussion of them.
I regard the situation as most crit
ical
Since i860 the legislation of our
country has been almost exclusively
within the power of one political
party. Naturally it has ceased to be
general in its beneficence and has be
come local and partial in the ex
treme. The law-making power has
hernme the fearfullv efficient im
plement of such classes, corporations
cliques and combinations as could by
fair means or foul obtain controlj of
it. .It has been made to subserve
nurelv nersonal ends. In divers
wavs the taxing power of the govern
ment has been perverted from public
or private purposes, money is leviea
thereby to ertrich manufacturers, to
sunnress rivalry in business, and in
every conceivable way to help the
favored few at the expense of the
many. The varied corrupting influ
ences "upon the business world aris
ing from this legislation produce their
natural effect. 1 he . classes wnose
business was thus favored flourish
apace, whilst the unfavored have ex
perienced in the midst of peace and
plenty all the losses and hardships
which are commonly felt only in
times of public calamity ; and the
extraordinary spectacle is present
ed of a nation whose aggre
gate wealth is rapidly and vastly in
creasing, whilst the individual wealth
of its chief toilers and wealth-producers
is diminishing in proportion
thereto. . . .
From the Republican party, with
its disregard of the limitation of the
constitution and its natural depen
dence for support upon the money of
the people whom it had enriched, all
this corrupt legislation has proceeded.
Without it there was nothing evil
done -that was done.
It follows as an undeniable truth,
that whoever directly or indirectly
upholds, helps or supports that party
is a friend to the corruptions which
it has produced, and is an enemy to
those who would repeal that legisla
tion and reform the abuses founded
upon. it. There is no escape from
this.
The Democratic party, on the con
trary, believes in the strict limitations
of the constitution, and has, as a
party, steadily opposed all abuse of
the taxing power, or any other power
of the general government lor private
...ot.c -nri hns unceasiniriv au-
or is
otter
vnrated the most absolute and per
manently luidicu 111 11 ; . . ,
y professional services to fect equality of all citizens in tne leg
islation of our country.
Thf-re is not a single wr.ong or m-
. - :..o nf which complaint is made
r- -, 1 in our laws for thirty years past which , the prize
h T 1 u,t he chartred to the Demo- j elections.
Li . , crat.c party Njt one u has ever
been a break-water against the tyran-
.nen in LaGrange and de- 1 tendencies of the Republicans;
Slrlg a iirst-class turn-OUt for and though m a minority has been
am- ;. t . . o'kio tr. nrtvMit some of the worst
"mH inre noint. conic i- 1
mvliv o legislation ever attempted
modily otner
V immediate point, come to
"ci siauies. uoou icdms, 0 1 ,.ru-ir.u
.r-,... r . i . . mrif 1IV nilltri ictw yin..
'-'Ui drivers and reasonable rignai iniquity would have been in -ates-
1 have made soecial ar ! frwlprable.
the acts and pur-
1 U OlOlt""'"
noses of the two great political par-
tives, which is
their rights and liberties.
The Democrats re-affirm their ad
herence to the constitution, their op
position to tariff robbery, to bank
ing monopoly and to corporate op
pression in all its forms ; and their
desire to" leave their power to control
elections where the constitution left
it, and where it has resided for more
than one hundred years. Primarily
it would seem that no Democrat,
and especially no Southern Demo
crat, could hesitate for a moment as
to which of these parties deserved
his support.
But a new party has arisen which
endeavoring to "make the people
believe that the Democratic party is
no longer to be trusted, lhe ar
gument to prove this is a travesty
on common sense. That because for
thirty years they have as a party
steadily opposed all abuses, and have
not been able at any time to prevent
or reform them, therefore it is no
onger worthy of the support of those
who desire reform ? The meaning
of this is, the Democratic party has
been guilty of being in a minority.
It sin consists in not having done
that which it cculd not, do! Then
et it be condemned, whilst the Re
publican party, which has had the
power and actually did all these
things and still has the power to undoJ
them and does not, is acquitted r
Nay, we will help to keep it in power
by betraying and destroying its only
enemy, therefore, as the Demo
cratic party, with its vast organization
in every State, county and township
in the United States, with its control
of one branch ol Congress, and com
prising in the popular vote a large
majority of the people in the Union,
has not been strong enough he retc f jre
to effect the reforms for which it has
abored and wished, being without
the Senate and Executive, they claim
the only chance for reform is to vote
for the candidates of this Third Party
whose existence in the National Gov
ernment and power to control legis
lation are evidenced by three or four
members of the House of Represen
tatives and two in the Senate ! Com
mon sense and self preservation would
seem to indicate that we should help
the Democrats, who are almost in
power, to get altogether in power
and trust them to correct abuses as
they have promised. One strong
pull at the polls in November next
would give them control of both
branches of Congress and the Exec
utive, and the long night of misrule
and injustice would burst into the
dawn of a new and better day. It
would be time enough to leave them
and form a new- party when they
had been tried and had proved faith
less. But the leaders of this new party,
falsely called the people's, insist that
you shall abandon the Democratic
party now and vote with them. I
am grieved to know that there are
quite a number of our fellow-citizens
in North Carolina who propose to
follow that advice. It strikes me as
the very extreme of unwisdom ; and
when done with full knowlegde of
the consequences it ceases to mere
folly and becomes a crime. For
whatever may be the hopes or the
wishes of these men, they know as
well as they know of their own exis
tence, that this party has not only
no chance of electing their candidates
at the polls, but also none of throw
ing the election into the House of
Representatives, about which they
appear to be most sanguine. Let no
man be deceived about this. The
handful of votes which will be cast for
Weaver in this State.be it as large
as they can honestly claim, cannot
wrest the electoral vote from both
Cleveland and Harrison, so as to help
throw the choice into the House.
It is absurd to hope so. But thirty
thousand (30,000) votes taken from
Cleveland and given to Weaver will
throw the vote, not indeed into a
Democratic House, but into the
hands of Harrison. This result was
so plain that the Republican leaders,
notwithstanding their professions to
the rontrarv. determined to not let
slip the opportunity, and they are
now ready with full tickets and a com
plete organization to avail themselves
everything which the dissension and
folly of our people may throw into
their laps. Their promises to run no
State ticket were manifestly made
with the intention of alluring a Third
Party ticket into the field, trusting
that when men get hot and bad blood
nrpvailed thev mieht walk oft with
. . . . r . . ir j tl
m both state ana r eaerai
Alas ! that want of reflec-1
. .m l
tion or patriotism should renaer tne j
scheme a probable success. Indeed, j
it is plain that no intelligent man j
can fail to see it or honest one deny j
it. that the only probable, not to say i
, 1. tl:.j ij u.. 1
nnH tn nossibe. result 01 tne izuru rany
in their i movement in North Carolina this fall j loses is m
will be to elect a full Kepuoiican
their
they will not lightly risk its overthrow
by casting useless or hopeless votes
in November.
The class of our people who have
had greatest cause to complain of vic
ious - legislation is the agricultural.
The party which has steadily resisted
this, and continually declaimed against
it on the hustings and have struggled
manfully to repeal it in the halls of
legislation, is the Democratic. You
will bear me witness that unremit
ingly since I have been your repre
sentative in the Senate I have both
spoken and voted against that unjust
legislation. At home, as you know, I
never ceased to expose its inequalities
and to advise the farmers to organize
for resistance to it. When they did
begin to combine they had the sym
pathy and good wishes of almost
every just man in the United States
who was not in some way the reci
pient of the plunder arising from this
abuse
Never was there a political move
ment of our people founded upon
better grounds or more reasonable
complaint. But that which I feared,
and against which I earnestly warned
them, soon came to pass. Men who
had little interest in agriculture and
much interest in their own fortunes
aspired to be its leaders. Often men
who had failed to obtain office from
either of the old political parties con
cluded to farm the farmers and raise
personal crops of honor and profit
out of them. They pressed to the
front, thrust the real farmers aside,
and involved the Alliance in the wild
est and most impracticable proposi
tions ever heard of among sane men ;
and in defiance of their constitution
soon converted it into a mere polit
ical party composed of the discon
tented and disappointed elements of
society, professing no fixed political
principles or .regard for the constitu
tion of their country, but striving only
to obtain the very worst of class
legislation, which is their sole idea of
r t . .
statesmanship. Their proposition to
purchase and control the lines of
transportation and telegraph in the
United States at the expense of many
billions of dollars, and of refunding to
the soldiers the difference between
paper and gold at the date of their
payment, at least a billion more ; of
loaning people money on real estate
at lower rates of interest than the
market rates, and kindred schemes,
are so preposterous that to argue
them seriously is a slander upon our
civilization ; and the advocacy of
such measures for the hitherto most
conservative element of our society is
a notification to all the world that we
are approaching that stage of dem
agogism and communism which mark
a people as unfit for self government.
My unfaltering confidence is in the
true farmers of North Carolina, who
as members of that Alliance will, I
trust, not permit their noble order and
their just cause to be thus perverted
and debased. Rest assured that no
real friend of that noble class of men
who, under the providence of God,
trive us our daily bread, will ever
consent to this degradation of their
cause into the obsequious tool of
unscrupulous, ambitious men, forfeit
ing the sympathy of all moderate
nennle. and makine the very name
of Alliance to stink in the nostrils of
justice and common sense. I can
but believe the good judgment of our
farmers will enable them to see where
these leaders are taking them, and
lhat their native honesty will impel
them to draw back in time to save
their country.
Many of our people, it is true, have
objected to Mr. Cleveland, and pre
ferred that he should not have been
nominated. I confess that 1 was
amon? that number. But an individual
preference before the nomination of a
candidate is one thing, and the duty
of a true man after that nomination
has been fairly made is another and
verv different thing indeed. In the
one case a preference may be indulged
in properly, without danger to the
principles we profess or tne parry
which has those principles in charge ;
in the other case we endanger both
and falsify our pretensions by con
tributing undeniably to the success of
our adversaries. If we refuse to'abide
by the voice of the majority of our
fellow-Democrats, freely and un-
: mistakably expressed in friendly con
vention, there is an end of all asso
ciated party effort in the govern
ment of our country ; if we personally
participate in that consultation or
convention and then refuse to abide
counts, pro and con, in this way:
Cleveland agrees with me in desiring
to reform the oppressive tariff taxa
tion, to restrict the abuse of corporate
privileges, to repeal the tax on State
banks and thereby to expand the
currency" and above all he is
vehemendy opposed to force bills
and all similar attempts to destroy
the rights and liberties of the States.
In all essential reforms he agrees
with me except m the single matter
of the free coinage of silver, and in
respect to this there is reason to hope
that the same candor and vigorous
investigation which brought him in
full sympathy with his party on the
great question of tariff reform will
soon bring him to see the absolute
necessity of maintaining both of the
preciwus metals on a par to meet the
urgent needs of the currency of the
world. Harrison, on the contrary,
, . -1
agrees witn me in notnmg ; mere is
no change or reform which I desire
that he is not bitterly opposed to,
and his party with him. Why, then,
should I hesitate ? Either my vote for
Weaver will help Harrison and injure
Cleveland or it will not it cannot
avail Weaver, for he has no chance
whatever, will probably not carry a
single State ; why, then, should I risk
doing a damage to the candidate who
would do most for me, though he
does not promise to do all, and con
tribute to the election of the one who
NEWS 0FA WEEK.
WHAT IS HAPPENING IN THE WOULD
AROUND US.
A ConilenswKl Report of the News From
Our Contemporaries Gleaned Here and
There For Rosy Readers.
BOOK of SHOES and CLOTHING!
CHAPTER I.
Nancy Hanks trotted a mile at
Minneapolis in 2:07, the best time
ever made on a circular track.
Mrs. Virginia Madison has been
jailed in Tarboro on the charge ot
killing the new-born child ol her
daughter, Rosa.
Miss Jane Armstrong, of New
York, who lost her fortune, $25,000,
at Monte Carlo on Sept 8th, went out
and shot herself.
Mrs. Wood, relict of the late Dr.
T. F. Wood, of Wilmington, has
donated his library, worth $5,000, to
the State University.
TheA. & N. C. Railroad has declar
ed a dividend of 2 per cent, on the
capital stock. It requires $x6,ooo to
pay it, $24,000 of which goes to the
State, which owns two-thirds of the
stock.
The Greensboro Record says that
from passengers who came down on
the train from Mt. Airy it was learned
that several witnesses had been sum
moned by the sheriff in order to gain
a clue as to who composed the Alli-
These things, O Shoe and Clothing Buyer, are those which are written for
thy benefit, yea verily they are for thy profit : Oh, my son, that which if thou
dost hearken unto them, will put money into thy pocket ; yea Sheckels and
many American Gold Dollars.
Be it known unto you that at Young's Shoe and Clothing Store is heaped up
many good and cheap shoes ; yea the multitude thereof is hard to count. Thou
dost need them for thy children to go to school, also for thy wife and daughters
who are not satisfied unless they get their shoes at Youug's, for thou and they
do well know that Yonng sells nothing but the best Shoes and the prices
are so low that people say, verily they are going to break. It hath been wel 1
said that a foolish and perverse people buy their shoes from other stores, but
that the wise man who knows the value of the Great American Dollar, never
makes a mistake ; therefore, oh, my son, it is said in Wilson that people are
very vise in as much as nearly all of them buy their shoes at Young's.
Yea, verily below are their Prices which doth tell the tale :
463 Pairs Ghildrsaos Shoeavat
NOT THERE YET.
BV NEQPHYTE.
promises me nothing but an indefinite son lynching party. Arrests are ex
rrmtiniianr-e of existing wrongs and pected to follow, but it is not sup-
an insolent threat of other and greater posed that any clue will be fastened.
wrongs so soon as he has the power
to perpetrate them r
It seems to me, lellow-citizens,
that the path of duty was never more
plain or the necessity ot walking in it
more imperative than it is at this
moment. Let me beg your earnest
consideration of the situation before
you vote in November, and before
you cut loose from the old constitu
tional Democratic party, which in
times of our extreme peril has so
often brought us forth out of the
house of bondage and abandon its
its shining banners to follow reckless
and incompetent men into the wilder
ness of their unreal schemes. 1 hink
well of the possible result of your
action ; how easy it is destroy, how
hard to rebuild. I recently cut down
(special cor. the advance.)
'Bro." John Hoover, myjo, Tohn,
When first we were acquaint,
You trod th' earth a parson, John,
And looked amost a saint.
Your face was long, myjo, John,
Your voice was eloquent,
And we believed you true, John,
Although your eye did squint.
But to-day we find you, John,
With "Kads, and black ones, too
What can you hope to get, John,
crew
From such a motley
Is't to Raleigh you'd 0 John,
To win fame and renown,
Sit back in "percushion cheers'
And wear a leaden lrown
in my mountain nome, in aDout nve To make the nation's laws,
hohrs. a tree that had taken hve
hundred years to grow.
The Democratic party is strong
and able and willing to help you ; its
arm is not shortened that it cannot
save you ; to cherish and uphold it is
the dictate of patriotism and Comm on
sense.
Your fellow-citizen,
Z. B. Vance.
Gombroon, near Black Mountain,
September 17, 1892.
John,
Does ambition beckon on ?
Or is't the Four Dollars, John,
our eve is hxed upon ?
These be weighty questions, John,
That you 11 be asked about,
But you'll have lots of time, John,
1 o find the whole thing out.
To Raleigh you can't go, John,
You are on the wrong track ;
The strainght and narrow way, John,
Is waiting lor you back.
Come out from among them, John,
While vet the lamp doth burn,
For thev can nev'r give you, John,
The thine for which vou vearn.
Lemon Elixir.
PEASANT, ELEGANT, RELIABLE.
For biliousness and constipation,
take Lemon Elixir
For fevers, chills and malaria, take
Lemon Elixir
For sleeplessness, nervousness and
oalnitation of the heart, take Lemon
1
Elixir
For indigestion and foul stomach,
take Lemon Elixir
For all sick and nervous headaches,
take Lemon Elixir
Ladies, for natural and thoiough or
ganic regulation, take Lemon Elixir
Or Mozlev's Lemon Elixir will not
fail vou in anv of the above named dis
eases, all of which arise from a torpid
or diseased liver, stomach, kidneys or
bowels
Prepared only by Dr H Mozley, At
lanta, Ga.
50CI and $1.00 per bottle, at druggists
Union Ridge, N. C, June 29, '91
Mr. Iohn N. Webb :
Dear Sir : I purchased one of the
Electropoise on the 5th day of May and
beean usintr it on Mrs. Hazel, who
eierhtv-five vears old. She has had the
rheumatism and asthma for twenty
five or thirtv vears. She has received
relief from the1 first application of the
noise, and has ereativ improved be
vond our sanguine expectations.
reccommend it to the afflicted. Believ-
ng it to be all that you claim for it, I
m. Yours Respectfully,
J. M. TAPSCOTT.
Take Simmons L iver Regulator in
youth and you will enjov a green old
age.
566
67I
271
379
263
463
275
Mens' Whole Stock Brogans,
Womens Whole Stock Polkas,
Oil Grain
Ladies' Davis Button Shoes,
Mens' Calf Skin Gaiters,
" Lace,
" " " " 2.00 to
25 cents.
75 "
50 rV
6O "
95 "
1.50
1- 25
2- 50
Others in Proportion.
In Clothirm !
260 Pairs Mens' Woolen Pants,
276 "
122 "
98 41
66 "
59 "
62 "
86 "
250 Odd Woolen Coats,
171 " " Vests,
Tn some-ihincr that is stvlish. elegant and equal to Tailor
Made Suits, we shall offer 123 Suits, 3 Button Cutaways, 16.50,
regular 22.50 everywhere else.
126 buits at 12.50, Kep-uiar rnces msewnere, 20.00.
r 10.00,
" " 8.50,
75C
T.OO
1-25
i-75
2.50
3.00
3.75
4.5o
2.50
50
132
142
105
99
86
121
And
to be
cotton.
7-50.
5.00,
4.00,
2.50,
1 6.00.
12.50.
1 1. 00.
8.50.
7.00.
5.00.
other lots in same proportion. These goods have got
sold and we shall sell them at prices that will suit 6c
Call early ifyou want to save money.
Young's! Young's! Young's!
ROUNTREE STORE.
An' Improvement on "Forty
' Mule."
Acres and a
A. CRAWFORD'S
Mercbant-Tailoring Establishment
c.
(Nash StreeL
Wilson, - - .
Lemon Hot Drops.
Cures all Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness,
Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Hemmor
rhace and all throat and lune diseas
es Eleeant. reliable
2s cents at druggists Prepared only
Ab Dr H Mozlev. Atlanta Lxa
Hear the
Conclusion
ter.r
of the WholeMat-
Not a few Third Dartvites in this
section went into the congressional
and State fights under the im
pression that no Republican ticket
would be put up alone either line
Now that they see plainly that they
have been duped, is is not their duty
as honest and patriotic men to come
back to the fold from which they
were enticed by false promises ? We
think so, and we are glad to know
that hundreds of them will do so.
What can it'avail a North Carolinian
to aid in the restoration of Republi
canism to power? Are not all the
ills from which the country suffers
the product of their legislation?
Greensboro Patriot
The State of Texas, )
County of Comanche, f
" Before the undersigned authority on
this day, personally appeared A. M.
Ramsey, who, after being duly sworn,
says on oath that the foregoing state
ment made by him relative to the
virtue of P. P. P. medicine is true.
A. M. Ramsey.
Sworn to and subscribed before me
this, August 4th, 1891.
I. M. Lambert, N. P.
Comanche Co. Texas.
How to Get Thin.
The only safe and reliable treatment
Tt r,Ht.Qitv. or fsiinerfluous fat) is the
"Leverette" Obesity Pills, which gradu
ally reduce the weight and measur-
ment. Ino injury or inconvenience
Leaves no wrinkles acts by absorption
Happy Homes .
Thousands of sad and desolate homes
have been made happy by use of 'Rose
Buds." which have proven absolute
cure for ithe following diseases and their
distressng symptons: Ulceration, con-
eeston and falling ot tne womb, ovar
ian tumors, dropsy of the womb, sup
pressed menstruation, rupture at cnuo-
hirth. or a-iv complaint originating in
diseases of the reproductive organs ;
whether from contagious diseases here
ditary, tight lacing, overwork, excesses
or miscarriages. One lady writes us
that after suffering for ten years with
leucorrheaor whites, that one applica
tionentirely cured her, and further
more, she suffers no more during the
menstrual period. It is a wonderful
regulator. "Rose Buds" are a simple
and harmless preparation, but wonder
ful in effect. The patient can apply it
herself. No doctors' examination ne
cessary, to which all modest women,
especially young unmarried ladies se
riously object. From the first applica
tion you will feel like a new woman.
- 1 . J
r rice $1 00 by man, post-paiu 1 he.
Leverette Specific co, 359 a sn -
ton Street Boston Mass
Here's a big one some of the
Thirdites have been telling. We learn
that one of them told an old negro
some time ago that if the Third party
got into power it would buy up all
the cotton in the country and have it
made into paper and run through the
government printing presses and
stamped as money and distributed
among the people. "Now" said he,
"don't you think that promise beats
the nromise of the Republican party
to give you darkies forty acres and a
C .... r. 1 1 jt j :i: i
answered that it did? Yes, the Third J giving ; and opening up
party promise is a bigger he, that's eicgaiu wvc 01 guuu lur
all. Who says some 01 tne lniraues
are not the biggest liars on earth ?
Kinston Free Press.
lew Enterprise !
with the
practice
most gratifying
THic f-nr. i fnnnded linon the most
bv the decision of the tribunal of our orjpntific orinciDles. and has been used
the most eminent Physicians
1 f iTi.rnnp inhis nriv.ite nractice "for
o norcAiw t-iormr :imnni men. iuiu " - i---
the confidence which is necessary to
all combined effort is gone forever.
The man who bets proposing to col
lect if he wins and to repudiate if he
all countries and among
all classes of people considered a
Court Calendar.
W.E.WAS&Co:
FIRE INSURANCE AGENTS,
(Successors to B. F. Briggs & Co.,)
OFFICE OVER FIRST MAT. BAINK.,
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.
dngtmtnts with the proprietor
total-. -11 l- o
an natrons to aeven
1
gy'gs. Wayne county's fa
ritfc health resort. Call on me!
W. H. HARPER, "
-lm T -nt
fc, -
ithfiillv denied
! ci ' i wu ! How the
I . Now what is me suuauon , - thrQugh
is it the manliest auty ui uu. ur
to do in the coming elections t
The two great political parties into
State ticket and to aid in the election ; aisnonest man.
of a Republican President and House ! But if the considerations of good
u.rJ,nr:dives. What is to be i faith do not influence men's actions
nurl hv that result I need not ask. j in such a case as this, surely those
s, j
five years,
results.
Mr Henry Perkins, 29 Union Park,
Boston, writes : From the use of the
"Leverette" Obesity Pills my weight
has been reduced ten pounds in three
weeks and my general health is very
much improved. The principles of your
treatment are fully indorsed by my
family physician. In proof of my gra
titude I herewith give you permission
to use my name if you desire to do so.
Price $2 00 per package, or inree
man.
fWe have been requested to keep
he following calendar standing in Thk
AnvANfK columns, lor the beneht o
our readers. Ed.
SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT.
Snrinor Term Tudee Georee H.
Brown, Jr.
Fall Term Judge George A,
Shuford.
Halifax fMarch 7, May 16, tNov
Northampton JJan. 25, April 4,
Oct 3.
Warren March 21, Sept. 19.
Edgecombe April 18, Oct. 17.
Bertie Feb. 8, May. 2, Oct. 31.
Craven t Feb. 15, May 30, Nov.
28.
THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT.
Spring Term Judge Henry
Bryan.
Fall Term Judge George
Brown, Jr.
pittJan. 11. March 21, lune
Sep. 19.
Wilson JP eb. 8. June o, uct.
Vance Feb. 22, May 23,
Martin March 7, Sept 5
Nash Mav 2, Nov. 21.
Franklin lanuary 25, April 18,
Oct. 24.
THE COUPER MARBLE WORKS,
Hi, 113 and 115 Bank St.,
NORFOLK, VA.
Large stock of finished
Monuments, Gravestones, &c,
Ready for shipment.
Designs free.
I have fitted up next door to
Herring's drug store the pret
tiest Tailoring Establishment
in this State and am now re-
an
fall
wear, "Consisting of latest styjes
of foreign imported woolens,
from which you cannot fail to
select a fashionable and satis
factory suiting or pantaloon.
Only first-class, experienced
wtrkmeu are employed, and in
fit and workmanship I guaran
tee to equal any establishment
in this country.
If parties out of town desire
a suit, and will so inform me by
postal, I will take pleasure in
calling upon them with a full
line oi samples from'Twhich to
select SSSHBHfcmMiiiiB
W. A. Crawford,
WILSON, N. C.
Aug. 25th, 1892. 8-25-31.
Shave, Sir ? .
he 1 in need of a shave, shampoo,
hair-cut, or moustache or hair dyed, if
wanted done in first-class style, call on
The Twin Gastons.
5-U-iy Nash Street Wilson. N. C.
R.
H.
13.
3
Uct. 3.
Dec. 5
reforms which they profess j which pertain to the public welfare ?&eg5
.1 "
Renublican success is sometning
which surpasses human conjecture, an
11 1 1 : 1 i r--m true
UUJlll. IU UC Utl-UIVV.. II wvri. vi....v-v office
with Mr. Clevelaed it seems to me The Leverette Specific Co, 339
honest man should balance ac-1 Washington St., Boston. Mass.
tFor civil cases alone. XFor civil
and iail cases.
Clerks of courts will please notify
us of any errors.
Hit -inui unuu hi
RICHMOND.V
P.WHITLOCK
ISKKKSKEESBM
YOUR
SUBSCRIPTION
to this paper will be one
of the best investments
you "ever j made if this
notice is the means of
getti ng you f to adopt
OLP VIRGINIA
CHEROOTS
as 'your only 'smoke.
,They are rich, pure and
sweet. ' Five for ten
cents NOT ten cents
for one. 23