Newspapers / The Wilson Advance (Wilson, … / May 18, 1893, edition 1 / Page 1
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$ 1 . 50 A YEAR CASH IN ADVANCE. LET ALL THE ENDS THOU AIM ST AT, BE THY COUNTRY S, THY GOD S, AND TRUTH'S." THE BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM VOLUME XXIII. WILSON, WILSON COUNTY, N. C, MAY 18, 1893. NUMBER 20. SHE WENT WITH HIM. POETRY. Miss Martha stood npon the platform before the assembled school sweet Miss Martha, adored by every girlish heart in the room not at all the ideal school- ma'am.; , I "I have a note here," she said in that"! clear, vibrant voice that never could be trained to the conventional monotone. I THKOLU MUSKET. J. W. KENYON. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. O CatGlies the BargaiBs! In lis Week in the Back 36 Pais Slippers at 60c. tin' Corner Store Store Fans, and a Dress Fans, Fans, from 4c. to 98c, new lot of Cream and Tan Goods.. r lii tlie Original Store Just received : New Stationery, Cor sets, and another lot of those Ladies , Silk Umbrellas with fancy handles, at $1,66. . ,-; HJSKVou know we don't keep goods long in stock, so if you want any of the above named articles call early. J. I. LI:': ATI I, h.ii'-ii;er. Nash and Goldsboro Streets, WILSON, N. C. On the wall above the mantle There's an ancient weapon, hung. Tarnished, dusty, old, and rusty, Springfield pattern, sixty-one ; inviting yon all to the sociable at the : And the spiders, all unconscious Methodist church tonight. Mr. Rowell informs me that an old classmate of his Will be present and will probably be in duced to te'l the company something of the mission schools in the Sandwich Is lands." ' -'. ' . Miss Martha, looking at the note as if not quite sure, hesitated a little before pronouncing the last words, then tore the sheet of paper to atoms. "You may find it interesting to go," she added, with a nod to her assistant to indicate that she had finished her speech. The assistant struck the bell, and the room was filled with the rustle of a well ordered rising. At the gate a gentleman, who. seemed about to enter, sjtepped aside, and lean ing an arm upon the fence watched with a benevolent smile the outgoing tide of youthful loveliness. . j; The gentleman, the girls decided, was of very striking appearance by reason of the gray hair that framed a face still youthful in contour and coloring, and from his clerical coat and tie they at once deduced the Sandwich Island mis sionary of the evening. Miss Martha still seated in her arm chair, her face turned toward the door and the fragments , of the note held loosely in her hand, heard the slow step upon the cemented walk, but. supposing it to4le that of Washington, the- colored janitor, she did not stir "Mha Dabney!" She looked np. "Ohf w exclaimed, rising with a startled luosked. while the bits of paper heeded to the floor.- "Why id!" said, drawing a step nearer, tating. as if not quite sure of DR.. WV S. ANDERSON, Physician and Surgeon, WILSON, N. C. Office in Drue- Store onTarboroSt. 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. Having permanently located in'-Wil on, I offer my professional services to he public. Eg-Oftice in Central Hotel Building: How' ThU. - We offer One Hundred Dollars Re ward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F.J. CHENEY & CO.,Props, Toledo O. We the undersigned have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Q. Walding, Kinnan & Mar vin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price 75c, per bottle. Sold by all Drug gists. 1 estimonials tree. IF Y00 WISH TO PURCHASE THE BEST Piaxjos, at the most reasonable prices, write to us for prices and catalogues. Our In struments are carefully selected and our guarantee is absolute. ' Cabinet . Organs. We carry an immense Stock and offer them at lowest prices. For par ticulars address. E. VAN LAER, 402 and 404 W. 4th St., Wilmington, N. C. GfVe refer to some of the most prominent families in Wilson. io-27-3tn - " 1 - , The Grand Command ery of Knights Templars elected officers at Augusta and selected Atlanta as the next place of meeting. Advice to Mothers Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup should always be used for children teething. It soothes the child, sof tens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for diarrhce. Twenty-five cents a bottle The Handsome And popular Shades of RIBBONS AND FLOWERS that we trim Hats and Bonnets with are -of the very best quality and latest Shades. WE CAN PLEASE YOU. Misses ErsHne 4 Bines' v Under Brings Hotel, fluttered n-i it is Mr. Iij "Yes," hej but still lies his welcome. But tyktiii.H time she had recovered herself and was once more the self pos sessed rsoii she usually appeared. Step ping down from the platform she ad vanced to meet him with outstretched hand and a manner that .struck just the proper bal;ce letwcen pleasure at meet ing a long absent fnend and the reserve naturally incident to a Ions separation. "1 am very glad to see yon. I didn't know you were in town.-' When did you arrive?" "This morning. I only meant to stop over one train, but Rowell caught me and'- "He wouldn't let you go, of course," said Miss Martha, with ready tact. "lie wrote me a note this morning inviting the school to hear yon sj-eak tonight, but he neglected to mention your name. He is exceedingly absent minded." "Yon are very little changed." he said abruptly. "1 should have known yon anywhere: It seems strange that we should stand together ' again iu this room." "It does indeed, especially when we think how widely separated we have been for so many years." - "Has the distance seemed great? Have the years seemed long?" "Won't you sit down?" she-.isked, turn ing with a suddenly awakening hospital ity toward a group of chairs. "It is pleasanter here than in the par lor. 1 hate the parlor. It is always haunted by an echo of patronizing voices explaining the peculiar sensitiveness, Of Mary Ann and the wonderful aptitude of Maria! Jane." "It is wonderful how little changed yon are," ho said again. "1 am an old man, ind yon are still a girl." ; "To be sure," she answered merrily 'Growing old is supreme folly. People turn their heads gray with solemn study and fancy they are' growing wise. To keep a light heart is the only wisdom." "I wish 1 had it," he said, with the old wistfnl look in his eyes. "But it is hard to keep a lonely heart light.'.' "But the way is not to have a lonely heart," she replied, rising to draw a flap ping shade beyond the reach of the wind. What conld he mean? Had he really not forgotten then? Her own heart and head grew light to giddiness. Still 'she must take nothing for granted. "And the Sandwich Islands," she said, resuming her seat and bravely attacking the name that 'had haunted her all day "Tell me about them. Life must be very interesting out there?" She rested her elbow on the arm of her chair and laid her pointed chin in her pink palm with" a distractingly attentive air. "Yes." he said feebly, his eyes glued to her face, but no appearance of under standing in his own. "And then the sea all around yon. Well, 1 don't know, either, that 1 am very fond of the sea. The sea is alien and inimical; full of treacherous thiugs r-no, decidedly, I don't like your -seal" "Ah, don't say yon will not like it," he said, leaning forward and seeming to make a personal matter of it. She shook her head obdurately. "I owe it an undying grudge. Besides it must be lonely." "For one. yes. but if there site two?" He leaned nearer; she drew back, half rising, but he caught her hand. "Martha, dear, yon didn't marry the man your father promised you to. Tell me, was it for love of me?"- "Well." she said, looking at him with a tantalizing smile, "what do you think about it?" . . ' "And you are right sure yon never for got me for a single instant?' "Quite sure. And yon will go with me, Martha,- dear?" . y "To the sociable this evening? Why. certainly." Ha took her face fondly Isetween his hands, looking down into the starry eyes. "Ah, yon know I don't mean there." . "Well," with a Bigh of deep content, suppose if nothing else will satisfy DiiuufcnAvi.i nxiao, iy lands. Boston (ilobe. , The White Caps were apprehended and arranged. They pleaded guilty ! While Mr, T. J. Richey, of Altona, and were sentenced to two vears in- Mo., was traveling in Kansas he was I the penitentiary. There was a most taken violently ill with cholera morbus. affecting scene in court, the prisoners He called at a drugstore to get some :i Amr. nr,A nfanfnn1 mpHirinp and the drup-prist recomen- uiui.t uunu v-uiupiciciy auu nvpioi "- . beged the judge to show them as tied Chamberlain's Cholic, Cholera much mercy as he could. The wife and Diarrhoea Remedy so highly he oi one of the White Caps held a concluded to try it. The result was small baby up to the judge and beg- immediate relief, and a few. doses her hushand. The cured him completely. It is made Of its power, upon its crawl. And have webbed it, breach and muz ' zle , Where it hangs upon the wall. Could it speak 'twould tell a story That would startle young and old, Tales of long and weary marches Could that weapon true unfold, Tales of battle, tales of carnage ; That would blanch the bravest cheek From Bull Run to Appomattox, Could that ancient weapon speak. Dear, indeed, is that old musket. It had sure voice long ago, Not a friend so true and trusty On the field to meet the foe, Then'it spoke and to a purpose, Fiery was thetale it told, Leaden was the fearful message From that weapon grim and old. And I love it who can .blame me It and I were closest chums, Old and rusty, tried and trusty, Best of all your make of guns, Comrades dead and comrades living. It reminds me of you all ; Elbows touch whene're I view it As it hangs upon the wall. Brings again your kindly faces. From the distant long ago, When, we faced the storm of battle On the field to meet the foe, On the wall above the mantel There's an ancient weapon hung, Tarnished, dusty, worn and rusty, Springfield Fattrn, sixty-one. See the AVorhls.Fair For Fifteen Cents. Upon receipt of your address and fifteen cents in postage stamps, we will mail ycu prepaid our Souvener Poitfoho of the World's Columbian Exposition, the regular price is fifty cents, but as we want you to have one we make the price nominal. You will find it a work of art and a thing to be prized. It contains full page views of the great buildings, with de scriptions of same, aric! is executed in the highest style of art. If not satis fied with, after you get it, we will re fund the stamps and let you keep the book. Address H. E. Bucklen & Co., Chicago, 111. A NEW ENGLAND MIRACLE. A IMILROAI) ENGINKER ICKLATGA Ills EXl'KRIKNCK. The Wonderful Story TaUl by Fred C. Voro and bin Mother-in-Law to a Reporter of the Host on Herald, ltoth are Restored After Years of Agony. (Boston, Mass. The wheelmen's meet, has closed at Savannah. H. C. Wheeler of New York, and J. S. Johnson of "Milwau kee carried off the racing honors. ' Dyspepsia in all its forms is not onlv relieved but cured by Simmons Liver Regulalor. 'I Am So Tired," Is a common exclamation at this season. There is a certain bracing effect in cold air which is lost when the weather grows warmer ; and when Nature is renewing her youth, her admirers feel dull, sluggish and tired. This condition is owing mainly to the impure condition of the blood and its failure to supply healthy tissue to Jhe various organs of the body. It is remarkable how. suscepti ble the system is to the help to be derived from a good medicine at this season. Possessing just those puri fying, building-up qualities which the body craves, Hood's Sarsaparilla soon overcomes that tired - feeling restores the appetite, purifies the blood, and in short, imparts vigorous health. Its thousands of friends as whh one voice declare. "It Makes! the Weak Strong." Brookhaven White Cap Coma to Grief. Nash Street, judge held the baby a moment and for bowel complaint and nothing else, soothed its mother, r but could not It never fails. For sale by A. j. Wilson, N. C. ! spare the father. Hines, Herald.) May 1 8th. The vast health -giving "results al ready attributed by the newspapers throughout this country and Canada to Dr. Williams' ''Pink Pills for Pale People" have been recently supple mented by the wonderful cures wrought in the cases of two confirmed invalids in one household in a New England town. The radical improve ment in the physical condition of these two people from the use of this great medicine is vouched for, not only by the eager testimony of the patients themselves, gladly given for the benefit of other sufferers, but also by the indubitable assurances of dis interested relatives and friends' who had been cognizant of the years of pain and distress endured by the two invalids, and who now witness their restoration to health, -'vigor and capacity. The names of these people, -the latest to testify from their own ex perience to the marvellous restorative tonic and healing qualities of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, are Fred C Vose and his mother-in-law, Mrs Oliver C. Holt, of Peterboro, mem- bers oi the same nousenoia, wmcn is composed of Mr. and Mrs. Holt, and Mr. ana Mrs. vose, the latter a daughter of the Holts. The home occupied by the family is a cosy and neat looking two stoned house, situa ted on the top of a hill and surround ed by many of the natural attractions of a residence in the country. Mr, Holt is employed in the Crowell shoe manufactory of Peterboro, and Mr Vose has for many years run the engine on the Fitchburg railroad trains between Winchendon and Peierhoro. lielore entering upon an account of the longillnesses of Mr. Vose and his mother-in-law, which shall be given in their own words as taken by a reporter of the "Boston Herald," it will be well to give the exact reason for the coming together under one roof of the two families, as this fact has everything to do with manner in which Dr. Williams' Pink Pills first came to the notice ot Mr. vose ana the reason of their introduction into the family as a medical remedy. Mr. Vose's wife had been in failing ; health for a number of years, her illness finally developing into a brain trouble, accompanied by intermittent paralysis of the tongue and lower limbs. Death . had taken all her bodily and mental infirmities to each an extent that her husband, himself an invalid, was compelled to take some means toward securing for her com plete rest and freedom from all house hold care. To this end he gave up housekeeping, and toe k his wife to her parents' home, where her mother might care for her in her ailments. Mrs. Holt was herself suffering from various complaints brought on by complete nervous prostration several years ago, but her daughter's severer and more hopeless condition was the more urgent and more appealing case of the two, and so Mrs. Holt for several years has tried to forget her own disabilities in tenderly minister ing to her stricken daughter. In February last Mr. Vose was readine the weekly paper, when his attention was attracted by the account of a case of paralysis cured by the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. The similarity of the case described to that of his wife at once aroused the deep interes of Mr. Vose, and he called his mother-in-law's attention to the published article. ' After long consultation they decided to send for the pills. The beneficial effect they had upon Mrs. Vose was marked. I4 rom being unable to stand she was so materially strengthened that she could walk without difficulty, jand.in other respects her condition was. much improved. The beneficent results noticed in Mrs. Vose's condition from trial oi the pills causea both ner husband and mother toiconsider try- ing tnem lor tneir own compiamis. They tried them on the 'principle that 'if they don t cure they I can t hurt, but before each had finished their first box they had felt such relief that they came to believe that the pills not only could not hurt, but were actually and speedily curing them. To the "Herald" reporter who was sent to investigate his remarkable cure, Mr. Vose gave a detailed ac count of his long illness and subse quent recovery. He begin his nar rative by saying : ' I am 1 not anxious to get into the papers in this or any other connection but," as I wrote the Dr. Williams Medicine Co. I have felt such happy results from the taking of Pink Pills that I am willing, if ray expedience will help any one else, to state how they benefited me. I am 37 years old, and 15 years of this time I have spent in railroading for the Fitchburg railroad on the Winchendon and Peterboro branch. For the past three vears i nave been engineer 01 uie train which connects with the Boston trains at Winchendon. 1 have been troubled with a weak stomach from my boyhood. In fact, there never was time in my remembrance wnen 1 1 t 1 r" was not more or less trouoieu irom that source. "Seven years ago, however, the complaint became greatly aggravated from the nature of my work and other causes, and I suffered greatly from it. My stomach would not retain food, my head ached constantly, there was a dimness, or blur, belore my eyes most of time, and my head used to' become so dizzy I could scarcely stand. On getting up in the morning my head swam so 1 was ; frequently obliged to lie down again. I had a most disagreeable heart burn, atcontinuous belching of gas from the fomach, a nastv coating of the mouth and tongue, and my. breath was most offensive. I cousultcd physicians in Peterboro, and took their medicines lor two years, but was helped so slightly by them that at the end of that time I gave np 111 discourage ment, and let the disease take care of itself for a long time. I grew worse as time went on. I have been obliged to give up work many a time for a week or two, and have worked at other times when I ought to have been at home in bed. I have lost many months during the past seven years and would have lost more only for the fact that I stuck it out and would not give up until I had to. "My appetite then failed me, and about four years ago I began to notice a fluttering of my heart, which grew so bad after a while that I could not walk any distance without a violent palpitation and complete loss of breath. The pains in my stomach, from indigestion lasted two and three days at a time. I lost considerable flesh, and before long I noticed that my kidneys were affected. This came from my work on the engine, I know, as many railroad men are troubled in the same way. Iliad awful pains in the small of my back, and was obliged to make water many times during the day. "I resolved to go back to the doctors again, though their treatment had done me no eood before. I was told that medicine was no good for me, that what . I needed was a long rest. v 1 could not take too long a vacation, being compelled to work for my living, and so I kept along, taking what stuff the doctors pre scribed, but feeling no better, except for a day or two at a time. "Finally my legs and hands began to ache and swell with rheumatic pains, and I found I coulden't sleep at night. If I lay down, my heart would go pit a pat at a great rate, and many nights I did not close my eyes at all. . "I was broken down in body and discouraged in spirit, when, some time in February last, I was reading in the "Montreal Family Herald and Weekly Star," which we take every week, of the great cures made by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peo ple. I got a couple of boxes for my wife to see if she would be helped any by nhem, and then I tried them myself. : I did not put much stock in them at first, but before I had finished the first box ! noticed that I was - feel ing better. 1 he palpitation of my heart, which had bothered me so that I could n'tbreathe at times, beean to improve. I found that in going to my home on the hill irom the depot, which was previously an awful task, my heart did not beat so violently and I had more breath when I reach ed the house. After the second and third boxes I grew better in every other respect My stomach became stronger, the gas belching was not so bad, my appetite and digestion im proved, and ray sleep became nearly natural and undisturbed. I have con tinued taking the pills three times a day ever since last March, and today I am feeling better than at any time during the last eight years. "I can confidently -and conscien tiously say that they have done me more good, and their good effects are more permanent, than any medicine I have? ever taken. My rheumatic pains in legs and hands are all gone. The pa'ns in the small of my back, which were so bad at times that I couldn't stand up straight, havenear ly all vanished, and I find my kidneys are well regulated by them. This is an effect not .claimed for the pills in the circular, but in my case they brought it about. I can now go up any hill without the slightest distress or palpitation or loss of .breath", and am feeling 100 per cent better in every shape and manner. "They "have been a saving of money to me, for since I began their use I have not been obliged to lose much time away from work. I am still taking the pills, and mean to continue them until I. am certain n.y cure is thorough and lasting one." ' After talking with Mr. Vose at the depot, where his engine was in wait ing, the reporter went to the house where Mrs. Holt, the other patient for whom the pills have done so much, received him and gave an ex tended account of her experience with them. -MrsHolt said : "I am 57 yeurs old, and for 14 years past iTiavehadan intermittent heart. trouble. Three years.' ago-. I had neivous prostration, which left rne-with.a number of ailments, for which I have been dectorinsr un successfully ever since. My heart trouble was increased .-so badly by the nervous prostration that I had to lie down moat of the time. My stom ach also gave out, and I had con tinual and intense pain from the brick of" my neck to the end of my back bone. I went to physicians in Jeffrey Newport, Aisled, Acton and here in Peterboro, but my health continued so miserable that I gave up doctors uespair ;mu iosi iaun in meaicine I betran to take Dr. Wil liams rmk rills last winter, more from curiosity than because I believe they could help me, but the first box i-nade me feel ever so much better. I have" taken the pills since February last and they have made me feel like a new woman. The terrible pains in my"' spinal column arid, in the region of my liver are gone, and I believe for good. My palpitation has only troubled me three ti tries since 1 com- menced using the pills, and my stom ach now prefoims its functions with out giving me the great distress which fromerly followed everything I ate. The pills have acted differently from any medicine I ever took in my life. I have tried everything doctors' medicines, patent medicines sarsa- arillas, and homoeopathic doses. In , ' . 1 1 4 weets. mree years ago 1 spent: $300 for doctors' bills and medicines, and since then have put out asr much more money, but the relief I obtained if any was only temporary: "With these pills, .however, the effects are different. They are not catharic like other pills I have! taken, but seem to act directly upon the stomach and liver without any loosen ing of the. bowels. My sleep, too has wonderfully improved since I began their use. For a long trme before I took these pills 1 lost sleep night after night with my heart and pains in my back. - ' "My improvement in health is a source of remark on the part of those who have known how sick I was. Iy husband, who didn't know I was taking the pills, is delighted atlthe noticeable betterment in my heajth, and upon learning the cause of it urged me to continue the use of the pills. This impulse, however, is not necessary, as I have been too sick in the past not to fully appreciate he value of a jemedy that has' done ne so much good. Dr. Williams'' Pmk Pills are certainly a grand medicine, and from my experience with them I can cheerfully and cordially recom mend them to any one who is troub led with heart palpitation, indigestion, liver complaint, and the many ills consequent upon nervous prostra tion." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are not a patent medicine in the sense in which that term is usually understood, jbut are a scientific preparation success fully used in general practice for many years before beinsj offered . to the public generally. They contain in a in aitojrctlier. sfgiSiiiiii Forcing the Season with 1 -W-V -B--T- ' nm tions c- nZ lhe weather, but We CAN CHANGE OUR PRICES. That's What we ve done and done it with a vengance. Never could choice goods be bought so cheaply in July clearing sales as during the month of May, commencing to-morrow. Our . Oreat Season Forcing Sale starts off with a 1 double -head of steam. Yesterday all day Ion? our big store was crowded, of course. ' It was doing business for glory. But it's sales, not profits, we are after now. Come in any day this month prepared for surprises. May mnst make up for April, and it will. Uur reductions are simply irresistable. 1 ney 11 make you buy in spite of yourself. REJOICE! Stylish :-: Dressers ! ! Men's Suits made to bring $10.00, Reduced to $ 7.50. Men's Suits made to bring $12.00, Reduced to $ 8.00. Men's Suits made to bring $15.00,. Reduced to $10.00. Men's Suits made th bring $17.00, Reduced to $12.00. Men's Suits made to bring $20.00, Reduced to $15.00. Men's Suits made to bring $25.00, Reduced to $18.00. Worst Whack Yet at.Pants Whether you be in need of a Pair or Pants or not, now is the time to buy. Now if you want to save 25c. on the dollar. All the finest and latest materials represented. . Pants made to sell for $1.50, Reduced to $ 1.00. Pants made to sell for $2.50, Reduced to $2.00. Pants made to sell for $4.00, Reduced to $3 00. Pants made to sell for $5 00, Reduced to $4 00. Respectfully, 1 .YOUNG BROTHERS 4&VV I condensed from all the elements ne cessary to give new life ind richness to the blood, and resto e shattered nerves. They-are an unfa ling specific for such diseases as Iocorjiotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus'.. dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheunjatism, ner vous headache the after effects of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, the tired feeling resulting from ner vous prostration ; all diseases de pending upon vitiated humors in the blood, such as scrofula, chronic ery sipelas, &c. They are also a specific for trou bl s peculiar to females, such as sup pressions, irregularities, and all forms of weakness. They build up the blood and restore ' the " glow of health to pale or sallow cheeks. In the case of An almost general rush is being made on Western banks. The numbers of failures recently reported vtuoii iiiu.ii uneasiness. iiypcruermic injections oi morphia are frequently prescribed by physi cians for cure of neuralgia ; buts its ef fects are only ephemeral and you will have to repeat the injection every day. J iscard this seductive en chanter, and use Salvation Oil, which goes to the seat of the trouble and effects a permanent cure. More than five thousand applica tions are on file in the Treasury De partment. New York leads, more than five hundred citizens being anx ious to serve their country. The Lone Star State comes next with close men they effect a' radical cure in all . to two hundred and fifty. Kentucky cases arising from mental worry, over work or excesses of whatever nature.. They are manufactured by the Dr. Williams Medicine Company Sche nectady, H. Y., and Brockville, Ont-V and are sold in boxes (never in loose form by the dozen or hundred) at 50 cents a box or six boxes fbr $2.50 and may be had of all druggists or direct by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Company from either address. The price at which these pills are sold makes a course of treatment comparatively inexpensive as com pared with other remedies or medical treatment. Some St ranee Miitnuinent. 'Much of the Russia leather comes from Connecticut, Bordeaux wine from California, Italian Marble from comes third with a trifle more than two hundred. Nearly every State in the Union is recorded there. "Ilrace Up." Is a tantalizing admonition to those who at this season feel all tired out weak, without appetite and discour aged. But the way in which Hood's Sarsaparilla builds up the tired frame and gives a good appetite, is wonder ful. So we say, " Take Hood's and it will brace you up." ) The heaviest rain ever known is reported in Texas. The country had been suffering from" severe drought then came the other extreme. Sec tions of railroad, county roads and bridges were washed away. The corn and cotton crops are much dam aged. ' Kenluckv. French lace from New York, and Spanish mackerel" from , wrwcoininbin Exponition the New Jersey lcoat. Dr. Pierce's' Will be of value to the world by illus- eolden Medical Discovery comes . tratinfr the imDrovements in the me. from Buffalo, N. Y., but there is noth ing in its name to criticise for it is tru)y golden in value, as thousands gladly testify. Consumption is avert ed by its use, and it has wrought many positive cures. It tofrects tor pid liver and kidneys, purifies the blood, banishes dyspepsia and scrofu la, renews the lease of life, and tones up the system as-nothing else will do. What is more, it is guaranteed to do all this, or the price is refunded. General S. C. Armstrong, iounder and superintendent of the Normal institute at Hampton, died at Rich mond, aged 56. He has devoted his ! life to the manual training of young ; colored' people of both sexes. If yoti feel weak and all worn out take Brown's iron bitters A sure cure for-croup. Keep it handy. Mr. Clinton Campbell, Ches ter, Pa., says : "I can recommend Dr. ; Bull's Cough Syrup as a sure cure for croup. We have kept it in the hbuse for the last five years and would not be without it." cchanical arts and eminent nhvsi- cians will tell you that the progress in medicinal agents, has been of equal importance, and as a strengthening laxative that Syrup of Figs is far in advance of all others. . fllO OTHER Sarsaparilla posscs- ses the Combination, Proportion and Process which makes HOOD'S Sarsaparilla Peculiar to Itself. A carriage has been constructed in Germany, which is propelled by means of a benzine lamp. It runs at the rate 15 to 20 miles per hour at a cost of Yt cent per mMe. It is easily guided and controlled. A terrible accident occured last Sunday at the j Calumnet Mine, Houghton, j Mich. Ten men were coming up on a car, when the cable broke and they were hurled 3,000 feet down the shaft. The wife of one of the victims witnessed the catastro phy. The account given of the recent war inHonduras, rival in savagery and barbarisen the scenes, we read of as enacted in the middle ages, Not even women and children escape.
The Wilson Advance (Wilson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 18, 1893, edition 1
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