WE BUY FOR AND- SELL FOR CASH, AND " LEAD IN LOW PRICES. The fortune lost in, time purchases of rugular concerns should be saved and not squan dered on favor or -friends-hp. Of course the regular prices do well enough for the ledger trade no trouble about that, but when customers are buy ing for the Cold Cash, they look ! into the windows for BARGAINS. They pass the show of the Old Regulators, but stop at the card of the close-cutter, and naturally " enouglv go in and spend their-money with the man who has , the nerve to sell at ONE when it would be cheap enoughat TWO. THE GASH RACKET. STORE iT still doing business on the above plan at the same old stand, and our stock is large and everything we. handle is sold, we believe,-below market value. In our Corner Store you will find Dress Goods, Piece Goods, Glassware and Crockery. In the Back Store we carry only SHOES, HATS AND TRUNKS. In the Orignal Store you - . . . 'a m ' will hnd almost anytning you may want in Notions, Gent's Furnishings, House Keeping Goods and Tin. CASH CATCH BARGAINS. The Cash Racket Stores, M. LEATH, Manager. Nash and Goldsboro Streets, WILSON. N. C. ' GOIISTIPHTION la called the "Father of Diseasea." It is caused by a Torpid Liver, and is generally accompanied with LOSS OF APPETITE, ' I SICK HEADACHE, BAD BREATH, Etc. To treat constipation successfully It is a mild laxative and a tonic to the digestive organs By taking Simmons 1 Liver Regulator . you promote digestion, bring on a reg ular habit of' body and prevent Biliousness and Indigestion. "My wife vil sorely distressed with Constipa tion and coughing, followed with Bleeding Piles. After four months use of Simmons Lirer Regulator she is almost entirely reliered, gaining strength and flesh." W. B. Lum, Delaware, Ohio. 'i -Take only the Genuine, i: Which has on the Wrapper the, ted 53 Trade: - mark and Signature or ,. . -J. H. ZXUXN A OQ Icy of fr-r i, : ADVICE FROM ARP. Men Should Insure for the Benefit of Relatives. : THE PREMIUM LICHI WHILE YODXG J And KVery Tonng Man Could Carry Some thing; on His Life Every Man fchould Pay Hla Own Fu- , neral Expenses. . . V Atlanta Constitution. If I had my life to live over again I .would insure it. I would begin at twenty-one. . I would take a life policy for the benefit of my wife or my mother or pnj sister or somebody near and dear to me. If I was poor I would insure for ,$1,000, for that would take only S9 twice ;a yearr Any young1 man could pay that much and if he died young the thousand 1-nii3 wrMil? Vain wife or his sister so much. Funerals his mother or his . now. There an investment. In fact if 1 could make the laws I would require every youn manto tasc policy for at least $1,000 when he applies for a ra irriag-c lieenso. If he couldn't raise $18 or $20 to protect the girl he .'oved for, one year, he is not litten to have her nor fittento get fitten. If he begun with a policy he would be very apt to keep on. The ordi should be promcnted rom issuin license unless the policy was produced and was approved by - him. A young married man has no right to die and leave a widow and one or two children helpless. A policy, of one or two 'thous and dollars would be a good document to court on. Every man should pay his own funeral expeiises and not die a pauper. There is a family .pride- about such things, and the parentis -of the widow will sacrifice everything for the loved one. The doctor's bills, the drug bills, the burial case, the burial lot, the car riages, the hearse and the mourning all cost money. A few months ago ayoung man of our town divd away from home. His life was devoted to bis mother and his sisters, but., it was not insured, and i ,j.i4v.fB ouargea utw . -.w r.vpeiiSt. . have been a rievt's bm"i!a. How easily lie conul have earriett. a $ 1,000, out of which he could h:f'c b I buried ami left a. g owed mother. I I wonder how ic Zing young men etu i tnotr.er or llicir mm sweet and blef-'d tdonal visits of the ; is a comtort ni Vy, 1 comes ur.tliaely ana unexpected the be reaved ones can t 1 ive on sorrow. I was ruminating about all this localise one nf our boys has , sent home 'a duplicate nf a policy that he has taken out for the tonefit of his sisters." lie will keep it alive as long as be lives. He will do more. He will look after and protect them when" the parents have passed away. That is a parent's great concern what will become of the girls the unmarried ones when we are dead? Will they have to live in penury or ac cept a home with kindred a home where they ar pei-haps not wanted and where the feeling of dependence is ever before them. And so I thought I would write a letter and encourage young men who love their sisters to carry ; a reasonable policy for their benefit. I know many girls who have been to the world's fair on a brother's bounty, and that is all right, but it will be still bet ter to take a life policy for their benefit and keep the premium punctually paid. Twenty-five years ago I carried one in the old Knickerbocker for the lenefit of my wife, but the company failed and I ouit' in disarust. But they don't fail U.LY IIiTS IT AbAir Juclo Hudson Pronounces the Law Null and Void. In"1! HE SAYS IT IS UNCONSTITUTIONAL Defendants in a " IMspciwary Case Dla missed If the Act Will Jot Hold Water the Jugs Will Hold More Liquor. of these travel policy for their i s. I1 ma I love is a tiling, and-the oeca-. hoys to their homes but when death CotrrMBiA, S. C, October 10. Judge Hudson has again thrown a bojnb from the bench "that -will probably smash the dispensary law into smitherines. lie is the same judge who at Darlinsr ton pronounced the law unconstitu tional and shut up the dispensary there until it was reopened by order of Justice Pope. In the circuit 'court today Judge Hudson rendered a decis-" ion quashing the inditements against persons in this city for selling liquor. Melton &Melton, attorneys for the de fense, demurred.to the indictments on the ground that the act was passed in violation of the constitution of the United States and South Carolina and was, therefore, null and void, and that in and bvaid act no punishment for the oITetise is. set forth in the indict ments.' ' s In rendering his decree Jnge Hudson said that the act creating the dispen sary t-ystem is uueou tlLntloual, null and void on the gi our.d that the legis lature has no rig'.it to transfer- from a citizen of th: state to the government thereof the exclusive right to traffic in intoxicating liquors as a buverage; that it is Viot a legitimate exercise of police power nor does it rest upon, the plea that usually supports ; the con struction of absolutely ".prohibitory laws. It is not a legitimate exercise of police power nor is-it, in the proper sense of the word, a prohibition law, but it is a mere assumption by the gov ernment of the exclusive right to traf fic in intoxicating liquors. This being1 the main provision of-the act, all limi tations, restrictions and prohibitions therein contained being merely auxili ary to this I main purpose, must fall with the whole act, and the act in its entirety , is pronounced unconstitu tional, null and void. Counsel for defense is eager for the state to appeal, and tliu place the dis pensary law before the supreme court on the question of its constitutionality. KILLED THE RAPIST. . Hi ghest.of all in Leavening Power. Latest U.S. Gov't Report. ff ABSQlLrYEEtf PURE Grows the Yellow' Flaprae at Poor, Stricken Brunswick. SUPPLIES ARE .iff:"" f- SOW COMING IX. A. Mistake in rJo Ieath Satin Every Day Adds to the Horror People Ilcing Down Wliile at Their . iviily'Work. ... SEWS OF TH& .WEEK CONDENSE J. Grand lall opening this week at Young's., ,4 Men's heavy .mixed wool suits at $2.75 at Young Bros. . Hats at your price at Young's. We are opening the largest stock this week ever shown in Wilson. Young Bros. v For ladie's fine shoes buy Zeigler's at Young -faros. - Five thousand pairs sample shoes just opened at Young Bros. ' - Pant goods ioc. per yard at Young's. We are offering big bargain in dress goods this week. Young Bros. Men's mixed wove pants Tor $100. Young's. Boys suits for $1.00 at Young's. Children's shoes from 25 cts. up at Young's. Zeigler's fine shoes at Young's. Five thousand pairs sample shoes at Young's It will pay you to see Young Bros, stock. White cloth at 4 cts. at Young's. c plenty of good compa nies solid fis a rock and there no ex cuse. Stop, young man stop and think and I know that yuu will agree with me. Let u? all take care of the girls, married or unmarried, if they areneedy or dependent. BILL ARP. . TKZ L e. C- PuiHoned by Scrofula. Is the sad story of many lives made miserable through no lault of their own. Scrofula is more especially than any other a hereditary disease, and for this simple reason : Arising from impure and insufficient blood, the disease locates itself in the lym phatics, which aie composed of white tissues : there is a neriod of foetal life when the whole body consists of hite tissues, and therefore the un ora child is especially susceptible to wis dreadful disease. But here is a remedy for scrofula, whether heredi tary or acquired. It is Hood's Sar sapafilla, which by its powerful effect n the blood, expels all trace of the disease and gives to the vital fluid jualty and color of health. If you decide to' take Hood's Sarsaparilla do not take any substitute. A Voice From Italy. ftev. W. C. Van Meter, Superin tendent of the Italian Bible and Sun day School Mission, at Rome, Italy, wntes : ' The Italians call Pond's Ex- w01 "Aua di Dio" Water of G?d' . .e Use it for every ache and pain ; u u dispensable it our medical de partment. I knew it was good be- lore, but now I cannot find words ' 10 exnrocQ : r ..i 1 nce. Invaluable for Cuts, Bruises, wns, Catarrh, etc. M:inv Persons are broke wn from overwork or household cares. V"WiiN -,, Bitters Rebuilds the JT- al(ls liestion. removes excess of tilo. cure UiaUri4- U?t the Genuine. are expensive nowadays, and a poor man cant : afford to die unless his life is insured. If a young man who is get ting from 550, to $100 salary' does not spend anything for whisky or cigars he could safely take a policy for $3,000 and pay $27 twice a year. If he was twen tyfive years old it would cost him only 30 semi-annually, b Not as much as his cigars. . If his salary was $150 a month he could afford $10 of it each month for insurance, and that would carry a poli cy of 85,000. What a blessing that sum would be to the wife or the mother or the sister. I know a young man who carries $10,000 for his father and mother. They are old and poor. He snpports them out of his earnings, but fears he might die before they do and then they would be helpless. If he outlives them the policy then becomes his own. Life insurance is the best savings bank in the World for a young man. He gets it so cheap. . Now,' here I am, old and poor, and am , carrying only $2,000 on my life and it eosts me $175 a year and it is a hard struggle to meet the premiums. I began only five years ago. Too late, too lc'le, but I must hold on until I whip the figut. I'll whip it sxire if I hold on for- bid Father Time is backing me. If I had begun at twenty- '; one or twenty-five the premiums would -have been about $40 and the dividends would have paid that long before this. I heard a man say the other day that ho paid ou $10,000 for twenty years and , now has a paid up policy and draws ' dividends on if just like it was stock in ' a bank. I wish I had done that when I was a young' man. Wpuldent it be glo- -rious if I had such a document for my wife and the girls. j But if aiyoung man seriously objects to make money by dying for it let him j take out an endowment nolicv for twen- w rT.fl - ! .,sn v,; that way out cn a sneer olwn-t. 4"XX71 r,a -Tni-rVi r' Tvnf. Iio j.on 1-f Ha . linCSS ailCl Ori.101. lives, . walk up, to the captain's -office and call for his money and do-what he J pleases with it. If he happens to die '' before hand his wife or his mother or his sister can draw it for him. - Every s young man should take out two policies ' if he can, one for, life and one on the ! endowment plan one for others and j one for himself. It is a comfortable thing for a man of forty-five to have a j paid up policy that is drawing1 divi- dends. It is still more comforting for a j widow or a sister or a child to inherit '. both policies if he should die before he expected to. . Insuring one's life for the benefit of others is the most unselfish act that a young man can perform , No- selfish or thoughtless young man will do it. It is like looking death square in the face but - few young men will do that. : It is the next thing to getting, religion. - It is a confession of mortality. But death is a fact, and if the young man would , stop and think, he would take a busi- j ness view 01 it ana leave tne religion out of the. question. Let ; him ponder -upon the fact that not half of the men at twenty-five live, to be fifty-that half his life is already gone, that the chances are against Jiim, that he will leave somebody behind him who has been de pendent upon him and may suffer with out him. Then if he is a reasonable man he must admit that he ought to in sure his life, while it costs so little, and not wait till it costs so much; - Why not? For forty-four years I have insured my house and furniture, ! and no fire yet. The insurance company has got all that money for good, and yet I have taken comfort -all that time. I have slept better at , home and felt better when abroad in knowing that if a fire did come and destroy my dwelling the loss ! would be made good. That fire may never come, but here is a case where death is sure to come a death which in most cases of manhood deprives the family of one of its pillars perhaps its ' chief support and yet how few oi the young married men are carrying a policy for the wife and chil dren. They are just going.it blind. It looks like defying fate for a young man whose only income is his wages to live a day without a policy. He can't afford to. Even the rich insure their lives as lit-. Sat 1 Gvait Not Oiiflnctl to tho.I'cw, 1: lmtiil'.! hi t'.ui i:Mrt8 of Sluny. "1 loiitf ago discovered (if indeed I ever needed to learn the lesson),' s-aid a man of moderate, moans, acconHng to the New York Sun. '"tliat there were plenty of men besides myself whose tastes were roo 1 nnd who liked beauty and order. Thus 1 had a pair of gaiters with elastic sides, which had come to be quite flaring in their old age, as elastic gaiters lo; but there w as service in them yet. and eo 1 continued to wear them and to have them repaired as occasion demanded. The last time they went to the shop one of the shoes needed a new linger strap; there were two on each shoe, and the back strap on one of the shucs -'was broken. I calicd the , shoemaker's attention to this. ai.v. rushed him to put in .a new one.' I didn't Mipposo ho could match the old one perfectly. I tnp'posedhe would come as near to it as he could; but , i 'thought the tic.v whole one would he belter, than the old broken one. Uut when I went for my shoes I found that the shoccake'r. being un able perfectly to match the sound hack strap had 'put-in two new back straps. These did not perfectly match the two front fitraps (nor would it have been reasonable to -renew them all), but they "matched- each other, and order was manifest in them; and it was sure ly moie agreeable to the eye and to 4 the mind to have them alike than it would have been to have them unlike; and the shoemaker had made them in heer lewe for sight- r "One morning, wearing those same bell-top shoes, I nat dow n at a street boot blacking stand, to have my shoes blacked. When the bootblack turned up deftly the bottoms of the, trousers "legs, the flaring tops of the shoes were revealed. They were not pleasing to his eye; he knew they were not pleas ing to mine; and surely they could af ford no pleasure ' to the -passer-by whose eye might fall upon them; and, without a moment's hesitation, - with out a look or a word, and at the same time with entire : unostentEtion and almost with a touch he rearranged the bottoms of the trousers legs so as to shield the' flaring tops of the shoes from view, and then he proceeded to put upon the old bell-tops a polish that must have made them proud." , A Furious Nightingale. A Boston woman, who took singing lessons irem jenny ijina many years ago, says that the Swedish Nightingale was a great- scoia. tier temper was such that she would often fly into a furious rage. ncl her husband would have to entice her out of the room to soothe her, after which she would come back, so very elaborate in her court- j esy that the student hardly dared to j breathe for fear of starting her off! again. The American confessed that she spent more of her lesson hours cry ing than singing, and added; '.'Her reprimands were often personal. She would look at me ,nd ejaculate, 'Oh you look so ugly when you sing!' It was impossible to resist apologizing for one's appearance when she spoke like that, and that threw her into a new rage." v The Firm'M Opinion. - A visitor was in a Jefferson avenue wholesale house the other day talking to a memter of the firm, when a well dressed young man passed in. "Who is thai? ' inquired the visitor. The member of the firm told. him. "Why," exclaimed the visitor, "I thought his parents were rich." "They are." "And can't he live without working?' "Well, if he can't,"" replied his em ployer, w'h a significant-smile, "he 'can come -about as near to it as any body we ever had in the store." De troit Free Press. Pwrn Ilelll.r Put Bullet Through - . Vb'lker' Head. SAVAJOiAii, OA:, October 13. March Walker, the negro brute who ravished Jliss Helen young, the- deaf mute, last Saturday night, vas shot and instant ly killed at Way's station this morn ing. - information was brought to the po lice last night through a negro man named Dennis, living at that place, that Walker had been seen there, and Lieutenant Riley anl a squad of po lice were detailed to go out and make the arrest. A reward of $450 had been offered for the negro's' capture, and the men left the city on horseback with a determination to get the crimi nal. When they reached Way's sta tion they learned that he had just left and was going south on foot by the dirt road. They followed him and came upon him at 11 o'clock at Stephen Screven's house. , Walker was ordered to surrender but refused. With a yell of defiance he turned and fired wildly upon the officers. Simultaneously shots were fired at Walker and he fell over having been killed instantly. BRUNSWICK, Ga., October 14. For the 24 hours ending tdiis noon the board of health .reports the following new cases: White, 4; colored, 14; discharged, 10, and the death of Mrs. C. Perrin. Postmaster Brown is at his post again this morning to serve the public, die did not have yellow fever but his ill ness was- brought on by overwork and mental worry caused by the death of his father and illness of his wife. His wife is doing well today. , Brunswick, Ga., October 15. Forty- two new cases of fever were reported today. There; were two deaths Ma tilda Greenwood, white, and E. 1. Pitt- man, colored. Recapitulation Cases under treat ment, 239;. discharged, 140; died, 21. Total, 309. iUiio of mortality, 5.2 per cent. One death occurred on St. Simons island. Both the north and south ends of the island are now said to be infected." Supplies are beginning to arrive, and the people are more hopeful. Prompt action on the. part of outsid ers has doubtless saved many from starvation. Bruxswick, Ga., October 16. New cases of yellow fever reported today, 3423 whites and eleven colored. Discharged Whites 14; colored 5. Recapitulation Cases under treat ment, 255; discharged, 1S3; deaths, 24. Total, 462. : ' . . Mortality per centage, 11.00. , J. M. Hendricks, white, ex-police man, died tnisatternoon. our otners H. P. Levin, the two Perrin boys and their father are hourly expected to die. M. J. Egan was stricken today. The cool wave is favorable to a de cline in cases, but unfavorable to pa tients under treatment. Noxw Th. mortality, ratio has here tofore been erroneously given, being based on the total number of cases, when it should have been on the total of discharges and ; deaths only, the cases under treatment not being taken into consideration until either dis charged or dead. CUT HIS WIFE'S HEAD OFF. Ilrutal Murder of a Woman llecituse She Left Her Husband. Ramcigh, N. " C, October 14. News of a horrible murder at Washington, N. C, reached here today. Two weeks ago Emanuel Slode, colored, quarreled with his wife. - She left him and went to the home of her parents fifteen miles from Washington. Yesterday Slode went to the house where his wife was with her father and mother and asked her to return to him. She refused and as she stooped over the hearth, Slode struck her a blow with an ax, which severed her head, leaving it hanging by a small piece of flesh He & track a secon blow which almost scalped the decapitated head. Slode at once fled. Officers are in pursuit. He has a considerable start of them and at last accounts nad not been cap tured. IT DROVE HIM CRAZY, A Young Hit Man Who Says He Killed Brother in a Lunatic. J acksosvillk, Fla., October 13. This morning W. II. Baker, county Judge, applied to R. M. Call, circuit court judge, to have some lunatics committed to the state insane asylum, and proof being sufficient, it was so ordered. One of the unfortunates is stange young' white man, found wan dering about the woods in the vicinity of Baldwin last week. - He gave as his name Walter M. Bethuse and says his father resides in Talbot county, Geor gia, and is a lawyer and well-to-do. About a year ago Bethune says, he killed his brother, Alfred F. Bethune and then left home and has been go ing from place to : place . ever since Deputy Sheriff Ed WiUiams obtained all the facts possible of the young man anu wrote to nis orotner. -lne young man is thought to be of good family as he gives evidence of educational advan tages and good breeding. i Death and Dent ruction. Columbia. S. C, October 15. A spe cial to the State from Georgetown, S, C, tells a terrible story of death and devastation : wrought : V by the hurricane- in and around that city and on the adjacent Sea Islands. The en tire water front of Georgetown was flooded and much damage was done to merchandise stored in warehouses. At Magnolia beach almost every house was washed away and thirteeti white and six colored were drowned. AN ORDER MODIFIED. ind Relating to the Sale of the Marrletta North Georgia Railroad. Atlanta, G. v., October 13. A very important document was signed by Judge Newman yesterday. It modifies the recent decree in re gard to the sale of the Marietta and North Georgia railroad. Instead of fixing the price of the Tennessee division at SDS0,O00; and the Georgia division at $.S0p,0O0, as stipu lated in his recent order, the minimum bid of the former is fixed at $750,000 and the lowest bid of the latter is fixed at $700,000. It is further decreed that neither sale shall be consummated until the sum of $75,000 has been paid cash in hand, or by a check properly certified. The sale of the road will occur on the 20th day of next month. Trj,E AUGUSTA IS SAFE. Arrives at Savannah After Being Thirty flours Overdue.' Savannah, Ga., .October 15. The steamship City of Augusta reached her dock this morning, abqut half past 3 o'clock, nearly thirty hours overdue. Captain Daggett had encountered the storm just forty miles north of Hat teras, and as soon as he saw he was approaching the center of the disturb ance, which was indicated by the fall of his barometer, he faced the sea and went Out. He sailed about sixty miles out Of his course, which accounts for his late arrival in port. The Augusta did not meet with as seyere experi ences as did the William Lawrence, of the Baltimore line, which came in yes terday. -.'.'' ' THE WORST IN YEARS. The attendance at the world's fair last Sunday was 99,656. The main building of the Minnesota State University was burned Sunday. Loss $1,000. As the result of an old feud, Joha SI. Brook shot and killed Zabe Pierce at Harrhnan, Tenn. The National Bank of Kansas City, Mo., which failed during the late panic, Has resumed business. The late storm did great damage at St. Augustine, Ormond, New Smyrna, Daytona and Titusville, Fla. The First National Bank and the Citizens National Bank of Pulaskie, Tenn., have resumed business. The state dispensary at Columbia. S. C, has received fifty barrels of whisky from a distillery at Camden by wagon. C. J." Wooten, jr., has been appointed postmaster at Kinston, N. C, the nom-, ination of John P. Haskett being with drawn. Mrs. Clara Ford, of Richmond, Mo., took 60 cents worth of morphine, and was found dead in bed. This was her fifth effort. - For the third time the Vigilant has passed the Valkyrie, and the American cup will remain in this country for an other year. . The Manchester cotton, mills, three miles east of Fort Worthy Texas., were burned on the 12th. The loss ; will reach $100,000. " ' At Marion, N. C, a horse belonging to Mr. C. E. Justice accomplished the wonderful feat of running at full speed across a railroad trestle. . A. 3. Roberts, near Flat River, N. C, had his dwelling house and contents totally destroyed by fire last Monday. There was $2,800 insurance. Over 700,000 people attended the world's fair on Chicago day, which breaks the world's record in the mat ter of attending expositions. The baby which was born with teeth on farmer Hinton's place, near Raleigh, N. C, was regarded as a great curios ity, but it only lived one week. No movement was ever started iu Atlanta with more unanimity of feel ing than the proposition to celebrate her semi-centennial on the 20th of De cember, ' -: j-. A Marshall county, Ala., man, ninety-four years old, went into the woods recently and cut a cord of lightwood, returning home without any fatigue whatever. ".. -. A verdict of suicide while insane wan rendered in the case of Henry. D. Ker shaw, the wealthy New Orleans news paper man who threw himsels under a train at Chicago. The latest discovery in Kansas is a liquid preparation that will make the African's skin white. ' The discoverer declares, that he has made white men out of two coal black negroes. The October report of the statistical division of the department of agricul ture makes cotton show a decline ol 2.7 points from the September condi tion, which was 73.4 as against 7.7 for this month. The failure of Wilbour, Jackson & Co., and Sheridan & Berhey, of Provi dence, R. I., has caused a great sensa tion iu banking circles, i hese con cerns were classed among the strong est in New England. There was an awful accident mar Jackson, Mich.: yesterday. An excur sion train crashed into a freight en gine, killing fourteen and badly injur ing twenty. Fourteen years ago to a day a Pacific express crashed Into a freight engine within 100 yards of the same place, killing eighteen people. During the late storm along the At lantic coast Wilmington, N. C... exoeri enced the highest tide ever seen there, it being 16 inches above the high water mark In 1853, which surpassed nit pre vious records. Nineteen people were drowned, and an immense 'amount of damage to property was wrought by the winds end waves. TIT it r ... -v " wan street bankeis Stttt still offering ONE DOLLAR AND TWEHTY-FIYE CEHT SHOES FOR ONE SILVER DOLLAR. TWO DOLLAR HATS HaifDouIIIve' o o' 'o And will guarantee to always give you ONE DOLLAR AND TWENTY FIVE CENTS worth of goods in gold for the One Depreciated Silver Dollar,. Houses Wrecked in North Carolina and Wires Down, Raleigh, N. C. October 14. The windstorm here this afternoon was the worst in years. The wind's veloci ty was thirty-six miles an hour at 3 o'clock, and the barometer indicated 28.66, which is the ' lowest ever record ed in North Carolina? Great damage has been done to the cotton crop, though most of it is picked. Raleigh was almost in the eye of the storm, its center being a little west of here. Telegraph wires are down in all direc tions. Some ' buildings have been wrecked at nearby points, and great numbers of trees are blown down. If a woman looked into her con science as often as she-does her mir ror she would not be any worse for it. ". ', - StGQOH S33reoi qaiqji ssaooxj prre norpoday; 'uonTOiquio3 atp sos . -sassod vQuedcsjes U3HJLO Olu - The Storm on the Lakes. Dunkirk, N. Y.; October 16. There is no farther doubt that the steamer Dean Richmond , has gone down with all hands on board. One of three bodies washed ashore has been identi fied as that of John Hogan, first en gineer, of Port Huron. The sign board of the boat bearing her name was later found and some barrels of flour which formed part of her cargo have also Irifted to land. She must have gone down off Lighthouse Point. Maxistee, Mich., October 16. The ship Minehaha has been wrecked and six lives lest. The captain, William Packer, was saved. A Father's Atrocious Crime. Spbixgfield, Mass., October 16. Crazed by his wife's persistent refusal to live with him, Haven F. Winn visit ed her home today and in her absence cut the throat hie infant son. While the child's screams were ringing in his ears, he killed himself with the S3 me weapon. ; , The Report Confirmed. . Washington, October 11. Secretary Herbert has received several telegrami from Captain Pickins, of the United States cruiser Charleston, now at Rio de Janeiro. One of these tele grams confirms the Associated Press teleirram from Rio. which said that one of the forts in the harbor bay had surrendered to the insurgent fleet today. GROWTH OF THE SOUTH. The Industrial Development la the Week l.ndlnff October 9th, 1893. The Tradesman, Chattanooga. Tenn.. la Its review of the industrial situation in the Soutb for the week endine October Bth. 1S93. report that no material change has taken place in in dustrial or iinanclal affairs. The average num ter of new industries is well maintained, and nearly every tranch of manufaott-rin? is repre seuted in tie list. Reorganization amonx tbe banks which closad durinsr the recent panic, ha gone steadily forward, and nearly all of them are now open and doing business on a satisfac tory basis. An increased activity is reported among iron producers. The great storms of last week on the Gull coast, causieg much loss of life, also atTected tc a considerable extent the output of the sugai and rice crops. It is believed, however, that the loss will not exceed one-fourth of the crop Cotton raisers are 'bringing in their crop more freely, but there is no general disposition t market it, there being a strong belief among the growers that higher prices will soon he had. The Tradesman reports 33 new Industries es tablished or Incorporated during the week, to gether with 4 enlargements of manufactories, and 8 important new buildings. The most Im portant new industries of the week are the Miehtsran Lumber Company, capital 1103; 000, at Little Rock, Ark. ;' the Lamar Grove Company, at Houston, Texas, capital 100.000; the North western Manufacturing Company, of Charles ton, W. Va, capital tiO.OOO; the Columbian Manufacturing Company, of Wheeling, W. Va., c apital-835.000; the Gates Desk Manufacturing Company, of Greenville, S. C, capital $25,010; and a fcO 000 slave tomnany at Yazoo City, Miss. AtlO.OOO canning factory is reported at McClellanville, S. C: a saddlery company at Dallas. Texas; a cotton compress at Shreve port. La. : a milling company at Colombia, Tenn.: a large saw mill at Grand Ridge, Fla., and a foundry at Asnoorougn, r. UP MARKET REPORTS By private wire to B. W. Martin, Manager. New York. October 16 -cottow. Nov. & SI Dec. 8 45; Jan, -8 55; market steady. Middling 8: market firm. Chicago. October ML Futures - closed as follows: ' - Wheat Dec. 6i Coax. Dec. 7H Oats. May 30 ?4 Pork. Jan. lit A Laud. Jan. s 42 Sides. Jan. 97. i Chicago. Ott. 16. Cash auotations were follows: Mess pork tl&;5&17.0!. Lard . "Q . Short ribs, loose. I Ab(&.nu Dry salt shoulders, boxed. t7.257.50; short clear Bides, bored, 9 7510.00 SAVARNAn. Oct 16. Turpentine q,uit a -rosin linn at 9a t - ' nOOOOOA' -0gooooog0 g ; o gooooog uooooou cgGCCGCCC G a a - cccccccc 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2S 222222222 222222222 ogooooo0 o o o o So o Soo 008 ao . oo wwoacdWOdTO-tdcs co CO cd 63 tO CO to to to 63 .t0 . 03 tO . to to to ' to to to to. tototo-ta to to to co to to - to to ?0 ?0 Jtf ?rj Jtf JsO Jtf JO ?rj ' to .: . to 777 :77 Ogooooog0- 8 " gooooog 00000U : Toil fell Not Wait For a Better Selection or Lower Prices! never come. To-day in m in in ' into m in in in in V in in in in-in intn in v m m m The time will is your time. gSggOur Stock 'has been selected v with the utmost care recog nizing the demands of our patrons in va riety, quality and priceand our deter mination for LOW PRICES. Young's Line of Nobby Hats are all the rage. --Our line of Nobby Suits was WJpST never so complete, and com prises all of the latest Styles and Shades. At YOUNG'S. fcaThe Domestic Se win or Ma chine Company ha vine cot into trooble, we are enabled to offer one hundred of their best Machines at $28.50 cash just half price. This offer holds good for ten days. .- At YOUNG'S. 5ftjgIn Dress Goods we have the -Largest, cheapest and Best selected stock in. Eastern Carolina. Our sales of over one thousand dollars last week shows that our customers know a good thing. UJjiYour especial attention is called to our large stock of Shoes at New York cost To thous and pairs that must be' sold. You know we carry nothing, but the best goods Ziegler's, Parson's, Kirkham's Faust's and Burt & Packard's. Young Brothers. Nerve Tonic Blood Builder v J A York (Maine) boy,, five years old, knows the exact figures ol the national debt at the close of the war. Me. 9r Senator descriptive pamphlet Dr. WILLIAMS MEDICINE CO., Schenectady, N.Y. and BrockviUe. Onfc If you want dry goods see Young Bros. If you want clothing see Young Bros. If you want hats see Young Bros. If you want dress goods see Young Bros. It you want shoes see Young Bros. Best ginghams 64 cents at Young Bro's. Now is the time to save money at Young's. Elegant styles in woolen dress goods at ioc at Young's, It is very hard for a girl who has been eneaeed once to behave with the next vounc man iust as if she j r never had. When the hair begins to come out by combing;, it shows a weakness of the scalp that calls for immediate at tention. The best preparation to ar rest further loss ol hair and restore the scalp to a healthy condition is Ayer's Hair Vigor. - The average sportsman, will begin to tell the exact truth about his fish ing experiences when it gets to be the regular thing to catch salt mack- eral in Mooselucmaguntic Lake. : . LaGrlppe. Duriner the prevalence of the Grippe the past seasons it was a "no ticeable fact that those who depend' ed upon Dr. King's New Discovery, not only had a speedy recovery, but escaped all of the troublesome after effects of the malady. This remedy seems to have a peculiar power in effecting rapid cures, not only in cases of La Grippe, but in all dis eases of Throat, Chest; and Lungs, and has cured cases of Asthma and Hay Fever of long standing. Try it and be convinced. It won't disap- f point Free trial bottles at all drug stores. Tlie l'roor of thd Pudding. Have you humors, causing blotches? Does your blood run thick and sluir- gisn r Are you drowsy, dull and languid ? is a bad taste in your mouth, and Is ycur tongue all furred and coated? Is your sleep with bad dreams brok- en? Do you feel down-hearted, dismal. Dreading something, what, you know not? Then be very sure you're billious That you have a torpid liver, and what you need is something to rouse it and make it1 active enough to throw off the impurities that clog it : something to invigorate the debil itated system, and help all the or gans to perform the duties expected 01 tnem, promptly and energetically. That "something" is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, the great Blood Purifier, which its proprietors have such faith in that they guaran tee it'to cure you. If it does not, your money will be refunded. But it will. Buy it, try it, and be con vinced of its wonderful power. If the proof of the pudding is in the eating, the proof of this remedy is in the taking. The chances are that if the north pole is discovered the trollery people will hang a wire to it in less than twenty-four hours. . Strength and Hmlth. If you are not feeling strong and healthy, try Electric Bitters. If "La Grippe" has left you weak and weary use Electric Bitters. This remedy acts directly on Liver, Stomach and Kidneys, gently aiding those organs to perform their functions. If you are afflicted with sick headache; you will find speedy and permanent re lief by taking Electric Bitters. One trial will convince you that this is tbe remedy you need. Large bottles only 50c, at all drug stores. . Rube. "How's der chicken-hunt-in' Uncle Abe ?" Uncle Abe, "Huh 1 Der huntin's all right ; it's der catchin' am so pow 'ful hard lately." Hood's Pills may be had by mail for 25c. ol C. I. Hood and Co., Low ell, Mass. To cure nervousness your nerves must be fed by pure blood. Hood's Sarsaparilla makes pure blood. Take ;t nOW. '