$1.50 A YEAR CASH IN ADVANCE. LET ALL THE ENDS THOU AIM ST AT, BE THY COUNTRY S, THY GOD S, AND TRUTHS. if THE BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM : - : . : : i : : WILSON, WILSON COUNTY, k C, NOVEMBER, 161 893 VOLUME XXIII. NUMBER 46 - - We are too busy fo write 1 . 1 . 1 ... !11 an tltl. . 10-ud.y, uui yuu win hear from "fis next week. J M . L EATH, Manager. The Cash Racket Stores, Nash and Golclsboro Streets, . WILSON. N. C. " I do not believe this insti tution has a Superior in the Soutli." " So writes an eminent scholar and I )i ine of the Wilson tor Lollemate -Institute, i' oung WILSON, N. C. (Kst.iblished.in 1.S7J.') fpi!IS INSTITUTION is entirely non L sectai ian. and offers a lhotrn;h Kqi.ir.Uiiry ciiiiTsf nf study, together ith an unusually full and conipiv.hen sue ( nllcoiatit course. Excellent fa cilities for'.tlicsludy of Music and Art. Healthful location.' Fall term, or 23rd si-hool year,. begins Sept. 4th, 1K93. lor catalogue and circular, address Si i.as E. Warren, Principal, Wilson. N. C. Justice (to ditmnuitive prisoner )- ihere is no use your denying. t4a vou assaulted the policeman and that you were drunk. , Mminuitive' prisoner (pointing to Sigantic policeir.an) Is that the cop I struck, your honor ? Justice Yes. ' diminutive Prisoner Then I must .nave liecn blind drunk. Judge. A nominee. jas tair and - niv passion begun! S 11 f: ''- smiU-d and"-I could not but love! ' ';nt vh.-n from afar I detected catarrh, No beauty my passion could move! In dcsjiair she sntiht doctors in vain. ''I sac li-;i!ivr-ft -,f "Hiim.nnlt;'s 1 s;ic . boon; 'w lu-'r breath is as sweet as the- Uiiii -,x fills upon roses in June. 1, .lew 'O-llljrlit, a;; we sit in our home, 1 er sweet lips o'er 1 kiss o'er, '-' bless Dr. ind Sage in our bliss. . i'or the joy which he hath brought to our door. Then; is.no disease more trying to '"ehdship than catarrh ! The con s,ant effort to dear the throat and J'. : the foul breath, all the features' the disease, make it as much areadtd by the friend as by the vic ' Humanity has cause to bless i?. Sae for his "Catarrh Remedy." manufacturers offer to forfeit 50o for any case thev cannot cure. iokrkrs See here. I don't want '"y duns coming to my house. Vun Then- why don't yo inv d ou call OOmrQ.T Vv . , T ri r-r )uu niqjjjwnc I till! 1 sr to call Weekly. on a grocer! Harper's Nobody need suffer from languor or .e'aiH-lu,ly if they take Simmons Liver Ktgulator. I GOHSTIPATIOIl Is called the "Father of Diseases." It is caused by a Torpid , liver, and is generally accompanied with 10SS OF APPETITE, l1;! ; -ti SICK HEADACHE, BAD BREATH, Etc. To treat constipation successfully It is a mild laxative and a tonic to i the digestive organs. By taking Simmon3 Liver Eegulator you promote digestion, bring on a reg ular" habit of body and prevent Biliousness and Indigestion. "My wife xrai sorely distressed with Constipa tion and coughing, followed with Bleeding Piles. Aftr four months use of Simmons Liver Regulator she is almost entirely relieved, gaining strength and flesh." W. B. Learn, Delaware, Ohio. 'i -Tafce only the Genuine, ' ' Which has on the Wrapper the red SB Trade mark and Signature of J. H. ZXIUX A 0fc She Does Not Let Any News of it Come Out by Cable. CARRILLO IS SAID TO BE STROK Two Provinces Almost Solidly With Him Spain Has Both Her Hands Full Just Now Busy with Morocco. I Opinions of Sympathizer. Key West, Fi.a., November It. The news brought by the steamer from Havana last night has cheered the hearts of the Cuban revolutionists here, who declare that their . cause has received a fresh impetus." The present movement in Cuba is evident ly ah outgrowth of the plans hatched by the leaders here, who have been, since the ' last fiasco, endeavoring' to Uincite another insurrection. K One of the emissaries recently sent to Cuba returned last night, lie re ports that an ; uprising took place Saturday night in the jurisdiction of Cienfuegos, province of Santa Clara. About twenty-five men, under the leadership of General Esgnierre, raised the 'cry. "Cuba-libre," near the town of Las Cruces, where thev had an en gagement with the civil guards. The reAoluVonists took possession of the guard house, capturing more than a hundred stacks, of arms. Then they procured horses and proceeded to the towri of riacetas, being reirforced Iry several hundred men. - Several engagements " have taken place between the insurgents nd the government troops, and a number of men have been killed on both sides. The Havana papers received here con firm the report of the outbreak, and while attaching little .importance to the uprising, show that the authorities are taking active measures to sup press it by concentrating all their available forces in that locality. Later reports show that several leaders, including esquires, with their followers, have surrendered, asking amnesty. Others have retreated to the mountains to avoid capture. Key Weht, November 11.- Private dispatches from' Cuba say that the in surrection is under full headway. The government controls all news channels and no news of the insurrection is al lowed to go through. An armed expedition will leave from this vicinity within the next twenty four hours. New York, November 13. Leaders of the Cuban revolutionary party in thisv city say they have private ad vices from their country which state that rebellion against the government, is already well under way. Many think the movement was prematurely begun, and for that reason will end disastrously. " ' It is pointed but that' Spain already has all she can take care of with the Morocco affair, and, therefore, will be unable to give aid to the island: This, it is thought, will not only make dis satisfied Cubans more confident of success, and consequently more deter mined, but will create a lack of confi dence among the government forces. Mr. Trujillo, editor of El Parveni, 1 and New York correspondent of La Lucha a Havana paper, this morning ; cabled the editor of the latter paper, ; asking information concerning the dif- Acuities. The message was sent early in the morning, and had not been an- i swered at a late hour, ordinarily ca- blegrams are answered directly. This ; Ik taken to indicate that the tronble Is ' nlro'idr sn sprirais that, stpns liavp licpn ! Ui.J W taken to prevent correct news from reaching the outside country. . WHAT A PROMINENT CUBAN SAYS. The leader of the revolutionary party in America and its most trusted adviser in Cuba is Mr. Jose Marti, ed itor of La Prairie. To a reporter, he dictated the following: T "There is undoubtedly in the Cuban revolutionary movement forces worthy of consideration. The government has kept a close watch over all communi cations from the island, thus revealing the true gravity of the situation. The news already published that cstme from Key West, although quite true as regards the unanimous feeling of Cu bans, and they are most enthusiastic the present moment, appears to be ex aggerated and somewhat confused. There also seems to be an unwarranted misuse of public names in the rumors which have reached the press. ; The emigrated Cubans, anxious only to help their country to the establish ment of a working and substantial re public, know what to do in the present moment, either in case of prosperity or otherwise, and will do their duty in I such a way as to please all true men oi America." Buy Tarboro hose for children at Young's. , Boots for men at $1.50 at Young Bros. 4 See Young's line of Knaby hats. Bargains in pant goods at Young's. "BULLY" Bill Arp Take3 Exceptions to Page's Article in t ho Forum ABOUT THE "SOUTHERN BULLY." There Is No Sm-h Character as the Author Deaeribes in This Section A De fense of the South. The Forum is a most excellent maga zine. It has ever heeri fair and liberal in sentiment towards the south. It is a medium for advanced thought, a con servative educator, and is always wel-i come to my fireside. . ' lint I confess that I am not pleased with thfc editor's article on the '-Southern 1 hilly" in the November number. Indeed, I did not know that we had . such a professional institution in all our borders,; and Mr. I'agvs's twelve passes of philosophical anathema against t him have failed to convince me of his existence or of our danger from bis lawless con duct. Distance does not always lend en chantment to the view. If Mr; Pae lived here in Cartersvilie h soon surprised to find tiia was not in these parts but was, per haps, a little lower down whore the mosquitoes aggravate, a man or. some foul, malaria poisons his liver and disturbs Jiis serouity. When I was a boy studying mv first geography, I 1 found there a picture of a heathen Chinee carrying on a pole a long string of rats for sale, and so for forty years I believed that rata were the Chinaman national food. Indeed, I was disap pointed . when I found .'that they did not eat rats. I had believed it so long I wanted to continue in the faith. In the same book there was a picture of a scene in Florida. It Was a dark, slimy lagoon surrounded by a tangled growth of trees and vines covered with long moss, venomous snakes hung from the branches, greedy vultures perched in the tretops and wide-mouthed alli gators were sunning themselves upon the logs. That hideous vision of Flori da lasted me for years. Just so some of our- northern breth ren have grown up with an idea that the south used to be full of despera does, and is even now spotted with bullies who are clinging to barbarism and brutality. They want to continue in that faith. . Mr. Pajre says '"the bully i: , , ! an old acquaintauce to those who know sou'th- ' ern life. He had much to do with the . war, the penalty of " which other men ; who had nothing to do -.with it, had to j Ray with his oaths and his honor; he; has strutted thrpughall the quiet w-ays " of southern life calling himself the south and he leads mobs to avenge 'ourl women' ' " " It has been left "for com- 1 merce by infusing its influence Into the ! body of local xiublic sentiment in the! south to rid us at last of this historic red-handed, deformed and swaggering ! villain." . j , Well, I am glad he. has gone, if lie j was ever here, for he must have been an awful bad man. -Strange' I did not ' come across him in my youth stranger j suit that m the infliction ot .fh -war j minima pass tin I um not recognize him and now in my old age 1 do not see him with his last hold upon the. throat of law and order. It seems to ine that Mr. Page has sot up the tenpins just to have the fun of knocking them down again. If he means that those who voted for secession were the bailies, then I plead guilty along with many of our noblest Christian -gentlemen, such as Howell Cobb anil Tom Cobb and Joe Brown and General Lvans and Colquitt and Gordon and Nisbett and a host of others whom the -people of -Georgia have delighted" to honor. Surely he is I not making a fiing at these men. The right to secede has long ago been set-, tied,-, settled when the north did not dare to try Mr. Davis for treason: their greatest lawyers d.'elarinfr 'that be coidd not be legally convicted.- The south seceded that w;:s all. It was the north that made. War about it. , Then who does he mean by the bully who had much to tlo with the war? Maybe he means the. common soldiers, the high privates, the "hoi polloi" Who mainly did the lighting. No, he cannot . mean theiil, for v they were patriots. Patriotism was their only motive for they, owned no negroes whose slavery was in peril. And besides red-handed, ' swaggering villains do not fight. They I are cowards. I remember but two or J three town bullies iu I tome when we 1 Avere makings up our companies, but i they dident join us. They had no influ j ence in bringing it on and they took no ! perilous part in the conflict. They ' never do. j Whq the bullies are that now have their '"last hold." as Mr. Page says, we ! are at a loss to know. If he means the lynchers, we must defend them from everything but lynch ing. They are neither red-handed, de formed nor swaggering. They are not villains. They do not " pretend to the traditions of the old southern gentle man, inev are not a ciass. ineyare a community. You cannot go into any 1 town or settlement anu Pick tnem oux and say this man will be a lyncher when the horrible crime is committed. Mr. Page professes the highest re spect for Bishop II ay good, as everybody does who knows him, and yet does not respect his assertion that "the southern people are. not cruel and never were. They are a kind-hearted people; good to one another -nd to all men. They are kind to dumb brutes. Whatever may be true or false, about them, they were never cruel-hearted They were kind to the negroes when they were slaves they are kind to them now." 'If this be true then where are the bullies that these sweeping reproaches are hurled at ? for it was this same kind-hearted class of people who burned the negro at Paris; the same kind who slew the negro rapist at Port Jervis, in New York; the same-kind that have avenged the purity of woman in Illinois and Michigan. The same red-handed, swaggering villains. The only differ ence between the north and the south is that the female victims here are hun- Nobody will suffer with liver or kid ney disease if they take Simmons Liver Regnlator. He Does '00 love '00 darling? ' She Just des I do. Intelligent Parrot (in deep nasal voice) Oh, we've all been there be fore. BROWN ' S X itO i. cures jjynpc digestion & -v, In Uobili ty .WE HAVE NO: r : dreds to every single one at the north Over fire hundred have been recorded within twelve moni us.- The human na ture that prompts the lynching is the same everywhereeverywhere where the. innocence and virtue of woman is respected; and let me add the greater th respect the . more speedy and terri ble the punishment. Hishop Haygood says "the south has always been pecu liarly jealous of its women," Mr. Page throws a sneer at this when he says it is the swaggering villain who struts around and leads mobs to avenge "our : women." Perhaps he is not aware that , the marriage relation is much more, sacred at Ahe south than at the north,1-, especially among our common people,;-; who have not much else to live for be- j side wife and children. Divorces are ' very rare in our courts, especially among our country people, the very people w-ho compose the mobs when j the outrage happens, but who in all other things are the Jbest citizens the world ever saw. Compare them with j the . north for obedience to law and order, and for every white convict for felony in Georgia I will show ten' in Massachusetts and twelve in New York in an equal number of population. Those are the tables from the last cen- L , , , 1 convicts in Georgia, there are hun t the bully , , . XT v , 1 11 j. board of charities of Massachusetts in summing up their report uses this lan guage: "And now we find that there is hardly a country in the civilized world where atrocious and flagrant crime is so common as in Massachusetts." Now I am not arraigning any north ern state for its sad condition, but I am defending the soutli from slanderous assertions concerning its morals not onjy its morals, but its good, industri ous citizenship. For every pauper and every tramp that can be found in Geor gia J will, show you fifty in New York and nearly as many in any other north ern state. If idleness is the parent ol vice, as Ben Franklin said, then our people ' are not idle, nor is "over the hills to the pooi-house" any song of onrs. ". No, the red-ha,nded swaggering bul lies are not domiciled among our people, but woe be to the negro or the white man who violates the sanctity of the j household. How low'down this sanctity j can fall I know not, but Mr. Stetson, ! the statesman of Massachusetts, says i in his report, "Within the last ten years i divorces have increased three times as fast as marriagfes, not counting the sep- arations that do not iret into the courts. . . x. A . anu now n lsiaieu mai not more man eight families in ten have preserved the honor and purity of their marriage re lation." This is enough on the subject of that myth called the southern bully. As tc the lynchings for outrage and the mur der of a child, Dr. Haygood tenderly says, "It is an emotional insanity, and if it was my child who had been thus dismembered, I, too, might have gone into insanity that would never have ended." There it is in a nutshell. Does any one think that a father would say, "No, let 'us wait; let the law take its course." Could he say it while looking upon the violated and mutilated corpse of a darl ing child ? I confess that I could not, and would not Let me be classed With the bullies for this, but this only. In all other things let the law reign su preme. Outrage antl murder combined removes the brute at once from the hu man code and places him along with wild beasts, w ith mad dogs and hyenas. If a burglar v enters my room in the night I may shoot him before he takes my watch, or while he is taking it, or as he jumps from the window to make bis escape. I may continue to shoot at him and to kill him if I can, even though 1 do not know whether he has my watch or not. What is that but a lynch ing lynching by one an execution without trial by jury. But for a crime infinitely more horrible it is said that we must await the law's delay, even though caught in the act. I have nc patience with such theories, nor '-would 1 trust Mr. I 'age nor Judge JJloc-kley nor Governor Northen to carry them out in a case that came home to his house and his heart. ' Un.L Akp. THE TOOLS. How the Nefarious Workers of tlie Night Obtain TlieSr Tools. Every little while, says the Boston Daily Globe, the police arrest a man with a kit of burglars' tools in his pos session, and one naturally wonders where they all come from. It is easy to buy a gun of any description, and the most reputable citizen would not be ashamed to be seen purchasing the most wicked looking knife ever made; but who would know where to get a slungshot, or a jimmie. or a device for drilling into a safe, or any of the many, tools used by the professional burglar in the pursuit of his calling? There probably are places in many large cities where these things are made and sold to the users, but such places are scarce. Once in awhile the police find such a factory, and then things go hard for the -proprietors. It may seem a little strange to learn that most of the tools used in burglaries are made by mechanics who are respectable men in the community. When a burglar wants any particular tool made he goes to a mechanic who can do the job, and pays him . perhaps five times what it is actually worth for making the tool and keeping still about it. Superintendent Elbridge of the police department recalls many cases of this kind that have come to light in Boston. One in particular oc curred three years ago, when an es caped convict named Williams went to a blacksmith in lloxbury and got him to make a lot of drills to be used in safe cracking. He personally superin tended the tempering of the steel, and when the job was nearly completed it leaked out and Williams was arrested. In this instance, the blacksmith knew nothing of -the use to which the tools were to be put, and escaped punish ment. In the opinion of Superintendent Elbridge most of the tools used by burglars are secured in this way. The only regular establishment where they were made ever discovered in Boston was at the West End. This was years ao, ard the place was soon broken ujl A riiild Enjoy The pleasant flavor, gentle action and soothing effects of Syrup of Fig?, when in need of a laxative, and if the father or mother be costive or bil lious, the most gratifying results fol low its use ; so that it is the best fam ily remedy known, and every family should have a bottle on band. IT I S N OT what we say but what Hood's Sarsaparilla does that tells the story of its merit. When in need o med icine remember HOOD'S CURES 1 xiguv.oi.wi an 111 xAVvTUllig 1 UWCl. LxiLCSL J . O. VJOV I XvCpOIT. - : mm ' I ABsawmvg PURE PAID THE PENALTY; A. South Carolina Negroe's Horri ble Crime. HE IS HUNG IN A SLAUGHTER PEN. Kennedy Had Assaulted One Whit Woman, and lrflHby One School Girl The Crime Quickly Avenged. j SrARiXECRO, S. C, November 9. A negi-o named Hob Kenedy was lynched at Gaff u'ey last night. j About dusk, a married white woman and her little", girl were returning home from the business portion of the jtown, when in a narrow lane near their home a negro suddenly grabbed the woman, threw her down and be gan to choke her. Her screams aroused a little boy not far off. He ran out and saw the negro who ran away as soon as he saw the white boy. He ran off without completing the as sault. .- "The white boy followed him and saw him enter a house not far away. He then called in some neighbors who went to the house and found Kennedy sitting by the fire . with his shoes oft and .put out of the way. He was or dered to ge't his shoes which showed that he had just been in the mud. He was carried out and his tracks corre sponded exactly with the dnes where the woman was assaulted. He was kept under arrest until midnight, when he was- taken out and hanged. The people were more incensed be cause a week ago three little girls were returning home from Gaffney when an unknown neero seized one and tried to drag her into the woods. The other two ran and screamed, and the negrc becoming alarmed, she was released nearly frightened to death. Thej' believed that Kenedy made the attack on the little children. He confessed to the assault on the white woman. THE YELLOW FEVER. Brunswick's .Kpidemic Still Claiming Its Victims Every Hay. Brunswick, Ga., November li. Eleven new cases of yellow fever were reported today, . two of which Were white. The white patients are,.J. A. Montgomery and G. II. Peterson. The The nine colored patients are, XV J B. Furlong, Alex Williams, Mollie Pear son. James Robinson. Pearl Adams, llattie Lewis, Charles Smith, Thomas Barton and Marie Mock. Six patients were discharged, none of them being white. . Bkunswick, Ga., November 13. Five new cases of of fever were reported today, none of which Were white. 1 he colored patients reported are: Lena Stewart, Lucy Ford, Rosa Ford, Virginia. Mitchell, Malinda Mclntyre. Eight '.patients were discharged. No whites. There were no deaths. The -official report shows l'S patients under treat ment., A careful review by attending physicians of cases reported and over looked in .discharging patients will doubtless reduce this number.' Resolutions were passed today by the. health board urging refugees not to return until an aiiviouncement that it is safe to do so is issued by the board and marine hospital service. The resolution includes a statement,, which is true as proven by the records, that three . refugees, who evaded the quarantine rules, have ben stricken with yellow fever and died. Business is beginning to resume. XSmith, the Train Itohber, Dead. TvNoxviia.E, Tenn., November 10. William Smith, who was wounded in the recent attempt to rob a train, near Coal Creek station, diedat the city hos pital last night. Barney Irwin had acknowledged that he shot Smith. Smith's father has sworn out a war rant charging Irwin with murder. He says that Irwin, purposely entrapped his son to kill him. The trial of Irwin promises to bring out some sensational evidence, and ii current reports are true,' the facts which will "be testified to will serious ly reflect upon the officers who were connected with the affair and may lead to other arrests. Another Crank Shows Vp. Cleveland, O., November ll. At 12 o'clock .today a crank called at the office of Myron T. Herrick, secretary of the treasurer of the Society for the Savings, and with a dynamite bomb in one hand aud a revolver in the other,, demanded g.7J,000. Mr. Herrick re sponded by promptly knocking the man down and grappling with him on the floor. While in this position the crank fired a shot at llorrick, the ball passing through his coat. The fellow then jumped through a window and escaped. ' After the Sports. Norfolk, Va., November 11. The sheriff and commonwealth's attorney of Princess Anne county are in Norfolk armed with a warrant for the arrest ol Wongo and Duke, the two men whe fought in a prize ring in, that county last week; also for the arrest of half .a dozen or more of the sporting men of this city who participated in the affair. Frendergast's Case Continued. Chicaoo, November 7. Mayor Har rison's assassin, Prendergast, appeared ; for trial today, but upon the request . of attorneys, secured for him by his ; brother a letter carrier the case J was continued by Judge Dunne until I November 27th. The lawyers for the ' defense stated that they desired time to study the case. Weeks Gets Ten Years. New York, November 9. Francis H. Weeks was today . sentenced ' to ten years imprisonment in Sing Sing prison, j He pleaded guilty on ar raignment and the entire proceedings did not. occupy five- minutes. - Ellison's cotton trade -Review shows that spinners in Great Britain have taken this year 159,070,000 pounds less than last season, and that on the con tinent the falling off has been 14,406, 0O0 pounds. NEWS OF THE WEEK CONDENSED. It is said that the Birmingham. Ala.. j rolling mill will soon resume work. The Edison, patent on incandes cent lamps in England vxplred on the ,10th. Farmers in Carroll county, Ga., are guarding the gins with Winchesters while the ginning proceeds. During the past week 53,000 pieces of sides and 16,000 tierces of lard -were shipped south from Chicago. Last week's business failures in the United States and Canada were 3&i against 309 for the previous week. I Four persons were killed in a col 1 lision on the. Hocking Valley railroad near loledo, Ohio, Thursday night Near Natchez, Miss, a yoUng girl ran a foot;, race with five young men, beating them all, for a purse pf 10. The tobacco manufacturers are kicking against the proposed increase in the tax on manufactured tobacco. , Chicago received 130,000 hogs .last ' week, which exceeds the receipts for the same week last year about 12,000. Francis II. Weeks, the notoious em bezzler, was carried to Sing Sing prison and put in stripes last Thurs day. The Merchants' and Miners' bank, ol Pratt City, Ala., has made an assign ment. Its depositors were almost ex clusively miners. Major II. H. Harse, of Wheeling, W. Va., committed suicide at Los Angeles, Cal., . by shooting himself. Despon dency was the cause. - Sir Andrew Clark, Mr. Gladstone's physician, and one of the most distin guished men in the medical profession, died in London Monday. - J. M. Mathis, a Goliad county, Texas, farmer, raised J5,000 bushels of corn on 640 acres of bottom land and a large number of bales of cotton. The internationl convention of Christian , workers met at Atlanta Thursday. It is largely attended, and many different countries are repre sented. It is rumored from Paris that the Archduchess Stephanie, widow of the late Archduke Rudolph, will shortly be married to Archduke Ferdinand, of Australia. .. One gin house was burned in Jones county, Ga., last Tuesday night, and other gins have been posted in the usual way by white caps, causing much excitement. ' . i At Greenville, S. C, J. Mims Hen derson has been convicted of the mur der of Herman G. Gilreath in 1892, and the prisoner sentenced to be hang-ed December 22d. Rev. Dr. J. A, Mundy, has resigned the pastorate of the. First Baptist' Church at Greenville, S. C, after an acceptable service of ten years. He is considering a call to Virginia, It seems that a protracted spree has interfered with the departure of Col. J. Hampton Hoge, the newly appointed consul at Amoy, China, and there is danger of his losing the position. It is understood that Secretary Car lisle will recommend to eongrejss an appropriation of of $2,500 to reimburse lighthouse employes of Georgia and South Carolina who suffered from the recent cyclone. , William SI Grady, of Georgia, has been appointed special agent to allot lands in severalty to Indians residing on the Fort Berthold reservation in North Dakota at $8 per day. He is a brother of the late Henry W. Grady, of Atlanta. There was great excitemet at the state fair at- Columbia, S, C, caused by the governor's attempt to stop a a man named Meetze front , selling beer. The man refused to be arrest ed without a regular warrant, and persisted until he had sold but. This government has notified Admi ral Mello, the Brazilian insurgent, that it does not feel authorized to re cognize his rights as a beligerent, he not being able to establish either po litical or military organization which would entitle him to such recognition. - ( hit-ago Anarch sis. Chicago, November 12. Services in commemoration of the anniversary of the death of the five anarchists, Par so'iif. Spies, Lingg, Fischer and Engel were' held today at the monument erected' to their memory in Waldheim cemetery In spite of a leaden sky with a -cold rain falling steadily throughout the day, the service at the graves was attended by nearly 2.50C persons. . -- GROWTH OF THE SOUTH. The Industrial Development in the Week Ending November 5, 1893. The Tradesman, Chattanooga, Tenn.. In Ita review of t:ie industrial situation in the South lor t.ii? week endin? November 5th, reports that ti;o f eltlemeat of the financial question is producing Kood results. Renawed'eonUdence is bhown 1 y enquiries received from prospective investors, by an increase in the demand foi machinery, by arrangements being made tc start up plants that have not been working, and by aa en ared volume of mercantile business. Xo matuial ad an.e tan be reported iu the iron and coal market which has practically touched t ottom. T;;e Louisiana sugar crop it now cominjr into nr-wket and is one of the larg est for many years, and the same is true of t'.e rite crop. A slight ad ance in the price of lot ton has rrought out an increased supply, but many planters who can afford to do so are hold in? tor vet higher prices-. The Tradesman retjorts 21 new industries es tablished or incorporated during- the week, to Kether with 7 enlargements of manufactories, and . Important Dew butt-lings. Among tue most important new industries of the week are the Bessemer Development Company, at Llano. Texas, capital tWOOO; a machinery comnany at Winston. N. C capital 3),0J0: a furniture aud fcardw are comtiany at Elkins W. Va.. cap ital :-0,00i: the Simmons Refrigerator and Manufacturing Company, at Dallas, Texas, cap" ital i-JO.GOO. ..' 'Aiompress company, and a tobacco manu factory are reported at Chattanooga, Tenn,; mines end auarries are to be opened at Cedar town, Ga.. Faith and Woodside, N. C; nduring mills are to bs built at Horse Cave, Ky., Elkin. N. C-. and Union City, Tenn.: lumter mills at Atlanta, Ja.. and Logan C'H., W. Va., and saw and pi ming mills at liall Play, Ala. . .and Bar tow, I- la. . MABKET REPORTS By private wire to B. W Martin, .Manager. Nkw York. Nov. li -Cottoh. Dec. 8 11; Jan. 8 12: Feb. 8.19 ma ret steady. Middling 8 3-16; market firm. Chicago, Nov. li Futures closed as follows: .' ' Wheat Dec. 6: Cork. Dec 37 Oats. May 31 i Pork. Jan. 14. 10 Lakd. Jan. 8.25 SrDKS. Jan. J7.30 Chicago. Nov . -Cash nuotations were a follows: Mess pork 117.5 !..00. Lard 9.rEa .! Short . ribs, loose. '.45&'.'.7M Dry jalt shoulders:- boxed. t7.357.50; , abort clear ides,'boxed. .354i9.50 Savannah. Nov. li Turpentine quiet at 26; tcum firm at USL . TWO THOUSAND HATS At 75cts in the Dollar. . :q: ; - Knox St vies ait. sip si? git. Dim Styl Stets of) Styles ' ( S .5V- Deri )s Wide, :o: Ladies Hats, Just From Paris. BOYS' CAPS. MK.VS CAPS. Children's Hats and Caps At Less Than Cost of Manufacturer. :o:- On account of larp-e failure , . p. - abled to offer the. above line Assortment and Cheapest Line unereu ro me traae. ine Opening Is To- . and if you want BARGAINS Aged Husband I begin to think, Mary, that I've wrecked your young happiness by permitting you to mar- ry an old man like me. ' . Young Wife Oh, no, indeed; I expect to make m v second husband veity jealous telling him how fond I r n. t 4 " - I was oi you unce a Week. Positive and Nejjalive. The Race Question is unsettled But it is settled that Hood's Sarsa yarilla leads all remedies, -j.. Disease" marches through all lands. But good health blesses all who take Hood's Sarsaparilla. , Dyspepsia is a great foe to the hu man race. But Hood's Sarsaparilla puts it to flight. Scrofula is one of the most terrible of diseases. But Hood's Sarsaparilla expells it from the system. The people of this day, like Job, suffer from boils. But Hood's ' Sar saparilla is a sovereign remedy for them. Catarrh is one ot the most dis agreeable disorders. But Hood's Sarsaparilla is sure to relieve and cure it.. " ' ' Rheumatism racks the system like a thumb-screw. But it retreats be fore the power of Hood's Sarsa parilla. - Loss of appetite leads to melan cholia. But Hood's Sarsaparilla makes the plainest repast tickle the palate. Life is short and time is fleeting, vbut Hood's Sarsaparilla "will bless humanity as the ags roll on. : Erlend I should think it would irritate an Irishman, with such artl aversion toward anything English as you hold, to have red hair. - O'Toole Yis ; but think av the pleasure Oi av cutting it. Puck. A Dead Shot right at the seat of difficulty, is ac complished by the "sure and steady aim of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Don't fool around with a pop-gun, nor a "Flint-rock," when this reliable "Winchester" is within reach ! Dr. Sage's treatment of catarrh is far su perior to the ordinary, and when di rections are reasonably well followed, results in a permanent cure. Don't longer be indifferent to the verified claims of this unlailing remedy. $500 is offered, in good faith, for an incur able case of Catarrh in the Head, by its proprietors, the World's Dispen sary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. At all druggists. Bridget Phwat's t' privint me tql lin yure mother on yer, Tommy Barker, shtealin' cake loike a thafe ? Tommy Honor. Bridget. Didn't you know there was honor among thieves ? Harper's Weekly. Nobody can have dyspepsia or bil Housness if they take Simmons Liver Regulator. Young Brot In Latest Blocks. ' - . ' "' . ' - es - In Latest Blocks. In Latest Shapes. In Endless Variety. Narrow and Medium. nf a Hat Fa rtrtflt lira n a am -- - uv..ujr, vc aic en of crrnrls whlr-V. ;c of goods that ever has been come quick. I Editor Woman's Home Queen" These jokes are old; I read them when I was a young girl j Humorist (anxiously and persua- sively) But, surely, that can't be so verv lono- ao-n! Editor (with dignity) However, I think we can find a place for them. I'll take them. Puck. After shaving, bathe the face with Pond's Extract. It is healing . and cooling, does not smart nor sting. Reduces .redness, checks bleeding. Just as it reduces any inflamation, it sends back the blood which the rasping of the razor has drawn near the surface, so leaves the face white, soft and smooth, without the shin. iness caused by other lotions. For this purpose far superior to bay rum, cologne or perfumed water. Best barbers use it. Why don't you try it. .. He 1 I have called to-night to ask to ask for your hand. She Well (silence while the clock ticks,) why don't you? Leslie's Weekly. - Mrs. Wellment Why, you are the same man I gave ten'cents to last week. What did you do with it ? Hungry Harry Well, IU tell yer honest, mum. I spent it for a Turk ish bath, - a haircut, a shampoo, a shave, a shine, a white flannel valu ing suit an' a diamond pin, an' I'm enrru tn enr mum rl -a fr I'm V,i , c t orl agin. Sea the World' Kalr for Firua Cat. Upon receipt of your address and fifteen cents in postage stamps, we will mail you, prepaid our Souvenir Port folio of the Worlds Col umbian 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 con tains full page views of the great buildings, with descriptions of same, and is executed in highest style of art. If not satisfied with it afterkyou get it, we will refund the stamps and let yon keep the book. Address H. E. Bucklen & Co., Chicago, III Mrs. Yerger What is the matter with you, Matilda ? : Matilda I dreamed all night long dat I was lyin' dead folks out and puttin' 'em in dar coffin's. Mrs. Yerger Of course. So you will not be able to do your work pro perly next day and spend the night in all kinds of mirth and frivolity. Texas Siftings. Baby carriages at Young Bros. Shoes! Shoes! Shoes! Goto Young's. If you j want a baby carriage see Young Bros. Day lers

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