Newspapers / The Wilson Advance (Wilson, … / Dec. 7, 1893, edition 1 / Page 2
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The Wilson Advance, y TV. t. CAJiTWELL. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. Entered in the Post Office at Wilson, N. C, as second class mail matter. "For the cause that lacks assistance, For the wrong that needs resistance, For the future in the distance, And the eood that we can do." SUBSCRIPTION PRICE One Year. . . Six Months. .- .1.50 75 Remit by draft, post-office order or registered letter at our risk. Always give post-office address in full. JQAdvertising Rates furnished on application. No communication will be printed without the name of the writer being known to the Editor. Address all cor respondence to The Advance, Wilson, N. C. Thursday, December 7, 1S93. We were glad to see that our Mayor had taken our advice and put some walking tourists to work. Keep up the good work and you will be blessed by the ladies. Last week the Advances, gave its' readers the Tariff bill as made public at Washington Tuesday. Sj far we have not seen this bill in any weekly paper published m the State. We will give to-day the Presidents mes sage in full as read to the two houses of Congress on Monday morning. This puts us behind the leading dail ies but one day. With a little en couragement we intend making the Advance the leading paper in Eas tern Carolina, but to do so we must have the hearty support of our home home people. Come forward friends and lets have a paper in this county worthy of the name. .TARIFF OK TAXF.S. The question of tax, or tariff, is just now occupying a large per cent of the time and attention of the "public men rf tViA rlatr Y7p mncf-cmr that tn our mind it appears a waste of valua ble time to make new laws until we find-some wav nf enfnrrino- those now linon the statute hooks. The rate of taxation in Wilson at present is 1 per cent. This covers State county, town arid Graded school. If our taxes wer$ levied and col lected strictly according to the law we might reduce this rate to one half of one per cent and yet have more money in the public treasury than our present system brings, at two and one-hall times this rate. Some peo ple will wonder how this can be, buta majority pi our readers know already that the tax lists are not made out according to the law, but too often according to the will of the men who should pay the bulk oi the taxes. The constitution provides that the tax shall be equitably distributed AC CORDING TO TE VALUE OF THE property, and yet we can site you a number of cases where men in this county are paying taxes on j, 4, ,,and in some cases property is listed at one-tenth its actual value. Friends, let us enforce the laws we have before we call for new ones. A Hundred Tun Magaziuc Order. A 'event in periodical literature, not without its significance to the general public as' showing the growth of the reading classes, was the receipt on the 9th of November by The Cosmo politan Magazine of the order given below. A single order from a news company of one hundred tons of magazines ! That is almost an event in the history of the world. A like order has never before been made, and if past ratios be maintained it means considerably more than half a million circulation for the December Cosmopolitan. Yet, when the list of authors and artists in the Decem ber number is examined, one is not ly known unpublished manuscript of De Maupassant illustrated by Vierge,' perhaps the most famous, of Euro pean illustrators ;' After the World's Fair, by Paul Bourget, John J. In galls,. Willian Dean Ilowells, Lyman J. Gage, Arthur Sherburne Hardy, Mark Twain, Robert Grant, and oth ers nearly as iamous, and nearlv two hundred illustrations. - think of hav ing the World's Fair done by such expensive men as -Howells, Mark Twain and Paul Bourget, and send ing such artists as Charles S. Rein hart to Chicago for a single Jiumber ber of a magazine to be sold for only 15 cents, or by subscription 122. cents. 1 A book publisher, preparing such a book would not dare incur these expenses short of $5.00 a copy. Is it not a revolution that is an im, . t 11 , jjujvcu.cul upon 01a mctnoas a rev olution , of vast importance to the reading uublic ? The order to which reference is made reads as follows : "Publisher, Cosmopolitan, Dear sir : ui the 200,000 copies of De cember number to be sent us, please send as follows : 172,650 copies regu edition, 27,250 copies R. R. edition. Yours respectfully, The American News Company." A Beautiful Instance of Self-S u rifiop. The letters of Mr. Van Alen to Mr. Gresham and Mr. Cleveland; resign ing the office of Ambassador to Italy, are in every way creditable to the writer. The tone is modest, straight forward and -manly. : It is self re spectful and self-sacrificing at the same time. Whatever may be thought of Mr. Van Alen's fitness or unfitness for the post of Ambassador, there can be no doubt now that he is imbued with the true spirit of Chris tian altruism. He 'accepts disap pointment and humiliation for the sake of another. N. Y. Sun. The Tariff Still a Party Football. The popular reaction can but af fect seriously the deliberations of Congress. The hard times have been attributed in large part to un certainty about the tariff; and many workmgmen who in 1890 and again in 1892 voted against "McKmley ism," are now suspecting that it was those very votes that precipitated the panic, stopped the factories and threw them out of employment. r "So they are ready to try the experiment of voting the other way. The moral of it all is that the tariff should not be the football 01 party politics. Once adopted, a tariff measure ought by general consent to remain on the statute books for a period of years. 1 he business of the country can sur vive any policy from the highest pro tection to absolute free trade, if only it can have some assurance of a con sistent maintenance of the policy .when once declared. It would be well if business men would agree to drop their controversial theories on the subjects of tariffs, and do every thing in their power to induce Con gress to deal with the question on its practical merits. The present Con gress will be greatly tempted to pass a political rather than business tariff bill. At the end of the session the members of the House must go home and face the: Cengressional campaign of 1894.: and the tariff bids lair lor a year i to come to be more than ever a strictly party issue, This is unlortunate for the country. December Review ot Reviews. Sugar lSeet Culture. Prof. Massey and Hon. S. A. Alexander have recently made a vis it .to Nebrarka for the purpose of investigating the sugar beet culture, and Prof. Massey has made a report to the governor, the purpose of which is to show that the cultiva tion of the sugar-beet can be made very profitable. We call the attention of our read ers to this matter because it is evi dent that our farmers must introduce the cultivation of some crop or crops which will yield a better profit than either cotton or tobacco. Of course the sugar-beet culture cannot be gone into without a plant for the manufacture of sugar, but if it can be demonstrated that our climate and soil are suitable to the cultivation of the sugar-beet, there are capitalists ready to invest the necessary amount of money to establish a sugar plant. That we can f grow the beat equal to any other section ot the world, ad mits no doubt, but this fact must be demonstrated by actual experiment before capitalists- can be induced to invest their money. Is there not enough enterprise" and public spirit among the farmers' of Warren coun ty to lead them to test this matter. If the beet can be successfully grown, then with a hundred thousand dol lar sugar plant located in Warrenton, to which the farmers from all parts of the county could deliver their beets and get the cash for them, any one can see what a great advantage it will be to the community. . We have recently called attention to the matter of hop culture and the value of the pecan tree and we .still urge the importance of a thorough investigation and practical experi ment with regard to them. There is no use talking about it, we must in troduce in our agriculture something that wiil pay better as a market crop than cotton and tobacco. With the finest climate in the world and soil capable of producing almost any thing that grows on the foot-stool, we ought to be, and can be the most prosperous, happy and contented people in the world. What we need, and about the only thing we do need, is a spirit of enterprise and progressiveness. Let our people wake up. They have been sleeping too long. Let them get a move on them. Warrenton Record. S;moe for the Goose but not for the Gander A contemporary asks: ''Are our elections honest ?" Well, on gener al principles, .when they pan out all right for our side, they are; .but when the other fellow gets the' scoop oti us, then there are at least grounds lor very strong suspicions that there has been more or "less .hokus-pokus. The Democracy which advocates tanrt reform but insists on protection lor industries of certain States or lo calities is tod thin to be robust Dem ocracy.. - " , With free wool we will have more wool and less shoddy, in our clothes. The' slroddy man is the only one who can reasonably object to free wool. Wilmington Star. ' . Governor -Russell, of Massachu setts, hasprepared an article for the December - number of the North American Review, entitled, "Political Causes for the Business Depression." ' There will . appear in the North Ameaicah Review for December - an of Kansas. on " the Mission of tHe Prinii lief- - "1- -r"""- rarry, '"What Dreams are Made of" is the title of an article by Dr. jouis Rob inson that' will appear in the North American Review for December. HOSESTY THE BEST POLICY. Scheme of a Genuine Constitutional Tariff for Hevenue Only. I. Be it enacted that on every ar ticle imported into the United States from any foreign country, there shall be levied an import dutv of thirty five per cent, ad valorem. II. There shall be no exception to this rate of duty, but it shall be levied and collected in the case of every ar ticle imported, saving only the goods of foreign Ministers accredited to the United States. III. Whenever at the end of any fiscal year the aggregate revenues derived from import 'duties shall ex ceed by fifty millions ot dollars the necessities of the Government, when honestly and economically adminis tered: The President shall be au thorized to issue a Proclamation re ducing the rate of import duty on all articles thereafter imported from thir ty-live per cent to thirty per cent. ad valorem. N. Y, Sun. " 4 Shipments of Texas Tobacco. Texas roads have ot late been bringing considerable tobacco to the New Orleans market, which is a mat ter of some wonder to railroad men, since heretofore Texas has had very little of this shipped. It is learned that there has developed no little in terest in the culture of this staple in Southern Texas, where, it is said, the soil is especially adapted for its suc cessful growth. ... Railroad men say, from what is told them by local representatives along their lines in Texas, that next year there will be hundreds of acres devoted to the culture ot this plant, since this year's experiment has not only proven it a plant well adapted to the country, but its culture an in dustry much more profitable than cotton, which for the past few years in these sparse and clay sections of the State, has been largely unsatis factory. The railroad penetrating the sec tions mentioned will offer every in ducement intheir power to foster and encourage the industry. Ex. Cotton Notes. - Mr. Ellison's cotton trade review shows that spinners in Great Brittain have taken this year 150,070,000 pounds less than last season, and that on the continent the falling off has been .14,466,000 pounds. The ag gregate takings .in the whole of Eu rope have, therefore, decreased 1 S.3, 536,000 pounds, or 433,840 bales of the average weight of 400 pounds. Furthermore the aggregate takings have been much less than in 1890 gi and 1889 90, and show but a small increase over 1888-89. The increase in cotton consump tion in Great Britain, comparing 1878-79 with 1S92-93, amounts to 740,000 bales, whereas in India tne increase amounts to 885,158 bales. The increase in the spinning power of the world amounts to 903000 spindles, all the countries except Great Britain sharing in the increase. Constitution. Where Cotton Seed Oil Goes. Last year about 1,250,000 tons of cotton seed were crushed in this country, from which was extracted 1,000,000 barrels of oil, and the Charlotte Observer says this is where it goes : Chicago pork packers buy 300,- 000 barrels, most of which is made into lard. Maine sardine packers use 20,600 barrels. Between 50,000 and 100,000 bar rels are consumed by various soap makers. Between 200,000 and 300,000 bar rels go to Europe, where it is made into "butter." Ex. A Youthful Army Ollnrer. Prince Frederick Karl, second son of the German emperor, recently cele brated his tenth birthday, and on that occasion was made a lieutenant in the First Regiment of Foot Guards. He is the youngest officer in the Ger man army. This unique reminder comes from a Georgia paper : "The wind biow eth, the farmer so weth, and the sub scriber oweth, and the Lord knoweth that we are in need of our dues. So come a runin', this thing of dunnin' gives us the blues." Would you be Attrnetivr. You must be healthy. Would you be healthy, always keep within reach, ready for any emergency, Dr. Fierce s Fleasant Pellets, the perfec tion of Physic ! Headache, bilhous ness, constipation, a coated tongue. always indicate a torpid liver. Thest; magical Pellets act directly upon the river the fountain head of many ills correcting all disorders, driving out all impurities, stimulating healthy ac tion. The best Liver Pills : mildiv giving all the benefit and none of the discomfort of other pills. Mr. Swelset Let me see, Christ mas is almost here. It comes on the 25th, doesn't it? Mrs. Swelset I believe that is the dale observed by the people gener ally, but it has become so common, don't you know, that this year and hereafter I shall observe it a week earlier.' Gargoyle What are you going to give your wife for a Christmas pres ent? Glanders I thought I would mve her permission to go home and spend .lift me nonaays witn her mother. Simmons Liver Regulator, bear in mina, is not an experiment . It is en- dorsed by thousands. See Gay's stock of dry, goods, dress goods, clothing, shoes, hats, carpets, &c., before buying. Melville Co's. and Knox hats at Gay's. It will pay you to see Young Bros..' line of pants. A big line of trunks at Young's. Woman's Future on the Farm. The farmer of the future will be a woman, if Michigan affords a Uisis for prophecy. In Wayne county alone there are 220 women farmers, and in the whole State 8,707, with an owner ship of 670,439 acres. The value of the land is estimated at 43, 500,000, and the earnings of the women aggregate $4,354,500. ' Short and SreI. "What did I you say he sent her ia memory of their short engagement?" "A pair of little souvenir spoons ' - Vojrue. Dress goods, all styles and prices at Young's. Bargains this week in clothin Young's, v at If you want a Mcintosh see Young Bros. overcoat - Tarboro stockings for children, the best in the world at Young's. Turner Van Newleaf That dairy you sold me is not complete. I asked for a dairy for a year, and this one has spaces for the month of Jan uary only. Salesman Yes sir: I thought vou said it was for your wife. Volcanoes of the United States. Excluding Alaska, the U. S. may be said to be non-volcanic, states Mr. Ralph S. Tarr, but it has not been so long. A chain of volcanoes extend from southern South America into ; Mexico, then there is a large break and the interrupted chain begins again in Alaska, curves southward, and joins the chain of Japan. The intermediate non-volcanic afea has just emerged from an era of stupen dous activity. Future resumption of such activity is not improbable, for jn tne West are volcanoes so recent as, like Mt. Shasta, to retain their coni cal form, and some of these perhaps are no more dormant than was Vesu vius before the fateful year 79$ when it buried Pompeii and Hercijaneum beneath the most terrible storm o; stones and ashes ever known to man In the Canon of the Colorado, in the deserts of "Nevada and Utah, and in New Mexico, exist small lava flows that must have been erupted in very recent years, probably since the white man's discovery of the conti- nent. inese seem x to record the death throes of the country's latest volcanic giants. The eruntions have played a part in bringing up stores of metais, ana tne richest mines are found in the volcanic districts of Ter tiary times. HOW S t HIS. . We offer One Hundred Dollars Re ward lor any case of Catarrh that can not be.cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Proos .. We, the undersigned, have known r. j, Liieney lor tne last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transaction; anrl flnon-,"nll.. able to carry out any obligation made uy uieir urni. -West & T ruax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Wolding, Kinnan Mar vin, Wholesale Drup-ists TnlpHn o Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken intern- any, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price, 7 sc. per bottle. Sold bv all Druggists 'testimonials free. The Washington Post had a car toon recently called "A Lone Hand," representing the President playing one card, the Queen of the Kanakas. The President wishes to restore: the status quo prevailing before Minister Stevens and the marines gobbled up the Islands. He doubtless thinks that Hawaii ought to belong to Ha waiians. It seems that the Mission ary Children, as they are called, got up the coup. Having waxed fat from long years of "gay nfull pilladge" they now want to turn the simple natives out and tote over, bag and baggage, to Uncle Sam. Mr. Cleveland is right. Let the lotus-eating savages go ahead with the lotus business. It is their lotus. Rocky Mount Phoe nix. When to Stop Advertising. An English trade journal once re quested a number of its largest ad vertisers to give their opinions con cerning the best time to stop adver tising, and the following replies were received : When the population ceases to multiply and the. generations that crowd on after you never heard cf you stop coming on. ;'.? ' When you have convinced every body whose life will touch yours that you have better goods and lower prices than the)'- can get anywhere else.. When you perceive it to be the rule that men who never advertise are outstripping their neighbors in the same line of business. When men stop making fortunes right in your sight solely through the dire:t use of the mighty agent. When you can forgtt the words of the " shrewdest and most successful business men concernintr the" main cause of their prosperity. When every man. has become so thoroughly a creature, of habit that he will buy this year where he did last year. When younger and fresher houses in your line cease starting up and u:3ing the newspapers in telling the people how much, better they do for them than you can. When you would rath.er have vour own way and fail than take advice and win. When nobody else thinks it pays to advertise.--Smithneld Herald. Ieservinar 1'raise. We desire to say to our citizens, that for years we have been, selling Dr. Kind's New Discovery for Con sumption, Dr. King's New' Life Pills, Bucklen's Arnica Salve and Electric Bitters, and have never handled remedies that sell as well, or that have given such universal satisfaction. We do not hesitate to guarantee them every time, and we stand ready to refund the purchase price, if satis factory results do not follow their use. These remedies have won their great popularity purely on their merits. At all Druggists. We learn that a serious shooting and cutting affair took place just over the line in Nash county on Saturdav last, in which Ambrose Benton, of this county, was shot by Ruff Collie and seriously cut by Callie Benton. Our latest reports say that the in jured man is in a critical condition. Franklin Times. 9 J salami,? Y Ti-jfift To the EfScasy Cftho World-Renowned s Tho old-time e:3it1j I remedy fron thn Rnors-Ia GTramos ad fields h.i oijo f orth to tho eatIpode3, Ji founding tho theories cf t ChV3l"ian'S r.b!!l Thdj- la nn Wnrvl ' taint Which ltdnmnnt lnmi!i(ii eradicate Poisons outwardly absorbed c Tho result cf vile diseases from within all yield to thl3 potei:t o-.it simple remedy. It is aa tmequUed toai;:. fcuiltU up the old and feeble, cores oil disaases ar,a.Dg from impure blood or weakened vitality. c:;iiil ior a treatise Examine tho proof. . tooss on "Elood and Skin Diseases "mailed free. Hrvggiat Sell It. SWIPT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3. Atlanta. Ga. MOOD'S GUARANTEES a cure. What it has done for others it will do for you. Ee sure to get Hood's Sarsaparilla. ; I 1 5 it t V. Duality of the Mind. The idea is held by Dr. B. W. Kichardson that the two lobes of the cerebrum give every person two; dis tinct brains ; ana that any congrega tion of human beings must be reck oned at twice its individual number before its mental constitution and strength can be DrODerlv aonraised. ' . . A. J X 1 The two brains are never : exactly balanced. They sometimes work to gether, sometimes diversely ; and when one is disordered these may be tendencies to insanity, with lucid intervals if the other is sound. Com plete change of personality may re sult from weakening the stronger or strengthening the weaker. Ask Tour Friends Who have taken Hood's Sarsaparilla what they think of it, and the replies will be positive in ,its favor. Simply what Hood's Sarsaparilla , does, that tells the story of its merit One has been cured of indigestion or dyspep sia, another finds it indispensable for sick headache or billiousness, while others report remarkable cures of scrofula, catarrh, rheumatism, . salt rheum, etc. T' t I i-iilt ! : l ?ii Virginia. Tne machinery lor the first silk mill in Virginia or in the South has arrived in Keysville from Patterson, N. J., and vice-President Arthur Ped iey expects to have the mills running with a full force of hands within the next fe,w weeks, and we learn that this is the forerunner of others that will follow, together with industries not only in this line but in various branches : there is no reason whv Virginia, "with her climate, soil, and ricn mineral deposits, in many por- ons oi tnev old Lomradnwea th. should not, ere long attract capital ana enterprise trom the North and West in spite" of our inactivity, and the day is not far distant when the sunny South will hum with snindles and prosperity will reward industrv and enterprise. Richmond "News. - It is stated now that the provision al government may call upon Eng- iana ro protect tnem it the United States should decline to do so. There is not much doubt as to .England's reply, should the proposition be made. Rev. T. M. Horner, of Horner's school, has been appointed a member oi tne Executive Committee nf. N. C. Teacher's Assembly. A canital selection, as he ranks among the coming young men ot the State Oxford Ledger. Mrs. A. A. Williams Lynn, Mass. " For the Good of Others Iter. Mr. Williams Heartily' En-, dorses Hood's Sarsaparilla. We are pleased to Dresent thi fiwn- Rev. A. A. Williams, of the Sillsbee street Christian Church, Lynn, Mass. : r i see no reason why a clergyman, more than a layman, who knows whereof he speaks, should hesitate to approve an , Article of Merit and worth, from which he or his family have been sijmally benefited, and whose commenda tion 11IMV KlTVH to OYtotiri thm. others by increasing their confidence. My wife maujr jcais ueen a sunerer irom severe Nervous Headache for which she found little help. She has tried many tilings that promised well but per formed little. Last fall a friend gave her a bot tle of Ilood s Sarsaparilla. It seems surpris mtr what sinmlv mm hnttia nnnin nt a for her. x he attacks of heartachn dMwaaAi in number and were less violent in their Inten sity, while her general health has been Im proved. Her appetite has also been better. i. rom our experience with Hood's Sarsaoarilla I have no hesitation in endorsing ita Merits." A. A. WILLIAMS. HOOD'S PlLLS are the best famlW r.thrH gentle and effective. Try box. Price 25a I A years subscription to Scribner's Magazine will bring into your home 1 ill twelve mommy nuniDers, aggregating Over ITOO Da?es of the hfst anH mnct interesting reading, and more than 700 ucautiiui illustrations. ANNOUNCEMENTS. Geo. W. Cable will begin in the Jan uary number a romance .entitled "John March, Southerner." . Two other important, serials have been en-aged : j. M. Barrie, author of uie iamous "Little Minister," has writ ten a new novel, the first since that fa mous story George Meredith, the great English novelist, has in prepara tion a novel entitled I'The Amazine Marriage." Short stories will be abundant. W. D. Howells, Miss Elliott, W. H. Bishop, Ludovic Halevy, Paul Bour get, Joel Chandler Harnss and many ne w writers will contribute. Studies of American Life will be an important feature, including Newport, Bar Harbor, Lenox, etc., and the West. I he illustrations will be even more numerous and beautiful than ever. A series of Frontispieces chosen by Phil ip Gilbert Hamerton will be especially notable. Complete Prospectus sent on request. S' FECIAL OFFER. The numher. for 1893, and a subscription for l94 - - - -r tA.rn The same, with back numbers bound . in c om, - - - . . - $6.00 sample copy, 10 cents. CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, 743 Broadway, New York. .-. Whem You mm S-l "'II T..r r.' r-TrV.cT.- rf 2rtnth Sfife.' ----- v I4W remedy for La Grippehat I know of is AYER'S Cherry lVctoral." , "Last Spring, I "was taken down with La Grippe. At times I was com pletely prostrated, and so difficult was my breathing that my bn.Rt seemed as if confined in an iron cage. I procured a bottle of AYKli'.S Plmrrir IWfnrol ami lln snnilPT" had I 1)0 til taking it tllSll VCliM followed. I could not believe that the effect would be so rapk cure so complete. It is truly a wonderful medicine." W. II. W ' PrnnV OUv si 11 "From my own experience, r take pleasure in voluntarily stating that of all the medicines I ever- used for fresh colds and La Grippe, AYER'S r'hf.rrv rrnmlis Trppmiiipntlv. the most potent remedy. Onlinarily, the most virulent fresh cold in the head and chest vanishes in a night, as if by magic. Just follow the directions, and AYER'S Cherry Pectoral will do the rest." Geo.' II. Pike, Cadiz, Ky. "For two years, 1 suffered from a most distressing cough, which, at last, Jbecame of a consumptive character, and very alarming to my friends. - After trying various remedies, without success, I began to take AYER'S Cherry Pectoral, and was very soon relieved. .Two bottles cured me.'' Celesttne Siiiois, Augusta, Me. ' .ysThe best remedy for colds, coughs, and the common disorders of the throat and lungs, AYER'S Cherry Pectoral is universally recommended by the profession. ' , ' ' . ? Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Prepared by Dr. .J. C. Aycr & Co., Ix)wclJ, 3Iass. Prompt to aot. sure . to ojure W. Pr SIMPSON, President. ' V A. P. BRANCH Breirieii & Co., BANKERS TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS ' IN ITS FULLEST SCOPE. SOLICITS THE ' BUSINESS OF THE PUBLIC GENERALLY. Our Fall stock of NOTIONS rln thing you need in the Millinery Line can be found at our all and be convinced mat we have the best selected stock in the citv. DRESS MAKING. We Miss Anna Davrs, ol Ba'ltirnore, Satisfaction guaranteed to all U1UC1S. : MRS. HNext to Post Office. THE: Centre Brief Warehouse HAS OPENED UP. ; 2Q,8 Pounds 1? Gill When you hear a blab-mouth talking about US, Some dop- has been hr ,;fU o U'J, U ' ' . o the 4halloo! ITT 1 vve are Here to serve you, and it shall be' our pleasure to stand close up to your every! interest in the qI nf e 1 1 r I - r J VV, let OUr Sale be hrst Or last. 1 Consult us before selling and we will rive r;V ,1 4. 1 . wc win give yOU OUr best advice. Your Friends Truly, ' Coza Cough, Choke, and for Breath, Gasp BEWARE!, It May be a Serious Symptom THE SPECIFIC For all Throat and Lung Complaints : is Ayer's Cherry Pectoral TTflmnton. X. II.. savs: "The best and the. LLIA3IS, HALES, Cashier Assistant Cashier - v. . - - have secured the services of an experienced Dress-maker. vho will favor me with their S. I. .GRIFFIN,. Our Sales Floor is the best lighted of any warehouse ev er built, containing 1 40 solid Skylights, diffusing the light evenly over ALL the floor space. . . . . . . . vviuii x uhk, licnce ro,,r rrrr a rr- 1 rt & Co., Proprietors, NOTICE. By Virtue of the power of sale ran tamed in a mortgage deed execute ?" me by William K. Boyett an' ' v bearing date 14th Iecember i.sSo , duly recorded in Book 28 Va.sL - ' "4 76, m the office of the Re-isu-V1" Deeds of Wilson, county, I un se 01 the Court House door in Wilson X r on Saturday, the 30th day of frn fl89i' J-he f ,laml in sPnn Hill township, adjoins the lands of f A. Stancil, David Daniel and oth. r and more fully described in said niort' gage, containing: one hundred ;im more or less. Terms of sale CASH JOHN 1. K EVELL, MortE n. u. lonkor, Attorney, Notice. - By virtue of a power of sal,. l u. tained in a deed of. trust-execuu-d t me by Jesse Dew and wife,-Tei-(,nlJJ in the Register's office of Wilson cuun ty in Look No 27. page 63, I win Svl, " the Court House "door in the ton n i f Wilson on Monday, the 4th "div ,'f December, 1S93, that certain t! a," t land lying on the waters of Com, -nn,J creek, and being . situated in 1 W ifso-r county, Wilson township-, adjnini,,'; the lands of Thos. Jordan, T. H Sv ? Barnes Daniel, Jr. and others, k'H n as the Jesse Dew farm, containir.- . e. acres more or less. " "v TERMS OF SALE. CASH. This is a valuable farm, well cifi;.,ej with good buildings . Jas. T. Wiggins, Trusue John F. Brutox, Attorney. NOTICE. VALUABLE LAND FOR SAI.K.' I will sell privately on easy t, rnis the valuable farm in Wilson ountv known. as the Arthur D. Fanner Lm,j adjoining the land of ,11. j;. : 1 v,v' Warren Woodard, and others, contain ing about four hundred and fifty anes Good dwelling and other ijuildin -s ; Also the lots in the town of is,,u belonging to said A. D. Farmer. Ti tle will be guaranteed.- For fuiHVr particulars apply to 4t - . Hi G. Connor, Tnisilt. NOTICE. By virtue of a decree ot the Shjh ri: or Court made in the civil a ti..n wherein C. Barnes, plaintiff, -and Sally' Ann Ezell defendent. I will sell at tlic Couit House door in Wilson 011 Satur day, the -23d day of December is9y the following described property : One lot of land situate on the South side of Green street Wilson, N. 0., ad joining the lands of Drucilla Taylor Julia Harrison and others, and contain ing one-half acre more or less. . Terms CASH. This Nov. 22, 1S93. 4t - J. D. Bakiin, Com, NOTICE. , By, virtue of a decree of decree of the Superior Court made in the civi-1 action Wherein Jno. H. Barnes was plaimilf and J. D. Barnes was defendant, 1 will sell at the Court House door in Wilson on Saturdav, the 23 day of December, 1893, the following described property: One tract of land situate in Spring Hill tctWnship, Wilson county, adjoin ing the lands of--William Hiunant, Jesse-Hinnant and others, containing -'sixty-seven (67) acres more or less. Fifty described in the mortgage from . 1 and Simon Barnes to Berry K.-vdnuv recorded in Book 28, pages 20 ami 3 iirlhe Register's ORice. 1 erms vrjrr. b This Nov 2d, 1S93. ?'; J. D. llARDIX, Cf I I. 4t NOTICE. 1 Pursuant to the" power of 'h- 011 tained in a mortgage deed e.e nt.l ly Basheba Barnes and Silas ('.. 1'owcll to me, bearing date January 12th, 1888, and duly recorded in the ollice ol the Register of Deeds ol Wilson coim tv, in Book No. 26, 1'age 207, 1 shall sell at public auction 'at the Court House door in Wilson. N. C, on-Sat-urday, the 30th da oi i -ereniL, r, 1: the lot or parcel of land iyimj or I;, in situate in Wilson county. Cross Roads Township adjoining the lands of Mary'' Barnes, and others and containing one hundred and seven and one half acres," more or less, Jbeing the laud on v. hidi the parties now live. Terms of sale CASH. John T. Ruvkli.; MorWa-. . H. G. Connor, Attorney. Wilson, N. C, Nov., 1S1I1, ' jt NOTICE. Having dualified as adni-nitr:,;,,. cf Jeremiah Bass, deceased. )ioti( is hereby given to all persons iud";lted to the estate of said deceased to make immediate settlement, and to all t r sons having claims against said rst.de to present them for payment on or before Nov. iSth, 1894, or this 'notice will be plead in bar of" their -rencrv. This Nov. iSth, 1893. - " ' W.M.- k: I'Hvh: A,!,, ', J. D. Bardin. Att'v. ' oticc T3Y virtue of a decree of the Su . i-.r -LJ Court made in the ivil adii ii " wherein S. A. Woodard, Trustee, uas Plaintiff and J. G;W. Cobb and were Defendants, 1 will seil at -W Court House ffrinr in WHtoi, Yff-.n- day the 4th day of December, jS,3, tTiu luiiovving aescrihed property: - -One lot or nnrr-l .f l:uif1 uoii iii- in the town of Wilson, on the' coi n, r t iNasii and Goldsboro St., 'adjoinin-ilic lOtS Of B. F'Hrifr?r; -,,rll-l Irv.l it beins: the lot three StOrv lirirk IiniMin.r .,(.n, r.iiiv known as "The Rawls Buildiiur-." ' J ERMS : Cash. S. A. WOODA-I'll r,,m'r. F. A ,& S. A. Woouakd, Att'ys. SALE OF PERSONAL FRORERTY. B v virtue Of thf unwer- ( sale containtid in ;i deed i trust executed to ine by M. Ro'untree & Co.. and dulv r- corded in the ofllce of' tKe Register of Deeds of Wilson county, in Book' No: 35, v- :&. 6. I will Dec i8,ell for on Monday, casli, at - tin: Forbes arnVon Nash road all the personal orooertv on said farm, jncludino- z mules, 1 r - . A . j mare and colt, farming iinjdc j ments of every kind and vario- :ty. Also a nice lot of corn, fodder, cotton seed &c, cvc. On Wednesday, Dec 20th. I wil1 se!! af Rtr farm, on the plank road, 6 vaJ- uable youn mules, 6 head of hogs, 30 head of sheep, 1 herd of cattle, corn, io rage of every description, cotton seed, X.c. also one 12 H. P. engine and farming- implements of every description. W. J. DAVIS, Assignee M. Rountree & Co
The Wilson Advance (Wilson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 7, 1893, edition 1
2
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