- Mf.vi -ill I if son v. $ 1 .00 A YEAR CASH IN ADVANCE. LET ALL THE ENDS THOU AIm'sT AT, BE THY COUNTRY S, THY God's, AND TRUTH'S." THE BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM VOLUME XXIV. WILSON, WILSON COUNTY, N. C, MAY, 31 894. NUMBER 18. Wil Ad HS : : fe "X" T now have, I am Ladies' Black IHose, I J You have paid us 23c. for he Floor 5 is here at last; but the 14c. 1 i .V e those 15c. as it cost us ic more. though, even at the advance. y r Pbje Curtail Poles And Pile Patent Sifters fe I are here at last. It took just six weeks to get them, but it paid us to wajit, as we got them so as to sell the Poles at the same old' price, 19c, "and' the sifters at less than ever before -ioc. each. hi W, E could only get one n pi so much sought after, at pretty and will go quick. m TRULY, CASH CATCHES THE BARGAINS. J The Cash Racket Stores, J". JM. LEATH, M'gY. Nash and Goldsboro Sts.' (0 L FROFESSIOSAL CARDS. II F. PRICE, . Sar eyor and CiYil Engineer, WILSON, - - n. c. - 30 ears' experience. Office next to Dr. Albert Anderson. 1. E. Woodard, W. H. Yarborough, Jr. OODARD & YARBOROUGH, Attorneys-at-Law, , Wilson, - - N. C. : .ruvlice In the courts of Wilson, i , vir t ii, Edgecombe and adjoin i'... ci.rii-.ties. 1 ',: Associated in Civil practice J. R. UZZELL, Attorney at Law, " WILSON, - - N. C. : I'ractices wherever services are re- :inr-d JSp"All business will receive lri!npt attention. - Otia e in Well's Building. J C. CONNOR, . .. - ' Attorney at Law, - WILSON, - - N. C. 1 'ilia- I'.rancli & Co's. Bank Building. GEO. M. LINDSAY, Attorney at Law, SNOW HILL, N. C. C ikc'uit : - Wi 1 son , u,l lohnstQii Counties. Green Wayne INSURANCE. FOR File Insurance Call on me, at the office of W. El VVar- r - ii & Co., over First National Bank. 4-iq-iv H. G. WHITEHEAD Vrood & Shing es. I have Cypress Shingles on hand at all times and will sell cheap. SAWED WOOD, WELL SEASONED, always on hand and can be furnished at short notice. Yard on Railroad, West side of Nash Street. mv:;: C. N. NURNEY. wanted, 10,000 bushels cotton -seed. Young,Bros. A big line ol rubber goods just re ceived at Young Bros. f Led sheets and mattresses at loung's Cotton seed bulls lor cows. Young B ros. A FAIR TRIAL of Hood's Sar sapanlla , guarantees a complete It is an honest medirine. honest- cure V advertised and it honestly CURES glad to say, another lot of Fast Black, Regular Made, at 12 l-2c. per pair. the same goods often. 14 Matting grade will have to be sold It is cheap enough, US piece of the Silk Finished Foulard 2yzc. per yard. It is very No Settlement of the Northern Strike. St. Paul, April 28. A settlement of the strike on the Great Northern Rail road is now further away than at any time since the trouble bepan. President Hill and the conference committee having1 failed to agree. Fall Settlement Agreed Upon. New York, April 28. The Richmond Tei minal reorganization committee an nounce that a settlement with the Richmond, York River and Chesapeake railroad, stockholders has been ar rived at. Oxford Ledger : There has been much interest at Roxboro in the trial of Logan Meadows and Jas per Robertson for murdering jailer Willis Royster by springing upon him and choking him. Louis' Wil lians, an II -year-old negro, wasr the chief witness. He was in jail, and says Robertson sprang upon Royster, who was feeble, and then choked him. The two prisoners then locked the boy in a cell and fled, but were quickly captured. The jury failing declared a mistrial, come up again at to agree, it was The case will August term of court. For four days the jury stood ii to i in favor of murder in the first degree, so it is learned. JJrlght Spring Days. The spring should be pre-eminent ly a season of contentment, happi ness, and hope. In these bright and pleasant months the country should enjoy its highest degree of tranquil ity and prosperity. But spring, it is well knownj, is often a period of dis comfort and disturbance in the phy sical system.- Important organs of the body become torpid or irregular in their action, and the fact is instant ly reflected in the mental condition of the individual. A disordered liver means disordered . nerves and a dull and unsteady brain. Anything which will bring the physical system into harmony with budding nature confers an enormous benefit upon the nation, j besides the mere allaying of physical comfort. Hood's Sarsaparilla does this, as thousands. of grateful and happy men and women can testify, and increased use of this standard spring medicine is of more real prac tical importance in promoting'health and quiet in the business world than reams of abstract theorizing. Simmons Liver Regulator cures gen eral debility and will give you a new lease on life. YEARS OF UNJUST PU?J!SHME.M T. I Governor Nor! hen I'ard:!ii tli Vic:iirj of Cruel ConKilracy. Atlanta, Ua.,' April 2$. lint for. deiithbed confessions. Allen Yancy, now confined in Dade coal mines, j would have served a life sentence for a murder of which he is entirely inao cent. As it is he was pardoned by Gov- i ernor Northen yesterday after ail ku-J just confinement of ten ears behind ; 1 prison bars. j Ihe man for whose murder Yancy has suffered was Richard Cuff, a resi dent of Calhoun county. In 1SS4 a i party of five or six white bys, healed ' by a negro named Blacker, went to the house of Cuff at dead of nipfht to whip him. Armed with cowhides and pis tols, they attacked the place. Bursting- in, Blacker tired at random to intimidate the occupant. One of the bullets proved deadly, however, and the intended victim of the little band of whitecappers was shot in the head and killed. The crime was laid at the door" of Allen Yancy, an I old, inoffensive, ante be! lum negro. Blacker failed to escape, however, and was convicted and given a life sentence. The crowd of whites, to protect themselves from a probable implication, swore to Yancy's gruilt as an accomplice. He narrowly escaped hanging, and was, too, sent up for life. Yancy has since made an exemplary orisoner, though always protesting his innocence. Recently, three of the white boys who were at the scene of the kill ing died. Upon their deathbeds they all completely exonerated poor old Yancy, now almost decrepid from his arduous serviee. The governor was immediately asked to pardon the convict. The then pre siding- judge, solicitor, jury and grand ! jury united in the request, becoming ! firmly convinced that he was in no way connected with the murder. Acting upon this, a pardon was granted, and Yancy will be immedi ately released. AT HARRISON'S HOME. The. Republicans of Indiana in State Con- vent ion Assembled. Indianapolis,'. April 27. For over twelve hours yesterday and last night, without a single recess for a bite or a sip, the 1 ,700 delegates to the republi can state convention devoted them selves to the making of a party ticket to be voted on in November. This ex traordinary session was duo to the fact that there were no less than forty-three candidates for the ten nominations, and taking their keynote from the speeches of ex-President Harrison and ex-Secretary Thompson, both of whom sug-g'est-ed that a republican nomination in Indiana this year was equivalent to an election, the supporters of each candi date fought to the last ditch for their favorites. .Three and in seme cases four ballots .were required for each nomination, and . the net results of nine hours calling of the roll four nominations had been inadeup to 8 o'clock last night. For secretary of state W. I). Owens, of Logansport, ex-congressman and President Harrison's Orst commissioner of immigration. For auditor of state A. C. Dailey, of Lebanon. For state treasurer F. J. Scholz, of Evansville. For attorney general W. A. Ket cham, of Indianapolis. LAWMAKERS DISABLED. The Alarming Proportions of the Congres sional Sick I. int. Washington, April 27. The sick list of men in and about congress is reach ing remarkable dimensions. Senator .Stockbridge is- bat slowly recovering from a severe illness at Chicago. Itep resentative Simpson is is not yet con valescing. Representative Sehermer horn's condition still excites the appre hension of his associates, and Repre sentative Rrattan is at home with an organic trouble which gives no hope of his return te ongrcss. Representative Graham, of Brooklyn, has never taken his seat, owing to con tinued illness since his term began. Representative Brown, of Indiana, is still ailing from his recent serious at tack. Representative Wilson, of West Virginia, has about recovered, but can not resume congressional duties for many weeks. ' r . BLOODSHED IN ILLINOIS. Striking Miners March Upon. Toluoa Wltha Determination to Do Damage. Springfield, 111., April 28. Acting Governor Gill yesterday received a message from Sheriff Lenz, of Marshall county, asking that five or six compa nies of militia be sent at once to To luca. In his te.legra.in Sheriff Lenz said that from 2,MH) to 3,000 striking miners were marching on the town from Peru and that he was unable to cope with them. The acting governor replied, declining to ordef out the j militia -until it became apparent that I bloodshed was imminent, and saying ! that he would go to Toluca and make a personal investigation. ATLANTA MAN SUICIDES. The Editor of the Southern Appeal, a Dem ocratic Negro, Kills Himself. Washington, April 28. A well dressed colored man shot himself through the bead in the park fronting Providence hwspital, this city, about 2:S0 yesterday afternoost. From papers in Ms pockets he was identified as E. T. Yarbrough, editor of the Southern Ap peal, of Atlanta, Ga. . See the World's Fair for Vifteen Cents. Upon receipt of your address and 'fifteen cents m postage stamps, we will mail you prepaid our . Souvenir Portfolio of the World's Columbian Exposition. The regular price is fifty cents, but as we want you to have one we make the price nominal. You will find it a work of art and a think to be prized. It contains full page views of the great buildings, with descriptions of same, and is exe cuted in the highest style of art. If you are not satisfied with it after you get it, we will refund the stamps and let you keep the book. Address, . H. E. Bucklen & Co., Chicago, 111. STATED BRIEFLY. The water will be let into the Erie canal at Eockport tonight. The Boston school board has declared in favor of anti-cigarette leagues. Corbett will not box at the Olympic club, London, in July, because of the heat. The new German loan of 108,000,000 marks has called forth subscriptions to 400,000,000 marks. Grocer Frank L. Henderson was fa tally wounded by burglars at New burg, N. Y., Thursday. The New Haven police have arrested Harvey Blutcher, the Yale sophomore t who was a spectator at the February I prize fight. Thomas E. Finley, cashier of the Chi cago and Alton Railroad company at East St. Louis, committed suicide Thursday. . : John Kennell, a well-known lobbyist ofPassaic, N. J., suffered an attack of vertigo in the state house, at Trenton, yesterday. A plot of six prisoners to break out of the Frankfort (Ky.) jail was discov ered, and the men placed in solitary confinement. Prince Bismarck will receive today ladies from the duchy of Berg, who will present an illuminated address and gifts. Eighty-four fresh cases of cholera were reported yesterday in Lisbon. The total number of cases now under treatment is 244. Henry F. Bachellor, president of the Stock G rowers' National banl-t5f"Miles City, Won., was found guilty of willful misappropriation of 840 000. A. V. Dickson, of Seymour, ind., late general superintendent of the Missouri Pacific, is d3'ing of nervous prostration, and may not live out the week. The Brussels court of appeal has committed Mme. Jodiaux. for trial, charged with the murder of her sister brother and uncle to obtain the insur rance on their lives. Criminal proceedings have been be gun against the Austrian banker Ar nold Lichtner, involved in the Hanover gambling scandal. He had cheated at cards and had loaned money to military orticers at exorbitant interest. Of 2.500 Chinese in Chicago, 111.. 1,540 have already registered. Thomas Crumpton, colored, was 'bauged Friday at Washington, D C, for the murder of George Shanklin last June. A New York express on the Boston and Albany narrowly escaped a serious collision with a hand car near Worces ter, Mass., yesterday. The Lasters Protective Union of North America is holding its annual convention in Boston, Mass. . Lurg.ars robbed the postoffice at Winclieudon, Mass., Monday, of S400. Judge Ne-.i man has refused to re move Receiver Glover of the Marietta and North Georgia railroad. He also refused to postpone the sale of the road. The Dutch ministry has resigned,ow ir.g to the defeat of the government at the recent election. The report of the escape of the IJra zilian refugees, who were on board the Portuguese war ships, has been con firmed. Slight shocks of earthquake still conlinne in Athens, Greece, and vicin ity, and the feeling of terror among the people is increasing. WASHINGTON, THE LAST CAMP I Geueral Coxe.v and Ills Commonwe al Army Marches Into the National Capital. Washington, April M.,oxej s rag ged and footsore army marched intc the city today without molestation by the authorities. The commonweal marched into the District of Columbia Sunday and en eampfd last night on federal territory, within a few miles of the capital. Citi zen Coxey sleeps at the National hotel. Two hundred people were gathered at the Silver Springs station when the commonweal army appeared. Urowne rode at the head on one of Coxey's horses. Coxey lumself, dressed in a stylish gray suit, rode in a low phae ton, driven by one of his henchmen. Coxey, ,when questioned as to his next movement, said: "We shall lose no time. Tuesday morning we shall march down Twenty-first street to the statue of Washington, and along Pennsylva nia avenue past the White House and the treasury, reaching the steps of the capitol at noon. There we shall hold a meeting and impress upon congress the advisability of agreeing to the meas ures of the commonweal." PLEADING FOR PURITY. Dook Distributed Through Ureckinridge'a District Asking: for His Defeat. Lexington, Ky., April 30. The anti Breckinridge people in the seventh congressional district have issued a pamphlet containing 12,000 words writ-' tin by Piofessjr J. Iv'Joues, of Ham ilton Fern a e e-jllege here. The Ixok is entitled, "An appeal to the people oi the Ashland district for purity in tlie home and morality in public life, and a protect against the re-election oi Colonel W C. P. Breckinridge." At the bottom of the title page ap pears: "Righteousness exalts an alien, but sin is a reproach to any people." Twenty thousand copies pf the pam phlet have been issued and their circu lation began today. In the introduc tion it is stated "This pamphlet is printed and distributed in the interest of no candidate in the field nor hereafter to be announced." Corn Going to Europe. Toledo, O,, April 30. Eight Cana' dian vessels are being loaded v ith coin for direct shipment to Europe. About 3,000,000 bushels of corn will be shipped abroad this way during the spring, and in the early summer it is expected about 5,000,000 bushels of wheat. Ogdeu Succeeds Blanchard. Shrevefort, La., April 28. IL N. Ogden, democratic candidate for con gress from this district, yesterday waE elected to fill the unexpired term of M. C-Blanchard. The man who called sarsaparilla a fraud had good reason ; for he got , hold of a worthless mixture at re duced rates. He changed his opin- j ion, however, when he began to take Ayer's Sarsaparilla. It pays to be careful, when buying medicines Dyspepsia and its attendant ills are quickly cured by Simmons Liver Reg ulator. I NEWS Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Reportr JMsowmm pure THE WEEK IN THE SOUTH Disastrous Accident- at a Coal Bank In Kentucky. THE FUNERAL OF JUDGE HARRIS. Death ofl'.dttor Cochran, of Forsyth, Ga. One Confederate Veteran Killed. A Florida Minister Sui ides. Southern Happenings. Barboubvili.e, Ky., April 28. Full details have reached here of the death of two persons about a mile from town. Mrs. William Stamper, a widow, lives on ay adjacent farm. Sunday she sent several children to get coal from a neighboring coal bank. As the chil dren were gathering the coal, the slate or roof broke loose and instantly killed one of them, a boy 4 years old. The other children ran back to the house to get help to get the child from the mass of slate and earth. A daugh ter of Mrs. Stamper went back with them, and in her efforts to extricate the dead body of the child, the slite sibovo broke loose a second time, so badly crushing her that her death has also resulted after several days of suf fering. The daughter was married ana leaves three children, one of them being a baby jiist four weeks old. The whole affair is a most distressing one, nnd runch sympathy is felt for the un fortunate mother. - CONVICTS FOUGHT THE FLAMES 'Destructive Fire in Columbia Within the Walls of the South Carolina Fen.. Coli mbia, S. C, April 28. Fire yes terday afternoon destroyed the hoisery factorj? situated within the walls Of the penitentiary, and operated by private parties. - The building was owned by the. slate, and was a total loss, there being tio insurance. The building was valued : at $S,(MW. Total i1 loss by fire was S20.000, including the machinery and stotik of goods. The "siill was operated by convicts. Owing to the intiamniable material of the stock it was impossible to get the lire under controL The convicts had quit work and had been marched to their narters. There was no stam pede.ftntng them, and some of them assisted the firemen in fighting the flames. The fire is supposed to have been started by a convict who was left to lock up the factory. John Graham, of this city, was one of the principal owners of the mill. The hosiery ma chinery and stock were insured for $9,000 in the following companies: Southern. $1,000; San Mutual, 1,000 American, of Philadelphia SI. 000; Phoenix, of Hartford, 1,500; Hartford, of Connecticut 2,500; Georgia Home, 2,000. The mill and stock were valued at $12,000. Funeral of Judse Harris. Athens, ,Ga., April 30. Judge Young L. G. Harris, who died here Saturday, was buried with imposing ceremonies. He was universally, esteemed and loved for his noble character and patriotic aDd generous manhood. He-was in his 82d year, and had been in failing" health for several months. Fifty years ago Judge Harris gave 5, 000 for the establishment of the First Methodist church in China and through out the south, an l especially in Geoi gia. He has built a number of churches and educational establishments. His estate is valued at 150.000. The New Orleans F re. New Orleans, April 30. The fire on Saturday night and " early Sunday, which destroyed the St. Charles Hotel, one of the oldest and finest hotel build ings in the south, was checked before great damage could be done, save the destruction of the one building. The wires were down and "it was impossible to file correct reports during the night. All the guests were saved save five who suffered in the flames. Several were injured, but mono regarded fatal. Death of a Georgia Journalist. Foksytii, Ga., April 27. Claude F. .Cochran, editor and proprietor of the Forsyth Journal, died at his residence here yesterday, after an illness of three weeks. Mr. Cochran was a popular and enterprising newspaper man and a progressive citizen. He had just at- tained Ms 35th year. Mr. Cochran leaves two children, a son and daugh ter, his wife having died years ago. The funeral will take place at Powder Springs this afternoon. One Confederate Veteran Killed. Birmingham, Ala., April 27. W. L. McCormack, of Cedartown, Ga., a dele gate to the reunion from that place, fell from the third story of the Dude saloon yesterday morning, and died from the effects of the fall at 3:30 p tn., at the charity hospital. His remains are now lying in state at Killer & Co.'s undertaking rooms. Mr. McCormack was a prominent citizen of Cedartown. Florida Minister Suicides. Jacksonville, Fla., April 2"?. At Fort Meade, Fla., yesterday, Rev. C. E. Butler, an Episcopal clergyman, was found dead hanging to the bed post in his room at the Lockner house, where he boarded. The deceased was suffer ing from an incurable disease, and it is supposed committed suicide while crazed by physical agony. His wife and family are at Atlantic City, N. J. Gastonia Gazette: A thieving burglar at Cherry ville a few nights ! ago entered the bed room of Mr. M. ' Carpenter, took the keys from the sleeping man's pockets, and extract ed something like thirty-six dollars from a bureau drawer. He then went to the store. It appears that he took nothing from the store and on leaving was kind enough to leave the key lying under the door. Mr. Carpenter can doubtless sleep more soundly than, most folks when there is a pocket full of money hi tlieroom. SOME ODD IMPORTS. Articles That Are Dutiable In Vari ous Porta of the World. Taxes Imposed Upon Persons Who Follow Certain Callings Sweden's High Tax Upon Commercial Travelers from Abroad. In times past it was deemed war rantable to tax salt, candles, leather, brick, soap, starch, paper, and in 1652, even bread and meat. Peter the Great of Russia lovioda tax on beards, with the lauda ble object of making his subjects wash . their faces and shave. Brass tokens are. still to be bought in that country bearing the words: "Borado pignaia tiagola," which means "The beard tax has been paid." F. G. C. Lnndy gives particu lars in Temple Bar of the .British hat tax of 1784, requiring hatters to take out licenses and imposing an ad va lorem stamp duty on every hat sold. In old times, too, the Scoteh sacra mental certificates used to bear a six penny stamp; a tax on religious al manacs, glass, stone bottles and adver tisements were among the fiscal duties of the past. There was also a tax on "the light of Heaven" in the shape of an impost on windows until far into the present century. This odious and un sanitary burden caused architects and builders to erect' houses with as few windows as possible, and to escape the tax the windows of many houses' were blocked up.' Some of these dark and dismal abodes are still in existence in England. The Russian government a few years ago decided to tax kerosene oil and matches virtually a tax on light. In some' parts of China a tax is imposed on all women entering the bonds of matrimony. Travelers to those parts are obliged to take a wife, and when they leave the ladies take fresh husbands, to the benefit of the revenue. In Kcrvia vanity is taxed in the shape, of ladies' bustles. In Melbourne Christmas cards are taxed one-fifth per cent. It has been stated that in Weimar the authorities levied a duty on musical parties. Quite lately an annual tax of ten francs has been imposed on pianos in France. Music has paid tribute to tax ation in other ways. A musical troupe recently crossing the frontier of Sax ony carried wit1! them a crown of laurels awarded them at a triumphal performance. The custom house offi cers taxed the laurels as spice. Masse net, the composer, it is related, was also charged duty on a crown oi laurels oti the German frontier.- In his .case the wreath of fame was deemed to be woven of "medicinal plants." In Montreal organ grinders pay a license of twenty dollars and are only allotvcd to play at stated times. In Vienna they are also licensed and regulated as to hours. In France a certificate of character, a distinctive badge and lim itation of hours is insisted upon. Ad vertisements in the form of posters and placards are required to bear a tax stamp in France, which is" distinctly a tar: on trade and publicity. In Italy, where the people complain that the taxes are exorbitant, the voluntary tax paid by the poorer classes in the form of ' lottery amounts in a year to over three million pounds sterling. At Laterza the Italians recently broke out in open revolt against the municipality, which had increased the hearth tax, and took the civic buildings by as sault, wounding the syndic, but they do not agitate against the lottery tax. In "Old Madrid" last year there was terrible and fatal rioting among the men and women who hawk vegetables, fruit and other articles in the streets and markets owing to the imposition of a tax "on Spanish hawkers. In 18S9 M. Dunajewski, the Austrian minister of finance, who was described as "the nimblest' politician in the world for inventing new taxes," de cided to tax the total isateiirs or bet ting agencies. Totalisateurs are es tablished on all German and Austrian race courses. The system is to divide all the money invested on the losing horses among those who backed the winner, after deducting eight per cent, commission for the agency. There is no cheating or welshing possible in the plan. A ten per cent, duty on win nings was decreed. In France the parimutual, a similar system of bet ting, is taxed seven per cent., five per cent- of which is devoted to the relief of the poor. Bookmakers are also taxed. There is also a municipal tax of ten per cent, deducted from the re ceipts of theatrical and public enter tainments, which is also assigned for the benefit of the unfortunate. This revenue is principally distributed in the shape of grants to public charities and hospitals, thus making pleasure come to the rescue of poverty and the relief of pain. In Sweden commercial travelers visiting that country have to pay one hundred kroner (about twen ty-five dollars) for every month or part thereof they may remain for the privi lege of transacting their business. "Napoleon" Ives, of New York, who died in Asheville last week, achieved distinction before he was twenty-three years old. -He stole $6,000,000. During his brief career he is said to have roped in his dupes to the amount of $1 7.000.000. of which it is said he saved about $1, 240,000 irom the minions of the law. Wilmington Star. The ETolntlon - Of medicinal agents is gradually rele gating the old-time herbs, "pills, draughts, and vegetable extracts to the rear and bringing into general use the pleasant and effective liquid laxative, Syrup of Figs. To get the true remedy see that it is manufac tured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only. - For sale by all leading druggists. InTliflL'ij Tobhcco Fertilizer. HIGH GRADE-QUICK RELIABLE. t Tl! Faiisrs enlorse it Tier sar It tells U tie FIELD ail on tlie WAREHOUSE FLOOH. S.l. TRAVERSE CO., AGENTS WANTED. PRICES REDUCED, Jz3uy tt) Don't waste your work on eheap Guanos made but of Kainit, Acid Phosphate, and alittle Cotton Seed Meal. Notional-:-Tobacco-:-Guano -OR National -:- Cotton Guano, EITHER, "-will not only make, you a good crop this year, but will be a permanent improvement to your land. ' Will Sell to You ior Cotton. You know you can make the- cotton, but the cotton may be worth only five or six cents. Come and Sec Us. Respectfully, Beef.Blood&Bone 1 ... fl ftHiililZBH WILL GIVE 2k COTTON and COM By S. W.TRAVERS & CO., Richmond, Va. 5 Write for Price m and Tomttmonlalm.'SM A Faithful Clerk's Reward. "James," he began, as the clerk entered the-private office, "the new year is close at hand." - "Yes, sir." "How long have you been with usr "Twenty years, sir." "Ah ! Twenty years. You came in from the Country with all your worldly possessions tied up in a cot ton handkerchief." "I did, sir." "Yqu left home determined to achieve success." , "Yes, sir." , "You believed that honesty and integrity would be rewarded, and that faithful service would meet its reward." "That was the way I reasoned, sir." "Now, James, my partner goes out with the new year; I've been thinking ol you." . "Y-yes, sir." "And I'm going to reward you. I'm glad it's in my power to do. I shall commence the new year alone." "Exactly." "With limited capital." "Ah !" "And it will therefore be necessary to reduce all salaries. On all others I shall make a cut of 15 per cent. Owing to your long and laithlul ser vices I shall make the cut in your case only 10. That's all James, and I hope you may try and get down half an hour earlier in the morning, and a'so be a little more economical with the gas and fuel." Ex. WsaEr Lit m may be inherited ; not Consumption. Thin, narrow chested children are the ones to look out for. Everybody with a tendency toward Weak Lungs should take . Scott's Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil, with hypophosphites of lime and soda. It builds up the system. Cures Coughs, Colds and Wasting Diseases. Physicians, the world over, endorse it. - - - Hereditary Weakness and. all Blood Diseases are cured by SCOTT'S EMUL SION. It is a food rich in nourishment. . Prepared by Scott & Bowne, N. Y. Druggist sell it . ... Importers and Manufacturers, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. Write for Testimonials vafi, Prices. e JB ros. SATISFACTION Goldsboro Headlight : A love affair in Greene county, was singular ly and abruptly terminated Monday. A certain Duplin county young man, after travelling a considerable distance from his home to Snow Hill that morning for the purpose of obtaining a marriage license, presented himself," that evening before his "best girl," armed with the document and with a minister on hand, but she told him she was only jesting didn't mean it. What became of the young man, minister, and license, our ' informant failed to learn. If you are dull and stupid you are billious and need a tonic. Take Sim mons Liver Regulator. Death (heated the Gallows. Asheville. N. C, April 28. Silas Nicholson, a Jackson county farmer, several months ago was implicated in killing-his son in a drunken row. The trial was set for yesterday at Webster. vvnue JNicnolson was in the courthouse be had an attack of heart disease and died almost instantly. He was 00 years old. One of his sons is yet to be tried for complicity in the killing. Major HcCreary Dead. Columbia, S. C., April 28. Major B. B. McCreary, one of the most promi nent business men in the state, died here yesterday, aged !8 years. He was a native of Londonderry, Ireland, and -came to this country when a boy. His gallantry in the confederate service caused his promotion on a number of occasions. Vncklen'a Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, SalU Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Erup tions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is euaranteed to give perlect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by A. J. Hines, Druggist-