Newspapers / The Wilson Advance (Wilson, … / July 19, 1894, edition 1 / Page 2
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The-Wilson Advance, By The AdYance Publishing Company. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY. 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 stood that we can do." SUBSCRIPTION PRICE : Six Months.'.... 5 Remit by draft, post-office order or registered letter at our risk. Always give post-office address in full. E-Advertfcing 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 ' ' t ' The Advance., Wilson. N. G Thursday, July 19, 1894. Prendergast, the assassin of Car ter Harrison, was hanged in Chicago last Friday. It is now stated that Capt. Peeble: who was recently nominated for the legislature from Northampton county and who was first reported as being a Ransom ma.n, now says that he is opposed to Ransom. " Well, who would have thought it ? the question of aiskitkation. : bodied in the AVilson Bill, namely, . that the fundamental Democratic doc- President Cleveland's acquiecence 1 tnne is t0 gather whatever revenue in appointing a committee of - investi- that js needed under a tariff system gation, the other day, to inquire in- . rrom a revenue tax on "the finished to the labor troubles, lias occasioned , rr(irinrr An( nnt on-raw material or the labor leaders to feel more hopelul successive taxation on different pro about arbitrating the differences with ' c ,sses Df manufacture : and that the Mr. Pullman.- Some of the leaders ;.qorrect SyStem of taxation is on value, and sympathizers of the strikers have ' The ef-ore ti,ead valorem method of claimed that the upshot of the whole assess;ng. duties is the correct one in matter is that a committee ol investi- j preference to the specific. f gation is one of arbitration. Those are the principles .upon Mr. Cleveland distinctly said that wh;ch the House conlerees headed it was a committee ot investigation, )y Mr. Wilson are making their fight, but the labor leaders have claimed lfthp., he successfnl free sugar, free that action as a surrender of an impor- cmi free iron, and free lumber will tant point, and hence a guarantee ' nnn kp ,i1P itms of the bill. The that the other will come in god lime, j C( inferees from the Senate are also Therefore they expect to exert such (jetermjned upon carrviner their point, and a long fight will doubtless be the result. . As to what the result will be no one can conjecture with anything like certainty. It will doubtless be an: other week before a decision can be reached, and then the bill will again i see the light ot day. We are hoping for the triumph of the House, but should that be found unadvisable we'are willing to accept the next best thing, a compromise. There is a revuision of feeling against the voluminousness of New York dailies. What stomach can re- a pressure upon the ruUman com pany that they will consent to arbitra tion sooner or later. Pullman says that no set of men can force him to make cars at a loss. He is not willing for a committee of arbitration to decide that he should ' work his shops, when such action woakl entail noth ing but loss upon him. 1 If Pullman speaks truth when he says thal-hij company has been los ing on "all recent orders that they have filled, then he is rijrrit in refusing to arbitrate. Who can force a man to continue a losing business? Were he to consent to arbitration, it. would be a virtual acknowledgement on his part that other men have a right to force him to work at a loss. He has "the riht to quit a business WOMAN IN THE VILI WEST. Treason in the Senate. HIH Ol KSTISIN OF K UOICSKMENT. ... iv : . tain its equuiDnum w that does not pay. He has a right fifty pages ot those Metropolitan wet tQ hig Workg wheQ nQ profit President Cleveland has been in- " 1 c ""1 w - I ovnorf f Hp rnntitrir - tr rsr-A 1 f?f unat vhed to Chicago to oin in an investi- 7 - ntUn r,r tha loKnr trnnhW Snrelv ne i,ah gaUu.i m . . ---j ., these anarchists that are leading those u-u y , u, u try win take nis statement: aooui losses as true r Wear not saying V that Mr. Pullman has falsified about We have received a copy of the last this matter. We presume that he catalogue of the State Normal and has spoken truely. We have no Indurtnal School at Greensboro, just cause lor disputing that point. I T 1 . 1 The enrollment is large, near four nis words may be as true as tnose hundered. It seems to be getting all found in the Pentateuch. But we do the patronage it can accommodate. . declare that Mr. Pullman should give the country better reason to believe Moore county last week instructed it than his word. the delegates tb vote in the Demo- V hen a business involves, as this '" cratic Congressional Covention for one does, the interest and well-being Hon. Duncan Mclver for Congress, of twenty thousand people, the pro There are quite a number of candi- prietors of that business should be dates in that district, and Mr. Mclver willing to surrenders part of their has a good running chance. rights it it does not entail loss. The company should be willing for this An enterprise is on foot to' unite committee of investigation to exam- the Chicago and Columbian Univer- ine its books, so that the country sities under the Superintendence of will be satisfied about the statements President Harper. If the project is of the company. Until that is done carried out, it will be the union of public opinion will be divided upon two of the greatest schools in the the matter, and people will be unde country. cided where to place the blame. Let Mr. Pullman open his books Yesterday the News-Observer I to the investigating committee and Chronicle was sold at auction., It let them report to the country the was bought by Mr. J. N. Holding, ofl condition of the company's business Raleigh, for $6,810.00. The paper . Is that too inquisitive ? Perhaps will be run as heretofore strictly as a so, but something is radically wrong Democratic paper. The plan of the somewhere, and it is a patriot's duty buyer has not been made public, to mend matters when he can, even however. if he has to surrender his own rights to an extent for a time. It would be about the matter? Can riots do not wish to strike a blow at the head of the government. It is estimated that the railroads magnanimous in the Pullman com- nave iosi eignr minions 01 aoiiars Dy pany to do thati and we think the. strike. Cook co.unty and the they should. city of Chicago will have to refund to ' the railroads the most of that amount. The railroads will not lose a cent The people of Chicago will Joose nearly all of it. that ISKHINIJ CLOSED HOOKS. At last the tariff bill has disap peared from public view. For months it has been before the county. It ran the gauntlett of the House. It stood the stare of the Senate. It sur vived the rough handling of Hill. It existed during the mutterings of Reed, and Sherman, and Hoar. It has been in public sight for a long time. It has weathered the storm of Indignation throughout the Democratic camp. It has been in It is now known that the earth- the verv teeth of the gale, and yet quake in Constantinople last week nas not' "inched. In China the cholera, is reported as being terrible. It is said that some iorty thousand deaths from the dis ease have occurred in Canton alone. 1 ne autnonties nave been suppress ing the reports of the ravages of the epidemic, but the truth has leaked out just the same. But now it has sought the seclu sion of the committee room again. It is before the conference committee of the two houses for agreement. For ten days the Democratic mem bers of that committee, eight of them, have been holding caucuses trying Last Saturday Craven .county to dece upon the provisions of the killed over two hundred people and destroyed property up in the mil lions. The wot Id renowned mosque of St. Sophia was badly damaged but can be repaired. The walls of the city were much shattered. Democratic convention adopted res olutions instructing the delegation to the State convention to vote for a resolution favoring primary elections for United States Senators on the day of election. The convention also passed a resolution endorsing Sena tor Jarvis to succeed Senator Ran som. ." Chicago newspapers claim that four-fifths of the strikers who have been engaged in the destruction pt life and property there foe the! last three weeks are of foreign birth. Isn't this immigration question worthy of con sideration by Congress any way ? It seems to be about time for the doors to be shut until Americans can gain the ascendency even in strikes. - Gov. Altgeld, of Illinois, is an in teresting character just now. He says that he put down the strike him self. He scorns to allow the United States regulars to enter into the cal culation, at all. He says that he had the situation on the hump all the jfjime, and didn't want any help any wayl It's true that it takes a thief to 1 catch a thief, .but the governor's thief was the loser this time. bill. The six Republicans nf th Committee are not even asked to at tend the meetings. They are not in it at all. Their room is preferable to their comp iny. They are nonintities. They are back niun hers, and so they take back seats while the Democratic bloods run things in that committee room to suit themselves. There is no rt as n for the Republi cans to complain about such treat ment, however, for. they would do the same thing if they had a chance. T-. f , ine uemocrats nave th nmrt,. and ' will co; t ol -matters anyway. They want to decide upon some ac tion, and after they have decided they will admit the Republicans and let them cast their six votes against it. Six to eight is the way the . vote will stand, and what is the use of having those six Republicans standing around Waiting for their DemocraHc matters to come to a conclusion ? ' - What is passing in that secret ccn c'ave of Democrats the county can not determine. It is understood, hoA-ever, that Mr. 'Wilson' --and the House conferers are making a reso lute stand against the . extreme de mands of the Senate. They arc sticking to the principles that are em- In about two eeks the Demo cratic State convention will meet in Raleigh. No doubt at that conven tion, the question of endorsing the national administration will come up for action. The question that will then" confront the body will be, "what are we going to do about it?" Whether the national administra tion should be endorsed in toto, or condemned in toto, should not be the alternatives before the convention. It should not be a squabble over a man or a set of men. It should not bit ad ministration or anti-administration, Clevelandism, or antirGevelandism. But it should be Democracy. The Democratic masses have never been much addicted to hero-worship anyway. Leaders of Democracy have been few during the life of this republic. In fact, one distinctive fea ture of the party has always been' the want of leadership. Therefore, the conventions of the party are not expected to tie themselves to any man's coat tail. . The people rule, and therefore do not follow any one blindly. But the matter of endorse ment will come up at the conven tion, and in order to dispose of it without friction it would be well to approach it somewhat delicately. There are many Democrats in North Carolina, peihaps a majority, who would not countenance an en dorsement of the administration. It would do the party great damage ' to endeavor to force them to swallow such a proposition. Also there are many Democrats in the State, who would not be willing to see the nationafadministration condemned. It would disrupt the Democratic masses to endeavor to do so. Then what course should be pur sued in order to conciliate the two factions? Prudence would suggest that some plan that would commend itself to both . would be the proper course. There is but one thing to do, it seems to us, and that is the happy middle ground that has al ready been taken by some State con convention to the South of us. Endorse the administration in so far as it has remained faithful to the Chicago platform and all persons that do endorse it. No Democrat can ob ject to that, No member of the party can be so bitter, so vehement, and 0 antagonistic of the President as to op pose that. That, it seems to us, will be the proper thing to be done. We should be sorry to see a resolution endors ing the administration either carried or voted down. It would mean disaster either way, we think. Democrats should keep level heads this year. This is no year to make blunders. We are confronted by a wily adversary that stands ready to profit by any mistakes that are made. Therefore, Democrats should move cautiously. Rather a sensational case came over the wires last Saturday. Nevada furnished a bit of news this time that is noticed even in the midst of the congestion of attention over the big strike. Nevada is small in popula tion, scanty in labor riots, but she does not propose to be entirely sur passed even by Chicago. The story that the wires ticked out for ther country Saturday night is about as follows: There lived some where in Nevada a man and his wife. The husband was a very suspicious did scoundreh He was a jealous old brute. He was always imagining that his wife wanted to runaway from him. The stoiy does not say whether she did or not. One day she got in the notion to go to see some relatives some miles up the road, and left in the passenger coach drawn by horses as it passed her house. Her husband was not present when she left, but he came back pretty soon, seized his gun and galloped on after the coach. He soon overtook the coach which contained his wife, the coachman named Lovelock, and a passenger named Sullivan. He immediately J fired and killed Lovelock, then Sulli van, and jumped into the coach and drove on to a well where he said he intended to conceal the two corpses. Then he was going to kill his wife and deposit her the re also. When he halted at the well and began to get out, his wife seized a pistol from Lovelock's pocket and shot him dead. She then seized the reins and drove on ahead to a town with three dead men in the vehicle and told the interesting story. What country can beat Nevada? The wild west cannot . be beaten when it comes to furnishing material for quill drivers. That woman would draw a crowd if she was put under a tent. It will not do to look upon Peffer as merely an intellectual misfit upon the floor of the United States Senate. The time has come when he must be taken seriously. His utterances up on Tuesday" were treason, flat and uncompromising treason; and no treason more frank and defiant has ever, before been uttered by any enemy that the country has had." He is for the overthrow of the Constitution. He wants the Senate and the House ot Representatives swept away and the Government abolished. He demands the sus pension ot the law that all business may be forced to cease and that all right of properly may end and anar chy ensue. He does not mince his phrases; his words are as straight as his purpose is vicious. What is to be done with this pub lic enemy, this agent of treason, who has invaded the precincts of the Sen ale? ' Peffer is iioje-to be lightly passed as a paranoiac without dynamite, a misstep of nature with nature's er rancy marked in his make. We say he must be taken seriously, because he talks treao-?. Nev York Sun. Wc read My. 1 ;... prec!i that the Sun comments on as above. We think Mr.- Peffer showed too much temper and we think he should have been called to order. Mow ever, we are inclined to let Mr. Peffer cool off and then hear what he has to say. Mr. Pullman says the stock of the Palace Car Company ' has- never been watered, that every time the stock has been increased' the cash was paid over to do it with. We don't blame Mr. Pullman for doing that, for requiring cash instead of water. . Water is avery good thing to tahe, but one can get enough ol water. -Whoever heard of Mr. Pull man getting enough of cash ? News fror.i the W est is to the "ef fect that Debs is still striking. He has given orders for all the members of the A R. U. t remain, faithful to one anolhor until Pullman' conies to T he only thing to bo'her terms will be to determine what sort of terms the A. R, U. are going to live on until Pullman' does thovv the white feather. N'ot wo: liy p'ortlieomin:; IMsoujsioiTs. In the forthcoming (August) num ber of The Forum, there will be striking articles treating ot the three startling manifestations of -the Great Railroad Strike Strimcer Mian a WsiU-h Tale. Mr- Bartlett Tarleton is one of the most respectable'" and responsi ble men of the Gibraltar neighbor hood of Union county. He is a man of truth, and his neighbors say his ward is his hond in all things. His wife is the same kind of a woman that he is a man and she verifies every word he says. Last Friday evening Mrs. Tarle ton noticed two or three lar?e snakes near the house, and called her husband to see them and kill them. When arrived they went to the rep tiles and found, instead of two or three, about twenty-five of them. They were black and in shape nearly like a buggy whip, but had no head at all, so far as Mr. Tarleton was able to see. When they came in contact with a stick or weed they simply parted in tfie middle, went around it on both sides and then went together and " again assumed their natuial shape. Then Mr. Tarleton tried to kill some of them, and b?at them i 1 to the ground, but in a very short time they would rise out and be as sound as ever. He tried to kill them repeatedly, but always met with the same luck. Mr. Tarleton was a little excited and went to tell one of his neighbors When he and his friend returned the strange reptiles had disappeared and could not be found. They have looked for them often since but have never found them. Mr. Tarleton says it is one of the strangest experiences in his life and he would like for some one to explain it. Last week the Senate passed a resolution endorsing President Cleve land's action in sending troops to Chicago to put down the mob. Sena tor Daniel introduced the resolution and it went through without a dis senting vote. President Cleveland last week, ap pointed a committee ot investigation to inquire into the causes of the strike. The labor unlbn calls it a committee of arbitrament,although the President distinctly told them that the committee would have no powtr to arbitrate but only to investigate. The Salisbury Herald thinks that Mr. Joshua Hudson, of Stanly county , deserves to take front rank among the citizens of the State. He is 99 years old, has been married three times, has 23 children and 400 grand children and great grand children. Notwithstanding his great age Mr. Hudson is hale and hearty and is active and cheerful. North Carolin ian. At last the labor troubles in the west stem to be at an end. pome two thousand coaches were destroyed by the mob besides mill'ons of other property owned by the railroads, con sisting of engines, roilingstock, round houses, and track. It is said, however, to the strikers credit, "that the greatest part of the damage was done by the tramps, dead beats, and loafers of Chicago who took advantage of the situation to pillage. We don't know how true that is, but it is a reasonable supposition. receut crimc- and its Causes; the Assassin of Car not ; and the Police Revelations in New York. Discussions of these subjects are grouped under the gen eral title, "The Sentimental Dealing with Crime and its Increase ; and fol lowing these is a fairly, startling re view of the receut world wide Tn creese of crime, by Mr. Henry Charles Lea, of Philadelphia. These make one ot the most note-;worthy groups of strong and timely articles that have ever appeared in our peri; odical literature. TIIK STATE OF UTAH. Only the President's signature is needed to make Utah, a State. The bill for its admission has been passed by both houses and was' immediately sent to the President. Utah would hive been a State years ago, if it had not been for tiff persistency of a lare portion ot her people in holding to the practice of polygamy. The new State will have a larger population than either of the States of Idaho, Wyoming, Mon tana, Nevada, Deleware, and possi bly New Hampshire, and Vermont. According to the, last census the population ofUtah wassomething over two hundred thousand and" surely such "a large community , deserves representation in Congress and to govern its own affairs'. ,v .In politics the State will probably be Democratic, though the Republi cans think by some proselyting that it may swing into the Republican column. y At any rate the new State will be a! good addition to the sister hood off States, making forty -five in all. X Lincoln and Grant are being spoken of for the nomination for President and Vice-President on the Republican ticket in 1896. Bob Lincoln is the son of President Lin coln and Fred Grant is the son of Piesident Grant. It is thought that they would make a strong team, not for what is in the boys themselves, but lor what is in the names In all probability they would, for at every election since the war there has-al-r ways been some old negro who wan ted to vote for Grant. The Old Friend And the best friend, that never fails you, is Simmons Liver Eegu lator, (the Red Z) that's -what you hear at the mention of this excellent Liver medicine, and ( people should not be ! persuaded that anything else will do. It ij the King of Liver Medi cines ; is better than pills, and takes the place of Quinine and Calqmel. It acts directly on the Liver, Kidneys and Bowels and gives new life to the vhole sys tem. Thi3 is the medicine yoji -rant. Sold by all Druggists in Liquid, or in Powder to be taken -dry or made into a tea. M ' "EVKRY PACKAGK-W V !. z Stamp In rel on wnnu Mr. George W, Tviley Benjamin, Missouri. Good Advice " Quickly Followed Cured of Rheumatism by Hood's Sarsaparilla. MC. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. : " I was taken down with rheumatism over a year ago. I was sick for over six" months Often I would have such pains that I could hardly endure them. A friend came to me and advised me to try Hood's Sarsaparilla. I took him at his word and pot a bottle of it, and since uavo iaH.cn eigm uouies 01 K. It Has Cured Me When the doctors could do me no good what ever. After being benefited so much from this medicine I descrile Hood's Sarsaparilla as a wonderful medicine. also advise every one wiiu is truuuieu wiui ueuinaram not u De Willi- Hood's5'1 Cures out Hood's Sarsaparilla. I am a farmer, and the medicine lias given me much energy and sirengin 10 periorm my worn." ukorge y Tulev, Benjamin, Missouri, Hood's Pills are hand made,' .and perfect In proportion and appearance. 250. a box. AND MONEY iPlpl . lam IT 13 ABSOLUTELY The Best SEWING -t'ACl'INE MADE you machines cheaper iian yon cau get cliewhoro.-tio ror; Is ourbeBt.batTtrbnanlco cen-cr Linda. acta as iho CIJJIAX, Eibjl auA other HIela Ana Full KIcUcl I?laied Sewln- Machines lor Q15.00 aad ap. can on our afrent or irrtto ud. YVo want your trade, and if prices, term and square dealing will win, vro will Wo cliallenze the world to prodaeo a BETTER $0.00 Serins Machine rr $50.00, or a better $20. .Sowing Machine for $20.0D than you can buy from u, or our Agents. THE NEW HOME SEWIHG M&CHIRE CO. Bam Fbaoisco, CaIL Atuwtj?GjL FOR SA'. FSY PriYett Tarboro St.,x Chnrcliwel Wilson, . C. ITCHING SKIN DISEASES Are Instantly Relieved And Speedily Cured By Cuticura Remedies A warm bath with CUTICURA SOAP, and a single application of CUTICURA, the great skin cure, will afford instant relief, 'permit rest and sleep, and point to a speedy, economical, and permanent cure of the most distressing of itching, burn, ing, bleeding, scaly, and crusted skin and scalp diseases, after physicians, hospitals, and all other, methods fail. Cuticura Works Wonders, and its cures of torturing, disfiguring, humiliating -humors are the 'most wonderful ever recorded in this 'or any age. CimeuRA Remedies are sold throughout the world. Price, Cuticura, 50c.; Soap, 25c.; Resolvent, $i. Potter Dri'G and Chem. Cohp., Sole Props., Boston; "All about the Blood, Skin, Scalp, and Hair," free. PJW5PLES, blac!cheaf, red and- oily skin pre- I 111 vented and cured by Cuticura Soap. MUSCULAR STRAINS, PAINS and weakness, back ache, weak kidneys, rheumatism, and. chest pains relieved in one minute by the Cuticura Anti Fain Plaster. FOR TWO CENTS (a stamp) any reader of' the Advance can have a sample copy :of The Southern Magazine by dropping a line to its pub lishers at Columbia Build jng, Louisville, Ky.', and can obtain a club rate on the magazine and this pa per by addressing the publishers of Tm-: Ad vance. Don't iliss This. If you have not 'hough t a new hat this season don't think it is toe 'late. . Now ' is"- the .Time - to Boy, when you can trtt them rhfan 1 rh, ; to the hard time? I am now oiFerin- mv of entire stock MILLINERY CONSISTING OF HATS, FLOW ERS, LACE. FEATHERS, AND. RIBBONS AT PRIME COST Come and see for your self and be convinced. Thanking you very kindly for past patronage, and hoping to re' ceive favors in the fut re, I am . Very Respectfully. Miss Bettie H. Lee. Cobb Building, Nast St., Wjlson, N. C. In front of Cah Racket Sjore. , University ol North. Carolina, Includes the College, the University, the Law School, the Medical School, and the Summer School for teachers. College tuition $60 a year; board $7 to fi? a month. Session begins Sept. 6. Address I'KESIDKNT WINSTON, Chapel Hill, N. C. Ay n egwl' "Some five years ago, I was not a littl.-ahrim-a t,),ij lFLtftifi cover that my hair was- falling -out, thivatni;ll-s;,,Hit baldness. AVER'S Hair Vigor being r,,,,,,,,,,,; y fl'M I procured a bottle and at once applitU n 1V g UWk and scalp, continuing to do so ior-M-vnu u-,,.. ' yfIgS was happily surprised that my hair stopp,.,! fnllii ;M new hair came out full ot litv ,ilul vi, S;-p?tAYEll'S Hair Vigor does ,,,-t .!l!y m fl0'neyr hair, but gives new liiViin.l v;-,,rtoiu fill . f - rUI : mm RESTORES Color, Fullness, and Texture TO HAIR Which has become Wiry, thin, or Gray, (rrmvrn. ami is wrssinu in; ; v inik,.,;.. Rev. D. J. IJURTr Baptist Miniver uxui of the Superior Court, DawsonviUr, ;u, AVER'S HAIR V S COR Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co.. Lowell, PEOPLE FIND That it is not wise to experiment with cheap Compounds puriMrtingto be blood-purifiers, but which have no real medicinal -value. I ,, ilia'ke use of any other than the old standard AVER'S Sarsaparilla -;!,, .Superior Blood-purifier-is simply to invite loss of time, .money, and hca-n,. 1 you are afflicted with Scrofula Catarrh. RheunuUiMu. I sp,. Eczema, Running Sores, Tumors, or any otheii blood disrase. lmssii that it pays to use: AYER'S Sarsaparilla, and AYI.K's ,l31lv. AYER'S Sarsaparilla can always be depended upon. ' It do,-s It is always the same in quality, quantity, and effect. I t is I'iti,-, combinaticm, proportion, appearance, and in all that goes to Lii;;, !)tjle system' weakened by disease and pain. It searches out all infinities in the blood and expels them by the natural channels. - AYER'S SARSAPARILLA Prepsired by Dr. j. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Has cured others, will cure you iV. P. SIMPSON, President. . . J. C. MA i ! S. -Cashi- A, P. BRANCH? Assistant Cashier B ra rich & Go ; BANKERS,; : ;WilBoi, - - - c TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING liUSiXHSS IN ITS FULLEST SCOPE. SOLICITS THE BUSINESS OF THE PUBLIC ' GENERALLY. The Object OF- Purchasers -OF- Is to Get the Very Best Article lo: the Very Least Money. E have the Agencies for the Caroib tor some of the best i'lancs nudi including the famous "SOHMKR. 1 r 1 .- we place no nctirious priccs.K our instruments, but in everv instance v,; will receive dollar for dollar in ;f ;uul valk We guarantee our instruments t !?e in: nitely superior to those oliV rei! in Vi!x.i t' other dealers, and at a saving l t(vciitvpt 1 cent to the purcnaser. W e are !. .viv at a.. . : , . 1 , , iimes 10 senu 10 rename patties, instruoi?: subject to approval, and if not sutisimoi we will pay all expenses ' Cabinet and Self-Playing (ra:.i We have in large variety at very l..wp;': from the factories of Wilcox iV U'liitv. ?V dan, Conn., Packard Orchest.r.tl Farrand & Votey, Detroit, Mich., and z Bridgeport Organ Co. We refer u the lowine citizens ot Wilson. N. C. : Hon. t G. Connor, Mrs. A. Branch. Mis. I! 1 tree, W. E: Farmer, Esq., l'rof. Silas -.t:re: Address all correspondence to E. VAN LAER, 402 and 404 North 4th St., WILMINGTON': X.C. ili Allt.iL LKINU. llttOUfc AS EViAHOCD RESTORED! f oaranteed to cure all nervous diseases.Biipii us Weak M.-nmrv. 1 w4't.3H l ower, Heiutache, Wakefulness, Lout Manhood, Nlnhtly KuH-:n!iO-m ness, all drains and Iom of power In Generative Ortmn of iiiior wxnuw by overexertion, yoathlal errorn, excessive use of tnbM ;,. opium ors'i ulants, which lead to Intlrinlty, Consumption or lnsnnl'-v ':iii (( rarrrjn vest pocket. VI per box. for il, by mall prpald. With a3 if Klve a written Euaruntnlo pure or ft fund the mm-v. S.M nvuereists. Auk. fur it. t:ilt nn nthfr Wrltnf'nrN,AUu.i i n..,.t .cnl-aW in plain wrapper. Address NEKVEKREII .. Mi..i,i.,T..ii.ie.flliai rursiuem Yuson. im. c., by JJOANK 1IKUHINU, Uruwist. StOD Tliem! Tin! Man orWoman who has bought FlRHITURE Ocracoke I lote M.rt ii)V. -FROM- Wootlcn S. Stevens Will tell you, that is the place to get the Best Goods for the least money. BROWN LEGHORNS. I have been raising Drown Leghorns EXCLUSIVELY for four years, and can offer ' The Very Best Stock. to be had in the State. Eggs per setting of 15, - $1.00 Fowls at reasonable prices. For further particulars apply to - M. STRICKLAND. FINCH, N. C. Or care Advance. Wilson, N. C. This favorite Snmrni i I been purchased by N, )' for the Summer of 191 u-i'U and in every way possi !.! for the comfort of its r.ii-- ' Blinds have beenputW the Windows, ana other Improve merits made, I' or fishing and natural :Ocracoit8 GUsrs Many !;;-n And the fare sliall be " ' ' may r-- n:;: - . STEAM r.U" connecting with .t!?- 1 Line, troin' Washiu..;! ' " ' will be put on July', s-;. I'er day, - - -. Per week, - - Per month, - - :- H.-B. SELBY. Pr; Care Hotel N'ii iiol.n, - H. A. TUCKER & BRO., DEALERS IN Granite,MarbIe, and Brownstoni ; MonumentSL and Headstones. Building Fork Furnished at Short Notice, of Granite, Marble, Brownstone, and Sandstone. DOORS, WINDOW SILLS, LIN TELS AND STREET CURBS A IAVAYS ON HAND e. ana xiiieiit Insurance 1 fire Inc.. r- In I mauicuice Lomitanv world do, & London -v and many others as rV1 those of any a-(.!' 111 State. Iarr- vonr insur- with me and it will !(.; E, F. McDAM 3t0 J, Front St., Wilmington, H. c. Nash' Street.
The Wilson Advance (Wilson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 19, 1894, edition 1
2
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