j .ison Advance, By The Advance Publishing Company. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. Entered in the Post Office at Wilson, N. C, as second class mail matter. "For the cause that lacks assistance, Forth wrong that needs resistance, For the future in the distance, And the scood .that we can do." - SUBSCRIPTION PRICE : ; ' One Year...!... $1.00 Six Months.................... 5 Remit by draft, post-office order or registered letter at our risk. Always give post-office address in full. tSAdvertisirig application. Rates furnished on No communication will be printed without the name of the writer being known to the Editor. Address all cor respondence -to . . ' i The Advance, Wilson. N. C Thursday, - - October 25, 1894 KKUULAK DE3IOCRATIO TICKET. . FOR SHERIFF, JONAS W. CROWELL. FOR "CLERK SUPERIOR COURT, JEFFERSON D. BARDIN. FOR REGISTER OF DEEDS, SPENCER M. WARREN. FOR TREASURER, , WILLIAM T. FARMER. FOR CORONER, CHARLES E. MOORE. ' . FOR SENATE, GEORGE W. BLOUNT. FOR HOUSE REPRESENTATIVES, JONATHAN TOMLINSON. " FOR CONGRESS, F. A. WOODARD. FOR SOLICITOR, JNO. E. WOODARD. DEMOCRATIC PROMISES. The Populist leaders are in the habit of charging that the Democrats have not fulfilled thsir promises. This charge is untrue. The Demo crats since the war have never had it in their power to pass or .change any law ot the general government, until August 1893, when a Democratic President called together a Demo cratic Congress in extra session. No intelligent man will deny this statement. , This is the 'first time the Democratic party has been in con trol of Congress with a Democratic President since i86oTand this is the first time since 1 S60 that the party has hid the power to carry out its principles or its- promises. What promises did the Democratic party make? - It promised to reform the tariff. Tr nrnmised to reoeal the hieh tariff " i -- r law, known s the McKinley bill. . This promise has been fulfilled. The McKinley law has been repealed and a tarift law has been passsed by a Democratic- Congress,-which lifts millions of dollars in the way of taxes from the shoulders of the labor ing men of the country. This Demo cratic law has'takerf the tax off ol all farming implements and bagging and ties, and reduced the price on cloth ino- and other necessary articles. And - .. . ... .-' this Democratic tariff has done more t has passed an income tax, which takes millions of dollars of tax oil the Cotton is lower now than it has ever been. The Liverpool market has touched low water" mark and gone below it. Only two weeks to the election. Democratic speakers are puttting in some good blows for Democracy, and the reoorts from all sections of the State are encouraging. Democrats never put the price of cotton down to five cents a pound as some try t& argue. Democrats make the cotton, and they would be poor fools, to reduce the price of their own products. Think about that some time when your mind is clear of cobwebs, and see if you can make any thing of it. Read the Democratic platform adopted at Raleigh on the eight ol last August and see if you can stand upon it. Somepf the Democratic campaigners are not sticking to the text, but let all other Democrats do so. There is nothing in the silver plank to irignten Len. Kansom or anybody else, and they should not turn pale when the mattef is men tioned. In our opinion the record of the Democratic party on the silver question should be bettered and the Raleigh platform is a good begin-ing- because he fears to disclose his posi tion on the silver question; that does not repeal that Democratic law as en acted at Raleigh on the 8th of last August. Gen. Ransom is not the Demo cratic party. He does not even lead the party in this State, and because be chooses to ignore the Democratic law in this State and stand upon a platform of his own construction, is no reason to suppose the party is in sincere in its utterances If our sen ior Senator choose to peril bis own political cafetyt by thus repudiating the silver plank nf the Raleigh plat form, it is nobody's outlook but his own. The matter stands now as it stood when the platform was written. The masses demand the free coinage of silver. The Democratic party ' has declared for it. It is one of the cardi nal principles of the party and stands out in bold relief. The party as t whole are sincere. Some of the lead ers may be otherwise, but the Demo cratic party is sincere inlts utterances. Some of v the men who aided in getting up the" platform may have looked upon it as clap-trap language gotten upto capture votes, but the great masses of the people, who staid at home and directed the making o that instrument from their firesides are sincere in it, and they will sooner or later whip these rebellious men in to line, or expel them from the party Therefore, if one wants to know the law of the oartv m this State, shouldeis of the masses of-the; peo ple and places it on the rich men and fead platloim Repudiate those men who repudiate the platform, and rnrnorations that emov tnese mil ions of income annually wrung from the labor and industry ot the country Nor is this all. This Democratic tariff bill has provided a stringent law against trusts and combines which were brought into existence and fos tered by the McKinley law. These things have been accom plished bv a Democratic President FmcTTt tha Parity of the Ballot. hold to that great law of the party. (iREATEK NE W.YORK. We observe that in some of the counties of the State there is a ten dency to throw out, on technicalities, the votes of enough precincts to re verse the result in such counties. As a Democratic ; newspaper, de voted to the Democratic' party and with a lively faith in the potency of Democratic principles, The Consti tution calls a halt in the counting out process! Legal votes that are cast should be counted. A manager, whether Populist, Republican or Democrat, , who refuses to sign . re turn, or who sign them improperly, because a - majority of the votes is against his party, commits an out rage for which the whole organiza tion becomes directly answerable to the people. - . We say, therefore, ,that the party cannot afford to tolerate even the sus picion of fraud. " The voters will not and ought "not to submit to'it. ; A contingency never will arise when any party can afford to do the dirty work and commit the- political crimes that theRepublicans are charg ed with. x The counting out of votes because some superserviceable election man ager refuses to certify to the returns is an outrage that cannot be excused or justified. If an election manager in some remote' precinct" can disfran chise the qualified voters and change the result in an entire county, then popular government is at an end with us. The purity of the ballot box is such a vital matter that the party in Georgia cannot afford to recognize or justify any act that will even lend col or to a charge that .there has been fraud in the counting oi the votes. Such a display of partisanship may result in a' temporary gain for the party, but it invites nay, demands -such a sweeping reaction as will compel the party to pay a terrible : Itnekln-Kitehi . , Cor. Wilmington Star. ' . I see from your valuable paper that Capt. Buck Kitchin says the "Democratic party has left him." Well this is true intone sense but not in the sense of Capt. Buck, for he holds that he still retains all the principles of the party, and that the Democrats have departed from their laiin. xmow - tms reminds me oi. a little story of a gentleman from Cork who was marching down street with a regiment of men, and being, several times ordered by the commanding officer to catch the step he replied by saying, he was the only man in the crowd that had the step. The Buck in Captain claims now to be the only Oil CRUTCHES 2 WEBS Limb Raw as Beef and Red as Beet. Pain, Burning, and Itching Ter rible. Not 5 Hours Bleep mo . Days. Makes One AppHca " tlon of Cuticuea'and In -,5 Minutes is Asleep. " A Remarkable Case. .- About two rears ago I was confined to my room with a breaking out on my ncnllm' physician pronounced Eczema. About tnree ek ago &. 1 aame oissM. brokj .outg;to on ttiA same abct. uhi but put wwu w wvw- -. r in me reuWly7catling Iron once twicf ffiy, the . ali Ume ttl wor. A uu ",WMb , RA, aa-nsine brother and 5-r rated by it. I wouia friend called to see one half teaspoonful me to try it. telling ot nunseii, uuuku ' "fc " . 4 . 1 not try It at first, sitnougn 1 oa crutches for over two weeks, and at one to?f counted between twenty-five and thirty suppur atine ores, and had not alept more than five noun in three nights. Monday morning about four o'clock tne pain, ournm u "rftrl came so severe that I determined to try Ccti- nn . thlnV4nn ttl&t if it did. DO STOOd. it COUlO Democrat in all of North Carolina who has the right step. ": What an awakening is in store for the Captain on November 6th no one knows bet ter than the. Captain: but r still he bucks. .. A. Buckless Dem. applied the Cuticcba, and in fivej nunuii j I laid down I was asleep. Next day I sent and got a box of cuncrmA, ana iu pieugeiu j word 1 would not take S100 to-day for it, if I could not get another. 1 wnmenwu CcncuaA Monday morning sdoui iout and to-day (Tuesday) my leg to nearly weU.not withstanding I had not walked a step without mv rnithM in two weeks. My cratitude to the man. who first compounded Cdticuba is pro- uy uoa Dieu mm. . ; J. T. FRAZIER, South Boston, vs. $20,000 Yo Twenty thousand dollars wcrth of New Good at - ung Bros. -THAT WILL BE SOLD AT- Hard Times Prices. -The prices on these goods are just as low as 5 cents is f0r cotton. Our buyer has been in the northern markets for the past two weeks looking for B A lG.A I N S and we can truthfully say we have never been able to offer goods so low. jSaraft .Grifrla. m) CUTICURA WORKS WOHDERS Bold throughout the world. Price, CrmcpRA, 60c; SoAP,2oe.; 1Usolthi-, tl. ram wu Axv Chxm. Corp., Bole Proprietors, Boiton. " How to Cure Skin Diieaaes, mailed free. PIES, bUekheade, red, rough, chapped, and ouy skin cured oy wmniu ow. :. pin OLD FOLKS' PAINS. Full of comfort for all Pains, Inflam mation, ad Weakness of the Aged is Cvticurs Anti-Pain VUir, the first and only pain-killing plaster. SHOES. We can sell yoy anything in this line at one-half the regular price. ' Women's Grain Polkas that sold at $1.25 we a re of fering at 75 cents. Men's Whole Stock Kip Shoes worth $1.50, at 75 cents. Shoes are low at our store and it will pay. you to see them if you have any to buy. . Dress Go O Gl S . In November the people of New York, and surrounding towns and cities will vote upon the question of enlarging the municipal bounds ot New York City. The bill has al and Congress, and yet lhese dema- ready passed the State legislature to price forthe temporary benefits. ogues go beiore the people ana 1 do so, ana it only taices tne sanction 1 For years the Democratic party charge that the Democratic arty of the people tor it to become a,law. has been crying out against frauds has not fulfilled any. of its promises. J It the people jjive their consent in J an(j outrages committed -by the Re 1 ne uemocrauc parry promisea 10 1 tne election on tae-otn 01 iovemoer, 1 publicans. The . party S protests reduce expenses and administer thej New York will suddenly grow to .a against tfc; great election frauds of government on economical pnnci-J city nearly twice its present size. It j are wei remembered. In fact pies. will include Brooklyn, Oravesend, for thirty years the Democrats have In less than two years we find the I Long Island City, Staten Island, and J been arraigning the Republicans for expenses of the government reduced I ten or twelye other small towns and I the tampering with the purity of the Dy a uemocrauc administration ovci 1 namieis, aiioi wnicn ne wunin a ra- 1 ballot. Jor that reason we deem it $28,000,000. dius of sixteen miles of the city hall tob our duty to announce in the in Why don t the t'opulist speakers of New York. - terests of the organization m this and papers tell the people now tne When the city thus becomes en- I State that the people ot Georgia will Democrats have redeemed this! larged, it will contain a population of J not tolerate the counting out of legal promise.' I three millions of people, making it votes, no matter in whose behalf the The Democrats promised to repeal I the largest city now on the Western j out rage may be committed. We do not know that any such at- Only a Scar Remains Scrofula Cured Blood Purified by Hood's 8arsaparllla. "C.L Hood ft Co., Lowell, Mass. : M It Is with pleasure that I send a testimonial concerning wast Hood's Sarsaparilla has dons (or my daughter. It is a wonderful medicine and I cannot recommend It too highly. Sarah, who is zourteen years old, has been - Afflicted With Scrofula ersr sines she was one year old. For fire years she has bad a ronnlnc sore on one side of her faes. We tried every remedy recommended, but AM. rl2ST TI3 AND LT7jFb 5" ABSOLUTELY" MONEY R The Best Hoods Cures Sarsaparula It bad cured her of dyspepsia. She had been troubled with that complaint since childhood, and since her cure she has never been without a bottle of Hood's SaraaDarilla in the house. Wo commenced giving it to Sarah about one year agi ana n uw ouuquerea vuo running soro, Only a Scar Remaining as a trace of the dreadful disease. ' Previous to taking the medicine her eyesight was affected but now she can see perfectly. In connection with Hood's Sarsaparula we have used Hood's vegetable nils, and find them the best" Mks. iubu ubitfix, jLenia, Illinois. Hood's Pills cure nausea, sick headache, Indigestion, biliousness. Sold by ill druggists. Valuable Real Estate Sale. SEWING MACHINE MADE XTB On OUn DEALERS can sell yen machines cheaper than you can get ciMTWhere, TUo me w uoia ts u sirbMbstwamaks cheaper Klnda, ancb mm the CU3IAX, IDEAL and other iklsli Arm Full Nickel Plated Sewing machines for S15.00 and np. Call on ear asent or write no. we want your trade, and If prices, term and square dealing will win we will nave It. Xf challenge the world to prodaee av BETTE& $60.00 Sewlnae machine for $50.00, or a better $30. Sewing Ffachlne for sso.uu man yon can any from ns, or our Agents. ; TEE HEW HOME SEWKG MICK1SE GO. Onuroa. Kami Jostov. Kias.St Uno Swabs. H.X. CiUCAOO. Ili. BT. LOCU, mo. DlILU, TXXAS, FOR SALX BY Our stock of Dress Goods is complete We have them at prices that will astonish you. Nice full cloth alicoes at 5c . Of course we have the inferior grades at lower prices. Ging hams from 5c. to 24c A ful t line of the latest patterns hi Satteeris at from 8c; to 12c. per yd. Bier Hneif novelties in Dress Goods. CLOTHING .'.We can sell yoaa man's suit for $J.25'up to $20. Boys' suits from, 75c. up. It will pay you, to look at our clothing if you don't want to buy. ; : ' ' HATS AND CAPS. All varieties and all prices. You can buy you a hat or a cap at any price you want one. ' - COME AND SEE US. PriYett ilartoro St., Church well, Wilson, H.C. the Federal election law; which was J continent, a&d next to London the an insult to the Southern people, j largest in the world. It will be and a menace to their freedom and j placed beyond the competition of their liberties. This promise has been redeemed, and vet the Populist leaders never Chicago ior a generation. No aty mention this noble act of the Demo cratic party. . If the State is lost to Democracy this year, it will be partly because of those Democratic speakers who have been boring the people with speeches on riots and such tomfoolery, omit ting altogether to mention the Ral eigh platform and its great,- stalwart, and lucid declaration on the silver question. Those men who have thus ignored that matter should not have been allowed to campaign the State under the direction of the Democratic executive committee. They should 1 t , , nave Deen cauea down at once, as soon as their policy became apparent, tempt has been made; but there are various whispers and rumors flying about. It is reported that in first one county and then another returns have been thrown out on purely technical grounds. All this is serious enough to invite comment. The voters of the State cannot be disfranchised on technical grounds, or because the managers of the precincts refuse to in the New World would ever stand the smallest chance of outstripping New York in population or wealth New York wants it very muc h, but The Democrats promised to equal- j it is unknown whether Brooklyn and ize taxation. I the rest of them will consent to lose j We find that they have pissed a J their identity and fall helpless in the 1 A. A. 1 1 1 ti . 1 I t XT tr t x - . I law 10 Tax greenDacKS ana ail omer arms OI INew 1 orK. 11 tney CIO, tney rprtHv tn the return Thnse whn T1 Tl t Ji -11.1 . . rl muiiey aiiKe. x ne i.epuDiicans naa 1 wm mus coniriDUte to tne aniDltlon Ol passed a law to exempt certain kinds the metropolis, while at the same of money from taxation. 7 Under time they will be flinging away their such a law the large money holders I own ambition. would collect that kind of money and Tne matter will soon be settled give it in and pay no tax. Now I one way or another and we will soon under this Democratic law they can-1 see our greatest American city is to outstrip the French capital. On the Sth of last August, the Democratic party in convention as sembled at Raleigh, adopted a plat form, as the law of the party. That document declares that the party fa vors the free coinage of silver at the ratio of sixteen to one. It is the big gest item m the platform. It is the clearest utterance in the whole in strument. Have the people been told about it? Great big Democratic speakers have been straddling the platform all over the State, and have not so much as hinted to the people that such a thing was Democratic law. Such campaigners should be expelled from the service and reman ded to their homes until after the election. not evade the law, but all money is taxed alike. Do the Populist speakers tell the people about this, and of other good laws passed by the Democratic party? If they have ever done so we have never heard of it. The Democrats have carried out every important promise made by them in less than two years, and there is only one other important matter to be acted upon and that is twenty-five or thirty thousand that will be polled by-the other candi dates. Then the question reduces itself to this: which would you prefer, T JJ J , , . w ouuaru, me man wno nas made a good representative, or Cheatham , the negro, whom his own race dis trusts? 'There is no other thoice. Dr. Freeman is in the race to com plicate matters, not for election. then who? Let every white- man consider well the matter tie casts his ballot awav. WOOOAUD OR CHEATHAM t make the attempt on any ground are i inflicting a terrible wound on the party and preparing to have them selves pilloried before the public Ballot box corruption is the worst form of thievery and there shall be none of it in Georgia! Atlanta Con stitution. $100 Reward $100. In this district the hght is between Woodard, the present incumbent, and Cheatham, the negro.candidate. Dr. Freeman stands no chance of election. He will say himself that his chances are as nothing. He will The readers of this paper . will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Halls Catarrh cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. ' Catarrh being a perhaps poll five thousand votes, butl constitutional disease, and giving the that is nothing compared with the I patient strength by building up the financial legislation. On this subject constitution and assisting nature in do- thev have done much Thev have 'mg itS work The PrPrietors have so , . J much faith in its curative powers, that repealed the purchasing clause of the they offer one hundred dollars reward Sherman Jaw, and made the way for any case that it fails to cure. Send On Dec. ist, at the Court House door in Wilson at 12 o'clock, M., I will sell to the highest bidder the following Real Estate. Lot No. 1. A two thirds interest in the farm known as the ."Rountree Farm" situated on the old Plank road three miles from Wilson, and containing 450 acres, more or less, This farm is in a high state of culti vation and is considered one of the Fall Hats. We have had our Fall Opening and are now ready to give our whole attention to the Fall Trade. -.. ........... .. OUR MILLINER is one of the best that has ever visited Wilson. Come early and leave your orders. We carry a...... You it g Bros: This Space is Reserved for . "V T FC - "T" . TTT T "V TV . . V AIN WILSVIINCTON N. C. of everything to be found in a hrst-class..... ... clear to increase the currency by en acting free coinage laws and issuing paper money based on both silver and gold. No party has ever done so much in so short a time, and it would be a great calamity to our country if the Republican party, which brought all these evils upon the before country should be restored to power to undo the good which the Demo- A. 1 1 1 crais nave aireaay aone, ana pass laws to destroy the prosperity which for list of testimonials. Address, F. Jt Cheney & co. Toledo, O. 5FSold by Druggists, 75c. Uennlne Protection. The cost of living under the De mocratic tarift is less by from 10 to 25 per cent, than it was a year ago under the McKinley tarift. That is to say, a dollar now will buy of the necessaries of life about as much as $1.10 or $1.25 would buy a year KEAI IT. is-just now beginning to dawn upon ago. although at ihat time hundreds Last August the representatives of our country. ; of merchants were ready to seU their 1 In anoiher place we publish an ar-. tide from the Atlanta Constitution up (jn the purity of the ballot. It expres ses our ideas xn that matter so well that we thus give it prominence. So much has been said recently about Yraud that we are thus glad to put ourselves upon record. We don't know whether there has been iraud in Wilson county heretofore as charged or not. We don't know anything about it. We just want to say that the safest way is to preserve the purity of the ballot, and we be lieve the rank and file of all parties think the same way. -No matter what may happen," no matter how the election may go, the genius of American liberty demands a fair election, and we believe the best of all parties demand the same thing. the Democratic party met in conven tion at Raleigh. They there adop ted a platform. That platform is an important instrument. It is particu larly clear in its utterances. It is parr ticularly bold in its position. That p'atform. is the law of the Democratic party in North Carolina. It is the record of our faith coupled with the history of our action. There is not a word in it that does not re flect the sentiments of the great body of Democrats in this State. That platform declares for the free coinage of silver at the ratio of sixteen to one. Is'that what the people want? That is what they have been . asking for. In that platform the Democrat ic party stands pledged to meet this demand of the people: If some Democratic speakers have seen fit to repudiate that platform, they cannot change what is there in black and white. If the greatest or ator now on the stump has seen fit to The Spider's View. An exchange says: "A subscriber found a spider in his newspaper. 1 the reader was super stitious. He wrote to the editor asking whether goods at a sacrifice to save them selves from bankruptcy. It costs less now to build a house than it did then. It costs less to car pet and furnish it. And when you come to live in the house it costs less to buy your canned vegetables, t- ..... 1 1 nnt i U1 "Ul " Wdf ua.u oraen-. e ecu- fish, fruits, and meats, your kitchen V v , P iooK1ng utensUs, 'your hardware, your butter, through the columns of the paper to cheee eggsshirts. drawers; sheets. acc vvucii mciciiciuis were not auver- most vaiuaDie in ine county. 1 -w -x T 1 ' T- Lot'Na 2.-The plantation on Ull LIXIC rxasn road Known as tne roroes riace, containing 335 acres, more or less. This farm is admirably located for one, who would like to farm and at the same time have the advantages of the town, situated as it is on one of the principal roads leading to Wilson, and within one mile of the Court House. It has a four room dwelling house and all necessary out buildings 1 1 1 I wnicn neip to maKe it a most aesira- Cobb Building, Nast St., Wilson, N. C. ble plantation. Lot No. 3. Two brick stores situ ated on the corner of Tarboro and Barnes streets, two stories high, with pressed brick fronts, with cotton yard in rear of stores with a frontage of 150 ft. on Barnes street by 1 14 feet deep will go with stores. They are in thorough repair and now occu pied by tenants at a rental that makes them a most desirable investment. Lot No. 4. One vacant lot cor ner carnes ana rine streets 50x7 1 eligibly located for business. . Lot No. 5. One vacant lot with a frontage of 56 feet on Barnes street and 71 feet deep adjoining lot No. 4, Terms of sale one-third cash, bal- lance one and two years, with inter est at 8 per cent, from date. : De ferred payment secured by mortgage on property. MILLINERY Very Respectfully. Miss Bettie H. Lee. In front of Cash Racket Store. W VlS" Vv. P. SIMPSON, President. - A. P. BRANCH J. C. HAI.ES, Cashier Assistant Cashier . Branch & Co., BAN KERS YVilBOT), - - - v. N. Clubbing W W Ra tes: tising, so that he would know what door to spin his web over without fear of disturbance. Washington Gazette. . Spiders have sense if some people seem to lack that article. Mr. Batler will please explain how it is he cares so much for us colored J people and then edits a paper called 'The Caucasian?" If he's in sympathy with the Republicans why not name it , York World. the Republican. Herald (Col. Rep.) .... I i nearly more for vour cotton is towels, rope, twine, oils, paints, : and pretty near everything else that enters into daily use. : These aresthe results of tariff re form. They are concessions wrung by Democratic legislation from the irusis wnicn naa conspirea unaer me 1 McKinley law to extort as much as possible from the necessities of the people. ' ' - This is "protection "to American labor" of a cenuine . sort. New Big prices for Cotton Seed, at trample the platform under his feet, Young Bros. . what you make by buying Bagging ' aud Ties at Young's. PERSONAL PROPERTY SALE: TERMS SPOT CASH. On Dec 3rd., at the Rountree farm, beginning at 10:30 a. m., I will sell to the highest bidder six fine mules, a lot of hogs, about 150 bbls. corn, lot ol forage of every kind, and all farming implements, also a 12 H. P. engine and' boiler mounted on wheels; good as new ; one 60 saw gin and other things to numerous to mention. At the "Forbe's place" on Dec. 4th, beginning at 10:30, a. m., I will sell to the highest bidder for cash, 4 fine mules, 1 colt 2 years old, a large lot of corn and fodder, and farming implements of every kind usually found on farms of this size. W. J. Davis, Assignee of M. R. & Co. Sept. 20. ELM CITY ACADEMY, " (FOR BOTH SEXES ) 1 UNDER NEW, MANAGEMENT. Fall Session Begins Monday Oct. 1st, '94. COURSE OF INSTRUCTION THOROUGH AND PRACTICAL. ; : Experienced teachers in all Depart ments. Superior advantages in Music and Art. Expenses very moderate. For full particulars apply to , ; r James W. HAYs,.Prin., v Elm City, N. C. Constitution, . ' Or Semi-Weekly World, . v and the TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS " IN ITS FULLEST SCOPE. ' SOLICITS THE BUSINESS OF THE PUBLIC GENERALLY. O Q ADVANCE 9 -AT- l.SO Per Year. J. A. POLL A K, .' CABINET MAKER. - I am prepared to make every kind of Furniture, to do Upholstering. Fancy Carving, and Turning. The Repairing of Furniture - a Specialty. " Give me a trial and you will find my work satisfactory an I my prices low Come. J. A. POLLAK, " Gol'dsboro St., Next to Farrior's Stable.. Rig prices Qoung Bros. for Cotton" Seed at THE CODPER MARBLE WORKS, , , 113 aud 115 Bank St., NORFOLK, VA. Monuments, Gravestones, &c j yjl Ready for shipment. Designs free ly j Go to B. W. Hargrave's for John- Wanted 100,000 bushels Cotlon son's CniH and Fever Tonic A sure Seed. Young Bros. . cure or no pay. - - ' HAR6RAYFS DRUG STORE. New Store, New Garden Seeds, New Goods, . New Cigars, : New Man:. New Stationery. HEWEYERYTH IK ; ITest Door to.th3 POst Cffics. Rowland's Drugf Store has been moved to opposite street and a complete line of fresh drugs takes place S!1 of V the old stock. Call at Hargrave'S Drug , Store, Next Door to Post Office. 0 Stop H. A. TUCKER & Them ! ' The Man or Woman who lias bough t - F1MTURE DEALERS H -FROM- Wootten Zl Stcvcnsr Will tell you, that is the place to get the Best Goods for the least money. 4 Young Bro's." ever. shoes cheaper than Granite, Marble, and Browustone, 1 Monuments and Headstones. B i 1 uiidincr Work Furnished at Short Notice, of Granite, Marble, Brownstone, and Sandstone. DOORS, WINDOW SILLS, UN: TELS AND STREET CUR ALWAYS ON-HAND. 310 H. Front St., Wilmington, K. C- Go to Young Bro's. tor Bagging a Tics at hall price. New Arrow Ties and reused ging good as new, Young Bro Bag- -e ait nervous diseases, sucu as J . Wakefulness, Lost Manbood, Niirhtly fci id loss of power la Generative Organs f'V, ' "tiluio gaarantecd to cure rower, Heaoacne Mnied7 ness,all drains and loss of power la Generative organs oi ' " , 0 or su"j hrnnriiftrUnn. vontbfnl nin excessive use of tobaM , i rarrie" nfsnU. which lead to Innnnlty, ConsumpUon or In?"",:,, a ord estpoctet. lperbox.for5, by mail prepai.i. VV Ui; "sql'jM U ri.. written u-..amnt n rnrr or refund the ""l.lt (.nt ik. f s VSSiTviiruKKlsta. sk tor It. take no other. Write for free Mea AhAt l2tSA5rjn plain wrapper. Address KEJtVBSEKM CO., Maoui-ieUJi' ll'OTi4aelUWU80n.N.CMbyDOANlfiHKKlUJSU,lJruKK'''''' --

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