Newspapers / The Wilson Advance (Wilson, … / Nov. 1, 1894, edition 1 / Page 2
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Y lv Wilson Advance, By Tlie AdYance Pnblisfeiag Company. i .. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. Entered in the Post Office at Wilson, N. C., as second class mail matter. "For the cau&e that lacks assistance, For the wrong that needs resistance, For the future in the distance, And the good that we can do." SUBSCRIPTION PRICE : One Year..... Six Months... jlr.oo 50 Remit by draft, post-office order or registered letter at our risk. Always give post-office address in full. Eff"Advertising 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 " . The Advance, . . . Wils4n.N. C. Thursday, November 1, 1S94, 'UKUI'LAK DKSIOCKATIC TICK KT. FOR SHERIFF, JONAS W. CROWELL FOR CLERK SUPERIOR COURT,' JEFFERSON D. BARD1N. 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, J NO. E. WOODARD. He who votes the fusion ticket should "ask himself the question: Will better government prevail1 it the fu sionists are successful? When a man casts his ballot next week he should know well the im port of that ballot.' He should ask himself why he votes as he does. If you believe in joining hands with the Republican enemies of good government, vote the fusion ticket headed by Faircloth and Furches. If, you believe in tarifl reform, vote the Democratic ticket, for the Demo cratic party is the only party that has ever made any efforts at reform along that line. II ill is making a gallant fight in New Yorkand says that he is going to win, but the odds are very much against him. The State Democracy is very much divided there, but Hill will win if anybody can. Democrats are .the only people who have shown any friendliness to silver in this country. The Repub licans demonetized it in 1S73, and now the Populists are marching to the ballot box arm in arm with them. Populists have put themselves on record as opposed to the free coinage of silver, not-by their words, but by their acts. They hav e joined hands with a party that is against silver, and in that act endorses thete principles. Have the Democratic judges of courts proved derelict to duty? Every body knows they have not. Indeed the courts of North Carolina have been justly famed for their purity since the Republicans were turned down about twenty years ago. Some people say that the Demo crats have put the price of cotton down to five cents. That is attribut ing power to the Democracy which they do not posess. The price is fixed in. England, and if any Ameri can party has any influence, there, it is the Republican party, certain! y not the Democratic. J j carelessly. I it is not patriotic to lTisusualforourPooulist fi;ends!VOte for "men si"5Ply because eV to claim that the Democrats hare bave been PUt UP b dagogues done nothing for the relief of the I and bSSeS- not patriotic to thus people. Well, they said that tvvo t lfle W1the ballot, the most power years ago before the Democrats had i fd Weapon f an Ame"can citizen. It a chance to do anything, and it was I 13 Patr, t!C to repudiate at the last T, - j iL i moment those'men who would turn true. They got wound up then and ! u lurn i ' u ' - i the State government over to incao- have been running ever since on the! , . . -"v "vl same line. But the charge is false,: now. Jas. Anthony Froude, the great English historian, died last week. He was master of a style that was rich and refreshing. His life of Julius Caesar was one of his masterpieces and was one of the masterpieces of the English language. His essays are particularly bright and instructive. He was one of the greatest writers of this generation. . should not be exercised in a way that Greenvillelndex: George Spell, will cause one to regret it by and by a colored man, who works fcr the There is an ambush to avoid. The Tilgham Lumber Co., in getting on Populist State ticket is a snare. It is the log train at Falkland Tuesday, an ingenious attempt to lead many of slipped and fell under the wheels of . our good people into the Republi the cars and was badly crushed. Drs. can party two years from now. The say that every bone in his body was trap has been set, and it will catch broken. .The man lived about three many of the unwary. There is time hours. t ' yet to avoid it. When you see Fair- AS UNJUST JUDGMENT. Twn vears ao when PoDulism be gan to show its liead, their leaders made the charge that the Democratic party had done nothing to relieve the distresses of the people. Quite a large portion of the people went into another political organization while the greater part remained ftithful to Democratic principles. . -Those that left pronounced the charge of the leaders true. They said, "It is a fact that the Democratic party nas not performed its duty and is not deserving of our support." Those who remained in the Democratic ranks said, "Yes, it is true that the Democrats have not done anything for the financial reliel of the people and the betterment of their condition; but they have not had the chance to do anything yet. They have not had the law making power. Give them that, and if.-they don't do some thing then, we will leave the old party also." . ' " ' The majority of the people looked at it that wav. and the Democratic party was installed in power in al branches of the government. They have been there eighteen months. They have been busily engaged in carrying forward remedial legislation. They have passed a tariff law that re moves nearly a billion of taxation from the shoulders of the people in a year. That taxation, too, did not go to the support of the government, but went into the pockets of the Northern syndicates and trusts. The government got not a dollar of it. That business has been abolished. They have reformed the pension lists so that enormous sums have been saved that way": They have cut down the expenses of the government about fifty million dollars a year, so that taxation need not be so large for the1 future. They have done these things. There's the record of them in the de partments at Washington? and any body can see for himself if he will go there. Many other things, too, have been done to relieve the people, but these are sufficient. In spite ol those things, the Popu list leaders have gone on making the same charge now that they made be fore the last election. Surely, it is not ignorance, for these fnen ought to know better. They have just closed their eyes to those things and resolved not to see them. Everybody who has been keeping up with the times knows that Dem ocracy has kept even pledge made to the people except the one about siver, and that will come along in its own time. Democracy is going to carry out that promise too. Read the Democratic platform adopted at Raleigh last August and see if you don't think so. The party has the power to do so, and it has promised to do so. It is much more reasonable to expect it from ' those who have the power, and have promised, it than from those who haven't the power and never will. No man of ordinary intelligence can have -the remotest hope tnat the Populists will ever cap ture 1 the White House and both branches of Congress. Their princi- yu.es are too commonplace to ever command a following sufficient to do that. Then why not stick to the party which has promised and which has power to fulfill its promises? It is sifest to do so. A VOI II THE .NXAKE. When a Populist goes to the poUs next Tuesday to cast his vote for the State fusion ticket, he should ask himself the question what the Repub lican party has ever done for his ben efit to thus enlist his support. If he can get an answer that satisfies his own mind, well and good. If he can not, 'then he will not be a patriot if he endorses the party with his ballot. It is the patriotic duty of every citi zen to vote as his heart and consci ence dictate. It is not patriotic to go j to the polls and vote spitefully or I, 1 "8 The right to vote is a sacred one. It is the voice of American citizens i which, silent at the time", has more . potency than the sword or the can non. It is the precious privilege for which our fathers contended during the ages that are gone by. It is the blood bought right which was won at Lewes, at Naseby, and at York town. It is the greatest privilege of a citizen of America. 1 Then it should not be. exercised in a prejudiced or flippant way. It cloth's name on a ticket along with Clark's, know that it is a snare and fllnj it aside When you see Furches' name on a ticket along with Mont gomery's.know that it is an attempt to deceiv e and cast it from you. It is the right, it is the duty, it is the privilege of American citizens, of North Caro'inians, to repudiate all fraud and deception at the ballot box. Ill lUil AU FKOOF CAIJS. Necessity is the mother of inven tions, and so it has proved in this case. Messrs. Morell and Ferrer, of Santa Barbara Cal., have had pat ented a burglar-proof car which is said to be one of the most ingenious inventions of the age. The frequent railroad robberies, that have alarmed the traveling public lately, have shown the need of some device, and the need has supplied the invention. . In the Scientific American of Oct. 27th, the car is described. Ihe car contains cages, opened only from the outside by the depot agents, in which are designed to be placed all moneys or valuables that the train has on board. There are a!so compartments in the car for express messengers to secrete themselves. The compart ments are bullet proof, but are so constructed that the messenger can shoot from them at any robber who succeeds in forcing an entrance into the car. Doors are ingeniously arranged so that the messenger by a device can shut in any robber who. makes his way into the centre of the car. The robber being thus 1 imprisoned, the messenger can shoot at him from the bullet proof compartment, through! port holes in the door. With that advantage the messenger is thus en abled to wage a succesful war, and in the i:nd make a capture or get the blood from his assailant. The arrangement is very simple and convenient. It is cot very ex pensive, as we learn. It comes in as a thing In need, and will doubtless come into general use. Train burglary has come to be all too common, and railroad companies will be obliged to provide some means to prevent their frequent re currence. It was thought for a long time that the eastern part of the United States was sale irom sucn vandalism, Dut the recent Aquia Creek affair has taught train men that nothing is sate. If the car proves a success they will doubtless be put on all railroads in a short while. KEFUIiLlCAN DOINGS, No man of intelligence will deny that every law on the statute books, which has oppressed the people and of which our tarmers have complained, was put there by the Republican party, j What party demonetized silver in 1S73 and contracted the currency? What party established National Banks in this country? What party enacted high tariff laws, put upon - the people the odious McKinley law, and built up trusts and monopolies to oppress the great body of the people, and to en rich a few men and corporations at the expense of the toiling millions? What party placed upon the statute books of the nation those infamous election laws to degrade and destroy freedom of the elections in the South, and provide for supervisors and mili tary force at the polls to intimidate and over awe the State and county officers in conducting the elections of their own officers? What party voted in Congress recently against the establishment of State banks, thereby continuing the monopoly of National Banks, and preventing an increase of the currency which the people so much need? What party but recently voted in Congress against the income tax? The Republican party. - The Republican party ' has done all these things. This will not be de nied. And yet the Populist leaders call upon honest farmers and South ern Democrats to go into a fusion with this Republican party, when it is plain, that if such fusion 1s success ful, the result will be the defeat of the j Democratic party, and placing in power again of the same wicked party which has passed all the bad laws that oppress us and which have brought the country to the very brink of bankrupty.. We appeal to honest men to pause before they allow themselves to be led astray by ambitious and corrupt leaders, who are willing to ride into office upon the ruin of their country. $10O Reward $100. 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. Halis Catarrh cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in do ing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer one hundred dollars reward for any case that it fails to cure. Send for I is of testimonials. Address, F.J. Cheney & co. Toledo, O. E3TSold by Druggists, 75c. POLITICAL NOTES. Cooke, the gallant Cooke, will beat Buck Stroud in the; fourth by nearly two thousand majority. Lockhart will go through with a whoop in the sixth, notwithstanding Dockery's stand against him. Branch is somewhat in danger in the first district, but it is believed that he will go through by . a" small ma jority. ' Henderson will be electtd in the seventh, Bower in the eighth and Crawford in the ninth, but the ninth is more doubtful than either ol the others. ' Woodard in the Second is thought to be safe. This is a Republican district naturally, but Cheatham fs not popular with his race and Freeman will carry many negro votes. The fifth is very close. Settle the Republican candidate is . personally very popular, but Graham is popular also, Graham will perhaps pull through with a small majority. Shaw in the third is having it all his own way if the papers tell the truth. His is a close district, how ever, and extraordinary developments may come to light at any time. He is believed to be safe. Yance'ti Suct:ossor. Up to this writing there are several candidates tor the place vacated by the death of the late Senator Vance. They are Capt. Samuel A. Ashe, Judge Armfield, Attorney General Frank Osborne, Maj. Charles M. Stedman, fudge A. C. Avery, ex Speaker L. S. Oveiman, ex -Judge James M. Merrimon, and possibly Col. Frank Coxe. Ex-Representative W. M. Robbins may also be in cluded among the possibilities. They are all gentlemen of at least far talents, and two or three have special qualifications that would make them useful and efficient Senators. Who will lead at the start and who will come in ahead at the last stretch and win the much coveted stake is be yond our prophetic ken. There is one of the above who would be sure to rank high in the Senate after a few years, if not sooner, unless we over estimate his abilities, which more than two decades ago impressed us as very considerable. He is a strong man with genuine legislative gifts, or we are mistaken. But we name no one. Any of the gentlemen aspiring will be a thousand times preferable to any Republican or any one that the vicious, unprincipled combination of conspirators would send. The thing to be done is to elect the Legislature and send good men to Washington who know what genuine, mud sill Democracy is, and will stand by it under all temptations and suggestions of alluremant. Save the Legislature. It means a' vast deal to No rth Caro lina. Lose it and then you will see what a dreadful curse has befallen North Carolina. Wilmington Mes senger. There never was a time when Dem -ocrats should have remained truer to the Democratic party than now. The State is in danger of being turned over into the hands of men who dis graced it twenty years ago. To pre vent that all true Democrats should vote against the fusion ticket. Arizona Judge (about to address the jury) "Now, gentlement ol the jury why, where in tarnation is that blamed jury?" Clerk "There's a dog fight goin' on out back o' the court house an' Judge "A dog fight ! An nobody never breathed a word about it to me ! If it's all over with 'fore I git there blamed if I don't fine somebody ler contempt o' court! Court's ad journed !" New York, Oct. 30. Seven per sons were burned to death at 3:30 o'clock this morning in a fire ia a five-story tenement. . Jacksonville Fla., Oct. 36. All the union bricklayers in the city struck to day lor $3 per day for 9 hours work. They have been work ing 10 hours at private terms. Monroe Journal: Waxhaw was visited by another fire last Tuesday morning. " A part of the cotton plat form, together with eight bales of cotton was burned. The depot warehouses and a part of the platform were saved by the latter being cut apart in two places. Sixty -five bales of the burned cotton belonged to the railroad, thirteen to McCain Bros., and two to Rodman, Heath & Co. We do not know how the fire origi nated. Calla Lilly, white, pure, and good, Sironach sells it. Try some. WItSOIf MARKET REPORT. CORRECTED WEEKLY. Cotton - 5. PRODUCE. WHOLESALE PRICE. Rio coffee. N. C. Hams " " Sides " Shoulders ' " Lard Eggs Chickens old. spring . ..... IS to 21 C 11 to r 2 9 to 9 9c IOC 20 tO 2Sc l8 tO 20C LITERARY NOTES' ! In Scribners' Magazine for November are many interesting articles. "Elec tion Night in a Newspaper Office" is a vqjy ' readable article by Julian Ralph of the New York Sun. He describes very concisely the laborious work in the office of a New York daily on ti e night after election. It is a timely article and one of much interest. Besides that there are other articles of great merit, among which we no tice, "English Railroad ' Methods," ,'The Horse", and others ol interest and profit. Address Chas. Scribners' Sons, New York. "How a Law is Made" is the title of a paper in the November number of the North American Review by Senator John L. Mitchell of Wiscon sin. . In it he describes the progress of a bili through Congress in a most interesting and graphic style. Chas. Dickens, son of the great novelist, contributes an article on"Publi: Din ner , ;. ; , " !f . hich he contrasts this i-iaro 1 ciciialn.t.eiiia as it ex isted in the last generation with those of the present day. There are others of equal or svpc nor merit, .altogether it is a very interesting number. Address North American Review, New York. " Review of Reviews for November is thoroughly up with the hitherto excellent numbers ol that- ex cellent periodical. A review of current events is one of the leading ! features of this magazine, and this number is a good history of the events of the day. "Oliver Wendell Holmes" is .the title of an excellent article by Edward Everett Hale. It is accom panied by photographs of the great author at diflerent periods ol his life together with pictures of his home. There are other articles of interest. I "Legal Education in the United States is a strong article on tnat subject. The Century Magazine, for Oc tober, presents its readers with an unusually interesting and readable number. It has secured many noted writers to -lend their pens in making the issues of the coming year one of notable interest. Among the articles in the current -issue are an jduonal on the greatest actor of the modern stage, Edwin Booth, also letters from his own pen with introductory remarks by his daugh ter Edwina Booth Grossman; a series ol articles setting forth the character and eccentricities of Stonewall Jack son that all old soldiers should read; a number of papers on political Re form that gives all parties food for u..ut ;tl j -.ti. serious thoughtThese and many oth- go to make up this issue while the m..u . .1 prospectus for November is none the less to be desired. San Francisco. Oct. to. E. C. w c r e. . j- j jj , Waite, Sec. of State, died suddenly this morning. Fall River Mass., Oct. 30. Nearly all the mills resumed opera tion this morning. M. L. Chetivront . Leonard, Mo. In Agony 15 Years With Salt Rheum Hood's SarsaparMa Cave a Perfect v'"' - C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: Hood's Sarsaparilla Is an excellent medicine. I had eczema In my left leg for fifteen ynn. Part of the time my leg was one mass of scabs, under the skin Ld the scabs would siouslott. Tho Itching and Burning sensation made me suffer indescribable agonies. I spent a great deal of money for different edies but did not get relief. About a year ago, leading physicians advised me to take Hood's Sarsaparilla. I did so and bave taken At bot- HoedV? Cures ties. Row all the sores, scabs and pain bar vanished and I am enjoying perfect health. I think Hood's Sarsaparilla Is second to none and gladly recommend it to all suffering humanity." JVI. L. CiiEUVKoxT, Leonard, Missouri. Hood's Pills act easily, yet promptly and efficiently, on the liver and bowels. 25c. Stop Them ! T I ic Man or Woman who has bought l'ROM , Woollen Zl Stevens, X. Will tell ,you, that is the place to get the Best Goods for the least money. ,y EIRIITURE ! i BAD COMPLEXIONS .Dark, yellow, oily, mothy skin, pirn- pies, blackheads, roughness, redness, dry, thin, and falling hair, and simple baby blemishes prevented and cored by the celebrated The moat effective skin purifying and beautifying soap in the world, as well as purest and sweetest for toilet, bath, and nursery. It is so because it strikes at the cause of most com plexional disfigurations, viz. : the CLOGGED, DTFUIKKD, DIBIT ATED, OVIBWORKED, or SLUGGISH FORE. finld thmravlurat the world. PoTTXB Dbtjo AK9 Cbbm. Corp., sole proprietors, Boston., jay "All about lfi Blood.Bnn, Bcaip, ana mur, manea iree. Fall Hats. We have had our Fall Opening and are now ready to Rive our whole attention to the Fall Trade .' OUk MILLINER is one of the best that has ever visited Wilson. Come early and leave your orders. We carry a H 11 I y Tl O "T of everything to be found in a first-class MILL IN ERY Very Respectfully, Miss Bettie H. Lee. Cobb Building, Nast St., Wilson, N. C. In front of Cash Kacket More. North Carolina, ) in the superior Wilson County. 1 court. Barnes & Davis, ,1 Notice of Execution Sale. vs. Jno. W. Gardner, By virtue of an execution directed to the undersigned from the Supeiior Court of Wilson county in the above entitled action, I will on Monday, the 1st day of Oct. 1894, at 12 o'clock, M., at the Court HouseKloor of said countv. sell to the highest bidder for cash, to satisfy said execution, all the right, ti- tle aifd intere3t whjch' h id ,-h w J Gardner, aefendani, has in the follow- I mg aescriDea real estate, to-wit: Une tt of ,nd in wilgnn,tfHBn.hin un I joining the lands or I. F. Smith, John w. uardner, bailie warren, and J. D. Lee. It being the excess after the ai- lotmf nt ot J.?n w. . Gardner s home- sieaa, containing tmrty-hve (35) acres, more or less. The above sale has been postponed until November, 1804. the 1st Monday in I. w. Crowell, Sheriff. Aug 16th, 1894, Valuable Real Estate Sale. On Dec. 1st, 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 most valuable in the county. -Lot No. 2. The plantation on Nash road known as the "Forbes Place," 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 fourroom dwelling house and all necessary out buildings which help to make it a most desira- I ble olantation. . . . T t Mn , TW .Vl, o , 1 """" ollu aiea on lne corner 01 larboro and I Barnes streets, two stones high, with pressed brick fronts, with cotton yard m rear of stores with a frontage of 150 ft. on Barnes street by 114 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 investmenL Lot No. 4. One vacant lot cor ner Barnes and Pine streets,, 50x7 1 eligibly located for business. Lot No. 5! One vacant lot with a frontage of 50 feet on Barnes street and 71 feet deep adjoining lot No. 4. Terms of sale one-third casrr, bal lance one and two years, with inter est at 8 per cent, from date. De ferred payment secured by mortgage on property. PERSONAL PROPERTY' SALE. TERMS SPOT'CASH. On Dec. 3rd., at the Rountree farm, beginning at 10:30. m., I will sell to the highest bidder six fine mules, a lot of hogs, about 150 bbls. corn, lot ot forage of every kind, and all fanning 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 nne mules, 1 colt 2 years old, a Urge lot of corn and fodder, and farming implements of every kind usually found on farms 0 this size. W. J. Davis, Assignee c 4 of M. R. & Co. Sept. 20. :"1 Cotton?Blight. Tests "made by the Alabama Experiment Station and elsewhere prove conclusively that Kainit Prevents cotton blight Planters can prevent the immense loss caused annually by . this disease. Send for our pamphlets. They are sent free. It will cost you nothing to read them, arid they will tave you dollars. "" . GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau Street, New York. $20,000 Twenty thousand dollars un Yo Ti I AT WILL BE SOLD AT Hard Ti in es Prices. The prices on these goods are just as low as 5 centsi is for cotton. Our buyer has Been in the northern mnrkets Tor the past two weeks looking for Jand we can truthfully say we floods . We can sejl you anything in this line at one-half the regular price. VVomen's Grain Polkas that sold at $1.25 we are of fering at 75 cents. Men's Whole Stock Kip Shoes worth $1.50, at 75 cents. 3hoes are low at our store and it will ?y you to see them if you. have any to buy. I ) rcss Go o d s . Our stock of Dress Goods is complete. We have them at prices that will astonish you. Nice full cloth Calicoes at 5c. ' Of course we have the inferior grades at lower prices. Ging hams from 5c. to 2jc. A full line of the latest patterns in Satteens at from 8c. to 12c. per yd. Big line of novelties in Dress Goods. . We can sell you a. man's suit for $2.25 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 GAPS. All varieties and all prices. You can buy you a hat or a cap at any price you want one. COME AND SEE US. You n g Pianos. This Space is Reserved for E. VAN LEAR, WILMINGTON N. C. Organs. 'S HARGRAVE New Store, New Garden Seeds, New Goods, New Cigars, N ew Man. New Stationery. NEW EYERYTHIKa. 2STe2Ct IDoor to tlio post Office. Rowland's Drug Store has street ana a complete line ot old stock. Call at 1 1. Hargraves Next Door W. P. SIMPSON, President. A. P. BRANCH irgiiviGxi xk Co., BANKERS, V: Wilsori, - - - N. C. TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS IN ITS FULLEST SCOPE. SOLICITS THE BUSINESS OP THE PUBLIC , 4 GENERALLY. ' iUtrOIUtAJil druKKtsts. -Ask for it buxu. in plain wrapper. Address A EUVKSEtl) CO.. MusouicTeaiple.CmtAUU. Forsale in Wilson. N. C, by DOANK HKKK1NG, Druggist. . . j. a. pollak: riPiMuT ' iin.r.E.iv. T , wmvuiv.. l am preDared to mat pvp t-Jni Furniture, to do Upholsterine Fancv l.arvtno- on4 T..,: Carving, and Turning. The Repairing of Furniture a Specialty. Give me a trial and you will find my work satisfactory and my prices low. Come. J. A. POLLAK, Goldsboro St Next to Farrior's Stable. ' wcrth of New Good at Di OS. have never br.cn able to t so low. - 1 ros. .! Organs. Piano DIG STORE; been moved to opposite side u tresh drugs takes place o " ' the Diw Store, to Post Office. .O J. C. HALES, C Assistant Cashier MANHOOD RESTORED! 7 fuaranteed tocure ail nervousdiseases.sucli as Weak Memory, Lossof liniin ower, Headacbe.'Wakef trine. Lout Manbooi, Nightly KtuifsionB, Nerve mj ness.alldratnsand lo of puwerin Generative Organs ol eilber ttvx cauJ br overexertion, youthful errors, excecsive useot tobacco, opium or siimi nlants, which lead to Infirmity, Consumption or Insanity. Can be carried lr Tent pocket. SI perbox, for S., by mall preoalrt. Wltuafg.1 order wa Vl V n W riltttn , n .. ,t hA m.hnAV. Mold 1 1 v ;t 1 1 tnkn r,n nrhor- Wrif for free Medical Book gent ecu!' J THE co!,PER HiRBLE B0!tK-s' i ; "i,iijai.dii5BankSt., j NORFOLK, VA. ! arge stock of finished I . - P.K1 iYi.uiiu;uenis. vjravesioncs, m . ' . . . B Keady lor shipment. Designs free Big prices for Cotton Seed, Young Bros. Young Bro's. shoes cheaper than ever. . e8 at
The Wilson Advance (Wilson, N.C.)
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Nov. 1, 1894, edition 1
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