Jl A TEAK, IASU IB AUKABUB. MtnTT TM mifitifin "LET ILL THE BHDS THOD AIliS'T AT BE THI C0U8TRI S, THY GOD'S AHD TROTHS." BEST ADYERTISIHG HEDIUII. WILSON, C, NGY. 7r 189 5. NUMBER 45. Statement from an Eye Witness of the Terrible Slaughter. , th.soeheb or ssbra EEvrrax i , T r- fi ; - teen -Foot Embankment, : r t For weeks our store has happily described by Charles y stage. " A fellow- thmsthisj 0you all full inside? Lamb auuui tuv vsiivi iuivw3. uui Miai lasi uuc um. uiu uusiuuoji lot me. :-S6 hbWfeh are out a j: tt ii-i i l:i uauy CTuwfiuigt-uur sneivcs- un LH Tne-gqoiis jairiy , iiuim.P1 J of 4, Wheeling for many, year occurred beseeching hands and teio :- 7: - - : iuukMUyk I wC, Wf' Ohle railre!., ThePftteburi-Cl THESE MO FE THEM; U FOR .SCriXflBWfA- OH AO! ti Big Stock of FALL. CALICOES, including? Navy L For c; a yard, yard wide Brown; Cotton. For scbJ Ka - f - - . -w . Don't buy your dress bill Fall opened 25 pieces of the celebrated Broadhead dress goods, consisting of mixtures and plaids in the newest things out. lllegant Wide.. land Grav. So many to select from all so cheap. We start them as I unless it pays you, but come CLOAKS tu r p nr u n n p v rT PTnnrp 1 J . M . L E A TH. Manager;; IflL LtHOII UHU!LI OIUSgLd, Nash and Coldsboro Streets. i TILLMAN'S FRANCHISE PLAN Passes South Carolina's Conntltntlonal Oon ventlon by a Good Majority. Columbia, S. C, Nov. 2. After flye days of debate Senator Tillman's suffrage plan was ordered to its third reading last flight by a vote of 69 to 37. A great many members were absent on business or other wise, but as they were paired the result would not have been changed. Nearly eyer'member took occasion to explain his vote before the ballot was taken. It has been a foregone conclusion for two days that Tillman was going to win, for every amendment to his plan was promptly voted down. The law prescribes that the qualifica tions for suffrage shall be : Residence in the state for two years, in the county one year, in the election district four months, and the payment six months before any election of any poll tax then due and payable;- registration which shall provide for the enrollment of every elector once in ten years, also an enrollment during eaoh and every year every elector.not previously registered as prescribed. Up to Jan. 1, .1893, all male persons of voting age who can read a clause in the constitution, or understand and explain it when read to them, are to be entitled to reglsterimd become electors, 'and such persons are to remain during life qualified" electors, unless disqualified by the other provisions of this article. Any -person who applies for registration after Jan. 1, 1898, if otherwiie qualified may be registered, provided he can both read and .write or show t&at he owns and has paid all taxes collectable during the previous year on property in the state assessed at $300 or more. - , . What is an called understanding clause is to be of effect only until January, 1898, in order to allow 'L who cannot read .and write and who own $300 worth of property to register. It is asserted that this clause is to be so administered as to register all white men aud.as few neerroes as possible. Henrv Wil son.' .fhp nnntmatitpr nt Welshton, Florida, says" he cured a J case of diarrhoea of long standing inH six hour?, with one small boltle of Chamberlain's Colic Cholera, and Di arrhoea Remedy. What a pleasant surprise that must have been to the sufterer. Such cures are not ' unusual with the remedy. In many instances only one or two doses are required to , gn e permanent relief. It can -be de 1 pended upon. When reduced with i water it is pleasant to take. For sale pby EM, Nadal, Druggist. ;-V . More Spanish TrooDs for Cnha. ma.EID' W Tho papers state that- .'Y0 troops will .be . sent to Cuba f orth .with, and additional reinforcements will sent as required. Reports received here 1 to the effect that the insurgents cqn to burn villages and plantations and .tempt.to dynamite the railroads. beSSMalt'aHifibng so La3iWwfKdiHifthe face lhViou&edrrArep 'l swemaf "dopft tfeq'ef M 1 . .. w - . . until you see them. Just Wale Serges in Blue, Black new and then they are low as i.8. Don't buvP and see our stock. STOCK AND PRODUCE MARKETS. Closing Quotations of tfco New York and Philadelphia Exchanasr New York, Nov. 1. TChe speculation in stocks today exhibited a falling off in Volume. The movement of prices taken as a whole, was less feverish than on tbo preceding day. Closing bids: Del. & Hudson. ...130 D., L.&W.... ..167& Erie 12 Lake Erie & W.. 21 Lehigh Nav......... a Lehigh Valley... 41 New JerseyQen..l09J$ N. Y. Central. ....100 N. Y. tc N. E ....... 45 Penn sy 1 vanla ti Reading.. ............. 14 St. PauL... 76 W. N. Y. & Pa..... V West Shore Geseral Markets, - -""' pHiLADBLrniA, Nov. 1. Flour firm; win ter superfine, $2,353.60; do. extras, $3.60 2.85; Pennsylvania roller, clear, $38.25; do. do., straight, $3.S0d3.40;westrn winter, clear, rU 133.35. Wheat weak, lower, with 660; bid aad idc. asked for Nevember. Corn un settled, lewer. with Uo. bid 4 and die; asked for November. Oats quiet, steady1, with 24$c. bid and ftG. asked for November. BayJlru; choice timothy. $15.5016. Beef steady. Pork qnlet; famUy. $H.eO18; ' ehert elear, $1113. Lard dull, western steam, $3.fi5. ' Butter ( stead r western dairy. lDlee.; do. ereamery, '15230.; do. factory, 14e.; Elgine. S6c.; imi tation ereamery, ialfe.; New York dakry. 1 V 21o.; do. ereamery, 8&So.; Peaneylvania ; and western ereamery priata. faaoy, X5.; do." choice. JHc.; ftr so coed. KleSe.; print jebbing at 26l9e. Chease Arm; large, 7MO lOc; small, 74llo.;jr4 skime, J7c; full skims, $$&e. Bga esiet; .New York and Pennsrlvaala. 90e.; lee house, 1817o.; western fresh. 18WWc. Monsignor Farley's Elevation. New York; Nov. 4. The Bight Rev. Monsignor John M. Farley, vicar general of the dtooeiw of New York and rector of St. Gabriel's church, has received wojkI from Archbishop Corrigan that the aroh bishop'e letter to the pope of Sept. 14, ask ing for the election -of Monsignor Farley to the episcopal as auxiliary bishop of New York hag been acceded to. Mgr. Farley's consecration will take place 6ome time in December. "Got the Drop" on the Stage Robber. KxA.M atti F alls, Ore., Nov. 4. Adolph C. Frick, a horsa thief who escaped from prison last week, held up the stage from Alger, Cal., j yesterday. While Frick was rifling a mail sack he was shot by a passenger-and captured. His wound is not serious. " Miss Fiaglr Jmdictrd for Manslaughter. W ASHIXGTON, Nov; 1. Miss Flagler, : daughter of Goneral Flagler, whose shoot ing and killing, of. a negro boy who was stealing fruit soveral months ago created a sensation, was' indicted yesterday fear manslaughter. " " ; The only permanent cure for chronic catarrh is to thoroughly expel the pois on from the-system by the faithful and persistent use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla. This wonderful remedy proves success ful when all other treatment has failed to relieve the sufferer. TTTO DEAD AKD MAKT INJUEij). ytul. Feared That Sereral of Those &ort " 11 Die A Sweat .op Fire to New! " Tork BesoltsT to Fottr IHth' aaoT ie4. ;tr7 Four ;1Ioom. r i!i j y l WrtttiW,, 'Nrr. 4feowtmrt of Those. ,railbaa weck in the fnuneaiate: TleuUtj l.cjnnonball,'juinped he trtckn afbr4i orer wiieeung-creeK, owinrvbrokp Csnffe n wheel of the snioWrfr car. The earine, tender and baggage ear- Jcep the' track, while .the mail car,' im6ke? and IhiHrnan parlor oar went orer a bahk about sixteen feet high. The Aaj coach turned completely orer and the other two flay on their sidesV - 7ho;CweWodni-t pletely demolished, seeming to hare been thrown some distance through the air.' So far only two deaths have happened. A woman, thought to be' Mrs. Miranda 'Hare, of Klttanning, Pa., but not" posi tively Identified owing to the Way she was disfigured, jumped from the car and was instantly killed. The 8-months-oId baby of Lawrence Bar tier." of Pittsburcr, was sitting on its. father's lap when the acci- j dent occurred. ' "It yr&g so "badly injured 1 'that it died -in a few minutes, while 1 neither the father nor mother were hurt, j TJiby. were eoming, to Wheeling to attend' the funeral of a relative. " Over half a hundred people received inr juries more or less serious, and of these it is feared that several will die. Many arms, legs and ribs were broken, and thirty of the wounded were unable to be removed to their homes. - r FATAL SWEAT SHOP FIRB. Three Bodies Found in the Ruins aad One Killed by Jumping. ' New York, Nov. 4. Several lives were lost in a -lire which started about'l a.rrh. "story brick Dulldlngs at 7 Felham street, " owned by Weil & Meyer, and used as a sweat shop. Three charred and almost un recognizable bodies have been taken from the ruins, and one man-who jumped to save his life from the flames was so injured that ' he died in Gouverneur hospital, whither he was taken suffering from a fractured skull. The dead are: Jacob Shaptro, watchman, found in the ruins,40 years old; Isaac Penson, found in the ruins; unknown man, found in the ruins; Morris Dirschauer, 40, who jumped from a second story window. The fire started from an unknown cause on the second j floor of No. 7 and quickly spread to three adjoining buildings, which were all de stroyed. - The total loss is about $75,000. The fire caused terror in the thickly populated neighborhood, and people ran out of their houses into the streets in mul titudes to escape" the impending destruc tion of their homes, which they feared. The buildings burned were filled with sweat shops ' and several watchman and others slept there How many cannot be told yet. Two of these people were Dirschauer, who died in Gouvernour hos pital, and Samuel Ischowitz, janitor at No. 7. They jnmped from windows to save themselves. Ischowitz is still in the .hospital with both legs broken. , :.. , Burnett te TJeath at' Her Home. Ciisn LAND, ' ifov. 4jriHelen Langdorf, of ,No. 4 Patton sfresx, was -burned to f death yesterday morning and her husband jmd children barely escaped , frdm-,tho : house, which was destroy ed, together with he house adjoining. - The cause of the fire is txnknown. but it Is supposed Mrs.-Lang- dorf atteriSpted to start the- fire with coal oil, and that an explosion resulted. The dead body of, the. woman was found on a :filde porch soea after the family had been -aroused. ' - w - - - - ;v Refused te Grant Increased Wages. .PHiLirsBURG, Pa., Nov, 4. The Clear- Held region bituminous coal miners met rlri maai meatinsr at Barney. -Pa.; to hear the reoort of the committee which had been sent to Philadelphia. The commit tee reported that it failed to secure an ad vance in the mininxr rate, and also failed to secure a promise from the company to attend a joint conference of operators and miners. The company assured the com mittee that an increase was probable later on. The meeting adjourned "without tak ing action, other than to resolve to con tinue their efforts for an increase. : - Railroaders Refused to Strike. Butte, Mont., Nov. 4.' It was an nounced Saturday night that a general strike would go into effect on the Great Northern at midnight, on account of the refusal of President Hill to meet the medi tation committee at St. Paul. Investiga tion proved that a strike was ordered to take effect -at that hour, but ; the employes of thft Montana Central have refused to take any part in the trouble and they have announced that they will not strike under Ueadiy xsace Riot in Tennessee. - Nashville, Nov. 4. Saturday night in "the outskirts of Clarksville a mob of negroes attacked four white men, and a -general fight occurred. Henry Baker,.a 'whito rnan-about GO years old, was stabbed twice, dying instantly. Ono ether "white -man was stabbed and badly injured. Two ueCToes wenfalsb hurt. Thre negroes are I In jail charged with the murder. Upem and mt t Death oa the StrWt-Thel ; : BNepe LtwUd Thlr Fvprty Dl- ; eaoaK th Hivdi New York, Not. 8. The following tatemenrtrtakBit ttam-pxtrmU letters re eeired bj a gejatleman in this eltr in re ard to the recent disturbances in Trebl- ' MlleifemnV tretjlsdnd egsk about Oct r S wheK on the lite oUhe ex.rali of Van. He was ! nhbtind wottoAeoan' r,.lutlpniss.who has nor ret: been onftur4 ppooo 07 me gorernmeni to lie concealed som where In the city. The ex citement of the. .Turks wee, ef , course, greatly Increased on'h'earinir of nateri'in Constantinople. . ! They teemed' WJ infer that all the Armenians were banded to gether and in armed rebelllom affaiast the governmtfnt. n The Turks thenlselve rep resented that they were afraid of an at tack T from the Armenians, and even in some cases took measures " to put their families in places of safety. "On Friday, Oct. 8, there were extensive movements of armed men on the streets. About il o'clock they seemed to disperse, and nothing specially worthy of attention occurred through the night. On' Satur day, Oct. 5, the excitement in the town was very intense. The consuls had a oont sultatlon, and going in a body to the jvall earnestly pressed him to arrest those who were exciting the people to acts of out rage. The vali declined to do so, but prom i ised in his OWn W.W tn An iri itV . 4ti4n)rr "Until Monday, Oot. 7, matters seemed to be; quieting down when an Incident stirred up the excitement anew. On the previous Friday night the son of a leading Turk of the town was wounded on the street, som say by one of his own com panions, others that he was shet by an Armenian whom he was fcryihg to arrest. On Monday he died, and the funeral re- rm7 nd loud and many were the threats of massacre that night, 'and; hundreds of the Armenians rushed to places of safety. "The next morning, Oct. 8, all dispersed in the hope that the danger was past. Men went to their shops and were encouraged to open them, as they had not done for two or three previous days. Suddenly the trou ble began. Unsuspecting people walking along tha streets . were shot ruthlessly down. Men standing or sitting quietly at their shop doors were instantly dropped with a bullet through their heads or hearts. Their aim was deadly, and I have heard of no wounded men. Some were slashed with swords until life was extinct. They passed through the quarters where only old men, women and children remained, killing the men and large boys, but generally permit ting the women and younger children to live. , "For five hours this horrible work of inhuman butchery went on. -men tne sound of musketry died away, and the work of looting began. Every shop of an Armenian in the market was gutted. For hours bales of broadcloth,- cotton goods and every conceivable kind of - merchan dise passed along without molestation to the homes of the spoilers. The Intention evidently was to impoverish and as near as possible to blot out the Armenians of the town. r: . - : v -; : ' - . "" " ; "So f ar as appearanee went the police and the soldiers distinctly aided in this savage work. They were mingled with the armed men, and so far as we could see made not the least effort to check them. .Apparently they took care to see that the right ones- that is, the Armenians were killed. Also that an offer of surrender might be made to all that were found un armed. To any found with arms no quar ter was given, but large numbers were shot down without any proffer of this kind. This talk of surrender, would seem to be o efce supposition that all were in an attitude of resistance. One poor fellow when called on to surrender thought he was ealled on to give up his religion, and when he refused he was hacked to pieces in the presence of his wife and children, " While I write the town is in a greai stir because news has come that the vill age Armenians, thoroughly armed, are on their wav to attack the town. The real fact, however, seems to be that the mas sacre is extending to the villages, but the constant effort is to show that this affair is only the quelling of an insurrection like Sassoun. "Not one of the perpetrators of these outrages has been arrested or disarmed, but all have moved about with the utmost freedom to accomplish their nefarious pur pose. On the other hand many of the Ar menians are in prison. While I write the wails of the newly bereaved fall on ray ears.- Throngs fill the 'schools that are under foreign protection and the consu lates. There is no telling how many havs perished. Four . hundred is a moderate estimate probably the figure would rise much higher, and how far the massacre will sweep through the villages remains to be seen." ,s ' " " ' ' ' Eighteen Months for a Firebug. Lancaster, Pa , Nov. 4 -Henry L. Steh man formerly a prominent cigar manu facturer of this county, who set fire to his cigar manufactory at Boherstown last April,was on Saturday sentenced by Judge Livingston to eighteen months imprison ment A few years ago Stchman was supt posed to be worth over" $lQ0,000vbut he is now Without any means . . - Unsespelaff Armcntaoe Feone4 Gir.lMOHUA tTEfflltATOIl7 - Are ycnUatnjj Smuoxa tarxa Rsa ulatob, the "Kro or Lives -Hedl enter That 1j iht :6ur 'teader want, and nothing bui that It lithe same ol&ftiead to which -the old folks, jitoxjd their feith nd yrerp ntrer dU appointedr Bnt 4nothttob4 room xaencUtlon br il i'tJist it la HL'n'iag tzian PillBj never gripesi, never weak ens, but works in inch an basy and natural way, jxist like nature ittelf; that relief comes quick and Bure, and one feels new all over. It never fails. Everybody needs take a liver remedy, and everyone should take only Sim mons Liver Regulator. Be sure you get it. The Bed Z is on the wrapper. J. H. Zeiliu & Co., Philadelphia. ) THE DISORDERLY ARMENIANS. The Friendly London Times Declares Tbtf ' Have Forfeited English Sympathy. Loxdox, Nov. 4. The papers this morn ing are full of Turkish troubles, and have columns of specUd correspondence from Constantinople. - T-he Daily News, in an editorial, complains of fhe want of agree ment among tha powers as encouraging the sultan to withhold the Imperial order enforcing tha Armenian reforms. "It. is most regrtablo," The Daily News consld ers, 4 -that Sir Phillip Currie (the British ConstantlnoleTly rjk.eyl should have -left The Time says editorially: TuiSr news ia of a grav and duquieting cluirav ter. Like mmUiehL . Turkish, the ap pointment of the Armenian commission of control appears to come too late. The ports seonii to hope that the summoning of the reserves will restore order, but at best tha process of restoration is likely to be a rouga oko." The editorial then pro ceeds to aruii that the Armenians, by thsir revolucioiiavy titctics, have forfeited the sympathy of laj English government, who have already, in thulr .interest, gone as near provoking a disitrous disagree- ment with rh-s European powers as would Whalera Threatened with Starvation. Sax Francisco, Nov. 4. The schooner Bosnrio arrived, from the Arctic ocean, bringinir 3.0OJ pounds of bone, the residue of a catch of lire whales. She is the first of the whaling fleet to reach pore from the north, aud it is within tho limits of possi bility that she may be tho last. When she left the ocean the ice was forming fast, and it was heavier than it has been for many years. The Bosarlo brings con firmation ef the news of a very poor catch in the Arctic. From the report of the Bosario it looks as if the entire fleet would be caught in the loe, The majority of the barks are provisioned with only enough stores to lank them through the summer, and if they are compelled to spend the winter in the north starvation stares the, whalers in the face. . , Ravages ef Yellow Fever. Washington, Nov. 4. Reports to the Marine hospital service show the contin ued prevalence of yellow fever at Havana. There were lf30 cases and 43 deaths from the disease fx-ora Oct. 10 to 34. A large percentage of the deaths are in the mil itary hospitals. During the week ending Oct. 24 out of 33 deaths 13 were soldiers in .'. . . . i i' Japan are shown in the abstract of cases and deaths up to Sept. 13. The main points of the outbreak are Osaka, Hlago, Hlrosh- ima, Kagawa. Tokio, Kioto, JNagasai, Miyagi, Tattori, Yamaguchi, Yehime and Fukuoka. In these places there wa3 a to tal of 3,475 CAS? and 19,&-r58 deaths. No Gambling: in Virginia. Washington, Nov.. 4. Governor O'Fcr rall, of Virginia, has taken a decided movo ia re.irani to the gambling houses in Alex- andri-t county, across the river from Wash ington. Acting ou the orders of the gov ernor Detective W. Baldwin, with a number of assistants from Itoanakc, on Saturday night raided Jack Heath's gam bling den, above Roslya. Heath's gam bling pArivth?rnali3, worth ! 3,-7)0, was confiscated, and yesterday it was destroyed. -"A large number of arrests wero madet many of. the victims being vvashingtoa department clerks. Four Acres of Buildings Destroyed. ARCADIA, la., Nov. l.A fire visited Ar cadia last night, and only one store is left in town. It burned over an area of four acres, taking with it six residences, hotels, onerahouso. one liverv barn, one harness shop, two grain elevators, one lumber and coal yard, barber shop, post'offlcc, two drug stores, two saloons, three general mer- r chandise stores, one f urnit ure st ore, ono hardware store, one butcher shop, one va cant, store room, one boot and shoe store "and four barns. The est imaced loss U t SSjOOO, partly covered by iusurance, - ' " MP I I "Il II'' " Mf '"-" II l" iillf M