ct- YEAR; CASH IN ADVANCE. "LET ALL THE ESD3 THOU AHST AT EE THY : OOSTEY'5, THY GOD'S ABD TRUTHS", BEST ADYERTiSIIiG HEDIUH. VOLUME XXVII. WILSON, X. C.,FEB. 18, 1897. NUMBER 7. : l, ,. GKN. WEYLElt AT PL. AC ETA1. Minor Skirmishes IlprtPfl and Pinar iel lllo. in Havana Cub en Wmwn Released. DIRECTORY. T3EQUEST you; to be present at their store on Tar boro Street . on any day during the coming week to examine the most perfect Bicycle ever put upon any market in the world. We have secured the agency for the COLUMBIA WHEEL and will take pleasure in showing it to you. m WE ALSO CARRY A SELECT LINE OF Crockery, Havana, Feb. i i.H-Ca,pt. Gen. VVeyler camped yesterday kt Piace- tas, some distance eastward jot Santa Clara. I Secretary Palmerola and the inten- dent General left Havana by train this morning in order to see: the Cap- tain General on important j business, th-e nature of which has not trans pired. - I j . Tile military commander of Agua- cate, this province, while on; a recon- noitering expedition, heard firing in the direction of Arcos do Diego, and went with his force in that idirection. He lound that some Spanish troops had been engaged with the insur gents in that vicinity, and jtbat Maj. Francesco 'Guillen, of the ' Guadala- jara Battalion, and twelve privates of that corps had been wounded, the Major having sustained serious injury. The trops from Auacate thereupon attacked the insurgents, dislodged them from their positions, and de stroyed their trenches. The insur gents left eight killed on the-field. During recent skirmishes in pro vinces ot Havana and Pinar del Rio the insurgents lost eighteen men killed and tire troops had a Lieuten ant and fifteen soldiers wounded. Havana, Feb. 10 Through ithe intervention, of Consul-General Lee four Cuban women, including jthe mother of Dr. Sanchez Agamonte, chief surgedn in the Cuban army; the wife ot Lopez Recclo, a well known patriot chie; attached to General Gomez's staff arid the wife of Cu ban Governor of Camauey, were on Sunday released from the infamous Havana den known as La Casa Real de Recojidas, where with Mrs. Eva Rodriguez an American they had been imprisoned by Spanish military authorities as political suspects. DEI'AKICRK OF TRAINS. ' .LOCAL trains: X. Bound. S. Bound. Between Florence and Weldon. No. 78. Xo. 23. 1:42 P. M. Leaves Wilson 2:05 P.M. Between Wilmington and Xorfolk: Xo 4S. 12:48 P. M. Leaves Wilson, Xo. 49. 2:12 P. M. hv Thunder Rolls-. Glassware an d Groceries. CALL AND SEE US AT THE BARGAIN STORE. J. R. HARDY & CO., Tarboro .-'.street. THE RED CKO-S IN CUliA. The SE)aiiish Govpt" injiit Aocppls Miss Clara lisit, ton's OfiEVr- Knowing from1 authentic sources Chri-st injhs were Aggressor's. London, Feb. 11. The Parliamen tary Secretary lor the Foreign Office, of the destitution existing in Cuba, Mr-George i. uur.zon, answering a the American National Red Cross : question in the House of Commons offered its services as an organize concerning the troubles in Crete, said t:on. Some international fluv pre-. l.nV ere were 700 sentine itself. Miss Barton immedi- -he heights of Halepa and an un- ntr.iv ,s-f , i-,,-.-.,!f h.r , ffi,wc1known number to the westward. He Chiristians on Inauguration nf President, William Mc Kinley, Washington, MaixJi"4tli. 1897. "Shoo) Fly" Wilmington to Rocky Mount: Xo. 40. -; Xo. 41. 10:23 P. M. Leaves Wilson, 6:15 A..M for individual service in Cuba, provi ded Spain acceded and the American people desired to place their contri butions of money or materials in the hands of Miss Barton and heroficers. The fcMowing' communication ifrom the Spanish Minister explains itself and Miss Barton and her officers an nounce that they are ready to go to Cuba, provided the people desire to place in Miss Barton's hands a sum sufficient to relieve the necessities ot the people of that island ; ' ., "Spanish Legation, ' "Washington, Feb. 11, 1897. "Miss Clara Barton, Washington, D- c. ;' . "Dear Miss Barton : I duly com municated to my government" the proposition made by you to go to Cuba with the view of conveying the aid of the American people to the suffererssin consequence of the war. "I have just received a cablegram from the Duke of. Tetuan, informing me that the government of his majes ty, the King of Spain, after consult- added that the general tenor of the reports indicates that the Christians were rather the assailants than the attacked. Continuing, Mr. Curzon said that the British naval commandsr in Cre tan waters cables on Sunday last that an agreement had been made by which the Christians were not to ad vance any further. He had no infor mation to show that the Turkish au thorities had armed or encouraged the Mussulmans. A Mussulman mob, Mr. Curzon also said, had forcibly seized the rifles in the arsenal at Candia, two Turkish guards being killed in the affray. 'Some Queer Superstitions. It is u iil nek y to enter a house wtih your left foot forward. It is unlucky to ride behind a bob tail horse at a funeral. Woe to the man or woman who sneezes while looking at a new moon. It is unlucky to sneeze before There is no occasion which is more magnificent or inspiring td the patri otic American citizen than j the inau guration of the President of the Uni ted Stales, which ,occurs in the city of Washington on the 4th bf 'March, every four years. i I For the inauguration of William McKinley, on the 4th of M&rch, next, the crowds will probably exceed the attendance upon any similar occasion in recent years. The8 reduced rates and splendid train service jofiered by the Southern Railway from all points in the South, and especially from Virginia and North Carolina, leave no excuse for not attending and par ticipating in this great occasion. For civilians round-trip tickets will he sold at a single fare forthe round trip, and for the accommbdatioi s bf millitary companies and brass bands accompanying them, (25 or mere men traveling together, iln uniform, on solid tickets) the extraordinarily low rate of. one cent pef mile has been authorized. From j Charlotte, Salisbury, Raleigh, Durham, Greens b6ro, Winston-Salem and intermedi ate points, the trip to Washington occupies only about 8 to 15 hours, the journey beingi accomplished in one night (if you prefer to travel at night to save' time) and the return trip can be made in Ithe same puick time; on magnificent vestibules trains with elegant Pullman sleeping cars and day coaches.! Thus jpassengers from the territory referred to can leave home the evening pf the 3rd and arrive Washington early A. M. of the 4th in ample time to! participate in the inaugural ceremonies. For - detailed information" call on any 'agent of that Company. . j ,, ; -I- Jude Norwood Endofscd. The prolonged roll of thunder is readily explained by comparison with a volley fired along a line of troops. Supposed troops'to be drawn upih line in such number as to extend for a mile, and ordered, by a signal that all could, see, to fire at once. One stand ing at the end of the line would hear the report of the musket nearest him instantly. He would hear the other successively. , inus a report 50 ieet a way would come to him in half a second, and he would , not hear the last report for five or six seconds after ; the gun had been fired. This would produce a soft of roll, which, would gradually increase in intensity. Flashes , of lightning may be considered as rep resenting three lines of troops along which the explosions occur at the same time. Consider the variety of distance and position of the listener, and we account ftr the variety of cound in. thunder. In mountainous regions the rolling is augmented by reverberations of echoes. Cleveland Plain Dealer. ' . THKOUOfl TRAINS. i Between Florence and Weldon: iXo. 32; - Xo. 35; 12:22 A.M. Leaves Wilson, 11:18 IV M. county 01 I ICHK JJOARI) OF COMMISSIONKKS: K. S. Clark, Chairman. . John C. Hadlkv, Tiios. Fkltox. Shade Feltun, J. H. X i:vsom W. J. CherrVj Sheriffj . 1): Bardin, Clerk of Superior Court. J. H. Griffin, Register of Deeds, S. IT. Tyson, Trea.surtr, Wm. Harriss, Coroner, J; T. Rkvel, Surveyor. TOWN FFIt EK, Aldermen: J. D. Lek, j. A. Clark, U. II. Cozart, Geo. Hackney, J. T. Ellis. 1st Ward. 2nd " : rcl 4th 5th P. B. Deans, Mayor; Jno. R. Mookk, Town Clerk'; W. E. Deans, Collector. ' " police: D. P. Christman, Chief. Ephriam Ha'rrell, .Frank Felton, Tames Marshuocrne. To the Ot-licate anil Malarious. The most incredulous are convinc ed of the virtues of Aunt Rachael's Malarial Peruvian Bark Bitters upon a trial of them. Their base in Speer's Port Wine, with herbs and roots so favorably known to the Medical Pro fession and .the community at large as the best cure for JMalaria. They are all that can be desired by the most feeble victims of Malaria. Phy sicians prescribe them. " Tlte Origin of "Chestnut.' breakfast or tell dreams pefore tak ing the Commander-in-chief, accepts , ing a drink of- wrter. your benevolent effer ted in the same cablegram to convey to you the thanks of her majesty the Queen and the Spanish government for your gracious intentions and views. Believe me, ver respectfully yours, (Signed) "E. DUPUY DE LOME." Post. I am instruc-, If a man Owns a white house, a vvhite cow and a white cat; and then caps the climax by carrying a white utiibrella, the average " Austrian will not associate with him. - The fae : sinils glgsatore of la ea Monroe, Feb.. 13 Cdurt closed here to day. The week's1 work has been well and rapidly done. Judge Norwood has impressed himself upon our- people as a fair-minded judge. This afternoon a meeting of the bar was held and resolutions strongly en dorsing the judge as fair, able and impartial, were unanimously adopted. The resolutions also expressed' the desire, that the Legislature grant a special term of 'court! and jthe Gover nor send Judge Norwood jto hold it. Charlotte Observer. i In an old play called ' The , Bro ken Sword" there is a captain who is always telling old stories; the detail of which often vaiies. He starts .a tale about a cork tree, when he is in terrupted by another character, who suggests "It was a chestnut, Captain, a chestnut!" "Bah!" says the Captain, "I say a cork tree.' "A chestnut," repeated the other "I should knowas well as you, having heard ycu tell the lail thps twenty seven times." At a dinner one even tng a gentleman was telling a story of considerable uhtiquity when an actor present, who had played in "The Broken Svord," said, half audibly, "A chestnut. I have heard you tell the tale these twenty -seven 'times." Weekly Telegraph. ' . Rev. CHUKCHKS. Timothy's Episcopal church, F. C. Bayliss, Priest-in-charge. ISullet-Proof Animal. The skin' of .a whale is from tw.o inches to two feet thick, and the skin of a large specimen weighs thirty tons. The rhinoceros is the thickest skinned quadruped, with -a hide so tough as to resist the clavvs cf the lion or tiger, the sword or the bails of the old-fashion musket. Services: Sundays ot 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m., Sunday School at 3p. m., Week days Wednesdays and Fridays at 4 p. m. Holy days at 10 a. m. Celebra tion of Holy Communion on 1st Sun day in each month at n a. nr., other Sundays at 7:45 a. m. Methodist Church, Rev. J. B. Hurley Pastor; services t 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Sunday School, 5 p. m., J. F. Bruton, Supt. Prayer meeting Wed nesday night at 7:30. Disciples Church, Rev. I). W. Davis, Pastor; services on Second, Third and P'ourth Sundays at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p m. Prayer meeting every Thursday night. Sunday School at 3 o'clock, p,, m., Geo. Hackney, Supt. Presbyterian Church, Rev. James Thomas, Pastor; services on the First, Second and Third Sunday in every month and at Strickland's church every fourth Sunday. Sunday School at 5 o'clock, P. M. Baptist Church, service as follows: Preaching Sunday morning at 11:00 o'clock and 8:30 p. m. Rev. J. A. Rood Pastor. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. Sunday School at 5 p. m., D. S. Boykin Supt. Primitive Baptist Church, preaching on 2nd Sunday by Elder Jas. Bass; on 3rd Sunday by Elder Jas S. Woodard; on the 4th Sunday and Saturday before by the pastor, Elder P. D. Gold. Ser- -viceS begin at 11 a. nr. LODGES. Regular meetings of Mt. Lebanon Lodge Xo. 117 A. F. & A.M. are held in their hall, corner of Xash and Golds- boro streets on tne 1st ana 3ra iionaay nights at 7:30 o'clock p. m. each montjr J. D. Bullock, W.I. Regular meetings of Mt: Ieoanon Chapter Xo. 27 are held in y Masonic Hall every 2nd. Monday night at 7:30 o'clock p. m. each monjh. Lat,411iams, IL P. Regular meeting of Mt. Lebanon Comniandery Xo. 7" are held in the Masonic hall every 4th Monday night at 7:30 o'clock each month. W. II . Applewhite, E. C. Regular meetings of Wil'son Lodge, K. of H. Xo. 1604 are held in their hall over the 1st National Bank every 1st Thursday evening at 3:30 o'clock, p. m. . 'B.' F. Briggs, Director. Regular meetings of Contentnea Lodge. Xo. S7, K. of P., are held in Odd fellows' Hall every" Thursday night. Visiting members always wel- 'irt come fffGNDERFUL are the cures jby VVl Hood's Sarsaparilla, and yet they I Regular meetings , of Enterprise are simple and natural. Hood's Sarsa- Lodge, Xo. 44. are held, every Friday parilla makes PURE BLOOD. ' nisht-in Odd Fellows Hall.