Newspapers / The Wilson Advance (Wilson, … / Aug. 5, 1897, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE WILSON ADVANCE: AUGUST 5, 1897- The Wilson Advance. r i ; BY THE ADVANCE PUBLISHING COMPANY PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. W. L. Catwell' - Proprietor. Entered in the Post Office at Wilson N. C. as second class mail matter. . ' SUBSCRIPTION PRICE : One YearJ fi.oo Six Months...... 50 Renjit by draft, post-office order or registered letter at our risk. "Always give post-office addresjs in full. Advertising Rat es furnished on application. I No communication .will be printed without the name of the writer being known to the Editor. j Address all cor respondence to I The Advancl., ' Wilson. N. C. There is always hope, for the man who can be taught by one mistake what a fool he has been. There is only one real fail ure in life possible ; that is not to be true to the best that, one knows. ' The reason why so few mar riages are happy is because young ladies spend time in making nets, not in making cages. It is to be hoped that our "Infant industries" will one day arrive at that age when they can eat good solid food and renounce government pop. We should so live and labor in our time that what comes to us as seed may go to the next generation as blossom, and that which came to. us as blos som may0 to them as fruit. This is what we mean by progress.1 I two practical operators in Ste nography; Typewriting and Telegraphy. The principal, Preston Lewis Gray, is the son-in-law of Col. William Bingham, and a B. L. of Washington and Lee 'Univer sity Va., a teacher and admin istrator of unusual power and attractiveness. J. M. Oldham, professor of Latin and Greek, spent several weeks in our town on our ball team. He made many friends while here and proved himself in every way a gentleman. We know of no better place than the William Bingham School for those who have sons or wards to educate. Every advantage is offered and at very reasona ble rates. We are glad to know that several Wilson boys will be likely to attend this school next season. IJenffiof Hie Trusts. THE POOR MAN'S IIOPK, t The Washington Seatinel doesTiOt like the new tariff, and'declares that it - is worse than the McKinley bill. It declares that it is altogether a tarift bill for trusts, monopolies and cam paign contributors. It puts its finger into the sugar bowl and gives the choice lumps to the Havemeyers. It taxes every, pair ol shoes for the ben efk of the beef trust. It taxes the builder and farmer to enrich the lunv ber kings. It makes every man pay more for his coat and every woman lor her gown in order that the sheep growers nfoy be deluded with the hope of getting more for their wool. And none of these extra taxes will ! go into the Treasury. They are not taxes for "the general welfare" but for the private enrichment. It is a tariff for robbery and protection to trusts. . The country has heard something like bij before, but did not expect to see it so plainly put in the Senrine1. The Sentinel is published in Wash ington within a short distance ol the Capitol, and if it continues to talk in this manner it will incur the anger of Hanna & Co. It' had better Took "if IT 5) I i orn To riPPo hv TOor. tired mothers, over IS a VlPfOFOUS feeder -J worked and burdened with care, debili- 3p0nds Well to. liberal fWfT tated and run down because of poor, thin I n 1 lcrUUZa- and impoverished blood. Help is needed JOI1. UI1 COrn lands the by the nervous sufferer the men and increases and the Soil imnr women tortured with rheumatism, neu- ;r , , 'lJrOVes ralgia, dyspepsia, scrofula, catarrh.' Help 11 properly treated with fer Comes .Quickly iehing not "4 When Hood's Sarsaparilla begins to en rich, purify and vitalize the blood, and sends it in a healing, nourishing, invig orating stream to the nerves, muscles and organs of the body. Hood's Sarsaparilla builds up the weak and broken down sys tem, and cures all blood diseases, because Potash Mr. H. k. K inlaw, the vet eran newspaper man, was in to see usJMonday. He says he will start a new paper at Rocky Mount shortly that will knock the spots off of everything in Eastern Carolina. Success to you brother. The Evening Teleoram, a bright six colum daily, made Its appearance, at Greensboro, North Carolina, on Saturday last. We congratulate the management, their first issue shows every evidence of a healthy-support. May it live long andand prosper. A Baltimore: firm recently underbid all England over forty thousand dollars on 7,000 tons of steel rails, said rails to be used on English railroads, and yet when this same con cern gets ready to sell rails at home it must be protected against English competition. T A i r " t i i he American iviontniy Ke views of Reviews for , Auo-ust devotes itself with accustomed thoroughness to the new tariff. The editor, in "The Prooress of the World," discusses the subject in its general bearings; while Mr. Charles A. Conant of the New York Journal of Commerce reviews the salient features of the new-law in an impartial and luminous article. A Lively Fight. get good six 1 We received to-day the at tractive illustrated catalogue of The William Bingham School, Orange County, near Mebane, N. C - a location long noted for healthfulness of climafe and the morality of its country neighborhood. The faculty is one of which any school might well be proud, four of whom are College degreemen and "Speaking of the Local taxation election Aug. 10, one man says: "Taxes are too high already ; I don't want to pay any more taxes." But this man has children and wants to educate them. If he sends them, to a i out. Norfolk Virginian. public school like we now have, the school will only last 12 weeks. He cannot educate his children this wav. They never learn much studying 12 weeks and not studying 40 weeks. So this man decides to send his boy and girl to a private school. How much must he pay? He must oav at least five dollars lor the boy and five for the girl. This is a tax often dollars on him. But if he will vote for local taxation he will get good six months' schools for his boy and girl and for ail the boys and girls he has at a cost of $1.30 if his property is listed for i,ood; at a cost of $5. 30 if his prop erty is listed for $5,000: at a cost of forty cents il his property is listed for $ico ; at a cost of eighty cents if his property is listed for $500. So you see this locaftaxation is the po0r man's only hope of educating his children." Times. Was it with an intent to de- " .. . - -i I ccive, ur was 11 simply igno rance, that led the editor of the Times to make the statement, "But if he will vote for local taxation he will months' schools, etc." There are, in Wilson county, about 2,000 polls that come under the provisions of this law, at 30 cents each they would pay $6co. The total amount of property, that could be reached is less than $2,000, 000,. at 10 cents per $100 this would pay $2,000. The ex treme revenue would therefore be $2,600 from which all ex penses and non -payments of the tax must be deducted. In other words, if the entire county should vote for this ex tratax the net amount would be a little more than $1,500. The present school appro priation is a little more than $12,000 which (according to the Times) runs the schools 1 2 weeks, therefore if the entire county votes (and pays) the tax, we may expect the school term to be lengthened one and one half (1) weeks;1 Does this double the present term ? We again ask, did the Times intentionally publish an error, cr was it simnlv lonorance t ,1 J o Y CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The fac simile signature cf is on wrapper. Winston, N. C, August 2. There was a lively time at Oak Ridge Church, Stokes county yester day. The annual session ot the Pilot Mountain Baptist Association had just closed. The new Deputy Mar shal lor Stokes, arrested Jim Taylor, a celebrated whiskey blockader, when he called upon the blockader to sur render Taylor rolled out of his bug gy in an instant and drew his pistol. Belore he had time to use it, however, Marshal Preddy fired, the ball going through the hand in which the blockader held his pistol. In an in stant the officer and his assistants were on top of Taylor and a lively tussle followed, . The officers finally tied Tayior and he. was placed in a buggy and carried to jail at Danbury. r There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few y tars, was supposed to be incurable. For. a 'great many, years doctors pro nounced it a local disease, and pre scribed local remedies, and by con stantly failing to Cure with local treat ment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitu tional disease, and therefore req lires constitutional treatment. Hall's Ca tarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts direct ly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer $100 for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address, F.J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. ICSPSold by Druggists, 75c. STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF Branch & Co.- Bankers, WILSON, n. c, At the Close of Business, Fri day, July 23RD, 1897. Condensed from the Report to the State -Treasurer, . RESOURCES. Loans'& Disc'ts I202.616.3S Stocks & Bonds, 2,575.60 " . ' Overdrafts..... 1,600.00 206,791.98 Banking House. Furniture. . 5,000.00 , i,965-95 6,965.95 Due by Banks 20,653.74 Cash & cash items 1 1,368.33 Cupii' Capere. In love'tis opposites attract ; The short would wed the tall, The old be mated to the young, . The large would wed the small. - And this is why the proud young man, Too poor to cut a dash, Is ever eager to procure A bride with lots of cash'. L. A. W. Bulletin. LIABILITIES. Capital ''. . Surplus . . . ... . . . ... . .... Undivided Profits,.. ...... . Bills Payable,; Interest unpaid, $130.12 Due to Banks 8,028.30 Certificates, 1 29,442,17 Indv'l Deposits, 110,345.14 32,022.07 $245,780.00 $50,000.00 10,000.00 7.934.27 30,000.00 147,845.73 $245,780.00 North Carolina, . ) W ilson County. ) I, J. C. Hales, Cashier of abovenamed Bank, do solemnly swear that the fore going statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. J. C. HALES, Cashier. Sworn to before me this, the 31st day of July, 1897. , W. S. Harriss, , . Notary Public. nn W(Q)(Q)(Q Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. 1. Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co!, Lowell, Mass. j , , Vk. are the only pills to take n OOU S Pl llS with Hood's Sarsaparilla. THE. STATE Normal and Industrial College, GREENSBORO, N. C, Offers the young women of the S ae thorough professional, literary, classi cal, scientific, and industrial education. Annual expenses $90 to $130. Faculty of 25' members. Mdre than 400 regular students. Practice school ot 126 pupils for reachers. More than 1,200 matricu lates representing every county in the State except three. Correspondence invited from those desiring competent trained teachers. To secure board in dor mitories all free-tuition applications must be made before August 1st. For catalogue and information, address President Chas D. McIver. . t , ' North Carolina College of Agriculture Meciianical Arts, WILL OPES SEPTEMBER 9th, 1S97. -Thorough academic, scientific and technical courses. Experienced Spe cialists in every department. EXPENSES PER SESSION INCLUDING BOARD : A trial of this plan cosh V j little and is sure to leacT to profitable culture. : All about Potash the results of its use bv a , ' penment on the best farms in the United 'ex told in a little book which we pubiish and n man n;ee to any larmer m America who fft T Q'T " . GERMAN KALI W0RKS " l 1 93 Nassau St, New Yet. Professional Cards. Bu DEANS, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LV.V Office in rear. of Court House P. O. Box 162. WILSON f F. TAYLOR, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR T Uff NASHVILLE, Xc. ' ' Practices in Nash Edgecombe, Wilsor Pitt and Halifax counties. A. J. SIMMS. A. B. DEAX? A. J. SIMMS & CO., GENERAL INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE AGENTS, Office in rear of Court House. P. 0.-Box 162. WILSON, X. C. For County Students. For all Otiier Students. c. 93.00. 123.00. jg G. CONNOR, Attorney at Law, .. ' WILSON, - - N.C. Offire Branch & Go's. Bank Kundm. J '87. Apply for Catalogue to Alexander Q. HoIIaday, LL. D., Fras't., ' Raleigh, n. c. Female' College, NORTH CAROLINA. Fifty-second Session of this college begins Wednesday, September 8tii Advantages of Cfollege and Conserva tory offered'at moderate cost. ' A Faculty of Specialists . Ample Equipment. A Pleasant Home. Catalogue on application. DRED PEACOCK, President COWS, (d c o L T s WE HAVE A FINE LOT OF STANDARD BRED COLTS From one to four years old. Both broke and fresh. Ako a few full strain Jersey Calves. For full particulars ap ply to Fair View Dairy, WVT. FARMER, Propr By specif 1 Z a vra ngen tent 0n offer- s Home and Farm In combination with our paper for being the price of our paper alone. That is, for all new or old subscri bers renewing and pa) ing in ad vance, we send Gape Fear and Yadkin Valley Ry. John Gill, Receiver. CONDENSED SCHEDULE In effect May ' S'0, 1?97. NORTH BOUN'D. No 2 daily. Leave 'Yilmington . . . . T Arrive Fayetteville. ... ... Leave Fayetteville. . . ... . . . . ; Leave Fayetteville Junction. . Leave Sanford. . Leave-Climax. Arrive Greensboro. .. . .. ... Leave Greensboro. . .' "... . . Leave Stokesclale ! Arrive Wahna Cove Leave Walnut Cove Arrive Mt. Airv. . ......... .. ii 3 47 : 5-05 " 6.54 " 7,25 : 7-45 " 8.52" 9-C3 " 9-30 ' ii.oj '' SOUTH BOUND. No I DAILY. " 1 year old 2 years old 3 years old 4 years old mm and One'Year Free. HOME AND FARM has for many years been the leading agricultural journal of the south and southwest, made by farmers for farmers. Its Home Department conducted by Aunt Jane, its Children's Depart ment, and its Dairy Department are brighter and better than ever. RENEW NOW and get this great journaLfor the home and the farm Leave Mt. Airy. . . , ..... 5 25 a m Leave Rural Hall 6.50 " Leave Walnut. Cove. . . . . . "7.19. " Leave Stokesdale. ... . . . 7.52 " Aarive Greensboro..... ..... 8.40 " Leave Greensboro 900 " Leave Climax ....... . 9.29 " Leave Sanford . .... r. . . 11.20 " Arrive Fayetteville Junction. . 12.42? Arrive Fayetteville. . ...... 12.45" Leave Fayetteville 1.15 Arrive Wilmington... ...... 4.30" NORTH BOUND, No 4 DAILY r Leave Rennettsville. . . ;. . .!.. . 7 45 a m Arrive Maxton. ............. 9.00 " Leave, Maxton.. 9.07 " Leave Red Springs 9.37 " Leave Hope Mills.. 10.26 " Arrive Fayetteville. . .... .10.50 ' 1 J SOUTH BOUND. . -- No 3 DAILY . Leave Fayetteville.'.. 445 P(f Leave Hope Mills. 5 02 Leave Red Springs 5 42 " Arrive Maxton ". 6.11 , Leave Maxton...... 6.15 Arrive Bennettsville ...... 7-20 " NORTH BOUND No 16 mixed daily except Sunday. Lea.vi 10 a 0 Leave Climax. 9 33 ,', ' Arrive Greensboro 10 20 Leave Greensboro. ......... io-55 Leave Stokesdale. n-20 , Arrive Madison ....... .... , . XT SOUTH BOUND , No 15 mixed Daily except Sunday . 2.10? ii 3 5 ., 4.30 ....... 5 45 , 6.57 u ..... S 55 Leave Madison. . . Leave Stokesdale... .. Arrive Greensboro Leave Greensboro..... Leave Climax.... Arrive Ramseur. . . . NORTH BOUND! CONNECTIO at Fayetteville. with Atlantic -Line for all points North and East J Sanford with the Seaboard Air at Greensboro with The Souther Railway Company, at Walnut W with the Norfolk & Western K:oZ Winston-Salem f h W. FRY, W. E. Gen'l Manar nn' Pass. Wanted-An Idea JOHN WEDDERBDRN & CO. fS,V .""nston. D. C..for their ilWJgF na list or two hundred tPventlons wanted. ft
The Wilson Advance (Wilson, N.C.)
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Aug. 5, 1897, edition 1
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