Tho W i Ison Advance WILSON, EDITOR & PROP R. LET ALL THE ENDS THOU AIM ST AT, BE. THY COUNTRY S, THY GOD S, AND TRUTH S. $1.50 A YEAR CASH IN ADVANCE- XXII. WILSON, WILSON COUNTY, N. C, MARCH 24th, 1892, NUMBER 9- I Caps 1 ' - 1 fC ) At . ' ' " "J 3 1 , f T lats dive in Xobby me of that ' ll'l'S :tition C rush 7 Sc., " Man's th f . A I OA I i 0 ou' le-lii .OuO. -ars: It-serve. arid vtU rt 1 estate. unent ED Dlt. orks iuararttee ber Especially Good. ;S, FROM PICS 1 J M iH AND WOMEN. day ol i eemberj March. ii:tl St'tfiuljer. , DAINTY. WITTY, TENSE. b fora and book staud has it. urnber, ".: ( 1 I S. JS'I.OO 111, postage ITIKK. . rterly reproduces the best . I i!ics. poemti, witti e . early numbers of that New York SodC v Jourual, is published treet, J?ub- ai - Town T'Pis''1 ami i 'Pi." tojfetber, at the i iur forthein or address, TOWN TOPICS, Y. A,.Y. City. rilyJiorse, will work ITWELL, W ilson, X. G. K1CST. BY FATHER RYAN. ! feet are wearied and my hands are tired, . My soul oppressed 1 I . 'desire, what I have long desired, Rest only rest. ; hard" to toil when toil is almost vain, .. In barren ways; . hard to sow and never garner gciffji 1 n harvest days. burden of niv days is hard to bear. But God know 4 best ; ml 1 have prayed but vain has been . my prayer For rest sweet rest. T hard to plant in spring and never reap The autumh yield; 'Tisrhartl to till, and when tilled to weep 'er fruitless field. And so 1 cry, a weak and human cry, So heart oppressed; And i sih, a weak and human sigh, For rest for rest. My u ay has wound across the desert years, And cares infest My path, and through the llowing of hot tears 1 pine for rest. Tis always so when but a child I laid 1 ;i my mother's breast My wearied little head; e'en then 1 pra ed As now for rest. And I am restless still; 'twill soon be o ' e r '; - l or, down the west, l.ifes's sun is setting, and 1 see the shore ' . . i Where 1 shall rest. M STILL THEY COME. i fere are some more definitions of a.kiss. Two weeks .ago we publish ed sonic good ones, . and thought that w ould end it. But we have received another batch, so here goes : A Poet w rites : "Tulips ( two lips I stealing; the sweets of summer (some her. i . A popular preacher writes : "True worship heart and lip service." Another fellow a musician doubt less writes: "Long meter, (meet her rest. d. c. ( go back to the begin ning. )v , : Another unfortunate, pathetically declares it to be: "My dream my rival's reality." This settles it. We do now de- i ciare tne noiiscioseci on mis question, and the contest ended. And, although this is leap year, we are bold enough to declare that this kissing business lias never interested us anyhow''. So, selfishly enough, 'we here declare the boys shall have no more fun with our long primer. AS TO POLITICS. Hon. Allen G. Thurman, of Ohio, 'the old Roman," thinks Cleveland s the man to nominate. The People's party and the Prohi itionists will join forces in Indiana and put a full ticket in the he'd. The Ashville Democrat hears that Hon. A. Leazer, of Iredell county, "may be'a candidate for Governor." 1 he Wilmington Messenger an nounces that the name of Mr. J. S. Carr, of Durham, will be presented to the Democratic State Convention for the nomination for Governor. Secretary of War, Elkins, declines to be the Republican candidate for Governor of West Virginia,' and .Representative Wilson is out in a 'letter "'declining nation. the Democratic nomi- Th ne .iorganton neram neiieves under presenf circumstances, that Hon. S. B. Alexander, df Mecklen burg, is the man for the Democrats to nominate for Governor. The Wilksboro Chronicle hears the names of Tvt e York and Col. T. J. Dunla mentioned in connection i with the Republican nomination lor i Congress in the eighth district. The Oxford Ledger' hoists the nann s a non. .'5. rs. mexanaer, ot M t eKieni .ur,Lr. tor vjovernor, anu K. til t 1 i A..Doughton, of A!leghanjr, for Lieu tenant (Governor. ColJ John R. Webster, editor of W'el'ister's Weekly, who it has been stated would contest with Congress man Williams for the Democratic congressional nomination in the fifth district this year, says in his paper' last week that he is a candidate lor no office w hatever, and further, that Conoressman Williams is entitled, bv the unwritten law of his party, to a second term if he discharges .his du ties faithfully. I. A. Robbins, a white Republican from Bertie county will be H. P. Cheatham's antagonist for the Re publican nomination in the second congressional district. Cheatham will have no walk-over. Robbins is out in a circular letter in which he attacks Cheatham- and the latter's methods also, saying: "I have given close scrutiny to the disarrangements which haw been perilous to our people and the Republican party." ' Our Country, the new Republican paper of Morganton, has interviewed Rev. P. k. Patton, a minister and schx)Ol teacher of that town, in regard to a report that he would be an inde pendent candidate for Congress m tin-eighth district. Mr Patton says he has thq matter under advisement and that if the Republicans or the Alliance put no candidate in the field he will probably be an independent candidate. He says he has hitherto voted both 'ways, bat has been de nominated "a Democrat with some Yankee ideas." BILL ARP'S LETTER. WHAT A ( oi.j. K; I ATK EDUCATION CONSISTS OF THKSK DAYS. Trainings of The llo.lv las Takm Place of Training of I he Mind If You fun Play Hail. Dance, or. How, You arc all Kigflit at College Ami This is all Wrong, llic Otil Man Believe. Sometimes sometimes he a man feels helpless, feels like he is away back behind the age and is not fittcn to talk and is too old to get fitten. There is a new set coming to the front now and it looks like thev have j come to stay. 1 hey are the College Athletes. For a tew years past we thought the boys were carrying this business a little too far, but thought it was only sporadic and spasmodic and would soon subside. That was our hope, but athletic sports are now the biggest thing in a collegiate edu cation. Take up bne of the great New York papers and once a week you will find a whole page devoted to it. The' head lines will read, "Among the Colleges," and you would naturally expect to find some thing about the orogress ofthestu dents in scholarship, but no, the whole page is a recital of their sports. Here is a sample from the New York Tribune : Harvard. T. L. McLung and W. P. Wright, of Yale, the captain ami manager of Yale's football team were in town yesterday and had a long talk with Professor Ames and Professor White, ot the Harvard Athletic Committee, on athletic rela tions between Yale and Harvard. PRINCETON. The invitation and dance cards for the Junior Promenade have been issued by Tiffany. Under directions of Captain Young and Trainer Turner, the candidates for the baseball team are practicing regularly in the gymnasium. There are twenty-five in all and some good material has been developed. Cornell. Two hundred couples attended the Junior ball and the Sophomore 'Cotillion was largely at tended. Li:m;n. The lacrosse and base ball teams are now training hard. The skating rink in town has been secured. McCarty who coached the team last year will have charge of it again. The baseball men are practi cing daily and from present indica tions the team will be an excellent one. y":? BoWDOix. At a recent meeting ol the Boating Association it was voted not to support an eight-oared crew, but to form four-oared class crews. Brown. The baseballteam will l'o into practice next Monday. A cup has been offered as a prize for the best-drilled team in the athletic exhibition to be held in Infantry Hall. Yale. Arrangements for the Senoir Promenade are about com pleted. Tne Committee is compos ed of Stuart Webster, a Wolf-head man, member ol the Banjo Club and the famous story teller of his class : J. S. Woodruff, the best-looking man ; George Badger, the most genial man: Harry McCormick. the man who in-" spired the song of "Here come Mc Cormick in his new suit of Clothes," and Louis Parker, the champion ten nis player. A handsome souvenir has been prcseuted to each member of the football eleven ; also a watch charm in the shape of a football. Columbia. The Rowing Com mittee had a meeting and passed the following resolutions : The College Glee Banjo and Man dolin Clubs will give a concert in Pouch's Hall, Brooklyn, next Friday evening. John McMullen will de liver a lecture on Gladiators, etc. Takt's College Massachusetts Exhibitions were given yesterday in Indian club swinging and on the horizontal bar. The feature of the day was the high kicking by Cush man, w ho made a standing kick of seven feet and a hitch and kick of eight feet and three inches. The class of 1892 held its annual banquet. Thirty-three colleges are reported on the page and the foregoing- are femal iair samples. Only one ! college is reported it hav- ing -just organized a system of gym natics. I thought the girls knew how to kick without training. When I was a fool boy one kicked me a long ways and I thought it would kill me, but it didn't. I suppose they want to learn how to kick high as well as far. The other day two of these trained high kicking girls visited the City Hall in Xew York and tapped at Recorder Smith's office door and as he opened it one of them kicked his hat off, and before he recovered from his surprise they had skipped laughingly away and down stairs. The Xew York Herald said the Re corder should have removed his hat before he opened the door. It was the lack of politeness that provoked the assault. Last week there was a great banquet erven in New York Citv to Walter Camp, the trainer of Harvard. Four hundred plates were set, and the cost was up in the thousands. Chauncey Depew and several others made speeches, and defended the athletes from many assaults of o!d-f;ishioned people. The Harvard teams have recently whipped out Yale, and, as Depew is a graduate of Harvard, he went to the banquet to rejoice with them. He made a good speech he always does but he was careful to say that this athletic business must be done in consideration. But it is not ; it is demoralizing in the highest degree. The boys don't take interest in anything else. Schol arship is of no consequence, honors for mental culture are not valued like prizes for physical culture. The college paper of Vale has demanded that Latin and Greek be no longer forced upon the students, and a lead- I ing old-fashioned paper says : "The ! under-graduates of to-day will soon attend the funerals of the white hair ed professors who know how to con- ; trol the colleges, iiid will then haw tinnus their own way, I ut do tne J boys know best w hat is good for j them? We like to see the young men 'trailing clouds of gfcr.y as they come," but we woutd have them re member that they do not own the world in fee. May they not yet live to thank their ancestors for holding them down to the good old theories of education." Andrew Carnegie is a good man and a smart man. He is a noble, true-hearted Scotchman, and has given away his millions, and keeps on giving away. He has recently made a public declaration hat no man is justified in dying rich. But his recent letter on uni vrs:t educa- tion was provoked by this very in-1 dulgence in college sports. He advises our young men not to go to college, but go to work go into business of some sort instead of studying, or pretending to study, for the learned professions, iie chances are against them. Not one in ten makes good use 01 his ti one in twentv is capable o ic. Aot succeed- ing in a profession, jority of boys, who anu a large ma have spent three or four years in a college, are of no account when they leave there. All froiics are contagious. We were hoping all of our Southern col leges would escape the epidemic, but not long ago our Mercer boys c har tered a train and went to kick a ball with the University boys at Athens. And but a little while after the Au burn bovs from Alabama' met the Athens boys at Atlanta and they kicked around all the evening and then kicked the glass out of the doors at the Kimball House that night. For the life of me I can't see any big thing at kicking a bail. It is constantly an unnatural use ot le:s A loot race would be tar more sensible it the Ie factors. There is no s are to be the creature that can kick gracefully except a mi ie, and to mm it is peculiar and indigenous. His paternal ancestors can't do it There is something: respectable and titter, m bat and ban, but tnis Kicking business is a modern humbug. Now, there is no sense in sending a boy to college to have him graduated as an athlete of any sort. Let them have games and sports, but what necessity for the boys of one college to go ioo miles to play with the boys of another college. It takes time and it take money and they are not fit for their studies for a week or two afterwards. JMfercerand Athens are planning another game already. Call me a kicker ii you lease but if had forty bo ind bushel ol money, I one of them to a colic things were permitted re w tin se ii. i. i'lii se Troublous Times. The Progressive Farmer this week i r ii l t i i . . ii im is Di nniun oi j mrci panv uaiK. j nere i are letters published which show a remarkable state ot affairs. At a sub-Alliance meeting in Moore coun ty the members who were for Hill were called upon to stand up. Not one moved. Then calls were made for those who favor Cleveland, w here upon one man stood up. Then the question was asked if there were any Polk men present, and there were about thirty-two rose to their feet. It is officially reported by Y I). Wail, Vice-President of the Alliance, that every member ot it will be tor Polk. The Progressive Farmer takes a shot at Senator Vance, saving: "Sen ator Vance about ttvo years ago said that any man ought to resign rather than accept instructions that he could not endorse. He swallowed the Cicala platform before he was re-elected to the United States Senate. Up to this time YYe have not heard of his making anv effort to briny about the reforms, neither have we he; he has resigned. Time is Hi that assingf raoidlv." MrW. J. Peele, a lawyer lure, has a letter in the Progressive Parmer. Like a woman's letter, the ''meat" ol it is in the postscript, for in this he says: "Of course no friend ot re- form will vote to" send delegates to the Chicago Convention." i hejc'ea ol a cut like this at the 1 emocratic party ! And to think that Mich things are read with interest in North Caro lina. Mr. Peele says he thinks the" Third party can command fifty thousand votes in North Caralina. Mr. S. Otho Wilson, who travels for the- business agency oi the Suite Alliance, was to-day speaking harsh ly of an Alliance man who did not endorse the platform endorsing Gov ernment ownership of railways, etc.. whereupon your correspondent said : "Mr. Wilson, cannot a man be an Allianceman and a real, old-fashioned straight-out Democrat at the same time?" To this .Mr. Wilson re plied, "No." Raleigh Cor. Wilmington Messenger, 14th, inst. A Third pa1y meeting was held in Goose Creek township. Union country last week, and a resolution in favor of putting in the field, a full county, State and national ticket 01 the People's party was passed.- A Youthful Conception. A little boy was asked by his Sun day School teacher why a certain part of the church was called the altar. "Because it is where people change their names," he promptly replied. FOR A WIFE, OO SOUTH, IS THE A.OV1CK GIVES TOUNG HEX. 'li t B' Anil as she Gives llc-r Koasons, wliii-h arc Ooocl Ones, wo AVant Yoo to Kc;m1 ant) I'.ii joy Her Sparkling Ai tit-Ie. New York, March 5. - -Bright and piquant Marie Jansen said to me the other day : "So many good things Begin with G there s girls and gum :inl frrnrn !" T -AAiA it,iL- c & AI fs1"- 1 auMv..vi iu Linr. . there s gin. She said "There's gloves and gravy." After this brilliant com bination my brain succumbed. But I went away thinking about girls I i scorn gum and gravy : the first is the attribute of Mary Anderson, that 1 beautiful statue and bad actress ; the , second is seldom good and when it is you eat so much you get indigestion, j Bt the girls, the really, righty, truly j girls, are blissful. You see plenty of ghls here in New York, but they ; arc not the kind I mean. They" are too awfully and intensely knowing, and it is a delight to come across the j real sort of giris once in awhile, I saw one the other day and watched her for an hour. She was looking at i a play that had a heart-rending love j story in it. and iust enomrh of a laugh here and there to make life worth living. When the sweetheart was telling his love, her beautiful face looked full and soft, and there was a little quiver about her mouth that seemed to say "Isn't that the most exquisite thing in the world that story of love." And when the comic man came on and laughed with his partner, she laughed too. It was a little laugh that sparkled from her eyes, that brought out the dimples in her cheeks, and then there came a mu sical sound that was birdlike in its beauty. That girl was nothing but the play while it went on, and with her face toward the stage, with so much expression in it. living with the actors, suffering and being merry with them, she was the most charm ing being in the whole theater. I never ceased watching her ; and then I said to somebody, "Where dues that girl come from ?" "From Chicago :" said one. "Look what beautiful hair she has!" "From Boston!" said another. "Look at the intelligence in her face!" And then I said: "Look at the romance in her eyes : look at the grace in her body, as she gets up ! You remember what I have always told you. and what I am quoting: You can't grow magnolias in Massa chusetts that girl is from the South." There were numerous bets made about this,and later on it was dis covered that, as usual (how I did glory in this), I was right, for the real girl, the pretty girl, came from Louisville, and if Henry Watterson gets into the White House, she will be one of the prettiest and most graceful that ever adorned that dreadful looking sepulcher. Since that day I have discussed girls until I have lost all knowledge of men, and the conclusion J have come to is this: if my oldest son ever reaches the age when he should marry, which is about thirty, i 1 i . i i i lor ceiore tnat no man Knows now to take care of a woman, 1 shall say go down to him : "My son, let us and visit our people in the South." and then I'll pray three times a day, and twice to increase my appetite lor devotion, that when the pro cession of sons and dogs starts home, the oldest son will be engaged to be married to a Southern girl. And I will tell you why I want him to have her- "First, she has a perfect belief in religon and when one says religion ; one means she believes in everything and everybody that belongs to her. She has been taught to thnik no evil: she believes to have a sweetheart is the most delightful thing int he world and it does seem such a perfectly lovely compliment to the favored one to see her eyelids fall and her cheeks cover themselves with a mantle of modesty when he approaches. She has been taught that husbands and w ives love each other, and she hasn't ! had discussed before her all the miserable, mean, low talk of the divorce court. She can't imagine ladies being loud voiced, tlressed loudly, or not respecting the gentle men of the family. Sometimes she sacrifices herself on the altar of re- i spect, but she dies in a good cause. bhe 11 tell you how nasty she thinks all those so-called jokes about mothers-in-law are, because naturally it she should ever get married and when she says this she droops her head and smiles in a way that tells you that's one of the certainties of life why of course her husband's mother would get her love just because she was his mother, and, of course, if she happened to be a little queer she would make the best of it, because when people get old they do some- times get queer. She is not apt to be so large that she belittles a man and makes it impossible for him to call her "a dear little woman." She is just the right height, because she can look up in his face, with eyes that are large and full, and which tell their own stories of love or hate, are most beautiful when upraised. And then, above everything else, she adores ba bies. If they don't happen to have a baby in their home, she borrows one from a neighbor, gains permission to wash and dress it, and devotes an entire morning to cuddling the small blossom and enjoying, in prospective, the delights of maternity. Now, these are some of the reasons why I want my boy to marry a Southern girl. I like the Western girl. I like her loyalty and her breeziness and her determination to have her clothes fit well and to be up in the latest fads. Her determination is a her eyes are clear ti look right straight thro all over one, as if inquiri rapidity: "Who made frock ? What's the last Where are you goir, leave- home, and won't us a little longer ?" 1 hk tality : there she is like 1 cousin. But then she ; bit to. 1 svt : .1 e ; if the Sontl 2 ot ieiorancc Qj tlte Sit girl does on the side Still 1 ike her. Mo: charmed by her perfect She would be at ease w i of all the Russias a; when she is mini generously to the b e-i P. I don't like the Boston girl, is aggressive w ith a large b and she is impertinent with sp( I She wants to inoculate j knowledge. She thinks sit . tured .when she is meiely l-.,.. and she isValculate'd to frffee U nade into ice cream ii .she . ;,s long enough. I have ba ud ton men marrying, but I ha . heard of Boston women doing it. them unbelief is a sign of the hi education, and love and all :;- and nobUfnctions perfectly sillj suppose they enjoy life. I won vouch for this. If ever they do b loose they become perfect ayalam and during Lent scrub the ch steps for the sake of rigion, afterwards almost .publicly p some well-known lion in the i of art. The Plymouth Rock pn heavily upon them, and it seen have squeezed out the sweet s of womanliness and kit in its ; the sour vinegar of semi-knowlt Abut the New York girl - 1 her, but I don't love her. S kind, amusing, and daring, kindness, however, is often result of policy, and therefore must not value it too much.- Th of her gowns commands your re; but you would rather she would devote so much time and thoiigr them. She can entertain a man ter than any of the other girls it's too apt to be any man, am just one man. If she marrie: makes a good housekeeper shi "stunning" wife. L don't like word, but it's one that- must be ap to her. She talks so well ai much that halt the men in New look like tools because she allow them time to prove the anything else. She is not ah'a ik. s, h id 1 iei 11 t d ti discuss anything: she of talking things, that are nice entirely as a matter She will not hesitate to t 11 5 some man who's awfully ' on a married woman, ant laugh heartily at a 'South look ot wonder at the ex such thim She a li in a way. She dresses her chtl sensibly and sees that the drainag the house is correct; she doesn't Iieve in cuddling them ii they har. to hurt themselves, for that h'apj to strike her as nonsense. She hasn't enough gentlei There are a few old-fashioned w that will never apply to her. On them has been- much vulgarized, is "high-toned." Think it over, you will see exactly what it me Now, she's not that : she's too lov 1 t 1 - 1 her tone, and there win never c to her that perfect elegance i n tier, carriage, and richness ot h that was meant years ago when word was used. I like her, bi couldn't, if I had some great sor lay bare my heart and expect ag sympathy from her. If 1 wept terly because of my grief, the Bp girl would analyze my tears lor and think that what had come to was not a real y-riei but only the 1 n me to me e nat-West- m will d your ural succession of events. '1 he ern girl would put her arms ; me and say, "My dear girl, y only make your nose red, an mourning dress has come hon looks perfectly lovely." Bu Southern girl would lean her I t to mine, hold my hand, look w ith eyes fall ot sympathy, say ing, and yet make feel happii r dear ! oh, dear ! What a lot i about giris: but it you don't blame what Marie Jansen s; the sight of Henry Watt Ml, said ke it daughter for it. Post. Bab. m hal Bovs An Bovs are men that have not got big ;ts their papas, and girls a women that will-be young ladies and by. Man was made befc woman. When God looked at Ada he said to himself "W eil, 1 think can "do better if I try again,'' aftd so he made Eve. God liked Eve so much better than Adam that there have been more women than men. Boys are a trouble. They wear out everything but soap. If. 1 had my way half the boys in the world would be girls, and the rest would" he dolls. My papa is so nice that I think he must have been a little girl when he was a little boy. A iirl's Essay St. Andrew's Church Recorder. m. - It was recently published that ( B. M. Collins, a prominent Alliai man ol Warren county had withdrj from the order. And now the s m Alliance, ot which Capt. Co;. s a member, comes forward with statement that he has been suspe ed for the past 18 months for 1 payment of dues. This has been lowed by a card from Captv Co denying that he owes any says he never attended meetings. Subscribe to Tin: An dav. dues but WEEK. IN 1 HE WOULD I'".- II A f N-,vs i .1 llo I'rom aocl 111 ecu filed ans in the irs of the a troubles. i , es up the ti r i ic iiiiixi unci State Guard this summer. i is. of Reids sation in the and was tried rge ot poison- marrit again. ph operator. of Micldleburg, Liabilities, $20, i le is the first f whose assets be much more -d b ty a yeai little child old, w as f fa a rooster its spur in I jum the i erfe wee stuck ild's 'nead, from the ie child died in a win says there is imoncrst the s, . bon who ) reduce the object being will amount It 1 as the movement ton acreage. oi Stanly county, on ast week, Confessed ol money several ipped it into her bus She wanted to get ie w as convicted and penitentiary, where cut of the Clinton rmed'that a petition m Sampson count 1 irady asking that a ed in Congress to amount for the kill they are so destruct- Standard finds that Hers w ho used 720 ho last year have 3. sacks this year, s with farmers the "sure that fully 90 tcreage in cotton will mot 1S92 s crop to Record, which is g good snake stories, ing: '"Capt- J. F. was cleaning some for supper Tuesday, ing open one, a live wiggling :n it. The . five in lies king and miy imbedded in the ' Next ! r. 1 . 1. Pool, who down on the Roa md a curiosity in the igle eggs, which he est of the " American overhanging surging 1 of the river. They ihapc .md size of a ley will be put under ;md are expected to her I she yean hand to ( Oil! f n nana e w; Aid ins 1 as 1 zaol ). W. Patrick, of . been- appointed 1 ireene county, to the position Robt. Ransom lent ol govern or improvements nas i.R.'t heldbv that ment r thate ( .en 1 superintenc cer and harl North ;( ted that V v i-ngira ei aroima. It has been is e ie k ireiy ignorant ot iwledge and has fications for the pbsition, arboro Southerner says this ike, that he is a post gradu ineering a Republican con- M tlx State Board of following drag Wake Forest ; K. Kyser, P. S. Sed berry, arker, Raleigh, 1, Mooresvi'lle. ire in which a tpplication for it. Mr. Kyser u in an admir- ma glSti L. Y. 5. P. B Kyser .ettevil I Tho K' Se! I li that C Wake D. Up- cn C I'Cll, lit. Clerk ho del us brot that hi Superior inltet le-r-ir 1 1,.f M'itl! I I' 1 I "arris, h showing amounty 1 being m orphans, in the tri I church. i-law, a statement embezzled Kinds it Si 8.000, this y belonging to emcnt was used fits against Un 1 i: ih U !s n church embez effort has been I ack to North ty fund bring Why him L aroima. iov. minuted to life ith sentence ot ir ji'isonmenfc ightman'I o, son, recently con . ...... :ieu 01 mui Wavne cou e house w;tl a wiioie family then burning I :a -dies of his 1 asking the -entente was .ho tried the t the prisoner large number Wayne and d in the peti-rc-ided at the . ernor that he S insufficient, tade affidavit weak-minded 01 tne -oesi people Johnston counties joir tion. The judge who trial also wrote the d regarded the eviden Several physicians that the prisoner was man. W 1: YARRl:xfa . Iv. ARREN (XLo. FIRE INSURANCE AGENTS, (Successors to ft", p, BriggS iH: Co.,i OFFICE CVEK FIRST NAT. BANK, WU.S' , N. C. w e purpose giving the busi ness intrusted to us by the citi- zens of Wilson and ne;rhbor- I . . mo- territory, our close andner- i r 1 . wnai aiu'uuon. v e represent i i i some ot the bes I tJle worjt. companies in want your in to see us. surance. c omc Wg,' Announce tl it the Holiday trade so nearly cleared out the Holiday goods that the re mainder will be sold veryvlow. Regular Millinery Business, with new attractions, will now le resumed. MISS P. ERSrvINE, W ilson, N. C. ! Under Brip-o-s atei. lilitary School, !ECK, N. e. Scotland Necl SCOT .A n Spring T ;ins January 25th, 1S92. THE -SCHOOL IDEAL FOR BOYS Two things aimed ai Health of body and vigor of mind. Charges reasonable. For information address, W. C ALLEN Supt. J OHN 1). COUPER MARBLE & GR NITK Monuments, Gravest nes, 111, 113 and 1 15 Bank St., NORFOl Designs free. V, A. for prict s. m . . 5-H-iy- DR. W. S. ANDERSON, Physician and Surgeon, WILSON, N. C. Office in Drug Store on Tarboro St. DR. ALBERT ANDERSON, Physician and Surgeon, iwiLSosr, n. c Ollice next dour to the Firs! Nationa Kank. DR. E. K. WRIGHT, Surgeon I )entist, U I I.SOX, X. c. Having permanently located in Wil son, 1 oner my professional services to the public. HTOflice in Central Hotel Building. I have now on hand a select lot of fine Horses and Mules ut ray Sale Stables on Goldsboro Street. The lot .consists of Fine F a r m And e :c(:lien unvinf and draught horses, your interests these' animals ptirchasing it is to to see before elsew- here. I will be glad t show them t' u. R tiully, J. II. 2- I I -tf. Xf)rtli Carolina, In tin Wilson county Uefor J. W. Thorne, Adtur. Augustin Farmer, dec Superior ("our A B Deans, c. s. c. .1 Petition to Sell land lor assc-tts. Jno N Standi Mary N Stand Bettie F Greei 1 ; Wm A Creech. Win A Creech, a hove noti e that a special led as above, has been it Superior Court f The defendant - hnamed, w !l take 1 - r proceeamg, enti commenced in t Wilson county, I r tl purpose of sell to the estate of deceased, for as ofsaid deceased. in- land iHloiiLon Augustin Farmer, sets lo pay the debt and tiie defendant will further lake no tice 'hat he is required to appear before the Clerk of said Court at his office in Wilson, N C, at 11 o'clock, a m, 011 Sat unlay, the 2nd day of April, 1892, and answer or demur to the I'etiiion in saitl proceeding, or the Plaintiff w ill apply to the court for the relief demanded in s.iid Petition. This, 24th Feb., 1392. A. B. DEANS, C. S. C. . D. HARDIN, Att'v for Plaintiff. 25-6t. ; ' . The Advance for Job Work. Millinery. 1K i-kNi;Tvp lylVt'tVGG i Horses S Holes. ni 1 ii 1 FARROR.