The Wilson CLAUDIUS F. 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 Advance. VOLUME XXII. Cash Catches the Bargains. cd a beauti We have receiv ful assortmi nt of Class-Ware usual In new Sty at our prices also arc Curtains from 65c up. Lace Bed Sets at 94c- Come and see these goods. You will find they are very de sirable and much below the prices asked elsewhere for the same quality ooch Ik Cash Racket Stores. WILSON, N. C. Nash and Goldsboro Streets. THE WASHINGTON LIFE Insurance Co. OF NEW YORK. ASSETTS- The Policies w ritten - $10,500,000. v tlie Washington are I)esvriW-il in these general terms: Non-Forfeitahie. Unrestricted as to residence and travel after two years. Incontestable after two years. Secured by an In' ested Reserve. Solidly backed by bonds and mort gages, first liens on real estate. Safer than railroad securities. Not affected by the Stock market. Better paying investments than U. S. Bonds. Less expensive than assessment certificates. Mure liberal than the law requires. Definite Contracts. T. I.. AUFRIEND, Manager, Richmond, Va. SAM'L L. ADAMS. Special Dist. Agent, Room 6, Wright building, 4-30-iv. Durham, N. C. DR.-W. S. ANDERSON, Physician and Surgeon, WILSON, n. c. Uthce in Drujr Store on Tarbpro St. DR. ALBERT ANDERSON, Physician and Surgeon, WILSON, N. C. Bank" nextdour to ue First Nationa DR. E. K. WRIGHT, Surgeon Dentist, Havi WII.SON, N. C 1V1I1P netm.mr.t1., 1 nr:i Son I , ii .iicu III VV II S 1 -1 -iiei 'he mihlii- "IV ProteSSW n;il fr'ifc tn K'Otiice in C-ntr:il ir,,ti n..:i,i: For Y ... . uiutuiuj; 0111 Fall Suit SAVE OUR ORDER FOR W. A. Crawford, MERCHANT-TAILOR, JJJo will open in Wilson, Au- for 1St' WlA a fine line of from 1,en ljioce goods chyoucantuakeyour iat tUUPER MARBLE WORKS 1111 "-""Ins Hank St., ' NORFOLK, VA. Larpp o 1 .. . stock nunients, G, ravestones. &c Keadj D, iv 1. iDptnent. es'gns frc.e U'. LANIER. -PROPRIETOR. "Wils n Marble Works ils, ", N. C. Cnstal NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC TICKET. For President : GROVER CLEVELAND, Of New York. For Vice-President : ADLAI E. STEVENSON, Of Illinois THE STATE DEMOCRATIC TICKET. For Governor: ELIAS CARR, of Edgecombe. For Lieutenant Governor : RUFUS A. DOUGHTON, of Alleghany. For Secretary of State : OCTAVIUS COKE, of Wake. For Auditor : ROBERT M. FURMAN, of Buncombe. - For Treasurer: DONALD W. BAIN, of Wake. For Supt. of Public Instruction : JOHN C. SCARBOROUGH, of Johnston. For Attorney General : FRANK I. OSBORNE, of Mecklenburg. For Judge of the Twelfth District: GEORGE A. SHUFORD. For Electors at Large : CHARLES B. AYCOCK. ROBERT B. GLENN. Public Office is a Public Trust. Gro ver Cleveland. I believe that the Administration is responsible to the people for all the acts of the officers of the Government, and lhat therefore the offices should be filled by friends of the Administration, and that the men who condact the ad ministration of public affairs, and who are responsible for them, should have the selection of their subordinates. To the victors belong the spoils. Adlai E. Stevenson. Free government is self-government. There ii no self-government where the people do not control their own elec tions and lay their own taxes. When either of these rights is taken away or diminished a breach is made, not in the outer defenses, but in the citadel of our freedom. For years we have been struggling to recover the lost right of taxing ourselves, and now we are threatened with the loss of the greater right of governing ourselves. The loss of the one follows in necessary succes sion the loss of the other. When you confer on Government the power of dealing out wealth you unchain every evil that can prey upon and eventually destroy free institutions excessive tax ation, class taxation, billion-dollar con gresses, a corrupt civil service, a de bauched ballot-box and purchased elections. From Hon. VV. L. Wilson's speech at Chicago. A CALL. A Convention of the Democrats ot Wilson county is hereby called to meet in the Court House in Wilson on Saturday, August 20th, at 12 o'clock for the purpose of electing delegates to the Senatoral Convention and canvassing the vote cast in the primary election. The Democratic voters of the va rious townships are requested to meet at their respective voting places on Saturday, August 13th, at 10 o'clock, for the purpose of holding a primary election for the selection ot candidates for the House of Representatives, Sheriff, Register of Deeds, Treasurer, Coroner and Surveyor. The polls will be opened by the township ex ecutive committee at 1 2 o'clock and kept open until 6 o'clock. Each township will at the same time elect delegates to the county Convention. The vote as cast will be certified to by the township executive commit tee and returned by them to the County Convention and the candi date receiving the highest number 01 votes will be declared the nominee 01 the Democratic party. At the same time and place a new township executive committee will be selected to serve for the ensuing two years. Each townshio ts entitled to one delegate to the County Convention for every 25 or fraction ot 15 votes cast for the Democratic candidate for Governor at the last regular election. The townships are therefore entided to delegates as follows : townshif: vote, delegates. Black Creek 266 11 Cross Roads 157 6 Spring Hill 139 5 Old Ffelds 302 12 Taylors 74 , 3 Toisnot 243 10 Gardners 179 7 Saratoga 75 3 Stantonsburg 64 2 Wilson 660 26 Total 2,159 W. W. FARMER, 85 Ch'm Co. Dem. Ex. Com. Advice to Mothers Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup should always be used for children teething. It soothes the child, sof tens the gums, always all pain, cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for dairrhce. Twenty -five cents a bottle A sore leg, the flesh a mass of dis eate, yet P. P. P. achieved wohderful results, the flesh was purified and the bone got sound, and my health was established, says IMr. James Masters, of Savannah, Ga. WILSON, BILL ARPS LETTER. DEAD LIONS AND LIVING DOGS COM PARED. When great Men or Good Men I'ass Away it is Well For us to Stop a Little While and Contemplate Their Lives. The wise man said that "a living dog was better than a dead lion," and he explains by saying that "the living know they must die, but the dead know not anything, neither have they any more reward, and the memory of them is forgotten." That may be true in the abstract, but still I would rather be a dead lion that the average dog. Dead lions are scarce, but living dogs are numerous. Dead lions were once alive, and if we compare them with humanity, they were a power in the land, and the memory of them is not forgotten. Obituaries, epitaphs and eulogies upon the dead are to the average reader unwelcome literature. Biog raphy will do pretty well, but an obituary comes so close on to the funeral that it smacks of death, and death is never a welcome subject. We haven: got time to consider death. We will see the old fellow later. But when great men or good men pass away it is wellJfor us to stop a little while and contemplate their lives. We don't know what com fort it will give them in the spirit world whether any or none or whether they hear us or .not, or can read our thoughts, but there is enough in nature and revelation for us to believe that the spirits of the dead are very near us, and are in tensely concerned in everything that we do. But whether we believe this or not, it is good for the living to contemplate the life work ot good men and good women who have gone before. Whether they be few or many, they are the saviors of all the rest the hostages who secure peace and good government and give protection to life, liberty and property. A cynical, skeptical man may sneer at religion and the church, but he wouldent dare to live in a community if every member of the church were to move out of it. A few men would have saved Sodom and it is the few that save every town and city. Leaving out of the ques tion the grace of God, there is that reverence which the bad have for the good that is like a balance wheel and establishes law and order. The ex ample and influence of one good, strong man in a community is more potent than that of fifty wicked ones. This is the natural tribute of evil to good. Even the Devil has respect for virtue in all its forms. Truth and justice, chastity and temperance stand alone, but vice has to have props, and even then it is always falling. "Murder will out." "One lie calls for another." Good men are scarce. You can count them easily in every commu nity. I mean the men of principle, the men you can trust in all emer gencies, the men of truth, whose word is as good as their bond, the men who stand firm in war and in peace, in fire and in flood, in famine and pestilence, in poverty and riches, always the same and always true. How many such are in Cartersville, how many in Rome, how many in Atlanta ? Suppose there was a sign of fire and brimstone unless we found fifty in our town, and old Father Abra ham began to look around, who would he take ? Suppose he wanted 100 at Rome, could he get them ? Could he get 500 in Atlanta, if he were to ransack every church and then run his seine through the opera house while the high kicking was go ing on r It s men he demands, not women ; women would save us, but good men, pure men are scarce. They are scarce, but they are pre cious. They make but little noise, and yet they are seen and known by the old and the vnung, and their in fluence pervades the community When such a man dies he is missed, There is a loss a loss of citizenship, and the Devil is happy and will fill the gap if he can. I was thinking about the death of iust such a man, my friend and kindsman in Rome. In all the rela tions of life Henry Norton was a sue cess, a model. It was a good thing that he was born and lived nlty years to illustrate our best humanity. He was no saint he was a boy, and then a man, and then a soldier, and then a husband and a father and a citizen, all his mature age a gentleman and a christian. How easily he moved all along the line the line of duty. It seemed to be no trouble for him to do right, tor he had no policy ; he had a moral principle to govern him, and it gave nun a strain. It gave him pleasure and made him cheerful and social and kind. He was wel come everywhere. What a beauti ful commentary on lite to see his aged father almost smiling through his tears and hear him say, "Henry was a good boy. He was always a good boy. He never gave me or his mother any trouble or anxiety. I never thought he would beat me there, but he has a little just a lit tle. I'll see him again in a few days." What a record for a son ! "He never gave me or his mother any trouble. 1 wish tr at it was mine. I wish that it was every boy's. How it would disperse the dark shadows that hover and brood over the par ents' hearts hover and brood until they would break if they could. One day an old, careworn father stood at the door of his shoo and said to a friend : 'Go home and kill your boy ; kill him while he is young." I "What for ?" said the friend. WILSON COUNTY, N. C, AUGUST "To keep him from that," said he, and he pointed to his own son who lay drunk upon the counter in the back room. Rome will miss Henry Norton ; the church will miss him, but who can measure the grief of the wife and children the wife a widow and the children fatherless. But they should nevertheless feel grateful that he lived so long and lived so well and left no stain or blemish upon his char acter. And it is good for us to pause and contemplate another lite one not more true and beautiful but grander in its work and far reaching in its re sults. Cyrus W. Field lived a noble life. He reached the goal, of his ereat ambition an ambition that was honorable, unselfish and for the good of mankind. It took a great mind to conceive of such a project as1 laying a cable tn the unfathomable depths of the ocean, 'and it took a hero to accomplish it. After the first failure, when all faith was weakened and all friends ready to desert him, it is reasonable to suppose, that, had Mr. Fields died just then there would not have been another attempt made for years perhaps not at all. Providence seems to raise up men for great works when the world needs them Bnd Cyrus Field was but his chosen instrument to bring nations together. Now that he is a dead, lion I have great reverence for his memory. When I heard of his sad affliction on the conduct of an erring son, I wanted to be near him and offer comfort or sympathy. He had it from thousands of hearts all over this broad land and it would have done him good to know it. I thought it would. How vain are all things here below when providence lays his hand upon our domestic happiness, when the peace of home is broken, when the husband or wife or child goes astray and brings a shadow over de clining years. Mr. Field died of a broken heart. His years were short ened by grief. His father lived to be eighty-seven and his brother David Dudley, the profoundest law yer of the age, is now eighty-seven and Stephen J. of the Supreme court is seventy-six. Dr. Henry M., the genial and gentle editor of the Evan- ist. seventy-three and their eyes are not dimmed nor their natural force abated. Yes, it must have been grief that cut short the old man's days, for they were all a loving fam ily and all their utterances and emo tions have been for peace and eood will among men. Verily they will have their reward and the memory of them will not be forgotten. Bill Arp. r. Wharton on .Sam .lonen. Rev. Dr. Wharton, who last week conducted a series of meetings in Charlotte, is out on Sam Jones. Dr. Wharton says: "Sam Jones is just beginning a" meeting in Knoxville. A tabernacle seating about 4,000 has been erected for him. It is a coarse, frail structure, made of rough, un plained boards, and the seats are backless. And yet crowds throng to hear him. In his first sermon he struck the liquor traffic and the town some hard blows. He makes the people laugh at the church, at the preachers, and at their own sins. He rarely refers to salvation by grace, or the need of salvation through Jesus Christ. He is a moral reformer, with small emphasis on the moral. He has preached in Knoxville before, and there is difference of opinion as to whether his preaching did more harm than good. While I was pastor in Bakimore he preached there in a rink seating 5,000 for one month and 2,000 con verts were reported. My church was near the rink, and we received 15, most of them reclaimed backsliders, and I think we received a larger num ber than any church in the city. It is safe to say that all the churches did not receive one hundred additions. I stood by him, not because I thought he preached a full gospel, but because he represented the right side. I do not care to stand by him again. He always declares that he does not ask any one to endorse mm ; but it a pastor in a small town refuses to en dorse him, he is certain to abuse him lor it. As a lecturer, making war upon liquor selling, gambling and drinking, Sam Jones is a success, for he is a miuhty speaker : but as a preacher, proclaiming the great tid intrs of salvation through a crucified and risen Christ, he is a total failure How to Get Thin. Th e oniv saie ana rename treatment for obesity, or (superfluous fat) is the 'Leverette"Obesity Pills, which gradu ally reduce the weight and measur- ment. No injury or inconvenience Leaves no wrinkles acts by absorption This cure is founded upon the most scientific principles, and has been used by one of the most eminent Physicians of Europe in his private practice "for five years," with the most gratifying results. Mr Henry Perkins, 29 Union Park, Boston, writes : From the use of the "Leverette" Obesity Pills my weight has been reduced ten pounds in three weeks and my general health is very much improved. The principles of your treatment are fully indorsed by my family physician. In proof of my gra titude I herewith give you permission to use my name if you desire to do so. Price $2 00 per package, or three packages for $5 00 by registered mail. All orders supplied direct from this office. The Leverette Specific Co, 339 Washington St., Boston, Mass. A terrapin with the letter "G" and tbp fimirfs "it" nn its tiart hue Kfn I "&r- jj captured near Oxford. The Ledger says : "Knowing ones interpret the writing to mean that 'Grover will get a majority of 33 electoral votes.' " ELM CITY ITEMS. The News From Our Enterprising Neigh boring; Town. (special cor. the advance.) July, 26th, 1892. The enrollment at the High School is 85. Miss Daisie Parker, that daisy of daises and the loveliest of them all, spent Sunday here. Miss Flonnie Taylor, that sweet, bewitching, little angel of the hills, left for her home at Wake Forest Sunday. Mr. McDuffy is not dead. He lives up in the huts. His presence always troubles Fred. He does him as he will. Mr Charles Walston, of Saratoga, is spending a few days here. He reports the crops of corn and cotton in his- part of the county as good. The choir at the Methodist church is practicing every are getting ready evening. They for a series of meetings that will commence soon. Mr. E. D. Gordon left Saturday for Ayden, N. C, where he takes charge of a telegraph office. Ethnor is a good boy and we speak for him much success. He is missed among us. Messrs. W. H. Langley and Jacob H. Barnes, two of our leading farm ers, tell us they have good crops of corn and cotton. Mr. Barnes has been quite sick for sometime, but he is now much better. Rev. E. C. Glenn returned Mon day from McKindree church in Edgecombe county where he has been for sometime conducting a series of meetings. He tells us he had a good meeting. There were about 25 conversions and 13 accessions to the church. On last Saturday night the little infant of Mr. J. T. Watson died, aged one week. Before it knew much of the troubles of earth, it was wafted on angle's wings to that world where all is joy and peace and love. It will serve as a strong tie to bind Mr. and Mrs. Watson to t'.ieir home beyond the skies. At the last meeting of the Batch- elor's Club the following officers were elected and installed for the insuing term : C. W. Massey, President ; J. D. Dawes, Vice Presicent ; A. C. Dixon, Secretary ; J. L. Barnes Treas urer ; J. d. lJawes, Lecturer, the club has been in existence only one year. It has lost one member by marriage. Many new members have been added to the list. It is the only regular organized club of the kind in the world and we solicit correspon deuce with a view to organizing clubs at other points in the South. The club will give a nice entertainment of some kind in the near future. Ses sions are held during the week for the transaction of business. Secret sessions are held on Sunday merit when the secret workings of the club are fully exemplified. Those wishing information in regard to forming clubs will address the Lecturer inclosing stamp. C. NASHVILLE NOTES. What tlie People of "Good Old Nash" are Doing and Saying (SPECIAL COR. TO THE ADVANCE.) July 26th, 1892. Mrs. Richardson is with her daughter, Mrs. W. T. Bailey, who is quite sick. Mrs. Addie Betts, of Raleigh, is visiting the family of her grandfather, Mr. George Ricks. Miss Maggie Trewaller ot Rich mond, Va., is visiting her niece Mrs. R. A. P. Cooley. Rev. Mr. Moyle, of Springhope circuit, spent Friday night in town with S. E. Eure, Esq. Rev. W. H. Cobb and wife, of Whitakers, spent Sunday night with Sheriff Ricks. Capt. Exum and G. N. Bissett, Esq., attended a fish fry at Bissett's mill last week. We regret to hear -that J. H. Col lins and J. W. Harper each Jost a little child last Monday. Rev. G. A. Oglesby came over from Sandy Cross, where he held his quarterly meeting Saturday and Sun day, and preached for us on Sunday night We regret to hear that Mrs. Caro line Baker, wife of Josiah Baker, Esq., is quite sick, though her con dition was more hopeful on Sunday. After spending two weeks in Rocky Mount, Mrs. J. T. Morgan and children, returned home on Monday. The past week has been a dull one in town, as our farmers have been busy laying by their crops and have had no time to come to town. We have heard of several who are curing tobacco primings. There is some complaint of draught in the neigh borhood. X. X. X. In France, when a funeral passes, every man raises his hat to salute it. The deceased person may have been a child, a pauper, a beggar, it is no matter; the cortege is saluted by every man, whether he be prince, millionaire or mendicant. It is a good and lovely custom. Subscribe to The Advance if you want the news. 4th, 1892. SARATOGA SAYINGS. As Our Live Correspondent Gatheretltheni for Printing:. (SPECIAL COR. THE ADYANCE.) July, 26th, 1892. Elder Greenwood filled (he Prim itive Baptist pulpit Monday. Our polished towns, Mr. John T. Moore, is in the country teaching. Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Shelton visi ted relatives near Moyton Sunday. The wide-a-wake, John H. Speight, is preparing to burn more brick this fall, The choir is improving greatly under the skillful management of Prof. Newsome. We are under many obligations to our young friend, Mr. B. M. Owens, for some very nice peaches. Miss Ella I. Moore is teaching a Public School at Holdon's school house this summer. Several ot our farmers are curing tobacco this week. The weed seems to have done very well in this section. Miss Fannie Peacock, a very faci nating little maiden of the Stantons burg section, visited Miss Lucy Bryant last week. Miss Sadie Felton, one of our most charming young ladies, return ed home Sunday from a visit to friends near Stantonsburg. Messrs. B. N. Owens, B. E. How ard, W. J. Mercer and Prof. L. E. Newsome spent Sunday in Eureka. Truly Cupid's arrows are irresistable. Mr. W. Z. Ellis, of Wilson, is in town this week. He was called down on account of the serious illness of his little son, Herbert. We hope the little fellow a speedy recovery. The choir will go over to Sauls X Roads the last of the week to help in the revival going on there. May the Lord bless the work of that pious man, the Rev. M. Rose. Shall We Have a Force Rill ! The most direct, but by no means the only important effect of a Force Bill, would be on the industrial prog ress of the South. How rapid that progress now is rapid beyond the realization even of the men that are bringing it about is set forth in a compact article in the August number of the Forum, by Mr. Richard Ed monds, late editor of the Manufac tuaers' Record of Baltimore, whose life's study has been given to the sub ject. Among the most signihcant facts set forth by Mr. Edmonds are these : Since 1 881, the corn crop of the South has increased 75 per cent., as against 7 1 per cent, in the rest of the century : the cotton crop has increas ed from five and and a half million to nine million bales an increase in value, even with the present low price, of two hundred millions of dollars; in 1 89 1, there were nearly 45,000 miles of railroad in the South, against less than 24,000 in 1881 a gain of 87 per cent., as against a gain of 56 per cent, in the rest of the century. The passenger traffic of the Southern roads increased during the same period 369 per cent, as against an in crease in the rest of the country of only 168 per cent. In pig iron manu facture the South's output jumped from 451,000 tons in 1881 to 1,914,- 000 in 1 89 1 a gain of 2-1 per cent. as against a gain for the rest of the country of 78 per cent ; in other words in 1881, the North and West made more than nine times as much iron as the South, in 1891 they made less than four times as much. The increase in the number of mill opera tives in the South was 135 per cent., as against an increase in New England of 1 7 per cent. And so in every line of productive activity the marvellous rapidity of increase is explained, showing that in assessed valuations the property of the South has in this period very nearly doubled, and in creased from $187 per capita to $271 a record that is propably without parallel in the whole history of sub stantial growth. And in spite of the temporary depression caused by an over-production of cotton, the increase goes on. Would it continue if a Force Bill were to go into operation ? This Question is answered in the same number of The Forum by Mr Hoke Smith, of Atlanta, Ga. The negro is the laborer of the South He has made the cotton : he has built the railroads. Everything de oends on the auiet and, industry of the negro. And the negro has done his work with effect, precisely in pro- poition to the absence of friction be tween the races. He made litUe or no progress, and the country made little or no progress during the days of Reconstruction. A Force Bill would bring back substantially the same state of affairs as existed during the Reconstruction days ; and South ern industrial deyelopment would be checked and thrown back. So Mr. Smith, himself a conservative and energetic representative of the young er generation of successful Southern men, argues with point and force. I have been a great sefierer from Catarrh for over ten years ; had it very bad, could hardly breathe. Some nights I could hardly sleep and had to walk the floor. I purchased Ely's Cream Balm and am using it freely, it is working a cure surely. I have ad vised several friends to use it, and with happy results in every cgse. It is the medicine above all others for catarrh, and it is worth its weight in gold. 1 thank God I have found a remedy I can use with safety and that does all that is claimed for it. It is curing my deaf ness. B. R. Spivev. Hartford Conn. LIFE'S AIM. "Desire not to live long, but to live well : How long we live, not years but actions tell. Who does the best his circumstances allow Does well, acts nobly, angels could do no more-" IN AUGUST. BY MAY LENNOX. The echo of a whispered word. A fleeting cadence low and sweet, Fresh as the songs the streams repeat, Faint as the croon of nesting bird. A deeper azure in the sky, Fields gleaming gay with green and gold, Closed wings that droning half unfold, As summer passes slowly by. A breath of sadness scarcely caught, A minor note to swell the strain, a mossom howed by Jailing rain, Gold strands with silver subtly wrought. O, rare, unfathomed August days, Rich with the glories of the past, What will you bring us forth at last? What lurks beneath your hovering gaze ? Indies Home Journal. FAIR WARNING. Bro. S. O. Wilson informs us that Bro. Elias Carr stated to him Saturday in this city that he would support Cleve land and Stevenson. He was opposed to the nomination of Cleveland, but feels bound to support him. We under stand that all of the Democratic nomi nees for State offices expect to support Cleveland. This makes a People's party ticket imperative, for there is no sense in putting in a vote against Wall street with one hand and a vote for it with the other. Progressive Farmer. The above is plain enough. There is but one thing left for Democrats to do : nominate straight men who will stand by the Democratic platform and by the nominees from President down and elect them. So far as we are concerned, we will say right now, once and for all, The Advance will sup port no man who refuses to stand on the Democratic platform and woik for the Democratic nominees. So far as our limited vision goes, we can "see no sense in putting in a vote" for the Democratic National ticket with one hand and with the other voting for a man who refuses to support the national ticket. This is our position plainly and bluntly stated. We are constrained to say this because we have heard men suggested for office who publicly assert they will not support the National Democratic ticket. Such a man can not be elected by our support. The Progressive Farmer is doing nothing more than it has all along been guilty of, viz : leading the peo ple astray. They are beginning to see this. Reason is returning, and many wavering Democrats are bracing up. North Carolina Democracy will triumph in November. AN ICE LOCOMOTIVE. Unique Invention of an Athenian l'rofeHHor to Reach the North Dole. An Athenian professor of mathe matics named Damaskin has inven ted an ice locomotive, which he ex pects will carry biru to the north pole. He has given an order for the con struction of a large locomotive after his pattern and is now calling for volunteers to accompany him to the Arctic ocean. The locomotive is to have an unique arrangement by which it lays and takes up the rails as it runs. Short pikes on the under side of the rails will make the latter temporarily fast in the ice. The locomotive will be operated by steam and at the same time will throw out enough heat to keep the travelers from suffering from cold. One cab, attached to the locomotive, is to carry the provisions for the exploring party. The locomotive and cab will be conveyed in parts to Spitzbergen, Prof. Damaskin says, and will there be put together. It will then be run for the north pole at the rate of thirty I miles an hour. As Spijtzbergen is about 600 miles from the north pole, Prof. Damaskin expects to reach his destination in twenty hours. He allows eight hours for his observations and twenty hours for returning, so that the whole trip, from Spitzbergen and return, will be made in just two days. Prof, Damaskin hopes to be ready to start on the journey late in Sep tember or early in October. NH!TL0CKRiCHM0 ilHMH m wx .! W X 0 5 STa Ms NUMBER 29. W.E Warren &C8: FIRE INSURANCE AGENTS, (Successors to B. F. Briggs & Co.,) OFFICE OVER FIRST NAT. HANK, WILSON, N. C We purpose giving the bust ness intrusted to us by the citi zens of Wilson and neio-hbor-ing territory, our close and per sonal attention. We represent some of the best companies in the world. We want your in surance. Come to see us. Elm City HIGH SCHOOL (FOR BOYS AND GIRLS.) FALL TERM OPENS SEPT. 5TH, 1892. The town of Elm City is located 2 miles north of Goldsboro on the Wil mington & Weldon Railroad. The lo cality is naturally very healthy. The social, moral and religious status of the community is unsurpassed. The leading religious denominations are represented in the town. There are several thriving Sunday Schools, and preaching each Sabbath. The School Buildings are commodi ous and well furnished, and are amply sufficient to accommodate one hundred and fifty pupils. Board can be had in good families at very moderate cost. Good assistant teachers w ill be em ployed to meet the growing demands of the school. Students will be pre pared to enter the colleges of the State. Discipline mild, but firm and thor ough. For terms and full particulars ad dress the Principal, C. W. MASSEY, (U. N. C.) Elm City, N.-C FOR SALE ! A brace of pointer puppies whose pedigrees include the finest blood in the country ; three months old, liver and white, well marked by Wise Croxteth, 213S9 Yum Yum, 5269. For particulars address, P. L. WOOIURI), Black Creek, N.C. P kURELY a vegetable compound. made entirely of roots and herbs cathered from the forests of Georeia. and has been used by millions of people with the best results. It CURES All manner of Blood diseases, from the pestiferous little boil on your nose to the worst cases of inherited blood taint, such as Scrofula, Rheumatism, Catarrh and SKIN'QlNCER Treatise on Blood and Slcin Diseases mailed Bbc Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Cia. S.H.Hawes&Co., DEALERS IN CO A I Richmond, Va. S.H.Hawes&Co., DEALERS IN Lime, Plaster, Cement, Richmond, Virginia. IF YOU SMOKE OLD VIRGINIA CHEROOTS Your friends will ; Kvnys be glad to meet- you, rs will be and : ple:isc ram to make your acquaintance. They arc the BEST SMCH : at the same t; tile CHEAPEST. FIVE for TEN CENTS IS