Newspapers / The Wilson Advance (Wilson, … / April 13, 1893, edition 1 / Page 4
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Sore Throat Lameness Sore borenj Cat Bn Cul Piles Female Complaints Rheumatism AND ALU Inflammation Sold cmly In Mr own bcfttles. All drugglsu. ' 1 POND'S EXTRACT CO.,765thAve.,N.V. lis roinarkablo specific wtii n upon th; idleoteil parts jrivoa itsupivuie control over I'llea, however severe: Also tot Ihtrns, Scalds, The Wilson Advance, PROBLEM OF THE MOB INCREASING DISCONTENT AND SUS PICION AMONG THE VERY POOR. e eg FmptUvia, Suit llh'eiim &c. i. estimi nials Iff m al 1 classes provo it.i e!Tic lev. l'ri.'O 50c. ii nd l7 nil DnigRfetsorsentby mail on receiptor prieu. I'utup only ' Cures all Female Complaints and Monthly i i ei:umriy, .Lieucorrnrea or w hites, .fain in Bac k or Sides, strengthens the feeble, build3 up the whole system. It has cured thousands and will cure you. Druggists have it. Send sunup lor nook. DK. J. P. DKSiiUOftI.E A CO., louUTxUe, Ky. FOB SKIN DISEASES Oocton Recommends Cutidura Be cause It Has Never Failed to Give Good Results. Cured in 3 Months, Salt Rheum ' i 20 Year's Standing Where All 4 ' Other Remedies Failed. of i. jHTca me pleasure to recommend your Ccti. . ctriiA liiMEDits to all who are troubled with the j-irioua ionns-oi 6K1.. diseases aud blood ioieon ;ve prescribed your C'UTICURA on several oi-ca-aio.is. aud it has never failed to give good retail. .""""'"i i e ieciai case-1 Suit, where ai- uun-r lemeuies iai:ea until I tried your Cuticpra ..'" .V. ,u,r CCTICCRA, Cl'TICIRA .-i.Ar, aim uuticura KESOLVENT, the patient w; s'viiifl ami well. She was troubled with salt rheun ........... ... r .......t-ni mr over twenty years. Aficr wK.i.uiiii! mc useoi cuttiouba Remedies, she was . iuim nuuau auu well in three months. Pit. M. K. JKNTOXS, . 238 Houston at., Atlanta, (ia. Aggravating Eczema ;viy y:ie had eczema on her hand for about five year, tried e great many bo called remedies, but thoy aij utterly failed- I at lart induced her to try Vlllir 1 't'TirT'i? a l l- u i- .. . i , i . . j .. . ... t,, aim am pieasea to say vli; y acted like a charm, and although it was a year iuo,it not troubled her since. 1 will strouirlv re... mnwnd your Cuticuha Remedies for all such ' Bivins, Cass County, Texas. Cuticura Resolvent K- 1.I.I.X1 l-unlier, internally (to cleanse the i .-vxi of all impurities and poaionous elements aud sims reuove me cause), and Cdticdra, the great " v-oinumiMiAaG exquisite Skin -..-.....k i, exuirnauy (to clear the skin and scalp ami restore the hair), cure every disease and humor v. iu tiu anc uiooa, irom pimples to scrofula. O.u . ..oiirevcrywnera. v nee, CmcvRA, 50c; Sop 2 .c. : Insolvent, $1.00. Prepared by the Potter J.it;a- and Chemical Corporation, Koston flTir-" How to Cure Skin Diseases," 64 paia-s 50 ..... bcoLiiuuiiiaiB, mauea tree. PURVC Skinantl Scalp purified and beautified I.TSUI u by CUTicp&A Boap. Absolutely pure. RHEUMATIC PAINS In one minute the Caticpra Antl- U raer relieves rheumatic sei- i hip, kidney, chest, and milMfll lur 4'-aiii8 and weakneaseB. Pruie. ilk if .a L. Rev. Thomas Dixon Pre aches -on the Errors j Kinl .Wrongs of Laborers Their Present ! Indifference to Cliristlanlty' but Tempo- j rary The Church Must Take Hold. I I'm kw x okk, April v. jut. jJucon an- ; nounced this morning that nntil next : fall the usual review of current events would 16 omitted, as the special series of : i;ennons to be begun, next Sunday mora ; iny wonld occupy the full morning hour, j The sermon this morning was a discourse ujon the needs of the ignorant and help less masses. The text was taken from Matthew is, 30, "But when he saw the multitudes he was moved with compas siou, because they were distressed and scattered as sheep not having a shep herd." ' And -et this same crowd this vast mukitnde of distressed and scattered people that so moved Jesus with pain gathered at last round his cross and joined with the proud and the 'rich in mocking and laughing at his agony. Those that did not join in the mocking stood beholding in silence. Hegel has denned a mob to be that force in a na tion which acts without or apart from the- organization of the whole. There may be thus an ignorant or a learned mob, a tuob cjf men of fashion or of men of letters. But the spirit is the same, and in its 'severance from the organic people there is the same essential vulgar ity. W e must rememher. m any discus sion of the problem of the mob, that it is capable of this wider definition. The church that seeks its own good as against the good of the community would be it self a mob J .The class or clique or fac tion, educated or uneducated, that blind ly seeks its own interests as against the communal interests is animated by the spirit of the mob. When the leaders of study join with these factions in sympathy or in action, they have abdicated the throne and joined the mob. When all England, and in fact all the world, with uncovered head mourned the death of Tennyson as he 'was laid to rest in Westminster abbev. the Prinee of Wales . preferred to go to the race track and bet rather than to pay homage to the immortal eulogist of his father and the laureate of the English nation. In that act the Prince of Wales was no better than the dirty leader of the anarchist mob that must be driven into 'a corner, clubbed .into submission and dragged to the penitentiary. THK FIGHT OP I.AB0R AND CAPITAL. But it is not of this larger view of the spirit of the inob that I wish to speak this morning. It is rather the cry of need from the dark, vulgar mass, which theVorld has misnamed the mob. that 1 wish you to hear today. We are in the midst of labor wars, and one miserable faction springs upon the throat of an other faction, and they fight each other to the death. They call each other traitors, liars, thieves, and while thev destrov one another their common enemy laughs at their calamity and mocks at, their weak ness, we see the pitiable spectacle of the Knights of Labor in one hostile we reuentiiou or jjaoor m an other, the employers fighting both, and. t ne wretcned people ground to death be tweeu the three. Do the masses ikWI e gospel? Thousands and hundreds of thousands of them are apparently alienat ed from Christianity. Does this aliena tion mean a real clash between the needs or the people and the ideal of Christian ity? Far from it. The 6pposition is sim ply npou the surface. It is a temrorarv misunderstanding. It must pass as the veil of ignorance is lifted. Hundreds of thousands of the masses are in heart longing and praying for light, for Guid ance and salvation. Hie problem of the mob in the nmhUm of the race. First ft must be so because of the transcendent sacrifice made for the com mon people in the life and the Jesus. Jesus Christ spent his life with the poor.laboring for them, leading them, teaching them, healing them. a.r f ri.i that God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that this world might live. He gave himself. Gri ir, Christ reconciling the world unto him self. The world here referred to is this dark, restless throng, distressed .n,1 scattered as sheep having no sW),o4 U o m.uciu. was unto this mob, lost in the wilder. ness of self and sin and iimnrancp tw Jesus came. He said that h ,.t1 - v vwmv lllll to call the mrhtemia hnt o ' w j4uma. oJ eat a sacrifice as his Ufa ! .lanfc yordd not haw been 'made ha.1 u used been commensurate 'with the deed. Love measures its work hv t,wi 1 " -.j . . . . uub u y leserfs. So Ciod measured his Ra.rifi,. not iy what the "mob deserved w w j history of this city of labor with an tag onistic capital that we have not been sold out by thoso wo trusted." Yet in their strugglo with the forces of the ma terial world ud. in their struggle with the unknown forces of the supernatural -world their cry .should touch the heart of the strong in knowledge and truth. They have rebelled against the priests, and yet they move in a priest ridden a' or Id, in which ghosts and hobgoblins re their masters. They have desarted . the sanctuary and follow their ownfrain conceptions of an impossible, and mon-: utrous spiritual world. , . OPPItE&SED BY SUPERSTITION. j The masses have ever been ridden with . superstition. Few understand how hope- ! Ies3 has been their struggle with this fell ! power. Take the hearty Scotch and ' Irish people and write the history of j their lives, of the forces that gave the ! formation of character and the cours3 of their development in life, and it is a mass of tangled superstition rather than back to his' generous elder b )thef. The truth is, the divine is born v. ;bin us. It is the breath of God. We a ) but little advanced from the condition of people that we call savages. We have better tailors and barbers. If we could only know of the suffering and of the helplessness and ignorance and misery of these thousands, we who are in better circumstances would cease to. complain at our own ills. Our own misfortunes would be lost iu the greater thought of this dark world of misery. The trouble is, we do not see them; we do not know them close enough; .we look at our own sorrows, our own mis fortunes, and magnify them. If we could only lift up our eyes and see this great dark crowd over which Jesus wept in compassion. our souls would be inspired with a divine enthusiasm for their sal vation, for their UDliftina-. ThAV- nur Defending Stage Women. Sol Berliner, an officer of the Five A'a club, believes- that there are some good, true women in the- dramatic profession. He was telling the story of his life to a crowd of men in a Twenty-eighth street cafe a night or so ago and incidentally dropped a few remarks about the wick edness in the theatrical world. He is quoted as saying that good women on the stage were as few as snowballs in some hot place. There were some actors in the group( but none disputed this statement. James Thornton, the compos er of "My Sweetheart's the Man ia the Moon," joined the crowd and corrected Mr. Berliner when his remarks were re peated. "You will find women on the stage," ; said Thornton, "whoso morals' are above ' many supposed to lead perfect lives. I xii a maiucu IUU.11 HIKI a ownn nna j j &VVrete it-so much the greater ia j big or little, to cast reflections upon the if i urw v ' Sood women of our profession." ! vents tne ravages or bogies and war lock's. To hear a cuckoo cry before breakfast is an ill omen.x It is fortunate for the housewife if a brooti of chickens all come off the nest cock bwds; it is in dicative of coming prosperity. The mag pie is the particular horror of the Scotch people: Oiw is sorrow, two mirth. Three a wedding, four a birth. rive heaven, six hell, - Seven the de'il's ainsel'. If you first see the new moon with your hands empty, you will be unfortunate for a month. If you see a cow lick any of her feet, you will at once hear of , a death. To see a snail on the bare ground is a bad omen. To see one on the grass is a sign of a plentiful year. The sudden loss of hair is the sign of the loss of chil dren, health or property. To dream of one's teeth falling out is the sure sign of the death of a friend. The shrinking of meat in the pot while cooking presages downfall in life. If it should swell, you will be prosperous. It is unlucky to be recalled after having set out on a jour ney to be told of something you have forgotten, but you can destroy the spell i A 1 I T 1TT1 the guidance of a compass or the friend ly rays of the lighthouse of knowledge. I mission life among a savage tribe of In Recount some of the vile ideas that dom- i diaris in the far west. She described to inate the lives of these people. A black j her listener their characteristics, their cock is highly prized, as its presence pre- ignorance, their brutality and. withal theut base ingratitude. Her listener an- oncicu, jiuu wuy uo you 8pena your life among them; why do you not leave them;' She replied as a tear gathered in her eye, "Oh, I cannot; I have learned to love them m their helplessness." If ve who are in a condition of life re moved from ignorance and want and su perstition and its consequent helpless ness, perversity and brutality, could only see me reai i;re ana real suffering of oth ers, we would forget our own and merge our purpose, our being, into the effort to save them. In Pans there is a home for scrofulous children. It is a noble work of charity and one of the saddest. The brothers who keep this home are cheered by the feeling that they are doing all tnai can be done for the unfortunates on their hands, but to the outside observer the sight of these poor children is heart rending, Some years ago the Marquis de Lay- oesryne, airector or the Hotel des In valides, a home for French soldiers, ren aerea the brothers in charge of this honfe. a service, and they went in a body lu maun miju, carrying meir crippled children with them. Some were on crutches. Some who were more afflicted v.ere tenderly carried in the arms of the brothers. W hen the marquis, received them, he was surrounded with men who had been maimed by war,- soldiers who had seen hundreds of brutal combats and faced a thousand perils. In behalf of the soldiers he tried to speak to the children, but burst into tears, and the soldiers sobbed or turned away in horror at the sight of so much disease and distress arid deformity, " "ii-" ci uouiiy auiiciion tne war had left to them, they saw how slight were their misfortunes compared Avith these children cursed from tL ?ir very in fancy. So, if we could only r.ae the suf- termg and the sorrow and the disease in which millions are born and to which they are doomed with a fatalitv swift unerring, certain of fate, we would cease to murmur at our own lot and hasten to take up the 1 arden of a world. Liet us remember that the cry of the masses is the cry of the world; the need or tne masses the need of the race. The hope of the mob is the hope of the world; its despair a world's despai. j.ne rare or the world hangs on these myriads of humble homes. In these humble cradles are being rocked today tue worm s ueroes,- the wor,ld s leader Whether thoe leaders shall be worthy or unwonny, whether they shall be trai tors or saints, depends in large measure upon tne degree, of faithfulness with which we shall face this problem. Shall we not bear to them the glad tidings? iney need j glad tidings. They have heard tew glad thmgs in the world enaii we bring to them healing? .They a sick anu distressed. .uulw. . Thornton is small of physique, and gned at the song writer. But ho laughed only once. Thornton's little right went sailing through the air, and it was Berliner's big nose that stopped the blow.; Down he fell, and his white tie was covered with red. The spectators were astonished. The victor wejghed 135 pounds and the vanquished nearly 200. "No one but a coward," continued Thornton, "would talk abeat.women in a cafe where they can't come to defend themselves. : i"T T: ' - not impressed it iv . .... i (,-.! ra wrong I'll keep at vork." "Never mind," said Berliner as he es caped out of the side door. New York Evening Sun. That dreaded and dreadful disease! What shall stay its ravages? Thousands sat Scott's Emulsion of pure Norwegian cod liver oil and hvooohosohites of !im A A A . v and soda has cured us of consumption in its first -stages. Have you a cough or cold acute or leading to consumption? Make, no delay but take Scott's Emulsion cures Coughs, TV colds, Consumption, Scrofula, and all Anr mio and Wasting; Diseases. vents wasting In Children. - t a paJ table aa mUk. ct :..- the rennlne, Pro Pared by 8cott & Downe, Chemists, New York. Sold by all Druggists. - m m m .TLANTIC COAST L f WILMINGTON &WELDON R. ' AND BRANCHES. AND FLORENCE RAIDROAD CONDENSED SCHEDULE TRAINS GOING SOUTH. DATED March SUi, 'S3. Leave Weldon Ar itocky Mount! Arrive Tarboro Leave Tarboro... Lv Kocky Mount. ioave wiissn ... Leave Sclina. ... Lv Fayetieville. Arrive r lorence BRANCH, President. A. P. BRANCH i J. C .HALES, Cashie Assistant Cashier. C .. Save Paying Doctors' Bills BOTANIC BLOOD BALM CTHE GREAT REMEDY F0R LLBLO0D AND SKIN DISEASES - what it needed TI5UE IlfSTOKY OK -'--'av- I LVt LiL. Second The history of the worhl far .as it hits been written at all ii tho story of the needs pf this great multitude. Hi i ue. record ot their sorrows set to a uni versal limbic. It is the story of their hojuK. or it irf the sad record of their despair. Real history tells tho KfV.TO their dumb aud bitter struggle with "the material forces of. the uni verse, i How they wrestled with famine and hunger and cold and unexplored forests, wild continents, slave chains, war riii.. and tyrannies.- Bo'yond the story of this ! he shrieked. by at once taking meat and drink. When you first put on a coat, if you will place money in the right hand pocket, you will not know want, but if you by mistake place it in the left hand pocket you will be . in need as long as the coat is worn. Such are the forces that dominate the minds of thousands' and hundreds of thousands. They will npt believe in the divinity of Christ, and yet they steer life by the crotchet of a superstition. BLUNDERS OF THE LABOR LEADERS. ..Third The ceaseless cry of the world's millions today is the cry of their needs. Christ looked upon this crowd. He was moved with infinite compassion at their distress and their blind helplessness. The same is true of the cry today. It should move every heart to pity, to love, to the furthest exercise of all the forces of love in active life to rescue. As they were scattered then they are scattered today. They do not know what thev want. They do not know what they need. J x uey nave no real leaders. They would be better off often with no leader at all than those they have. They do not know their own friends. They did not know them ia the days of Jesus. They have not learned to know them in the centuries that have rolled over the earth since then. The pharisees cursed and killed Jesus, and the people stood by beholding the people for whom he had lived, to whom he had ministered, upon whose needs he had poured out his life in loving sac rifice, in whose homes 'he had moved witn Dounuiess sympathy, scattering the light of eternal truth wherever he went. And yet the people cried, with evil lead ers, "Crucify him." Under the inspiration of a great work, Mr. Edward Bellamy has practically given his life to the cause of these suf fering masses. He has lost thousands of dollars in his work. He has made the greatest sacrifices to pursue that work. And yet what do the masses care? Noth ing. They, scarcely know Bellamy. He received a letter the other day from one of the people who had read his book and who had read for a few months his paper, The New Nation. He wrote to stop the paper, saying, that he had be come thoroughly converted now to the principles, and he was in no need of any further expense in the way of a paper. 1 have devoted weeks and months in tliis pulpit to the expression in the most vigorous language possible of the wrongs of the laboring masses in America, for which I have been criticised most se verely by the conservative world of strength and capital. It is amusing as well as sad for me to receive from week to week copies of labor papers iu which lowand vill.iiuous paragraphs are penned by their ignorant editors against me simply because I am a minister. The trouble is they do not know k,heir own ueeds. They do not know their own friends, and in their ignorance they are incapable of judging. RAILING AT THEIR BENEFACTORS, Hyde park in London is given on Sun day afternoons to all sorts of meetings. Some time ago a radical speaker called a crowd under the trees and waa urging anarchy ou them when a brougham passed in winch eat a white haired old man. The fine horses and liveried serv ants, the crest upon the door, all kin dled tlje orator's rage to a frenzy. "This is tne land vt man that preys upon you," Who Invented I'lum Duff? Among the many legends of the origin of plum duff, the sailor's great holiday dish, a good one i3 told in the "History of the British Navy." According t this, an English brig was caught in a series of hurricanes, in one of which the cook was washed overboard. This unfortunate ac cident left the crew not only without a Christmas dinner, but without any one to prepare an ordinary meal. The sail ors were sick of "hard tack" and remem bered with longing the plum pudding of Merrie England. They determined that somehow they must have a Christmas pudding and drew lots as to who should be cook. The choice fell on the boat swain's mate, a brawny son of the Emer ald Isle. Iri the galley he found an old cookbook. This he solemnly pored over in search of something promising, but found nothing he dared venture upon. At last he settled upon a recipe which began, "Make a stiff dough." Whenlm reached the word dough, he said to him self, "If r-o-u-gih spells ruff, d-o-u-g-h spells duix." So he made the Duddnirr putting in some fine;Malaga raisins, and served it out with a generous ouantitv of rich sauce. The sailors hailed it with delight and appreciation. "What d'ye call it?" they asked. . "Plum duff," said tho proud cook. And plum duff it has remained from that day to this. rein ch. & BANKERS, : AZilsor, - - - N. C. TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS IN ITS FULLEST SCOPE. SOLICITS THE BUSINESS OF THE PUBLIC GENERALLY. Coo ke, Clark &C0:, SUCCESSORS TO LUTHER SHELDON.) Sash, Doors and Blinds, Builders' Hardware Paints, Oils,' 'Glass, Putty, -AND- Nothing Like A clerk in a a Littloj Encouragement. Market street siore hiA his -.':;ry raised some time ago upon in-forr.:-' - l i:; employer of an increase in the L . The uext time he had oc casion i j report a similar occurrence he witu pnuo and enterprise flashed twins. Phihiuelphia Record . 13 nil diniT Material . No. 16 West Side Market Square and Roanoke;Ave., NORFOLK, VA. " ' up Ivy Under Trees. a i ew xork const says: "I am often asked to name the best plant that will grow under trees, and I invariably rec ommend ivy, as it will succeed where grass refuses to grow, but it ought to be Kept on tne ground. Although it looks well creeping up trees and draping them with its elegant verdure, it will ulti mately prove a deadly enemy to them. Ivy will take possession of n tree, and in some cases, if allowed its own way, will in rime Kill it. Wow that I know the cause of the, evil I strip the ivy from most trees annually,, and it is surprising how t.hrvua froul fivMv. it- ..ww a uut 4v Lu ur Lixree years ago have regained their health." all Testier To the Efficacy of the World-Renowned Swiff's ! Specific. The old-time Elmi.le remedy from tho Georgia traps and fields has rth to lUe antipodes. astonishing the skeptical and leg tho theories of i depend solely on tha physician's BkiU. Thero no blood taint which itdoeanotlmmrHiat.-io- eradicate Poisons outwardly absorbed or t)j result of vile diseases from within aU yield to thla potent bnt simple remedy.' It Is an tm equaled tonic, buUd3tipthe old aadfeeble. cures all dirauoa arising from Impure blood or weakened vitality. Send for a treatise. Examine tho proof. Cooks on " Blood and Skin Diseases " mailed fro, Ihruggista Sell It. ' SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3. Atlanta. Ca. I I H u . l:BK -i. f- Kii -m Female Editors. Miss Lloise Mayhain and Miss Effie Gardner are members of the editorial staff of The University News, the daily paper issued by the studenta of Chicago nmversitv. - YOUR CASE IS NOT1 HOPELESS Has been thnrtm&hiv ttA kt a ' inent phyxiPians and the people lor 40 jears, and never fails to cure (imcklv and nemitmontiir pnnAri i ... 1 J onuruLA, ULCERS, Knc.UniAISM, PIMPLES, ECZEMA, ERUPTIONS and all manner of 'EATTSO. STTiFAnrvn IM V.I BODCC T : l , " I lAIfi, XX j ".", cures me inoet lowed. Price SI ner bttl. ft t. .. .n '.sale by Araafsiki ' ' SENT FREE rfn!W bluuu halm CO., Atlanta. Ga. il.1L ......... jiiu nee-oT.ciiaree. 1 .'"v'''11 Jreparea by the Beverend "f'1''- : siace IffiO, and : riEO CO. Chicago, 111. - : .s j.tst pc,-florae, GforSS ui ; J f Li Yc CP 'AS A KESIS fdves fnstant ' f Wurenet iuk! is an mfnllible varererl'Hts. 1'rieeSl. By V I.'i-Ufrjristsor rnnil. Samnlea x i-s liox stio. xv cw York An GEO! M. LINDSAY on )ey at Law; SNOW HILL, N. C, 'Circimt: Wilson. Green and Johnston Counties. W ayne JHECODPER MARBLE WORKS, nr. 113 arrrr-fi5 Bank Sr.', ' NORFOLK, VA. " Large ftock .of finished fdonuments, Gravestones.' &c. Ready lor shipment. Designs free. tHK.ii m;iss mere is im lin-,.., The cry of the mnV, i ti,Q i' world. The history of theailure of the race, where it has failed, ia tVm t thenr ignorance and their helplessness 1 hey are tha prey of the strong and the shrewd. Their follv- ml miuwm proverbial. When they have organized for their own interests and made a few steps ot real progress in demanding tv,w th.r) stron- their rights, airain an,l are they betrayed by their own leaders A young -labor leader in New York said to in-; some time ago with great bit- lCxiV.--,- "atisineuseof enterino-into any campaign, inljo any struggle, on be half of tho laboring people? Thev are so ignorant. They do not know, how to protect themselves from base leaders rhcro never has been a struggle in the ! of tho faction returned. HIGH LIVING, if you keep at it, is apt to tell upon tho liver. The things to prevent this are Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. Take one of these little Pellets for a corrective or gentlo laxative three for a cathartic. They're the small est, easiest to take, pleasantest and most natural in the way they act. iney uo permanent good. Consti pation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, Sick or Bilious Headache, and all derangements of the liver, stomach, and bowels are prevented, relieved, and cured. ? . Tliey'ra guaranteed to give satis in every eujse. or ranr j-, 5 H -I Ca-Dr. Hie worst cases of Chronic tarrh in tho Jit-ail, yield to ftage s Catarrh Kemedy. So cer tain is it that its makers offer $500 reward for an incurve case. gyO OTHER Sarsaparilla has.the I careful personal supervision of the proprietor in all the details of its prepa ration as has HOOD'S Sarsaparilla. Here is one of the tyrants poor. He was astonished hv a good natural burst of laughter from the crowd. The old man in the brougham was one of he most loved men in all England, known throughout the for his charities, his unceasing efforts and large expenditures of money to up lift the poor and especially the laboring classes. It Happened that the mob knew this man. They join in railing at thou sands of whom they do not happen to know. 'v As they were distressed in Christ's day, so they are distressed today. So they bear burdens grievous to be borne, bo they. tramp. in the dull, ceaseless round of uninterested toil, without hope or leisure or joy. How infinitely pa thetic was the suicide of that old bank messenger who had been a slave of work so long that it was impossible at last for him to live save in the ceaseless w 0lLhS toil! He tad thought of nothing, he had dreamed of nothing, hi had lived nothing, he had been nothing! save a laboi-mg machine, until, at the PairS? l T blCW Ut his b t-aithful, honest, capable of high things and vet ha. -i,-.i 1.7. "oiuin0s, 1- J V . cu "ecause he could no onfVpity , V ". peopie are capable of high things could they only attain them. " 13 a truth capable of the widest demonstration. All classes, beginning with the savage in the wilds of the forest! through all Rations of social distant tions are capable of the highest things. L'f'0 a missionary return tribes of Burmah. He said that when he first went among these savage peo ple he took with hinisonie milk crackeS l emmren. lie met two little ones one about 10 years of age, the other about 4 He gave to the older child a cracker. Without a moment's hesitation the lit tle savage took the whole of it and gave it to his little brother, and the little fellow broke it in two and eave hali A Snake In the Saddle. A true story of how a plucky girl sat on a snake for nearly an hour and then killed it with a club comes from near Indian Springs. A young Adams girl living, near there decided to take a horseback canter a few days ago. She had been away from home all summer, leaving her saddle hanging in the barn. She noticed that the seat of the saddle appeared as though a stick might be under it, but could not be re moved without ripping the saddle. 1 After riding for several miles the horse became suddenly frightened and w to rear and plunge. Upon looking anrand u uiscovered a live snake issuing from the saddle, and with its head striking at inn uorse and then at her. Realizing uer situation, she jumped to the ground. i.aoiuing tne horse with one hand, she juuwi me snaue with a club which she neiu in tne other. It was found to be a black racer 3 feet lonsr and Wile much .wsrrnfld up to be n fWiraMu IT he Most ( Beautiful and , the Most Fashionable Goods in this Line Just Received. Every lady knows the im portance of wearinsr a fashionable Hat or Bonnpt trimmed correctly and of the shane lace of the wearer. ' V My Experience in the Business Knablps mf tn ClWr I7nf c.:f:-. .l 1 -"iou.i3icii.uoii uu ine most lasticliouv. REASONABLE PRICES. . I am aware of the scarcity of money, and am satisfied with very ismall profits, and will aooreciat-f vnnr IrL-'nnr ctnU Kofno 1. T ' J "lU1- uv-ioic uuyillg ciscwiicre. , MRS. S, I. GRIFFIN & CO., Leave Wilson... Leave Ooldsboro! Loave Magnolia.. Ar Wilmington... PM 139 235 12 64 139 885 10:3 330 430 00 P M C 03 PM 505 60S 6 03 I 6 38j 8-40 1 10 40 ! 1130 615 .. 1235 ! TSi 12 : i 1 15 i 200! 3 2o'i 6(fi r 23 PM 3 330 515 8 30 is 7 35! 8i:i 8 47 arc, 1015 ... 11 35 P M AM PM TR AINS GOING NORTH. DATKD March 6th, 1803. Leave Florence . Lv Fayette ville. Leave Selma Arrive Wilson... Lv Wilmington,. Leave Magnolia. Leave Ooldsboro. Arrive Wilson .. Leave Wilson Ar Kooky Mount. Arrive Tarboro . Leave Tarboro. . Lv Rocky Mount. Arrive weidOn.. St?! S o"5i d S5Q; 55 A M 510 A M 9 30 11 10 1320 110 A M 110 157 3 35 12 54 167 3 05 PM AM 920 1148 114 158 A M 158 2 42 2 43 3 45 PM i fta PM 730 34 11 aii"! 6 PM 8 00 9 30 10 :b 11,15 I AM ! t:io ; 950 1 1140 1250 P M 4 00 5 40 t 48 PM 5Ci PM 1130 12 08- 13 08 101 AM PM 7 4 8 20 :io I'M I'M 0 i't SilwesSGo, DEALERS IN Unit IN AIDS NATURE NATURE'S OWN WAY. IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TO INVESTIGATE. A 40-Mge ramphlet MAILED ' FREE upon application. ATLANTIC ELECTROPOISE CO. 1405 New York Ave., Washington, D. C. too companion, public. -India&a Cor. Stv Louis Re- Like a Fairy Tale. A . . 1 , jwujis ourgiar was "tracked" and vciugni; m a queer manner at Silverton Or., a short time ago. He visitor! Q iv' bor s granary, fiUed his sack, but did not nvtice mere was a small hole in the cor- .r o! me sack. From this opening l"u" srain niai-Ked his iath so that he -sTOvirea and arrested by t he police. iviany a man who is a fool 1H be credited with being thepossessor vi mumary intelligence if he would oniy keep his mouth shut. Ex. Advice to VVomeu If you would protect yourself from Painful Profuse, Scanty, Suppressed or Irregular Men struation you must use BRADFIELD'S FEMALE. REGULATOR . ThiB will certS TSSEEfifc, Immediate family, after having suffered for years from Menatrnal Irregularity, being treated without bennflthv Ani..' were at lenrth completely cured by one bottle tyo: Bla stus im.u mmuai Denent oy pi RMrn enect is truly wonderful. J. W. SraAnaa. Book to " WOMAN mailed FREE, which contains valuable luTormatlon on aU female dlaeaek BRADFIELD REGULATOR ATLANTA. CA. tor. iu CO.. Q07?W0 oTulfsTinvPilteo are very small, yet possess aU tho vir tues of tho larger Tuti's Pills wliichfH Itavo been bo popi jir for thirty years. Their' size anl Biijjar-coatiner com tnendthem for the use of children j and persons with weak stomachs, l'or O Siok Heailaclie 6 a they arc invaluable as they cause the A food to assimilate, nourish the body and pasoirnat!irally without nausea or griping. liof U sixes of TuttVi rills are sold by al 1 d rufrTits. Uoso nmall. (i3 l'rico,23c. Ollloe, 3J I'ark Place. K.Y. O Q Q Q Q Q Plaster, Cement, ' : r. . . Richmond, Virginia. S-HawesMo,, DEALERS IN Richmond, V Stop Tlieiii The Man or Woman who has bought JOB Printing Why Yes, IF YOU WISH f SQUARE Dealing: patronise J. W. BATTS. Trains on Scotland Neck ft rich leave Weldon 5:15 p m; Halifax, m; arrive Scotland "T 6:i ville, 7:58 p m: Kinst a ; turning leaves Kinstoi 7. ville, 8:22 a m; arriving ..1 liai. a m; Weldon 11:20 a m, dai0 Sunday. 1 rams on Washington branr. Washington 7 co, a m arrives at. f armele 840 am. Tarboro o -;o return ing lea es Tarboro 6 35 p m, Parmele 7 40 pm, arrives Washington 9 00 p m, daily except Sunday. Connects with trains on Scotland Neck Branch. Train leaves Tarboro. via. Alhemnrl & Raleigh R. R., daily, except Sunday, 5 10 p m, Sunday 2.50 p" ni; arrive Ply mouth 9:50 p m, 5:20 p m. Returning leaves nymouin. daily, except .Sunday 5:30 a m, Sunday 10:00 a in; arrive Tarboro 10:23 a m anc IJ:2a m. Train on Midland N. C.Branch Teaves Goldsbord daily, except Sunday, 6:00 a m; arrive Smithfield 7:30 a in. Return ing leaves Smithfield 8:00 a m; arrives Goldsboro 9:30 a m. Train bn Nashville Branch leaves Rocky Mount 6:15 p m; arrives Nash ville 6:50 p m;. Spnnghope, 7:15 p m. Returning leaves Springhope 8:00 a m. Nashville, 8:35 a m; arriving at Rocky Mount 9:14 a m, daily, except Sunday; Train on Latta Branch Florence R R leaves Latta 7 30 d ni: arrive Dunbar 8 40 p m. Returning leave I)n nlar 6 00 a m; arrive Latta 7 15 a 111. Daily except Sunday. Train on Clinton Branch 1 pavi'i; War saw for Clinton daily.except Sunday, at 6.00 p m, and 11:30 a in. Returning leaves Clinton at 8:20a m. and 1:10 n m connecting at Warsaw with Nos. 41, 40, J auu 70. I rain No. 78 makes close connection at Weldon for all points North, daily, all rail via. Richmond, and daily, ex cept Sunday, via. Portsmouth and Bay Line. Also at Rocky Mount with Nor folk and Carolina road for NorfoiL- !-.;. Iy and all points North via Norfolli aauy except Sunday. JOHN F. DIVINE, , . General Sup't. . J R Kenlv, Gen'l Manager T M Emerson. Traffic Manager. 1 can first, We'll do it Nicely For You. Your orders Solicited. RURSITURE -FROM- Woollen & Stevens Will tell vou. that is th:U to get the Best Goods for the least money. W c Give U1VK BELOW A LIST OF FIXTURES i FOR THE . BROWN and the HALL Sell-Feeding Cotton Gins, Which we offer very low and on easy terms. TWO 60-isaw " Rrnun 4 Cotton Gin feeders, right hand. I Two 50saw Brown Cot ton teeders, right- nana. TWO 60-Saw Rrnun Cotton Gin Conden- ers, right hand. One60-saw Hall's self Teeamg uotton Gin feeder. One50-saw. Hall's self feeding Cotton Gin feeder. - Everythinp- vou need furnish. Buy your provisions and then if you want a of the best "licker" in town we can furnish that too. The fa mous N. C. Mountain Corn Whiskey for onlv rr. gallon. Cash or trade given for all lands of countrv nrnrlur ' Give me a trial and I am sure to get your trade in the future as I will convince vmi that I'll give more goods than any man in town for the same money. ' Hoping to receive a call C ' ' T irurn you, 1 am . Respectfuly, JNO. W. BATTS. Tarboro St.. . Wilson, N. C, SALE OF REAL ESTATE FOR TAXES. Tract in Old Fields township, known as the J. C. Eatman tract, amount of tax ...... fA 68 Tract in Saratoga township, known as J the John Felton tract, amount of i tax 0 (0 House and lot On Tarfwirk cin--i in Wilson, N. C known as the Nancy B Clark lot, amoujit of tax u -w.- ime anu lot in Wilson, N. C, on j Pfender street, known as the C. D. Brownly lot, amount of tax A. M. Bottoms tract. Old Fields' "town" 1 L .sn,D amount of tax ... . .3 22 Johathan Parker tract, in -Taylors townsh B. Bell tract. Old Fields townsh .. amount of tax. , . G. W. Tomlinson Old Fields town amount of tax... Which I will sell to ' r for cash at the Court the 1st day of May 18c at 12 o'clock m. This .V W V . 2,, CROVVLlL, J: HAVE YOUB WASHING DONE AT GREENSBORO Steam Laundry. t3?SDecia1 j families. Leave orders 'i. G. Connor. Ir.. at Alex. Green's feed storetr f 0 IT. 8 pi H COMPLETE MANHOOD AND HOW TO ATTAIN -Attart mdfc1 work that telU the cause, oueilbm tae Sect. poinU tbe remedy. This u ielBtuJeallr he most valuable, artutlcally the aaoat baaatlful. medical book that haa ap geared f or yyara; M paea. erery page bearing a batf-toae llluatratlou In tints. Home of the fbjaeta treated are Nervous Debility, Imno. if7. trUlty. Derelopment, Varicocele, The H5Sj?1Tbte Intending Marriae, etc. ..r'S ra2w trmilH know the Grand Tr ith rTlfr L?T " applied to Mar rtem MAfe, vsKo would atone, fnr ,..iu.. turtle fur imm H H M M N ZZTi Z. wmua atone for It Willi. ji wa. tum "uu" while tbe edl a ivbj P7Pota alone. Vt.rzr ''rPl enclose ten cents to I Address the publishers ERIE MEDICAL CO.. S CTFALO, n. T. u il a. r. iinit, mcnit nuni muaiKtv' JOHN GASTON. Fashionable Barber, Nash St, WILSON, N. C. Easy chairs, razors keen: "' Scissors sharp, linen clean, for a shave vnu rvo o a: yjtiXs a niclcl tn r .l: Shampoo or l,air cut Pompadour You pay the sum of twentv cents more ISlTZitlnn n "Kiiin Pai. -wXP,M FOR SALE. My house, near I Graded School. Price, $800. $200 I cash, balance in one, two and three years interest 8 per cent. R. B. Evans.
The Wilson Advance (Wilson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 13, 1893, edition 1
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