Newspapers / The Wilson Advance (Wilson, … / June 29, 1893, edition 1 / Page 1
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' . - - - - , - , - - - . m ; . . $1.50 A YEAR CASH IN ADVANCE- "LET ALL THE ENDS THOU AIM ST AT, BE THY COUNTRY S, THY GOD S, AND TRUTH S. THE' BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM WILSON, WILSON COUNTY, N. C, JUNE 29, 1893. ' VOLUME XXIII. NUMBER 26 (Ml Racket Stores. 'if Looking Forward ! There is no principle of business u hick is so invaluable an aid to econ omy in the people, or which does more to encourage an appreciation of Merchandise as the principle we have 1 since we have been in trade 1 ie Pav'As You Go! It has done everything lor lis, and enabled' us. to do everything for you. There is no substitute for it, nothing can take its place. All time and all people have proven that there is but one correct way to do business, either for the seller or the buyer, and that is with the dollar in hand. The great est help we' have been to the people id in giving them . a better conception '.of their financial capabilities. Our invaluable methods not only embody theirs, but we clainvihe entire credit uf having been the originator and sole defender of eternal and universal Cash. You to the multiplying advantages it brings to you, and we to the great est power it places in our hands for serving the pubhe. '.Bargains in Mattings This 'Week. ' The Gash Racket Stores, J . M . LE AT II , . Manager. Nash and" Golds! orn-Streets, -. WILSON. N. C. DYSPEPSIA la that misery experienced "when suddenly made aware that you possess a diabolical arrangement called stomach. No two dyspep tics have the same predominant symptoms, but whatever form dyspepsia takes The underlying cause i in the LIVER, and one thing is certain no one will remain a dyspeptic who will hV It will correct "- " Acidity of the Stomach, ' Kxpel foul gaaes. Allay Irritation, . Aaalat Ttlfutlon. 'and at tne same tima Start the Liver working and all bodily ailment tvM disappear, "Tor man thaa three vera 1 tuffered with Dyspepsia in its wont form. I tried wwri doctors, but they afforded no relief. At last I tried Simmons Iirer Regulator, which aired b i a short time. It is a good medicine. I would not be without it." Jambs A. Roas. Philad a. Pa. See that you get the Genuine, with red Z"frootc'wTwet'-: rearAKBO orn Vt J.H. ZEXLUi CO Philadelphia, fat I T-ion- cpruirp anv o reat-cvrandfkther. U1V.11L u.. m..jf .f r great-grandmother, great-grandson, or great-granddaughter. After each clerk has declared upon honor that he or she has no grand- FOUR HUNDRED SINK! RIDDLED WITH SHOT. A CYCLONE IN KANSAS n-" if World's Columbian Exposition Will be of value to the world by illus trating the improvements in the me cchanical arts and eminent physi cians will tell you that the progress in medicinal agents, has been of equal importance, and as a strengthening laxative that Syrup of Figs is far in advance of all others. WASHINGTON LETT Kit. pauses Loss of Life and Great Dammage to .Property. Perry, Kan., Jund 25. The most rlpnt Virlonlino-j'Vflnnft that ever visited S )n-in-law, no g'randdaughter-in-law, eastern Kansas passed through Will no PTaiidnenhcw or erandniece-in- iamstown and the surrounding country law in any of the Government depart - ments, each is required 10 mane declaration that there is not now, to the best of his or her knowledge or .To British, Flagship Victoria Goes Down at Soa in Jefferson county last night. It came from the southeast and took in a scope of country half a mile wide and about six miles long. Not a house. barn or tree was left standing in its CARRYING SCORES TO THE BOTTOM. belief, any person in any branch of path. It was accompanied by a terri- the Government service bearing to ward herself or himself the following relations : . "Great-grandfather-in-law, great-, grandmother-in-law, great-grandson- m-law, great-granddaughter-m-iaw, great-uncle-in-law, son-in-law of great-uncle, daughter-in-law of greats uncle, erandson-in-law ot great-uncie, granddaughter of great-uncle, son-in- . law ol hrst cousin, daughter-in-law 01 first cousin, son-in-law of nephew, j daughter-in-law of nephew, son-in-law of niece, or daughter-in-law ot niece. It is the abstruse calculations pi heredity involved in the answers to these last questions, particularly among clerks from Kentucky, Vir ginia and Georgia, and other States, where family ties are of perplexing . intricacy, which, it is said, is causing some of the clerks loss of sleep. j Gen. Catchings, of Mississippi, who was a member of the last House ! Committee on Rules, legislation which will occupy the at tention of Congress at the special session this autumn, said: "The re peal of the Sherman law and the re form of the tariff are the two great subjects with which we will have to deal." . ble rain and midnight darkness. Eleven bodies have so far been discovered, and it is know that at least five more were killed Their bodies are horribly mangled. Mrs. liutehenson's arms and limbs were found in a tree a mile from the house. ,. Eva Kincade's head was severed from her body. Three persons are known to be fatal ly iniured, and many others are seri ously injured. A BLOW IN IOWA. Des. Moines, Ia., June 25. A cyclone passed through Adair county, south west of here, last night and devastated a strip a quarter of a mile wide. A large number of farm houses were de stroyed, but no fatalities are reported. A child was carried twenty rods through the air and eseapep unhurt. A Fearful Calamity The nig Man -of-War Goes Down in Fifteen MinuteH After i j Colliding With Another Vessel ! 1 of the Fleet Admiral Lost. Tax Assessor A. J. Tuny of Wakulla County Killed. " HIS MURDERER BITES THE DUST. LOWLAND ER'S PRIZE. The 125,000 O T ri E ?2 Sarsapa rilla com bines economy and strength 2ike HOOD'S. It is the only one, of which can truly be said "100 Doses $1." The l.ai.1 i ijs. .The pleasant effect"- and perfec safety with which ladies may use the California liquid laxative. Syrup of I;irs, under ail conditions, makes it their, favorite remedy. To get the true and genuine article, look tor the ji.ime of the California Fig Syrup Co., printed near the bottom of the pack 1 i;e. - There .will be a grand reunion ot .t lie Confederate veterans at Binning "him, Ala., July- 19th and 20th,' A lrand time is expected. Representa tives from all the -Southern' States will be o'n hand. . Ail vie to Mo! hers Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup should always be used for children teething.'' It soothes the child, sof tens the gums, allays all pairf, cures wind colic, -and is the best remedy for idiirrhce. Twenty-five cents a bottle - Capt. Congdon, of the U. S. cutter Colfax, gave (iov. Carr and party a very pleasant little excursion from Morehead to Cape . Lookout last . week. Among those present were : Tlx -Governor Jarvis Chief Justice Shemurd. : and a number of other noted men. President Cleveland hopes to join Mrs. Cleveland at their Buzzard Bay cottage the latter part of this week, although he has so much to do that he cannot make the trip one of rest and recreation. He will simply transfer the executive office from the While House to his seaside cottage. He told Representative Richard son, ol Tennessee, who was chairman of the committee jon Printing in the last House, and who will probably occuov the same position when the present House is organized, that he would not appoint the new Public Printer for some time, Representative Tarsney, p( Mis - - r soun, created a sensation in the House a few weeks before (the ad- journmentiby declaring that irV Raum's administration pensions hail been granted for no other disabihtythan the loss of hair. Republican mem bers 'of the House bitterly denied the statement, and the next day Raum sent a letter to Representative Grout, of Vermont, officially denying that a pension had ever been allowed for baldness. Mr. Tarsney replied by saying that his informant was an em ploye of the Pension Office and would at - once be dismissed if his name were mentioned. "I make this pledge to the House, however, that at the very first opportune mo ment it can be safely done, I shall, by Suburban Won by a l'oor Man's Horse. Nkw Youk, June '3. The famous T,nmnlifrhtfr is no lnnifcr kins? of the in speaking of turf. " The Surburban .Handicap, of a guar anteed value of 25,000 was decided at Sheephhead 15ay yesterday afternoon in the presence of 25,000 persons, and for the fourth time in the history of this race it was won by a poor man's horse, Lowlander, the property of Fred Lowe, a young1 man scarcely 25 years of ag-e, with XV. C. Daly's Terrifier second and the .favorite, Mr. Pierre Lorillard's Lamplig-tcr, third. The race was honestly run, and there was an entire absence of crowding', jost ling, or crossing, and the best horse at the weights was victorious. The time for the mile; and a quarter was 2:00 2-5. It was the fastest Suburban ever run. The race was worth 18,000 to the winner, -$5,000 to the second horse, and $2,000 to the third. DEATH AT A CIRCUS. Goldsboro. N. C, Iune26. tUn profess o lal burglars made a raid on j this city last night while the rain was ' coming down in torrents and entered ' the wholesale grocery establishments 1 of B. M. Privett and liizzell Bros. & , Co., ransacking everything and attempting to open the safes by means of a chissel. Not succeeding, they robbed tht money drawer at the latter - place of its meagre con tents. Their next attempt was to enter the wholesale grocery of I. B. Fonvielle and the hardware house of W. H. Fuggins by boring holes through the back doors and shutters, . tent 1. more than lifty people Lightning Strikes a Tent. Killing Eij;ht FrrsniK ami Injuring Twenty. Rivkk Falls, Mtxx., June 24 A ter rific thunder storm raged here this afternoon, llain fell in sheets, and there was unusual thunder and light ning', llingland's circus had just finished its performance, when a ter rific bolt of lightning struck one of the Londox, June 24. Hundreds of lives have been lost by. the sinking of the British battle ship Victoria, Hag-ship of the Mediterranean squadron, which was: run into . off Tripoli by the English battle ship Camperdown, also 'belonging' to the Mediterranean squad ron, j Vice Admiral Sir George Tryon is among the lost. The Victoria and the Camperdown were maneuvering off Tripoli during the afternoon. Durintr the evolutions the two battle ships collided, both go-, ing at a g'ood rate of speed. The Cam perdown's ram struck the Victoria forward of the turret on the starboard side. An enormous hole was made in the side of the Victoria, through which the water began to pour in torrents. The immense hull of the ill-fated bat tleship began to settle immediately, and. lefore those on board of her could cast lose their small boats, she shot to the bottom with nearly all of those on board. So rapidly did the Victoria go down that those on board the Camperdown could do little toward helping their fellow seaman. Some of the officers and crew managed to get out of the suction caused by the "sinking- ship and were rescued. Not less than 400. of the otlicers and crew were drowned and 255 men were saved. In less than fifteen iiiinutes from the time of the collision the great w arship was lying bottom uppermost in eigh teen fathoms of water. The Camper down was badly crippled by the collision, but the extent of her damage is not fully known. According to a dispatch from Rear Admiral. Markham, of the Trafalgar, twenty-one . oHieers were drowned. MVST STAY IX THK SKA. lioxnox, June 20. It is stated this morning that no attempt will be made to recover the bodies of those who went down with the Victoria. The vessel lies in eighty fathoms of water, and it would be almost impossi ble to recover the dead. MORE CLOSED BANKS. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report The Jenkins Brothers Barricade Theii Doom Against the Sheriff Tally Enters the Yard and is Cruelly Murdered. Tajxahasske, Fla., June 26. News comes from Wakulla county, that A. J. Tully. tax assessor of the county and an estimable citizen, and a man named . Jenkins, were killed yesterday. Some time ago two brothers, named Jenkins, moved with their families from some point in West Florida and settled on the Sopchoppy river in Wakulla county both living1 in the same house. Warrants for their arrest were sent to Sheriff R. S. Smith oi j Wakulla county. Yesterday morning j he started with a posse to make the arrests, thirteen miles southwest ol I Crawfordsville. The Jenkins brothers. it appears, were expecting- a visit ol r I. : ,.i j .1 ' j mis enaracter, as wiey were iuudu in their dwelling, with ,the doors closed. When the posse halted at the fence in closing the yard, the Jenkins brothers sent their wives out at the back doot to notify the sheriff that the first man who put his foot in the yard would be killed or words to that effect. A. J. Tully, a brave and courageous man, : immediately entered the yard, and al most at the same instant three reports from deadly shot-guns rang out on the morning air, and Mr. Tully fell to the ground dead literally riddled with buckshot from the abdomen to the top of his f oredead. . . The Jenkins brothers hastily left the house by the back door and ran off in the direction of a swamp half a mile away. Some of the posse remained with their dead comrade while the others pursued the fleeing murderers. Seeing that the murderers- would reach the swamp and escape, theii pursuers fired a volley at them on the run, and one of the Jenkins fell, mor tally wounded, a Winchester ball hav ing passed through him from side to side, just above the hips. The posse kepjt up the chase for some time, but failed to capture their men. ON THE BACK TRACK. ABSOLUTELY PURE THK NEWS0F THE WKEK'. Tuesday, June 'iO. The round trip fan- frhm Atlanta to to Chicago was reduced to $:u.40. Mrs Lottie Cummings, of Knoxville, Tenn., confessed to the murder of her little step-son. Ranks were reported in easier feel ing in the west and it is said that tho demands for nppiunnilnf ian va11- I Krn t-rij-iitm yC 1 ; 1 , , v... ...wnicui me mineral resources "";";c --I of the bleak and forbidding region ihe united States internal revenue UirU :c . r 1 u , ? s special taxes alt expire on the 30th day ! , '5.? S to f explored, but there are of this month. " tnuhtions that the precious metals exist there. If it shall turn out that there is anv foundation for Why suffer from indigestion and dyspepsia? Simmons Liver Regulator is pleasant and cures. There is a probability that import ant discoveries may be made by the exploring expedition which has left Quebec for the interior of Labrador in the service of the Canadian Genlo- I j gicai survey. Very little has ever The body of Walter Lloyd, the j young Englishman who was drowned j in --Flint river at Albany, Ia. last 1 Wednesday, was recovered this morn ing nnd buried. Atlanta society is greatly stirred up over the divorce suit for infidelity brought by Sidney I. Kawson p. gainst his wife, Ada J. Raw son, the daughter these traditions. Labrador .will become more attractive than it has been at any time since its discovery, four centuries ago. New York Sun. - The office of the New Albany of the late Chief Justice Jackson, of ' Gazette, New Albany, Mis but eventually gave it job. up as a bad Atlanta, Ga., June 26. Miss Julia Force was put on trial to day tor the murder ot her two sisters last February, The family is one of tine i connection and social standing. M 'ss I Force planned the double murder carefully and, after having committed it, walked to the police headquarters j and surrendered, bhe had kept a , diary for a year or more and all , through it appeared her intention ol , some time killing her sisters. j Comparatively little trouble was experienced in getting a jury." i At 5 o'clock both sides announced they had closed. , The case will be argued and the iurv charged lo-morrow. A verdict ' J . . -. r the files and records ol that orhce, pi acquiuai on uie giouuu in mswumy prove the truth of my informant's statements. Two clays before the inauguration of President Cleveland, Dr. Warren Holt of Missouri, was dismissed un der the charge of having given false information to Representative Tars ney. Now for the sequel: This week, quite accidentally, a case was discovered that proved Mr. Tarsney's statement to have been strictly true and the dismissal of Dr. Holt to have been unjust he has been reinstated. The case is that of Allen G. Peck, of Company H, 1st R. I. Light Artil lery, who was allowed a pension of $4' per month, the only disability is expected. The Washington Star has been writing up Smith's Island. It says it is the stangest bit of land north of Florida, and so it is. The late State Geologist, our lamented iriend, Prof, i W. C. Kerr, told us it was a slice of Florida floated up to the mouth of the Cape Fear river. This land is nearer to the Gulf Stream than any other part of the Atlantic Coast, and hence the peculiar giowths of the island. We copy from the Wash ington paper : "The result is that it is sub-tropical, the palmetto reaching a height ol thirtv feet or more and erowintr in were prostrated. Seven were killed instantly, a few more injured, and the balance are now regaining the normal use of their limbs, which " had been temporarily paralyzed by the shock. The scene of consternation which followed when the survivors realized the extent of the facility surpassed description, and when men and women surged towards the scene it was only by the exercise of rare presence of mind, on the part of Messrs. Kingland and employes, that a serious and prob ably a total stampede was avoided. Booth's Will. New Youk, June -4. The will of Edwin Uooth was filed today. looth leaves the bulk of his pn.'.erty to his daughter, Edina Booth Grossman. The value of personal estate is esti mated at $(')0".,000. He gives his brother, Joseph A. Booth, ten thousand dollars, and niece Mary Booth Douglass, ten thousand dollars, and other nieces and nephews five thousand each. His cousins, Charlotte Mitchell Baltman, and Robert Mitchell, of North Caro lina, each ten thousand, and to several friends five and ten thousand each. Actors' fund and other actors' socie ties cet five thousand each. But Their Assets Far Kxt eed Th ir Liabili ties Several A ssienments. Sax Francisco. June 2". The board of directors of the Pacific bank de cided not to open its doors this morn ing'. It ha a paid up capital stock of $1,000,000. a nominal reserve of about 8700,000, anjrt deposits of about a mil lion and a half, i according to a recent official re nor t. s Niagara Falls, N. Y., June 2'-.. The Cataract bank, of this city, the largest bank in Niagara count v, closed at noon. There ' is great excitement among business men in consequence, as over 700.000 ol their money was on deposit there. San Francisco. Juno . -The Peo ple's Home Savings bank closed its doors this morning. It'-alliliated with the l'acitie bank, which closed yester day. The resources are, s.aiil to far ex ceed the liabilities. Cincinnati, June 23. Samuel XV. Conin & Son, owners of -the Cincinnati dry dock, assigned . today. Assets :nd liabilities estimated at $.V.o; each. Chicago, June 23. Friedman and Friedman, wholesale . clothing, failed today. CONSUMPTION CURABLE. The failures for the week number 287 as compared with totals of 347 last year. For the corresponding " week last year the failures were 190. About 70 per cent of the failures were of those having 5,000 or less, while ordi narily this proportion is 90 per cent. GROWTH OF THE SOUTH. The Industrial 'Development in. the Week Knuing June 19th. ' Fifty, cents is a small doctor bill iiut that is all it will cost you to cure any ordinary case of rheumatism il you use Chamberlain's Pain Balm. - Try it and you will be surprised at the prompt relief it affords. The first application .will quiet the pain. 50 cent " ' bottles for sale by A. J. limes. The Railway Commissioners left Kaleioh Tuesday to make a critical examination of the Atlantic and North Carolina railroad. This was done at the special request of Governor Carr, who wishes to know exactly how the ! ad stands, as it is controlled by the State. : alleged being "loss of hair ; result of profusion, while thg olive and myrtle typhoid fever." are abundant. A greater peculiarity Next hriday will close the present . js that frost does not affect vegeta fiscal year, and instead of the eight or tion Gn the island. The latter is ten million deficiency which was about four miles long and three wide, estimated by Raum, there will remain On it is a light house, built in 1817, unexpended more than $i,coo,ooo of . and a life-saving station." Messen the pension appropriation. 1 per. It is understood tnat secretary 1 Or. Lamont's action in revoking his re cent order appointing an army court London, June 26. Despite the efforts of the government to prevent jyO OTHER Sarsaparilla has ef fected such remarkable cures as HOOD'S -Sarsaparilla, of Scrofula, Salt Rheum, and other blood diseases. of inquiry to inquire into Col. Ains-T the introduction ot the dread disease Vorth's connection with the accident mto t-.ngiana, cnoiera nas oroKen at Ford's old theatre, was the result out in London. An untortuuate sea of a conference with President Cleve-1 man on a large trading steamer, land, and that it has been definitely ' which arrived here yesterday from decided not to suspend Col. Ains-. Nantes, died of the scourge on his worth until the court's decide whether vessel, which is docked in the River he is guilty or not. He will be in- Tyne. . dieted by the grand jury. Paris. June 26. Cholora is There is nothing mugwumpish spreading with frightful rapidity in about Mr. Dayton, the new postmaster Mecca. A dispatch received to-day of New York City. Speaking of the ' states that during the past twenty- appointments to oe maae in nis four hours there have been 455 ofhee, outside ol the classihed service, death's from that disease. he said: "In making appointments to these places I shall put in Demo crats, as a matter ot Dknison, Tex., June 26. Another attempt was made to hold up the Missouri, Kansas and Texas passen ger train No. 3 at- Stringtown, on Saturday ni"ht, this being three at- t"nmu during the oast week, all of 'Vnich were unsuccessful. t'l World's Fair. 1. Washington,-I). C, June 26. Attorney General Olney has decided that the seveftil appropriations made y, the act of Congress, approved August 5. 1S02, in aid of the World's 1 air, Chicago, including the appro priation made for the government 'xhibit, "are as available now as be J're the decision of the Circuit Court (,f Appeal, permanently opening the World's Fair on Sunday. Re- Cleveland did not appoint me the idea that I would appoint publicans." Clerks in all the departments ot the Government here have received . a new set of questions which they are C ri t v-i" t.-i 7 t T-k ' Til T uno iA CZ.rw r mm i .ir Mivir ir-L.iv. 111.1 1 uuv. - v. LUUISC. AY1I. , , 1 .i 1 wjjn ilgeiu lias paiuuncu iuc v-iueau naymarKer trageuy aiuiLaisis.inccuc, Fielden and Schwab. No The Tradesman's review of the industrial sit uation in the South for the week ending June 19th reports -the follow-in? anions the important new industries established: The organization of a cotton mill company at Portsmouth, Va.; and one at Inland Ford, N. C. ; cigarette machine manufacturing company, Richmond. Va., capital $.") 000: cotton compress company. Birmingham. Ala., capital 25.OU0. 13 new industries were established or incorpo rated during the week, together with 4 enlarge ments of manufactories, and 20 important new buildings. Among the new industries not above referred to, are agricultural implement works at Galveston. Texas, brii-k works at Magnolia, Ark., distillery at Kinston. N. C. electric light ing plant at Cleveland. Tenn.. and flouring mills at Klkin and Mebane. N. C. tee factories are to be built at Apalachicola and Tallahasse, Fla., coal and coke companies have been organized at Gilliam, Jones and McDowell, W. Va., a pot tery at Irondale Ala., and a shoe factory at Cuthbert. Ga. Woodworking plants for the week include a barrel factory at Winterville, N. C. : furniture factory at Berkley, Va.: saw and planing mills at Montreal, Ark.. Astor, Fla., Ulendora and Logtown, Miss.. Capron. Va., and Davis, W. Va.; spoke factory at Koanoke, Va.. and variety works at Rocky Mount, N. C, and Wolf Creek, Tenn. Waterworks are to be built; at Perry, Ga., Falmouth, Ky.. and Sistersviile. W. Va. The enlargements include bottling works at Paris, Texas, a cotton mill at Columbus, Ga., a knit ting inill at Kinston, N. C, and a handle factory at Clarendon, Ark. , New buildings of the week include business houses at Louisville. Ky., Windsor, N. C. Tay ior and Orange, Texas, churches at Atlanta. Ga., Covington, Ky., Dallas. Texas. Lambert's Point and Norfolk, Va.. a court house at Bra- den Town. Fla., factory buildings at Talladega. Ala., and Louisville, Ky., and a school building at Lynchburg. Va. MARKET REPORTS. 7.64 previous intimation was given of his intended 1 action. DisDatches from the Dakotas and required to answer for information of Minnesota say that the wheat crop is the committee of Congress. The in- damaged 25 to 50 per cent. The quiries propounded have struck the , dry hot winds are parcning growing ; majority ot the clerical torce witn grain in me nems.. mingled consternation and amuse- Late dispatches from Shanghai say ment. The intricacies of consan- that the Chinese Premier has mti guinity and affinity they are required matetj that a new treaty with this New York, June 26. -Cotton. July August 7. ;79 Sept. 7.SS: market very steady. Middling 8; market quiet. Chicago. June2 Futures closed as follows Wheat July. 66Ji Corn. July, 11 Oats. July. 29 Pohk- Julv, 19 9J Laud. July. . 62 Sides. July, SS.9 i Chicago. June 26. Cash Quotations were a follows: Mess pork ilSt o2',-C( ls.S5. , Lard tO.tfi &,9.si5. Short ribs, loose. ?y..r0(.l(.oo Dry salt shoulders, boxed. fe).7j&li).tl0; short clear sides, boxed. it.TbCa 10.00. Savaksah. June 25. Turpentine firm atSSii: t.in nrui at tl.10. Amioli Says That All lie Wants Is a I-'alr Test of His Medicines. New York, June 25. Of sixty physi cians representing all the schools using the Amick Cure for Consumption inter viewed today, thirty-two agreed with Amick that the bacillus microbe is produced by the disease, and twenty eight, while admitting Amick" s treat ment is the onlv successful one-be lieved with Koch that the bacillus is the cause. A special from Cincinnati says: "Dr. W. K. Amick," when shown ,he above said: 'I will continue sending test medicines to, these and all other doctors for each hew patient until ali realize their success could not come from any false theory.' " A Wild Cyclone. Dallas, Ga.," June 2.'!. This town was badlj' wrecked this afternoon by a cyclone. Thousands of doll'ars worth of prop erty was destroyed almost m the twinkling of au eye. IJuildings were blown down or unroofed, the occu pants having barely time to escape. All the time rain felt m torents. Cvops were destroyed. Corn was cut to pieces. tireat gullies were washed in cotton fields. Fruit trees, were stripped and the trace of the storm is marcled by dessolation. Dallas is demoralized. All business was closed for the rest of the day. Bitten by a Mad Dor. IIiaoapsek. Ga.. June 22. Luther Sims, one of Towns county's ' Taest young men, was "bitten by a mad dog Tuesday. On Sunday his dog was bit ten and in forty-eight hours it showed siarns of eroinsr mad. Mr. Sims asked a neighbor to come over at noon and shoot it. Before the dinner hour his dog slipped up on him while he was plowing and bit him. He knocked it off and it had a convulsion athis feet.. Mr. Sims had his wound dressed imme diately, and is getting along very well. His family, however, is very uneasy about him. Death of Congressman Mutrhler. Eastonv Pa., June 23. William Mutchler, of this city, congressman from the eighth district, died sudden lj' of heart disease this morning. Gold Kotarnincr to. This Country Low Kx change Rate Causes It. New York, June 23. T.he first impor tation of gold is on its way to this country. It will leave Southampton tomorrow on the steamship Columbia. It consists of $r00,000, and is being im ported by Baring, Magoun & Co. Mr. Magoun said this morning that the importation was due to the low rate of exchange in the money market, and that there was a decline in the demand for money from the country and the situation was not so strained. It was hoped that the government would promptly anticipate tlje pay ment of July interest and if it did so there would be a further improvement in the situation. It is reported that the First National bank has ordered 1,000,000 in gold from England. AN ATROCIOUS MURDER' Farm Hand in Alabama Settle a Quarrel with a Winchester. fAisiKV, Ai.A., June 2.". A cold blooded and atrocious occurred near Asheville, St. Clair county. A farm hand named Armstrong" was working on Folk Dill's farm, when a man named Skelton came up, and without a word of warning, shot Armstrong live times with a Winchester,' produc- insr almost instant death. Skelton i made good his escape. Armstrong", Skelton and Easterwood : were farm hands working for Polk Dill. They had a row about a trivial matter and Skelton borrowed Easterwood's Win chester and used it witli the abovee result. . New Postmasters. Washington, D. C, June 32. The following postmasters were made for Georgia. Thomaston, Upson county, T. B. Bethel vice E. E. Love; Eatonton, Putnam county, C. R Dusenberry vice S. C. Prudden: Ridge way, Harris coun ty, J. E. D. Epps vice T. A. Langford; South Atlanta, Fulton county, A. S. Poole vice L, J, Price; Tilton. Whit field county, Mrs. M. W. Elrod vice J B. Brown. I.eland Stanford Dead. Menlo Park, Cat.., June 21. Senator Leland Stanford died suddenly last night at his home in Palo Alto. Gov. Stanford was in the best of spirits yes terday. He took a drive around his stock farm and seemed as well as ever. He retired shortly after ,10 o'clock and about midnight his valet going into the governor's bedroom discovered that he was dead. Five 13-inch-calibre guns, 40 feet long and of 05 tons weight are nearing completion at the government foundry at Washington. They are calculated to shoot a projectile of 1,100 paunds a distance of thirteen miles and are the biggest guns yet manufactured on this side of the. ocean. Twelve of them will be used in the armament of the Indian!!.. Oreiron and Massachusetts and will make those vessels as formida ble fifhtinjr machines as are on the BASE BALL. "For six Bridges, Athens, Tenn. Mjnttc- " 1 nr ei v vfart; I harl heen to unravel are beyond the powers of country wUi be necessary. Probably ' afflicted with running sores, and an many of them. Each government the new minister will be charged with ' enlargement of the bone in my leg. employe is required upon honor to the task I I tried every thimr I heard without 1 1. 1 1 1 1 nr-VM ' I " declare wnetner ne or mic , , WlLMIXGTOX N. Q, June 26.- or daughter, a father or mother, a DranPr. reta:i drv foods' brother or sister, an uncle or aunt, a "-' H tnA' w;t1, any permanent benefit until Botanic Blood Balm was recommended to me. Standing of Clubs in the Southern League for the Week Kndinjj June 84at. The following table shows the num. ber of games won and lost by Sou there league clubs so far this season: Played. Won. PerCt. Augusta.., 52 Charleston M Savannah . .52 Memphis 3 Atlanla "3 Montgomery 5i Macon 56 Hirmi nsham 55 Chattanooga -55 New Orleans -54 Nashville. Mobile...: 5 36" 692 36 667 31 596 31 585 29 . 547 25 481 26 464 25 455 24 436 23 407 18 333 10 354 The Astor mansion in New York bo1J f or S200,000. - " cousin, nepnew. n ece, gwnuiawcr u. ' ference No statement of assets n-Mn mAtnpr n Tnr sprun t. r 11 ri St. Louis, June 26. A special to the Post Dispatch from Fort Scott, 1 Kail., says at 9:30 this morning the entire east wall of the Tremont I lotel fell. Over one hundred guests were in the hotel at the time. It is thought that many were killed and injured. The ground floor of the hotel was service. Alter answering these questions it is then whether he or she has in the Govern- y and liabilities is obtainable, but the amount involved is not believed to be After usine six bottles the sores occuoied bv stores, many of which healed, and I am now in better health were filled with customers, than I have ever been. I send this testimonial unsolicited., because I want others to be benfitted. Herr Krupp, the celebrated Ger ; man gun-maker w ill visit the Fair. London;, June 26. Telegrams re ceived to day from Calcutta by the Anglo-Indian banks here, state the Indian government has stopped the coinage of silver for private account at the India mints. Atlanta, and prominent people of that city. Wednesday, June 21. . Two deaths from sunstroke were re ported in London. Paul Trammell was appointed collet tor of revenue for the northern district of Georgia. The Christian workers from all over the country will hold their next annual meeeting in Georgia, during the tirst part of next month. A little girl in Marshall county, Ala bama, wandered olf from home and was found peacefullf sleeping in the woods, with her head pillowed naar a large rattlesnake which had not harmed her. The winner of the St, 000 prize, of fered by the German-American Insur ance Company, for the best plan of a fire-proof cotton warehouse, is Mr. James A. lteasely, of Memphis, Tenn. A Florida man, on retiring, heard a fstrange noise in the room. Investiga tion proved that tne noise was made by an. alligator which had either crawled or been placed there by some one. Thursday, June 'A'l. The latest advices from Mecca, Ara bia, where cholera is raging, show 3.1Q deaths from the disease in the last live days. A false alarm of fire caused a panic in a chureh at Boresoglesk. Russia, in which over a hundred peoide were killed. Miss Ida Dent Wright, formerly oi Georgia, was married to General An toine Ezetta, brother of the president of Salvador. George XV. Vanderbilt has just con cluded the purchase of a. t wenty thous and acres of land in the Pink Keds -section of Henderson and Transvlvania counties, North Carolina. The pur pose of the purchase is to make one of the finest game preserves in the world. 1'rlday, June 'A. There will be no pension deficiency for the current fiscal year, which-ends J une 30th, next. A careful estimate of the late Sena tor Stanford's property indicates that its value is somewhere in the neigh borhood of $35,000,000. The steeple of St. Phillip's church. Charleston, S. C,, which is 10 feet above ground,, will .on the 24th instant have a fixed white reflector light placed in it for the benefit of mariners. It is said to be the first Instance on record of a church steeple being used in this country as a lighthouse. No gold has been transported from New York to Europe for the past three weeks, and, as a consequence, the treas ury department has been' gaining gold during that time, the net gold balance now standing at 8.4,00."),030. During the current month the department has redeemed nearly S6,oo0,000 of gold cer tificates, the amount outstanding leing $98,070,000 against $104,000 on the 1st of June. Saturday, June 24. The fight between Jim Daly, Corbet's late sparring partner, and Joe Hutler, was won in siz rounds by Ilutler. : Will Brown and Lee Hoist, who stole 8,500 worth of diamonds from Mr. M. Laughton, of Brooklyn, last March .were arrested in iS'ew Tcrk. South Carolina has 10.773 acres planted in watermelons, and it is ex pected that the crop will be a large and profitable one. A Louisiana man. eighty-one years, old, wagers 55 that-he can beat any fifty-year-old man in the state in a foot race. There is trouble ahead for Paymas ter John Clyde Sullivan of the navy, who has been put under arrest at the Mare Island Navy Yard for not ac counting for $12,000. of the Govern ments money. Mrs. J. T. Ford died at her home, one mile east of Richmond Missouri, from blood poisoning, caused by a rat bite ten days ago. She was the moth of the notorious Bob and Charley Ford, who killed Jesse James. Monday, June 26. There were 313 failures in the United States the past week. The new German relchstag will be called to meet July 4th. Justice Jackson began the hearing of the Central railroad cases at Savan nah. The Howard Bank, of Cartersville, Ga., and the Sumter Bank, of Ameri cus, Ga,, closed. A decrease in deposit's of S.472,.i00 is shown by the weekly statement of the New Y'ork banks. . Will Anton, of Atlanta, Ga., was made a special examiner of pensions. His headquarters will be at Knoxville, Tenn. - iss.. was: broken open Saturday nieht and the type, oftlce furniture, etc., was taken out and destroyed. The outrage was committed - by masked men sup posed to have been White Caps, against whom the Gazette has been very outspoken in its denunciation. ' The j;rcat vegetable subsititute for pills is Simmons Liver Regulator. Cure sick headache. Dr. . M. J. Davis is a prominent physician of Lewis, Cass county, Iowa, and has been actively engaged in the practice oi medicine at that place for the past thirty-five years. On the 26th of May, while in Des Moines en route to Chicago, he was suddenly taken with an attack of diarrha-a. Having sold Chamber lain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhtea Remedy for the past seventeen years and knowing its reliability, he pro cured a25 cent bottle, two doses of which completely cured him. The excitment and change of water and diet incident .to traveling often pro duce a diarrhoea. Every one should procure a bottle of this Remedy he fore leaving home. For sale by A.' J. Hines. - Kansas City, Kan., June 2-;. Just across the State line Solomon Williams called on the District Clerk and asked for a marriage license. "What is the lady's name: ?-' asked the Clerk, after he had filled out the intended groom's name. " . ''Why Maggie. Oh, Miss Maggie; that is, to tell the truth, I .'don't know her last name. Just make it out for me and Maggie. and I'll fill her name in when 1 hand it to the preacher." 'I Am ho Tired." Is a common exclanialioiLat this season. There is a certain bracing effect in cold air which is jost when the weather grows warmer ; and when Nature is renewing her youth, her admirers feel dull, sluggish and tired. This condition is owing mainly to the impure condition of the blood and its failure to supply healthy tissue to the various organs of the body. It is remarkable how .suscepti ble the system is to the help t; be derived from a good medicine at this season. Possessing just those puri fying, building-up qualities which the body craves, Hood's Sarsaparilla soon overcomes that tired feeling restores the appetite, purifies, the blood, and in short, imparts vigorous health. Its thousands' t)f. friends as whh one voice declare. "It Makes the Weak Strong." Fitzham Electrocuted. Auburn, N. Y., June 26. John Fitzham, the Buffalo murderer, was electrocuted at 12:44 this afternoon. The electrocution was a success. Mount Pulaski, 111., June 27 1802. Have been in the drug trade since 1848, and for years sold Pond's ICx tract. Was called last December to the beside of our 18 year old daugh ter sick with typhoid fever in stage of hemorrhage. Wife took along bottle of Pond's Extract ' which we think saved her life, having gone through three distinct attacks of said fever, temperature - each time as high as 1052. After 160 days got her up on her feet and bids fair to become O. K. in general health. We kept a cloth saturated with Pond's Extract lor weeks and months in her mouth with soothing and saving effect. We applied it constantly over throat, chest and body, tljus prevent- . ing and allaying every inflammatory condition. We are again home and happy, and this short story is tu re without money or price. b. Linn Bkidi-.kk. Do not confuse the Famous lilush of Roses with the many worthless paints, powders, creams and bleaches which are flooding' the market. Get the genuine of your druggist, A. J.' Hines, 75 cents per bottle, and I guarantee it will remove your pimples freckles, blackheads, moth, tan and sunburn, and give you a lovely -'complexion. - Impure blood is the cause of innu merable maladies. Hence, one of the greatest benefactions to humanity was the discovery of Ayer's Sarsa parilla. which, more than any other medicine, has saved America from becoming a nation of invalids. Overrun With Vlii-t. Jackson, Miss., June 26 Sheriff Magee, of Marion county brought three whitecaps to the penitentiary this morning, each being sentenced to ten years' imprisonment.. Several others are under indictment. If you wish the public tri know what you, are doing advertise in The Advance.
The Wilson Advance (Wilson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 29, 1893, edition 1
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