Newspapers / The Wilson Advance (Wilson, … / Oct. 26, 1893, edition 1 / Page 1
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1 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 VOLUME XXIII. WILSON, WILSON COUNTY- N. C, OCTOBER, 26 1893. NUMBER 43 i boy for Csu 1 1 COtlSTIPATIOn -AND- SELL 111 I l - I XJtJL- r 11 ! T - : Ti T 7" .ft r .. - " T" 1 1 ft , i i iji (in 111 1 j-diTiiiiii r iiwpr 1 n 'per 11 -a-- iv 1 I o , , " v " w ar. viu k iv,l;ui l " AND- rx if I LOW PRICES. The fortune lost in time urchases of rugular concerns 1 ho saveu anci not squan-; llCrC'tl 'H lav Ul vi inv.nu.iii. T 1 1 Of course tne regular prices uo u ell cn-oifgh lor tne ledger r;itt. no trouble about, that, ,at when customers are huy nrr for the Coltl Cash, they look into the windows for 3AKU-A1 LL. I.Tu;y;iiass' the show of the Regulators, but ' stop at card of the. close-cutter, .naturally enough go in I their ?money"with la called the "Father of Diseases.". It is caused by a Torpid layer, and is generally accompanied with LOSS OF APPETITE, SICK HEAPACHE, . BAD BREATH, Etc. To treat constipation successfully spend x and aiul the man who nas tne nerve to If at ONE when it would be x T r "v - - ..heap enough at 1WU. THE GASH RACKET STORE doTng business- on' the plan at the same old and our stock is large 1 1 1 n anu everyuinig we iidiiuuc sold, we. believe, below market value. In our Corner Store you will hnd ' Goods, Glassware . Ml is sun above stand. Pieca Dress .Goods, ' . and Crockery.' Back Store " In the only SIIuES-, we carry HATS AND TRUNKS. 1 you In the Orifrnal Store O wul hna almost anything you may want in Notions, Gent's Furnishings, House Keeping Goods and Tin. CASH CATCH BARGAINS. It is a mild laxative and atonic to the digestive organs. By taking Simmons Liver Eegulator you promote digestion, bring on a reg ular habit of body and prevent Biliousness and Indigestion. :. "My wife was sorely distressed with Constipa tion and coughing, followed with Bleeding Files. After four months use of Simmons Lirer Regulator she is almost entirely reliered, gaining strength and fleih." W. B. Lurn, Delaware, Ohio. , lv -Take only the Genuine, Which has on the Wrapper the, red SB Trade. of J, B. ZEXXJLN S W mark and Signature ot ARP STAYED AT HOME Why Ho Did Not Boo the Great Co lumbian Exposition. HIS BA3K ACC0U5T WAS SMALL And It Cost ana Wife To Hash t Take Himself Colombo Was Me Great Shakes, Anyway. - lil8 Gasli Racket Stores, J. M. LEATH, Manager. ; N'ash and Goldsboro Streets, WILSON. N. C. CEO. M. LINDSAY, Atteriieyat Law, SNOW 1 1 ILL, N. C. ClRt V!T : WiiSQIl, and ohnsun Counties. Creen "Wayne Atlanta Constitution. It was a great show, the greatest show on earth, I reckon. I wanted to go and see it, hut I dident g, : I tried to get in on the ground floor for my 8elftand wife, bit I-couldent, aaid as I dident have money enousrh for two I concluded to stay at home. That' t i He made the tnbe of an old organ pipe, and got a spectacle-maker to grind him a concave glass for one end and a con vex glass for the other, and then to his surprise and delight he saw stars, more stars, new stars. He improved the tel escope until it magnified thirty times, and he saw he moons of Jupiter. When he announced his discoveries, the wise men said he was a crank, a fanatic, a fool. They said that any star or planet that could not be seen with the naked eye was not intended to be seen, and it was sacrilege to pry into the mysteries of God. They said there eouldent be but seven planets for there were but seven days in the week, and seven metals, and seven holes in a man's head. They kept that poor man under watch, and persecuted him to such an extent that he lost his sight, and when John Milton came to visit him there I were two blind men together conversing earnestly and secretly about the uni i versej the solar system, and the'won i derful works of the creator. There was a scene for painter Milton and Galileo i each soaring in realms of thought far -' above the conception of mankind, and ; njomiortmg' each other In their ahli. ; Itions. But in his last days Galileo tri umphed over all his enemies, and esta. b lished his wonjlerful discoveries, ile lived to reap some rewarda, and although blind and deaf, he was visited by the rnost noted men of the civilized world. - IJ ust think what martyrdom the truth has to suffer before it is established. And the king said unto his servants "what honor and dignity hath been done unto Mordecai for this V' And they said "nothing has been done." ' That is the way of the world still. , The benefactors of mankind are soon I tforirotten. Morse and Cyrus Field and 1 blaury and Crawford Long and Elias Howe are passing out of mind and men tion. The great heroes of war, the men 'of blood, get fame and a name, but jihose men who have done most for mankind in the arts of peace get but a pmall record in the annals of history. Let our boys and girls read more biogra phy of the great and good men who have passed away. It is as interesting ias a romance. It beats baseball and bicycles. I asked a young lady not long ago who composed that beautiful music she was playing and she said "Beetho yen." "Who was he?" said I. "What nationality ?" I was sorry that 1 asked the question, for she didn't know. The children should be encouraged to read about somebody every, day or night. Fill the mind with useful knowledge and it will be a comfort when old age comes. ' KILL Alii. WILL THEY AGREE On the Sherman Law Repeal Bill, " or a Compromise, HOMESPUN FOR CLOTHING. .loyalty conjugal loyalty. There was j another reason. , I heard a man talking ; about another man and he said: "Yes, j dogon him, he ean go to Chicago and take his wife, but he can't pay me that grocery bill he's been owing me for six months."" I owe a few of these darn little just debts myself, and I dident want to be talked about, so it's all right. It's an awful time to be sending money out of the country anyhow and getting -nothing hack but pleasure. It's well enough to celebrate Columbus and make a great display, but the times are unfortunate and the great UnitedStates senate won't do anything j but draw their pay, and everything is demoralized. I wish now we had let! Demand Mr.- Columbus alone. "Lead us not into temptation," is a good prayer. i there had been no fair nobody would have wanted to go and our money would have been kept at home. Co lumbus wasent such a wonderful man nohow. He dident mean to discover America, and he dident know he had Nerve Tonic Blood Builder 30c. Mr box for 82.50. Bend for descriptive pamphlet. WILLIAMS MEDICINE CO., Schenectady, N.Y. and Brockyiiie Onfr he rt have vou ''Out to the stable a drawing ksson. hm' to draw a v(!oi been, Tommy?" giving my goat I tcached him lliae is-no better medicine for !;imilv use than Aver's Cathartic Pills Uieir sutr-co.itin makes them easy even : agreeable 'to take, and as ihey cor.taiano calomel or other in jurious drug, they are t perfectly safe patients of any age. - To stop a chimney from burning- ? it-is desired to extinguish the fire 'n a chimney which has been lighted bv a fire in the fire-place, shut all the ors of the apartment, so as to pre v.cnt any current of air up the chim- "4', then throw a few handfuls of wrnmon fine salt upon the fire. The Philosophy ot this is that in-the pro cs of burning the salt muriatic acid gas is evolved which is a prompt -ex-uisher oi fire. discovered a new continent when he landed. He was on the make. He, stole Indians and carried them away and' sold them.; History does not make him a great man or a good man, but he was an enterprising navigator and was a success, that's all. I would rather have been Galileo than Columbus. He diseovered'a far bigger thing and. did it on purpose, It was not an accident. . He discovered the universe, the sofar system,' and' declared it to mankind. My admiration for him is profound, and I wish the schoolboys and girls to read about him and think about him. it was just 300 years ago this month that he convinced himself that the sun did not go around the earth, but the earth went around the sun. 1 What a stupendous assertion for any man to make! Just think of it! For thousands of years everybody had seen the sun to rise and set and rise again every twenty-four hours, and noboiy doubted or suspected but what it weht around the earth and that the earth was stationary. It does look that way, doesent it ? No wonder everybody believed iL Joshua believed it when he commanded the sun to stand still on Gideon. Solomon be lieved it, and so did all the astronomers of Egypt and of Greece- and Rome. So did Shakespear and Bacon and the wise men of England. How could any man dare to say that the earth went around the sun, making a circuit of 200,000,000 miles in a year and get back to'the same identical spot from whence it started ? Columbus dident do anything or know anything to be compared to it. Galileo upset and destroyed the theory of ages, and he challenged the astrono mers and the mathematicians of the world to listen to him and to come and examine his proofs. That was only three hundred years ago. Just think how long the world had 'slept in utter ignorance of the grandest thing the hu- 1 man mind can contemplate the solar system. We sbouh have celebrated Gali- 1 leo some way this very year. Columbus ; discovered a continent; but dident : know it. Galileo discovered a universe ; and did know it. Copernicus had in a Material from Canada In Ureat Among Men of Fashion. Kough, picturesque material 01 a light gray or creamy color and coarse as a towel is occasionally seen in the streets of New York, worn by men 01 fashion during the hot weather, ant usually all three pieces of the suit art worn together. Many people wonde. where this cloth comes irom, says th. World, for it is not to be found in an;, of the tailor shops and is, never seen i: ready -made clothing. The material is Canadian homespun. I 'It is not the homespun which is made in the steam mills, but is the real arti cle, and it is made on hand looms by the inhabitants of Canada during the long winter here. No two pieces .are ever alike, and -it is impossible to "match it." This cloth is admirably suited for hot weather. Its rough coat makes it look thick and heavy, but it ;is loosely woven and the wind blows through it. Then, again, it can be thrown into a tub and washed. This cloth comes in all varieties of gray and contains do dye. ' The habitant saves the fleeces of his sheep, one or two of which are likely to be black. He mixes the black wih the white wool, and if he has no black sheep his homespun will be all white. The French Canadian farmer wears this homespun himself. It is so cheap in Canada and so universally worn by the poorer classes there that a gentlj inan from Three Rivers says: "Nobody making any pretension of fashion or style in Canada would wear the homo spun of the country, which, like blue jeans in some parts of the west, is re garded as the 'mark of the country roan. Yet it is an excellent, honest, serviceable and handsome material. I have seen it in fashionable tailor shops of London, where it is sold for a high price on its merits. It has an air of picturesque distinction pos sessed by no other material for men's clothes." ' Who has ever seen American home spun? That, too, never gets into the New York market. The homespun made by the farmers and farmers' "wives of Maine i3 a handsome, closely woven brown material, stained with butternut juice. In the mountains of West Virginia also strong, serviceable material is made and worn by the poor whites." Most of the Scotch homespuns are make in steam mill's, as are many of the Irish. From a commer cial standpoint they are better cloths than those made by hand, but they lack the individuality of the latter, and are not so artistic. t AS THEY DO 05 W0MA5 SUFFRAGE ? BotU 8idee Unwilling to Yield Some Lively Spata In Both Bouses The Fight is Now on Changing the Bales Clotnre Is Demanded. the : iiismieil by SicroI'ulH. sad storv of manv lives made jeraUe through nor iault of their n Scrolula is more especially aa any other a hereditary disease, fortius sirnole reason: Arising rm impure and insufficient blood, k Pase locates itself in the lym t: !cf which aie composed of white v-es ; there is a period of foetal i t tl Uv . - . ," n the whole bod rte tissues iy consists bw tissues, and therefore the un p child is especially susceptible to r'.l a,rea,!tl disease. 'But here is a of I The American Male. i The American mule is in danger of suffering from discrimination in favor I of the pauper-bred animal of South I France.- For years the French West i Indies have been large buyers of Ameri- can mules, and the trade has been im portant enough to make the French men anxious to capture it. Let ' tcrs received by shippers from their : correspondents in - the islands say that the writers understand that the French government is to give a bounty for shipments of mules to .the r?v n o 13TPU a 1 3 a i wmia way aeciareu me uir hJS- , colonics the amount beimr bia- enousrh tern some fifty years before, but he died j maUe the shutting off of importa without converts, and his theory died j tions frQm this country extremely W1LI1 null. liVCU irauicu b.ck in a nccicu j for seven years. He was afraid of the i pope: and after he did announce it he a the b! ir y- Ult- scrofula whether heredi ty (,T HCOmrrH Tt Urvr'o- Qor. which -by its powerful effect 00(i (JVrif1 -ill tftr-a tf tVtct ' and gives to the .vital fluid fp-J" and color of health. If you c,gc to take Hood's" Sarsaparilla ' n take any substitute. Su'ts at half price at Young Bros. was put in prison and kept in a dungeon until his health broke down, and his wife did like Jobe's wife. She begged him to recant and say he had lied, and he did it. It was a memorable night the scene of that recantation. The great philosopher down on his knees before the pope, and in the presence of cardinals and priests and learned men, swearing with uplifted hands that the earth did not go around the sun, but the sun went around the earth every day.- But as he rose up and retired from the pope's presence he whispered to a friend, "I have recanted and ab jured only to save my life. The earth does revolve on its axis and around the sun." Then for seven years he had to go before the priest three times a week and recite the seven penitential psalms as am 1 atonement for his heresy. The pope and the priesthood declared his new theory to be heresy' because it con tradicted the Bible. Galileo had made him a telcSCODe Ihe nst one ever made. probable. ' About one thousand mules are shipped to the French islands an nually. ' - Hoped to Sew Him Often. Creditor (determinedly) I shall call every week until you pay this ' ac jount,' sir. Debtor (blandly) Then, sir, there jeems every probability of our acquaint anceship ripening into friendship. Boston Globe, " . ., October 18. The taking up of the silver purchase repeal bill was delayed by action on the house joint resolution as to the suffrage at the first munici pal elections in Oklahoma territory. It was amended .bya proposition that no one shall be authorized to vote or hold offlee who is not a citizen of the United States. An amendment to strike out the word "male," so as to allow the right of suffrage to women, was voted down yeas, 9; nays, 40. Mr. Manderson gave notice of an amendment to rule 5, providing that on any roll-call, exeept one to determ ine the presence of a quorum, senators present shall be counted, and that the result of such a vote shall be binding. even 11 a quorum man 1 voie, 11 we i result showed a quorum present. , Mr. Lodge, called up the amendment to the mles he offered Saturday that no senator shall read a written or printed speech. He made a strong ap peal to the senate to reform the rules. Mr. Voorhees moved to refer the amendment to the committee on rules, but yielded to Mr. Vest to debate Mr. Lodge's proposition. Before the sub ject was disposed of the morning hour expired. The silver bill was taken up, and Mr. Jones, of Nevada, continued the speech he began Saturday. The house resumed the consideration of the McCreary bill to amend the Geary law. The question was then upon the final passage of the bill and on a standing vote there were 167 in the affirmative and. 92 negatives. Octobeb 19. Immediately after the journal was read in the senate Dolph animadverted upon senators not vot ing when present and said if it oc curred again and the vice-president did not count the members not voting he (Dolph) should move . to have them counted. Butler, - replying, said if Dolph attempted to saddle arbitrary rules on his equals he would meet with opposition from quarters where least expected and the present session would extend to an extraordinary limit. After some discussion between Faulkner and Hoar, Hill referred to a decision of the United States supreme court sustaining 'the right , of the speaker of the bouse to "count a quo rum and thought the decision good enough for the senate. The senate, he said, was clinging to old traditions that were without sense and justice. There is nothing in the rules regard iug how to determine a quorum when senators were present and refused to answer to their names. On this poirlt the senate should proceed according to general parliamentary law. Mor gan said he was not surprised to hear Senator Hill uphold the revolutionary rulings of Speaker Beed because the senator had been unfortunate in dem ocratic precedent, whose course in the New York legislature had served as an example for the republican speaker. In the course of the debate Morgan and Washburn got into a personal controversy, and Morgan turning to his opponent said, "1 am responsible for every word I say here in this cham ber or out of it. Do you understand that?' At another point Morgan said "I intend before this debate is over to move to strike out the enacting clause of the pending biil and insert one re pealing the entire Sherman law. I will see where you repealists then stand." "Will you vote for it?" asked Cullom. ''Certainly," replied Morgan, "I'm heartily in favor of repealing it entirely." . October 20. The pending question being Dolph's motion to correct Mon day's journal, "Morgan resumed the floor. Iieferring to the supreme court's decision upholding speaker Heed's counting a quorum, . he said the house had rules and precedent for Reed's. ac tion, while the senate had not. It was not possible lor the senate to take a similar course without beingr uncon stitutional. He undertook to show that in several instances the supreme court, ; according to public belief, had been influenced by political exigencies. He scouted the idea that it was the duty of a senator to follow the decision of the supreme court as to his action on legislation. Such action would be subversive of senatorial - dignity, of honor and conscience. He claimed that the minority only wished to have the present action postponed until the people could be heard from at the polls. Morgan then paid his respects to Hill for remarking upon Morgan's connec tion , with the confederacy. He said the south had not seceded because it objected to the constitution of the United States, and when It found it could not get its desire it came back to the house of its fathers. Other demo crats had fought on the Union side and never sneered at southerners for sit-i ting with democracy. "Honest sol diers who fought me in the war, ex claimed Morgan, "never sneer; it is only those who tstaid a home, hired substitutes or pleaded the baby act. who endeavor to twit me with the fact that I fought for the confederacy.' Then Mr. Dolph's motion was tabled by a vote of 45 to 3. October 20. A report from the sec retary of the treasury as to the finan cial aspect of the government was read in the senate. The statement shows total expendi tures for the first quarter amounting to $1,736,357 in excess of the estimate. or at the rate of $20,836,503 for the year over the estimates ; and suppos ing the receipts and expenditures con tinue as for the first three months. would show an excess of expenditures over actual receipts of $76,318,838. Secretary Carlisle attributes the" fall An Editor's Opinion of I'oiiti's Extract. "Your medicine is first-class. . We would not be without it in the house (yellow label, buff, wrapper, name j blown in the glass) for fifty dollars a 1 year. Aurora, - III., Express and ! Herald. Ing off in the revenues to the existing financial uncertainty. - Mr. Stewart finished his speech with in two hours. He had little to say about? the rules, except to declare at the close of his speech that the attempt to geti the vice-president to disgrace himself ' and make himself infamous was outrageous, and that the vice-president would not thus lay his hands on the constitution and laws of his coun try, but would administer the rules and protect the minority. October 21. Voorhees gave, notice; of an amendment to the rules. Said; it was- substantially" the amendment proposed by Hill with some additions.: ft provides whenever , any bill or resor lution pending as unfinished business find been debated thirty days any sen- ator may at any time move to fix the time for a vote. Such motion is no1J amendable or debatable and is to be put immediately and if passed the vote' on bill or resolution and all pending amendments shall be had at date, fixed in. the original motion without.1 debate or amendment except by unani mous consent, while a motion to fix a date for a vote and also at a time fixed by the senate for a vote no motion of any kind to be entertained until bill or resolution is finally voted upon. No agreement has yet been reached regarding a compromise upon the silver repeal bill. The executive session of the senate today was devoted wholly to the con sideration of nominations and there were about a hundred taken up and passed upon. The only one of them which created more than passing notice Was that of Mr. Van Allen ta represent this government at Rome. The vote on the confirmation was, yeas, 39; nays, 23. . October 23. Details of the forth coming compromise on the silver ques tion have been practically agreed up pn, and a few moments before 1 o'clock this afternoon democrhtie senators be gan pledging themselves in writing to abide by it. ' , - The compromise agreed upon pro vides that the repeal of the purchas ing clause of the Sherman act shall take effect October 1, 1894, and that? the bond question shall be eliminated entirely. All silver bullion now in the treasury, and all that may be pur chased up to the time the repeal goes into effect, together with seinorage, is to he coined save the amount neces sary to redeem the outstanding silver certificates. All greenbacks and treas ury notes under 10 dollars in value shall be retired, and silver certificates or coined silver dollars shall take their place. As soon as the conference committee reached this conclusion, senators on the democratic side were sent for, and there was a steady stream of senators wending their way to the committee room Mr. Voorhees, in charge of tho bill, having been previously, and for some time closeted with the com mittee. A paper was drawn up. addressed to Mr. Voorhees, in which the senators . pledged themselves. that if he would move to amend his bill in accordance with the outlines given above, they would, support it and then vote for the bill as amended. The house has adopted an amend ment to the printing bill providing for the publication of 75,000 copies of the famous horse book issued by the agri cultural department. CLNERAL SOUTHERN KEW$. Wall Street Bankers SZtt r - ' still offering ONE DOLLAR AND TWENTY-FIVE CENT SHOES FOR ONE SILVER DOLLAR. miTTA HATT IT TT I mn t? 'tm. o-,- vt5 THE FIRST ON RECORD. For distressing oppression and full- ln the stomach take Mmmon s Liver Regulator. , After Getting Possession of the Negro the Mob"Voted Not to Xyneh Him. Birmingham, Ala., October 23. The lynching of John Cole was prevented last night at Cuba station in Sumpter county, in a rather peculiar manner. Day before yesterday he assaulted a young lady near that place and was captured yesterday and was identified by the young woman. The infuriated mob put a rope around the negro's neck and proceeded to the woods to hang him up. When they had reached the outer edge of the - town one of the party called a halt and made an appeal to the crowd against lynching. He oc cupied a stump for about ten minutes in his speech to the mob. It was finally decided to settle the matter by a vote. Thirty-seven stood on one side of the road against lynching and on the other side ' stood twenty-five, who said lynch. The rope was re moved from i- the negro's neck and he was sent to the county jail at Livings ton. - - A Big Whisky Blaze. Lancaster, Pa., October 19. The bonded warehouses in this city of Ja cob F. Shaffer were totally destroyed by fire last night with their contents, consisting of over 1,300 barrels of whis ky. The distillery near by was also on fire, but the flames were extin guished before much damage was done. The buildings were set on fire. In the distillery the incendiary placed hay in and around the vats and saturated it with kerosene-. . The bung, was-also knocked out of a barrel of spirits, which ran over the floor. The loss is 880,000; insurance $58,000. " Stabbed Hla Wife to Death. ' Riverside, Caxa., October 23. A double tragedy occurred here at noon today. W. E. Wesley, a laborer, who has '..-been estranged from his wife, forced an entrance to the house where she was living and stabbed her to death. The woman was alone. Wes ley then returned - to his lodgings in the Park hotel and blew the top of his head off. Wesley was a hard working, respectable man. His wife, who for merly lived in San Francisco, recently left him, and a few days ago was in police court charged with disorderly conduct. ness - Potato Pies 4" eggs, 1 cup of but ter, 1 cup of milk, 2' cups of sugar, 4 common size potatoes, flavor to suit taste. , , ' . Mrs. Oldsaw "The world moves!" Mr; Oldsaw "What's the trouble, don't it pay the rent?" Puck. WO BOGUS testimonials, no bo gus Doctors letters used to sell HOOD'S Sarsaparilla. . Every one of its advertisements is absolutely true. ' Gins Shut Down in Cherokee. ' . ,Wood8TockV Ga., - October 23. Re ports from the western portion of this, Cherokee;, county, say- the gin ners in that locality have been noti fied by the white caps .under penalty of death not to move a wheel until cotton goes up to 10 cents. The notice further reads that if any farmer at tempts to have his cotton . ginned he will suffer the same fate as the owners of the gin. Consequently three gin shut down today. - . Memphis, Tens., October 21. The strike on the Memphis and Charleston railroad has been settled, both sides making concessions. All the old men will be. taken back. Daixas, Texas, October 21. A Pull man sleeping car on the Texas Pacific railway was raided by robbers last night. J. T. Dargan. of Dallas, lost $10,000 during the raid?. - i Savannah, Ga., October 20. The Alliance cotton warehouse at Bastman burned this morning at 4 o'clock with 3,000 bales of cotton. The ' loss is about $12,000, with $1,500 insurance. Port Rotal, S. C, October i6. The barge "Whocoken," of Cleveland, was foundered during the storm. The ves sel was loaded with coal and bound down. Only three persons were saved and fourteen were lost.- 1 y Washington, Ga., October lsr-Rev. Dr. H. S. Bradley, pastor of the Meth odist church here, died of peritonitis, after a short Illness. He was one of the ablest and most popular members of the North Georgia conference. 1 i Greenwood, S. C, October 17. The Greenwood cotton seed oil mill lost their cotton ginnery by fire today. The loss is about $7,000; insurance $2,800. The oil mill was saved after a desperate struggle with the flamesl, i Nashville, Tenn , October 18. Through train service and sleeping car lines on the Louisville ' and Nash ville, which were discontinued because the gulf storms of October 1st and 2d, were resumed today, and are'running as usuaL Montgomery, Ala., - October 18. Wright Mills, a leading farmer of Conecuh county, was today convicted in the circuit court atv- Evergreen of sending a challenge to fight a duel and the jury fixed punishment at two years in the ppnitentiary. - ' Opelika Ala., October 17. A gin belonging to Colonel R. J. Trammel" was burned Saturday morning at Tuckersburg, Chambers county. Twenty-five bales of cotton and fc.OOO bushels of cotton seed were destroyed. The total loss runs up to $3,000. No insurance. - Louisville, Kt., October 18. Phil Wise, a negro, is in - danger of being lynched at Bardstown. He brutally assaulted a little girl named Hall. The jail authorities have doubled the guard to protect the prisoner. The outrage has aroused the community to a state of frenzy. Abbeville S. G, October 21. A boiler exploded todaybn Major Arthur Parker's place about ten miles from Abbeville, killing one negro twenty two years old, named Jim Perrin. The engine ran 300 yards after the boiler blew up. The engine was used for ginning cotton. Two other menvvere wounded. ' Houston, Tex., October 18. Reports from eastern Texas say that fifteen miles of pine timber, reaching from Montgomery county toward the Sabine riveY, are a seething mass of flames. The whole country is dry, and unless rain falls, it is feared that the loss to the jellow pine section of Texas will run into the millions. Charleston, S. C., October 18. The British steamships Glenlvy and Dart more which sailed from this port yes terdav. the first named for Bremen- and the other for Liverpool, carried 17,250 bales of cotton. The Glenlvy took, 9,137 bales and the Dartmore 8,113 bales. These are the largest cargoes ever shipped from this port. Charleston, S. C, October 21. The raiding of the state dispensary consta bles has been resumed in this city The saloon of Parsarello on Market street and the grocery store of John Schutz. on Beaufain street, were each visited. Bar fixtures and all drinka bles found in both places were taken to the county jau. Savannah, Ga., October 18. B. F. Smith, charged with embezzling $1,700 from the Brush Electric Light Compa ny last May, was last night brought back to Savannah from Gilmer, Texas, where he was captured by sheriff Wil- liford, of Upsh aw county. Smith ad mitted taking part of the money, but says he did not take all that was charged acrainst him. He has a wife and child. . - , Birmingham, Ala., October 21. The latest posting of gins took place night before last in Lawrence county. Two gins in that county have been burned in the, last three days, entailing a loss of over $9,000. The citizens are arm ing themselves, and say they have had enough, and swear that white cappers will be run down and killed. The sit uation is anything but serene. Sev eral gins have been posted in Perry county. Summkrviixe, Ga., " October 20. Early this morning a mob of about 100 men, armed with Winchesters, went to the jail here, and, under pretext of having a prisoner, overpowered the jailer and tool out "Bill Richardson and Tim Dickson, the negroes who killed James .Hall and shot Marshal Murphy at the same time. The negroes' bodies have not been found, but there is no doubt that they were lynched. Palestine, Tex., October 20. Peyton. Graves, a grocery merchant, entered Fox & Lucas's store, where Nat Black shear was employed, and with some re marks, which no one overheard, both men began shooting. Graves fired four shots, when his pistol hung fire and would not discharge. Blackshear emptied his pistol when Graves walked out of the building down the sidewalk a few feet and felL He was carried home, and died as they were entering the gate. Memphis, Tenn., October .,18. Bill Wade, a notorious desperado, rode in to the town of Webb, Miss., this after noon, . armed with a Winchester, a brace of revolvers and a butcher knife, lie soon cleared the streets with the exception of J. M. Evans, a quiet citi zen, who was sitting in front of his store. Wade opened fire on Evans, but the latter refused to be bluffed and returned the fire with such unerring aim that when the smoke cleared away . Wade was found with six bullet holes through his heart. . Evans was seri ously, but not fatally wounded. . . J nooooon 0gooooogo o o gooooog cgccccccc: a . a ': - G Cgccccc:'cg -cccccggc 3 2; sj i 3 00000 " ogooooqgo o o o o o - - o 0-00 OO o 00 - oou td Cd C3 ds.te C2 Cd C3 KCdOdtdtdCdtdtatd w . w -. ' - ta And will guarantee to always give you ONE DOLLAR AND TWNETY FIVE CENTS worth of goods in gold for the One Depreciated Silver Dotlar. You' lew! It Wait For a Better Selection or Lower Prices! " ' - . - . never come. To-day Cd td -Cd td Cd Cd td a td Cd cd cd Cd a td td tc D3 CJ td td td td td ?d prj ?d prj jrj rj rj 7$ ?a ?a ja ?a jo jo ; - & . 73 : ?d 7$717$' 771 ogO0C0Gg0 o .0 gooooog8 - 0000.0 Ul w in in . in '. in ' "JViWinV mm in rn m m m m m mw m m m m Tn m m The time will is your time. .Our Stock' has been selected with the Utmost euro rornrr. nizing the' demands of. our patrons in Va riety, quality and price and our deter mination for LOW PRICES. Young's Line of Nobby Hats are all the rage. Tyf-0ur linc f Nohby Suits was S never so complete, and com prises all of the latest Styles and Shadesr At YOUNG'S. : ggKn Domestic Sewing Ma chine Company having got into trooble, we are enabled to offer one hundred of their best Machines at $28.50 cash -just half price. This offer holds good for ten days. At YOUNG'S. Dress Goods we have the Largest cheanest and Rt selected stock in Eastern Carolina. Our sales of over one thousand 'dollars 'last week shows that our customers know a good tinner. . our ..especial attention is called to our lare stock of Shoes at New York - cost. T.vo thous and pairs that must be sold. You know we carry nothing but the best goods Ziegler's, Parson's, Kirkham's Faust's and, Burt & Packard's. , Young Brothers. 1 noticed your breakfast P Mrs. Rasper husband gwiriff a .'"tramp this morning." "Oh, yes he is very tenderhearted; he cant even bear to start a lire on a i a substitute for c)Id winter morning. Uttierviiijr I'raiKr. y We desire to say to our citizens, that for years we have been sclliiig Dr. King's New Discovery for Con sumption, Dr. King's New Lite I'ills, Bucklen's Arnica Salve and Electric Bitters, and have never handled remedies that sell as well, or that have given such universal satisfaction. We do not hesitate to guarantee them every time, and we stand ready to refund the purchase price, if satis factory results do not follow" their use. These remedies have won tlie'r great popularity purely on their merits. For sale by all druggists, ? ATK.vr h,;i;S. T;iS. Storv. nf- Kansas City; still --declares that, he can',' make-" artificial eggs. He says that his greatest trouble is in securing tne white of the hen's egg, but that he has conquered at last and "when his machinery is ready to begin business, he will put fresh t'ggs " the markeLat a. cost of three cents per doz. "Poor Jack ! he never could spell and it ruined him." - "How?" "lie wrote' a verse to an heiress he was in love with, and he wrote honey for bonny." . s the sinner ;uul trouble It troubl saint; It's a troublesome complaint, Don't think it incurable; ain't. s the trying and nasty I tell you it Sure, efficient, easy Hood's Pills. They should be in every traveler's grip and every family medicine chest 25 cents a box. ; "Truth is tough. " It will not break like a bubble at a touch ; nay, you may kick it about all day like a foot ball, and it will be round and full at evening." Holmes. If yoii are melancholy or down w ith the blues you need Simmons Liver Regulator. you indicted a man's .skull with Lawyer "Weren't once for breaking an axe handle?" - ( Witness "I wasn't convicted, though. My ' lawyer proved that as the stick had never been in an axe it wasn't an axe handle-" . Excuse the grammar: it's the truth I'm after, whether gramattcally or un'gramaticaliy told. The truth is that catarrh can be cured. The pro prietors of Dr. Safe's Catarrh Rem edy offer $500 for . an incurable case of Catarrh in the Head. The Symptoms ok Catarrh. I Icadachc, obstruction of nose, dis charges falling into the throat, some times profuse, watery and acrtd, at others, thick, tenacious, niucoup, purulent, bloody, putrid and offen sive ; eyes weak, ringing in the ears, deafness ; offensive breath, smell and taste impaired, and general debility. Only a few of these symptoms likely to be present at once. , Dr. Sage's Remedy cures the worst cases. Only 50 cents. Sold by druggists, everywhere. i eacner . vv nat is the meaning of one twenty-fifth ?" Little boy "I don't remember." Teacher :"If you had twenty-five children visiting you and only' one apple for them, what would you do?" Little boy -"I'd wait till they all went'horne and then. eat it myself." "Woman's SuflVr-ag-e" was what a writty woman called that period of life which all middle aged pass through, and through which so many think they must suffer that Nature intended it so. The same lady added ; "It you don't believe in 'woman's suffer-age,' there is one bal lot" which will effectually defeat it Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription." This is true, not only at the period of middle life, but at all ages when wo men suffer from uterine diseases, painful irregularities, inflamation, ul ceration or prolapsus, the "Favorite Prescription" so strengthens the weak organs and enriches the blood, that years of health and enjoyment are added to life. , t - ' .3 Cm-ed&indigcsthri OmiimUs heedy dose oroacs mficacy PRICE 50 CENTS PER BOTTLE. BOOK OF mABU INFORMATION FREE. FOR SALE BY DRUGGISTS. ni'prrnnt at hnlf nrirf at Vnitnor's .... I - c
The Wilson Advance (Wilson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 26, 1893, edition 1
1
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