Advanced' on $I.OO A YEAR CASH IN. ADVANCE. LET ALL THE ENDS THOU AIM ST ATBE THY COUNTRY'S, THY GOL S, AND JTRUTh's." THE BEST ADVERTISING" MEDIUM . VOLUME XXIV. WILSON, WILSON COUNTY, N. C, MARCH 22, 1894. NUMBER 12, GOOD RESOLUTIONS FOR 1894. SiioD Econom: You cannot shop economi cally at stores where one him-j ered per cent, profit are put on goods you need in every daylife it is impossible. To shop economically, you must single out the merchant who sells goods for Cash and Cash Only, and who by so doing can af ford to undersell his "Credit vstptn" competitor to the! tune of from twenty-five to ''hirty X: : . the l havt ro nl. book three and a third per Walk hand in hand with -t t . .1 . ,t . r, , I in:K.aaaL,iuu.yuu- reliant and you c - j r-. .1 . 1 .it me Dnp-ni 1 1 . ' uu r : and wealth. I ;Hn inci chant keeper's salary lias no to pay, no collector to pull your door L-nrh off no nrinter's bill for j. invw stacks of printed bill heads. All these expenses, not to mention the losses by bad debts, are saved to the cash man." but the credit man must I add on so much to his profits to cover these necessaries, and You Pay for It. Did you ever Jhink of this ? We admit its "so conven ient to have it charged," but kind friends, this "conven ience comes mighty high to you. Our low prices and cash system have ' made the Cash Racket Stores a by-word in every house in Wilson and the adjacent counties. We shall strive to make 1894 the-ban-ner year of all its predecessors by giving our patrons unprec dented bargains. Our change less motto in- Underbuy and Undersell. That's our secret. Start to-day and shop econom ically, we can help you doit. Tiia Gasli Racket Stores, J. M. LEATH, Manager. Nash and Goldsboro Streets, WILSON, N. C. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. EV BOARDING HOUSE. MRS. DR. KING e Has returned to Wilson and opened a boarding house at her residence on South Cor.' Green & Pine Sts. Board both Permanent and Transient. 2-I-Jt. Y F. PRICE, Surveyor and Civil Englnser. WILSON, - - N. C. j. yc-ru;;' experience. Office next Dr. Albert Anderson. to J:i K. Vixl,i:.t. V.'. II. Yarlmrough, Jr. WOODARL) & YARBOROUGH, A it -r n e vs-r.l-Lav, Wilson, ' - - N. C. ' U practice, iu the courts of Wilson, Nash, Green, Edgecombe and abjein inji counties. N. B. Associated in Civil practice only. " J. R. UZZELL, Attorney at Law. WILSON, - - N. C. Practices' wherever services are re quired. iF"All business will receive prompt Attention. Oflice in Well's Building. j J G. CONNOR, Attorney at Lav, WILSON, - - N.C. OITice Branch & Co's. Bank Building. DR.' E. K. WRIGHT, Surgeon Dentist, WrILSON, N. C. Having permanently located in Wil on, I offer my professional services to he public. IE3F"Ofhce in Central Hotel Building. GEO. M. LINDSAY, Attorney at Law, SNOW HILL, N. C. Circuit: Wilson, Green Wayne and Johnston Counties. Wanted, 10,000 bushels cotton seed. Young Bros. A big line of rubber goods just re ceived at Young Bros. - ' Bed sheets and mattresses at Young's. Cotton seed hulls for cows. Young Bros. Tarboro stockings for children, the best in the world at Young's. Ladies' hats, latest stvles at Young's. See Young's line of Knaby. hats. Bargains in pant goods at Young's. ipyofr t:ack Acnr.s, JJ. you rrc all worn cut, rt-aliy good for Eoth- . in?, it is Ki.:icr:J dfbilitv. Try , rt .,1R "fx 1 H X MtlTTEltS. " wiu cure you, cl anse yr.-r liver, and give a good uiipctiic The Old Friend And- the best friend, that never fails you, is Simmons Liver Eegu lator, (the Red Z) that's -what you hear at the mention of this excellent Liver medicine, and people should not be persuaded that anything else will do. "It is the King of Liver Medi cines ; is better than pills, and takes the place of Quinine and i iJuottihi- it. jinTS nirpmra nn T.n -7 j- j . r . r . gives new Me to the whole sys- - . J tern. . This is the medicine you . want. Sold by all Druggists in Liquid, or in Powder to be taken dry or made into a tea. WETERt PACKAGE-SI Has the Z Stamp In red on wrapper. J. II. ZEIUN & CO., Philadelphia, Pa. GOLD AND SILVER. Gold Is Not Universal Money, as is Popu larly Supposed. "It is little wonder," said a well known English traveler," who was in the Senate gallery" yesterday during the delivery of Mr. Vivas' speech, "that the public is puzzled as.to cur rency theories when Senators pay so little regard to the facts." Senator Vilas had just declared that gold was everywhere "money," when Senator Teller said:. "No; in India, for example, it is not valuable for money any more than diamonds are." The Wisconsin Senator re- plied : "Always these silver advo- cates have to ride off to some coun- try where we are in the dark as to the facts." " The English visitor said that not only was eold coin not money in India and the East, but - he said : "Yoij ceold not get a breakfast for a sovereign in many of the out of-the- way towns in British India. And further, in the' Eastern provinces oi Russia the peasantry will not even take a Russian gold coin except at actual discount, notwithstanding that gold coin is quoted at 40 per cent. premium to-day over the paper rou ble. And if I were asked what coin circulated at par over the largest area in the world, I should say the Mexican silver dollar. Indeed,.! don't know civilized or any country, whether . - I avage, except part 01 j Africa, where it is not convertible at its par. In Ceylon it is current money ; in the entire Malay Peninsu la it is the currency unit of China ; any bank and any house in Europe will take it. Why is it so popular ; why has it superseded throughout all China the trade dollar of France and the unitea btatesr. 1 can give no other reason than this one that it is legal tender at jts home and the Mexican mints are open to coin it in unlimited amounts. "If I may take Senator Vilas as a representati veof gold mono - m etallism , then I think Sir George Chesney's recent statement is justified in your country, also that the world is divi ded into two schools, the bi-metallists and the mono-metallists ; into those who understand the question and thqe who Post, 1 3th. 'don't." Washinoton Tennyson on Spring. We have the word of Alfred Ten- r ..... - ., nyson lor it tnat in tne spring tne young man's fancies lightly turn to thoughts of love. It is singular that the great laureate omitted to mention the fact that it is in the spring that a considerable portion of the human race turn to taking Hood's SarsaparT il!av Probably nothing but the difii- culty of finding a good rhyme for that invaluable remedy deterred him. Certain it is that the old-time domes tic remedies are generally discarded in favor of the standard blood puri fier, Hood's Sarsaparilla, which has attained the greatest popularity all over the country as the favorite Spring Medicine. ! It purifies the blood "and gives nerve, mental, bod ily, and digestive strength. He that hath a contented spirit hath riches, and he that addeth field to field addeth trouble to trouble. For Ien2th of days the. increase of j sorrow, and wealth pouring in at the : door driveth happiness out at the window. Sophocles. For billiousness and headache, Sim mons Liver Regulater is ; the best medicine the world ever saw. ' Now is the time to subscribe for the Advakce. , Sam Del Hiliuan. j In the thirties there lived in the ' town of Oxford, N. C, a di&tin-j guished lawyer by the name of Sam-) Juel Hilman. ; He was a man of gen-' Everett, of Indianapolis, at the Lin ' erous . impulses and genial nature, dell the other evening, "I had a'fove 'and -but for one most unfortunate ' affair which came very near bringing habit would have risen, perhaps, to the highest position possible in his . as it was I got a "scare- which I don't profession in this State. He was ' think I will ever forget. I was about sadly addicted to his cups at times, ! sixteen years old, and was, as I sup and the habit grew with age. There ' posed then, hopelessly in love with a is an interesting little incident con- i gid in our town, and nad reason to nected with him that has come down believe she was not indifferent to me. to the present time. - Mr. Yancey j We' had been . going: together for was an editor of the weekly newspa- j some time when I began to notice per called the Examiner. Mr. Hil- that a certain young fellow of the man met the editor one day and said, ' town seemed to follow me around a "1 wish to insert an advertisement Rood deal. I would meet him Uar in your next issue, as I propose to ,W every place I. went, and hcus to remove my office." A few days la-j eye me in a way I did not like. One ter, Mr. Yancey met him in front of Herndon's store, and said, -I shall ; go to press very soon, and if you de-1 sire to insert an advertisement I must! have it now." Mr. Hilman said, let us go. into the store and I will; write it." It must be added that the . lawvpr. like honest Tam in Rum's immortal poem, was ''o'er all the ills of life victorious." The paper ap peared that afternoon with the ad vertisement and read as follows: where he was 'to where he is, where he may be found " when . not else where." This, of course, afforded great amusement to the legal gentle men and Others of the town. It was in fact, the very best advertise ment he could have inserted There is in the Oxford court house a famous legal document which was actually drawn by Mr. Hilman when in one of his prolonged drunks. It was written in the porch of the resi- dence long occupied by the iate Mr, Augustine Landis. - The late Mr. Lunsford A. Paschall told us, when ne was himself quite an old man," that he acted "as the amanuensis of Mr, Hilman, -and that actually he would iail asleep in his chair, and af ter a protracted nap would wake up, j take a fresh drink of spirits, light his old pipe and i say, 'Lunsford where did I leave oft ?' I would read two or three of the last lines, whereupon he would take up the thread of his bil1 in equity, dictate, until he either fell asleep again or took another drink, which would be sure to bring about that result." Thus it was the document of very marked ability was written. II is an interesting fact that those two other very eminent law yers, the late oeorge L.. liadger, tr -t : ,, j xxr-11" t t iaciie pnnceps, ana vv iniamnenry ,1 I J J U.U II. iJ t- uuuca ocua- tors at some period of their life, were in Oxford. Mr. Haywood was an equity lawyer of the first rank, with possibly no rivals at that time in all orth Carolina. These two gentle men knowing ot the remarkable doc ument of the distinguished Hilman, fnd the extraordinary circumstances under which it was prepared, went into the Equity office in Oxford, and i sat down at the table and read it from beginning to end, and it was a very long document. They were greatly impressed jvith its exceeding ability, especially in view of the lact that it was written in the midst of a debauch. Mr. Hilman removed to the Western part of the State after- warns wnpre nf ivpn manv vpans ; . 1 r 1 1 , , and we believe never abandoned his habit for drink. He was one of the three lawyers who figured in the fa mous poetical contest recorded in Wheeler's history between them and . H(lnr tj Anra Tl tUg Hilt A1V.U1 JT A-a A- WJ A 11V. ULLlVi two lawyers were Mr. Uues, and the I late Governor Swam. Wilminotnn " Messenger. j Cough and cold are the "danger I signals", which nature has provided to warn the unfortunate victim that the affection which is now confined to the head and chest may soon reach the lungs. To avoid such a calam j ity take Dr. . Bull's Cough Syrup I when you first catch cold. Tranners (to collector) I'm sorry I can't settle your account, but I've just had a tombstone put over my grand-mother s grave, and it leaves me a luue siioru . lIlAl- I d. - 1 Umce Boy (.interrupting; 1 here 2. man cfutside to see you, sir. Tranners Well, what does" he want? Office boy He wants to collect a bill for a tombstone. Brooklyn Life. The tolern Way. Commends itsell to the well-lormed, to ao pieasanuy ana enectuaiiy wnat was formerly done in the crudest the crudest manner and disagreeably as well. To cleanse the system and break up colds, headaches, and fevers without unpleasant after, effects, use the de lightful liquid laxative Syrup of Figs. lcnjcujr, A UMYV LOVK AFFAIR. It as n't Much of an Experience, Put It Almost Ended in Murder. ; , S "When I was a boy," said J. L. serious consequences' upon me; and day I went up to him and 'asked him why he acted m this way. He said : 'You are going With my girl, and I want you to quit it, or we will have trouble.' I had known the fellow by reputation for some time. He was regaraeo. as a preuy tougn customer about the town, and one who would not hesitate to take a mean advantage of an enemy. I did not speak to the young lady, however, as she assured me she had not even the slightest re spect for the fellow. I did not see anything more of my rival lor nearly a month, and thought he must have left townwhen one night Iwoke up and found that fellow sitting by the stove in myroom watching me. I was nearly paralyzed with fear. When I got the com mand of my voice I asked him what he was do ing in my room at that time of the night. He replied in a perfectly cool manner, 'I have been here over two hours, and came with the intention of killing you, but some how or other I can't make up my mind to do it, so will have to give it up.' With that he went to the window and escaped by means of a ladder he had placed against the house. I never saw him after that, but heard several years later that he bad been sentenced to the penitentiary lor horse stealing." St. Louis Globe Democrat. Mr. F. Sloan, 187 Portland-S Boston, Mass., gives it superlative praise. He writes : "I have used Salvation Oil for neuralgia, and find it superior to any liniment I have ever used. A New KxpgesiH. There is a negro preacher in Rich mond, Va., who has made himself famous with a sermon to prove that "the sun do move," based upon Joshua commanding it to stand still But it is not alone his very strong presentation ol that question that has made him famous.but he explains the miracles in. a way that is as interest mg as it is original. His exposition of the story ot Jonah and the whale is perhaps, the funniest ol them. He says: "Dat country war a seashoah place, an' de hotels dey was named aftah de tings ob de sea. Dah was de Sailor's Rest, de3lMariner's Re treat, de Sea Faring Man's Home, and a lot ob sich places, jest as yo' kin fin' 'em at Norfolk now. Among dese places was one called de Wrhale's Belly. Jonah come along, an he didn't have no scrip in his ' purse. He staid dar tree days, an . . . .. . . . when de landlady lound he didn t hab any money she spewed him out. It is gib to us to show us how when we don' treat a man right kase, he's pore we may be kickin' an angel unawars '"North Carolinian. See the World's Fair for Fifteen Cents. Upon receipt of your address and fifteen cents in postage stamps, we will mail you prepaid, oar Souvenir Portfolio of the World's Columbian Exposition. The regular price is fifty cents, but as we want you to have one we make the price nominal. You will find it a work of art and a thine to be prized. It contoins full j Daee v;ews Gf tne great buildings, ' with descriptions of same, and is exe- j cuted :n the highest style of art. If yGxJ are not satisfied with it after you ! get it, we will refund the stamps and s et you keep the book. Address, H. E. Bucklen & Co., Chicago, 111. All Kiods. Sing a song of January, sing a song June Icicles -Tnd briar roses ; set 'em to tune ; . j Hot er cold er wet er dry take yer j pick x weather, Must be satisfied in March ye git em all together. : - V Washington Star. You feel faint and weak in the stom ach no" appetite Liver Regulator. : Take Simmons Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. ABSOIIJirEIY FVBB Progress ot the Soutii. The value of improved imple ments, apparatus, and processes in the dairy and other' farm 'work is shown most conspicuously in the ad vance of butter-making in the South. Previously to the introduction of the deep ccld " setting of the milk in the closed tarks, and of the use of ice, there was very little butter made in the South r sale, and none of a fine quality for the best class of consum ers. But now there are fine dairies scattered everywhere, and in spite of the summer heat the butter-making goes on as well and a3 easily, and even ;more profitably than in the North. - There are advantages in the South that are not enjoyed by the North ern dairyman. These are the ample Winter pasturage, the great diversity of feeding crops, along with the mild winter weather, in which hand feed ing is reduced to a minimum or wholly done away with. There is not one day in the year south of the old Mason and Dixon line in which there is any difficulty met with in the w hole work of the dairy. And this is especially the case in that elevated mountain region ' in the South that extends from Virginia to Alabama, and is sixty miles in width or more. This region is from, 2.500 to 4,000 feet above sea level, above the in fluence of troublesome germs, has a fertile soil, myriads of cold sparkling springs, is productive 01 tne nnett grasses, has 80 per cent, ot its - sur face covered by the finest forests, in which cattle and "sheep find even richer pasture than in the verdant meadows, and it has an even climate, varying from a few degrees below freezing point in the few cold days of the winter, but never one day - in which snow will not melt in the day light hours, up to the rare maximum ot 8o at noon, in the midsummer, but with always agreeably cool nights. If the butter or cheese maker could have a climate made to order, he could not improve upon this for : his purpose, and the best land in the re gion may be had for . the interest yearly on the cost of land in the North. New York Times. All Free. Those who have used Dr. King's New Discovery know its value, and those who have not now have the op portunity to try it Free. Call on your Drug !st and get a trial botde free. Senc' your name and address to H. E. I icklen & Co., Chicago, and get a sample box oT Dr. King's New Life Pills free, a3 well as a copy of Guide to .Health and " Household Instructor, free. All of which is guaranteed to do you good and cost you nothing. : How He Settled It. Pinchcash (excitedly) What in thunder do you mean by publishing that obituary notice of me ? I ain't dead ; not by a long ways. . The Editor (calmly) Well ! weU! It does- look that way,, doesn't it? You see, I sent you more than twen ty letters asking you' to come in and pay something on the fourteen years subscription you owe. I didn't get any answer or see anything of you, and I thought sure you must be deacl. S'pose you settle, and I'll print a retraction free of charge. Thanks that's just the right change. Come in again. Fireside' Compan ion. ':.'- v'",-""' ;'":.--:; Don't lose time and make yourself worse with pills and oils. Take Sim mons Liver Regulator. " The Atlantic Coast Line have just bought, at Washington, N. C, a new .' steamer called the Aurora, which will be one of a line of steamers belong ing to the ; Styron Transportation Company, to run between Washing ton, N. C, and Eastern North Caro lina, bordering on the Pamlico Sound to everv noint in Hvde coun- of ,, , . j ty. When the arrangements are a complied two trains daily will run betwerthis city and Wrashington, N C Norfold Virginian. Furniture j Furniture, at Young's Men's htotfp.50 to $10.00. Young BrosV V ' , '. 4 0 Get your necVwear at YoungaY ' It will pay you to look at Young's stock, - - ' O W MIAMI II 4 TOM DIXON A PESSIMIST. He Says Tbat the Federal Uonrnmaut Is a Failure. - t The Rev. Dr. Thomas Dixon, in his New York sermon last Sunday, took the position that the Federal government is a failure. , In the course of his remarks he said : "We have never passed through such a year of; disaster and panic as last year proved to be, and as part 'of the present year has been. Nearly every railroad is in the hands of a receiver, and over fifty million dol lars tied up . in bankruptcy. We have many reasons to urge for this deplorable condition ot affairs. One is that our system of natural govern ment is out of date. Congress meets a year after it is elected. It ought to meet within three days after elec tion. -'""." - ..... "There is just one real power in this country, and that is tho congres sional committee, which meets in se cret. That committee is a humbug. The chairman of it can be a'despot. He kills every - measure he- doesn't like and there is no one to say him nay. Nobody is responsible for any thing. If a mistake occurs the Pres ident blames it on the Senate and the Senate on the President We have an absolute despotism without responsibility. The President vetoes all the measures he pleases. .Queen Victoria would no .more veto a bill passed by the English Parliament than she would turn a somersault from the. .Westminster bridge." Winston Sentinel. " Mistakes of Historians. William tell did not found the Swiss confederation, and the story of Ges ler has no historic basis. There is no historic authority for the statement that little George Washington cut down the cherry tree. Richard III was not a hunchback, but a soldier of fine form, some pre tensions . to good looks and great personal strength and courage. The mother of Coriolanus did not intercede- with her son to spare Rome. The story has no better foundation than that of Horatius. Charlemagne's paladins had no ex istence, and the history . of Charle magne himself is so clouded by myth as to be utterly unreliable., Wellington at Waterloo, did not say, "Up, guards, and at them." The words were put into his mouth by a 1 lively English writer. i The crew of Le Vengeur, the fa mous French ship sunk ,by an En glish man-of-war, did not cry "Vive la Republique !" They , bawled for help and the English boats were sent to their assistance..; Lonstantine the treat was not a saint. He murdered his wife, one or two of his sons, a considerable num ber of his Other - relatives and was guilty of a score of assassinations and murders. He was a Christian only in name. Charles IX did not fire on the flee ing Huguenots from the window of the Louvre during the massacre of St. Bartholomew, On the contrary, he was frightened almost to death by the reports of the guns and spent the time weeping and wringing his hand? The pass of Thermopylce was de fended not by 300 but by at least 7,000 Greeks, or, according to some writers, 1 2,000. The 300 were the Spartan contingent, who sLowed.no more bravery on that occasion than their companions in arms from the Greek states.- St Louis Globe Dem ocrat. . Sam Jones, the unique evangelist says that "ofall the - box-ankled, bandy-shanked, flea-bitten, bobtailed, lop-eared, mangy, courageless, brain less jackasses that ever assembled since God made the world, I think for pure, downright cussedness, the present gang in Congress, headed by Hill in the Senate, and tailed by"no quorum" in the House,' beats them all." Salisbury Herald! : The trouble with most - cough medicines is that they spoil the appe tite, weaken I digestion, and create bile. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, oh the contrary, while it gives immediate re lief, assists rather than impairs the assimilative process. . - ; r 1 1 1 Do -You See the Point? We. will save you $15.50 in one ton of Tinsley's Guano. ; r How Can We Doit? It takes two. tons of Pocomoke, Whann's, Bradly's or other cotton goods to make 435 per cent, of Amonia. It takes thf: same to eet 14 per cent, of available Phosphoric Acid. In ;lcy's High Grate We give you 435 per cent, of amonia, 14 per cent available acid. Calculation: Two' tons cotton guano $26.50 per ton, $53.00 We sell you one ton Tinsley's Tobacco Guano - . 37.50 Profit in favor Tinsleys, y Why does your tobacco take second growth and cure black ? Because just at the time that it needed all of its strength to ripen, your cotton guano gave out in strength. We can point to farmers who have 'nev er failed to make bright tobacco, they use nothing, but Tinsley's Guano. You had ; better use one sack of Tinsley's to the acre than three sacks of cotton goods. It will give you better results. It is the color that tells in Tobacco. Your friends, Young B Mow the Texnu Died. The old Texas veteran was dying. For days he lay unconscious on his cot in his log cabin. The doctor had given up all hope ot his recovery. There was nothing for the faithful watchers to do but' to wait for the end. How lime tbat seems to take noth ing as it passes finally robs us of ev ery thing! There was nothing in the shrunken features and wasted form of,the dying man to remind one of the hardy frontiersman who had once been Sam I Houston's most dar ing scout, whose unerring-rifle was a terror to the bloodthirsty Comanche, and who had blazed his way with his dripping bowie knife through the ranks of Santa Anna's Mexicans. Suddenly there came a change over tne lace ot the v dying man. There was an eager look on his face as be whispered : "Hurry up, boys, we must come up with them before night !" and his sons, themselves gray-haired men, whispered together. They knew his thoughts had gone back half a century, and he was once more with Jack Hayes following a trail of Indians who had captured a white family. . For a few moments the old veteran was so still and motionless that the watchers thought his spirit had fled. Then he clutched the blanket. There was a frown on his wrinkled brow and a glare in his eyes that would have appalled a demon, as through his clenched teeth, like the growl of a tiger came the words : "No quarter ! Remember the Alamo !" He was again charging the Mexicans on San Jacinto's bloody field. . But Iod'k ! What a marvelous nn y mmmm if : allowed to run, will destroy the lining to Throat and Lungs, weaken the system and invite the Consumption Germ. Scott's Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil, with hypophosphites of lime and soda, builds up the system overcomes : Chronic Coughs and - Colds, and strengthens. the Lungs. Physicians, the world over, endorse it. SCOTT'S EMULSION is themost nourishing food known to science. It is Cod-liver Oil rendered palatable and easy to assimilate. .1 - Prepared by Soott A Bowne, II.Y. Druft sell M one ton of 4 Tobacco Guano $15.50 rothers. transfiguration ! An expression of ineffable tenderness, like a gleam of sunshine on some ancient ruin, came over his features as he "softly whis pered, "Little May." f His sons glanced at each other. For more than fifty years that name had never passed his lips. She was his only daughter who had brought disgrace and sorrow to his heart. "Come, little one," he whispered with a smile on his lips, "Let us go out on the prarie and pick some flowers" and he was still forever and ever. Amen ! New York Her ald. Bucklen's Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Erup tions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. ; Ibis euaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by A. J. Hines, Druggist- Wisdom says : "Honesty is the best policy ;" Virtue says : "I do not care whether it is the best policy or not; it is right, and therefore I will be honest." Lyman Abbott. Suits at half price at Young Bros. 5,000 pairs sample shoes at . New York cost at Young Bros. Big sacrifice in dress - goods at I Young's. . If you want a baby carriage see Young Bros. Boots for men at $1.50 at Young Bros. Wanted,. 10,000 bushels peanuts. Young Bros. LIOOD'S CURES when all other preparations fail. It possesses ' curative power peculiar to itself. Be sure to get Hood's Sarsaparilla. n o ! 3EgL