$ 1 .00 A YEAR CASH IN ADVANCE.. LET ALL THE ENDS THOU AIM ST AT, BE THY COUNTRY S, THY GODS, AND TRUTHS. THE BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM VOLUME XXIV. WILSON, WILSON COUNTY, N. C, MAY 24, 1894. NUMBER 21. 0- t I - E now have, I am glad Ladies-' I lose, J You have paid us 23c. for ? The Floor is here at last; but the 14c. grade will, have to be sold at' ic. as it cost us ic. more. It is cheap though,; even at tne advance. : r Ptje Curtail -And- 1 r F 1 1 e IP aten t S i f t e r s pare here, at last. It took just six weeks to get them, fjbut it paid us to wait, as we got them so as to sell, the fr'ii'oles at' the same old price, 19c, and the sifters at less . i' ! Lhan ever before 10c. each. x y A - E could only get one piece of the - Silk Finished Foulard so much sought alter, at i2c. per yard. It is veryf pretty and will go quick. TRULY, GASH CATCHES THE BARGAINS. The Cash Racket Stores, JT. Ivl. LEJL'TH, M'gY. Nash and Goldsboro Sts. PROFESSIGML CARDS. i t f. price; V JL i - Siryeyor and Civil WILSON, - - N. C. .-'- ears' experience. Office next to I)x. .Albert Anderson. -r. 1. K. Wooilanl, V. ILYarlyiroiigh, Jr. WOODARD- & YARBOROUGH, Attotnevs-at-Law, Wilson, ' - - N. C. Will practice. in the courts of Wilson, X ;.-.h, Green, Edgecombe and adjoin ing t'ounties. . 15. -Associated in Civil practice R: UZZELL, Attorney at Law, WILSON, - ,- N. C. -tict.s Wherever services are re--1 All business will receive. .;! atu jitioii. i'.:' c in Well's Building. I i -CONNOR, Attorney at Law, WILSON, - - N.C. :' : ranch "iS: Co's. Bank Buildinj GEO. M. LINDSAY, Attorney at Law, SNOW HILL, N. C. iKcnx : Wilson, Green Wayne i i'liniston Counties. i Sl KANCK. FOR - 3TIie XxLSxr ancs 'i n nie, at the ofhee of W. E. War 1 Co., oyer First National Jiank.. ':.! r.;n 4 i' II. G. WHITEHEAD. Wood &Shinsiles. I i ave Cypress Shingles on hand I' limes and will sell cheap. ' at s.VWEI) AVOOD,! WELL. SEASONED, ! tU'.iyson hand and can be furnished : : short notice! A'ard on Railroad, , West side of Nash Street. . , C. N. NURNEY. id; 10,000 Voting l)ros. bushels cotton j line ot rubber goods just re - 3 sheets and mattresses at -d hulls lor cows. Young '...iU'eboio butter at -Young's, thickens cheap at Young's . , ttfli: turkeys at Young's. AH kinds canned goods at Young's 1 1 to sav, another lot of kl Fast Black, Regular. Made, at 12 I-2c. per. pair. the same goods often. Matting enougn, Poles 14 No Confidence in Mamma. Mamma When that boy threw stones at you why didn't you-come and tell me, instead of throwing them back ? : . . Little Son-Tell you Why you couldn't hit a hay stack. Spare 1 Moments. IIooiI'k Cures. In saving that Hood's Sarsaparilla cures, its proprietors make no idle or extravagant claim. The sdvertising ol Hood's Sarsaparilla is always within the bounds of reason, because it is true; it always appeals to the sober, common sense , ol thinking people, and Jt. is always fully sub stantiated by endorsements, which in the financial world, would be accept ed without a monent's hesitation. Read the testimonials published in behalf of Hood's Sarsaparilla, all from reliable, grateful people. They tell the story. Hood's Sar aparila Cures. . l!i:r Morm. One Life I.ohI. Mr. E. J. Gibson's barn was struck, by lightning last week. One old hen was kihed, and the barn slightly damaged? Several trees were struck in this neighborhood. Gibson Head light. Mai veloiis HenuItH. From a letter written by Rev. J. Gunderman, of Dimondale, Mich,, we are permitted to make this ex tract : "I have no hesitation in re commending Dr. King's New Dis covery, as the results were almost marvelous in the case Qtmy wife. While I was pastor of the Baptist i - Church at Rives Junction she was brought down with Fneumonia suc ceeding La Grippe. Terrible parox ysms of coughing would last several hours with little interruption and it seemed as if she could not survive them. A friend recommended Dr. King.s New Discovery ; it was quick ... . 1 v-i 1.. ri.. in US WOiK. anu iiiginy saiibiatiui y 111 results."' Trial bottles free at Har grave's Drug Store. Regular size 50c. and $ 1. 00. ' - BRXlWil' 3 IH0K I ITTERS cures Dyspepsia, In digestion & Debility . ONE SWEEP OF PERIL Tho Valleys of PQrn3yIvr.nia Aro Valleys of Decitb.. i ) THE JCETOH FLOOD REPEATED. - trrmendonfi Floods Overflow the levers and DiMii' ht s, ami Down the Hill the Water. Kafthes, Cixrrjing iicalli in Ita Path. Johxstows, Pa., May 21. -The Cone--maujh river is overflowing, and people are fleeing for their lives." The water in front of the Wesuirn Union Tele-r graph office is three "ad a hilf fewt deep. r ... Ai.tooxa, Pa., Slay 21 The reservoir at Kittanannmg Point, which supplies this city with water, broke this lriorfc ! ing and the water is rushing in a mighty i flood on Holidays burg and Uay.sport. . WiLUAMEt'OET, Pa., May '21. At i o'elock Sunday morning- the great boom with its million of dollars worth of uncut plumber, gave way. and Yv'ili iatnsport is awakened to a sense of great financial disaster. The river is 25 feet hirh. IN WATER'S TRAGIC WAKE. The Great Johnstown Fiood to Ue cu- maxed in Death and Host r act ion. 'Wiu.iAMsroBT, Pa,, May 2 1. With the horrors of the disastrous Hood of 1SS0, that which spread death" and de struction throughout this valley, is brought to memory by the threatened danger of a sweep of waterthat )rom ises to be ts freat as that of live years ago, and the people of this city and all through the west br:m,-hTalley are in a .state of panic. ' Since Friday night a steady and al most continuous rtownpour of rain has been swelling all of the streams,- and la te last night nn tne rous clo ud b u rsts along the 1'ine Creek and other tribu taries of the west branch of the Susque hanna hav made it impossible to eon fine the water within the banks of the streams. It has therefore spread out over the country and with every point is pouring.in the main river. Ka!n and Clcadbnrsts. Throug-hout the day and night the rain lias fallen here a nd continues to fall. Advices from all "points up the river say the same conditions exist. A cloud burst at Keating. 20 miles above Kenovo yesterday, raised the river there 20 feet, and the river at Kenovo is re ported higher than the ilood of 13S9, when half the town was under water. Above there and extending to the head-waters at Clearfield, every town and hamlet has been reduced by water to the conditions that prevailed in 1389. Along the Philadelphia & Erie railroad, between this point and Empcreum, traffic has been practically suspended since last night. Trains are running between Williamsport and Locthaven, but above the latter point landslides and track washouts have practically swept the tracks away, and the loss will be very heavy. ' The Sn?iiueliann Rising. The Susquehanna here flows to the south of the city, and while it has not yet readied the point of danger, it is crawling up at the rate of a foot an hour. U raff lis Run, a tributary which emp'ties into the river belo'w the city, flows north of Vyilliamsport. It over flowed its banks and spead over a con siderable portion of the city at noon Sunday, flooding many houses and driv ing the occupants from their homes. All of the houses were occupied by poor people, and the rise was so sudden that the- sufferers .lost much of their personal property. "The fact that the water rushed down upon the city-i the dark hours of the niht adds an additional element of horror to the situation. The rush ot water that ' swept so much away in 1 881) came at dayligtit, and the work of rescuing the people could be better prepared than after dark. In anticipation, however, of what was expected the tire and church bells of the city were rung at 10 o'clock yesterday morning taJolify the people of the impending danger. l'rayins sor I'roteotlon. Since that hour the work of pre parins.for the worst has been in prog ress. In- the hundreds of homes that were submerged five years ago the peo ple are moving out and storing their goods in the houses of those'living on the highlands. The business part of the city was a complete wreck five years ago, and hundreds of merchants are moving their stock to places of safety. Conveyances of every descrip tion are 'hurrying through tha streets of the city loaded with household goods and merchandise, and the scenes beg gar description. The regnlar church services were all suspended yesterday, and in all of the houses of worship those who attended confined' their de votion to the offering up of prayers fo -the assistance of Providence in the present grave emergency. Chief Justice of Florid Uosijrns. Jackson if, Fla., May 15. Advices f . tn Tallahassee, Fla., state tl at Hon, George P. Raney, chief justice of the supreme court of Florida, has tendered his resignation to the governor to take effect June 1st. The cause for his res ignation is not stated. He has'beenon the supreme bench nearly twelve. years, llis second term woidd have expired in a few months. Snodgra.! Renominated. Chattanooga, Tenn., May 18. IL. C. Snodgrass was renominated for con gress at 5 o'clock yesterday morning on. the 437th ballot. Returning from the convention on the train Dr. A. L. Grvfiiths, a delegate from Jasper, Tenn., was shot and killed by John L. Stickley, a delegate from White county. - Stickley was very" drunk. Over the Ear "Without Toaclilnjr. Fegnandina, Fla., May IS. The Brit ish steamship Bellingham sailed from this port today with a cargo of 4300 tons of phosphate for Copenhagen. She drew ju feet 8 inches of water and went over the bar without touching. This is the deepest laden vessel that has ever gone out over the Fernandinabar In all cases, where a mild but ef fective aperient is needed, Ayer's Pills are the best. 1 hey improve the appetite, restore healthy action, promote digestion, and regulate eve ry function. No pill is in greater de mand, or more highly recommended by the prolession. THE WEEKIM CONGRESS Renewed Zeal and Doubled Efforts m bustling tne Tariff Through. "THE EXD IX SIGHT," SAYS ONE. - In the House General Legislation Will Con sume the Week Batty Days Ahead for Representees in Both the Branches of Congress. Washington, May 11. "The end is in sight," remarked Senator Jones, of the finance committee, "and we expect fco begin gathering taxes under the Wilson bill on the first dav of Julv. which . begins the new fiscal ' year." This statement was indorsed by Mr. Harris. The fact that beginning today the senate meets at 10 o'clock, and the belief that the republicans have de cided not to interpose unreasonable opposition or prolonged debate on the bill, lead the managers of the bill to take a cheerful view of the situation. Messrs. Harris. Voorhees and Jones, of Arkansas, assert that they have the 43 votes necessary to pass the bill. The j republican leaders admit the impossi- bihfy of consolidating, their votes into a cdhesive whole, subject to the call of the parliamentary managers. The mietal schedule has now been reached and but two more schedules remain to be acted upon before the sugar sched ule is called up. Democrats assert that they will" finish the metal and wood schedules this week, but republicans say the debate on iron ore and the manufacturer of iron will be protected, and that the metal schedule cannot possibly be disposed of this wek, leav ing the free lumber debate to follow a week later. " No set speeches have been arranged on the tariff, but it is probable that Mr. Quay wil' come to the front again, as his state is especially interested in the metal schedule. Mr. Quay's speech, so far as it has been delivered in in stallments April 14, 18 and 3D and May .-, 4 and 8 would make over 150 closely printed newspaper columns. With seven and a half hours a day for the consideration of the pending bill during the current week, it would seem that some headway ought to be made. Mr. Morgan is anxious to have the Chinese treaty disposed of, and it may happen that Mr. Harris will grant him an afternoo - for this purpose. The Week in the House. Some general legislation is in sight in the house this week. The managers have come to the Conclusion that it will be safe now to intermit for a brief period their efforts to send appropria tion bills to the senate inasmuch as that body is apparently committed to the tariff bill for a month or xuojw to ''the exclusion of all other business. Two or three days will be required, it is believed for the consideration of the legislative, executive and judicial ap propriation bill, which will be taken up today under the five-minute rule. Although general debate on the meas ure has been "exhausted, there are features which will be criticised quite extensivelv in short reports. Anionjr these are the provisions of the bill in tended to reorganize the accounting branch of the . treasury department, abolishing the offices of second comp troller and deputy second controller, and reducing the clerical forpe. With the final disposal of this meas ure, consideration of appropriation bilfs will be suspended for a time and other matters taken up. The first of these will, be the Brawley bill to suspend the operation of the 10 per cent, tax law xra respect of the clearing house certifi cates and other substitutes for cur rency issued during the financial crisis of last year, reported from the commit tee on banking and currency. I he amendment to this offered by Mr. Cox, Democrat, of Tennessee, providing for the repeal of the law. outright, will be the principal feature of the discussion. The majority of the committee are com mitted against the unconditional repeal of the la, but it is understood that the great majority of Democrats, all the Populists and a few Republicans will vote for the amendment These two measures are expected to occupy all of the week. Should their discussion fall short of that period, the Hatch anti-option bill will e taken up. MURPHY WILL FOLLOW. Xew York's Senior Sc lator to Iierve the Tammi. Ship. New York, May 2L Senator Edward Murphy, Jr., will decline a re-election as chairman of the democratic state committee, and it is' understood that Lieut.-Gov. Sheehan will retire from the executive committee. A prominent democratic politician, said this morn ing: "Senator Muryhy has reached Mr. Croker's conclusion that he has had all the politics one man needs in a lifer time. He has reached the highest of fice to which he can aspire, is the pos sessor of abundant means, and as he is getting well on in years, feels that it is time for him to retire. "He it was who advised Mr.' Croker to desert the Tammany ship,- and now he intends to go ashore himself.' "ffhe word has been passed along the line that Senator Murphy will refuse a re-election, and during the past few days there have been several quiet con ferences with a view of selecting his successor, - "The retirement of Murphy may mean that C, R, Defreest will decline to serve any longer as secretary of the committee. His time is fully occupied with his duties as secretary of the board of railroad commissioners." The announcement creates a stir among the xammany tuiuiuiutcmcu and is now a political sensation in New York state. ' - Barn and Mules Burned. Henderson, Ky., May 21. Consider able damage was done to private prop erty by a storm near Sebree last night. A barn belonging to John Osborne was struck by lightning and burned, with eleven head of mules, a large crop ct corn and a number of tons 01 nay, ; Brictclen's Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores. - Ulcers, Salt Rheum1 Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Erup tions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is euaranteed to give perlect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. "For sale by B. W. Hargrave, Druggist. Young's Patent flour 2c. " Coffee 15 cents. Young Bros. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U.S. Gov't Report KM AB&OILOnrEire PURE NEWS. STATED BRIEFLY. The London cabmen assert that 200 owners have acceded to their demands. liert Bell, a well . known speculator at Belvidere, N; J., committed suicide Friday. ' - .'' , : The World says the New York and Brooklyn ice companies have formed a gigantic trust. ; . Fraudulent Wells Fargo orders are reported at " Middletown, Port Jervis and Gosheu,. N. Y. ; A gang of juvenile thttMres with rich booty has been unearthed in the Eighth ward of Bay City, Mich. King Gatchell had a hand blown off while explaining how dynamite workeSI to a party at Sandusky. The IIendrik- Brothers' Coppe works, of Newark, N. J., have resumed operations on half time. Fire was discovered in the hold of the Edam at Rotterdam Wednesday morn ing. It injured the cargo. , The contest over the will of Elbridge Farmer the Arlington, Mass., million aire, has been compromised. Gen. E. Burd Grubb has been made governor of the Society of Colonial Wars of the state New Jersey. Henry Scott, colored, was lynched -Friday near Jefferson, Ark., for the murder of his stepdaughter. Emile Henry, the condemned anarch ist, is said to have tried to escape from prison by bribing the keepers. The American Ticket Brokers' asso ciation commenced its sixteenth annual session in Washington. Thursday.; Kaiser Wilhelm's old generals, vet erans of '71, are resigning, and he is putting in a lot of young officers. A procession of anarchists paraded the streets of Roubaix, France, Thurs day. Six ringleaders were arrested. Four smuggled Chinamen were ar rested on the southbound flyer at Platts burg, N. Y., Saturday night. It is calculated that a gang of swin dlers has defrauded Northwestern banks of $55,000 during April by raising drafts. ... United States government engineers are inspecting the proposed "sites for fortifying the Pacific coast at Port rr 1 iir i A, re ward of 83,000 will be offered for the C3pt?3 tif the Taylor brothers, dead or, alive, by Linn and Sullivan counties. Missouri. ', The Christian Endeavor Missionary League of the Reformed Church of America has elected DeWitt Mason, of New York, as president, - The Northeastesn Life .' Insurance company, capital $25,000, of Manches ter, N. H., has decided to wind up its business and to reinsure. Seven persons were instantly killed -in a collision on the Newport News & Mississippi Vallep railroad, twelve .miles east of Princeton, Ky., Saturday. The annual inspection of the Thir teenth Separate Company of the Na tional Guard will be held by Inspector General McGrath at Jamestown Wt dnesday night. . v The program committee of the Na tional Editorial Association has com pleted arrangements for the tenth an nual convention at Asbury Park, N. J., in July. Tramps piled a ton of fish-plates on the Boston" & Albany track to wreck the Adams express train at Worcester, Mass., but the train plowed through uninjured. Ten lads connected with prominent temperance families at Westfield, N. J., were arrested for breaking into an applejack distillery Saturday night. The Fidelity and Casualty Company of Yew York has filed a bill to enjoin the bondholders of ex-Treasurer M. J. O'Brien, of Chattanooga, Tennessee, from selling his property to have a ie ceiver appointed. The Yale corporation elected Horatio W. Parker, prpfessor-of music; George M. Duncan, professor of philosophy: F. K. Sanders, Woolsey professor of Bibli cal literature, and Samuel B. Sanford, professor of piano playing. The general council of Christian Unions of the the United States assem bled yesterday in'quadrennial conven tion at Holt, Mass. The Butler Hard Rubber Company has been -awarded damages against Newark and the East Jersey Water Company of $73,899. 1. It is reported that the issue of $150, 001 public improvement bonds by Iron wood, Mich., which were taken by' a New York firm, is illegal. i The supreme court and court of oyer and terminer, with grand jury, wilj further investigate the Cornell chlorine case at Ithaca, N. Y, : : " - , It is said that in the distribution of queen's birthday honors Mackenzie Bowell and Frank Smith, members of the Dominion cabinet, will be knighted. The Wisconsin Central yesterday sold to J. J. Kennedy and Fayette Shaw, of Medford, Wis., 50,000 acres of hemlock lands in Taylor and Rice counties. Slight shocks of earthquake were experienced in the Annandale and Esk dale Hills, near Dumfries, Scotland. Friday. The vibrations traveled north ward. - - There is talk of the Dominion gov ernments imposing an export duty on Canadian nickeh of which large quan tities will be required by the United States government. The workmen at the state fair grounds at Springfield. 111., while excavating for the exposition building, unearthed the remains of thirty-two human bodies in a forgotten burial ground. ' ye Modern Mistress. Fair Guest My goodness! This room looks like a prison cell. What is it for? Hostess That is to lock myself in whsn I scold the cook. N. Y. Weekly. Never mind where you work; let vour care be for the work itself. r - Spnrgeon. 1 . . . I CHICKEN LIVERS IN MANY WAYS. Tuer Are a Great lellcacy When Properly Cooked. A very common way of cooking chick en livers is en brochette the livers cut in slices and put on a- long spike with alternate thin shavings of bacon and mushrooms. This is turned rapidly over a broiler, and the. result is very' satisfactory as a breakfast dish. A saute of chicken livers ia favor ite dish with the French. This, made with a little butter and onion or garlic an eschalotte, with the addition of a little parsley, when it has been done enough to serve, makes another deli cious breakfast dish. - The most popular chicken liver com bination in New York is an omelet of chicken livers. For this a very light omelet is made as the envelope and the chicken liver is used for filling. This, if made by anyone who has given sufneiept study to the subtle science, is about as much gastronomic richness as an ordinary uneducated stomach would care to attack at one sitting. . Nothing "queers" chicken livers so easily as poor pastry; and the same may truthfully be said of the human stomach. Supposing the pastry part of the vol-au-vent to be all right, you make an espagnole of heavy meat gravies, with tomato and a suspicion of garlic. Then, having cooked your liv ers in this sauce, you have a dish that is extremly hard to beat. Simple brown sauce and butter or what the French call roux is a good medium for cooking livers, if you are a little afraid of overrichness. To serve them on toast after cooking in a warm', vinous sauce, isa style very much favored in certain restaurants, but the brochette and the 'omelet are by far the most persistent in popular favor. . They are also prepared in olive oil, which is like adding affluence to opu lence, and in some places they are stored up like pates de foie gras, and not a few. gastronomes have ventured to hazard the opinion that pate de ioie ae volatile is really a superior delicacy to the liver of the pampered goose. . The livers of very-young chickens are apt to be mushy. Those about a year old offer to the teeth just that amount of residence which un epicure prizes in his food. . Another dish which will be found unusually toothsome, made by some housekeepers down in Maryland, is to broil chicken livers- mediumly then h'ish them and serve them creamed on toast N. Y. World. NOT , ALTOGETHER FRIENDLY. The Selfish Motive That Actuated a Benefi . cent Deed. . A young man wearing a red necktie and a new spring suit boarded a'yellow ear nt the post office the other evening. He slid gi-aeefully into a sea't, and had just buried his face in a paper when the conductor touched him on the shoulder and held out his hand for the fare. . TJie young man fumbled through his pockets while, the conductor still held out his hand expectantly. As he turned his last pocket inside out he turned red as he remarked: . ; "I will have to walk, I guessI can't find any money." "Never mind," said a small man with a ragged beard and rustv hat. "here's a nickel." . ; The conductor took the' money, rang his bell, and went out on the platform. "It was very kind of you, I am sure," said the young man. "Where can I find you to-morrow to repay your kind ness?" ;' -;. . " "You needn't mind bothering about that," said the little man. "I was actuated by a selfish motive." "A selfish motive. What was it, pray?" "I wanted revenge upon the con ductor. That nickel was a lead nickel. When he turns in his cash at the end of the run It will be detected and he will have to make it good. He Jjyes next door to me and kicked my dog last week." Kansas City Times. . Brush Your Clothes Down. "Look at that boy brushing those trousers against the grain," said a tailor the other day in a barber shop. "Clothes," said he, "should always be brushed with downward strokes. It is the most natural method; the dust is directed whence it must ultimately falL We are very careful, when cut ting garments, to cut them in such a way that the grain of the cloth can be best smoothed downward. : Sometimes, however, the pattern prevents this be ing done. A piece of goods with rep tending in the -wrong direction fills with dust much quicker than other wise and requires twice as much care to keep it clean." Louisville Courier Journal. : ; , - ' Mid Pleasures and Palaces. Mr. Flathouse Well, how is the last new girl going to suit? Mrs. Flathouse I don't know at all. dear. She is a Norwegian. ' Mr. Flathouse Great Scottt Can't you stick to one nationality? You've had a Swede, a Frenchwoman, a Ger man and an Irish girl, all within two weeks. It makes a man think he is living in a sort of Midway plaisance. Puck. - - ; ' .-'- ' Suffered Like the Rest. , ; Bobby Pa, what do they mean when they say that the mills o'f. the gods grind slowly? Pa Well, Bobby er I suppose It's on account of a lack orders, owing to the business depression. Judge. The Russian government has decided to settle -1,400 peasants from Southern Russia and 100 Cossack families in Ussuri, Siberia, during the summer en tirely at the expense of the govern ment. - " " The annual meeting of the Lamson Consolidated Store Service Company, ith capital stock of 54,000.000, which controls all the -patents for cash car riers in stores, was held in Newark, N. J., Friday. Ymrjt YOUNG Slau per We have too many goods,' and the season is advanc ing so we are going to put the knife in them in the start to move them. This week you can buy goods almost at. your own price. You can buy Solid Colored Pacific Lawns at sets, per yard, worth 10 cts. You can buy Ginghams at 5: 6, and 7cts. worth from 10 to 12 ctsY You can buy a Calico dress at 5cts. a yard, worth 7jcts. We have by far the largest and Cheapest Line of Wliite Goods in the town. If you want any White Goods for the children it will pay you to see ours before you buy. These goods must be sold regardless of price. Dress -:- We have a large stock have made the price right at them you will buy. Lace We have just received another lot of Butter Laces and Insertions. These were bought late and the price is way down, and they are -all the go. Oxfords. We have just received another shipment of Ladies' Oxfords that you can buy way down. Clothing;. We are head quarters, remember, and if you want a' suit for yourself or boy. And prices on Clothing are just a little more than half what tney usually are. It might pay you to come and post yourself, if you don't want Jo buy. v. Your Friends, YOUNG BROS. The .Only Test. . Blinkers Talking about aged peo ple, there's a woman in .toy town who says she is one hundred and ten years old. Winkers Does she remember dancing with George Washington ? "No." ' ' "Then she is a fraud." N. Y. Weekly. The Spring Medicine. "All run down" from the weaken ing effects of warm weather, you need a 'good tonic and blood purifier like Hood's Sarsaparilla. Do not put off taking it. Numerous little ailmentif neglected, will soon break up the system. Take Hood's Sarsa parilla now, to expell disease and give you strength and appetite. Hood's Pills are the best family cathartic and liver medicine. Harm less, reliable, sure. Turkeys on aDrauk, A Cedar Hill, Ky., woman found j all her six turkeys apparently dead. She didn't want to eat diseased meat, and after oluckino- them to save the c it ,,' . iL 1 mucous surfaces of the system. Send feathers threw the bodies over the for testimonials free. fence. By evening they 'all came j F.J. CHENEY & CO.Props. back, like littie Bo Peep's sheep, and prjce 75c. per bottle. Sold by all'drug stood shiverine around the kitchen gists. - door. They had only been on a frightful drunk. , The woman had thrown out ajar of brandied cherries the day before. Salisbury Herald, MS may be avoided. It comes from a germ that takes root and grows only when the System is Weak and Lungs are affected. Scott's Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil, with hypophosphites of lime and soda, overcomes all the conditions which make con sumption possible. Physicians, the world over, en endorse it. ' Qoughs, Colds, Weak Lungs and. Emaciation pave the way for Consumption. SCOTT'S EMULSION cures them and. makes the system strong. Prepared by Scott & Bowne, N.Y. Druggist sell it. BROS Sale. Goods. of Dress Goods that we on, and if you will look A BIysterjr Solved. Mr. Hungry Higgins had finished eating his "handout" and was peru sing the paper it was wrapped in. "By gee," he said, "this accounts for it." "Accounts for what ?" asked Mr. Weary Watkins. "W'y, they is a doctor says in this paper' that after a man has had the grip he never gets plum over it. It leaves him kinder tired, an' in need of slimulants' all the time, the doctor says. I bet I had it myself when I was a little.- baby." Indianapolis Journal. - . State of Ohio, City of Toledo. ) Lucas Countv. f ss' ..Feank J Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F."J. Cheney 8c Co., doing business in j the city of Toledo, county and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay ' the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL LARS for each and every case of. Catarrh that cannot be cured bv the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of Decem ber, A. D. 1886. 1 W. GLEASON. ... Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken intern- a y and acts directly on the blood and Pleasant to the taste and readily taken is Simmons Liver Regulator. It cures heartburn. Hptioii

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