The : $ I .OD A YEAR CASH Iti ADVANCE. LET ALL THE ENDS THOU AIM ST AT, BE THY COUNTRY S, THY GODS, AND TRUTH S.' THE BEST ADVERTISING . MEDIUM j ' J- VOLUME XXIV. WILSON, WILSON COUNTY, N. C, JUNE 8, 1894. NUMBER 23. WEEK lil THE SOUTH 1 WEEK IN WASHINGTON Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report j The Fair Forger Who Worked Her SchcraD in Atl-nta. S Programme for the Coming Few Days in Both Branches. ... LYNCHED; IX THE PALMETTO STATE. FIGHTING ON THE TARIFF BILL FORCED HPT '- -1 - r I v v E now have, I am glad M those . ' ' . a Black 1 I I I l ose, You have paid us 23c. for he oor is here. at last but the 14c. grade '.-will have to be sold cost us 1 c. more. It is cheap enough, jat isc. as it ill though, even at the advance. rV c ( a iriaiij Poles And Plie Patent Sifters are here at last. It took just six weeks to get them, but it paid us to wait, as we got them so as to sell the Poles at the same, old price, 19c, and the sifters at less than ever before 10c. each. El V V f E could only get one fa r Silk Finished Foulard so much sought after, at I2jc. per yard. It is very pretty and will go quicks pi TRULY, GASH CATCHES THE BARGAINS. 1 ri : The Cash Racket Stores, J. M. TvEATH, M'g'r. Nash and Goldsboro Sts. !ri PR0FE3510SAL CARDS. II, I". PRICE, Surveyor aci Civil Engineer. WILSON, - - N. C years experience. Oiiice Dr. Albert Anderson. next lo In;). E. Woo.lur;l, W. If. Varhorrmuh. Jr. WOO DA II D & ' YARBOROUGH, Attornevs-at-Law, Wilsox, :- - N. C. Will practice in the courts of Wilson, Aasn Ureen, Ldgecomoe and adicm- ,-t i jng coTinties. X. li. Associated in Civil practice R. UZZELL, Attorney at Law, -WILSON, - - X. C. Practices wherever services, are re- 1 wired t-S vll business will H oinpt attention. Ofiice in Well's Building. receive J G. CONNOR, Attorney at Law, WILSOX, - -i c; ofiice Branch & Go's. , Bank Building;. GEO. M. LINDSAY, Attorney at Law, SNOW HILL, N. C. Circuit : Wilson, Green Wayne and lohnston Counties. "SltraM)e7 FOR Pile Insurance " Call on me, at the ofhee of W. E. War- n & Co., over First National Bank. : 19 iy H. G. WHITEHEAD. I II t 1 a ni . , I V f)0 (X S M 111 0 1 1 have Cypress Shingles on hand al ; i times and will sell cheap. SAW ED WOOD, W'F.LL, SEASONED, f.ways on hand and can be furnished ! it short notice. Yard on Railroad, West side of Nash Street; . y. -. : . c. n. nurney: F.UX - af.un's dim. mmm phis ' 'i,ly FHE:iCH.8t-oandre- n:irket. I'llceJUBO; BOEt by 1 - nlj by ticiiuino ; X'aj druggist P.nd Sole Agent to say, another lot of Fast Black, Regular Made, at 12 l-2c. per pair. the same goods often. r- , - piece of the Knew any famous Writers. There is an elderly resident of Brook' lyn who in his youth saw much of the Scotch and English writers through his intimacy with the head of a large pub lishing house. He affirms the truth of the story that it was the habit of Thomas De Qaincey to draw a little brush from his pocket and tenderly dust his roil of manuscript before submitting it to a publisher. New York Snn. Tlie Why and Wherefore. There 5s nothing marvelous in the fact that Hood's Sarsaparilla should cure so many diseases. When you remember that a majority of the dis orders "flesh is heir to" are due to impure or poisonous condition of the blood, and that Hood's Sarsaparilla is an effective and radical purifier, the whole thing is explained. - Besides its blood purifying quali ties, 1 Hood's Sarsaparilla also con tains the best known vegetable stom ach tonics, diuretics, kidney remedies and liver invigorants. and is thus an ! excellent specific lor all disorders of j these organs, as well as for low con dition of the system or That Tired J Feeling. The Mate "Was that the owner of the yacht that you were speaking to just now?" , The Captain "Yes." The Aviate "Did he come down to see whether we had fixed her up shipshape ornoti"' The Captain-"No; lie came down to ask if the liquors and other stores had, been tent aboard." N. Y Specimen Cases. S. H. Clifford, New Cassel, Wis., was troubled with Neuralgia and 1 Rheumatism, his stomach was disor- dered, his liver, was affected to an. alarming degree, appetite fell away, and he was terribly reduced in flesh and strength. . Three bottles of Elec tric Bitters cured him. Edward Shepherd, Harrisburg, 111., had a running sore on his leg of eight years standing. Used three bottles of Electric Bitters and seven boxes of Buclden's Arnica Salve, and his leg is sound and well. John Speaker, Catawba O., had five large fever sores on shis leg, doctors said he was incurable. One bottle of , Electric Bitters and .one box Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured hirn entirely. Sold at Hargrove's .Drug Store, - Bliinv PTons arj brokti down fawn overwork or household cares. I5rowis Iron Bitters Cebuiids the (vstpm. n'dsdieestion. removes excess of bile. and curtia jaLttria. Get the Genuine. Matt 111 Y ;3 lal Deposit i A Alalnni: Wanted in Car olinaKitty Cheatham to Wed. Young: JIfn Are Eotlt OtJier Southern News. - ' i Atlanta, June 4 who were so cleverly -The merchants j taken in by the" ! flashily-dressed. bnjeweh'd Mrsi- E. E, White, of the country at large, called on Chief Connolly and authorized a re ward of S.i;V for . her and put up money to defray the expenses of circulars and correspondence. Mrs. White has been away from At lanta more than a week. The heaviest losers ara the Keely Company, "Eads-Xeal Company and J. Itiginsteiu. The female dup?st stop ped at the Aragon and went in fine style. She purchased bills of goods from her victims and gave in exchange che.cks bearing the forged sag-nature of a wealthy Floridian and draw.n on a Jacksonville bank. It is said that she had a male accomplice when she was here. I She remained in Atlanta but a short time and it is believed that after leaving- here she went to Texas. However', this is mere conjecture. She covered her tracks with characteristic shrew ness and it. will not be easv to find her. ' ' ANOTHER PALMETTO LYNCHING. Hardy Gill, Jfegro I'ind. Taken from thef Charleston Jail and Strunar to a Tree. Chaei.kstox', S. C, June 4. Hardy Gill, a colored man was takon by force ! from the jail in Lancaster yesterday morning between 1 and 2 o'clock, by a i party of twenty-five men and carried ' away about three miks and lyncheJ. Coroners inquest was held over his body and the jury returned a verdict that he" was shot to death by parties unknown. 1 wo or thr?e days ao be withoxit provocation, assaulted and i flicted, it is feared, mortal wounds on the wife of Mr. James A. Clark, whd is now at the point of death. j Mrs. Clark resides wUh her husband I about fourteen miles from the court i house. The whole transaction is very j Bad and is greatly to be deplored. LOOKING FOR LYNCHERS. The Mob in Mississippi who Strung; up the Rnrglars Eagerly Sought After. jACKSOjff.Miss, June 4. The press of this county unites in its condemnation of the recent lynching of the two ne groes charged with burglary, naar Clanton. . i At the closing of the - commencement exercises of Mississippi college at Clan ton, resolutions denouncing this lynch ing in unmeasured terms were enthusi astically supported by eminent divines and other leading citizens, and were adopted by a rising vote. Thr governor has offered a reward of $"250 for each one of the lynchers, pay able upon conviction. The Richmond Gazette urges the grand jury, which meets soon, to probe the matter to the bottom. LEAD DEPOSIT 4N ALABAMA. One Found on the Property of an Esteemed Widow Lady. 'Montgomery, Ala., June 4. - A valua ble find of lead has been raade in Dal las county, nearSelma, 011 a plantation owned by a Mrs. Smith, a widow lady. For years it lias been found impossible to plow a large portion of the land, the ground being tough and evidently full of some mineral. A few days ago some of the earth was parried to Selma turned over to :i chemist for analysis. After a thorough examination he de clared the "Specimen contained 8r per cent, of lead of the finest quality. As the ore abounds in enormous- quan tities on Mrs. Smith's place, that esti mable woman is believed to be on the road to bier fortune. WANTED IN CAROLINA'. Bold Youdr I$cr!ar Arrested and Held at fjristol. IlrusTOi,, Tenn.. June 4. Will Can non, a notorious burglar 22 years of age was arrested here last evening by chief Caldwell. Officers, from. Mossy Creek pursued Cannon through several coun ties during the week and cantured him twice, but each time he cunningly es caped. He served a term in the peni- ' tenitary for horse stealing. He is wan ted at several points in East Tennessee and North Carolina for bursrlary. lie committed several burglaries while the officers were on hi. trail, lie is wan ted at Mossy Creek for stealing a lady's watch. KITTY CHEATHAM TO WED, The Nashville Aetrests to Marry an English Cotton Merchant. Nashyit.le, June 4. Miss Kittie Cheatham, the actress, will be married on June 9. in this city to Win. li. Thomp son, of Englapd. The ceremony will be performed at the residence of Thomas Plater, " Vauxhall place. Mr. Thompson met Miss Cheatham while she was with the Daly company on its English tour, lie is a member of a large cotton firm in Liverpool, which has a branch house in New Orleans, of which he has recently taken charge. Young Slen Are The-, Both. Montgomery, Ala., June -l.-Whichever way the dice falls, Alabama is destined to have the youngest attorney general in the United States after the August elections. Neither M r. W. C Fitts. the democratic nominee, nor Mr. W. S. Eeese, the Jeftersouian nominee, will be thirty years of age when inaugura tion day arrives, lie joicing in North Carolina. Raleigh, Jane 4. There is rejoicing today at the colony of the Waldenses, in Burke county. Kev C. A. Tron, fon der of the colony, has arrived from Switzerland on his first visit to them. There are 20O of thrse colonists, and they are the only ones in the United ritatea. If you desire a beautful com plexion, absolutely free irom pimples and blotches, purify your blood by of Aver's SarsaDarilla. Re- V W www- J i move the cause of these disfigure ments and the skin will take care of itself. Be sure you get Ayer's Sar saparilla. - Bank Tax Debate Still on In the House, And no End Yet Spied Trojan Horse Embarrassingly Springs up la tbe Senate End. vvashisotos, June 4. I he end of the debate on the bill to repeal the lawtax- ing the issues of state and other banks and associations is not yet in sight in the house, although an effort will be made today to draw it to a close. It has been the desire of Speaker Crisp and other democratic leaders, especial ly those interested in the management of the appropriation bills, that today should see tta close of the general de bate on the bill and there has been the work of bringing in an order from the committee on rule to that effect. But that has been opposed by the republi cens, who f?ant the debate to exhaust itself and by a number of democrats, of whom Messrs. Rayner of Maryland and Harter of Ohio are types. The former opposes repeal and the latter f ayors it, but both agree that discus sion should proceed two weeks at least, as in their opinion that period of time sould be profitably spent in considera tion of the subject. That the time would be occupied, is proved by the length of the list of those who have asked Chairman Richardson for time in which to speak. It is probable that the orc.er referred to will be reported by the committee on rules during the day to test the question. If it shall be agreed to, it will be taken to mean that the repeal . bill will paf a; if it shall be defeated, the fate of the bill be to be "talked to death." In that event the executioners may consent to re duce the limit within which to perform ;hat duty and end the matter within a day or two. When the state bank tax bill shall have been disposed of, the Indian ap propriation bill will be taken up. An an usually long discussion of its pro visions is anticipated, because of the many radical changes Mr. Holman has introduced into the MIL Next in or der, of general legislation, will be the general deficiency bill for the year jnding the 30th instant, which will have been reported to the house in the meantime. The Week In the Senate. Two months of tariff debate have passed in the senate an d the end is not yet within telescopic v sion. Republi can senators stated ter days ago that I he close of this present week would Snd the sugar schedule still undisposed Df. The course of events in connec tion with the facts elicited by the sugar trust investigation of the special com mittee as tax as that investigation has proceeded, and the facts which it is ex pected will be developed in the further sessions of that committee seem to make it possible that this threat may be verified. Some of the leaders on the republican side insist that the vote can not with decency be taken on the su jar schedule until the investigation into the allegations of improper - influence to secure the adoption of that schedule tiave been disposed of. Several of the populist senators and also Mr. Hill are an record as favoring this view. The solid republican vote and the populists jr most of them, it is expected, will rally to the support of Mr. Mandersons proposed amendment to retain the bounty on domestic sugar instead of paying an increased tax on the impor ted product. Mr, Harris, the chosen j j japtain of the democratic cohorts on of an intention to force the fighting. It is understood that the republicans tvill not oppose an extension of the session to something like 8 o'clock; but carious threats are made as to what eoarse may be pursued if Mr. Harris it tempts to urge what the republicans Ball "Extraordinary measures." The tactics pursued by the republicans last week, were successful in drawing out 1 number of democratic senators and it is understood the same policy will be jontinued this' week, with the hope that the democrats will be compelled to participate in the debate. The fifteenth of June, at which time ts democrats have said the bill would pass, is not very distant but there seems little chance of a final vote by that time. It can be said with absolute- certainty that the sugar schedule will aot be dropped until the republicans have had an opportunity to discuss the testimony taken by the investigation committee. There is another matter that will tend to prolong this debate about which nothing has heretofore been said but which will probably come to the front very soon. An amendment to the bill will be in troduced probably this week which provides for the repeal of ten per cent, bank tax This may prove an embar rassing "Trojan horse" in the camp. It is argued that such an amendment would be quite as pertinent to a" tariff bill as the income tax sections especial ly as the repeal of this tax was one of the democratic platform pledges. Hobgood Acquitted But Ke-Arrested. Makedian, Miss , June 4. The trial of Colonel E. S. Hobgood, at Hatties burg, ended Saturday. The jury was out only a short while and returned with a verdict of not guilty. Hobgood was -re-arrested immediately, on the spot, on an affidavitcharging him with the. murder of AlexJIarrel, in Marion county. The trial will be held next week. : - . The War Vessel. Alliance, Safe In Port. ... Washington, June 4. The navy de partment is in receipt of a cable mes sage announcing the safe arrival of the United States war vessel. Alliance, at Barbadoes yesterday. Senator Gorman Improving. Lauret, Md., June 4. Senator Qor- man is very much improved feeling better this morning. and was Barkleu'a 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. It is ruaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by B. W. Hargrave, Druggist Pills promote constipation Simmons Liver Regulator cures constipation. ABSOH.lU'ffElW PURE THE WRONG BRAND. Weather That Made the Old Man Call on the Weather Dispenser. While the rain was doing its level j best the other afternoon a moist little old man with two umbrellas and a "grim" coat dashed into the Mills build ing. . Water dripped from the elevator all the way up to the tenth floor, and when the little man. splashed into the weather-works at the end of the hall the curl came out of B. S. Pague's mus tache. - "Where's the fellow that did this?'' demanded the little man, glaring sav agely around the room. "Did what?" inquired Mr. Pague, in his best meteorological tone of voice. "Pulled the plug out of theky." "You mean the shower. Oh, that's a little dash of precipitation we throw in once in awhile to equalize the climate. It ' makes the farmers jubilant, you know" . "Oh, does it?" said the little man, smiling sarcastically.' "Perhaps you don't stand in with those people, who sell fifty-cent umbrellas in the hall ways." - "Sir! How dare you!" "Keep your hair on, professor," broke in the visitor, as he stepped out of the puddle that dribbled from the' tail of his "gum" coat. "You're running this job, are you not?" ' "Well, yes," Mr. Pague confessed with becoming modesty. "I'm at the head of the bureitu. Would you like to look at some of our weather samples for the fall and " "You predicted fair weather for to day, didn't you?" persisted the little man, who was beginning to breathe hard. The head of the bureau looked out at the unbroken streaks of wet driving obliquely across the window and glanced musingly at a large tissue paper chart with red spots on it. Then he made some figures on the margin with a blue pencil and started in to ex plain: "Of course the low pressure in the northwest, combined with a rising barometer, naturally has a tendency to "Hang the little man. northwest !" howl ed the 'Is this San Francisco or Siberia?" The head of the bureau reluctantly admitted that to the best of his knowl edge and belief this was San Fran cisco.' -, r . "And are you our regular ' licensed predicter?" "I am." "Well, don't you know that we. have a ball game here every Sunday and that a storm like this is in direct oppo sition to the wishes of the people?" "Storm? Why, up in Oregon, where I came from, thiey " "Oregon b blowed! This, is San Francisco, where we know what weath er is. Do you'mean to say that you came here from Oregon and went to monkey ing with the valves without asking us what we wanted?" "It looks that way," replied Mr. Pague, beginning to feel uneasy." "How long have you been here?" "About two weeks." - "Are you the one ivho uncorked the cyclone that blew the 1 shingles off the ships and things last week?" demanded the little man, grasping his umbrella firmly by the handle. Pague glanced around for the police call, but it was in the other room. "Who are you?" he asked, in order to gain time. "I'm a tax-payer in the city- and county "of San Francisco that's what I am," the little man yelled, as he slap ped himself on the chest, "and I'll write a piece to the papers about the incom petency in the weather department. Great Scott ' Who ever saw the like? Its an outrage, sir, I'll report you to the the-er I'll report you anyhow. What condition do you expect the ground tobe in for the foot-ball match next Thursday, if you keep on with your infernal deluge ! Fair weather, indeed, and six inches of mud and water everywhere. I'll be teetolly dad binged if I don't " "It is a very difficult matter, I find," said Mr. Pague, "to satisfy everybody in this business. Some want drought and some want rain, while others again send in orders for wind. There was nothing in this little shower to excite anyone, but perhaps I am too well ac customed to moisture after living so long in a country where the ducks roost on the trees nine months in the year. "However, I have ordered out a line of nice, fair weather, with diamond clouds and a thread of sunshine in it, for to-morrow. After arranging clear weather for to-day, I changed my mind last night and decided to wring out a couple of damp clouds. The storm was originally moving eastward, and had it continued that course to-day would have been clear. But it fell in with a cold wave coming this way and we couldn't separate them. From Wednes day night until two o clock this after noon the rainfall has amounted to three and four hundredths inches, but is all over now." San Francisco Chronicle. - Mountain Peculiarities. : Mountain ranges of great height al ways arrest the passage of clouds and rain. Within and about the tropics these are borne from the east by the trades, and generally the windward slope of the mountains is- fertile bar rier, while the leeward slope is a bar ren desert." So it is in many parts of Peru and Chili, on the west of the An des, while on the east there are virgin forests and the wildest and most luxuri ant vegetation. To some extent I have noticed these conditions in the little island of Jamaica, where, behind some lofty peak, there exists a tract of coun try utterly barren, where rain seldom f alfs, while only thirty or forty miles away showers occur every few minutes the . year round, keeping . the earth drenched with moisture and causing the most luxuriant vegetation. Gold thwaite's Magazine. Dyspepsia in all its forms is not only relieved bat cured by Simmons Liver Regulator. THE WEEK'S NEWS CONDENSED. The United Presbyterians will meet next year at Pittsburg, Pa. v Mrs. Elizabeth Williams of Green ville, Pa., was robbed of $1,00.1. Burglars entered the Post Office at Sandford Me., and stole $400. ..ich placer diggings have beiu dis covered near Loon Lake. Idaho. The Viking ship has been donated to the Field Museum', Jackson Park, Chic ago, in. The Bank of Bengal has reduced its rate of discbunt from 7 per cent, to 6 per cent. . , " Secretary Herbert, who has been in Yellowstone Park, left St. Paul, Minn., for Washington. ' The post office at Mechanic "Falls, Me., was broken into Wednesday night and SI. 000 stolen. The twenty-fifth annual convention of the Alpha Zeta fraternity is in ses sion at Schenectady,' N. Y. ' The administration department of the Vermont State Insane "Asylum at Waterbury was dedicated Saturday. James -lJuncan, who s-hot ..Udei-nv.'i Lomasney in -L 'as, Mhk.. ou 7, has been committed to an idva.no a. lum. Secretary Morton and Dr. Zeballo:-, Minister of the Argentine Republic, visited the Latonia (Ky.,) race Satur day. W. A. Nicolaus, husband of Zella Nicolaus, has filed a petition for divorce in the district court at Museatine, Iowa. , The Dubuque and Wisconsin Bridge Company has been incorporated to bridge the Mississippi at Dubuque. Iowa. "" - Miss Hill won the prize reading at Tuft's College last night in the ilr.-.t competition to which women were ad mitted. In the last four dnys seventeen bo::s cleared from Duluth, Minn., with 12. 000,000 feet of lumbar, breaking all records. -About one thousand carpenttrs struck in fo Louis, Mo., because thei; demand for the union scale was disre garded. - , Treasurer Starr arrived at Tahle quah, I. T., with $1,G40,000, the first in stallment of 8,000,000 to be paid the Cherokees. Twelve 'hundred Italians met in Bos ton, Mass., and adopted resolutions apainst the padrone and Italian bank ing systems. . The Spanish Government has forbid den the admission of German goods by means of certificates of origin from other nations. Menacing manifestations prevail in Polerrao, Sicily, over the sentence of Deputy De Felice. The police have made many arrests. ' C. S. George, a farmer, and Edward Davis his hired man, were arrested Fri day at Fitchburg', Mass., for ' issu.2i:ig counterfeit half dbllars. : James E. Malone, of Wisconsin, RegT ister of the Laud Office at Perry. (). T., at the opening of the Cherokee fctr.p, is being tried for bribery, - A rebellion has broken out in Linn -choora. China, in consequence of agra rian disputes between the Chinese set tlers and Molgoiian chieftains. ' The Herman steamer Alpine Seyd, in the Chiua Sea, has been .Wrecked on Barren Island, Tasmania. ' jMany. pas sengers and crew were drowned. Several persons have bean arrested in Montevideo, Uruguay, on suspicion as forgers of the checks on the London and Iliver Plate and other banks. The Czar has conferred decorations upon the bidhops of Jaroslay, Minsk, Kisan, Charkoy and Mehilev for zeal in spreading the "orthodox" faith. A thirty-days' educational trip is to be made by some of the school boys tf Rochester, N. Y. A steamship has'b-jen chartered for a tour of the; Groat Lakes. The steamer City of Windsor crashed through the lock of the Welland Canal at Port Dalhousie. Ont., .Thursday, and navigation will bs interrupted for sev eral days. A bomb .charged wUh picric acid, scrap iron, nails, etc., was" exploded in Messina, Sicily, yesterday. A man, for merly a newspaper reporter, has been arrested. ; Benjamin II. Corey, of the bankrupt music firm of Corey Bros., of Provi dence, R. I., was arrested on a warrant for embezzlement got ont by Jacobs Bros., of this city. ; Both houses of the Prussian T)iet have been closed by royal decree. The Upper house adopted by a large major ity the financial proposals of Finance Minisiter precisely as they were pissed by the Lower House. A nugget of solid copper weighing 400 pounds has been found in the -bed of Rainy Eiver, thirty miles south f Sheboygan, Mich., with outcropplngs of rich copper near by. The Indians always said there was copper there. Lightning struck the house of Wil liam Hall, at Lakeview, Ohio Wednes day evening and wrecked the structure. Mrs. Hall and her infant were bui ied in the ruins. Both were terribly in1 jured, and Mrs. Hall's wounds are fatal. . The Manager of the Church Emigra tion Society of London says that not withstanding the decrease in the total emigration to- Canada this year the number of families applying for assis tance is steadily increasing. Mr. Charles Cunningham Conner, M. P., who conducts business in Belfast under the firm name of Fenton, Conner & Co., bleachers and spinners, ' states that owing to-be depressionoftra.de, he will wind up his affairs. . His credi tors will be paid in full. ''A New Kngland SnerstitK-.n. In olden times in New Engl.:i'.l it vrr.s supposed that the first unmarried prrton of the other ees whoa 0:13 rotten Et. Valentine's moiTiing-while cr.t trslkiirc was a destine! vife or a destined Las-hand. Y0UNGBR0S. ! Slaughter Sale. . f . .- - 1 - ' -('' "' ' - , o v .. 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 5cts. per yard, worth 10 cts. You can buy Ginghams atv 5, 6, and 7cts., worth from. 10 to i2cts. .You can buy a Calico dress at 5cts. a yard, worth yjcts. We have by far the largest and capest m Ul in . the town. If you want children it will -pay you to These goods must be sold i Brcss -:- We have a large stock j have made the price right 1 at them you will buy. Laces. 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. Oxford, si. " We have just received another shipment of Ladies' Oxfords that you can buy way down. 01ottir 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 they usually are. It might pay you to come and post yourself, if you don't want to buy. Your Friends, YOUNG BROS. Valuable Bird's Essrs- Among the rare eggs of birds still living that of the blue red-winged grosbeak is probably the most valuable, a well-marked set being worth nny v.Iiero between fifteen hundred and two thousand dollars. At a recent auction bale of zoological rarities in London a fine set of golden eagle's eggs, two in number., were, "knocked down" at seventy-five-' dollars, and fif teen -. dollars were exchanged evenly for one egg of the swcllow-tailed kite. The t''g of the Pallas sand grouse i3 usually quoted by dealers in natural history f-pecimens at about id:: dollars, but there arc exceptions to this as to all other rules. It is an Asiatic species and was never known to nest farther west than India until the year 1S"0, when a set was taken in England. The Identity of both birth; and eggs as certain, and the egg. Collectors vcnt wild forthwith. The first offered ten ! time's the market yr.lne of Rich orgs, but comiietit'o1-! was'r,o lively that they (there were two of them) were fhialiy sold for six hvmdred dollars, one hue dred times uyual. "list price." Ciiiarrli Cajinot Be Cui td with Local Applications, as they can not reach. tlie scat of the disease. Ca tarrh is a blond or constitutional dis ease, and in order to cure it-you must cake internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on tl e blood or mucous sur faces.. Hall's Catarrh Chrre is not . a quack medicine. Jt was'prescribed by one of the best physicians in this coun try for years, and is a regular prescrip tion. J It is composed of the besCtonics known, combined with the best blood, purifiers, act'ng directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such jwon'derful results in -curing Ca tarrh. Send for testimonials, free. I . J. CHENEY-& CO., 1'rops., i . Toledo, O. Price 75c, per battle. Sold by all drug gists. may be inherited, or Blood-should be rich ett?s Blood of Cod-liver Oil, with hypophosphites of lime and soda, cures all ' Blood Diseases, including Scrofula and Anaemia. It makes the blood rich and nourishing. Physicians the world over, endorse it. Persons troubled with skin eruptions and all who are thin or emaciated should take SCOTT'S EMULSION. Cures Coughs, Colds, and Weak Lungs. " Prepared by Scott 4 Bowne, N, Y. Druggists sell It. of Wlilte Goods any White Goods for th see ours before you buy. regardless of price. Groocls. of Dress Goods that we on, and if you will look On an Ol J BattlcQrld. For the first time since the war perfod a squadron of cavalry in now quartered near Washington on the old Lee estate, "Arlington." Since their arrival in the east the troops have been sent in turn to varior.s Virginia- battlefields. Recently one of these troops on the march halted near r. farmhor.Ke. and the captain, in conversation v?th thu owner, remarked that, ho was ,6iiig to the Bull Run bat tlclleld and would remain there over Sunday. The farmer's daughter, seated near by on t he piazza, began to laugh, and when asked for an explanation said, "Well, captain, yours will be the first Union soldiers who have staid there that long." San Francisco Argonaut - On aui Atlantic Steamer, Mr.ouiberhue You are eating and dr;nliing when any moment we luay bo io, uncbed into eternity. Tho tAiip may ,ro dc vn any moment. Moiryctiss (taking another bit") That have just the reason I'm doing it. . TT1 10 chance after I'm launched into eternity. Texas Siftings. A Houneliold Treattur. ,D. W. Fuller, of Conajoharie, N. Y., says that he always keeps . Dr. King's New Discovery in the house and his fomily has always found the ) 1 . 1 . it . . , . very Dest results ioiiow us use ; mat he would not be without it,' if procur able. G. A. Dykeman, Druggist, Catskill, N. Y., says that Dr. King's New Discovery is undoubtedly the best Cough remedy ; that he has used it in his family for eight years, and it j has never failed to do all that is claimed for it. Why not try a rem-'j edy so long tried and tested. Trial bottles free at Hargrave's Drug Store. Regular size 50c. and $1.00. j iseass: acquired during life. to insure health. Emulsion 1 4