$1 A YEAR, CASH IN ADVANCE. LET ALL THE ENDS THOU AIMS'T AT BE TliY COUNTRY'S, THY GOD'S AS D TRUTHS." BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM. VOLUME WILSON, N. C , DEC. 5, 1895. NUMBEK49. "THE RACKET." F1FTY-F0DHTH COMES ANOTHER Mil HORROR The Man from Maine Again As sumes the Speakership. LITTLE BU8IHES3 THIS T7EEK Many Men Buried Beneath Tons of Earth and Eock, WJA "V Yt EL K f M ctr A Racket is a nol, a disturbance they say, Sure it i s . U . IVt L o - va " Racket" is raising to-day. Competition with wonder at his prices otare, For none with the Cash Racket can com- pare,' .: . v ... Ladies at "The Racket" will always find Novelties in Dress and Dry Goods of every kind, - Lamps, Crockery, Bric-a-Brac, Notions and Shoes, Everything at The Racket Leath has for you, So Awhile in Wilson you chance to stay To the cheapest on earth The Racket a visit pay, From a needle to an anchor do not forget Just what you need at The iacket you can get, A r The low.est priced in Wilson. With money he does back it, Is the wonder of the age J. M. Leath's Racket. Open to-day, another lot of L-adies Capes. m m B1 Tiir Pflpu nnpsrT FTnnrp T K A T P A T T-i f71 I11L UfUl! iinUL. I UlUilLiJ Masb and Goldsboro Streets. m The Uyams Twins Acquitted. Toronto, Dec. 2. In the second trial of the twin brothers. Harry and Dallas Uy ams, for tho murder of young Wells,' the beneficiaries of -whose life ''insurance pol icies, aggregating $30,00 J, the Hyams ulti mately became, ended in a verdict of not guilty. The jury were out only thirty-five minutes. When Judge Ferguson told the prisoners they were free they -started to leave the court room, but at the door were rearrested on the charge of conspiracy to defraud the insurance companies in the case of Martha Wells. The prisoners will therefore remain in prison until the matter is finally decided. ' - - V Five Drowned in the Monongahela. UNiONTOWN,Pa.,Dec. 2. Joseph Pickup, Mrs. Missouri Mcintosh, Mrs. Ethel Ste phens, Jacob K iking and Joseph Mcintosh were drowned in the Monongahela river below Brownsville Saturday midnight. They were returning in a skiff from Brownsville to their homes at Woods Run,' and got too close to the? steamer James G. Blaine, which was coming up stream. The waves upset the skiff, throwing them all into cfcep water. Nothing could be ilone to help them in the darkness. The bodies were recovered. Three Killel at a Crossing. Toledo. Dec. S.-r-The mail train on the Adrian division of the Lake Shore struck a wagon containing three persons at Air line Junction, killing all of them. .The dead are 'Joseph Roi mean, his 10-year-old daughter Lizzie, and Ernest Neiver. " The men were market gardeners, and were re turning horns from market. Dishonest Hank President Convicted. Lockport, N. Y., Dec, 2. At 3 :30 o'clock yesterday afternoon the jury in the case of Joshua S. Helmer, ex-president of tho Merchants' bank, came in with a verdict of guilty, with a recommendation for clem ency. Court was adjourned until next Saturday, when sentence will be pro nounced. The indictment upon which Helmer was tried charged him with hav ing wilfully deceived the state bank ex aminer as to the condition of the bank on Sept. 19. 1S93. Any one who has children will reioice with L. B. Mulford, of Plainfield, N.J. His little boy, five years of age, was sick with croup. For two days and nights he tried various remedies recom mended by friends and neighbors, He says : "I thought sure I would lose him. I had seen Chamberlain's Cough Rem edy advertised and thought I would try it as a last hope and am happy to say that after two doses he slept until morning. I gave it to him next day and a cure was affected. I keep, this remedy in the house now and as soon as any of my children show signs of croup I give it to them and that is the last of it." 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale by E. M. Nadal. Druggist. m Fisher Not Guilty of Murder. Wilkesb aeue, Pa., Dec. 3. After a trial lasting eleven days the case of James Fisher, charged with the murder of Bar ney Ileick, was given to the j ury Saturday afternoon, and fifteen minutes afterward the twelve men came into the court room with a verdict of not guilty. Fisher was at once discharged. He was suspected of being an accessory to the murder of Bar hey Keick the commission merchant who was killed hre about two years ago. James Hendricks was found guilty in the second degree of the crime and sentenced to twenty years; Jack Robinson pleaded and got eighteen yoars, and there is an other man, Patrick Kearney, now in jail awaiting trial. Senator Hill's Lecture Tour a Failure. Minneapolis, Dec. 2. Senator David B. Hill's lecture tour in the northwest has proven a failure and came to an abrupt end yesterday, when the senator closed his business arrangements and returned to New York with IJ13 reason assigned for this action that h had contracted a severe cold while at Duluth, making him adverse to further public speaking at present. The fact is, however, that the audiences which gathered to listen to him at Milwaukee, Minneapolis, St. Paul and Duluth were sobneager that the financial returns were insufficient.- to pay expenses and Senator Hill refused to talk for nothing. He was booked for ten lectures altogether. An American's Gift to Paris. Paris, Dec. 2. Bright weather shone upon the ceremony yesterday of unveiling the group of statuary of Washington and Lafayette, modeled by the well known sculptor, Frederic Auguste Rartholdi, and presented to the city of Paris by Joseph Pulitzer, editor of the New York World. A notable assemblage witnessed the un veiling. The figure of W ashington is ten feet in height, while the figure of the Mar quis de Lafayette is some inches less. Noted English Authoress Arrives. New York, Nov. 30. Beatrice Harra dan, the author of "Ships that Pass in the Night," arrived on the Lucania yesterday, and will spend the winter in California. Her forthcoming book will have an En glish theme, but as yet she has not decided upon a title for it. Detectives Indjcted for Murder. Chicago, Nov. 29. Charles and Joseph McDonald, officers of a private detective agency, have been indicted for the murder of Frank White. They and others are said to have dogged the man, and were present at, if not actual participants in, the killing. Pennsylvania Defeats Cornell. Philadelphia, Nov. 29. The Univer sity of Pennsylvania football eleven yes terday afternoon defeated the Cornell team by a score of 46 to 2, thus winding up - the football season with a clean record of vic tories to her credit. Tomorrow's Sessions in I5oth Houses Will lo Devct- 1 to t'.ie Keasiinj; of t!ie Presi dent's '3Tossa;e Feiiatois 31 ay Kave a Contest for ieers of That Body. - Y,' aching to n Dac. 2. The first week of the Fift-fuurth congress, which convened at noon today, promises nothing at either end of the Capitol in the way ofactual leg isla ! i m. The time before the Christmas hol idays is usually devoted to preliminary matters, and the work of the session does not begin uutil after the recess. The new congress will probably not .be an exception to this rule. Mr. Kerr, clerk of the last house, called the house to order. After the roll call came the election of the -officers nominated by tli3 Republican caucus on Saturday night. They are: Speaker, Thomas 13. Reed of Maine; clerk, Alexander Mc Dowell of Pennsylvania; serg.mt-at-arm. B ;iijami:i-F. Ra;sll of Missouri; doorkeeper, W J. Glenn of New York; postmaster, J. C. McKlroy of Ohio; chap lain, Rev. II. X. Coiuba of Michigan. The officers -of the Republican house caucus, who will serve during the session, are: Chairman,- David B. Hendarsou of Iowa; iT t tt . vr.. secro.ary, warren x. xxooi.er oi j.-uw York. . As soon as Mr. Reed was formally in stalled as speaker the drawing of seats, which is known as the congressional "raftl?," was begun. This is a somewhat tedious but amusing affair, and will oc cupy the remainder of the afternoon. The reading of the president's message will consume tomorrow, and at its conclusion the house will probably adjourn until Thursday, and on convening Thursday adjourn immediately until Monday. These adjournments will continue probably un til the committees are announced. This is the program, but the unexpected might occur, as it so often does in the house, if some aspiring member should introduce a sensational resolution and ask for its im mediate consideration. v Speaker Reeil says that the committees will not be announced this week, with, perhaps, a single exception the commit tee oh rules. This committee formulates the ruhvs which are to govern the house during its sessions, and it is customary for the speaker to name it during thy first week iu order that it can immediately bo gin its l.ibors. While it i believed' .that theruijsof the Fifty-first congress, over which Ml. Rvd pr-rsid-jd, will bo reported for tho ga'nlaacj of tho piv-on:; hoa-io, it understood that a few 'ehaago will o3 made, a a- re uic o expoex-ace, which aro designe d to still further improve tho house machinery mil ike facilitation of public busines.--.. - Reptv .eataiive Lawrence McGann, of Chicago, who hold a sour in tno Fi Ccy-second Snd Fii'.ty-riiird .ve.'igresso..-; and was chair man 6f iii ; c iuiajiitoo oa labo.' in tho last congres-. wiLl lurnish to t ho house the un usual sp ctaele of a m nuber making a vol untary r;uii)quishment oi the seas to which he holds a certilicato. As soon as he is able to secu.o lecogmtion from tho speaker Mr. McGann will make a statement to the house to the effect that he thinks his Re publican opponent, Mr. Hugh R. Belknap, is entitled to the seat, and that he (Mc Gann) waives all claims thereto. Tnis step will make it possible for the commit tee on elections, as soon a3 it is organized, to report in favor of seating Mr. Belknap, and will relieve that gentleman of the necessity of making a contest before the committee. Mr. Belknap is a son of Hon. W. W. Belknap, who was secretary of war under President Grant. It is not probable that the first week of congress will not witness much serious effort at-legislaive work in the senate. If anything should be accomplished beyond the receipt of the president's message and of the reeess nominations and the intro duction of bills the session would be an exception in the history of the senate. The proceedings of today consisted in the swearing in of the newly elected mem bers who were present, and the . appoint ment of a committee to wait upon the president. Tomorrow the senators will listen, to tho roading of the president's message, and the brief sessions of Wednes day and Thursday, will be devoted largely to the int jodaocian of bills, of which there will be sovo.ai hundred. Following precedents, the. senate will adjourn on Thursday until the following Monday. One or two brief executive ses sions for the reference of nominations are also among the probabilities for the week. If the senate Republicans, at their cau cus this afternoon, decide upon an effort to reorganize, as is now generally con ceded, the Democrats will follow with a conference tomorrow or Wednesday, at which they probably will decide upon a course of action. It now appears probable that all three parties will place candidates for president pro tempore in the field, and in that event the week will be enlivened somewhat by a triangular cqntest for this and the officers of the senate. "It is a pleasure to sell Chamber lain's Cough Remedy," says Stickney & Dentler, druggists, Republic, Ohio, "Because a customer after once using it, is amost certain to call for it when again in need of such a medicine. We sell more of it than of any other medi cine we handle and it always gives sat isfaction." For conghs, colds and .croup, is without an equal. For sale I by E. M. Nadal, Druggist- THIRTEEN LIYS3 ARE SACRIFICED. TXie Cra-,:i Cime With-mfc a Moment's Warning, ana I5ut Few Werf Krasli riacss of " Safety BuJi Victims Terribly lanied. Able t; 4 of tiio .Caemel, X. Y.," Nov. 30. An accident resulting in the loss of thirteen or fourteen lives occurred at the Tilly Foster mines a little after 3 o'clock yesterday afternoon. Foreman Murtha was descending into tli3 pit to take the timo of two gangs of la borers, numbering thirty-five men, who were working at the bottom, when a vast weight of earth and rock slid with the force of an avalanche from tha mouth of the pit to the bottom, a distance of 300 feet. The earth crashed over the men with tremendous force. Out of one gang of eleven only five came out alive, and three of the men employed in another gang wore were taken out dead. Among those known to be dead are: Michael Gannon, foreman; Pa! rick II. Murtha, foreman; John Fagah, boarding house keeper; Thomas Djnnis, James Smith and an Austrian known as No. i3i. Four other dead bodies were taken out to- j day. They are; James Fox, sometimes ! known as James Smith, and James Clark, and two Italians known as Nos. 13 and 312. - The bodies of three Italians are still in the mine. An Austrian known as No. 331 received a fracture of the skull, and will probably die. Several of the workmen were seri ously injured. The first intimation to those below was the low rumbling sound which preceded the fall of the mass. But the shock came bo suddenly that few were able to reach places of safety. Half a dozen of the work ers who were directly under the ledge from which the mass of earth fell were buried under tons of cf&bris. The fall was tremendous. One of the first to be brought to the sur face was Foreman Murtha. He was found near the top, pinned down by a huge piece of rock. The rescuing party dug him out and bore him, still alive, to the fresh air. j Murtha was badly mangled, and his clothes were almost torn from his back. : He was taken to his home, but a short dis tance away, but died almo ,t immediatel 7 : after reaching there. Murtha was married, and his wife along with the wives of other unfortunate's stood at the top of the slope while the rescuers were at work. All of tho bodies were horribly mangled, the sharp edge.? of the rock and iron tear ing tli rough their clothing and pooling the 'flesh from their faces and bodies. One by one the bodies were brought out and car ried to the carpenter shop where an awe stricken crowd of - people, looked upon the remains and uttered exclamations of woo when the identity of the victims was made known. Somoof tho;e assembled sought anxiously, after a friend or relative sup posed to be in the ruin-? in the pit. William Ospell and four companions succeeded in getting away by running. Five Italians also got out alive. One of the Italians who came hear the cable car for the purpose of rendering assistance was killed by a second fall of rock. Ran Into an Open Switch. Syracuse, N. Y., Dec. 2. Passenger train No. 8, on the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western railroad, which left Syracuse at 10:10 last night, ran into an open switch at Preble, ten miles from Cortland, and telescoped three freight cars. The engine of the passenger train was completely wrecked, and the baggage and mail cars and two coaches caught fire from the blaze under the wrecked boiler, and were con- sumed. The engineer was instantly killed, and the fireman was taken from the debris by the passengers in a dying condition. The sleeping car was the only one saved. The passengers escaped injury. The en gineer was -Richard Young, and the firc- man's name was Roof. Somebody had tampered with the switch, evidently with the deliberate intent to wreck the train. Triple Murderer Shut to Pieces. Cyxtiiiaxa, Ky.', Dec. 2. Orville Eals was a farmer living near Browingsville, and his wife deserted him for John Fields, a tenant on the place. Eals induced his wife to return on Tuesday, killing Fields. Eals defied arrest and took refuge in a hut. Yesterday at dawn an attack was made by a posse. Eals began firing, and an officer named McCoombs fell mortally wounded, while two men named Wells and Herbert were seriously shot. The storming party effected an entrance, and found the mutilated body of Mrs. Eals al most nude and covered with ugly wounds. The party had fired a f usilade of shots as it entered the house, and Eals was shot to pieces. Hauled Down" the Stars and Stripes. Toronto, Nov. 29. There are many American students attending the Ontario Veterinary college and, yesterday being Thanksgiving Day across the line, they sought to honor the event by raising the stars and stripes in one of their lecture rooms. This, however, the Canadian stu dents objected to, and rudely hauled down the flag, though they met with a vigorous resistance. Then ensued a free fight, sev eral on both sides being slightly injured, though none seriously. See our ladies hats this week M. T. Young. " Shoes-all kinds M. T. Young. r cr i a P r- Are yon taking Sdimons Liver Reg ulator, the "King of Liver Medi cines?" That is what our readers want, and nothing but that. It is the same old friend to which the old folks pinned their faitn and were never dis appointed. But another good recom mendation for it is, that it is better than Pills, never gripes, never weak QJi3, but works in such an easy and natural way, just like nature itself, that relief comes quick and sure, and one feels new all over. It never fails. Everybody needs take a liver remedy, and everyone should take only Sim mons Liver Regulator. Be sure you get it. The Red Z is on the wrapper. J. II. Zcilin & Co., Philadelphia. COUNT VON TAAFFE DEAD. Austria's Ex-Premier Succumbs After Ser eral Month' Illness. VlENNA,Nov. 33. Count Edward Taaffe, formerly prime minister of Austria, died yesterday on his estate at Elishau, in Bo hemia. He had been ill for several months with heart affection and subsequently pyaemia. Count Edward Francis Joseph Taaffe, viscount of Corrcn and Baron of Bally mote, Sligo, in th Tnsh Hiiage, was born - THE LATE EX-Villi vl IEH TAAFFE. Rt. Prague, Feb. 24, J S:)3. He entered the l iiperial S3rvic in 1837 as secretary of the Hungarian government, and in -1863 ac cepted the omce of governor of Salzburg. In 18G7 he became Austrian minister of the interior and vice president of the Cisleithan ministry. He served a minister president in lS6rJ, and was appointed governor of the Tyrol and Yorarlberg. In 1879 he became-" premier, and held that position for four teen years. Count Taaffe never once had a clear ma jority of his own in the reichsrath during the fourteen years he held office. Yet he had long been by far the most popular man in the country, with the single excep tion of the emperor. Th:? middle. classes, German by origin as a rale, were fiercely opposed to him, but tho great mass of tho population-had unbounded faith in nim.. V t HOLIES' DEA i H SENTENCE. The Prisoner-listen to His Doom With out liet raying: Amotion. Philadelphia', Dec. 2, A new trial was refused'by Judga -Arnold in the case of Holmes, the convicted murderer of Benja min F. Pitezel, in the court of oyer and terminer on Saturday, and the prisoner was sentenced to bo,. hanged. The scene was an intensely impressive one. No per son in the court room, however, betrayed less emotion during Holmes' ordeal than the cool, calculating murderer himself. He had been duly informed by his counsel what the result was to be, and that an ap peal from the judgment of the oyer and terminer was undoubtedly to be taken to the supreme court. After Judge Arnold had finished the reading of his opinion, denying the appli cation for a new trial, he arose, and with him the entire assemblage. District At torney Graham had moved for sentence, and the court was at last ready for the or deal. Then, addressing the prisoner, the judge, with impressive solemnity, pro nounced the death sentenca. Governor Hastings is to name the date of execution: After sentence the prisoner i was taken back to Moyamensing prison where he was stripped of his citizen's dress and clothed in convict garb. Mr. Ahoemaker, Holmes- lawyer, says a stiff flight will be made before the supreme com Hats! Hats! Hats 'kt Young's carpets ana rugs :s-thci cheapest in town M. T. Young! -"' - 8l& V:. . ... k m-- - Xd i 'kit? ..:; j- J"