$TTyeak, cash n amice, l ! LET ALL THE E8DS THOU AIMS'! AT BE THY COUSTRY'5, THY GOD'S AKD TROTHS." BEST ADYERTISIKiJIEDIDU. VOLUME -XXYI WILSON, N. G., FEB. 20, 1896. NUMBER 8. THE '!-. ' i , Original ' I iiilf rsi'lfrr. j . V - f -.--.- .1.' r'" r - - 1 : - " - . " . j ., ' ' . i - . -. . ... ; '-' , - ; age. V Ready usn on re- itJE' ARE goiii- toy put sale this; week some ? ) markably cheap j: goods, even for tins remarkably ci m mm of silver: Another Setback for White Metal Adherents in Congress. . THEIR DEFEAT OVERWHELMING. Senate eap was the pole tHat knocked down the nersirnmork and VI i ! I il'i. ITlUi iW) J Down opens the gate to eather them. LI it: P'JWCI LU HI terest in the so called dull season. Some Extraordinary Good Values One lot of' Vard wide Bleach Cotton in .reranjints, : well worth 7c yard for 5 cents. .. f. odd lot hefwy Shoes lor men at 75c, i in sizes I7, 8 and 9, worth $1.25 and $i.5b. - inn C sold elsewhere at 50 cents. f , 36 pairs -mn's Bal. Shoes at $1.25, I'm suret cannot be bought foi: less than$i.5b. - ..Small lot- of Hamburg Edging in remnants, at about one half their Value. ' :"; ' . The balance of a case ol FedoraHats for 7f iirM-rVt 4tv. rA flia' lafPCt styles in Derbys, Satin Lined, for Si. 09, would be considered good vaiue at $200: T; REMEMBER Cash Catches the Bargains. Amendment Defeated by 215 to 00. At the Night Session Mr., Talbert Is As sailed by Mr. Ilardy and Retaliates in Gentle Sarcasm. , Warhikoton,1 Feb. 15. The majority against free silver in the housB yesterday, when the final vote was taken on concur rence in the senate frep coinage amend ment. Was larger than that of ...Thursday in comjnittee of, the whole. On Thursday i ho motion to' concur was defeated by 190 fo ?0, a; mnjority of 110; yesterday it was bwitenjby 215 tojf)3, a ma joriiy of 125. The vote, was a reeord .making vote, and count--lag thq pairs hut thirty-seven out of 353 faembdrs were ijtiHCcounted for. "Perhaps a few absenfeo dodged," but iiiost of them yer uiiarojdiiMy nbssnt and were unable lo secure pairs. An analrsivof the vote show that :184;iloiubIicans arid thirty-one Demneirn- s voted nlgainst coueurreiice and Uity-eiglit Democrats, twenty-4lv6: Repub licans j and sovbn" Populists for concur rence, i The debate which . preceded the vole was of an (interesting, character, but : devoidj of any sensational features. The galleries as usual on a jfield day in tlip lower branch of congress were crowded to the doors, and quite a numbci of sen rtlors sat -through the five our debate. Secretary Herbert vas also.prcsent. "YjZ Speaker Cii-p Iprrt-eutsd th closing ar gumeiit for t ho silver meujand was re plied to by Mrj Turner, a Democratic col- -; league from Gecprg'ia.in a two hour speech. 'The personal rivalry between the two leaders of the opposing factions of the Democratic side of the iouse;adde(Fto the interest of the j occasion. . Mr. Dalzell, of Pennsylvania, closed in behalf of the R3 publidans. Tlie -partisans f the respective champions missetl no opportunity to ac claim their approval whoa telling point3 were inade. ( ' .. - - v A very exciting row was only prevented at the night session of the house, which was devoted to til 3 consideration of privme peuion bills. ImUiq, .Osid-rt fwri uy iir. Tatb Jof South Carolina, :';whso utterances at the night session two weeks ago caused Air. 'Barrett, of Massachusetts, to offer a resolution to censure him for "treasonable arid seditious' language. Last night Mr.. Talbert "was opposing a bill to pension a soldier's widow who had subsequently remarried and. had been di vorced, from her second bu? band, when Mr. Hardy, Indiana Republican.arose and made a savage personal- attack upon Mr. Talbert. South Carolina, he said, had al ways; been raising her voice in opposition to the Union, j I , "We have heard from South Carolina," said he, "year in and year out, except the four years when she was out; bf the Union. She ha3 caused more trouble than any state in the Union from the time when John' C- Calhoun tried to nullify the statutes of the United States; in 1833, and Jackson threatened to hang; him for his nains. unto th nresent time when the gentleman from South Carolina appears In this body and a gentleman with sim ilar propensities appears at the other end TERRIBLE TAtE OF SUFFERING. A-Boat Drifts Ashore trlth Five Corpses - and Six Nearly Dead Men. Cakrabel Fla., Feb." 15. A boat con taining five corpses and six men barely alive haa 'drifted ashore; on Dog Island. When discovered by two fishermen the fUrvivor were, lying 'unconscious on the decomposed corpses of their companions. The survivors wera revived, and Gilbert Holmes, who was the strongest, related a story of awful suffering. Last week the eleven left Key West on a smack td fish on the west coast. "When two days out the smack was wrecked, the men escaping in a boat withTut food,-water or clotfimg. Three days after the wreck Frank Mason died, and soon after . Max Thornton,"Al fred Stafford, Joe West and Nathan Adams succumbed. The survivors were too weak to throw their . dead comrades into the sea, and the corpses remained, in the boat. - .' For the last two days Holmes was the only one of the living conscious, and he does not remember all that happened. The scene at the boat : was horrible. The liv ing and the dead, without a rag of clothes, were tumbled together, Thb -corpses seemed, to.; lie gnawed in" places, and the lishennen suggested that : in vdesperation the survivors tried "to sustain life on the fiesb of their dead compiions"v v The six survivors are Josu Rodriques, "Sam" Williiiihs, Kenry Johnson, John Blackburn, Arthur' Moore ajid Gilbert Holmes, wlioijre being iured for ou. Dog Island; Several of them iem to have been rendered idiotic by their of the Capivol. out a parallel. Chart-fl with Choking Hi Wife to Death. IANOASTui:l. Pa., Feb. 17. John Herr, r ged 55 year, was lodged in jail here last night charged with the murder of his wife iu Coluriibia. The couile lived in the couter of thj tovn. Both-bad. been drink ing freely.- and Saturday hight they quar reled. Shortly "afterwards--: Herr - told a neighbor time his wife hfid died suddeuly, Tiie woman's body showed jn irks of vio-" leuce, tiie con ditiou of the neck and,' face indicating that she. had been choked to death: Herr, when arrested, was too drunk to talk. . - Will Avert a Fretch Crisis. Paris, eb? 17i-Taa: cabinet has de "cided to ignorvj the vote taken in the sen ate on Sarurday, which Wiis ,i repetition ,pf a vote. of that '-.Jy nl-Vi 1 '5tjrft!i't ;la t lui iiguiariues dse'i0.jed in connec tion with the Southern railway scandal, and demanding a searching inquiry. The newspapers here express t he belief that no Issue from lb. i cabinet crisis is possible, except through the - resignation of M. Kicard, minister of j'ustice. -; - :; -.. - The TheriPOMiotw's Dowuward Bush, .New YoiiK, Feb. 17.. The temperature in this city about midnight was 8 above zero. The temperatUic was reported from other places a follows: Buffalo, 4 degs! below; Syracuse, 13 belo.v; Rochester, 5 below; Albany, 0 below; Montreal, 10 be low; Toronto, 15 bjlow; St. John, N. B., 6 below; Worcester, Mass , 4 above; Boston 10 aboya, HANSEN AT TEE POLE. Ei-Explorer Who Thinks It Quite Probable. GIVES BEASOHS . FOE HIS BELIEF. In the Meantime There Has Keen No Con firmation of the Report a St. Peters burg, Though There It Is Deemed Not Unlikely. ' . St. Petersburg, Feb. 14. A dispatch from Irkutsk, Siberia, says thai a Sibe-: rian trader - named Kouchnareff, who ia acting in the capacity of agent for Dri Nansen, the Arctic explorer, has informed the prefect of Kolmysk that he has r& ceived information that Nansen has reivched the north pole, where he found land, and that he is now on his way back. Naperville, Ills., Feb. 15. Kvlyn D. Baldwin, the meteorologist, of ihe Peary rxpodition of 1893 94, was asked what he thought of the reported discovery of the north polo by Dr. Nansen "1 think"' it highly probable," he replied. "It is the result of well calculated plans, and not unexpected. Dr. Nansen has cer tainly, it would appear, accomplished that for which he has striven for; at "L least the past live years. The voyage of the Jean- : :- -M ' PASSAIC'S TRAGEDY SENSATION. i The Polite Satisfied Thit Miss Edson W I : Accidentally Asphyxiated, Passaic, N. J, Feb. 17. Passaic Is still worked up over the Bad death of beautiful Minnie Edson, the ChriHia Endeavor girl, who was suffocated wmlc Jouing in Ihe home of her married lover. Andrew C. Rahe, at No. 50 Irving Place, on Thurs day night. - --. " Kahe's prqmineno4 from his connection with the matcir factory, and the girl's previous good character and excellent repu tation, makes the story all the more sad, and -the girl's companions are grief stricken, while ;he residents of the'neigh borhood in which the death took place are horrified, j ' - -1 . -' Rahe, after being, released from the po lice station on tail, packed up a few goods and left town. It is believed that he has gone to New York. His wife, who is now in York, Pa., has been notified of .his dis grace, but she, refuses to believe it. A telegram she sent to her friends in this city says it is all a case of blackmail," and .that her husband's enemies are - trying to injure his basiqesi reputation. She char acterized the dead girl as a party to the conspiracy. " ." ' : . Rahe's story vould lend some truth to his wife's belief were it not for the fact that he has admitted that he willingly agreed to the lia-on. ; Chief of Poliqe Hendry is satisfied that the girl was asjhyxialotl accidentally, but an effort will bje made to have Rahe in dicted for criminal intimacy. . He Announces SENATOR QUAY'S CANDIDACY. That He Is in the Tresi dential Fight to Win. Pittsburg, Feb. 17. Senator Quay hasi aispelled all dojubts as to the sincerity of the movement in favor of "his nomination for the pre-ddoQcy at the St. Louis conven tion through an, interview with Frank Be H. RobisonJ, of Cleveland. The Cash Racket Stdres, NASH & GOLDSBORO STS.. I lrath, Manager. Her record here is with I am here to vote for every pension bill presented to this house, in spite j of Southr Carolina, winch has not sent an hone3t representative to congress pince:i872." - - . ' 'j . "-:-rV V Mrj Talbert was evidently suffering un der great excitement while this attack was being made, and an outbreak was expected, but he restrained himself with difficulty and turned the! attack with a pleasant ref erence to the fact-- that Canada had been heard from (Mr. Hardy was born in Can ada).! Later, however, while; he was dis cussing another bill, he took occasion to remark that he had noticed those who had taken no part in the war were loudest in their proclamations of patriotism and their; denunciations 'of those who had fought against the Union. . Mrt Talbert himself served j in the Con federate army throughout the war. Mr. Hardy did hot serve in the Union army. "I have no ticed," .concluded Mr. Talbert, "that those who are invincible in time of peace were generally invisible in time of war." ; A Repulse for the Tariff Hill. Washington, Feb. 14. The friends of the tariff bill met an unexpected repulse yesterday afternoon when, by the decisive vote bf 21 yeas' to 29 nays, the senate de feated the motion of Mr. Morrill, chair man of tho flnanco committee, to take up the measure. The negative vote which de feated the motion was given by Demo crats, Populists and four Republican sen atorsviz, Teller, Mantle, Dubois and Car ter. ! The affirmative vote was entirely Re publican, but its total is less than half of the aggregate Republican strength. Mr. Morrill's motion has been anticipated for some 'day 8, but it was not pressed pending consideration of the urgent de ficiency appropriation bill, t Kruger Resents English Interference. London, Feb. 17. xne ueriin correspon dent of The Chronicle sends a dispatch, apparently inspired by Dr. Leyds, the sec retary of state of the Transvaal, which says: f The Transvaal government consid ers I Secretary Chamberlain's proposed home rule a preposterous and utterly un workable scheme.' It may.atmos do ac cepted as certain that President Kruger will not Visit England,' because his pres ence there would be a rirtual recognition of England's right to interfere in the In ternal affairs of the TranayaaL" ; , Eight Cremated in a London Fire. London, Feb.-17. A number of horrible accidents occurred at a fire early yesterday morning in a tenement house at No. 7 Church street, Soho, behind the Palace Theater of Varieties. Five children and .three adults were burned to death. One man jumped from a window and was im paled upon the railing of a fence. He was removed to a hospital in 'a dying condi tion. SeveraLother persons escaped from the burning building with the greatest difficulty with burned faces and hands. A Negro Murderer Lyiiched. Montgomery, Ala., Feb. 17. Robert Williams, the aegro who j killed Police Officer Suggs on Saturday, while the lat ter was j attempting, to ; arrest him, was caught at a station about twenty-five miles north of Montgomery; Saturday night. While a deputy sheriff was bringing the prisoner to the county jail a mob of sev eral hundred citizens flagged the train near the city, took the prisoner from the deputy sheriff and hanged him. Eeitler and Kiter Named. - Philadelphia, Feb 17. The appoint ments of Director of Public Safety A. M. Beitler to be judge of common pleas court j No 1, to succeed the late J udge Allison, and of State Representative Frank M. Riter to be director of public safety to suc ceed Mr. Beitler, were announced on Sat, urday. Mayor Warwick' announced Mr. Riter's appointment immediately after Beitler's elevation to the judgeship had been received from Governor Hastings. Korean Ministers Murdered. Yokohama, Feb. 14. Advices received from Seoul, capital of Korea, says that, an uprising took place there an Tuesday last, during which the premier and seyen offi cials were murdered. . The dispatches add that the king and crown prince have sought shelter in the Russian legation. It is stated that the king ordered the minis ters to be put to death. A force of 200 Russian sailors and marines are guarding the legation of that country. Four Killed in a Mining Shaft. Republic, Mich.,Feb. 17. While eleven men were ascending . from the Republic mine in a 6kip it overturned and they were thrown to the bottom of the shaft. James Dridge. P. Pegelber, Andrew Bailed and William McGrath were killed; and Andrew- Peterson was so badly in jured that he oannot live. Erick Martin had a leg broken, and all the others, with one exception, were Injured.- Slr Edward Clarke Will 'Defend Jameson. LoiJDON, Feb. 17 Six Edward Clarke, q. C., the distinguished criminal advo cate, has been retained for .the defense of pr. Jameson upon his trial in England K-: DE - masses. . i .;. ette under De Long until the crushing of the vessel in latitude 77 degrees 15 minutes and longitude 155 east, indicated that, the near approach t o the north pole was to be made by a well equipped and properly con structed vessel from that direction by the New Siberian islands. - ! "The Jeanette had drifted through two long Arctic nights in that region, and this would indicate that if it is possible for a ressel under" Orainary conditions to endure so long, it is to -be expected that one of special construction, as was Dr. Nansen's, would succeed in going much farther. Dr. Nansen's advance since June 24,1893, has given him time to make at least very close approach to the north pole, and I think it highly probable that, with favorable con ditions, he has succeeded in' arriving at the long coveted point. " 5 ; "Since communication with the New Siberian islands at the mouth of the Lena and Delta is continuously had by means of the traders and hunters of that region, it is not improbable ihat Dr. Nansen has had means of sending dispatches to the Russian settlements in Central Siberia, ana thus nome. o 1 think the report is not at all improbable. The appropriation made by the Norwegian government, and supplemented by private subscriptions, so abundantly equipped JDr. Nansen that he has been unhampered so fair aS his ship is concerned, and the conditions : have been altogether very favorable. ' "It wasj however, expected that the first news from him would chronicle his arrjr, val off the north coast of Greenland, as It was his theory that his vessel would drift with the ice north of the New Siberian islands nearly, if not directly, over the. north pole, and thence southward to the coast of ; Greenland. It seems, however, that instead of drifting south after once having arrjved at the north pole he, has re turned southward by way of the outward voyage, as did De Long after the.crushing ' No Confirmation in St." Petersburg. St. Petersburg, Feb. 15. No confirma tion has been received of the news that Dr. Nansen has discovered the north pole and is returning to civilization. If he is returning his own dispatches are likely to arrive before any answer is possible to in quiries sent to such wild regions, devoid as they are of telegraph or other means of regular communication. ; Captain Wig gins opines that if it is true that Nansen is returning he musfirave abandoned his ship. This observer regards the report re garding Nansen as not impossible. ,i . . Brutal Asylum Attendants Convicted. Wilmington, Del., Feb. 17. John J. Swan and Daniel Brown, attendants at the Farnhurst Insane asylum, who have been on trial for causing the death of Leon Pisa, an inmate, were yesterday convicted of manslaughter, the jury having been out all night. Michael Lynch! another Attendant, indicted with thmf was ac quitted, but there remain two charges of assault against them. A motion for a new trial will be made. The penalty for manslaughter in -this state is a fine of from of $400 to 11,000 and imprisonment from one to five years, . 1 Killed Her Sweetheart and Herself. St. Louis, Feb. 17. Barbara Kossel, "a pretty German girl, about 19 years old, last night shot and filled John Rohlflnge, her lover, and then, with the same weapon. a cheap revolver of 32-callber, fired a bullet into her own brain, dying instantly. ; Mr. Robison j who is the, representative of Mark A. Hanna, ex-Governor MiKin- ley's right hand ; man, called on Senator Quay at his hokne jn Beaver yesterday dud pointedly asked the latter what his; real position in the presidential race is. The query was brought about by the numerous statements tlUt Senator Quay's candidacy was merely aiiluff. . , . - Mr. Robi3on said- the senator received him Cordially, and in answer to the lead ing question unhesitatingly, and" without qualification,; said his candidacy was bona fide in every respect, and that he was in the fight to win. Should he faii.it would not be because his friends would not world faithfully t attain their end. , Mr. Robison was pleased with the out spoken way I4 which Senator Quay met him, but says the McKinley forces will be nothing daunted, and will not waver a particle in their allegiance to him. Kussia's Advance In Korea London, Fod. 17. The Times prints-a dispatch from Kobe, Japan, which says; News from S'eoul, Korea, proves that Rus sia made a remarkable coup bn the night of Feb. 10. On that night 200 Russian marines, withj a field gun, were loaded at Chemulpo and marched to Seoul. The king secrecy left the palace for the Rus sian legation, ministers gni whence he proclaimed his ty of treason . Two of the ministers were arrested and executed and the others fled. The tai-won-kun (the father of the ting) Is a prisoner at the le gation. An knti-Japanese ministry was then formed. A bitter feeling has been aroused in Japan It is believed this pre ludes a Russian protectorate over Korea. 1 Gomez's Warning .to Weyler. Tampa; FIjL, Feb, 17. One hundred and forty passengers arrived on: the steamer Olivette fro ni Cuba last night.. They say that the rumor prevails in Havana that the prisoners in Moro Castle are being shot, as the firing can be heard in the city. Gomez has notified General Weyler that should he attienipt to repeat his. atrocities of the former: revolution that he will be shot by Cubafn assassins. A Spanish se cret service cletective - named Garcia will arrive on thenext steamer commissioned to remain hepe and 6py upon expeditions. Caused His Hudson, N Own Death by Pneumonia. . Y.i Feb. 17. Charles Mc- Darbey, aged 28, in; jail here under indict ment for the murder of Caroline Proper, in Gallatin tbwnship last November, was found dead in his cell yesterday. During the past week, he became demented brood ing over his trouble. He was found naked on the floor of his cell with a window open to let in the cold. Death, it la stated, was caused by pneumonia. ! Don't think because you are sick and nothing sem to give you relief that you cant be cured. There mt st be a cure for you some- where. - If your d octor can't cure you, per haps he ha$ mistaken the cause. Any body is liable to make a mistake some times, j ' ' r One in three of us suffer from mdi digestion, and ona out of three dyspep tics doesn't know it. This is. he may know he is sick, but blames it to some thing else. . - Indigestion is the cause of half of our dangerousjdiseases. ' Shaker Digestive " Cordial, .-- made from tonic (medicinal roots and herbs, is the mosti natural cure for indigestion. It relieves the symptons and cures the disease getitly, naturally, gently, efficiently,- giving fresh life, strength and health to sick dyspeptics. At druggists.- A trial bottle for 10 cents. ' - ! "