THE WILSON ADVANCE: JUNE II ,1896.
tri-baf . !
i Anther.
look in those eyes, listen j AVhen everything
The MilliiiHiuiii will Dawn.
goes to "please
Tlie HVavy II n-se Always iu Demand.
j'r voice, notice the feeling ; everybody
!0 touch bestowed upon you When every kind of b
tor
V)
. !l nfll
ct . f: .fathomable love in those
the
The mod' rn contrivances of travel
I and motors fur power havt made in-
usiness k1 roads on the' lightest scrub horse.
hand r Make much ot it , conducted to suit the notions of every I and lor some ! time it has appeared
( -on- hive the most precious ,
vet you - , .. !
nW oitts a loving iiiuuier
eves-
.nne a:
kind
anxiety of that
iRht
have
nam
r .
-.a inok. however sngni uurj
u nf.tr life.; you may
. T 1 1 itimi Kuto o r- oin
, j uui never win uu iavi. oSQiu
t inexpressible love and gentleness
iMirti-upon you which none bfi't a
rotner bestows. Olten do I sih in
i . ,-,-'tli th.? hard, unrafincr
jorld fJr the svvect' deep security 1
,wh,n,oi an evening, nestling on
er bosom, I listened to some quiet
suitable to my ..age, read in her
iirinir voice. Never can I forget
jprsireet glances cast upon me when
Appeared asleep ; never her kiss' of
pace at nioht, ' Years have parsed
since we laid her beside my
..j -,er voice whispers Irom the
rrave, and hcr-eye watches over me,
I visit the spots long since hal-
-LordMacaulay. . ;
It's
i the luxuries They're Clamoring for.
AS&tesville minister, remarking la
times, scarcity oi , money, cu,., uwi n
is not necessities of life that the peo
ple are. crying for, but luxuries. This
is true: ' How many people in this
section, tor instance, are actually des-
Me? Poor peopl2 there .are, of
T-l " 1 1" 1 1
course, mere always nave Deen
poor people and always; will be poor
people, no matter what sort of condi
tions obtain. On ' the i htjie'r hand,
numerous " people' enjoy, more luxu
ries than they ever did before. We
are glad this is so, but some of them,
because they cannot obtain all the
uxuries they want, cry out that they
. . . "
ate.Dovertv-stncKen and oppressed.
1
t is not the necessities of lite they
cry for, but the luxuries. Statesville
Landmark. "
dowq and har-
t ,
tell a lie and
body else.
If Tl
When everyone pays their debts
without being hunted
rassed.5.
When nobody wil
nobody; swear they believe, it is so
When everybody's premises are
cleaned up .and kept ' just as every
body else Would do it who have none
of their own to attend to.
'-' When everybody has some busi
ness and attends strictly, to it, with
out attending to other; people's.
When it gets into the ' head of
everybody' to live andi let live.
When everybodv loves the Lord
."' -
and their neighbor anddoes not try
to dead bf?at either one or the other.
"That ' horse is not clear escaped
that drags the halter,' j and that man
is not sure of escaping a drunkard's
doom in jail, penitentiary or grave,
who is tied on to the saloon by the.
social dram.
U4- T,:., . . HT '
I ma', ins uaupauon is gone. iot so
with draft and heavy horses, coach
ers, etc. Many were frightened into
selling their heavy broodmares, think
ing them unterly useless in the future
just as they did when railroads were
introduced. Just as the railroads
have increased the use for'good hea
vy horses tenfold, so, too, will elec
tricity increase the use of heavy
horses. Thousands of . motors re
quire tens of thousands of horses
to haul their material and manufac
tured products, which are increasing
as the industrial interests develop
and prosperity resumed ' its wonted
reign. Ex.
Seeins a Sew Light.
.NiivOia Tesla has announced to the
world that he has perfected his latest '
-invention, an electric lamp without any j
uidiuciu or mm, ana, a revolution in
electj-ic lighting is it hand. The lamp ?
is a bulb a few inches long, charged,
so faj- as the eye can detject, with noth
ing at 11 a perfect vacuum. Into this
bulb j a current ot electricity is intro
duced and a light is produced so bright
that fine print can be read in the farth
est corner of a large room, where but a
single one of these j lamps is employed,
Tesla gets ten , perl cent, of illumirtant
from
DM not Advertise lut w -as linsy.
With the blood full
the heated term is stil
ot humors, the
more oppres
sive. Give the system a thorough
cleansing with Ayer's Sarsaparilla and
a dose of Ayer's Pills, and you will en
joy Summer as nevej j before in your
life. Just try this for once and you'll
wot repent it.
15uu ;l to Holler.
some
While in Lexington, Va.,
months ago I heard a story I have
never seen in print, which General
Lee told on himself, and which al
ways amused him when it was re
eled. Soon after he went to Lex
ington he was ridine on horseback
0 Goshen, when he passed a black
smith shop, the smith came - out,
ooked at him intently, and asked in
apprise: "Ain't that General Lee?"
es.' said the General, as he rained
a Traveler. The old soldier stepped
rward, grasped tfee extended hand,
Mid gaTe it Q rrrir..,V,,Wi Bnflo ttlP
eneral wince. Then, standing back
steP, he cried out : "General, lam
bund to holler !" "Oh. no." said
'e General, "I wouldn't do' that."
Yes. sir' I'm bound to holler!"
And with that he swund his; hat
around his head and p-ave three hear-
7 cheers.
convulsed with lauriter. Select
ed. . - 1 C
Fun AVitli the Post Office -
4- letter -was dropped in the Post
office with an address that none of
the clerks were able to decipher, and
the letter was sent to 3uperintendent
Walter, who' passed it along to As
sistant Postmaster; beiditz. It vas
addressed to "Thomas Waltham, in
the city where the next President of
the United States wa.s born." ? Inas
much as the next President is not to
be elected until next November and'
there appears in certain localities'some
lingering doubt of the election of Mc
Kihley, the letter was jsimply sent to
the Dead Letter Office and in due
time will be ; returned to the tunny
man who wrote it. It bore the reg
ular postage and also a special deliv
ery stamp. Soothe Government is
ahead just a dime on account of the
alleged humor of the write.' Kansas
City Journal,
A friend tells us that he recently
went into the store of a business man
who did not advertise, and was sur
prised to 6nd him busy. Thewstore
keeper, it transpired had the itch
and a Waterberry watch, and when
he wasn't scratching himself he was
winding his watch. Mayheld Moni
tor. : " '..' ; .
his materials, whereas the ordi
incandescent! lamp yields ' but
- M. . f '
nary
three
v' L..:it .y.i i ' '" 4 J
it y.m reauuy De unqerstood, even
from this crude statement, vv hat an
immense saving will be 'effected in the
lighting of streets, public buildings,
stores and private
residences. If the
, In a Xutshe'l.
' l'.-" ''"" , ' '.
The American public demands
that the government shall make every
efiort to prevent violations of neutral
ity laws in the , Cuban matter, but it
aiso hopes that the filibusters will be
able to elude the utmost vigilance 'Of
the officers. Detroit News.
' The other day a bulletin reading:
"St. Louis struck by a cyclone and
wrecked" Was sent' to Xondon. On
the bulletin' boards it appeared in
this form : "The "steamer St Louis
has been wrecked by a cyclone. One
invention can be made use of at once,
"I j i
the problem of municipal, lighting is
solvejd foi- the smallest 'city as well as.
the largest. Edison is .hard at work
trying to eliminate the dynamo as a
tactor in the production ot electricity,
and when he succeeds as there 'ap
pears' to be no doubt that he will elec
tricity will almost' become a new aarent
and its power and usefulness be in
creased beyond measure1. ' ;
It seems peculiarly opportune that
just at this time the .aijnouncement is
made that the VVestinghou.e and Gen
eral jElectric Companies have ceased
their warfare upon each other and,
while remaining competitors in the
great field of electpal japparatus, will
use their patents in" common. This
greatly cheapens all eleptrical 'applian
ces, and causes another jfbrward moVe
ment in the general use of the great
mechanical agent of the end of the
century.-
EURE5 ALL 5KIN
D DISEASE
- Fliyticmss eci.r; 1. P. P. s a, tplrtidiJ CdmMaktioo.
md prescra. ! with grt Mikfaction for tha"cnte of all
f.Tms Dd ttars rf Prjmaw?, Sec-nidm-v and Tertlrr
. -f ... ...... t.- l . J.. . . - U.J.l VDi
Gertie Uusrs thct hv r;ittid r.ll trrttrscnt. Catarrh,
CURES
P. ?. P. i? . iowerfoi
r.nil an tsireiloct erpgttCT,
biiiiume up Uie tVaieui raitiuiv.
Ladies whose systems are poitoned and whose blood U la
or imntire 'tfadiUorj. due to injnstrnji! fn-ffnlariti, are
J laltl,! !
A NuisHuce NMpiires'Sed.
'' 1 i
how
' is
a selfish; man
given in "The
This account of
"met his Waterloo
Golden Rule" :
At a certain concert a .young -man
persisted in whisperingl loudly to the
lady who accompanied him, telling her
what the music "meant," what sort of
a passage was coming next.-arid soon.
Presently he closed his eyes, and aid
to his romnaninn. P'Did -von pver trv
L:;uusdUU uvea ,..u F'""'y i Hstenin,to music with four eves shut?
never occurred to the. Englishmen You've no idea how much better-t
who nosted the bulletin that there is sounds
in Missouri a city bearing the sarrte
name as the steamship, remarks the
Savannah News. :
CURES
LARIA
I'wuimriy Ocutniiid by Uio wuDilcrlul toaic iu.il blcxxl
cle ui'ug properties cf P. P. P., Prickly Ashr. Pok Root
snd Pr isinm. ' '' .
New line dress good. M. T. Young
Price of School Jlooks.
V: A Sanday Chicago paper, which
sells for 5 cents, that is about 3 cents
at wholesale, contains as much matter
i .
as a schoolbook of 600 pacres.v The
. . .. ' . s . .
average schoolbook contains hardly
a third as much matter. School
books ought to be selling as cheap as
Sunday papers. The art of paper
making and bookmaking has been
revolutionized and the school children
of the lr nd ought to have the benefit
ot ic. Kill the school book trusts and
there will be no demand for free text-,
books for school ' children they will
be so cheap that even the poorest
parents can buy them for their own
children. Iowa State Register.
sJ;'rnws ami" 1$ icyclt s.
A curious thincr about the English
s?arrovv has 0f!en been noticed Lv
en. When the cyclists first
rv1. l ,
10 the street a few
He : birds
and
years ago,
used to hop up in the air
sip avvav before the wheel-was
bin fiien feet of them. Tlie rap-
em out of their wits. But now
"'rtu the increased speed of
fmatic tires and high rears. the
lUS Show little r- fpor rf the
Ci!3, waiting till tne last moment
,elore flyina. The wheel is often
eSs than tu-n ft.of r-nm '-ttiom Kfrre
" 11 J III lllltli t-rwv.
take to flight. One sparrow
0n Clinton street, Brooklyn, a
ays ago hopped to one side a
s and allowed the wheel to
iV.
uiey
over
few
Pass
Su at abut twenty inches. N. Y.
When the advantages of a town or
community are to be talked lip, or
when any institution- enterprise or
industry, either public or private,
needs to be puffed up, or long reso
tions of thanks ; or obituaries are to
be published," the local paper is inVa
riably appealed to to do the work,
says the Durham Sun. It perchance
it fails to speak as favorably and pro
fusely as some would have it, the
editor is accused of being non-progressive
and lacking in enterprise;
and some of those very ones will pat
ronize every advertising scheme that
comes along, outside of legitimate
newspapers, which oft times never
reach the public money wasted
and yet they ' prat about the jewel
called consistency.. And then say
advertising does not pay. :
Children Ciyfoi
A number of our very wise people
are now very animated in a discus-,
sion as to whether the lat elemental
disturbances, wherein so many peo
ple were, killed and such a vast
amount of property was destroyed,
was a cyclcjne or a tornado. . What
is the difference to you, anyway, just
so it doesn't play in your back yard.
Exchange, j -
A healthy appetite, with perfect di
gestion and assimilation, may be se
cured by the use of Ayer's Pills. They
cleanse and strengthen the whole ali
mentory canal and remove all obstruc--ions
to the natural functions of either
sex, without any unpleasant. effects.
Hereupon a gentleman who sat in
the seat in: front of the young man,
twisted himself about, and said gravely,
"Young man, did you ever try listen
ing to music with your I mouth shut ?"
Thenceforth the silence in that part of
the .hall is said to' hate been almost
painful. v j
.... M
The cotton ' acreage in this State
this year is o per cent, greater than
it was last season. The sales of fer
tilizers are twice as large this season
and 30 per cent, greater than in any
season since the tonage tax went into
effect.. . V ' ..t" -
-9
. ""Opportunity.
! . i
Opportunity is ba.ld behind, and must
be grasped by the forelock'. .Life is
full of tragic might-have-beens. No
regret, no remorse, no self.accusation,
no clear recognition that I was at fault
will avail one jot. The time for plough
ing is past ; you cannot stick the share
into the ground when you should be
weilding the sickle. "Too late" is the
saddest of human words.- And, as the
stages of our lives roll on, unless each
is filled, as it passes, with the discharge
of the duties, and the appropriation of
the benefits which it brings, then, to
all eternity, that moment will never re
turn, and the sluggard may beg in har
vest that he may have the chance to
plough once more, and have none.
The student who. has spent the term in
indolence, perhaps dissipated, has no
time to get fip his subject when he is in
the examination room, with the paper
before him. , And life and nature and
God's law are stern, task-masters, and
demand that the ""duty shall be done in
its. season or left undone foreverl
"Strike while the iron is hot!" Ex.
Pitcher's Castorla.
The block of glass which is to be
made into a vast mirjor jbr the big tele
scope which is to be: one of the features
of the exhibition ofj 1900 has recently
arrived in Paris from Belgium, where
it has been cast. This immense tele-
1 ,
scope. is, to bring the; mqori to an' appar
ent distance of fifty kilohieters from the
earth and is being constructed under
the direction of M. Francis Deloncle.
The pQlishfng of the glass for themir
ror of tie telescope Will be -done in
Paris. .
LIPPliIAN EEOS., Troprleton,
Druggists, Lipnman's Block, SAVABHAH, QAr
Book on Blood Diseases, mailed free.
Fop sale at HargraYe's Fkramcy.
ECLECTIC MAGAZINE.
. ,:""':; ' ! OF ' " ' ";' -
Foreign Literature, Science and Art.
"The Literature OFfTHE World."
I89N5.
- 1 ; -4 :. : .
" Fifty-sedond Year.
TFHE ECLECTIC MAGAZINE re-
produces from Foreign Periodicals all
those articles which are valuable, to
American : Readers, Its field of selection
embraces all the leading Foreign Re
views, i Magazines and Journals, and
the tastes-of all classes of intelligent
readers are consulted in the articles
presented. - Articles from the
Ablest Writers in the World
will be found in its columns.
The following list gives the principle peri
odicals selected from, and the names of some
of the well-known authors whose articles ap
peared in the Eclectic.
Periodicals. t Authorn.
Westminster Review.
Contemparary Review
Fortnightly Review.
Nineteenth Century.
Science Review. ;
Blackwood's Magazine.
Cornhill Magazine,
Macmilian's Magazine,
New Review.
National Review.
Chamter's Journal,
Temple Rar,
The Academy, ;.
The Athenaeum,
Public Opinion,
Saturday Review,
The Spectator,
Ion W. E. Gladstone,
udrew Lang,
Prof. Max Mueller.
1. Norman Lockyer,
Fames Rryce. M, P.,
kVilliam Rlack,
AVH.Mallock.: '
Herbert rncer,
T. P. Mabaffy,
Sir Robert Bail
jPrince Kropotkin,
Archdeacon 1-arrar,
St. George Mivart,
Rev. H. R. Haweis,
v Mrs. Olihant,
jivarl iiiiiiu, :
etc., etc., etc., etc.
The aim of the ECLECTIC is to be
instructive and not sensational, and it
commends; itself particularly to Teach
ers, Lawyers j Clergymen, and all intel
ligent readers who desire to keep in
formed of the intellectual progress of
the age. ;' !.' i
TcTmc ' Single: copies 45 cents; one copy one
1 CI 1113 . year ".00. Trial subscrition for 3
f4.U
The General In His Own Country.
Sir Evelyn Wood, V. C, tells this
story: An entertainment was given
in his honor at his Norfolk home on
his return from Egypt. Among the
crowd assembled ! on the occasion
li n i;- 4ii To months $1.00. The Eclkcttc and any
was the wife of an agricultural la- Mfla7in to nne address -.nn:
borer. She was very eager to know 1 With the Eclectic and one good Ameri-
Sir Evelyn Wood, and a, bystander ' cal Monthly the reader will le fully abreast
nninted him out to her. J the times.
. 1 . 1 -
"What," she exclaimed in amaze
ment, "that litt:
Wood I Why, my
clout ( thrash ) him
e man, .General
owd man could
easilv. "
V Never, " said Sir Evelyn as he
concluded his story,' "had I" felt
more humiliated in my life. " WTest;
minster Gazette, i : i ;
B,l,PgCT,Faar,liiEpStJ.?.
Wanted-An Idea 3
Protect yonr ideas; they may bring you wealth
Write JOHN WEDDEKBTJRN & CO., Patent Attor
neys. Washington, D. C, for their 1.800 prize offer
and list Qf two hundred inventions vraated.
ARE YOU
BANKRUpTinhealth,
constitution undermined by ex
travagance in eating, by disre
garding the laws of nature , or
physical capital allj gone, if so,
NEVER DESPAIR
Tutt s Liver Pills will cure you.
For sick headache, dyspepsia,
sour stomach, malaria, torpid
liver, constipation! biliousness
and all kindred diseases.
Tutt's Liver Pills
an absolute cure, i i
i NOTICE.
I 'wa.tst every man and woman in the United
States interested in the ; Opium and Wbieky
habits to have one of my books on these dis
eases. Address B.'M. Woolley, Atlanta, Ga,,
Box 282, and one will be sent joa free.
Chergman's Suits at M. T. Young's
See our Dress j Goods. M. T.
Young. :- '.!:!' : "; j'.' : :
Lumber
ii
ante
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-1 i
! A
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Cut Accurately and Rap-'
laiy on tne
FARQUHAR
Variable Friction
Feed Saw Mill
yrlth Quick Recedlne Head
kiocks. f capacity: &,ooo to
30,ouo reet, jsngine
ano iKHiers irom u to
Horse Power.
For full descriptive catalogue
address, ...
A. B. FARQUHAR CO., Ltd., .
m m
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