Newspapers / The Wilson Advance (Wilson, … / Aug. 5, 1897, edition 1 / Page 7
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X-; , '. " -, : : I who had XWlrf ADVANCE: AUGUST 5; 1897. 7 SOUTHERN HEWS. ---rt? been attacking tr- -o "iv. 'JUt lii. the hqusehold, turned upon Mr.-Jcnes Ky., July 2S . At Cane exchanged between Estill ' T ;hn Casey and tliree uailey r;'u" tctiii -Casey is dying . and .vana two -of the Baileys are J1-'-' . v-cunaea. Pa:nl Vnon, W. Va., July 30.-A re- IlU:io?njust reached here that Cap-pi-1 .flia. the notorious outlaw held tai" ,;' on t,vo cases, escaped from for n'u!'11 ja,;i yesterday by cutting his tte out vith a hatchet. A large re 'a Veered' for him. ; -avu was .ousines?. .police and a great crowd not at San Antonio, Tex., July 31 Maximo in unty jail, yesterday after- van111" n-llcnll CO tle for a tripl murder committed nT-'ne " last. He killed Jesus Cariilo 03 t i wife, an aged couple, and Juanita da IS- wnom he," first ravished. Aa'tinez died without a struggle, and Jlaarently with no. fear. He said he PPted the irl to elope with him, but she objected because he was mar i - although he was separated from rayetteville, JM. U., Juiy 2S.-At tne j stance of New York creditors, who T'd. mortgages l amouting to $25,000, j,VP 'purnell, of the -United States circuit court, has appointed J. S. Mc Kae of this place, receiver of the Cum-vi-lancl Cotton mills property. The re ceiver will sell the property at public action unless the mortgages are lifted in the meantime. The mill is in oper ation, and has selling: asents in the north, and will continue in operation whatever disposition is made of its ownership. Kittrell, N. C July 31. Miss Nannie Catlett, a respectable young white lady nea,r here, was brutally assaulted and raped by(a young negro last night. Her assailant -was captured, tried, and committed to jail. The people are very excited, and lynching may follow. The voting' lady had gone to a spring, and while on her way the brute sprang out, caught and choked her and. accom plished his purpose. The negro was brought before the young lady in com pany with several other negroes, and she instantly identified him. Sehna. Ala., July 31. Pig Newell, col ored, was hanged here yesterday. He admitted his guilt, and while on the scaffold prayed for the Lord to send two ansrels to escort 'him to glory. The drop fell at 12:25, and his neck was broken. The trial of Lewis Thomp son at Decatur has" ended. He was charged with, raping a little white girl He a necro yeoman held tne cnua. He was found guilty ' as charged, and ,Titi- v,-o fivcrl. at neath. An- ;ro man and the 'woman who the child are yet to be tried, and suit wi.l probably be the same. , Ala., July 2:. Editor the Argros, the colored iaper -here,, was shot. and kihtd shortly after neon yesterday in the Columbus Street Colored -Baptist church. A con ference was in- prdgress at the time, and the admission -of Brown, the de posed pastor cf the Dexter Avenue Baptist church, was under discussion. Patterson opposed. Brown's admission, and Stokes.' pastor of the Columbus ana nroKe n:s nee with awpie.ee of scantling. Mr. Jones was an ex-Ccn-federate soldier, and famed for charity and good heartednes. He long engaged in" tne oyster Davis was arretted by the lodged in prison, where gathered. Apprehending an atlen '.ynching, tne local militia', were ordered under arms, che company being sta tioned near at hand. The people in the southern part of the city are greatly excited over the affair. , Agrnnst Union " 'ncifl? TcaUs-oaI. Omaha, Neb., July 30. Decrees cf sate or tne union i'acilrc railwav under the foreclosure - proceedings in;titntpr? against it by the United States were passed upon by Judge Walter Sanborn in the United States court here yester day. The entrance of the government decree drew forth a vigorous debate between ex-Governor Hoadley, special counsel for the United States, and vvinsiow a. fierce, counsel for the re- :; til he is starved' out., , No doubt the agricultural college will ; ClKl a vr'ay to meet another visitation With some exterminating. i;rcce& i the migratory lecust will "j fliiae where he. will distntb :lo .lucre, whither forbears of his ilk have pone. when migrate to a T he W -i S ore I Cue .of, Lincoln's Dispatcbes. ' j In his "Campaigniug With Grant," in The Century, General Horace Porter j tells cf General Halleck's fear of trou- j his desire that Grant shculd send troops " T Q haVSJUSt i to the northern cities. General Porter I L Q ,Qn 4-Uincr says: Ou the evening; cf Aug. 17 General '- Grant was sitting in front of his quar ters with several staff officers about him when the telegraph operator came over from his tent and handed him a dispatch. He opened it, and as he pro ceeded with the reading his face lecarce suffused with smiles. After he had fin ished it he Lrcke into a hearty laugh. We were curious to know what could rprpivpH a nir.p. new stock of every thing kept in our line and we want your patronage. Our line of organization committee. The debate ! produce so much merriment in the gen was upon the right of the court to re serve to the United States all rights of the government not explicitly stated in the decree. Itj.vas decided in favor of the government. the '.-na t ther n the r ileritgc-niery Pattei -siJn. of Street church, favored it. Hot words fnsued. Patterson struck. Stokes in the face, when the .report of a pistol "was heard and Patterson '. fell dead. A negro man named Pritchett has been caught about ;a mile from town by A negro posse. He confessed, to having shot Patterson. Waco, Tex., July 23. In the stock brokerage office of C. E. Trice & Co., yesterday, B. F. Kivett and TV. v. Kivett were shpt and killed by W, , Lamden, a member of the firm. Bad feeling had existed between the Kivett brothers and Lamden for some time, growing out -of charges made by the relatives of Lamden and a sister of the Kivetts. The shooting between the brothers and Lamden occurred during the busiest part of the day, when the office was crowded, and it caused in-r tense excitement. Two more of the Kivett brothers armed themselves anct proceeded to the scene of the shooting, threatening to kill Lamden. but they were not allowed to enter. The killing is universally looked upon as justifi able w Atlanta. July 30. After giving a se cret hearing yesterday to two of the brothers of Dr. W. L. Ryder, -the white niHn lvnrViP in Talbot county last Vveek. Governor Atkinson offered the following rewards:" Five hundred dol- lors for the arrest and conviction of the first two members of the mob that . lynched ""Ryder: S100 for each subse quent avvpst anrl ronvTction, and $250 for the arrest a.n conviction of any persons hindering or interfering with the bringing of lynchers to justice. The governor announces that he has in his Possession the names of several -of the lynching mob, which numbered only 15, with positive proof against three of them. He nresses his determination to exert the full power of his office' to punish the guilty parties. Durham, N. C, July 28. This town is excited over the' challenging of the . mayor of the town, Moses E." McCown, to "fight a-duel by Captain Joseph H. Shields. Mr. McCown, who a few . months ago vias elected mayor, lias a reputation for being a man who does not run away from trouble. Yesterday he was approached by Captain Shields, vho pulled out a naner and handed it McCown wiih the remark: "Read Blunders of Xovlists. Will Jl. Clemens catalogues in The Home Magazine some of the blunders of foreign novelists, a f evv of which wre reproduce: "Thackeray, who was exceedingly anxious to get everything right, was perpetually getting things wrong. Names are mixed, the hero is sometimes called by the name of one cf the other characters, and in at least one place an important personage is called by a name from another novel. This was Philip Firmiu, whom he called Clive New- .ilV. - . , for in auother story he killed and hur ied old Lady Kew and later brought her again on the scene for, the purpose of rounding off a corner of the story. "Thackeray, in his 'Virginians,' makes Mme. Esmond of Castlewood, in Westmoreland couuty, a neighbor of Washington at Mount Vernon, on the Potomac, 50 miles distant, and a regu lar attendant at public worship at Wil liamsburg, half way between the Yo?k aud 'James rivers,-fully 125 miles frcm Mount Vernon, In the same book occurs the following: 'There was such a negro chorus about the house as .might he heard acres?? the Potomac. ' The nearest bank cf the Potomac w'a3 57 miles away. "AMhcuy Trollope was .heartily langhed at' by his acquaintances for rninv Anctv f'cott'ro 'come .whistling up the sfrcet v.Tith a cigar in his mouth. ' But what is a slight error of this sort in comparison with Amelia B. Edwards' 'description, in 4H:nd and Glove.' of htr hero 'pusnins? backward and forward like an overseer on a Massachusetts cot ton plantation.' "George Elict,-whose knowledge cf science is highly commended, in 'The Mill on tha Flops' makes .the odd bluu dpr nf havius the ' bout overtaken in LiSi. m the midst ct the trvine: circum stances which surrounded him. He cast his- eyes cver the dispatch again and then remuiAed: "The president has more nerve than any of his .advisers. This is what he says after reading my reply to Halleck's dispatch." He then lead aloud to us the following: "I have seen your dispatch expressing your unwillingness to break jour held wheie you nre. Neither am I willing. Held on with a bulldog grip- and chew and choke as much as possible. "A. Lincoln." BOOKS 4ND ONER! is entirely complete, and Our Prices arc Iigllt. - Tabooed. "When I was in the lightning red business," said the drummer, in a rem iniscent mood, "I" But the smoking room had suddenly emptied, and he was an outcast among the traveling men thereafter. Hard ware. Jilson- I wonder why millionaires ZZ'lrZ We shall try to keep everything you want, apd they are dead sure of never encounter ing an anarchist. New York Sunday Quinine and other fe ver medicines take from 5 to 10 days to lure fever. Johnson's Chill and Fever Tonic cures in ONE DAY. will do our best to please you in every respect. q We make a specialty of , 1.4 (4- fioiim of nncicrream uv a ni?.ss ul ului uuauuf, u a more rapid rate than thofraii craft a physical impossibility. " . The organization of the Wilming ton, and Newbern railway now owned by the Wilmington and WeMo i, has been effected. The speedy completion of this road to Washington or Greenville is expect ed, so as to give this road a heavy haul of truck from the Newbern sec tion. It will also develop trucking in 'Onslow. There was a lack of har- KQ(--, ooW thp former owners of the road and the people living along the line. , Blank Books of every description, and will carry the "Koiie Cure" Tor Grasshcppcrs. The intelliccuce of scent cf the red legged grastkepper enables it to select its food while ou tne wmg iu iu, where, by some process of signaling xiiown only to '.itself, it gathers a great army of-its kind to descend with mass ed force on the field beneath when a 45 aero field cf corn will only afford them a single meal. ; , " ; ... Last year the grasshopper reports btuu to the University Of Nebraska at Lin coln caused apprehension 01 an imu- sion this year, as great quantities ci eggs had been deposited m the soil over La large area of country, and those eggs are expected to furnish an army 01, ao tive "locusts," as they are technically named. . " ,; - , , . Farmers call them "hoppers,' but the college entomologist talks knowing ly of "M. Atlantis," "Packardi" and "Cananula pellucida." In Utah they have what they call a "rope cure" for the -pest, and every mnn: woman and child takes part in Tutt's. Pills'-' i Cure All Liver Ills. A CLEAR HEAD; good digestion; sound sleep; a fine appetite and a ripe old age , are some of the results of the use of Tutt's Liver Pills. A single dose will convince you of their rr,orfn1 nffpPtS ailQ VirtUC w A Known Fact. An absolute cure for sick head ache, dyspepsia, malaria, sour dizziness, constipation the performance. It consists ci araw- - . lA i;Vpr ina ropes, held taut by persons at each j bilious fever, piles, torpid liver cna, acroEs tue "lt and all kindred diseases. grain, su mut cr- . not find any room for the sole of his nnt nd thev keen this seesaw up nn- L eaam Magazines, ir Ladies' Journals C 3 i Daily rapcrs. A fine stock of Tutt's Liver Pills Artists! umi-iniin to tnat. nnri o ha. an answer. Please..,. The' mayor found it to be a challenge to fight a duel on account of an alleged insult offered the paptain by the mayor when the latter was- testi fi'ing in a recent case in which the clAain was interested. Unless the ayor accepts the challenge the cap tain win attack him jon the stree't, Mobile, Ala., July 29. Thomas Jones, 4n old and respected citizen, .living on Palmeto street, was murdered last fc'ght by a negro named Josiah Davis. Jones? horri a nni3p; ir his back vard. went' out. to see about it.. Davis. and As bright as Silver. As pure as Gold. As cheap as Brass. While .North buying Silverware I w'e selected a full line ot orna ments in ....... ..ALUMINUM.. Pins Buckles, Picture Frames, Matcli Safes And a hundred other articles. Eve onarantee not to tarnish. Also a lull line 01 A V WW W Watches, Clocks & SilYerware. vT. G. PAWLS, J. . '.--r. i Nash Street. Plate uiass r iui !.. Always on Hand. WilsonlBook Store Plate Glass Front opposite Court House,
The Wilson Advance (Wilson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 5, 1897, edition 1
7
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