THE HEADLIGHT
PUBLISHED EVEHY THURSDAY.
SUIVSCnil'TION $1.00 PER YEAH.
A. KOSl'OWEIt, Editor and Proprietor.
G..I.1.SHOR.,, X. C, Feb. 21, 1901.
CONGRESSIONAL EXTRAVAGANCE.
The fact th.it the expenses of the
Government at Washington are
now s00, 000,000 11 yefiri against
70,000,000 at the beginning of
the McKinley administration, four
years ago, cannot but shock the pa
triotic citizen, who sees that the
extravagance initiated by the war
upon Spain extends now to depart
ments of the Government not con
nected with the army or navy. The
enormous appropriation for rivers
and harbors, just made, illustrates
the demoralization of Congress,
which seems, to have repudiated
the old-fashioned idea that econo
my is a virtue. The money of the
people is wasted without scruple,
as if tax -paying were their favor
ite amusement. To make bad
worse, the example of Congress is
followed by State and municipal
bodies, so that taxes are every
where on the increase.
All this extravagance hastens, of
course, the day of reckoning. The
burdens now being gayly laid on
the backs of the people will be
borne with increasing dilliculty.
At present we have a sort of spec
ulative 'boom. Kvery industry is
stimulated to the .utmost and the
hard times of 1S'.5 are forgotten.
ut taxes easy to bear when times
are good become oppressive when
reaction sets in, business slackens
and incomes decrease. It will be
little comfort to the struggling
householder, when embarrassed by
high prices all round, together
with tariff and internal taxes, to be
informed by the spread-eagle ora
tor that "this is a billion-dollar
country" and can afford to waste a
thousand millions yearly. If, in
stead of being mostly thrown away
it were all spent wisely in such
ways that it came back equitably
in valued benefits to each citizen,
the case Mould not be so had, but
when it is known that millions are
wasted on pen-ions, other millions
on the .subjugation of the Filipinos,
hundreds of millions on an increased
army and navy and millions more
in needless expenditures on the
pets of the administration, the fu
tility of the whole thing will be
keenly felt. Naturally such a re
action of feeling, accompanying
business depression, will have poli
tical results.
Senator Hale, of Maine, made a
vigorous protest Thursday against
the extravagance of the present
Congress. Air. Hale is a loyal lie
publican, but he fears that his par
ty will be discredited by the va
rious schemes to loot the Treasury
which are now linding favor in
Washington. ''The tremendous
expenditure constantly before our
eyes, he said, "are so demoraliz
ing to our minds that we are inca
pable of understanding and appre
ciating them. When the people
once realize the situation, those
who are responsible for the expen
ditures will call upon the rocks and
mountains to hide them from the
people's wrath. When wc get to
the end of this Congress and figure
up the appropriations they will be
found to be very much larger than
have ever been made by an Ameri
can Congress." Mr. Hale's warn
ing is timely, but it is not proba
ble it will be heeded. A Congress
which proposes to give away 270,
(00,000 of the people's money in
ship subsidies, which is preparing
to appropriate 80,000,000 for
river and harbor improvements
anil votes 145,000,000 for pen
sions, will not be open to admoni
tion or appeal until the Treasury is
empty. Mr. Hale's intentions are
good, but if he expects his party
to be economical he is doomed to dis
appointment. It has never failed
to make the most of its opportu
nities when there was a surplus.
Thk action of the Kussian Gov
ernment in imposing retaliatory du
ties on iron and steel manufac
tures imported into Russia from
the United States is not influenced
mainly by the importance of the
sugar exports to this country, but
by the fact that the Russian Gov
ernment has explicitly denied the
payment of bounty on sugar ex
ports against which the counter
vailing duties are levied. A ques
tion of honor is raised, and as a
consequence the Russian Minister
of Finance has lost no time in
striking back. As the Russian buy
far more from us than they sell to
us, they would have decidedly the
whip hand in a commercial war
fare. "
Oxk of the most remarkable cases
noted recently is that of Miss An
nie Fuqua, of Reidsville, who sued
the Southern Railway for 2,000
damages. She didn't get a cent.
The prosecuting attorney must not
have made plain to the jury that
the suit was against a railroad?
A Sermon Ou Woman.
"Woman," said the old Codger,
during one of his meditative spells,
'Ms a perpetual paradox, a chronic
conundrum without an answer, an
unknown quantity possessed of un
expected possibilities, a perennial
prize package of peculiar potentiali
ties,' a conventicle of characteristic
contradictions and an amaranthine
aggregation of other attributes which
are not alliterative.
"She is man's greatest earthly
blessing, and the cause of most of
his misery. She is his chief inspira
tion to the achievement of all that is
good, grand and glorious in this
world, and at the same time a labor
saving device to help him make a
fool of himself. She soothes his tired
nerves with the coo of her gentle
voice, but she always has the last
word in every controversy with him
and, incidentally, about 97 per
cent, of the preceding conversation.
She brings him into the world, and a
few years later talks him to death.
" "Most of man's trouble is caused
by woman, but so deftly does she
pile the load on him that whenever
his burden of trouble is lifted he
wanders uneasily about hunting for
more otherwise, there would be
very few second wives. She wiH
cheerfully go to the stake for the
truth's sake, and lie about her age
without even being asked. She will
grow weary of an indulgent, husband,
will cleave unto death to the man
who beats her regularly. She will
break her heart because a man does
what she don't want him to, and love
him all the better for, so doing.
"She scorns all advice in the selec
tion of a husband, but takes two
other women along to help her pick
out a hat. The less actual comfort
to be obtained from a thing,' the
more enjoyment a woman gets out of
its possession. At 16 she is a wo
man; at 2o, if still unmarried, she is
a girl. She will face the grim spec
ter of death without a tremor, and
swoon at the sight of a mouse. The
only time she ever does what you ex
pect her to do is when you expect
her to do what you don't expect
her to do. The sole reason why she
does anything is simply because she
don't know why she does it. She
jumps m conclusions and always
lands on them squarely, for the sim
ple reason that when the conclusion
skips to one side, thinking to avoid
her, it gets exactly in her way. She is
the dearest thing in all the world, and
the most aggravating. She is as she
is, and that's all there is to do about
it. The only man who ever fully un
derstands a woman is the man who
understands that he don't understand
her, and has got sense enough to let
it go at that."
CJutta Percha ami Cables.
An obstacle to the construction of
a Pacific cable from San Francisco
to Manila at present is found in the
very limited supply of gutta percha.
Xo good submarine cable can be
made, it is said, without this par
ticular gum as a means of insulation.
"The reasons for its general use,"
says the Philadelphia Manufacturer,
"are several, chief among them be
iug its ductile nature which makes
it possible to apply it to cables with
out seams, and the fact that salt
water has no appreciable deteriorat
ing effect upon it. This latter qual
ity is illustrated by the fact that
guttapercha used in steel-bound ca
bles in actual service shows no sign
of either physical or chemical change
after twenty years submersion.
Rubber, which is used for insulating
small cables which may be easily ta
ken up and repaired, lacks the im
permeability which is an absolute
essential in a cable designed to cover
long distances and to work without
interruption or repair for a quarter
of a century at a time." A nautical
mile of cable requires from 3o0 to
400 pounds of gutta percha, so that
some 1,200 tons would be required
for the San Francisco-Manila cable.
The supply of gutta percha ob
tained from the East Indies is said
to be decreasing, owing to the slight
care by the natives of the limited
number of trees that furnish it. At
the same time there is an increased
demand. The use of it in making
yearly 2,000,000 golf balls is said to
add to its price, which is now over
$2 a pouud. Competition among
manufacturers of submarine cables
is, however, at -present the chief
cause of the exceptional price. The
project of laying a cable between
Canada and Australia is now about
ripe for execution, and the world's
supply of the gum has been bought
up for two or three years by the
manufacturers of submarine cables
who expect to bid for the contract.
In view of the scarcity and high
price of gutta percha our Pacific
cable cannot belaid, it is said for
$10,(100,000, as expected, but -will
cost some three or four millions more
than that.
Because a number of them tried to
conceal a fugitive, all negroes have
been ordered to leave Hillsboro, Pa.,
under penalty of death.
Catarrh Cannot be Cured
with local implications, as they cannot
reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh
is a blood or constitutional disease, -ami
in order to cure it vou must take inter
nal remedies. Hall s Catarrh Cure is
taken internally, and acts dreetly on
the blood and mucous surfaces. lfalls
Catarrh Cure is not a quack jnedieine.
It was prescribed by one of the best phy
sicians in this country for years, and "is
a regular prescription. It is composed
of the best tonics known, combined with
the best blood purifiers, acting directly
on the mucous surfaces. The perfect
combination of the two ingredients is
what produces such wonderful results
in curing catarrh. Send for testimonials
free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props.,
Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, price 75c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
'He That Any Good
Voiild Win
Should have good hcalih. 'Pure, rich
Mood is the first requisite. Hood' s Sarsa
parilla, by giving good llood arid good
hcalih, has helped mar.y a man to success,
besides giving strength and courage to
-j)omen ivho, before taking it, could not
even rce any good in life to urin.
Heading Rooms For Womeiu
Women's organizations in Auburn,
N. Y., find afield for effort among
the working women of that busy
manufacturing. .city. The Woman's
Union has established and maintain
ed free reading-rooms and library
for working women. It conducts
classes for the same girls in domestic
service, sewing, cooking, bookkeep
ing, etc., and sales, at which their
handiwork is disposed of for them.
A registry for servants is also kept.
The appreciation of the working wo
men for these rooms is shown by the
attendance there every evening, often
taxing, as it does, the capacity of the
home-like quartersj
Auburn streets are not kept quite
as the women would like to see them.
For this reason, some time ago, the
local chapter Daughters of the Am
erican Revolution took up some vil
lage improvement work and planned
to establish receptacles for rubbish
at various points in the city. The
street superintendent became greatly
interested, and approved the scheme,
agreeing to work with the chapter
in caring for these receptacles. To
the surprise of both him and the
chapter, however, the Common
Council rejected the offer on the
ground that there was a city ordi
nance forbidding obstructions on the
sidewalks.
Earned G8,000,000 in One Year.
The Standard Oil Company has de
clared a dividend of 20 per cent, pay
able March 15th. This is at the rate
of 03 per cent, since March 1st, 1900.
The Standard Oil will thus have
distributed among its ' stockholders
08,000,000 withiu the space of one
year and 13 days. Of this sum John
B. Rockefeller will have received
21,080,000, more than $j3,000 a day,
or about $40 a minute. Mr. Rocke
feller's wealth has piled up so aston
ishingly that even the great money
kings of Wall street are marveling.
His available cash has become such a
factor in Wall street that according
to one of the best judges of the mar
ket, all chance has been entirely eli
minated from transactions ou the
stock exchange.
Mr. Rockefeller can put up stocks
or put them down as he chooses. Xo
combination is strong enough in Wall
street to defeat his plans.
The Mirror Of a Town.
The newspapers of a town are its
looking glasses. It is here you see
yourselves as others see you.
You smile on them and they smile on
you, you frown on them and you ase
repaid in kindness. They are the re
flex of the town. If the town is do
ing business, the newspaper will
show it in its advertising colums. If
the merchants are spiritless, shift
less fellows, whose stores are jumbles
of junk and jam, the newspapers will
show it by the lack of space they
take. If you want the world to know
you have a live town, you can only
let it be known through the news
paper. " Three persons were killed and sev
eral injured in the wreck of a pas
senger train at 'Mills City, New,
Tuesday.
The greatest danger from colds and
la grippe, is their resulting in pneu
monia. If reasonable care is used, how
ever, and Chamberlain's Cough Remedy
taken, all danger will be avoided. It
will cure a cold or an attack of la grippe
in less time than any other treatment.
It.is pleasant and safe to take. For sale
by 11. E. Robinson & Uro., J.F. Millers
Drug Store, Goldsboro: J. R. Smith,
Mt. Olive.
GOLUSltOIiO MARKET REPORT.
Cotton
Bulk Meat. .
Salt
Lard
S.75
7.8.")
1.30
..10
N. C. Hams
N. C. Sides
Meal per sack
Flour
Sugar, granulated .
Eggs
Beeswax
Corn
Oats
Peas
Hay
..10
. .. s
1.15
.4.10
...Oi
..l-2i
...20
...40
...DO
1 1.10
Thousands Have Kidney Trouble
and Don't Know it.
How To Find Out.
Fill a bottle or common glass with your
water and let it stand twenty-four hours; a
sediment or set
tling indicates an
unhealthy condi
tion of the kid
neys; if it stains
your linen it is
evidence of kid
ney trouble; too
frequent desire to
pass it or pain in
convincing proof that the kidneys and blad
der are out of order.
What to Do.
There is comfort in the knowledge so
often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp
Root, the great kidney re,medy fulfills every
wish in curing rheumatism, pain in the
back, kidneys, liver, bladder and every part
of the urinary passage. It corrects inability
to hold water and scalding pain in passing
it, or bad effects following use of liquor,
wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant
necessity of being compelled to go often
during the day, and to get up many times
during the night. The mild and the extra
ordinary effect of Swamp-Root Is soon
realized. It stands the highest for its won
derful cures of the most distressing cases.
If you need a medicine you should have the
best. Sold by druggists in 50c. and$l. sizes.
You may have a samde hoftl r.t thia
wunaeriui aiscovery
and a book that tells
more about it, both sentgOP3riHf
absolutely free by mail,
aaaress ur. Kilmer ft n o
Co., Binghamton, N. Y. When writing men
tion reading this generous offer in this paper.
Girl Forced By Her Father To Wed.
On Monday night of last week,
Miss Sarah Hudson, accompanied by
her brother, drove up to Mr. M. F.
Gainey's residence, at DunD, and the
young lady asked permission to re
main over for the night and to be
allowed to stay for a few days.
Her request was granted atid soon
after she had gone in the house, she
related the sad story of her father
attempting to force her to marry a
man she did .not love. . She related
the story in tears and with a broken
heart. Mr. Gainey told her she
could spend several days at his home.
On last Saturday her father, Holly
Hudson, came for her, and finding
her at Mr. Gainey's he made her a
promise if she would go home with
him she might marry, the man she
loved. The girl "agreed to go, and
they started out. Just as they were
passing out of town one of the friends
of the man whom her father wanted
her to marry drove up in a buggy
and suggested to the young lady,
who was riding on a cart, that she
might ride with him in' the buggy.
She agreed to this and soon after
she had gotten in the buggy her
friend told her he was going to drive
her away to marry Cufus Lee, the
man of her father's choice. We are
told that the girl broke down as if
her heart was broken. She was car
ried down in Sampson and there
married to the man of her father.s
choice.
The girl's mother is dead and her
father lives in Westbrook township,
Sampson county. The man she
loved was a poor man, and her fa
ther thought by marrying Lee she
would marry into some property, so
it is stated.
A Most Brutal Murder.
One of the most brutal murders
that has ever been committed in
Rowan county occurred near Spen
cer Saturday night when Dilliard
Cox, of Winston, was shot and killed
by .Sam Malone, of Davie county,
both colored. Malone, not content
with shooting his victim twice,
dragged him out from under a church
where he had crawled to die and
stamped him. The shooting oc
curred over a game of craps, in
which four darkies were engaged.
Cox had won the money, and' when
Malone attempted to pick It up Cox
pointed a pistol at him. Malone
wrestled the pistol from Cox and
attempted to shoot him, but was
restrained. Cox then ran and was
pursued from one house to another.
Finally Malone caught him attempt
ing to enter a front door and shot at
him three times, two of the bullets
taking effect.
Dudley Reflections.
Mrs. F. G. Ilines visited relatives
in Goldsboro last week.
Mr. II. J. O' Kerry spent several
days in Raleigh last week. .
Mr. J. VY. King, of Goldsboro, vis
ited relatives here last Sunday.
Mr. A. M. Herring, of Wilmington,
visited his family here last week.
Miss Dora Kornegay visited rela
tives near Mount Olive last week.
Mr. J. A. Westbrook, of Mount
Olive, was here one day last week.
Miss Annie Keethley, of Duplin
count', visited relatives here Sun
day. Mr. II. W. Lynch tilled his regular
appointment near Walter last Sun
day. Mr. Frank Southerland,' of Duplin
county, visited relatives here last
Friday.
' Miss Etta Deal, of Mount Olive,
visited her aunt, Mrs. W. B. Bow
den, here Saturday.
Special Business Locals,
WANTED. A young man to learn the
watch-repairing business. Will
train him reasonably.
K. A. Watts, Jr.,
at T. H. Stanton's.
f II. ROBINSON & CO., "Charlotte.
J, N. C, can furnish profitable em
ployment to hustling people; either sex.
Write them.
VTOTARY PUBLIC This is to give
notice that 1 have been appointed
by Governor Aycock a Notary l'ublje
for" Wavne county and solicit the patro
nage of the public. J. M. Perkins,
Fremont, N. C.
ITTANTED Capable, reliable person
V 'n every county to represent large
company of solid financial reputation:
i'J'M salary per year; payable weekly; $3
per day absolutely sure and all expenses;
straight, bona-lide, definite salary, no
commission; salary paid each Saturday
and expense money advanced each
week. Staxiaki House, 3J 1 Dearborn
St., Chicago.
Have Your Eyes Examined.
Dr. II. Mayer, the celebrated oculist
from the Imperial and Royal University
of Vienna, Austria, has opened an of
fice for a short time at the Bridges
House, this city, where he examines all
defects of the eyes free of charge. I7r
Mayer gives consultation in six lan
guages. ;
The Norfolk Virginian says: "Dr.
H. Mayer, the oculist, has during his
twelve months' stay in our city success
fully treated the eyes of hundreds of our
best people, and his practice is contin
ually increasing."
The Washington (N. C.) Progress
says : "Dr. II. Mayer has during his
six weeks stay in ous city treated over
150 cases of the eye, and we have not
heard of a single case where there is
complaint. This is the best record he
could leave,'"
Standard-Keeper's Notice.
All persons using weights and meas
ures are by law required to bring the
same to the standard-keeper of the
county and by said standard-keeper to
have all their weights, measures, etc.,
tested and sealed, as the law directs.
For a non-compliance with said law
subjects each and every person so of
fending to a misdemeanor; and in every
such case (of non-compliance) it becomes
the duty of the standard-keeper to re
turn the same to the court. The law
must be respected. J. W. Ham,
Standard-keeper Wayne County.
BETTER THAN
OF DOCTORING.
ONLY MINE'S CELERY COMPOUND DID HER
. ANY LASTING GOOD. .
I can be truthfully said of no other '
remedy in the world what is so often
said of Paine's celery compound, that
in no single instance has it failed to
benefit, and benefit permanently
and there's the point that no sufferer
should lose sight of.
The whole stock-in-trade of the
ordinary, plausible-sounding, but
wholly irresponsible remedies is to
bring about the appearance of health
to cover up symptoms and to stave
off breakdowns, making the perma
nent cure all the more difficult.
Other remedies, because they can
effect no lasting cure, do harm.
The same words that fairly and
accurately describe Paiue's celery
compound, a remedy that every day
proves its worth, are boldly used to
exploit concoction that can by no
possibility do anything but harm.
More brains and ingenuity is ex
pended on the label and wrapper
than on what is put into the bottles.
Persons who try this remedy aud
that, in the foolish hope that they i
may hit on the right one by chance, !
and at any rate it can do thern no
harm, should know that the' are'
doing their system incalculable mis
chief aud putting off the da' of com
plete recovery by such experiment-j
mg.
Paine's celery compound must not
be judged by the standard of any of
these superficial medicines. It is a
great, responsible, scientific; discov
ery, singularly unlike any remedial
agent that ever aimed to effect a
similar purpose to make people
well. It is not an ordinary remedy.
The results from its use have been
so extraordinary and so gratifyiug
that busy men and women have gone
out of their way to send letters of
thanks and to allow their names to
vouch for every statement they have
made in praise of it.
The following acknowledgment
from Mrs. Geo. E. Rouse, of Green
Ba', Wis., of the surprising benefit
she has received from the use of
Paine's celery compound is too val
uable to be withheld from the pub
lic. Mrs. Rouse's honest opinion of
FERTILIZERS !
If you want the best Fertilizer on the market for almost all kinds
of crops, come to see us and get the
N. C. Alliance Official Guano.
With the use of the Alliance Official last season, Mr. B. li. "Williams
of Grantham. Township raised over 400.00 worth of tobacco on two
acres of land, some of it bringing .7.00 per hundred. We also sell
BONE AND PERUVIAN GUANO
Which is a little cheaper. Acid Phosphate, Kainit, lione and Pot
ash Mixture, Muriate anl Sulphate of Potash, Nitrate of Soda, and
Cotton Seed Meal.
HOOD &, BRITT,
GOLDSBORO, N. C.
FROM BEST SEED YOD GET BEST RESULTS'
I offer you for this season's planting .
85bbls finest 2nd growth WhiteBIiss potatoes
l?n 5?ame Early Rose potatoes
ft? Early Goodrich potatoes
1 Peerless potatoes.
600 bushels best' oats, ever planted in
Wayne county,
Absolutely Rust and Smut Proof.
1,000 Bushels White and Mixed Oats
OnSTE CR, load
you -a
Come around and let us talk with you.
I. B. FONVIELLE,
WEST WALNUT STREET AXD THE "UXUCKY CORNER."
YEARS
this great remedy cannot be mista
ken by any one who reads her letter.
Green Bay, Wis.,
March 3, 1900.
Wells, Richardson & Co.,
Gentlemen : For the past ten
years I have been troubled with neu
ralgia of the stomach and dizziness
in the head. I have doctored with
many doctors, but found no relief
until a friend of mine recommended
to me your Paine's celery compound,
and I found it a great cure for my
sickness. Yours very truly,
Mrs. Geo. E. Rouse.
Public opinion in the large cities
throughout the country shows the
reliance that hard-worked, often
overworked men and women have
come to place upon Paine's celery
coir pound.
Nothing demoralizes the health
sooner or more completely than even
the occasional loss of sleep. Paine's
celery compound gets the brain out
of this dangerous habit of sleepless
ness. It feeds the nervous tissues
all over the body, and does not let
the nutrition of these delicate parts
get low enough to permit of insom
nia. One of the earliest evidences
of the final success of this great
nerve and brain invigorator in cur
ing neuralgia, debility, rheumatism,
headaches and indigestion due to in
sufficient nerve force, is the joyous
feeling of returning strength of mind
and body, cheerfulness and "well be
ing" that takes the place of the old,
tired, languid,, morbid, melanchbly
condition.
If you are "played out,'' to use a
forcible street phrase, can't digest,
can't sleep, can't work, and Lave
lost courage, it is your nervous sys
tem that's "played out." Try Paine's
celery compound and see how soon
you give up brooding over your
health and how soon you forget you
ever had nerves that could possibly
ache. The dismal failures of other
remedies must not prevent one from
taking the remedy that is always
successful. Paine's celery compound
has driven sicknesss from thojsancg
of homes.
GRAND
Special Saie
CHILDREN'S CLOTHING
: The manufacturer from vhoir
we always buy our children'
clothing decided to go" but of busj
ness. He offered his "stock to
and we bought it -
AT - 25 - PER - CENT - LESi
Than it cost him to make.
are now offering this lot at prices
which do not cover the
ACTUAL COST OF PRODUCTION.
There are over one thousand ir
the lot.
WE -:-HAVE-:-PRICED
$1.78 suits wprth $2.25 and $2.50
At $2.39 we are "selling $3 anc
$3.50 values.
At $2.98 we offer suits worir
$4 and $4.50.
At $3.75 nothing is worth less
than $5, and many are worth $5.5:
and $6.
THIS SALE ENDS PROMPTLY SATO,
DAY NIGHT, FEB. k23.
Remember the Prlces.
H. WEIL & BROS.
HONEST MERCHANDISE.
ACME MACHINE WORKS
GOLDSBORO, N. C.
MACHINIST AND FOUNDERS.
OF A I FRR IN
JEW AUD SECOHD HAND MACHINERY OF EYERY DESCRIPTION
Ames"' Engine ami Hoilers,
'Laue'" aud other saw mills.
Couplings
WE MANUFACTURE
A Large Stock of Mill anil numbers Sujiplh"
Leather and Rubber ISelting,
Packing. Kubber Linen and
Cotton Hose. Cant Hooks,
Log Chains and
Snaking Tongs
i lilucksinith To'..
And a great many articles too numerous to mention, llej -:i:rln
Satisfaction guaranteed. Your patronage solicited.
All our machinery is new and up-to-date, such as boring ni";'..
planer, radial drill, universal milling machine for cutting gear at.'!
steam hammer with which we can do heavy forgings. -;'ci ix
cart axles, etc. Our shop is new, feet long x 40 feet wide.
Our motto is "Fair Dealing aud Promptness."
SPECIAL NOTICE TO FARMERS,
Have aain received three carloads of tine stock.
HORSES AND MULES
Which I will sell for cash or on time or will allow vou iL'l't ti:
for cotton in payment for stock, payable next fall. I pronto t- s'
you from 15 to 20 on every head, lie sure to rivo mo :i
purchasing. If necessary 1 will also furnish you'w ith sosm- t-vi-U a'
per cent. On
STANDARD AND OTHER FERTILIZERS
W ill give you specially low figures. Will sell anv v:iv 'i
for cotton or money. Have alsu received two carloads of
SINGLE AND D0UDLE
And buggies which I will sell 10 cheaper than vou ca:i !lv l?:
elsewhere, on time or for cash. Just received 300 sets" of Ivavm--1
will sell at reduced prices.
JOSEPH EDWARDS,
THE CHAMPION OF ILOW PRICES
I AM CLOSING OUT
2sLy Entire StocK
wWHTTER GOODS
To Make Room for My Spring Stod
SOON TO ARRIVE.
BARGAINS IN EVERY LINE.
DON'T MISS THIS CHANCE.
. F. B. EDMUNDS0N.
Van Wink V i
Shaftine, Pulleys. Ha;
and Set Collars.
m m.i. :. :
-. i;-v
Engines, lii!er. (
(iris-t Mills and Saw
Mil'-.