Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / Nov. 1, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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Golds Headlight. boro ESTABLISH El) 1887. GOLDSBOHO, N. C, THUltSDAY, NOVEMBEll 1, 1894. VOL. VIII. NO. . JL XlJDi A New Dajisrer, A great danger lliicit-'us the people of the South. An evil ilrit is steadily growing, iiinl imli'ss cheeked will cause "Teat misery ami sutiering. Liver Medicines, called ly all -nits of name-, arc being sold lo the druggist to he handed lo the people w hen they call for Sim mons Liver Regulator. Beware! There never has Keen more than one Simmons Liver Regulator on the market. Take nothing else. The person who tries to persuade you that anythiiur else is just the same i- not to he relied upon, nor is l!ie dealer to lie trusted who tries to sell you another article ia its stead. You know what Simmons Liver Regulator is, In-! 'au-e it has done you good. don't lie deceived into trying anything else. Wait until the Old Friend. Simmons Liver Reg ulator. has failed you, then will lie time enough to try something de. Iletnemhcr. Simmons Liver Regulator is what you want. It is put up only !y d. II. Xeilin oi Co., and:1. li 1 X is on every package. ".Now I Lay .Me lUwn lo Sleep." Tlie lire upon the hearth is low. Ami there is stillness everywhere; Like troubled spirits, here ami then The firelight shadows fluttering go: And as the shadows round nie eree, A childish treble breaks the gloom, And, softly, from a farther room Conies, "Now 1 lay me down to sleep.' VITAL TO MANHOOD. "via . And, somehow, with that little prayer And that sweet treble in my ears, , My thought goes back to distant years And lingers wirh a dear one there; And, as I hear the child's amen. My mother's faith comes back to me, Crouched at her side I seem to be, And mother holds 1113' hands again. () for an hour in that dear place! 0 for the peace of that dear time! ( for that childish trust sublime! () for a glimpse of mother's face! Yel. as the shalows round me creep. 1 do not seem to lie alone Sweet magic of that treble tone And "now 1 lay me down to sleep." El liKXK FlKI.O. Pn. E. C. WEST'S NERVE AXO P.RAI.V TKF.AT V. V.ST, a "pf'iie for Hysteria, iii.zini'-s, Fits, Niu r.i ria, IT -'a. lar.'ie, Nitvuus Iro.-tration cuuseil ly n' . 'iw! "v t'll'.u'oo, W":iko fulness, l-utul Pi'iirrs-inTi, S f:-i;:i!r f Brain, causing ill-unity, misLy. ilt'e;Ly. r : . . 1 1 ti . I'r.-uinture OM At, lsanviiui', Loss i,f l'.iwrr m i-itht'r fex, Impntenoy, Li ueorrhrrn ami ml Ft-maio Weaknesses, Involuntary Losses, Spcrnm trrtuea caused by over-exertion of bruin, Si-if-u' use, over-InduU-'ence. A moi'tii's treatment, 1, f fori5, by mail. With each order fi.rii boxes, v illi V will send written cuaraiitee to refund if iKt cured. Guarantees issued by asrent. WEST'S L1V1.H FILLS cures Sick Headache, I3iliousness, Liver Couinluiut. hour Stomach, Dyspepsia and Constipation. UUAUANTEE8 Issued only by M. E. Robinson & I'.ro.. Gold-Wo, N.C. i fit Sorredi indiqestien in 0 miMLUS pro 13 as it? efficacy V.J 3Iixc! Politics Willi Religion. Newton Knten'risc. There was an amusing occurrence in Lowcsville the other night, dipt. E. W. Ward, the ''twisted tail'' can didate for the Legislature drove into town and Col. I). A. Lowe invited him to partake of his hospitality, but the candidate said he was looking for a, man of his own political faith. The colonel thereupon sent him over to Mr. Withers, the only Republican in the place. The two Republicans discussed politics in the greatest possible har mony, agreeing perfectly that the Republican party was the greatest party on earth and that they were pulling the wool over the eyes of the Pops, getting all the county candi dates and would land them all in the Republican partv before the next election, etc. From politics they passed to a dis cussion of scriptures, and on this the harmony which had marked their former discussions was split wide open. Their interpretation of cer tain passages was so radically differ ent that they almost came to blows. Finally Mr. Withers showed the candidate to the door and went to the stable and caught his horse and ordered nun to see tors. A UP AT A FA IK. PRICE 50 CENTS PER BOTTLE. BOOK CF VALUABLE INFORMATION FREE. FOR SALE BV DRUGGISTS. THINACURA FOR THIN PEOPLE Are You Thin ? Ti.ina reate ., retini; tli. Tin lake t!i rielltlitc f every and di- ut the liuuiv. They are the sTAM i:i) KKM i:iV . ciiiitaininc no arsenic, and nh Kill Visits a ;eii :ria Comity Fair and Tells all About It." If a man would escape all this hur ly-burly of politics let him take an overland trip to some quiet country settlement where there is a camp meeting or a fair oing on. I found a place last week that surprised and pleased me. There is a territory about ten miles square down in the corner of Troup, Heard and Coweta counties that seems to loom up a little higher and is a o;ood deal rich er than the average land of either county. The old original survev'or who laid otT these boundaries would not put all this fine land in a single county, but tried to tote fair with all. He gave Heard the largest share because it needed it. About the cen ter of this territory is a little village called Corinth." Some old Bible read er gave it that name. I reckon, in honor of Paul, who lived and preach ed in the ancient city and planted churches there and turned them over to A polios to be watered. This Cor inth has no Paul nor A polios, but it used to have a reputation for its school. Corinth has just closed her fifth annual fair a settlement fair that draws the farmers and their families together like a camp meeting. It does not pretend to be a thing, but it costs nothing hardly and the peo ple like it. They brought the best products of their farms, some corn stalks eighteen feet eight inches high and twelve feet to the ear. Wheat and oats and hay, hams and leaf lard and butter, cane syrup and sorghum, potatoes and pumpkins and many kinds of garden seed. A fine display of fowls, some hogs and Jer sey cattle. In the woman's depart ment there were some of the same o4d coverlets and counterpanes and patch-work quilts that we have seen ever since we were boys, and there was some beautiful embroidery work that we didn't see in the long ago. other quar-' nt-11' ere au sons 01 preserves anu j jeuies anu picKies anu i counted six was president of the fair. He stands six feet four, and is large in propor tion. Seven sons and tliree daugh ters of like proportions ornament the family, and nearly all are married. Almost everybody in that settle ment seemed above the average size, just as they do in Kentucky where the blue grass grows. All flesh is grass, you know. Cattle eat the grass and folks eat the cattle. Judge Ware is a pious man and doesn't ap prove of the races, but he says he is obliged to stand around and keep or der, but he always turns his back when the horses are running. This reminds me of my son, who is in England, and while he was w alking around the old historic tower of Lon don wanted a sprig of ivy that man tled its walls. Old soldiers were slowly walking about as guards, and the signboards said, "Hands off,'" but he humbly approached the guard nearest the wall and told him he was all the way from America and would be glad to take home a sprig of that ivy to remember the tower by, and the old man turned his back to the wall and whispered: "I'm not looking at ye." So lie quickly cut a branch and put it under his vest. It is now growing in a little pot, and he will bring it when he comes. I met but one Populist at Corinth that I know of and he said he had al ways liked Mr. Atkinson (Georgia's new Governor) until they told him he had got to drinking and whipped his wife scandalous. "Maybe it was his wife whipped him," said I. From all political liars and slanderers may the good Lord deliver us. Bill Arp. A I ariff Object Lesson. Morgunton Herald. The McKinley law went into effect in 18!H). It so happened that the Methodists of Morganton were that year building a handsome brick par sonage. The building was located in a section of the town where they were required to cover it with tin. In the Herald of Oct. SUth, 18t0,were showed how bv reason of the McKin- A N ATION'S DOINGS. So about ten o'ck heard a knock at his door and the candidate informed him that he would have to take refuge with him, as his host had ordered him out. The next morning the two would not speak. The moral of this story is. that poli ticians should stick to politics. They are out of their element when thev venture into religious matters. Col Lowe nome-mucie wine, among them was some maypop wine that the judges said was delicious, but they never offered me any. Some of the old veterans brought their guns and swords and canteens. There was an old battered canteen that was in all the war and had I The News From Everywhere Gathered and Condensed. Fire destroyed $123,000 worth of property at Pensacola, Fla., Sunday. Fire at Wabash, Ind., Wednesday, destroyed railroad property valued over $100,000. A cave-in of a sewer trench at Scran ton, Pa., Monday, crushed to death Joseph Noonan. In shooting at a target, Monday, Leonard Forman, of Clayton, 111., shot dead his younger sister. An incendiary fire at Phoenix, Ala., Saturday, caused the loss of over $100,000 worth of property. To test the constitutionality of the Indiana law, 250 women of Ander son, will try to vote next Tuesday. Prairie fires throughout Nebraska last week roasted alive thousands of cattle. Five lives are reported lost. Ambushing his wife and her para mour, Sunday night, John Thomas, of Shelby. Miss., shot them both and escaped. The explosion of a gasoline stove ignited the clothing of Mrs. George Lane, at Camden, Pa., Sunday, burn ing her to death. In grief over his wife's desertion, John Waltz, of Cambridge City, Ind., on Monday, killed his two-year-old child and himself. In a runaway and collision with a brick team, Monday, Samuel E. El more, a Hartford (Conn.) banker, was thrown out and killed. A gas explosion in a photograph gallery at Marion, Ind., Thursday, killed Miss Alice Speakan and seri ously injured two others. For the alleged poisoning of James Drummond, of Elizabeth, W. Va., Mrs. Drummond and John Hamrick, her lover, are under arrest. Fire from a gasoline stovedestroy- ed a steam laundry at Bridgeton, X j J. Thursday, and burned to death William Stiles, an employe. I When sentenced to death at Belle- Tti i.- i t i.:n: v..i l.v'nwtho Mothodist hnd to tinv I nie, in., nm...,, 10. Miu.ig iia. j ivann, ueorge ienireu said .urs, ! Kahn instigated the murder. ' Dynamite wrecked Bradley Bern hart's hotel, at Rochester, la., Fri day, killing four sleeping inmates. ; The miscreants are unknown. Because he refused to testify in a - I for loiiinii h irmleNs. 1'riee.i.rep.i.l. 1 , I'liniplilet. lli.V.' To TheTIl I .CI K. :, l.t. ; f.. . New Vi PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM C-2J Clean and beaming the hair. f rMiiiiiles a luxuriant prwl!i. Never FailB to Bestore Gray Hair to its Youthful Color. Cutis Fra.n il;-. :i-. s it hair lU.alig. HINDERCORNS. i b'u a., pa.u. ic lit llru.sts, Ill'stOX X CO., N. Y. Attacked by a Hull. Charlotte Observer. Will Crockett, colored, lives on Mr. Wadsworth's farm west of the city. He is generally employed to drive the milk wagon. Yesterday after noon he went in the lot to get the horse to put to the wagon, when he was attacked by a young bull which Mr. Wadsworth owns, and came near losing his life. The sight of the man seemed to infuriate the 'bull, and he made at hii'n. Crockett ran but the animal struck him in the back, knocked him down, and but for its horns being sawed off. would have gored him to death. As it was, it mashed him with its head and feet, causing the negro ter rible pain. But for timely assistance the bull would have probably killed fifty-two dollars for tin to cover that building more than they would have paid before the McKinley law was passed. Just now our Baptist friends are erecting a handsome brick church on the same street on which the Metho- been such a poet as my friend Lucien i dist parsonage stands and only two : divorce suit, Charles Surbaugh shot Knight I would have written an hundred feet away from it. They ' and instantly killed Morgan Adams apostrophe to it in verse are also required to cover the build-', near Winchester, Va., Sunday, lhiil old canteen, the .Southern soldiers" j ing with tin. Before the McKinley j Financial difficulties induced J. Whilom the marc h his en.mtrv to ,le-! luW waS th ot quotations I Polk Vk-ott, a prominent business feu.!. " ;on tin at 10.3i per box. They de- j man of Klkton, Md., to blow his him- D.v ins sine uiy sinning iorm vwi ; cided to wait until me new tarin law m-ains out V i 1 1 1 a pistol. Tuesday. Last Week in Trade Circles. Special Correspondence. Xew York, Oct. 20, 1S0-4. Business during the past week has shown well sustained activity in some departments, and less in others. The industrial revival has made encour aging progress. 1 he boot and shoe factories are crowded with orders, and of the cheaper grades of goods production are sold from one to three months ahead. Shipments from East ern centres are larger than at the corresponding period in either of the two preceding years. Production of textile fabrics and the output of iron and steel continue to increase. The distribution of some lines of goods from first hands has fallen olT a little, owing to the advanced stage of the season, and on account also of the retardation of consumption by mild weather. The fall in cotton prices has unfavorably affected business and restricted credits in some parts of the South, although most of the reports from that section take a hopeful view of the business situa tion. The backward season, low prices for agricultural products and the in creasing political excitement in many States fully account for the slight shrinkage in the volume of business disclosed by the returns of bank clearings. Railroad earnings in Oc tober have decreased 3.8 per cent., but the decline is attributable to the fact that current comparisons are with the period last year when the World's Fair passenger business was at its height. There lias been no re newal of gold exports. Merchandise imports at Xew York so far this month have increased $3,433,803, or alxmt 16 per cent, from the compar atively small totals for three weeks of October last year. Exports, on the other hand, have declined $2, 32O.074, or a little over 10 per cent., which is due chiefly to lower prices of wheat, cotton and provisions. Business failures in the United States and Canada during the past week numbered 283, as against 300 for the corresponding week last year. Re j turns to R. G. Dun & Co., for three ALL OVER THE STATE. t'ATAI' 1MIAL DYSPEPSIA. A Summary r Current Event o for the Past Seven Days. Several residences were burglariz ed at Salisbury last week. Governor Oates, of Alabama, spoke at Greensboro yesterday on the po litical issues of the day. Howard Gaskill, . aged 22, was drowned in Neuse river, near New bern, Thursday morning. A child was born in Henderson county last week, whose father is 70 and its mother GO years old. Fire destroyed the Iso-Thermal Hotel at Rutherfordton, Friday night, causing a $10,000 loss. Wilmington, Raleigh and Xewbern were visited by hailstorms Friday night and Saturday morning. The warehouse of the Southern Railway at Asheville was destroyed by fire early Saturday morning. Loss, '$80,000. J. W. Fillyaw, who rooms at A. McF. Cameron's, in Kinston, was robbed Tuesday night of $300, w hich he had in his trunk. A three-year-old child of John Craig was burned to death in Cald well county, Saturday, while its mo ther was out milking. David M. Vance, who in 1877 was executive clerk to his father, Gov. Vance, died Friday at the State Hos pital at Morganton, aged 37 years. The Presbyterian Synod, which was in session at Greensboro last week, adjourned Friday. The next meeting will be held at Fayetteville. Tom Hawkins, colored, attended a shooting match in Wilkes count', Friday night, and the next morning his dead body was found floating in Elk creek. While out coon hunting in Onslow county, Monda', Tom Pierce was struck by a limb of a tree which he endeavored to cut down, and almost instantly killed. The State Fair closed Friday. It was the best and most successful ever held. President J. S. Carr and A liiseouniiretl Invalid Restored to Health air.1 Happiness. Catarrh of the stomach causes a condition known as dyspepsia or in digestion. It usually results from catarrh in the throat, but sometimes occurs in people who have never had catarrh elsewhere. The symptoms of dyspepsia are: liver complaint, biliousness, sour stomach, water brash, bloating after eating, consti pation, piles, and. in many cases, low spirits, dizzy head, sympathetic heart palpitation, pain, indigestion, and looseness of the bowels. Pe-ru-na and Man-aiin, taken according to directions on the bottle, will cure even- one. The following is a spec imen of the letters received from pa tients: O. S. McQuillan, Spring Hill, la., writes: "Four years ago last fall my stomach, without any previous warn ing, refused to perforin its functions, and I sxn lost strength. During this time food was forced through my stomach by using cathartics. With flesh wasted away, strength exhausted so that it took all my en ergy to even get into a bath tub, hopes all gone, I began to take Pe-ru-na, following free advice which Dr. Hartman gave me. In a short tune 1 could eat nourishing food, ami the piles, kidney trouble and consti pation disappeared. Flesh, strength, and a splendid appetite returned, and I went to work." Fur treatise on catarrh, coughs, colds, consumption, and all climatic diseases of winter, send for Family Physician Xo. 2. Address The Pe-ru-na Drug Manufacturing Company, Columbus, Ohio. And none stuck cl.wer than his old can-1 ", ,1L ' .,lsll,Udi teen. j bought their tin at 8.25 per box. or words to that effect. And the j The new Democratic tariff law Las Itatians were there with their mon- j saved them more than forty dollars ster performing bears. These wan-! in this one item. They will besides dering sons of Italy were 3,000 miles : save money on their nails and hinges from their home ministering to the and locks and other hardware. l'l isure of our children for a mere pittance, but where the bears came from I know not. They danced and pranced to music. They marched and countermarched and made bows and sat in chairs and wrestled with their keepers and did many funny and fantastic things that amused and ! in tho st(H'k rising campaign Items From Dillville. We are glad to hear that this coun try is "on the move." But if you can't move with it, you'll have to pay house rent. Our farmers have been successful Let entertained us all. The men and the bears sleep together in some out- IE BBBN'SiSS Li'.naryor. el dist or A V&i At, A ri'-vtri I IVL. him. After the animal was gotten nouse. tliey eat together and sliare oiT him. the negro was picked up and a -'omm..n fortune. The chief differ- i brought to town and Dr. Gibbon at- M. 1- l: .!i'm.-n iv. bn r A E ST C , X. c. 3 KXOV7 DR. FELIX LE C SUN'S STEEL F.I1! FE5HYE0YHL FILLS iir.l,e i.riKintil unit only rKF.'NCH. Fiifanil ro liiiiilo cure on tin iimriiet. I'l ice jfl.l.H; tiellt by until. Uenuine bold only h M. K. Hi.t.i. ,V l',!-,... ;,!,i-.!,i,r,.. X. c. Dr. J. M. Parker, ., dental srm;i:o. Fresh Nitrn when iloiivi w ork done. tfr OlVire K More, WiM C ( Kiile ir;w aiimiiiiMrivil Crown and KriilLre viT I,. I). ;i,i tended him. The skin was not brok en, but he was hurt internally. His injuries are serious, but not fatal. Durham's Dark Siile. Kriuii the Sun. Rumor has it that there was a night carousal in Smoky Hollow, a pistol was fired in one of the houses, and sir in hush money changed hands not to bring it to light. Who is it impli cated, if these rumors are true? The most cowardly and contempti ble act we have yet heard of the Dur ham "co-operators" doing is to send anonymous letters, of a threatening character, to colored men who they ! fear will not vote with them. Is this j a free country or not? Is that giving I the colored man his rights? It is a species of anarchy that no self-re-' specting colored man should tolerate . in voting for such a desperate gang I of cowardly intimidators. mre Nsvet. A special from Murphy, Cherokee county, says that a wedding recent ly occurred near that place that is puzzling a great many people. Last ! spring Mr. Steve Miller's wife died, iving him with several small child- ren. Last Sunday he married his IjIOUOI'S fUKl UK'S ! j mother-in-law. which now makes him A Happy 1 S (H'AUAYl Kl- uil! call :U stocked at all tin 1 lomeMic ami In Welcome1 :i to 'iiiosi: who! my saiuon. which is - witli the choicest of All the huot manion! drinks compounded ;t'-.l I iv skilil'al men. and j his own fathcr-in-law and father to his own children. grand- Domestic and Imported Cigars, VXD A LAiUlK LOT OF FINK TO V iiaceo. For Pure North Carolina ' "'.'ii 'htkey inv place is headquarters. Mr. CiiMe-i il.'.w ell is with me and v ii'.l.i he pleased to sec his friends. Jas. L. Dickinson, At John (.inn's Old Stan,!. ence is that God clothes one and man the other. When dinner time came the mat rons and maidens spread their table cloths upon the ground under the shade of the trees and filled them with good things for the multitude. Everybody was invited everywhere and all were pressed to eat and drink, for spring water and coffee were abundant. I eat chicken and sausage until I didn't know whether to crow or to grunt, and so I did I neither. Next came the races horse races, upon a mile track that was in the shape of the figure eight. .It was in a close sheared meadow of bermuda grass. This racing busi ness seems to be quite orthodox with the people, for all the stock is home made, and there was no jockeying or betting that I discovered. There was some good stock, but none that were kept for the turf. They pulled the plow or the wagon and made tho crop. Nobody seemed to time them, and the only question was, which beat? Maude S. was not there nor Nancy Hanks. I think there must have been oOO or 400 buggies around that track, and in most of them were young men and maidens. There was no drinking nor swearing and not an accident of any kind, I met some people I used to know, but had forgotten. One middle-aged us give you credit for a cow on your subscription? This is a queer world. Give a man a new wheel for his wagon and ten to one he'll want you to furnish the axle grease, too. We do enjor this October weather. It's as sweet as molasses and as ex hilerating as mountain dew without the revenue stamp. We have been elected one of the stewards of the church here, and as soon as we are able to give bond you will see us taking up the col lection. We can't have eve'thing as we want it in this world. The fattest 'possum is always the one that climbs the highest, and the cow that gives the most milk never conies home. Secretary Hal W. Aver were re-elect- weeks of October show aggregate j ed by acclamation. liabilities of only ?5,:K),741, of which j A tramp crivinir his name as Jack- i:2,(12'.t,(;71 were of manufacturing and 2,0r)7,5(!7 of trading concerns. Cotton prices have further declin- son, alias ''Texas Dick," confessed to Charlotte officers, Wednesday night, i that he was implicated in the recent ed a ot a cent per pound, as a result : train robbery near Quantico and was of the continued large crop move-: immediately locked up. nient from the plantations and weath er conditions favorable to the realiz "Ja ktii. (.iant Kiin r." j gentleman introduced himself by The child's story of -Jack, the Giant ; saying: "Major, you do not remem Killer," t'iirnir-hc:. a vtrikiiiij; illustration bcr me, but I will refresh your mem- of the ellica.-y of Mnall a-encies towards j when you wero tlie suppression of jrivat evils, when ju- -la,,J.vt dieiousiy used. The daring exploits of living in Home you was a member of brave lilt It Jack remind us, in their re- the s,.l,ool hnnrd mid T was an nnnli- cant for a teacher's commission. M fX?' Agents. $75 .'. K.clu.ive frnl..ry. Tli ILiil HUhh.r. Wli..sllili "RAPia 1S(, ; suits of the wonderful achievements of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant 1'ellets in battling j with the giant, disease. Itelat ivoly, tlie j proportion between the youthful hero, ami oiii r.lumlernore, is apparently not greater than tiat between the 'little Pellets" and the relentless monster which preys upon the vitals. Yel, the "Pellets" conies oil' eoanueror of const i- nalioa. sick headache, biliousness and I busted, but VOU let me in. You were chosen to examine me on arithmetic and when it was your turn you asked me to go to tho black board and write down eleven thou sand e'even hundred and eleven, and Yes. I He Used a Crow Dar. Nurih WUkesburo News. On Tuesday evening, a crowd of hands was working the public road near McGlamery's store, this county, when a dispute arose between Worth Church and Milt McGlamery, two white men. After wrangling some time the former suddenly clinched his side of the question by picking up a crow bar and striking the latter on the back of the head. It was a very hard blow and ren dered McGlamery unconscious for some time, but he finally come around all right and was able to bo out the next day. A terrible gash was cut by the blow, but fortunately the skull was not fractured. The "liver regulator" they had taken on seems to have taken effect pretty soon. When Others Kail Hood's Sarsaparilla builds up the shat tered system by giving vigorous action to the digestive organs, creating an ap petite and purifying tho blood. It is prepared by modern methods possesses tho greatest curative powers, and has the most wondeifnl record of actual cures of any medicine in existence. Take only Hood's. ! A baseball which he attempted to j catch, struck Joseph Kercher, of ! Kutztown, Pa., over the heart, Sat j urday, killing him almost instantly. ! While suffering from nervous pros I tration, Mrs. Mary Fackler, of Phil adelphia, committed suicide, Satur day, by cutting her throat with a razor. The destruction by (ire of the West Street Hotel at Seattle, Wash., Sat urday night, caused the death of six teen guests by suffocation and cre mation. Because Will Hammond, of Honey Springs, Tex., slandered Tip Dul lard's wife, Dullard shot him dead, Wednesday, and was himself serious ly wounded. Attempting a criminal assault on a four-year-old girl, Nathan Shedd, of St. Ix)uis, Mo., was caught in the act by the child's father, Friday, and clubbed to death. tornado tore to pieces several houses and stores at Tonka wa, O. T., Tuesday night, injuring several per sons and scattering dry goods and groceries for miles. Two farmers while crossing the railroad track near Heelsville, Ind., Thursday, were struck by a train and killed. They were returning in toxicated from the circus. At the point of revolvers, Aaron Greonewald was held up bystreet robbers at Richmond, on Saturday night, and relieved of a valuable dia mond, a gold watch and money. Because he could not take all his property with him when he died, John W. Warner, an eccentric farm er, of Allegan, Mich., set his cabin on fire Saturday and cut his throat. At Mt. Airy, Thursday night, Joe Hanes shot and mortally wounded Emmett Atkins. Hanes is an illicit distiller and accused Atkins of re porting him to the reverue officers who destroyed his still the previous day. While Frank Padget and his wife ! were ridins? alonf tho nnhlic road in uuoul oo pe. cent, ui.gc. man w.ey , 0nsmv county in fln ox.cart Satur. we.ew.w.e . ... . e,. ,..uh.k l' day, a tree broke off some ten feet 1S!2. New business in cotton goods : 'm , , strikin,r 1;uWt has been comparatively quiet. There j thp kming him anJ cripp5n,. his wife. at ion of maximum estimates of the yield. While demand has been mod erate in proportion to the offerings, the exports have increased, and tak ings bv Northern mills so far during the season have been more than dou-1 ble what thev were last year and has been a fairly large distribution on account of back orders; but the season for retail trade has been back ward, and the stocks of jobbers have not been sufficiently depleted to call for general replenishment. Prices of cotton goods show a little change; but the market lacks strength, owing to the abnormal price depression in the raw cotton trade. Fluctuations in wheat and corn prices have been within narrow limits, and the net changes for the week are unimportant, except at New York, where a speculative short interest has caused 2 cents advance in the price of the October option of corn. The interior move ment of wheat has continued small in winter grain districts, but com paratively large in the Northwest; and a further enlargement of visible stocks has prevented an3 accession of speculative confidence in the mar kets. There has been, no activity in the export trade. Inquiry from for eign buyeis has been fair; but the volume of new business has been re stricted by a hardening market for ocean freight room, which has found more profitable employment through Two mail trains of the Seaboard Air Line going in opposite directions, collided at Henderson, Saturday Both engines were badl' damaged and several iersons hurt. The cause seems to have been a misunderstood train order. Two ginhouses near Hamilton, con taining twenty-five bales of cotton in all, were destroyed by fire Friday. Both gins were at work at the time and it is supposed to have caught from matches being carelessly left in the cotton by the pickers John E. Brothers, the Democratic registrar of Salem township, Pasquo tank county, for refusing to allow a Republican ex-Sheriff named James S. Wilcox, to examine ihe registra tion books, was shot by the latter Mondaj-, and died the next day The Elkin Times says that at Sur ry court last week a woman succeed- KiK'kN-n'it Arnic-a Salve. The l'.est Salve in the world for Cuts, Pruises, Sores, Ulcers. Salt Kheuin. ever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains Corns, and all Skin Erup tions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give IK-rfeet satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 2- cents per box. 1-or Sale by J. II. Hill & Son. (Joldslmro, and J. H. Smith. Mount Olive. ;uaraiit4-cl Cure. We authorize our advertised druggist to sell Dr. King s New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, upon this condition. If you are alilicteu with a Cough, Cold or any Lung. Throat or Chest trouble, and will use this remedy as directed, giving it a fair trial, and ex perience no benelit, you may return the bottle and have vour money refunded. We could not make this offer did we not know that Dr. King's New Discovery ill. I 1h' relied on. Jt neverdisapiioints. Trial lMittles free at J. II. Hill & Son's, (io'.dsboro. andJ. K. Smith's. Mt. Olive. Large size ."iile. and ft. A Lratler. Since its iri introduction. Electric Hitters has gained rapidly in popular favor, until now it is clearly in the lead among pure medicinal tomes and alter atives containing nothing which iM-r- niits its use as a beverage or intoxicant, it is recognized as the Itest and purest medicine for all ailments of Stomach, Liver or Kidneys. It will cure Sick Headache. Indigestion. Constipation, and drive Malaria from the system. Satisfaction guaranteed with each Iwittle or the money will lie refunded. Price only r()c. per bottle. Sold by ,J. II. Hill & Son, Goldsboro, and J. H. Sinilli, Mt. Olive. The world is divided into two classes those who master their troubles and those who are mastered by them. Tiretl Itraiu and N erven. The quickest, safest and sweetest re lief for the tired brain and nervous sys tem conies from using Dr. King's Itoyal (iernietuer. As a nerve tranquilizer and tonic, it has never licen equalled. Dr. L. D. Collins, (loldthwaite. Tex., says of it: -It is the finest nerve tranquilizer I have i-ver used." L. C. Coiilson, deputy clerk circuit court, Jackson Co.. Ala., says: "I commend it for iiervousnes above anything I have ev,r tried." Geo. . Arnistead. editor he Issue, Na-hville, Teiin., says: "It is an invalu able builder and invigorator of the nerve forces." $1: it for .'. A ci il tongue is a In-tter protection for the liead than a steel helmet. Sick people don't want to be bothered with preparing the medicine they take. Pad enough we must take it. You don't need to make a tea of Simmons Li ver Regulator, it is already prepared. You take a doe of liquid or powder to-night and awake in the morning free from ,. ....'. , . r your biliousness, sick headache or con ed in ootaining a divorce and m five K5 tiu indigestion. No pnrga- minutes after Judge Battle signed the decree which gave her freedom she was in the register of deeds' of fice asking' for a marriage license. The Elkin Shoe Company received iyS.N I V'l.r-r- i,n...il.'.lli.i..1i.rc!i. JgA Sura!i,wrrs W. I'. II AH.K1SON 6c CO.. lUrk No. l: Hood's Pills are purely vegetable, and do not purge, pain or gripe. L'oc. kindred ailments every time. If you remem! ,ei-e.l then that his name was are su!Ye ring from either acuteorchron- , ..c 1 , .' jie disorder of the digestive organs, try i Duke, and how mortified he was at; ( ;(Ki wii 1)ot let go of your hand 1m I this sure remedy. " j 1 is failure. My friend Judge Ware i cause the world throws iinnl at you. After confessing that he clubbed his aged father to death for his cash, William Milford, a young farmer near Milan, Ala., on Tuesday, took a dose of morphine, gave up the money and died. In a freight wreck, which occur red on the Pennsylvania Railroad near Corydon Station, Pa., on Tues day, three men were killed outright and a score or more injured, some seriously. A miners' boarding house at Lau rel Run, Pa., was blown up with dynamite, Monday night. Three of the inmates were killed outright, four fatalky injured and half a dozen seriously hurt. Confessing that he robbed the City Bank of Hartford, Conn., of $23,000, J. Allen Francis, teller for .38 years, was arrested Friday night. He had been prominent in church and Sun day school work for years. an expansion of the general cargo j an order last week for a No. 1(1 shoe, business. Much of the recent out- j The last, which was sent by a negro ward movement of wheat was stimu- living in Surrv county, is 20 inches lated by the acceptance of ballast in length. Unable to find shoes at freight rates by the ocean liners. Some of the reports concerning the yield of corn are disappointing; but as a rule the crop returns point to more satisfactory results than had been anticipated. There is practi cally no present movement of corn for export; and as yet little business has been done in new crop for future clearance. , There have been larger shipments of hogs to Western pack ing centres; and prices have general ly declined 23 to 30 cents per 100 pounds. The increased output and the cheapening of hogs have com bined to depress prices of products and Chicago quotations are lower than they were a week ago by 55 cents per barrel on pork and 30 cents per 100 pounds on lard. The Moon and the W Ives. I s:iw the moon bright, full and round. It slieil its U-ams o er all the ground. And then there came this tln.uirlit tu me Our wives just like that moon should be: Fair, full, all rounded out n.id bright And by their reenie hheddifiK liicbt. Yes. ami they will Ik if in time of any functional derangements or organic trouble: the stores large enough to fit him, the negro is compelled to go bare footed. The Morganton Herald says Mr. John Campbell, of Burke, raised 1,200 bushels of sweet potatoes on six acres. The Deaf and Dumb School raised COO bushels on two acres. The State Hospital has not yet been heard from, but will raise between 1,500 and 2.000 bushels. A half-witted negro, who was em ployed as a waiter in a restaurant at Reidsville, was sent to the home of an aged white lady, Frida-, on an errand. Finding her in the house alone, he suddenly seized and at tempted to assault her. Her screams brought help and the negro fled. An alarm was given, the negro was cap tured and jailed. For a pain in the side or chest there is nothing so good as a piece ol Uannei damm-ned with Chamln'rlaiirs Pain 15alni and IkmiikI on over the seat of pain. It affords prompt and jiennanent relief and if used in time will often lire- thev take Dr. Pierce's Favorite : vent a cold from resulting in pneum- Sample package pow der. slip tive ineillcme, o cents. A fact is something that will keep go ing straight on forever. English Spavin Liniment removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps and blem-i-Is.-s from horses, blood spavins, curbs splints, sweeney, ring-bone, stitles sprains, all swollen throats, coughs, etc. Save -"iO by the use of one lnittle. War ranted the tnost wonderful blemish cure ever know n. Sold by M. E. Hobinson & Hro., druggists. Goldsboro, N. C. Itch on human, mange on horses, dogs and all stock, cured in 80 minutes, by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. This never fails. Sohl by M. E. Robinson & 15ro., druggists, Goldsboro, N. C. There are some parents to whom their children never arrive at an age of responsibility. AW Prescript ion. No woman should keep i nia. I his same treatment it a sure cure house without it. It is a cure for the ! for lame back. For sale by .1. II. Hill "complaints" jM-culiar to lier sex. V Son, druggists. Powder JlbsoIiXteiy Pure A cream of tartar baking powder. Highest of all in leavening strength. Latest U. S. Government Food Ke port. Royal Baking Powder Co., hu Wall Street, X. Y.
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 1, 1894, edition 1
1
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