Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / Dec. 23, 1897, edition 1 / Page 1
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11 Jl V. II EI) 1887. GOLDSBOHO, N. C, THUliSDAY, DECEMBER, 23, 1897. VOL. XI. .0. 17. iO when t.1.!: :i; it is pleasant ::-; tnsl; r.iul acta '-v on the Kulnevs. . ' , ( A-:ni:-c the sys- I : vl:". head- ;.: i cun habitual :' of Fip is the ii kind ever pro t tlu? taste and ac stoiaeh. prompt in ruly beneileial in its I only from the most i .-il lor uh'tances, it9 ;u.ilit:cs eonnnend it : i it the most !.: - 'a. i'or sale in 50 all lending tlrug iiahle drwrgist who . t. hand will pro--V for any one who Do not accept any smyp co. V.ZIZZO. CAL. f.c'.V YOM. N.Y. l it in et tilL-heil t inniLihotrat.y. S3. 95 I Hi i C : fl nur pec- t. lal pi :cv tcr tliir JWdesk. rroir :.t! v.) tr.e i f all i- a! CaUi '. ii !" ', Jji'm I'eries, Krrv, jMin-nrs, r.-, -hirer-. Ilat.y I'.v l!i..rl Cl'IU- i. a:!'i v.-e pav .! i- i.L- 1 Cu. -pet ::j ..:.;. is .:: i.. ii cut-pet .i a'.- I r;o now to pi SES & SON, Md. - .v,. V"r 7, ra;ns, iL J' iiiil r.f :v:;.cttt3, Indigestion, :j c: vl:: Stolen and i ' hi lr-.n. Il is I never f-iils to '.cs will ilfijion-:ii-. I'ricc, -.icts. hook. It tires of the li.-li :cr- -iirins. et. LiiLlu to ua J for ..mi r I X r S mm lore 1 .RIEi!. I Yopi'S. , 1 1, lore inlying. f Goous Suitable i Trifle. y..;i ran buy of r... N, c arison house .1 for it, hut , when iv .1 in ail ki Is of li'o( vrios. y on every a have pro- u ;uid v-'c e-t market 1 1 a it iug it SOX, .ill-! i-.iiv:: I'LASTCRScuro UHEUMA L.ACKS. At druggists,, ouly 23C. 1 ."-vl rcrul 1 1 :-.i iJ" have a hook, Christmas Times. It's coinin 'loner Christinas with its l'U'UMires an' its joys. An' we" iv all si-lookini ft.rward to the mcctin' with the boys; An" Sue will come froin'eollege, an Jim my won't forget. An' we'll all fee! mirhtv thankful that we re all a-livia" yet: Hit' turkey's been ; feaihers fatin' ii of his An' his -gobble, gobble, gobble" seems a darin' us to dine: Hut the venliet's been again Jiim, ah' his exeeiltioii's set. An" he makes us feel right happy that we're all adivin' yet: there; folks I! come from Texas Illinois and Maine: New Yoi k'll -end ns Duly, an' II shiiv'll iive ;;s Jane. and imji- V.'e'll have a great hamlshakiu" when all the triemls air met. An" won't we h I i v in" right nippy that It's e iv ; I'mnin vet: ng-Chri: nas w ith all its melodies it- love and 1'iLdit: Its dinners in the daviimi at night. I he turkey's fat Silver's set. juicy the table's Yn" we're feelin' mighty happy that we r in ;i-n 111 vi i : The Christnas Snirit. The vital force of Christian princi ples is i-omewhat curiously illustra ted at the Christmas season when many thousands of people who do not profess Christianity nor ordinar ily practice its teachings are moved as by common impulse to promote ''peace on earth, oood will to men." It is possibly nothing; more than the contagion of example due to the sec ular observance of the Christmas holiday, but for some reason at this season of the year hardened natures are softened, and men not accustom ed to giving ay aside for the moment their seitish dispositions and try to make some one else happy. The story of the trantformation wrought by the Chrltmas season is nowhere better told than in a Christ mas carol by Charles Dickens. It is an excellent story to have read in the family circle at this season of the year, for though it may be familiar, it is ever fresh and enjoyable. The character of Scrooge as depicted in the beginning may lie a little exag- fj'cal, and the met noil whereby lie i ' tran-fonned may also be somewhat 1 ytj fanciful, but such transformations, ; ' tievertliele.--, take place at the Christ-! b1 ! mas season, and more of them would P occur if the Scrooges of to-day could i i j be taken around to see the joys of j U i the Christmas holiday feason. J Xear'y all the readers of The II kat'I.ioiit, we may suppose, have! family reunions on Christmas day and do not need to go away from their homes to taste the joys of; Christmas, but they should give some j thought to the friends and acquaint-! anees who may be far away from i home alone on ChrUtmas day, and ; who would be glad to join in the fes- j tivities of the season. There are not : only the poor to be cheerd and help- j ed, but also those who need nothing more than an opportunity to join in making others happy. They are not Scrooges, but they have dropped out of social life and feel their isolation keenly at Christmas time, when all the rest of the world is making mer ry and they alone seem to be shut out from participation in the pleasures, of the season. It is a Christian duty to help these as well as the poor to the joys which come into the world when selfishness is set aside and men unite to make others happy. fiift-giving at Christmas is or ought to be nothing more than a manifes tation of the Christmas spirit, which is unselfish, seeks only to make oth ers happy. Every one who has been moved by tins spirit lias rea.izea u.e truth of the saying that it is "moi" blessed to give than to receive. " Cynics may affect to find something selfish in the desire to obtain enjoy- ment through making other people happy, but the world will not suffer from that form of selfishness. ' as a matter of fact docs the kindly man or woman thmk ( paring to pleasantly : self in pre- j surprise rela- j fives and friends on Christmas morn- j ing. The sole thought in his or her mind is the pleasure that may bo j given, and that makes all the greater Jeforo the war there were no female the pleasure he or she enjoys. doctors or lecturers or editors not Christmas, however, is not to be oneami there were no book-keepers enjoyed through the following of an3' i or typewriters or shop girls or clerks, set rules. One must enter into the avera,,e woman officiated as a spirit of the season to participate in ! w;fo an j molher, or a daughter cher its joys. The best preparation is j isl)(.d bv ll0r 1)ai-ents and her broth the reading of the Christmas carol, j Tne wife was the lady of the That breathes the true spirit which is ll0US;(N pe -lt eVL.r so humble, and she founded upon kindness of heart and , wug colltent with her lot. It was an unselfish desire to promote lhc eVcn considered beneath her pride happiness of others. Whether one s j ity to teach school, and oifts be large or small, few or many, , i)0nce there was an annual importa :f a,. nro insnired bv the rig nt spirit they will bring blessings upon giver and receiver and leave in the minds of both a pleasant memory of the Christmas season. A merry, merry Christmas to one and all, with many returns of the day! A Life Saved. Marvelous cures of throat and lung affections are made daily by Dr. Hull's Co-rdi Svnm. Miss Annie Swan, PctcTsI .uiv, Va., lcs : "My brother w "t'r-.'lo 1 by a had cough and cold, ;n" iwns" thought he hadconsump p'a Ur. Jiuli's Cough Syrup was vc,i ",.1 to our -reat surprise it made him w-11 and hearty.- There is no better cure in the world than this Syrup." Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup is sold everywhere for 25 cents. ART ON THE OLD SOUTH. Hill Declares That the Country Has AI Tanccil I'ackward. We were talking about the old south and the new south and some said there was no new south; that we were the same people and have the same principles, the same religion and the same politics that our fath ers had, but like the rest of the civi lized world, we have adaanced in education and general intelligence and in the enjoyments of the comforts of life. Well, T am no pessimist, but I am grieved to say that in many things we have advanced backward. We have more books and more newspa pers and more schools, but that crime is on the increase is known and admitted by all who study the rec ords of the cout ts. There are more idle young men than there need to be yes, five times as many, accord ing to population, and I Jen Franklin said that idleness is the parent of vice. I can pick out a score of young men in every town who are doing nothing young men of good fami liesand they are living on the old man and old woman and seems to be content. They haven't been reared to work and they won't hunt for it. Fifty years ago we had no vagabonds; every young man worked at some thing, and it was considered disrepu table to lie around in idleness. In fact, we had a vagrant law that com pelled iazy, trilling fellows to earn a living. I reckon that law is still in the code, but it is a dead letter. When a young man married a girl it was expected by both, sides that lie could and would support her, but nowadays about half of them are sup ported by their wives or by the old folks. Then we got to talking about the new woman the female doctors and lawyers and editors and preachers and teachers and book-keepers and saleswomen, and how woman was ; loriMig anci-.ii ana xawmg ine place : and occupations of the men. and my friend, Dr. Williams, of California surprised us by saying that there j was a tribe of Indians in the north- west who were already far in advance of this line; that he had. known of them ever since he moved to Califor- nia. in 1S41.'. In this tribe the wo- men dominate the men 111 the tatlll V and the field and forest ti m. , Ihe t uie them absolute and wash and , make them cook nurse and actually hire them out and collect the pav. Their principal business is trapping for furs. The women do this and sell the furs and pocket the money, and many of them have a good bank ac count in San Francisco. The men are not known in any business trans actions. So it seems that our new woman has a savage precedent. Have we j is a brighter side. A sunshine that j urday night, John Clifford, of Monte got to come to this? Will I live to illuminates and warms the heart, for J ZUma, Ga., shot and killed John see the day when my wife will hire : marriage is the natural state of man j Tooko, his friend, and a sheriff shot me out as a nui-sc or a cook and pock-! and woman, and there is nothing j Clifford. et the money? She knows that I can do both, and I never dodged it at home on an emergency, but I reckon she will let me stay at home and work in the garden and cultivate her ilow- ers the remainder of my terrestial days. She knows that I never hid my money from her; when I got any 1 kept it for her, that's all. It was hers just as much as mine, but I kept it sorter like the old fellow who had a thousand dollars in gold and when the confederate govern ment passed a law taxing gold per cent he swore he wouldn't pay it, and so he got out the bag one night and ; ut u ou Uj0 midd!o of tbe taWe anj i cunej up his wife and four children j aIul divi,j0i ;t into live piles and gave j thcm pach and sai( "Xow, the j M Js aR yours anJ T can sxvcar j j aven-t j,0 a dollar in the world; hut : T reckoa j had better keep it. for ; y0,1;-' an j iie raked it all into the bag , ar, locked it up in his trunk. There is no greater contrast be tween the old south and the new south than is shown in the advance ment and the humiliation of woman. Thev are now on the two extremes. tion of New England spinsters to teach the children. I and my sisters went to four of them in quick succes sion, for our widowers married them about as fast as they came, and they made good wives and good step mothers, and were the most econom ical housekeepers in the world. They were raised that way and neither the dog nor the little niggers got any more than they could eat. Hut now the new woman is cither smart or aggressive, or she is poor and pitiful. She comes to the front with her brains and her ambition and wrestles boldly with the men as edi tor, writer, lecturer, professor in schools and colleges, and even as office seeker, and generally succeeds in what she undertakes; or else she takes an humbler place behind the counter or in the pressrooms, or per haps in the factories, for a pittance, just enough to keep soul and bod' to gether, and every year grows paler and sadder from her work. Most of them are working to maintain some body who is near and dear to them, but their wages are rarely raised, for they are women. I can almost weep for some I know. They keep their sorrows to them selves aud "let concealment like a worm in the bud feed on their damask cheeks." Ah, woman! how great is thy peril! How hard is thy lot! Not long ago I received a tearful letter from over the border. It was from a wife and mother who was an exile from her state and country, and had not heard from her parents in three long years; nor did the' know where she was. She did not dare to let them know, for fear a letter might betray her and the sleuth-hounds would get on the track of her hus band for the reward that was olTered, and so she ventured to write to me and to enclose a letter to her father, which I must address in my own handwriting and mail from Carters vile. 'T saw you once," she wrote, "when 1 was a happy child and you took tea at rny father's house, and I know that I can trust you. I have kept my secret from them as long as I can bear and it seems to me that I will die if I do not hear from them, for they love me and my heart is al most breaking." They are happier now the child and the parents for they communicate through me. I know of other cases where the wife has followed her unfortunate husband into voluntary exile and left behind her all her kindred and the i endearing scenes of her childhood, j Who knows the silent grief of woman of wives and mothers wives whose j husbands have broken their marriage j vows and gone to the bad; mothers j whose sons are afar ofl in prison for; some crimr-, or at home a drunkard, j i Oh. the pity of it, the pity of it! Js there no way to reform this world and make it better? If I was a young woman and longed for a mate a j young man, some ideal of my thoughts . and dreams, one who would love me j and cherish me and protect me all j my life I would hesitate and ponder w before 1 took the leap. A misfit, -i Tint;!.-o i misore bif rononv is a mistaKp is misorv . i , i environed with nerds, even when the , husband and wife are mated as well as married, for the children may bring grief and sorrow. St. Paul' ' enumerated and boasted of his trials and tribulations, but he was an old ! escape. batchelor and knew nothing of the i Hy a collision on the Missouri Pa perils of woman. ! clfic Railroad, near Fort Smith, Ark., Hut this is the dark side the shad- j Wednesday, Mrs. E. A. Ilolleuback ow and I only ruminate over it now was killed and several persons were and then when some pitiful case is : injured. ! recorded in the daily naners. There j more beautiful upon earth than the j marriage altar, where the bride is oood and pure and the groom is man- ly, devoted and honorable. Love is the best thing upon this sin-cursed j earth. In fact, it is the only thing worth living for. The love of wife and husband, parents and children. I heard an aged mother say the other day that her son her baby boy, as she called him was away out west somewhere and she had not had a letter from him for three long years. There were tears in her eyes and some came into mine. Oh, you boys, young men, mercantile travelers, don't forget your mothers. Hill Arp. The Kinston Free Press says that during the present term of Lenoir Superior Court, a defendant, anx ious to secure a lawyer to appear for him, offered to give a mortgage on six hogs in the woods, two dark steers, one 'possum dog, seven coon hides, one spinning wheel and a fid dle, to secure the fee. Mrs. Nancy Durham, of Duck Shoals township, Yadkin county, is now 88 years old. Three years ago she thought she was going to die aud sent and got her burying clothes, and then failed to pass off and is now hale aud hearty. Oue day last week she spun six cuts of cotton, some thing not many young girls of to-day can do. Some men at work in a field near Gaston, Halifax county, Saturday, saw a dog with the leg of an infant in its mouth. Investigation discov ered the remaining portion of a white infant hid away near by. Foul play is suspected, and suspicion points strongly to a certain young white woman in the neighborhood, and the matter is being investigated. A Timely Friend. With perfect propriety may wc call that excellent remedy, Salvation Oil, a timely friend. This liniment rapidly cures rheumatism, neuralgia and pains, when other remedies fail. Mr. Jno. M. Hall, Ashland, Va., writes : '"I euflered with rheumatism in the anklo and the muscles connected therewith. Salvation Oil at once relieved the sore ness, reduced the swelling, and cured the pain. No other liniment that I ever used did me so much good." A NATION'S DOINGS. TIio News Trom Everywhere Gathered and Condensed. Fire af. St. Louis, Mo., Sunday morning, caused a loss of $333,0u0. A train wreck near Clinton, Ind., Friday, caused the death of three persons. Congress adjourned Saturday in a holiday recess to re-convene January 5th(13l7. In a snow-slide at Glendale, Mont., Wednesday, John Hassettand Frank Webber, miners, were killed. At Carrollton, Ala., Friday, Cud Heard, colored, was hung for assault ing un ( ight-year-old white girl. A party of lift' women left New York, :'.ionday, to invade the Klon dike gold He'ds in search of wealth. An unknown assassin shot dead Patrick Murphy as he was leaving his home near Oakland, Cah, Friday night. Another negro has been lynched near Montieello, Miss., in connection with the murder of the Smith family last week. In a quarrel over a game of cards, at Bismarck, N. D., Thursday night, Henry Wyman was fatally shot by his brother. Falling into a bucket of boiling water, Saturday, Irvin Ditzler, aged four years, of Warwick, Fu., was fa tally scalded. The color line in the schools is be ing agitated at Alton, 111., and the question will be decided by the Su preme Court. In a dispute over a bale of cotton, M. S. McKae, of St. Clair, Ala., fa- tally shot George Thompson, colored, on Wednesday. Jealousy prompted Alfred Shelby, of Padueab, Ky., to shoot dead George Jenkins, his rival in love, Thursday night. j,as generator in the federal building at Wihnin.'ton. Tick, exnlo- ded Thursday, instantly killing John J. Cooper, aged '-2. In a jealous rage Charles Winston, colored, killed his wife at Washing ton, I). C, Tuesday night, and then attempted to kill himself. More than a thousand insufficiently ! Pvisoneu men are reported 10 nave """"l'-"-'""'""'" v.i.i, .u mi. ; iiont iKe region, io avoiu starvation. ; ' Slx Persons were burned to death ! in Hotel Dakotah, at Grand Forks, Sunday nigut, where 1WI i '"ts escaped down a small lire- I Umiurh misfnU-o in Tno flnrl- Snt- A distinct earthquake shock was felt in Richmond and vicinity, Satur day evening at C:15 o'clock. No damage was done anywhere, so far as reported. Stepping out of the way of one train, George A. Clark, aged o.", was struck by another at Shenandoah j Junction, Pa., Monday night, and in stantly killed. A child of Augustus Wegge, near Port Jervis, N. V., Monday, acci dentally twisted a towel around its neck and was strangled before help could reach it. For the murder of M. C. Hunt, a prosperous merchant, in the latter part of February, Hud H rooks and Grady Reynold, both white, were hanged side by side at Jefferson, Ga., Friday. While house cleaning at South Sale m, N. Y., Tuesday, Mrs. Phoebe Wilson threw an old package con taining white hellebore into a stove, causing an explosion aud fatally in juring her. In consequence of the death of the President's mother the customary New Year reception at the White House will be omitted and all social functions there will be suspended until January 13th. FireatDuryea, Pa., Monday night, destroyed $173,000 worth of business property and burned to death two men. While the fire was in progress a mob looted several stores, stealing several hundred dollars' worth of goods. At iioiyoice, ..uass., ounaay, .miss Amelia Koegel attempted to light a fire in a gasoline stove, when an ex plosion ensued. She picked up Alfred Kenell, a child, and tried to escape, but was cut off by the flames, and both perished. ' A steam engine in Townsend's wood-yard, at Charleston, S. C, ex ploded Saturday afternoon, wrecking the building and killing three negro employees. The boiler was thrown a block away, and all the windows in the neighborhood broken. A social party at the home af W II. Califf, a prominent farmer near Jeffersonville, Ga., turned into scene of riot and blood-shed, Tuesday night, due to one drunken man. As a result, three men were shot dead and two ladies seriously wounded. All Over the State. Greenville had three fires on Thurs day. Total loss, $10,000. The post-offices at Ramseur and Cedar Falls, in Randolph county, were broken into Saturday night, and money and stamps taken. A four-year-old daughter of Thom as Rose was burned to death in Yad kin county, on Monday, during the mother's temporary absence. Ilatton Perry, colored, will be hanged at Washington the 27th inst., for criminally assaulting Mrs. Annie Walker, of Beaufort county. While on a protracted spree, J. Ritchie Smith, an insurance agent of Petersburg, Va., blew his brains out near Wilson, Saturday night. According to the Greenville Reflec tor, J. R. Perkins, of Pitt county, whose mind is unbalanced, moved out all lvs furniture, Monday, and burned the house. The latest estimate of the total cotton crop of the United States for 1SU7, is placed at 11,000,000 bales, of which North Carolina produced a bout U0O,(J00 bales. The Railway Commission has issued an order, effective at once, fixing the rates on such provisions as corn, flour, etc., in small quantities the same as in car load lots. Asheville is preparing to organize a new national bank. J. W. Nor wood, president of the Atlantic National Hank of Wilmington, is at the head of the movement. A little son of Charles McAfee, in Huncoinbe county, fell on a pocket knife while playing Saturday and stabbed himself in the breast. Death resulted from internal bleeding. Thomas llogwood, of Wilson coun ty, was killed by some unknown per son Monday morning, while going out to feed his stock. He was once a member of a white-cap organization. A drunken row between Moses Wilson and Joe Tipton, partners in a government distillery, in Yancey county, Monday, resulted in Wilson shooting Tipton, killing him instantly. In Forsyth Superior Court last week seventeen people were convic ted of not giving in their taxes, the cost in each case amounting to 10. 0. This in addition to the taxes they had to pay. J. L. Jenkins was killed by a falling tree in Martin county, Saturday, while whetting saws for the timber cutters. A colored man named War wick Jones was killed in like maimer in Halifax county that day. The Times says the telephone rate in Concord is only jl.-3 per month for offices, stores, etc., and only S4 cents per month for residences, and ven at these low rates it is estima ted that the company can declare a dividend on its stock. The five-year-eld sou of David Moore died a horrib.e death of hydro phobia, Thursday morning. Three weeks ago he was bitten on the hand by a cat. Prof. Adolph A. Rooinson was bitten by the same cat and he is uow at Baltimore receiving the Pas teur treatment. The President has appointed Henry C. Dockery, of Ihxkinhara, to le United States Marshal of the Eastern District of North Carolina, to suc ceed O. J. Can-oil. Edward C. Dun can is to succeed F. M. Simmons as Collector of Internal Revenue for the Fourth district. In Madison county, Saturday night, Willard Frankly n and Reuben Gun- tcr quarreled, and Gunter struck Franklyn on the head with a revol ver. Frauklyn then cut Gunter with a Unne, so wounding mm inai ne died within an hour. Franklyn was arrested but escaped. The Supreme Court decides in the case of the State against Jones, from Rockingham, that under sections 52 aud of the new revenue act it is not the duty of the sherilT to make report of tax delinquents to the court as provided for by this law, until after the day of levying and selling has passed. This fully sustains the Attorney-General's opinion. Friday night, when W. T. Croom had just completed the work of fit ting up his new saw-mill in Richmond tounty, some scoundrel went there at night and tore up every piece of machinery that he could damage. The guages, tubes and pipes on the engine were completly demolished, while belting was cut and part of the maehinerv was thrown down the hill. Absolutely Pure UMS ttftrit ALL libfc f AlLS. CJ Best oiii;h SvruD. Ta-sUai Good. USB T7t POWDER Fifty Years Ago. grandfather's hat! And within it you see. Grandfather's favorite cough remedy. Whether 'twas Asthma, Bronchitis or Croup, Or baby at night waked the house with a whoop. With Ayer's Cherry rectoral Gran'ther was sure That no cold or couyh would e'er fail of a cure. In h.it-i th styles change, but the records will show Coughs are cured as they were 50 year ago. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral has no equal as a remedy for coughs, colds, and lung dis eases. Where other soothing elixirs palliate, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral heals. It is not a cheap cough syrup, which soothes but does not strength en; it is a physician's cough remedy, and it cures. It is put up in largo bottles, only, for household use. It was awarded tho medal at the World's Fair of ninety -three. It has a record of 50 Years of Cures. COGELIN Trade-Mark. Nature's Nervine and Rapid Restorative An nnfailini' cure fcr Di-casi-s of the Digestive. Ne;-vms and Generative Sys tems. A Tonic of rare cllicacy for the old and young and of marked service for Students. Touchers, atul all who are engaged in Urain work or close occupa tions. OTJTRJES Depression, Nervousness, Loss of Ap petite, Restlessness, Ker?e Weakness, Excesses, Tired Feelings, Muscular Weakness, Palpitation of Heart, Hysteria, General Discom fort, Alcoholism, and that almost innunierahle scries of a-es and complication- result in from anv derangement of the Nervous vstem. Invalualile for weak women and nervous children. Steady Nerves, Dr. Cox's Cocci in Nerve Tonic. raced System. h-.survd liY Usiuff Sound llesf, Jood Work, Contains no opiates or Pan.Tous Prims to Make a Habit. 50 (cnls per I'ottlc. If three Wtl.-s bo ordered at one time, a copy of Oriole Cook Hook will lie included free. AT i;i'.t.lSTS AND PEALEKS OK DIUECT Of US ON KECK I IT Oi" I'lilCE. 50 CENTS. Wiiikclinaiiu k Urown Drug Co., soI.E I KOl'KIEToIiS. ISaltiinorc, 3M., l S. A. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cleuut aiidi betut.fic uc bait. fZfV ife-V i Hair to iw Youthful Color. 'V-J -.J Cun c.p u. & hair f-u Wevi-r y'l to Bestore Gray I0LD-FAST,"1,,lirt!!,.SE A new and useful di'vioc whieli every family will uv, is soM onlv ttimiiuu l.i.il agents, simi lo and tronu: can lv.ut u anywhere: securely holds rope re: inst.int adjutuiL-nt an.l removal l line: no s needed. Sells on siflit. J'oi.ular price. .Vtti W mited Kvrryu liT". Kiclusive Ter ritory. Allraetive terms. I'reniimns and profit s!i;iriiiB. Any one may become aenl. Sample iiir. I t ma 1. "."io. iI.I.s ( tl.Tl lit, n:s Locust Mreet, I'iiilitdi-lphlii. ffclrhMUr'n EnsUaB JMainoJKl Kmt. FEF1HYR0YAL PILLS kr!o-!nnl Only f2nn!nfl 1 for Chirhotcr FwLth liia-- "Il'oxfa. afled wlih 1.: no hWon. Take JTV Jim., M.ll. lO.OOO T.-timotnala. 'd (awr. rind TChli-kev Hr.hita cured at home with out paia. llook of ptr '.are Pent I It I.E. LWOOI.LKY. M.D. AUMiatu, feu. oiiice im K. 1'ryor St WHEN VISITING FREMONT Don't forget to call at my saloon, which is stocked at all times with the IIEST WINKS AM) LIQUORS to le had in this country. My stock of Tohacco and Cigars will also he found of the Ut quality. lMIIC'I-X ALM'AYS LOW, hut the goods pure and of well known brands, (iive me a call and bring your friends along. Z. 1). MUMFOKD, Fkkmoxt, X. C. Valuable Opportunities. " The Southern Realty Exchange. HEAL ESTATE UOUGHT, SOLD And Exchanged. HaTO you Property for Sale. Do yon wish to Invest! Loans negotiated, Investments made Correspondence solicited. The Southern ( (Jol.lsboro, X. C Realty Exchange, S L. . A. Tbat Lame Hark can "be curett wltn Dr. Miles' itKVK fLASIER. Only 25c ' W H ! FA n I B.yfcssf33i!asa b.m Tobacco will cure well, have a bright, rich color and flavor, with good burning properties, if liberally supplied with a fertilizer con taining at least 10 actual Potash. in the form of sulphate. The quality of tobacco is im proved by that form of Potash. Our books will tell you just what to use. They are free. Send for them. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 03 Nassau St., New York. ARE YOU ALIVE to the fact that you cau Ret anything in the line of DRY GOODS and GROCERIES at our store, at lower juices than charged at other stores? You will also find that we keep everything in the lines of Notions, Shoes and Hats, also I'ants, Crocker' and (dassware, no matter what you may call for ami at prices lower than the lowest. IT WILL BE OF INTEREST to all to favor us with a call ami see how low good and reli able goods can be bought at our store. F. B. EDMUNDS0N, East Walnut Street, Goldshoro, N. C. MONEY SAVED IS MONEY MADE. Why pay high prices for goods when we will sell you the san e goods 20 to 50 Per Cent. Lower than you can buv them cl-M-where? If low prices will sell goods, we are going to sell them. You can pay more money but You Can't Buy Better Goods than sold at our store. It will pay you to call and see what Rare And Valuable Bargains We have to offer in every depart ment, llest assured that we will make prices right. D. W. C01515 & CO., East Walnut St., opp. Mayor's Olliee. THE NEW Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine WITII Rotary Motion and Ball Bearings, Easy Running, Quiet, Rapid, and Durable. Purchasers say : " It runs as light as a feather." " Great improvement over anything so far. It turns drudgery into a pastime." 'The maffic Silent Sewer." All sizes and styles of sewing ma chines for Cloth and Leather. YESTBROOK & CULBRETH, Sole A;kxts Moi xt Olive, X. C. House : Heating OF EVERY KIND. Tin Roofing and Plumbing. Cooking and Heating Stoves. Estimates Furnished for Work upon application. Jno. Slaughter, Walnut stkeet. THE - PUBLIC - APPRECIATE Oil! EFFOKTS. m ' i k. . . . nnh oniHnirafTtwi as to hire another man to kft'I" uj. with ur Kupair Depart- uivnt- Ol'K l"MEKTAKEKS LINE mbract-s evervthir.fi in Fine Kuueral Kurnihin(rs. Our Funeral" ar is furnished ui!ntely without ...t mr n-ooi.tiuli room and otlire with stationery Cor corn-.mk'uce is t.-n. and our country friend are asked to use it for their corrvsjotideiice. AVE STKIVE TO PLKASE. Reasonable prices and satisfactory scrviee will win Yours to i-lease, Ci. U. V IJ. x. K. E. Uizzei.l. Pres. Jonx Si.a rr. htkk. Mgr. Caul. E. Stanley, Asst Mgr. Walnut Street Ophite IIeaki.ight Office. DR. J. M. PARKER. Office (her Killer's Drug Store. Hours From 9 a. ni. to 5 p. ni.
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 23, 1897, edition 1
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