Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / March 8, 1900, edition 1 / Page 1
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m She Golds Heai boro )OGHT ESTABLISHED 1887. GOLDSBOEO, N. C, THURSDAY, MAliCH 8, 1900. VOL. XIII. NO. 26. "Every morning I have a had taste in my mouth; my tongue is coated; my head aches and I often feel dizzy. I have no appetite for breakfast and what food I eat distresses me. I have a heavy feeling in my stomach. I am petting so weak that sometimes 1 tremble and my nerves are all unstrung. I am getting pale and thin. I am as tired in the morning as at night." What does your doctor say? " You are suffering from im pure blood." U'hat is his remedy? Q You must not have consti pated bowels if you expect the Sarsaparilla to do its best work. But Ayer's Pills cure constipa tion. VTe have a book on Paleness and Weakness which you may have for the asking. Write to our Doctors. v lVrliRjis you would like to consnlt pintntrt jiliysicians about vour condi tion. Write us freely nil the" particulars iu your ease. Yon will receive a prompt reply. Addreat, 1)R. J. O. AVER, f Lowell, Mas.."' TASTELESS TDM IS JUST AS COOD FOR ADULTS. WARRANTED. PRICE 50cts. G ai atia. Ills., Nov. 16, 1893. Paris Medicino Co., M. Iouis, Mo. (.entlPmen: We mild last year, fX) bottles of GROVE S TASTELKSS CHILL, TOM C and have bouulit thro cross already this year. In all our ex perience of U years, in the druif business, have ever sold an article that gave such universal satis faction as your Tonic. Yours truly, abney, cabs & co. C3T For sale and guaranteed by all druggists. WOOD'S HIGH GRADE arm Seeds. Our business in Farm Seeds is to-day one of the largest in this Country. A result due to the fact that qniility hns always been our first eor.sidcriitinn. We supply all Seeds required for the Farm. GRASS & CLOVER SEEDS, Cow Peas, Cotton Seed, Seed Oats, Seed Corn, Soja, Navy & Velvet Beans, Sorghums, Broom Corn, Kaffir Corn, Peanuts, Millet Seed, Rape, etc. Wood's Descriptive Catalogue (.'ivos tlio fullest information about tiiese ami all other Sjeods ; lst methods of culture, soil best adapted for differ eretit c-rops and practical hints as to what are likely to prove most profitable to grow. Catalogue mailed frea upon roijurst. T. W, WOOD & SONS, SEF.DStf.EH, - Riofemond, Va. GoTo. MALPASS & ETKBIDGE, To buy Shoos and (Jrocorios down ritilit. We make country produce a specialty, drove's Chill Tonic .i.'ic. coil'ee He and up. 10c size hakiug powders 5c, ,V sie at :lc, keg soda 4e, starch ." cents. " Your Orders Solicited for all kind-; of rouuh lumher and .atlis, at i-easou:ible prices. Have a hore for sa!' cheap, live years old, will work anywhere. Come to see us if von don't huv a thing. Halpass & Etbridge. At J. T. (Jinn's old stainl. All druggists sell Dr. Miles' Nerve Plasters. LL riowiii' Time in BillTille. riowin' time in liillville the little folks at school. An' the bigger fellers 'jerkin1 o' the bell line on the mule; LayirT out the cotton, tiggerin1 on corn, An1 the lazy nigger wishin' he had wait ed to be born! The larks air lookin' lively, the fur row's lookin' long; Thar's nothin' that's suggestive of "the weary ploughman's song." He don't do any singin1 aceordin1 to the rule, Fer all his time is occupied in swearin' at the mule! The farmer's wonderin' jest how fur will next year's cotton drap; The .sheriff's gittin' ready fer to levy on the crap; Au' all air hustlin' lively, an1 all air pullin' strong, An' the days, to all the toilers, air tifteeu yards too long! Frank L. Stanton. Suspicion. A too credulous disposition may subject one to imposition, but it is an amiable weakness compared with the suspicious habit, which is generally illnatured and very frequently un just. The suspicious man is one who has little faith in human nature; he is prejudiced, and, though he may be logical, he frequently draws wrong conclusions because his premises are false. Suspicious people are gener ally illuatured and of bad temper, and the conclusions they draw from very innocent transactions, simply because they have started out with a wrong conception, are sometimes astonishing. They can do a vast amount of mischief, also, through their unfolded suspicions. Play wrights frequently use suspicious people as fun-provokers, because of the misunderstandings to which false suspicions give rise; but the fun is for the on lookers, not for the char acters who are set by the ears through the machinations of suspic ious men and women. Sometimes the suspicious man is malevolent; sometimes he interferes in other people's affairs from a sense of duty, but in any case he is a trou blesome customer. Unlike suspicion, credulity does no harm except to the amiable possessor of it, who has an abundance of faith in other people and is misled b' his trustfulness. One should aim to be neither mark edly credulous nor markedly suspi cious, weighing all things without prejudice of any kind. The middle course is easily maintained by those who are disposed to be just and who have their emotions and passions un der proper control. As a rule, the young are credulous from lack of ex perience. Advancing years develop the tendency either toward a suspic ious disposition or toward that phil osophy which looks calmly upon things as they are and indulges as little as possible in speculations. The experiences of men have much to do with the development of their characters, but another factor is their disposition; whether it is open and generous or secretive and selfish. Of two men having equal experience with the deceits of the world with its injustice and h3pocrisy, one is soured and rendered suspicious, the other enobled and made tolerant of faults. One looks upon the dark side and sees no good in any one; the other is hopeful, cheery and seeks to help his fellows to be good rather than con demns them for being bad. The young man at the outset of his career should endeavor to .build up his character on the lines of that of the generous phil osopher; neither expecting all men to be good nor suspecting that all are bad. This he should do, not merely for the sake of his own peace and comfort, but because he may thereby be helpful to his fellow men. The suspicious man never accom plishes any permanent good, but may do a great deal of harm. The generous man who is not unsophisti cated thinks no evil and does no harm; but may on the contrary, help to protect and uplift those against whom unjust suspicions have been directed. Shorts (.'hats on Advertising. The local weekly is the best medium for the local merchant. Don't be tedious in your advertis ing talk. Better leave a little to be said to-morrow than to be tiresome to-day. No one person in five thousand reads an advertisement twice. You must impress with the first reading or the effect will be the last. The hardest thing in adwriting is to write a plain, every day talk. It seems easy to write this kind of an ad., but when one attempts to do it he soon learus how difficult it is. The advertiser must keep the fact in mind that it is very easy to fall out of the procession and get lost. Liet any man retire to some place and keep his friends in ignorance of his whereabouts, and within three months they will have ceased to think of him or speak of him. A Good Cough Medlilue for Children. "I have no hesitancy in recommend ing Chamberlain's Cough Remedy," says F. P. Moran, a well known and popular baker, of Petersburg, Va. "We have given it to our children when trou bled with bad coughs, also whooping cough, and it has always given perfect satisfaction. It was recommended to me by a druggist as the best cough medicine for children as it contained no opium or other harmful drug." Sold byM. K. Rob inson & lro., J. II. Hill & Son, and Miller's Drug Store, Goldsboro; and J. R. Smith, Mount Olive. ARP ON IIOLDERBY. He Agrees with the Preacher as to Moral Instruction of Children. I thought that the school system was settled and the people had all acquiesced. Some of us antiquated men and women rebelled for a while, for we were wedded to the ways of our fathers, but we had to fall into line and be reconciled to what we could not help. The world was against us; Prussia, France, Ger many and New England, where all the development comes from. Still some of us felt that it was hard and unjust to be taxed for the education of other people's children when we had already paid for our own under the old plan. In the old country the young men have to pay it back in military service. But every now and then somebody raises a rumpus, and abuses the whole thing the mode of teaching the exclusion of the Bible and morning prayers, and the inflic tion of corporal punishment. If I had my way I would reform some things, but I am only one man, and there are many men of many minds. I would give the Bible a place if it drove out the children of every dissenter in the land; not a place to be taught as a study, or for sectarian doctrines, but a place to be read at the opening of the exercises and to be respected as the oracle of God. This is a Christian country and we base all law and legislation upon the Bible; every officer of the law is sworn upon it from the president down to a petty constable, including the judges of the supreme court and all the other courts, the members of congress and all of the legislators. Congress has its chaplain and all bow in reverence to the morning prayer. So has the house and senate of Georgia; and yet there are always one or more members who are Jews or infidels or agnostics. Judah Ben jamin and David Yulee were United States senators and they were great and good men of the Hebrew faith, and always bowed their heads rever ently to the blind chaplain's prayer. Major R. J. Moses, a distinguished Jew of Columbus, was the speaker of our Georgia house in 1S0G, and with his gavel solemnly called the mem bers to their feet when the chaplain stretched forth his hands to heaven. Our governor isuot a member of any church, but had to confess his faith in the Bible when he was sworn into office. Then, if all these great and learned men who represent this government, both state and national, do not hesi tate to honor the sacred book, what is the matter with children in the public schools? Are they to have uo moral training? No reverence for the word of God? Is there a college in Georgia that does not open every day's exercises with morning prayer? Then why this immunity to children this locking out the Bible and its code of morals that the ages have sanctioned? What means the observ ance of the Sabbath and the sound of the church going bells? What means all the mighty efforts of our people to send the Bible to the heathen, and through our mis sionaries to Christianize the world? What is there peculiar to our chil dren that they shall not be taught anything sacred? The very seclu sion of the Bible casts a shadow of doubt and uncertainty upon its truth; and added to this comes ever and anon the attacks of such men as Ingersoll and Abbott and Mitchell, who seek to knock out one by one the pillars of the sacred volume. But the reply is that these dissenters are taxed to support the schools, and their religious convictions must be respected. Their convictions are not respected in any other department of public policy. They cant work on the Sabbath nor can their children play ball or hunt or frolic. Every letter that is written in their busi ness or their families have a date of IjlOO, which means 1900 Anno Domini. But I forbear. I am only one man, and have no backers save perhaps Dr. Ilolderby. With him I agree that far, but I never was more sur prised than to read his vehement philipic against corporal punish ment. Either he or I is a crank upon that subject. And he is a minister, and I suppose would have been guid ed by the wisdom of Moses and Solo mon. His indignation at the thought of somebody else whipping his child is very great. He is very emphatic and almost belligerent. If the teach er was a man and should as he says, 'lay the weight of his finger upon his child," I believe he would fight. If the teacher was a woman I dont know what he would do. But I will say that if I was the teacher his chil dren shouldent come to my school at all. I would reject them at the start for the first thing a child should be taught is obedience, and if the child has already been taught at home that no punishment is to follow disobedi ence, but defiance rather then the child should not come to me. But the good doctor need not be alarmed, for his children will never be my pu pils thank the Lord. I believe in corporal punishment in schools, that is, for bad boys. I never saw but one girl whipped and she deserved it. She was no spring chicken, either. I was raised on corporal punishment, both at home and at school. I did not get it often, but at long inter vals, but I got it when forbearance had ceased to be a virtue, and it was administered like medicine and was always a good cathartic. If this was all wrong and made me worse instead of better and humili ated my pride, as the doctors say, then I must consider myself an in jured person, and hire a lawyer to sue somebody for damages; for Black stone says there is no wrong without a remedy. But my teachers are all dead; and they were all dead broke before they died, as all teachers are. So, I have no remedy. Now, of course, there are children who never need punishment either at home or at school preachers' children and some mild-eyed Jerseys who are good continually. Most all girls are that way, bless their hearts, but original sin is developed early in most boys, and if not restrained grows into moral terpitude and ends in total de pravity and the chaingang. Old EH got his neck broken for not restrain ing his boys, and they came to a bad end. Eli was a preacher. Solomon said, "Withhold not correction from the child," etc. There were children of Belial then and there are now. Dr. Ilolderby says there are 500 boys in Atlanta schools who never heard the name of God save when it was used profanely, and he might have added and who never got a licking at home and are on the high road to the chaingang, and their only chancers to be restrained at school by rod and reproof. Teachers are better than fathers and mothers for many chil dren. In fact, we all know of par ents who are not tit to raise their own children, and who ought to die and let their children be sent to an orphan asylum. Why all this racket about whipping bad boys? The doctor throws down the chal lenge and says the rod in the scrip tures merely means government, and that the very moment that you dele gate to a teacher the right to whip a child you fling an iusult in the face of God. Well, if everybody who knows Dr. Ilolderby dident love him they would smile at such ridiculous asser tions. He could hardly find another biblical scholar but who would say that the rod in scripture means a ood old-fashioned licking, and it is to be remarked that whenever it is used it is in the masculine gender. "Correct thy son and he shall give thee rest." "Beat him with the rod and save his soul." "He that spar eth the rod hateth his son," etc., etc. The girls dident need it then and they do not now. They are all mild-eyed Jerseys, except some. Dr. Ilolderby declares that whip ping a boy injures his social stand ing and takes away his self-respect. Maybe that is what's the matter with me, and is the reason why I am so meek and subdued. Maybe I was whipped too much. I liad a fight one Sunday with a boy at camp-meeting, and he whipped me and muddied my Sunday clothes and gouged the skin off my face. Next morning my fath er whipped me for fighting and when I went to school the teacher got ready to whip me, but I showed him my legs and he let me off. Good gracious! what a proud, self respect- ng man I would have been if it had not been for good old John Norton and Dr. Patterson. You see, I was not a preacher's son. But, seriously, I know parents who would rather the teacher would pun ish their bad boys than to tackle them at home. The school is their reformatory, and with some moth ers it is the nursery. Then, again, there are parents who think the teacher ought to whip other peo ple's children but never touch their own. There are lots of these, espec ially mothers. The teachers have a hard time steering between the breakers, and I am sorry for them, but I have never known a single case where the bad boy got more than he deserved. Long experience has proved that corporal punishment is best for bad men as well as for bad boys. Crime has rapidly increased all over the land under the new regime. The average of boys are much worse than they were fifty years ago. They grow up to fill our prisons and chaingangs, and fill the daily papers with mur ders and suicides lind crimes of every description. The Atlanta cry is now for a reformatory. Maryland has never abolished the whipping post and not a burglary or bank robbery is committed there for the punish- COXTIXCED OX SECOND PAGE. Remarkable Cures of Rheamatlmu. From the Vindicator, Kutherfordton, Jf. C. The editor of the Vindicator has had occasion to test the efficacy of Chamler lain's Pain Balm twice with the most remarkable results in each case. First, with rheumatism in the shoulder from which he suffered excruciating pain for ten days, which was relieved with two applications of Pain Balm, rubbing the parts aftiicted and realizing instant benefit and entire relief in a very short time. Second, in rheumatism iu thigh joint, almost prostrating him w 1th se vere pain, which was relieved bv two applications, rubbing with the liniment on retiring at night, and getting up free from pain. For sale by M. E. Robinson & Bra., and J. F. Miller's Drug Store, (ioldsboro; and J. R. Smith, Mount Olive. A NATION'S DOIXUS. The News From Everywhere Gathered and Condensed. It is almost impossible to get la borers at Milwaukee, Wis. ' Miss Georgianna Peck, of Minne apolis, Minn., was killed in a bicycle colhson at Detroit, Mich., Sunday. A large part of the business por tion of Keysville, Va., was burned Tuesday night, causing a $50,000 loss. At Pocahontas, Va., on Monday, Hugh Brown shot and instantly killed Boney Davis, caused by jeal ousy. About 6,000 New England granite workers have struck for an eight- hour day aod a minimum wage scale of $3. The United States Milling Com pany, known as the "Flour Trust," has been placed in the hands of a re ceiver. Near Bluefield, W. Va., Tuesday, Joseph Glean, a farmer, killed his daughter and her lover, and then cut his own throat. Several persons lost their lives in a fire at Newark, N. J., Tuesday night, and property valued at $1, 000,000 was destroyed. The steamer Australia, which has just arrived at San Francisco, re ports a fresh outbreak of the bu bonic plague in Honolulu. Edward and Fred Keller, aged 18 and 14 years, respectively, were drowned in a mill pond near Belle fonte, Pa., Saturday, while skating. The stranded Savannah Line steamer Gate City broke In two near Mariches, L. I., Friday, after two thirds of her cargo had been saved. A wealthy farmer, Matthew Lat timer, aged 72 jears, was frozen to death Friday night while walking a half mile to his home, near Elyria,0. Frank Hakey has been arrested at Tulsa, I. T., charged with burning his Indian step-son to death in order to get the child's allotment of Indian lands. Because James Powers, a school teacher, chastised the little daughter of W. A. Fuller, at Seymour, Ind., the men fought a pistol duel Satur day in which both were killed. Fire destroyed the McMurray & Baker wagon factory, at Jackson ville, Fla., Thursday night, causing a $50,000 loss. Three firemen were fatally injured by a falling wall. Miss Mary Lucy, aged 18, of Spot Cash, Va., was burned to death at her home Tuesday morning, her clothing becoming ignited while standing in front of an open fire place. Edward Brooks was shot and killed by Will Adkins in a millinery store at A tlauta, Friday. The two clerks had some words over the re fusal of Brooks to give his co-worker a match. The boiler in the engine room of the Warnel Lumber and Veener Company's mill, at Plant City, Fla., exploded Thursday, seriously injur ing two men and almost wrecking the plant. The Virginia Democratic State Committee selected Norfolk as the place, and May 2d as the date for holding the State Convention to elect delegates to the Democratic National Convention. A rear-end collision occurred Tues day night on the Missouri Pacific Railroad, a few miles out of Kansas City. Three persons are reported killed, two of them being burned to death, and eleven others are badly hurt. J. II. Soock, Jr., an electrical con tractor, was arrested Saturday night in Atlanta, for robbing the Kimball House of about $1,500 in currency and checks. When arrested Soock said he had been pilfering for four years. The bill to charter the Richmond and Washington Air Line Railway, the- outlet of the Greater Seaboard system from Richmond to the North, passed the Virginia House of Dele gates by a vote of 67 to 26, as it came from the Senate. It now goes to the Governor. George Williams, a young negro man, killed his mother while they were following the corpse of the husband and father to the grave near Pleasant Hill, Ga., Monday. The boy ordered bis mother to stop her manifestations of grief. She paid no heed to him, and then he shot and killed her. Foreign Affairs. The Boers are evacuating all of Northern Natal. The Indian cotton crop this year will leave almost nothing for export. Puerto Rican laborers have struck for an advance in wages from 3 to 5 cents an hour. Artificial coal is being made at Kill and Mannheim. The situation throughout Germany is desperate. By an explosion on board the Bri tish mail packet France, at Dieppe Monday, six of her firemen were scalded to death and four others are in a critical condition. The passen gers escaped unhurt. National Capital Matters. From Our Regular Correspondent. Washington, March C, 1900. The republican leaders of the House are still shaking from the fright given them by their narrow escape from a humiliating defeat on the Porto R ico tariff bill. The figu rative sack cloth and ashes of Ash Wednesday came very near to being real for them on that day. They amended the bill by reducing the tariff from 25 to 15 per cent, which Representative Berry aptly said merely changed the crime from grand to petty larceny, and by limiting its operation to two years, which was an acknowledgement that the whole principle of the bill was a wrong one, and then they could not get the votes needed to pass it without re sorting to every known form of po litical bull-dozing and cajolery. Had the republicans of the House voted their real sentiments, the bill would have been defeated by more than a two thirds vote instead of being passed by a vote of 172 to 161. The Constitutional question involved in this bill will not down. It will be heard when the bill is taken up in the Senate, and it will be heard all during the coming Presidential cam paign, and like other great ques tions, will never be settled until it is settled right. Senator Aldrich explained the gold standard bill agreed upon by the Conference Committe, to the Senate, but he did not attempt the impossible task of defending the measure, which ought to be officially entitled "A bill to put money in the pockets of the rich at the expense of the poor." Within 24 hours of the time that the House was passing the bill to rob the poor Porto Ricans by impos ing a duty upon the products they have to sell the Senate was taking the first step toward making Hawaii a State, by passing the bill providing a territorial government for Hawaii. If there is any logical reason for making this unjust distketion be tween prosperous Hawaii and half- starved Porto Rico, it has leen care fully concealed from the public. The House Military Comn.ittee has endorsed two pet schemes of the ad ministration to provide promotion for favorites that to give the Adju tant General of the army the rank, pay and allowances of major-general. which will be in the nature of a re ward to Gen. Corbin for his subser viency to Alger, and bis underhand attacks upon Gen. Miles, his superior officer; and that authorizing the President to select a retired briga dier general for promotion to major general, which is intended to give Gen. Shafter the difference between the pay and emoluments of a brig adier general and a major general, retired, as a reward for the Cuban campaign, the greater part of which he spent lying in a hammock. Representative Bailey, of Texas, made the closing speech on the dem ocratic side against the Porto Rico tariff bill, and it was a powerful plea for the maintenance of the Constitu tion as its framers intended it to be maintained. His last words, which were received with uproarious ap plause by the democrats and the oc cupants of thegallories, were: "When emotional statesmen were asking who would haul down the flag, 1 dared to say that I would take it down from any place where the Con stitution could not follow it. Do you desire to present the anomaly of a government restrained by the Con stitution in one quarter of the globe, and possessed of a despotic power in the rest of the world? How long is the Constitution to shield us and our children if its protection is withheld from the humblest inhabitant? Let me borrow the words of Lincoln: 'This republic cannot endure one-half free and one-half slave.' We must all be citizens, or in time we must all be subjects. I did not want to as similate these alien and inferior races, and I pray God to deliver us from the task. But if you will take them, they must share our destiny with us." The bill providing for the ship sub sidy job has been favorably reported to the Senate. The report which was made on the bill will be widely cir culated by the republicans for the purpose of trying to create a public sentiment for the $200,000,000 job, but it is very doubtful whether they will try to push the bill through un til after the Presidential election, as word has been passed around among the republicans in Congress to keep the total of appropriations made at this session of Congress down as much as possible, with the under standing that the money can safely be made to fly at the next session, which will not be held until after the Presidential election. Of course, the disagreeable weath er in Washington had nothing to do with the departure for Cuba, via Florida, of Secretary Root. He is going to make an "official inspec tion" of Cuban ports, using a govern ment transport after he reaches Tampa. What part his wife, son and daughter, who accompanied him, are to take in the'official inspection" is a question which he may be able to answer. This trip looks like a junket for his family at public expense. ALL OVER THE STATE. A Summary of Current Events for the Past Seren Days. Thirteen divorces were granted in Guilford Superior Court last week. A furniture factory, with a capi tal of $20,000, has been organized at Oxford. A company with a capital of $100, 000 has been organized to market the brown stone around Carthage. William Futch, colored, of Pender county, was killed by a falling tree Friday, while in the act of cutting it down. In a drunken row at Greensboro, Tuesday evening, Mary Johnson, colored, fatally stabbed Ike Dean, a negro teamster. Clifford Rogerson, son of Capt. William Rogerson, of Newbern, was burned to death near Havelock Fri day evening while in the act of burning a field of dry grass. The four-year-old son of John W. Kerns, at Salisbury, was acciden tally killed by a ten-year-old son of C. J. Edney, Saturday evening, while playing with an "unloaded" gun. George Ratclitf, colored, aged 22, committed a criminal assault upon an eight-year-old white girl in Hay wood county, Saturday. The negro had been in the employ of the fam ily for a number of years.- The Black well Durham Tobacco Company has been placed in the hands of a receiver. This is really a move on the part of the American Tobacco Company to "freeze out" the minority stockholders. Monday evening, the 3-year old child of Mattie Allison, colored, was burned vto death at Charlotte. The mother was away from the house at the time and the child was left in charge of an old negro couple. A. G. Call, aged C5, a Wilmington contractor, was murderously as saulted at his home bv a burirlar Thursday night. A young white man named C. E. Workman has been jailed, charged with the crime. John Kane, foreman of the iron bridge force of the A. C. L., was killed at Wilmington, Thursday, by falling from the reloading bin of the Atlantic Coast Line elevator to the wharf beneath, a distance qf 55 feet. The 0-year-old son of A. J. Rose, while playing around the shafting in the Bala Cotton Mill, at Concord, Friday afternoon, became entangled in the belting and was drawn to the revolving shaft, which crushed him to death. C. W. Battle, the negro postmas ter at Battleboro, was jailed at Hal ifax, Saturday, for embezzlement of $400 money order funds, and for failure to deposit post-office funds. Battle is the fifth negro postmaster to come to grief in this district. Eugene Hunt, a negro, froze to death in Winston Sunday night. He was partially' demented and went to sleep on a street near his home. He was not discovered until the next morning and was so badlv frozen that he died in a short while after being found. Clyde Sellers, a young negro man in Guilford county jail, escaped early Monday morning by donning a wo man's clothes. Attired in this garb he passed the guard, who thought be was a female prisoner who was al lowed the privileges of a "trusty" about the jail. The depot at Advance, in Davie county, was broken upon Monday night by unknown parties." The ticket desk was carried out and down the railroad track a short distance and left on the ground. Strange to say, the safe and money drawer were not interfered with. Mrs. Alex. Baker was so seriously burned at her temporary home near Asheville Tuesday evening that she died next morning. Mrs. Baker and her hus'o; nd lived about from place to place. They . were occupy ing an outhouse and slept on planks near the fire. In this way the wo man's clothing caught. The Governor lias revoked the commission of First Lieutenant D. F. Mclver, of Company K, Third Regiment, North Carolina State Guard, at Mt. Airy. This was done upon information from that town that Mclver, who was its tax collec tor and policeman, had left for parts unknown with $500 of the town's funds. Baking Powder Made from pure cream of tartar. Safeguards the food against alum Alum baking powders are the greatest menacen to health of the present day. ovm. Raking owoc CO., aew nM. Pain has no show with Ir. Miles' Pain PUIS 1 A Mormon Elder Egged. A Mormon elder undertook to preach at Garner, Wake county, a few days ago. The people of Garner did not receive the elder kindly. They looked upon a man who wanted rr.ore than one wife as an idiot or some thing worse, and he had not been speaking a great while until a great shower of eggs struck him. From all accounts those eggs were laid a long time ago and on a clay when the hens were not feeling we!!. That Mormon elder skipped, leaving be hind him curses on the people of Gar ner and a scent of ancient eggs. I Ask your physician this ques tion, "What is the one great I remedy for consumption?" j He will answer, "Cod-liver I I oil." Nine out of ten will i answer the same way. Yet when persons have I consumption they loathe all i fatty foods, yet fat is neces i sary for their recovery and j they cannot take plain cod as liver oil. The plain oil dis- turbs the stomach and takes away the appetite. The dis I agreeable fishy odor and taste make it almost unen durable. What is to be done? This question was ans wered when we first made SCOTT'S EMULSION of Cod-Liver Oil with Hypo- j phosphites. Although that f ago, yet it stands alone to- f day the one great remedy for all affections of the throat and lungs. The bad taste and odor have been taken away, the oil itself has been partly digested, and the most sen sitive stomach objects to it rarely. Net one in ten can take and digest the plain oiL Nine out of ten can take SCOTTS EMULSION and di- gest it That's why it cures so many cases of early consumption. J Even in advanced cases it brings comfort and greatly prolongs life. I Soc. and $1.00. all drucgists. , 1 SCOTT B JWNfcChtitmu, New York. - 3 TJ-ND IS A SYSTEM BUIL0ER.GIVES APPETTTE & CORRECTS THE'LI VER 3? TASTELESS &id Chill tonic is sold Strieflv on its Merits. It is the best Chill Tonic at the smallest Drice.j ana your money rerunaea it if rans to cure you. CTFor sale wholesale anil retail ly The (ioldsboro Drug Co. i subject to pecuUar ill. The right remedy for , bahies Ills especially worms and fctoiuach disordiTS 1 Frev's Vermifuge hoamrpd children for 50 yearn. Kt-nd for lllus. book atxut the Ilia aud the remedy. Oc uttir iiH for Sfii'i K. A. S. FREV, Baltimore, 31. I. Pyny-Pectoral A QUICK CURE FOR J 1 COUGHS AND COLDS Very valuable Remedy in all $ affections of the Z THROAT or LUNGS J Large Bottles, 25c. DAVIS & LAWRENCE CO., Limited, Troy's of Terry Pvia' Tain-Killer. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cluum aad bcantifM tta bait ProoaotM . luuriADl growth. Herer Tails to Bastor On; Hair to lta Youthful Color. Cut Klp diM h hair fauue. WJPjaonatrujgiraj pennyroyal pills I! 7av OHclnal awd .It !. CHICHtSTtR'R KN&LISM . ia ltEI M4 Col BXtaJUe aoM. araLri 9 witk Uaa rlbboa. Takaaaatbrr. Refaas VVi llumu Nabatltatiaaa aaa lailla- Maw HEAD MUSK Cum hr rlSlBLB TUBJIA1 EAI Whianara heard Cora- kmadtaa n. ilia, book A frOolJCraa. Addraaj f. UIM.OX. IU araaaa.. Saw j III 1 i Ncran i ROBERTS mm loom ro. rut lCy 1 MOMCGgHinMg RED CROSS, taSaSaMaaaJ WITHOUT IT
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 8, 1900, edition 1
1
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