Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / May 24, 1900, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
G OLDSBORO EADLTGH 1 ESTABLISHED 1887. GOLDSBORO, N. C, THURSDAY, MAY 24, 1900. VOL. XIII. NO. 37. yt i"i n L JLiJEld Ever have them? Then we can't tell you any thing ahnnt H lllthern. You "Wknow how dark everything looks and how you are about ready to give up. Some how, you can't throw off the terrible depression. Are things really so blue? Isn't it your nerves, after all? That's where the trouble is. Your nerves are beingpoisoned t .1 . . J r i ironi uic impurities in k j your blood. purifies the blood and gives power and stability to the nerves. It makes ij neaitn ana strength, activ Li ity and cheerfulness. This is what "Ayer's" will do for you. It's the oldest Sarsaparilla in the land, the kind that was old before other Sarsa parillas were known. This also accounts for the saying, "One bottle of Ayer's is worth three bottles of the ordinary kind." SI. 00 a bottle. AH druggists. Wffe the Doctor. na have any complaint whaterer t'sire the beat medical advice you possibly receive, write the doctor y. You will receive a prompt r- -miour cost. Aaaress. Va, J. C. AYEK, Lowell, : PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL r Barb Wire Cuts. Scratches, ' and Collar Galls, Cracked Heel : Old Sores. Cuts, Boils, Bruises and all kinds of inflammation oo or beast. Cures Itch and Mange. Tie ::, Sit M Bits tri'.l nsrer natter iitT ti oil l'.e prepared for accidents bv keeping it in your s: or stable. All Druggists tell it on aguarantee. Cure. No Pay. Price 15 cts. and $1.00. If youi .g.sl does not keep it send us 25 cts. in pos , t'-umps and we will send it to you by mail. Paris. Tenn., Jan. 2rh. 194. I arBir: I have used Pott.r1. Aatla.ptlc HallM Oil - ,( i-.m. and Saddle Gall... Scratches anil Barb Wire Cuts . ; tttr.-t atnta.-ti.m, and 1 heartily recommend it to :..'..ry and Stockmen. C. B. IRVINE, Livery and Feed SUble. BABY BURNED. ' , nmen . I am pleased to ineak a word for Porter ill. Mvt.at. r all other r 1 tir-t applifatio is well. 1 also u after tr' inedies I applied your "Oil" ;i?f. and in a few days the i on mv stock and find that poae that I bare ever used. C. X. LEWIS. ii a few months 1 bast remedy tor thi is. Tenn., January BlItrFlCTrRED BT PARIS MEDICINE CO., ST. LOCIS, MO i-g" For sale and guaranteed by all Irueists. CURE ALL YOUR PAINS WITH iPain-Killer. s A Medicine Chest in Itself. I SIMPLE. SAFE AND QUICK CURE FOR I i Cramnc tliarrhnna. Colds. Ii I Coughs, Neuralgia, I Rheumatism. 5 25 and 50 cent Bottles. I BEAASE OF IMITATIONS. BUY ONLY THE GENUINE. I PERRY DAVIS Wood's Seeds. Seed Potatoes (ir Planting in June or July. UV have a Inure quantity of late Seed which were put into cold stor- t ;.tiy in the season, so as to keep . ::i u::spruttd and in first class viiro- ,.,..liti..n f..fl:it.' t.latitintf in June r .Inly. Iltretofoic, the principal ot u. l,. l0 planting late potatoes success iliy has lieen in procuring sound anc ij.-rmis stuck late enough to plant, go - tn ii-i-urt- tl:e maturity of the crop in :.i r ...1-r rainv season of the fall. We U ;- v .-nsr, ,in,-rs to i .lace their cad, l -t -.1. therwise our supply may Shipment can be made ; customers are ready to v. ... r. - ,i n...-.-rintive Circular u information about all J'-eaMmahle "eVds. (ierman Millet, Cow Peas 'le-hue, Jorjhums, Buckwheat, etc. T. W. WOOD & SONS, etusnien, Richmond, va. That Lame Hack can bo euretl witli ht. M1W NLitYE I'LASTEB. Ouiy25c "NX A 4 . Fc hi huirstrk f " 'l aro a source of comfort. 1 hey nre 1 f, J ,i -.nirre of cart-, al.-o. If you cure , Ifl fur your cliii.l's toealth semi for ( t!l'itr!tt.-d I100U on the disorders J ; ' :o wiii li children are subject . V-l "A and which H FREY'S VERMIFUGE V ; L:is cureil for 50 years. V Oue bottle br mail f.ir 2 cents V-" E.&9.FHEV, K - j.-- llaltlmore, Ho. God Kuoweth Best. The gates of life swinjr either way, On noiseless hinges, night and day. One enters through the open door, One leaves us to return no more; And which is happier, which more blest, God knoweth best. We greet with smiles the one who comes Like sunshine to our hearts and homes. And reach our longing hands with tears lo him who, in his ripened years, Goes gladly to his heavenly rest; God knoweth best. He guards the gates. te need not dread lhe path these little feet must tread, Nor fear for him who for our sight Passed through them to the realms of light Both in his loving care we rest; God knoweth best. Mary Wheaton Lyon. Mental Health. Much brooding upon one subject or purpose to the exclusion of all others sometimes develops fanaticism which does not differ greatly from insanity, except that we apply the term fana ticism to an excess of zeal in some matter having a reasonable founda tion and associate insanity with something that is wholly unreason able. The mental state of a fanatic, however, is that of a lunatic. He does not see things in their proper relations, misuses terms and senti ments and acts in disregard of the very principles he advocates. The most remarkable exhibition of fana ticism the world has ever seen was that of the French Revolution and of the religious wars of previous times. The insanity of each period became contagious and the nation for months was led and controlled by fanatics. In the name of justice thousands of innocent men and women were butchered; in the name of religion the most infamous crimes were com mitted. The speeches mde at the time of the French Revolution, which so in flamed the minds of the mob, read to-day like the rantings of lunatics; yet they were made in good faith by men who thought they were perform ing a duty. At the outset they aimed at the removal of the governing class that had oppressed the people, but the Revolution soon got beyond their control. There was no discrimina tion. The best and kindest among the aristocrats and even innocent children shared the fate of those whose misgovernment had developed this fanaticism. The frenzy passed away, but the world has not yet re covered from the shock of the French Revolution. It still dreads a return of such a contagion of fanaticism. Although whole communities are sel dom swept away in this fashion by unreasoning zeal, individuals are subject to the malady and sometimes embroil nations in war by their wild enthusiasm. In private life fanaticism leads to great excesses that bring about in justices similar to those of the French Revolution and, like those, founded upon a sentiment or principle in it self commendable, lhe fanatic is mentally diseased. His enthusiasm or zeal is misdirected; he is incapable of sound reasoning; his vision is dis torted. He arrives at this condition partly because of mental weakness, mainly because he neglects to take healthful mental exercise. To main tain lhe mind in a sound state of health it is necessary that it have varied exercise; that it shail not be directed exclusively to one subject or purpose, ine ianatic is neces sarily a monomaniac. He is con trolled by one thought or purpose by the side of which all other ideas ap pear insignificant, and while in this condition he is unable to see the true relations of thincrs or reason about them. Fanaticism takes on many forms and develops to various degrees of danger, but even the slightest indi cation of it should be avoided as a sin of mental ill health. Each man has his special field of labor in which he takes more interest than any other, and he cannot well avoid oe coming more or less one-sided, but if he would retain his mental health so as to be of the greatest service that chosen field he must give some variety to his mental activities and avoid brooding over one line of thought. If he should fail to do so, he may become a fanatic unable to distinguish between the evil desire of accomplishing private vengeance and the commendable desire to do a public duty. Every Merchant Should Advertise. Advertising is as necessary to the small merchant as to the great one. The man with a small store wants to increase his business, just as the owner of a large mercantile estab lishment must maintain its prestige. Business, always goes to the adver tiser at the expense of the non-advertiser. That being the case, the most important, reason why all mer chants should advertise is obvious. Beware of a Cough. cough is not a disease but a symp tom. Consumption and bronchitis, nm the most dancerons and fatal diseases, have for their first indication Wwtent couerh, and if properly 1 .i mnn as this cough appears are easily cured. Chamberlain s Cough Remedy has proven wonderfully sue fnlfv. and gained its wide reputation and extensive sale by its success in pur ine the diseases wnicn cause wuKum6. If it is not beneficial it will not cost you . " f 1.,. hv M. E. Robinson & Bro. J. F. Miller's Drug Store, Golds- boro;and J. R. Smitn. Aioum v,u 1RP AS I) THE GERMS. The Georgia Philosopher Differs With Doctors About Bacilli. "Prove all things and hold fast that which is good. " Science is do ing that, but it seems to me that the modern doctors attach too much im portance to germ theory. They are trying to cure all sorts of diseases by exterminating germs, microbes, bac teria and other invisible infusoria. Maybe they were not intended to be exterminated but are a part of the economy of nature. There are botts in a horse's stomach and wolves in a cow's back and fleas on a dog for some useful purpose, and it may be that these invisible germs are a nec essary part of our organism. We eat them in food and drink them in water and breathe them in the air, but still I reckon there are a poison ous, infectious kind that do produce disease and pestilence. I was rumi nating about this from having read in a London paper an account of the experiment now being made by the British Medical Society to discover the true cause of malaria in the Pon tine marshes that for centuries has proved a slow and certain death to the poor peasantry who work there and have to work there to make a living. These Campagnean marshes lie adjacent to Rome and cover ater itory twenty-five miles long and ten miles wide and are wonderfully pro ductive, giving three crops a year, but the malaria soon pales and sick ens the strongest men, and they have to stop their work and go to the hills to die. To discover and remove the cause has been the problem of the ages. Three hundred years before Christ these marshes were solid land and the Appian way was built upon it. Slowly and surely the water en croached upon the land and submer ged it, destroying the Appian way, the aqueducts and arches. Julius Caesar and Augustus Caesar spent immense sums to drain them, but without avail. They were finally given up to the labor of the slaves, and Pliny tells of one man, Cecilicus Claudius, who owned 4,110 of them all males, who worked there and were not allowed to marry. Their cruel fate was to work out a brief life and die. About 125 years ago Pope Pius VI made another effort to drain the marshes but failed, and since then all efforts and all hope has been abandoned. But now a new theory comes up before the scientific school of medi cine ana nas agitated tne meaicai savants all over the world. It is claimed that a malarial climate does not produce mosquitoes but that mosquitoes produce malaria, and it is their bites or stings and suction of the blood of the peasantry and thereby inoculating them with poison and producing malaria that eventu ally wastes the life away. This the ory has found many strong advocates in London and Paris and Berlin, and now they are preparing to prove it. The English government is having a wire gauze house built, and it is to be placed in the middle of the Pon tine marshes, and two English phy sicians have volunteered to live ia it for a year or more and test the effect of the climate secure from the mos quito. Just think of that! Living in a wire gauze house right in the midst of the most noxious miasmatic climate-in the world, and all for the sake of science and humanity. If they prove their theory then they will cease to use quinine for the ma laria but build wire houses and wear wire cowls or hoods over their heads and faces and fence out the mosqui toes and turn their next attention to exterminating them. They say it is a big thing, financially, for there are two million acres in those marshes and will be worth if they succeed a thousand dollars an acre, and that makes two thousand million dollars for Rome ajd the pope. But still I am dubious. I don't be lieve the mosquito introduces malaria into the human system. His pro boscis draws out blood but puts precious little in. The germ theory has become a scientific fad and has not vet been proven. The doctors all went mad about Pasteur and his in nfulatinc? virus, but that has sub sided and we never hear of it now Folks are too ready to believe any new thing. Appendicitis raised mighty rumpus for a while and every sick man imagined he had it, and it must be cut off, but the disease is now doubted and the use of the knife almost abandoned. Just so folks take up with new doctrines of politics and religion. Dr. Vance, of Nashville, said not long ago that if a shrewd, smart man with a lively tongue was to declare that it was necessary for salvation that a man should jump off the roof of a house onto the pave ment he would find followers who would be jumping all over the coun try breaking their arms and legs and necks on this new road to heaven. What upon earth those Mormon elders and proselyters expect to ac complish is a mystery to me, and I amazed that any person with com mon sense can be fooled by them. TheT ought to be scourged out of this country. They break up the peace of some families and give noth ing in exchange but a spurious, con temptible religion that is an insult to our Maker and the Christian, re ligion. They are religious tramps and I rejoice when I hear of the peo ple driving them out of the settle ment with whips and stones and thresh poles. I've been knowing and watching these Mormons for fifty years and never knew any good of them. I don't care anything about their faith or the book of Mormon that that old fraud, Joe Smith, pre tended he found under a stone, but I want them to keep out of this coun try and let our ignorant and credu lous folks alone. Speaking of germs, a philosophic friend writes me that the doctors have now located them in the car cushions and church pews, the seats in the theater, the air in crowded assemblies and even the poor school teachers with consumptive chests have been excluded from the school rooms for fear of breathing the germs of disease into the pupils. He says that everything is impreg nated with bacteria save money. In an old dollar bill we find all the fragrance and all the fetor of crea tion. We accept it from the lady's stocking or the sewer cleaner's nasty pocket, from the sachet of the belle and the garlicky claws of the un washed Dago. It is never refused. It has been through every phase of nastiness and when we take it from some foul, filthy,rancid wretch reek ing with deadly bacteria, do we pause to think of the danger? Never; it is Mammon. Give us more. The germ doctor will take it from a filthy leper's hand or from a dirty Italian in hell's kitchen. This dollar has been in the grog seller's mangy pocket and at the race course and the bawdy house, but it is all right it is money. But the last phase of the fight is between moqsuitoes and miasma in the Pontine marshes which is cause and which the effect aud I'll wager my dollar that those two doctors will die within two years. "The pestilence that walketh in darkness" is not a mosquito. They are a nuis ance, an affliction, and so are fleas and flies and ants and roaches and many otner atue pests wnicn are here for a purpose and try our pa tience. Mosquitoes used to annoy me, but they don't now. The law of compensation has come to my relief. I have become quite deaf in one ear and so I can turn the good ear down on the pillow and tell the mosquito to blow his little horn and sing his little song if he wants to. My skin is so tough he can't bore a hole in it, and so I defy him. Bill Arp. Death Penalty by Proxy. The steamer Empress of China brings information that punishment has been meted out to the murder ers of Missionary Brooks, although, it is said, the execution was by proxy. Fifteen men were tried for the crime before the provincial judge at Chiman Fu and C. W. Campbell, British consul. It was developed at the trial that only three were guilty of the actual killing, and one of these delt the final blow. This one, being most culpable in the Chinese criminial code, was beheaded in the presence of the British consul. Another, who was only a shade lighter in guilt, was sentenced to strangulation at the autumn assizes. A third was sentenced to life im prisonment, and four others to ten years' punishment. In connection with the punish ment of the Brooks murderers the North China Daily News has a start ling story to the effect that the condemned men were allowed to purchase substitutes and that for a thousand dollars two men were pro cured who agreed to pay the penalty of death imposed upon the most directly concerned in the murder. The man who was to be beheaded paid $G00 for his sustitute, a disso lute opium smoker, who wished to provide for bis family. The mur derer condemned to be strangled had to pay only $400 for his substi tute. Some Backwoods Philosophy. Say what you please 'bout de devil, he alius at his post en ready ter wait on customers. De road ter destruction is so broad dat even de bow-legged man kin fin' plenty er room. De nex' worT is so clost ter us dat some folks feels oncomfortable in flannel underwear. De truth is a burnin lamp, but some folks puts it out by too much trimmin' er de wick. It is with a good deal of pleasure and satisfaction that I recommend Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy," says Druggist A. W. Sawtelle, of Hartford, Conn. "A lady customer, seeing the remedy exposed for sale on my show case, said to me: 'I realy believe that medicine saved my life the past summer while t the shore,1 and she became so enthusiastic over its merits that I at once made up my mind to recommend it in the future. Recently a gentleman came into my store so overcome with colic pains that he sank at once to the floor. I gave him a dose of this remedv which helrjed him. I repeated the tlose ana in fifteen minutes be left my store smilingly informing me that he felt as well as ever. Sold by M. E. Robinson & Bro.," J. F. Miller's Drag Store, Goldsboro; ana J. K. bmith, 1 Mount Olive. A NATION'S DOIXGS. The News From Everywhere Gathered and Condensed. All the moulders at Youngstown, O., are on a strike. Virginia will vote to-day on the question of calling a convention to frame a new Constitution. A train at Franklin, Pa., Satur day, decapitated Edward Birtcil, a life-long resident of that city. Three municipal ice plants are pro jected at New York, to meet the raise in price by the Ice Trust. Crazed by jealousy. Dr. Robert W. Murray, a druggist of Greenville, Va., killed himself by shooting Sun day night. Domestic trouble induced Martin Frey, of Newville, Pa., to blow out the brains of his brother-in-law, Wil liam Collins. Frank Fossett, on trial for murder at Fort Worth, Tex., Saturday, walk ed unobserved out of the court house and escaped. By the explosion of gas in the Cap itol building at Charleston, W. Va., Friday, four men were injured, one of them seriously. Three persons were killed and fif teen injured in a fire which destroy ed Hotel Helene, at Chicago, early Wednesday morning. Mrs. Samuel Fenton, known as the "Terror of Vermilion county," stab bed her husband to death, at Indian apolis, Ind., Monday. Governor Smith, of Montana, has appointed former Congressman Mar tin Maginnis United States Senator to succeed William A. Clark. At Roberts' Station, Fla., Satur day, A. B. Moore, a turpentine dis tiller, was killed by some negroes and further trouble is feared. After shooting at his wife and missing her, Henry Simmons, of Bremen, Me., shot his daughter and then killed himself Tuesday night. The Supreme Court of Massachu setts decides that gifts to Harvard College to found scholarships are valid, sustaining fourteen scholar ships. A baud of seven negro robbers raided the village of Bluestone, Pa., Tuesday night, 1 ng a number of houses and shoo several of its in habitants. The expenses national gov erment for the i iscal year are approximately f . JOO.000, which is about $37,000,000 more than for the current year. Mrs. Thomas Moser, wife of a far mer near Tremont, 111., and her four small children were found with throats cut Monday, and husband and father missing. Insane with grief over her mother's death, Miss Sarah Kapenburger, of Plymouth, O., leaped from a fourth story window, at Cincinnati, Friday, and terribly injured herself. While experimenting with a new motive powe" compressec" Washingtc men were explosion. nposed to consist of nd gasoline, at Tuesday, two y injured by an Affairs. People i nd and most of Eu rope wore . e past weeK. A bust oi ne sculptor Alabella brought $16,300 at a Paris auction sale. Thousands of natives attended the recent naval parade and review in Japan. The municipality of Havana has decided to found a home for Cuban orphans. A man ran amuck on a Sweedish steamer off Hoping and murdered seven persons. It is announced at Colon that the Colombia insurgents were defeated in a bloody battle. King Humbert of Italy has dis solved the Chamber of Deputies and ordered a new election. The boiler of a torpedo boat ex ploded at St. Petersburg, Russia Monday, killing six persons. General MacArthur is making an effort to establish civil governments in Filipino towns held by Americans Experimenting with a "long-life elixir," Dr. Rastineuf, of Paris, kill ed both his mother and himself, Mon day. A proclamation issued by Aguinal do urging Filipinos to hold out for indepen'dence is being circulated in Manila. About thirty persons were drown ed at Ronciglione, Italy, Tuesday, by the capsizing of boats with festival parties. It is announced officially that Col ombian troops have defeated revolu tionarv forces in the Province of Santander. It is said that in some of the In dian famine districts 40 per cent, of the natives are wholly dependent on charity for food. General MacArthur has forwarded from Manila an official report con firming the story that 19 men out of an American garrison of 31 were killed in a Filipino attack on Cantu big, Samar, recently. Last Week In Trade Circles. Special Correspondence. New Yokk, May 22, 1900. Business during the past week has in many lines continued to reflect the effect of distrust in the stability of recent prices. This has caused a dis position to reduce stocks in hand as much as possible before placing new orders, even on a moderately lower price basis. The current distribution is large, but it is in great part due to previous transactions between job bers and manufacturers. While new business in many departments is comparatively quiet, the general con dition of trade is unsatisfactory only in contrast with its abnormal activ ity a few months ago and at the cor responding period last year. At the latter date there was greater specu lative activity and a general ten dency to commercial and industrial expansion, while at present specula tion is in comparative abeyance, and the trend of domestic business is in the direction of decreased activity and more general conservatism. There has been no reaction, how ever, in the foreign trade of the country, which is larger than ever before. Merchandise exports in April eclipsed all previous records, reach ing an aggregate of $118,926,507 for a month in which exports in no other year had equaled $100,000,000; and, while imports also increased, the ex cess of merchandise exports in April was $43,459,765, and for ten months of the fiscal year $455,495,141. Crop conditions have been generally favor able, although drought in the North west has furnished a pretext for speculation to slightly lift the price of wheat. Business failures during the past week, according to R. G. Dun & Co., numbered 117 in the United States and 30 in Canada, against 147 in this country and 17 in Canada during the corresponding week last year. Cotton prices have declined I of a cent per pound as a result of im proving crop conditions, liquidation by speculative holders, lower foreign advices and the absence of any im portant new demand for the staple. The cotton goods trade shows no im provement so far as domestic busi ness is concerned; but there has been a revival of activity in the export trade in brown cottons as a result of the acceptance by manufacturers of moderately reduced prices. It is es timated that about 15,000 bales of cotton goods have been taken within a week for shipment to China, and additional business is in prospect. The wool trade has continued quiet; but there has been more steadiness in prices, which has been in part due to a recovery of 5 per cent, in prices of cross breds at the London auction. This advance abroad has been stimu lated by American buying; but in this country manufacturers have not begun to renew operations on any considerable scale, although the be lief is gaining ground that the limit of price depression has been reached, and that a gradual restoration of confidence will lead to increased buy- The interior movement of both wheat and corn is moderate, and vis- ble stocks are decreasing. The price of corn has been alternately lower and higher under speculative influ ences, but it shows a net gain for the week of 1 cent per bushel in Chicago, which is the centre of bullish activity in operations in this cereal. There has been a good export business in corn until within a day or two, when the renewed strength in prices caused a lull in foreign buying. Western packing operations continue on a liberal scale, but interior prices of hogs average 10 cents per 100 pounds higher than they were a week ago. -Absolutely Pure- For the third of a century the standard for strength and purity. It makes the hot bread, hot biscuit, cake and other pastry light, sweet and excellent in every quality. No other baking powder is "just as strength, good as purity Royal bakin-. pdwder co.. ALL OVER THE STATE. A Summary of Current Events for the Past Seven Days. Roswell Walser, of Davidson coun ty, was drowned in the Yadkin river Saturday, by the capsizing of his boat. Donald McQueen, of Moore county, was seriouly injured at his saw-mill Thursday by coming in contact with machinery. Cornelia Mitchell, colored, was murdered by Ed. Davis, her para mour, at Hamlet, Saturday night, being brained with an axe. John Galvin, an engineer, was fa tally shot at Hamlet Tuesday even ing by King Strickland, whose wife was the cause of the trouble. The 18th annual convention of the North Carolina Woman's Christian Temperance Union will be held at Asheville June 14-18, inclusive. While plowing in a field Saturday evening, T. S. Cross, of Davidson county, drove his horse over his four-year-old daughter, inflicting fatal in juries. The postoffice at Randleman, Ran dolph county, was burglariously en tered Monday night, the safe blown open and $225 taken, in cash and stamps. Thomas Fort, a young white man, has been jailed at Fayetteville, charged with an attempted criminal assault on Mrs. James Driver, of Hope Mills. In attempting to lift a bale of hay: Wednesday, N. W. Hendricks, of Springhope, was accidentally shot by a pistol be carried in his inside vest pocket. The wound is likely to prove fatal. According to a letter from Repub lican State Chairman Holton to Dem ocratic State Chairman Simmons, the Republican State nominees de cline to meet the Democratic nomi nees for State offices in joint discus sion. Jacob Bowman, white, a cabinet maker of Concord, was killed by a passenger train on the Southern Railway near Concord Monday night. He was sitting on the track asleep and it is presumed that he was drunk. Becoming suddenly demented Sun day, Reading Sherard, a farmer of Beaufort county, committed suicide by blowing his brains out with agun. He bad first locked his wife and chil drcn in the room and threat en ed tn kill them. A party of drunken negroes went Saturday night to Four Oaks, Johns ton county, where they undertook to take the town, threatening to kill every white man. A bloody fight ensued in which about twenty per sons were injured. The Proximity Mills at Greens boro, which recently suspended oper ations on account of differences with the operatives, have resumed work. Only employes who signed an agree ment not to join a labor union were allowed to resume work. St. Mary's Roman Catholic Boys College, at Belmont, Gaston county, was burned early Saturday morning, The origin of the fire is supposed to have been caused by spontaneous combustion of sparrows nests under the eaves. Loss, $100,000. Walter H. Griffin was killed by train near Peachland, Anson county, Wednesday night. There are two theories as to the manner in which Mr. Griffin met his death. One is that he was drinking and sat down on the track and went to sleep. The other is that it was a deliberate case of suicide. The fact that he had re centlv suffered business reverses gives color to the suicide theory. Royal," either in or wholesomeness. Many low priced, imitation bakine powder re upon the market. These are made with alum, and care should be taken to avoid them, as alum is a poison, never to be taken in the food. ioo william ST.. new vork. KNOW PERUNA IS THE BEST CATARRH CURE ON EARTH." Bough Rider Bergeant Buck Taylor. Sergeant Buck Taylor, one of the famous Rough Riders, is a personal friend of Governor Roosevelt, of New York. He accompanied Governor Roosevelt on his great stamping tour through upper New York itte. He WM promoted through gallartry in the flld during the late war. The Sergeant has the following to say of Pe-ru-na: " I think there is no better medicine on earth than Pe-ru-na, for catarrh. It has cured me. It would take a volume to tell you all the good it has done me. Pe-ru-na is the lieft ca tarrh cure on earth, and I know, for I have tried nearly all of them. Respectfully, Buck F.Taylor. Send for book of testimonial:;, sent free by The Pe-ru-na Medicine Co, Columbus, O. Grippe and influenza invariably leave the system with a bad cough. For sueh Dr. John W. Bull's Cough Syrnp Is highly recommended. Thi3 won derful remedy gives relief at once, conquers the worst congh overnight and soon effects a thorough cure. COUCH SYRUP Cures Grippe and Influenza. Doses are small and pleasant to take. Doctor recommend it- Price 25 cts. At all druggists. IS A SYSTEM BUILDER.GIYES APPETITE ft CORRECTS THE LIVER. TASTELESS Chill tonic is sold Strictly cn its Merits. If is The best Chill Tonic at the smallest price, and your money refunded if ir rails to cure you. For sale bv Jenkins & Fairies and Dr. J. H. Powell, Goldsboro, N. C. mm 10OK FOR THC LJy MOMeGBN'j.NS RCO CROSS. aahfcJ WlTIOUT IT. I PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM ZJ Claa&M and btaotiflM tfa halt, fromous a tuuriaiil growth. sJ WeTer Valla to SMtor Gray , i?f Bmir to It Youthful Color. . V 1 Cww k1b dutuea A btir tauuit pam CMICHtSTER'S ENGLISH UOaliXBArE. r.iub Utdlcfi brute Ib BED (raid metallic Doae. mlt4 5vl lmem KiMltilliM Ml Imlta- .p. for raruman, ifniRiua . " rr . m-ii iai.TMjiiu a.uibw 11 Drtfiuu 4-hlehcater 4'heamlad Xaattoa tai vV- Jfadlaam rui, faille, fA. DALMAT10N OR PER SIAN INSECT POWDER. Sure death to flies. We guarantee this powder to be a superior article, freshly ground and strictly pure, 5 cents an ounce, 50 cents a pound. TASGLEFOOT FLY PAPER. Black Flag Powder, Paris fJrccn, Powder guns and sprayers, at lx.t tom prices. a&'Don't forget to ask for one of our free needle cases. JENKINS & FARRIES, Druggists and Seedsmen. Walnut St., opposite Mayors Oflioe. FRANK BOYETTE, D. D. S. All manner of operative and mechan ical dentistry done in the lest manner and most approved method. Crown and Bridge Work a specialty. Teeth ex tracted without pain. tSTOflice in Borden Building, oppo site Hotel Kennon. DR. JSO. 31. PAKKEIt, I). I). S. Office over Miller's Drug Store. All dental work neatly, durably and cheaply done. Teeth can be extracted painlessly and no ill effects. The latest and best plan in false teeth made. Crowns and Bridges made after the latest method, and. they give perfect satisfaction. Teeth worn off to the quick fixed by a new method, which gives ease and satisfaction. Nitrous Ox ide Gas given when wanted. Hours 9 a. m. to 5.30 p. m. Headache bad? Get Dr. Miles' Pain Tills.
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 24, 1900, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75