Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / June 7, 1900, edition 1 / Page 1
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rr Pn-n-a-. JL- -JL. -H li A BORO EADLIC fHT. ESTABLISHED 1887. GOLDSBOKO, N. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1900. VUu. XIII. NO. 39. rOLDS Wealth of hair is wealth indeed, y to a woman. c v e r y o t n c r physical attraction is secondary to it. We have a Look we will gladly send you that tells just how to care for the hair. If your hair is too thin Growth becomes vigorous and all dan druff is removed. It always restores color to gray or faded hair. Retain your youth ; don't look old before your time. $1.00 a bottle. All druggists. " I h:ivo hspiI your Hair Vipor n'W fur about iiS years and I have fnunil it (Splendid and satisfactory in ever, way. I l!i-ve 1 have re roiiiiiH'inled" this Hair Vior to ImiulmU of my friends, aim they all tell the Paino story. If any body wants the host kind of a Hair Yipir I diall certainly recommend to tlvi lust as Ptronly as I :in thr th-y get a bottle of Ayer's Hair Viiror." -Airs K. E. Hamilton, Nov. ;,1MW. Norwich, N. Y. f Wrtta the Doctor. If Tu ilon't obtnln all the benefits Tim cl, sir from the use of the Vigor, PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL For Barb Vire Cuts. Scratches, twiddle and Collar Galls, Cracked Heel 1 .urns, Old Sores, Cuts, Boils, Bruises I'lles and all kinds of inflammation or i uui or beast. Cures Itch and Mang-e. Ths 53?, Cot or Bars will aeter mtter t!Ur tfca e:l ha cttc ipjUsl. Fte prepared for accidents bv keeping it in your I: .use or stable. A 1 1 Druggists sell it on a guarantee. I 1 Cure, No Pay. 1'rice cts. and $l.oo. If youi I 'ruggist tiqea i,ut keep it send us 25 cts. in pos . i ;e stamps and we will send it to you by mail, Parin.Tenn. Jan. 20th. t. Iar8ir-.I have lined Po?tir' iatlm-pilc Hallo; Oil I t llirnHf and Sail. lie (ialls. Srratche ami llarb Wire Cu' w t , .prftrt atifactiitn, aiiu I heartily recommend it to t . l.ivtij aDii h'ockmn. C. B. IRVINE. Livery and Feed Swb'.e. BABY BURNED. (iontlcmpn . I am pleased to siwak a word for Porirr'a i..ll.plo Heal.acOH. Mvti!iTa burned a tew months a-". and after trvinir all other r-meilies I applied your "Oh" a : I the flrrt app1ictin K'H'e relief, and in a low days the -vart well. 1 also used the oil on mv stock and find tl.at 1 u bait remedy fur t'lis purpose that I have ever 11 sed. C. T. LEWIS. rv 2-. ASCFACTrRED BT PARIS MEDICINE CO., ST. I.OCIS, MO. K-iT For sale and guaranteed by all druggists. CURE ALL YOUR PAINS WITH jPain-Killer.j b A Medicine Chest in Itself. P SIMPLE, S.AFE AND QUICK CURE FOR p Cramps, Diarrhoea, Colds, f If Coughs, Neuralgia, p Rheumatism. p g 25 and 50 cent Bottles. If BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. II H BUY ONLY THE GENUINE, 1 I PERRY DAVIS "We have a book. prepared especially for you, which we mall free. It treats of the fctonii'.ch di.-iorder.s wormx, etc. that every child in liable to, v-ud lor which prey'S Vermifuge has been successfully use for a half century. ml t.v mail for !5c. K. & S. I U t V , Baltimore, Id. Wood's Seeds. Seed Potatoes Tor Planting in June or July. Wo have a large quantity of late Seed jutut.ies winch were n into cold stor .t'f tail j- in the season, so as to keep them unsprouted and in tiist class vigo rous condition fur late planting in June or July. Heretofore, the principal ob stacle to planting late potatoes success fully has been in procuring sound and vigorous stock late enough to plant, so a to insure the maturity of the crop in the cooler rainy season of the fall. We fid vise our customers to place their orders ahead, otherwise our supply may be exhausted. Shipment can be made at such time as customers are ready to plant. Write for prices and Descriptive. Circular, which als.) (rives full information about all seasonable Seeds, uerman imiei, wow run Teosinte, Sorghums, Buckwheat, etc. T. W. WOOD & SONS, Seedsmen, Richmond, Va. Headache hail? Get Dr. Miles' l'alii Pills. i cr los- 11 PI luster5 II i A lHi. J. C. AY Kit, ' 1 W Lowell, Mass. I jj iAfiifllfii if Xo Pockets in a Shroud. ye 'ho bow at Mammon's shrine, U hose hearts with greed are growing cold, Who turn your backs on things divine And worship but the god of gold, U hat will it profit you when death Lays low the head so kingly proud And robs the wasted form of breath? There are no pockets in a shroud. Your thoughts by day, your dreams by night, Are but of grasping golden gain; lour guide is but the beacon light Of riches burning in your brain. You cast all nobler aims behind, And struggle as a madding crowd In clutch the dollars, but you'll find There are no pockets in"a shrowd. Ye usurers who grind the poor lieneath a cold, relentless heel, Who overshadow many a door With cloud of misery and feel No sympathy to see them lie Heneath the hand of sorrow cowed, Remember when you come to die There are no pockets in a shroud. What is the profit to the man Whose life to Mammon has been civen? A bridge of gold can never span ine gun netweeu the earth ami hea ven ! What will it be to him to find The wealth With which h ia on.lnivb.l At death's gate must be left behind? J neie are no pockets in a shroud. This life is but a span ; to-day We're here, to-morrow . rr-,n Have faded from the earth away Into eternity's strange dawn ; Yet in the hungry greed for gains To many at the gold shrine no wed Forget that wheu the life spark wanes a ne re are no pocKets in a shroiui. Cunning and Morality. The derived meanings of English words often contain suggestions of lessons in morality. The cunning man was at one time simply a man of knowledge one who used his learning to advantage but the term afterward came to be applied to those who were sly or secretive and then to those who were wily enough to deceive. At present a child may be called cunning in compliment to its shrewdness, but the term applied to a mature person implies that he is either secretive or deceptive. The cunning man, according to the later uses of the word, may be skillful or possess knowledge, but he uses his powers in a secretive or deceitful way. Cunning may excite a certain kind of admiration as for something bright and keen, but it does not in spire respect. The cunning man is distrusted by all who know him, and though he may flourish for a time he loses power as his true character is disclosed and ends as a man without influence. In the course of his career he is likely to meet with other men who, if not cunning by nature, can assume de ceptive manners in order to meet on equal terms those who would de ceive. Thus cunning is set against cunning, as in the game of politics, with disadvantage always to those who rely upon cunning alone and have not some high and well-settled principles upon which to base their conduct. Consideration of what is meant by cunning in the ordinary acceptation of the term should con vince us that it is knowledge joined with deception and therefore not to be cultivated. Knowledge should be united with high principles, wit with morality. Intellectual gifts will be admired even though they be mis used, but their possessor never really enjoys his fame unless he is both ad mired and respected. The moral element enters into every relation of life, and meu, how ever callous they may become, think more highly of their moral than of their intellectual reputations. Men like to be considered shrewd, sharp or cunning, but they also like to be thought honorable and manly. They have little satisfaction from a repu tation for mere cunning, because that brings with it no real respect from their fellow-men. To be cun ning they must not only have knowl edge, but they must be artful enough to employ their knowledge in a de ceitful manner, and that is wholly foreign to the conduct of a man of honor worthy of the respect of big fellow-men. The young are frequent ly misled by the admiration, purely intellectual, excited by cunniug men; they should look beyond the surface, and then they will see that cunning men may be admired without being respected and that the world really pays tribute only to those who are not only mentally bright, but honest as well. Morality counts for a great deal even in this wicked world for so much, indeed, that no amount of knowledge or so-called genius can altogether offset its absence. Variety is not only the spice of life; it is also the life of advertising. It is advisable at times to vary the literary treatment of the matter of an advertisement; for sameness even tually becomes monotonous and wear isome to the reader. The advertiser whose business notices are always in teresting to the public is one who has the most customers. A Good Cough Medicine. It speaks well for Chamberlain's Cough Remedy when druggists use it in their own families in preference to any other, "I have sold Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for the past live years with complete satisfaction to myself and customers," says Druggist J. Gold smith, Van Etten, N. Y. "I have always used it in my own family both for ordi nary coughs and colds and for the cough following la grippe, and find it very efficacious." For sale by M. E. Robin son it Bro., J. F. Miller's Drug .Store, (ioldsboro; and J. R. Smith Mount Olive. MRS. ART IS ABSENT. She Has Gone to Friends in Rome and Rill is Demoralized. So many letters come to me of late asking about "The Confederate Vet eran" that I am constrained to ans wer through the press. It is a month ly published in Nashville by Captain S. A. Cunningham. This reminds me to say that Sam Davis is not the only hero of his kind. William M. Formby writes me from Le wisville, Ark., that there is in Little Rock the grave of David C. Dodd, who when only eighteen years f age was arrested near there as a spy and important papers found on his person. General Steel was in command of that post and offered him a pardon if he would disclose the names of those from whom he got the information. Like Sam Davis, he refused and said he would die first and he did die. He wrote a letter to his mother, who then lived in Atlan ta, Cass county, Tex., telling her of his untimely fate. My friend says he has a copy of that letter and has seen the grave in Little Rock, which some friends have marked with a plain white shaft. I have written to him to send a copy of the letter to The Veteran and if possible a photo graph of the marble shaft. Such loyalty and fidelity must be preserv ed and put on record. We are all demoralized at our house and home, for the maternal ancestor has gone off on a trip to Rome and will stay there, I reckon, until I write to her that Jessie or her little children or some other member of the family is sick. Then she will come on the first train. She has got kin dred and friends over there, lots of them, and they will keep her until she goes the grand rounds, for she lived there twenty-seven years. She and I were among the pioneers of the Hill City. In fact, we are the only living perions who were living in Rome when we moved there fifty years ago. Just think of it and pon der it. How surely and stealthily a population passes away. How insid ious is Time, the unrelenting old rascal. Only fifty years, and not a man or woman left but my wife and I. There were then about 1,500 peo ple in Rome and now there are ten times that number. Every old set tler is dead save Colonel T. W. Alexander, and he came three years after I did. Every lawyer, every doctor, every preacher and teacher, every merchant and mechanic are dead. Old Judge Underwood, J. W. H. Underwood. Judge Wright, Geueral Black, Alexander, Sloan, Shorter, Dr. Battey, Dr. Underwood, all strong and notable meu. I could write a book about each of them. And then there was old Jake Herndon and Big John, the Mun chausens of the town, who were ready to swear that when they settled there away back in the thirties the Coosa river was a little spring branch. Old Jake declared he had seen a freshet that rose to the gum tree on courthouse hill, and the thermometer was 240 in the shade. He always said thermom eter and accented the first syllable.My little boy had an old fashioned rubber ball and showed it to Uncle Jake and be remarked that he once had a ball made out of "shore enutf injun-rubber," and it would bounce out of sight, and one day he bounced it oncommon hard and it never come down till next day, and then his little dog grabbed it and it rebounded and took the dog up with it and he had never seeu the dog or ball since. Old Jake believed his own lies. I heard him say once that when hog killing time came round he heated rocks on each side of his millpond and threw them in and drove the hogs through and they came out clean on the other side. Big Johu kept the only saloon in town. A saloon was called a grocery then and Big John's grocery was a landmark the loafing place for he kept a comfort able bench on each side of the front door. They were outside on the side walk and were generally occupied. Old Jake Herndon could be found there half the day and Big John gave him his whisky free as an attraction. He was a drawing card and drew the thirsty men like molasses draws flies. Sometimes I wonder where they are' now and what they are doing, for Swedenburg says that folks will pur sue the same occupations in the next world that they do in this, but with greater diligence and to greater per fection. My venerable friend Major Ayer lives on Howard street, the Peach tree of Rome. It extends from Broad street to the bridge and was thickly settled thirty-five years ago, and is yet, but this is the only family that lived there thirty-two 3-ears ago, when he built his house. Think of it. All gone within thirty-two years. Rome is thirty miles distant from Cartersville and the river lands are all occupied by farmers, but not one of them lived along the line before the civil war, and the river still sings as it flows. "For men may come and men may go, But I go on forever." My wife will come home to spend her birthday next week, I know. She knows that many of her numerous offsprings will gather at the paternal mansion and have a gift of some sort and kiss her classic brow and stroke her raven hair. That is where she triumphs over me. Not a gray hair on her head, nor a dark one on mine, but she is catching up pretty fast. I remember when I was six times as old as she was and six years later I was just twice as old, and now I am seventy-four. Now let the school boys and girls do that sum and tell how old my wife is. But the sensation of the day is about the negro. Like Banquo's ghost, he will not down. Dr. Lilly, the able secretary of the Stillman in stitute for negroes, at Tuscaloosa, reports to the Presbyterian general assembly that no progress has been made in colored evangelization, and that industrial training is a failure, and out of 1,243 negroes educated to mechanical pursuits, only three are following the trades they have learn ed. He declares that agriculture is the only calling open to the negro and the only one that will keep him out of the cities and out of crime and the chaingang. These are the re sults at Stillman's and Booker Wash ington's schools. We are glad to find one preacher who has got good hard sense concerning the negro and dares to speak it. Of course, we can't stop Booker Washington from teach ing, nor the north from giving him money, but we can stop the Presby terian church from wasting our money on the negro. There are 4,- 000 in the prisons and chaingangs of Georgia now, to say nothing of those we have lynched, and most of them have been educated. Let them get to farming. That suits his better nature and will keep him out of crime. But the biggest sensation is the sermon of Rev. Henry Frank, of the New York Metropolitan church, preached last Sunday, in which he declared that giving1 freedom to the negro has proved a disastrous fail ure. That he is rapidly lapsing into barbarism and will soon become ex tinct. He speaks of him as a brutal beast, more dangerous in a commun ity than a wild bull. He advises that a territory be set apart for them and there they must go again into slavery and choose their masters, and in the meantime the franchise be taken from them. That out-Herods Herod. I don't know what to make of it and I am afraid of anything that comes from a yankee preacher. I havent forgotten Henry Ward Beecher yet. Maybe those people would like to own them again and work them in a more congenial clime than New Eng land, and they would go to making cotton and take our laborers from our farms and coal fields and iron mines. We will have to watch them fellows, for they are always up to some devilment. Bill Arp. A Student Commits Forgery. Nicholas Fitzpatrick, of Tillery, Halifax county, until a few days since a student at the A. and M. College, Raleigh, is uuder a $500 bond for opening the letter of a fellow student and forging a money order for $15 which was cashed by Heller Bros., of Raleigh. The letter, which con tained the money order for $15, was addressed to J. W. Barbour, an A. & M. student. Fitzpatrick is charged with taking the letter from the post office some ten days ago. He is also charged with forging the money order for $15. The money order was cashed by Heller Bros., who sold the young man presenting it a $3 pair of shoes. Fitzpatrick left the college soon after the incident occurred. Postoffice Inspector Jere Connelly was notified of the transaction and he soon developed the charges men tioned. Fitzpatrick was arrested at Tillery on Monday, was given a hear ing before United States Commis sioner Robertson the next day, and was held for the grand jmry at the next term of Federal Court under a $500 bond. Young Fitzpatrick ac knowledges the forgery and he is very penitent. Reflections of a Bachelor. It's a funny thing how a woman will always fix her glasses on better just before she begins to talk over a telephone. A woman can never resist a story where the girl wakes up in the night and finds a handsome man, escaping from justice, in her room. When a woman calls on another woman and finds a man there and looks mad, she has either got a secret to tell or else she likes the poor man. No woman down in her heart be lieves that she isn't really as good looking as a photograph that she knows is a lot better looking than she is. Mr. W. S. Whedon, Cashier of the First National Rank of Winterset, Iowa, in a recent letter gives some experience with a carpenter in his employ, that will be of value to other mechanics. He says: "I had a carpenter working for me who was obliged to stop work for several days on account of being trou bled with diarrhoea. I mentioned to him that I had been similarly troubled and that Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera anil Diarrhoea Remedy had cured me. He bought a bottle of it from the drug gist here aud informed me that onedose cured him, and he is again at his work." For sale by M. E. Robinson & Bro., J. r Miller's Drug Store, Goldsboro; and J. II. Smith Mount Olive. A NATION'S DOINGS. The News From Erery where Gathered and Condensed. Kansas needs 20,000 men to gather its record-breaking wheat crop. The town of Shabomire, 111., was wiped out of existence by a cloud burst, Tuesday. Fearing that he was becoming in sane, Louis Eislie killed himself at Union Hill, N. Y., Monday. Detected in stealing $2 at Pat chogue, N. Y., Bessie Girard, aged 14, killed herself with laudanum, Monday, A duel to the death was fought with rifles by two cowboys in Hidal go county, Tex., Saturday, both men falling in their tracks. The Virginia Legislature will pro bably be called in extra session next winter to arrange for a meeting of the Constitutional Convention. Charles W. Heath, of Brooklyn, N. Y., was killed Sunday by drinking a quantity of ammonia, given to him by mistake by his sister-in-law. Mrs. Lillie Gardner shot and killed Mrs. Mamie Caddell, wife of her lover, at Blocton, Ga., Saturdaj', while Caddell himself looked on. Bruce Carter, when leaving the house of his sweetheart, at Babylon, L. I., Sunday night, fell into a hole dug by jealous rivals and broke his neck. The Hamburg-American Liner Pretoria, from Hamburg with 1,940 passengers, is held in quarantine at New York, owing to smallpox on board. The hall in Philadelphia in which the Republican National Convention will meet June 19th, has been fin ished and turned over to the com mittee. In a wreck caused by a collision with runaway cars, on the Grand Trunk Railroad, at Merritt, Ont., Tuesday, the engineer and fireman were killed. Four men were killed and seven seriously injured by a premature ex plosion of nitro glycerine which was being used in shooting an oil well at Whipple, O., Thursday. An indictment charging Faltha Gilliam, a domestic in the family of Dr. M. J. Ambrose, with having put poison in their food, has been re ported by the Grand Jury at Cincin nati, O. Resideuts of St. Louis have for mally demanded that street railway employes be disarmed, and the Po lice Commissioners have asked the Sheriff for 2,500 special deputies to preserve order. While Kate Connolly, an insane patient at the Manhattan State Hos pital, New York, was bathing Tues day night, Mary Brennan. also in sane, turned hot water on her, scald ing ber to death. Burglars blew to pieces the vault of the Bank of New Lisbon, Wis., early Saturday morning, and es caped with several thousand dollars in cash. The front of the building was partially wrecked. The United Confederate Veterans at their reunion in Louisville, Ky., last week, re-elected Gen. John B. Gordon, of Georgia, commander-in- chief. Next year's meeting will be held at Memphis, Tenn. Judge Cantrill, of Frankfort, has issued a bench warrant for the arrest of former Governor Taylor, of Ken tucky, to answer to an indictment charging him with being an acces sory to the Goebel murder. The body of a well-dressed young woman was found in the East river Monday at the foot of Forty-sixth street, Brooklyn, N. Y. A severe beating seemed to have been given her before she was thrown into the water. Foreign Affairs. There were 1330 deaths from chol era in India last week. Bubonic plague has broken out afresh at Ale ldria, Egypt. Steps are b g taken to cut "down expenses in tl lavana postoffice. A merican s ers burned the town of Yubi, Luzo. and killed 17 Filipi nos in a fight. American soldiers surrounded and burned to the ground the town of Pawin, Luzon. Major March's troops have return ed to Aparri from another fruitless chase after Aguinaldo. A state almost of anarchy, due to the agitation by the "Boxers," pre vails in parts of China. Yellow fever has broken out among the men of the Second Cavalry sta tioned in Santa Clara province, Cuba. Lieutenant Evans and three other Americans were killed in a skirmish with natives in the Island of Samar, Philippines. Wars1 the leading nations are lar nes at Taku, China, but th 'efuse to allow Rus sians t Dps past the Taku forts! The 1 i dismissed the gar risons 1 orts about Pretoria, and it u .ved in London that British troops have already occupied the city. Last Week In Trade Circles. Special Correspondence. New York, June 5, 1900. Business during the past week has been generally quiet. Industrial ac tivity has been maintained by old orders, but the downward tendency of prices has caused cancellations in many lines which adversely affect the prospect for a prolonged contin uance of the recent rate of manufac turing output, unless conditions shall speedily change for the better. The process of price readjustment has made further progress in various lines, however, and renewed confi dence in price stability would un doubtedly be the signal for a re sumption of buying on a liberal scale by distributers and consumers. The price movement has been downward except in the refined sugar trade, in which an advance of nearly of a cent per pound has resulted from a compromise between the Sugar Trust and rival refining interests. Crop conditions are a little irregular in the wheat belt, but are still sug gestive of a considerable increase in the yield as compared with that of last year, while the outlook for cot ton, corn and other crops is almost uniformly favorable. Business fail ures during the past week, accord ing to R. G. Dun & Co., numbered 1G0 in the United States " and 21 in Canada, against 145 in this country and 14 in Canada during the corres ponding week last year. There has been a further decline of 5-1C of a cent per pound in cotton prices as a result of continued spec ulative liquidation, a fall in the Li verpool market and favorable re ports concerning the new crop. The movement of cotton to the ports has been small, and exports and the tak ings of domestic mills have been very moderate. A reduction of i of a cent per yard in the price of print cloths has failed to stimulate de mand, and the home trade in cotton goods generally has cotitinued dull. The tendency of values in the cotton goods market has been in bu3'ers' favor, but the latter have shown lit tle disposition to press their advan tage. There has been continued buying of brown sheeting and drills for export to China, but new busi ness has not been so active this week as it was last week. The wool trade in Eastern markets has been dull to the verge of stagnation, and dealers look for little improvement in de mand from manufacturers until the latter shall have need to buy for their spring weight output. Corn prices are also practically unchanged for the week. They have been supported by light interior re ceipts, by the continued relative cheapness of the grain as compared with its meat products, and also by the active demand for corn for ex port. The offerings of corn from farmers' hands have moderately in creased, but demand has been in ex cess of the receipts at market cen tres, and visible stocks have further decreased. Chicago prices of boi? products have declined 40 cents per barrel on pork and 15 to 20 cents per 100 pounds respectively on short ribs and lard. Western packing op erations have been on a fairly liberal scale, although smaller than in the preceding week. A Area Name There are many brands of baking powders, but " Royal Baking Powder is recognized at once as the brand of great name, the powder of highest favor and. reputation. Everyone has absolute confi dence in the food where Royal is used. Pure and healthful food is a matter of vital importance to every individual. Royal Baking Powder assures the finest and most wholesome food. ROYAL DAKING POWDER CO., ALL OVER THE STATE. A Summary of Current Events for the Fast Seven Days. The Legislature meets next Tues day in adjourned session. Ernest Britt, aged 14, of Tarboro, was drowned in Tar river Tuesday afternoon while swimming. The Farmers and Merchants Bank of Newbern, has elected a !adjr, Miss Brownie Hanks, as paying teller. The President has reappointed Col. Thos. C. Fuller, of Raleigh, Associ ate Justice of the Court of Private Land Claims. North Carolina was given the place of honor in the parade at the Confed erate Veterans reunion in Louisville, Ky., last week. The six-year-old son of William Vaughn was drowned in Davie coun ty Sunday afternoon while bathing at the Fulton mill-pond. Some unknown persons set fire to the residence of John Bullock, in Granville county, Thursday night, evidently to burn him alive. The Supreme Court in a case from Henderson, decides that fines and penalties in cities and towns go to the public schools and not to the cor poration. Rev. Dr. W. C. Tyree, of Durham, has declined the offer of the presi dency of the Baptist Female Univer sity at Raleigh, which was recently tendered him. Charles Murdoek, colored, was shot and killed at his home in Meck lenburg county, Sunday morning about 2 o'clock, by his step-son, Moses Jaggers. Domestic trouble was the cause. A young negro criminally assault ed Mrs. James West in Cumberland county, Wednesday afternoon. Her husband and farm hands were at work at a distance from the house and failed to hear her screams. Henry Jenkins, a young white man living five miles from Albemarle, was drowned while bathing in the Yadkin river, Thursday. He at tempted to swim across the river and sank before he completed the trip. Mrs. William Johnson, of Lincoln ton, was found dead in bed Sunday morning. A coroner's jury brought in a verdict that the deceased came to her death by the criminal negli gence and acts inflicted by her hus band, who is now in jail. The postoffice at Marshall, Madi son county, was robbed Saturday night. The safe was blown open and about $4,000 in cash and stamps taken. Part of the money belonged to the county, the postmaster being also deputy county treasurer. Monday afternoon, while Mrs. W. H. Joyner, of Garysburg, Northamp ton county, was attending the fun eral services of Mrs. Virginia F. Suiter, in the Garysburg Methodist Episcopal church, she had a stroke of apoplexy and died almost instant ly in the church. Dr. J. B. Shearer has resigned the presidency of Davidson college where he was in that capacity for the past 12 j'ears. His resignation does not take place until next June, a 3'ear from now. He is to be succeeded by Dr. Henry Louis Smith, vice presi dent of the college. is a guarantee of superior worth There are many imitation baking jxiwders, made from alum, mostly sold cheap. Avoid them, as they make Hit: food unwholesome. 100 WILLIAM ST., NEW YORK. R08ER lb s ma 1 IS A SYSTEM BUILDER.CIYES APPETITE , Ct CORRECTS THE LIVER. pwiiiCiV LyMILL IONIC i5 sold StricHv cnits Merits If 15 the oesTthiu ionic aftte smallest price. iiu jfuu mousy rciUCuC'J li t r rails to euro vou. For sale by Jenkins & Farriesitml Dr. J. II. Powell, (Jolibboro. X. C. THE NEW Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine WITH 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 magic Silent Sewer." All sizes and styles of sewing ma chines for Cloth and Leather. POSITIONS GUARANTEED, Under $3,000 Cash Deposit. Rat' road Fare Paid. Open all yaar to Both Seza. Very Cbsap Board. Georgia-Alabaua Business College, PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Clea&M mad beautiftc thm hate i'rocuutcs a luxuriant rrowth. Wever Ptvlla to Restore Grajr Cure tra.p diwaarc bair fsuuug. mm CHicHrsrcR's English Pennyroyal pills II x, s. OHa-lasl ana Only l.rili. vBAFE. Lsdlo. ut lrurlit tor rillCUKSTEK'S ENCLISH l la UK.lt ivl bold netallte koiM ith Mm riMxm. Take stkrr. Rrtmrnu fehfc VVJ llucenu NabatltBtJMa aaa laalta. UMtk ! fl yr liraxicial. ar .aa - i tJ and "Kallrr for l.adla, Mur, bj r. apm rmrueutmru, Tcatta Manttoa loia paper. Jtadlava fmrh, I'm LA.. fA. DALMATION OR PER SIAN INSECT POWDER. Sure death to tlis. We guarantee this powder to be .a superior article, freshly ground and strictly pure, 5 cents an ounce, .r0 cents a pound. TANGLEFOOT FLY PAPER. Black Flag Powder, Paris Green, Powder guns and sprayers, at lwt tora prices. CiTDon't forget to ask for one of our free needle cases. . JENKINS & FAERIES, Druggists anil S.edsnien. Walnut St., opposite Mayor's Oflice. FRANK BOYETTE, D. D. S. All manner of ojM-rative and mechan ical dentistry done in the licst manner and most approved method. Crown and Bridge Work a specialty. Teeth ex tracted without pain. tOHice in Borden Building", oppo site Hotel Kennon. 1)11. JNO. 31. PARKE It, I. I). S. Oflice over Miller's Drug Store. All dental work neatly, durably and cheaply done. Teeth fan le extracted painlessly and no ill effects. The latest and lest plan in false teeth made. Crowns and Bridges made after the latest method, and they give perfect satisfaction. Teeth worn oil to the quick fixed ly a new method, which gives ease and satisfaction. Nitrous Ox ide (Jas given when wanted. Hours 9 a. in. to 5.30 p. m. t. COMPOUND. A recent dlcoery by an old physician. tivaxMtuay ani monthly by thousand of La Air. Is theonly perfectly aafe mnti rt'ltatilA medlclrtA discov ered, hewareof unprincipled diuirirlat who offer Inferior medicine In place of tnu. A k for Cook's Cottos Hoot Conform, take no ntbutttute, or Incloaefl and 8 cent. In postage In letter, and we will send, .ealed, by return maiL full sealed particular in plain envelope, to ladies only. 2 tarn pa, Addre&S 1'ond Lily Company, y. 3 h Unvr litoca. Lwuolt. Alien. Everybody Say So. Cascarets Candv Cathartic, the most won derful medical discovery of tlie ape, pleas ant and refreshing to the taste, act pent' and positively on kiiineys. liver and bowels, cleansing the entire system, disel colds, euro headache, fevfr, habitual constipation and biliousness. I'leas'5 buy and try a box of C. C. C. o-day ; 10, i", M) cents. Hold and guarantoeu to cure by all dru;.'s:ist8. icck ran Te fy.j momecfNuiMe- KCD CROSS. HBAbi WITHOUT IT frsiM PLtsrffCrZfOXi 51 Igffc BEST K .niiTVrtJl iA EVER It I BAU" l 'n
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 7, 1900, edition 1
1
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