Newspapers / Goldsboro News-Argus (Goldsboro, N.C.) / Dec. 18, 1900, edition 1 / Page 1
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The National Bank OF GOLMSOSO, OF 60LMB010, Wti roar bnrtn ,f 4 TIP U Offer to depositor Try !gUd to tfclt m tamnamA wit yom. d tioa an teaklaf vin nnul . 3IO. A. MOaWOOD. Jr. F-rttflJ QKO. A. H01WOOD, Ja frwt J. x. HOLLOW ILL. Cathtor J. SI. H0LL0WXLL, CMhler. "This Asa ua o'r the peoples' rlghU Doth an tmJ vigil kep : No toothing itraing of M&U't tout Can loll lu hundred eyas to ilep." VOL XXXII GOLDSBORO. Itf rC TUEHOA5TIVEN INQt DECEMBER 18. 1900. NO 59 Thb National Bank nt n . MP0F1I1 ITEMS OF INTEREST FROM DIVERS SOURCES. IX Jl'ST THIRTEEN' MINUTES News of the Stage, Social, Politi- cul and Otherwise, Culled -r From Our Exchanges. Christmas is a' time when every body is apt to be cut a good deal. Holland does not help the Boers because it desires to remain in this world a while longer. The cities are presenting Lord Roberts with swords just when he has ii o use for thein. General Mercier could whip Eng land in about the same way that Ma poleun 111 whipped Uermany. General Chaffee stands indorsed by the American people, and tf he hits von Waldorbee another lick no one will regre. it. Isaac Khan Mofakhammed Dore let is not an Enghuhman, but a Per sian, and he is representing his coun try ai Washington. Husking bananas on the sidewalk shou.d go along with spitting, and offenders in each case should be hurried oil' to ine calaboose. Prince Edward Islaud reminds one of this country it is bo differ ent. It has luu,0OU people and has not had a divorce cube in thirty years. The Sultan is trying to buy a navy on tick, and if he can get all the ships he wauis on sucti terms he will soon have the biggest navy afloat. In Fulton, Mo., a voluntary whip ping post has been established. Two negroes receutly preferred twenty, five lashes well laid on to four months' imprisonment. It cost Mr. Croker 15000 in the shape of an income tax to stay in Engknd this year. If he cannot get that much out of Englishmen on the race track, he bhould quit the busi ness. Queen Victoria's message of seventy-one wordd promptly secured a vote of 8d,UuO,it o co the war chest in th Huueeoi (Joaiiuons. The vote was 2 13 lo 8. it should have been unanimous. Uu.versity of Chicago girls com plain that then menu is hash, eggs and toast, toata, e'gs and hash, and that jlr. Rockefeller never sends them a turkey. The lot of a univer sity g rl is not a happy one, Tht fact that a train from Omaha, Nebraska, to billings, Montana, av eraged 53 miles an hour in a i un of 893 miles calls lor a revision of idea generally prevalent concerning the slowness of lmiroiid travel west ol the Mississippi. The run was made at the instance of a wealthy resident of Billings, who learned at Omaha that his daughter was seriously ill at home. It was consequently not a regular performance, but that it was carried through safely and at a mo ment's notice snows that the track and rolling stock were in condition for Buch work The case of Louis Rosche who, after passing head of the list at a civil Bervice examination in Wiscon Bin, was found to be an escaped pa tient from the Wawautosa Insane Hospital, must be a great blow to the educators and the alienists. It may, too, be more or less of an an noyance to the civil service reform ers, for there is no doubt that the political machinists throughout the country are tilled with wicked glee over the incident. To the disinterest ed observer the affair seems to indi cate once more the thin dividing line between sanity and mental de rangement. There is more Catarrh In tbli eo tlon ot the country tnan all other dls eases put together, and until the taut few years wm nupposeU to ne Incurable. For a great mny year, doctors pro. nounood It a local diieaae, and pre scribed local remedies, and by con stantly failing to cure with local treat ment, pronounced ttlnourable. Science has proven oatarrh to be a constitu tional disease, and, therefore requires constitutional treatment Halt's Oa tarrh Cure, manufactured by F, Cheney & Co ; Toledo, Ohio, Is trie onlv constitutional cure on the market. It is taken Internally, in doses from 10 drops to a teaepoonlui. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the sTStem. Tnej offer one hundred dollars tor any oaid it fails to our. Bend for circular and testimonials. Address, One Hundred and Forty-Five Millions Voted for Pensions la That Brief Space. It took just tbi.teeo minutes to pass a bill through the the Houee of lifTMeotatives on Saturday pp op mtirg one hundieJ and forty-five millions of dollars. As this appropri.it on was for pen sions it met no opposition and the Hmte took itcn the astuiaoce of the committee that it was a pre cise copy of last year's bill. The pensions thus lightly pro vided for sre one of the re maining charges of tbe war which em ed thirty -five years Bgo. Th pens on for the Spanish war and the war in the Pbilipp ne hae not yet begun to coun1, tint there will Daturhllj be addi'ions lo the tst to take tbe places of tbe old pensiooers who are tow dropping off. As the war in the Puilippioet setms likely to go on indefinitely, aod as most of t ho boldiers who return at all return with irn- ired health, tbe pension appro priation ii suro to figure latgol) in tbe annual ludgit for many years to ci me. Some day, when the que-tion of way a and metm may happen to be senwus, Congress will find it worth whilo to oveihaul the nioo L goliiU n, to stop some of tbe leiks, and to give more ibao thirteen minutes to tbe bus iness. WHAT DEMOCRACY NEEDS. According to Cleveland it is a Return to First Principles.. Atlanta. Ga., Dec. 17. The Atlanta Journal this afternoon oublished an interview with for mer President Cleveland, obtain- d by a staff correspondent a1 rincetoD. N J. Mr. Cleveland is quoted as follows: ' In my opinion the great need f tbe D -mc crauc party is a tf- urn to hrst principles. 1 ti Democratic party has not bept. fatally disorgauiz d, but it sadly needs rehabilitation on purely Democratic lines. "What is tha matter with tbe party? It has in my bumble judgment, simply wandered iff afier strange gods. A large mast. of Democratic voters saw thit b-fore tbe last election. They re mained quiet, but when the time came to vote tney said: "ThiB is uot Democracy,' 'aud refused to upport it. "Aslseei, it is the duty of Democrats every where to aid in the rehabilitation of the party There are signs of an insistence upon tbe necessity of a return to Democratic doctrines in tbe South, but they are not so gen eral as I would like to see." 'What of the future?" was asked. 'With a sincere" return to its old time doctrines," Mr. Cleve land replied, "tbe old time vic tories of the Democratic party will certainly be won." Whiskey Downs the Mayor. AilnDta, Dec. 17. - Mayor Jae. G. Woodward, of this ci' j, has been arnsted and locked n tbe police barracks lo-n'ght on tbe charge of being drunk. Bomo time ago for tho same cause tbe city council and board of aldermen threatened impoich ment proceeding)) agaioet Mayer Woodward, bat upon promisee that he would abstain from fur tber intoxication no action was taken. Tha mayor tendered his resig nation to the body and it was placed in the hands of Councilman KawsoD, who holds it on condi tion that if the mayor becomes in toxicated it shall be tendered for acceptance, The resignation was submitted this afternoon at GTloid by prorg'Jisi Too. V; trai postponed ootu JTrlwy, WHY IT WAS NOT SIGNED. The British Minister Deiniiiuls a Modification of au Important Point in the Joint Note. Ptkin, Dec. 17 D . tijite in structions supplementing yes terday's communication from L)ndoo, have been received by Sir Ernest Mason Satow, :be British minister, and be now de m aod s a modification of a point in the j lint note which the for- eiga envoys genera ly regard as importar.. This meat s further delay as a I the ministers must communicate anew with tb ir respective governments. Just what is tbe nature of the obj c tiou raised by Great, Britain, 'he ministers decline to say, tut they admit that the new demand will involve a good doal mnrt diplomatic procedure. Washington, Dc. 17.- Officials. here are at a loss to understand be reasons for the important modification in ihe j not Chinese note, which it is reported the Britisb Minister to Pek'm is to demand before siguing that docu ment preparatory to its presen tation to the Chinese plenipoten tiaries. Tbey have no informa tion on the subj'ct aa nothing has been beard from Mr Conger jn the matter for some days. Tho understanding here has been that the j )int note as agreed upon by the envoys was in the main satisfactory to the Britisl government. She simply de sired a slight amendment, said to be in the nature of a mm chauge in style of language to be used, rather than any amend ment to the scope of the agree ment. This did Qot coc tl ct with aiy of the principles held out for by our KOveromenT Hitch being tbe case, it was confidently expected the signature of the British ministerwou'd be prompt ly affixed to the agreement, and ihe note presented to the Chinese at an early date. MANY MILLIONS OF EGGS. Njw York city, according to he statistical expert of the w York Herald, consumes 2,23 eggs every minute of Jhe daj, wbl.-h means iOO 000 000 d.zen a year. The city may feel iudi pendent of the hen so far as the hatching process is concernef', but is entirely dependent for its supply of eggs on tbe moody creature who regulates her ou put according 'as the weather happens to suit her whims.Thefce hens get food and lodging f r their part of the work and thei owners receive $20,000,000 a yet for the 342 eggs that they supply annually to each inhabitant ( 1 the city. This is a great and growing industry, that has brought into existence many chicken rgncbts and some of the largest in tht world within easy reach of tbe metropolis. At Manaq'jan, N.J., 350 acres of land have been pre pared for a giant hen industry, to be conducted on scientific methods, and whicn will support a laying herd" of 200,000,000 chicken, with an estimated out put of 30,000,000 eggs for the first year. This plant is exiraord inariiy large, but there are scores of lesser ones, and many more yet smaller about the New York suburbs. QUIET HOI'! C"ATS' C THE FUTURE Q" CHILIU'.KN. How I'arenU Ae Responsible. H Laura JeTi LUiIh y I have a very IntcTeBiinK hiwi f i . a mother, who says: "Will you advise roe on a sut'jr. i th.. haa coat n e thua far many nn Ii mm c anxious thought! 2 have a sn bright boy of fifteen, now un h l:n school. We live vefy ntctiy an. I m very good nelghborhd. Tlui. :. i. people hertabouta wSn do not nun il; own prope.ty. My Iftisband Ls a l K keeper. My worry Is this; Shall I Veep in boy at school for seteral years . i. Bhnll 1 do us some oft my relativen ihk put him at some trale? Th.-v sa h is just at t le rignt aje to icarn .1 iia n and if I wult longprlt will nnan a l;l of idleness for hint no matlei M . . much edm.itlon he tains "All of the boys around here ato n hool Would not these lads refuse ( associate with him if lie Is put to .nl. and seen coming to and fro In woik n lollies? My mind Is torn wnh mil Mh'ihiK en.otlons. I must confess a; this point ihat we have never l.. . n alii. to s:ive any money. It has cost si. much to k. ep up appearances If you reply to this letter no doubi your advice would hen. lit many otln i mothers who are tiJiiiK to solve tin ame problem that I an; A MtiTliKU WHO IS IN Dot ' HT " My dear, 1 do not wonder thai ym. feel arrrut anxiety over a matter whi. ! ulls for t lie deepuet. most eannsi IhoiiKht a loving mother is capable ot 1'cislnn. for the question before .hi Is no li&lit one. The future of ).ui boy banns upon it. In my opinion the young man who fuces the world at one and lweni without a trade Is sorely handicapp. d He Is launched upon the tide of life Utiout an oar to shape iln- course of his bark, and la noccssaiily at the mercy of every storm thai overtakes him. I'he man who lias a trad" is n thou- sand times, better eipilpped than the man who has none, for he feels within his breast Ihe Independent feeling thai e iu. it never want. He can tlud pro lilabl.- work In any part of the world. Tin true secret of making good, hon- rable. siai nch men eul of our boys Is to put them to work in their youth, be foie their habits are formed, and to ep them at It. It is not necessary that a boy who lenrns a trade should follow It nil bis life. Having acquired useful knowl edge does not bind him dow n to It if his talents In later years bid l.lm rise higher. Our ablest men began life humbly. Hen Jonson was a bricklayer; John Jacob Astor once sold apples on the streets of New York; Daniel Webster was at one time a plough boy; Henry Liay was a miller's ehore boy; Presl 3eniAancoin Negroes Lynched. Owensboro, Ky,. December 17. Jim Hendeieon and Bud Rowland, negroes, were hanged at 8 o'clock tonight in tbe jail yard at Rockport, Ind., by a mob of 500 persons. Henderson and Rowland way lwid, murdered aod robbed H. S Simon?, a white barber, early this morning. The two men were suspected and arrested, and by the aid of a bloodhound their guilt was established. Henderson was shot to death in his cell and tben hanged. Row land confessed before he was canal. Good trades are the stepping-stones to success, respectability and tumid ness. The parents who endow their sons with a gocd trade have given them that which no one can take from them. ml have started theii feet in the right ath. Young men who have been bolstered up all their lives are seldom k.k1 for any crisis. If lliey find themselves con fronted by dillleult ies th y look about or soinebocy to cling to to help them out. Kven the rich who send forth their sons ihus ii iv live to rue It. No parents should feel that It belli- lies their dk-iilty or their standing In a community to lay (he foundation of sound prim pies In the heart of their boy and sh. w him Hie path by which the w isest i. t.iif st men have climbed greatnesr and wealth and bid him enter It. If a lad tits mastered his trade and finds it Is rot I,, his liking he Is mill uiik eriotn h to begin to study a pro- csse.n, but lie who waits to do either until he has reached his majority may not have an opporiunlty or feel In- lined to hcein lo Irani then If an easier tvenue of Ii ing Is presented to him. Itend the 'ree w hen II Is it sapling In the way wh ih you Intend that II shall grow, dear parents. 1.A1 HA JKAN LIHHEY. CASTOBIA Acfc'c(ab!c Pro pflrdlionfor As -simila tinfi the lixxl and Hctf ula -ling the Stouuiclis ami Bowls of Tron oles Di'slion.Checrruf ness and Rest (mltiiis neither Oj)ium,Moriluin' nor Mineral. OT iVVH V OTIC . mJtm SrrJ Mx I'm. ft ' SJa - IMtk.IW -(YiniW umr Aperfi'd Hcmcilv forronsllv tlon , Sour Stomach. DiarrhiHVi Worms ,('onviiUiuis,lVvvrHh ness mri Loss of Sleep. FiU'Sunilc Sitinnlure of NEW VOHK. ... I tXCT copy or wrapper. P III J For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of AM w Use For Over Thirty Years THt crrAun commnt, hcw von city, StplfPSJlSJSJisJIBs A Handsome Box oicando. Would make a nice CHRISTMAS PRESENT, wlicre you are undtcided what to gl. And we Lave the finest lot pvi r brought to Goldsboro. We are opening thein np now. Call mid MaEo your selection; we will put it away for you. LYON'S CHOCOLATES. The finest goodn on the market. SO ceuta per pound. FINE FRUITS. Let me bavo your Christmas order before the rush and before tho bent is picked out and I will puck it awuy for you and send it to your home when ordered. W. H. Griffin, ttaooesaor to J. B. firlffln. OiUKinlte Hotel Kennoa Sam Lee's Chinese Laundry Hand Machine. No Tear, Clean Wat. Fine Polish, Arlington Building, South Coiner. Holdsborn. N. C THE ONLY True Uhmd Purine.' ihniiiiieiitly in tho publio eye to day i Mood's Sarsaparilla. Thereforf Mood's ind ONLY MOOD'S THIS IS YOUR CHANCE. TO GET f olisr7eel Cobblcf ockel. AT MANUFACTURERS' COST. ;tzi;MA, nciiiNU hlmokh, PIMPLES CURED V ii ii n Gottle Free to Sufferers Ujes your bkin itch and Bumf Distre&sin Eruptions on the Skin so you feel ashamed to be id company? Do Scabs aDd Scales form on the Skin, Hair or Scalp? Have you ticzemar bkia Sore and Crackad? Kaih form on tbe Skin? Prickling Pain iu, the Skin? Builh? Pimples? Bone Paii? Swollen Joints,? Falling Bair? All Run Dowo? Skin Pale? Old Sores? Ealing Sore,? All beee are symptons of Eczema and Impurities and Poisons in the Blood. To cure lo stay cur ed take B B. B. (Botanic Blood BaIid) which makes the blood pure and ric". ti. ii. B. will cause tha sores to heal, itching of eczema to stop forever, tbe skin to become clear and the breath sweet. B. B. B, is just tbe remedy you have been look iog for. Thoroughly tested for 30 years. Our readers are advis ed to try ii. B. ti. For sale by druggists at II per large bottle; six large bottles (full treatment) 15. Complete directions with each bottle. So sufferers may test it, a trial bottle given away. Write for it. Address BLOOD BALM CO., 277 Mitchell St. Atlanta G., Describe your trou ble and Free personal medical advice glvnn be c o o o X Hi o o DC T3 C C3 i O - 0) 0) bD "O u TJ u O CD 5 CO Ti CD TJ CD CD Ti CD -M C 3 t O c 3 CD CD . CD V) CD O O O 5 o D 6 Ti ra L. H o - CD o o T3 CD u CD i- D CD (1) J C CD 3 (T CD tf) C 0 o 1 CD ( O o Ti CD Ti "u CD "D CD i- O (4- CD s CD JC CD . 0 5 CD T3 rd n3 T O X u O - CO CD E o in cc UJ cc D h o Ul D Z h U re E CO This thprefore is a Chance for You to Buy a c 3 O c o & $4.00 Cobbler Rocker for $2.25. 3.50 Cobbler Rocker for 2.00. 3.00 Cobbler Rorkerfor 5.50 Cobbler Rocker for 5.00 Cobbler Rocker for 4.50 Cobbler Rocker for 4.25 Cobbler Rocker for 1.75. 3.50. 3.00. 2.75. 2.50. IflrOur patrons will please take notice that change of advertisements for (Saturday's edition should be sent in by Friday afternoon to in- strung up- I sure choice position and display . ntio kn IIai otawa . Il.n.a.lli : LI I Hx U 9 .U . 1 1-1 rifled with baiisti, I m Batumi 10 o'ciooi . a. We have over 400 of these Rockers now ready for your inspec tion. Call early and get first choice. Yours truly, ROYALL & BORDEN.
Goldsboro News-Argus (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 18, 1900, edition 1
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