Newspapers / Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, … / Feb. 1, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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If O to -I p w w w K t o 2.8 SfS a crS SV ff GO OQ "0 P W H fc O 3 8 3 ft. g o 2. PS Ph 5; w 3pOSiS ? D . e a t a CO 5S3 qO9 So I 2- Sao co O D C Hi i On- W a GO CD w to 1 1 up a o 3 a . ,.a tsc a OS 5 O 3 f IB 41 1 t m rill i i i i uh n mi in ' ' I V " "This Akous o'er the people's rights . No soothing strain of Mai's son Doth aneternal vigil keep; Can lull its hundred eyes to sleep". .f VOL. XVI. GOLiDSBORO. N. C.. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 1, 1894:. No. 149 0 i - - .i . $ ' 1 i; : 8 J I -'1 . '. it - .J y s j 3 f - 3 "V I ' t " " t ' 7.' : v L t T' 1 .i - i 1 DISAPPOINTMENT- The husbandman cf human hearts am I Older than all tha tillers ot the soil. I've seen the hopes ot proudest men re coil And expectation pale as I passed by. All lands are mine! Of people low and h'gh I gather tribute. Of his daily toil Not one refuses when I take the spoil. Through breaking hearts are vainly wondering why. Yet, when I've ploughed about the roots of prid; Blown with ray'.jld winds til. weak faith was strong. Drenched till the heart was moistened through and through , And all its powers of fruitfulness were tried, The hearts of men from sighing turn to song, For life gains meaning that they never knew ! Christian Register. THE SOUTH IS ALL EIGHT- As the LovL'wviUeCourierr Journal sayp, the tender solicitude which Republicans likeMcKioley and Re publican newspapers like the Chi cago Inter Ocean have recently be gun to manifest for the prosperity of the Sooth is so unusual and on expected as aim st to excite sus picion. Trie South 13 urged to take a 6tand against the Wilson Bill be cause of the menace it is supposed to contain to the developing indus tries of that section. One would infer that the development of the South had been tor years the dear est purpose of the protectionists, and that tbeir.soje anxiety about the present situation arises from a fear that their philanthropic under taking will be defeated. But the Sjulh will not be used as a catspaw. It has for years Dald its share ct the tri6ate to protected manufac turers because it had not power to secure a just relief from the bur den. It was an agricultural section, having nothing to gain and all to pay under the policy of artificially made home markets. It naturally became the earnest hamj ion ot tariff reform. It has supported the cause faithfully and consistently for many years. It is committed to the principle it has to long as Eerted, that protection by the levy of customs duties is not essential to the apbai!ding ot any -industry properly grounded on the natural resources ot the country. It will not no jv stultify itself by tbondons ing these conviction?, and becoming the tool of the men whose policy thas eo long oppressed it. The real interest of the South in the matter have not been changed by the industrial developmeiit ct the section during the part few years. This development has grown inevitably out of the natural re sources of the section. It owee nothing to protection. It will con tinue even more rapidiy without protection. It has nothing to lose and all to gain by having the inaik eta of the world thrown open for it. It will be fuller, more subs'antial, more rapid it, while there is yet t'me, its foundations be laid on the rock of a natural system of trade Protection is an insecure foundation ior any industry. A great enters prise erected npon it at this day, stands on the shiMing sand, ex posed to the gathering force of a hostile pnblic opinion. No greater good could come to the Sooth than to have the further f rogrees of its industrial develops ment spared the uncertainties that attend the protection system. Ho greater harm could befall it tuan that it should build op itself upon a system which the common sense of the people has repudiated, which has been repeatedly condemned at the polle, which has perpetuated itself for years by corrupt means, which represents in its present shape an unholy compact between spoilsmen in politics and spoilsmen in bueinesa, and which despite its desperate straggles to save itself is bound to go .down, and that scon. So sagacious a man as Andre vr Carnegie has seen the handwriting on the wall. He understands that 'the American people have tried protection and condemned it, have detected its shams and despise tbem, have counted its cost and re pudiated it. The reform must eome. Until it come?, there will be nnrest,.agitation and diturbance of business, and it were well that it come quickly. Does the South wunt to rest its industrial future upon a crumbling structure? Does it want to build upon artificial supports that are sure to be soon removed? It is fortunate that the op portunity for establishing its basi ness future upon a sounder basis has presented itself so- opportunely. Its ol jcction to the Wileon biil should be that it does not remove enough of the impedimenta to its unrestricted natural development, Tho6e Southern newspapers and Southern members of Congress wLo have been caught by Republi can appeals and have cried out that the South ia about to be nc done on the very threehhold of a great commercial career, are blind to the signs ot the times. The very agitation from which the interests or which they assume to speak are now suffering should warn them of the unsubstantial character of the artificial syste n whose con tinuance they demard. Their lright at the suggestion of an honorable dspendencc by the South on its own reeourcea 6hou'd warn them that protection has al ready begun to undermine their 8elfre!iance. There is time to save the South from wasting its energies in developing its indnstie6 ur.on an insecure foundation. And now is the time to doit. His Bargains. "I am a victim," began the man with the loug hair as he untolded his newspaper and dropped into a eat on tde 1 train beside an ac q laintance, "1 am a victim ot my wife s taste, enterprise aud ecoii omy."'' ' Bat, I say, old man, you ought to ret a kair-cut. "That's what I say, out my wife won't have it. She says I look more distinguished with long hair. 'Say, I never eaw you with red tie fee'ore. lou were always very particular about those things. "I knjw, I know!" said the other wearily. I thought I had table, and I think so yet, but what am I going to dt? Th s tie," and he gave it a savage prod with his forefinger, ''was purchased at a sa e Thirty nine cents it coBt and I have to wear it to prevent a row. My wife says it looks well, "See these cufft? Well, they are twelves, and my size is ten and a half. They came eff the bargain counter, too, at the rate ot two pairs for thirty-eight cents. Cheap? But I have to put tucks in them o tbey will fit inside my coat sleeves.'' He gradually warmed i p to hie subject. "You ought ta see my undeidothing.Job lota,every piece; fragments. Some are too )arge and some &re too small. See this ha ? Ii came home in pi uk paper, and cost $1.98. I wear a seven, thia ia seven and three-quarter-. There is one morning and two evening news papers in the band bo it will fit." "Bat it was a bargain, sure. My hats est me $5. You ought to be glad you're married. You must be saving money at that rate." "BargaiL?BaL! Don't talk to me ot bargains. I'm sick of the word. I hear of bargains from morning to night and sometimes during the night. I shouldn't be surprised it my wife should pick up a tomb stone because it was cheap and won d have to be used seme time. "And as tor saving monej ! Whew! All the surplus cash goes for bargains. She baa two trunks foil of bargains that she Bys will come in handy some day. I live surrounded by a junk shop, but tor the sake ot peace don't dare to say a word." He leaned slightly forward as he 3poke, and there was a sharp click. He put his hand around to his back with a pained expression. What's the matter? Hurt your self?" 'Ob, no," he said grimly. "Two of the patent suspender buttons bought at a bargain counter have parted the ways and my 22-cent suspenders have broken. Say. you haven't a safety pin or a couple ot feet of cord, have yoL?'' Lieut. General Sir George Toin kyns Ghesney, M. P., expressed the opinion in a speech at London last week that, "in the event- of war with the United States, it would be impossible for Great Britain to prevent Canada from being annex ed to the States." That won Id be a good thing tor Canada and not a bad one for the United Statea, pro vided that England would first take home Gold win Smith and the leper settlement at Tracadie. These would be unwelcome adt junets of annexation. Without tnem uanaua is a grand country and fit for admiesion to the Union. LITTLE BOY BLUE. A little toy dog, all covered with dust, But sturdy and staunch he stands, And a little toy soldier, all red with rust, And his musket moulds in his hands: Time was when the little toy dog was ntw, And the soldier passing fair, And that was the time when our Little Boy Blue Kissed them and put them there. Now, don't you go till 1 nij, he said, ADd dentou make any noise. So, toddling off to hia trundle bed. He dreampt of his pretty toys, And as he was dreaming, an angel song Awakened our Little Boy Blue Ob, the years are many, and the years are long, But the little toy friendi are true. Aye, faithful to Little Boy Blue they st&nd. Each in the same old place, Awaitirjg the touch of a little hand. And the smile of a little iace, And they wonder, as waiting the long years through, In the dust of the little chair, vVhat has become of our Little Boy Blue Since he kissed them and put them there. Eugene Field. WHO CAUSED THE DEFICIT? .Republicans have not yet become so hardened that they do not expe rience an uneasy feeling when allu sion is made to the deficit in the Treasury. When the subject mentioned everybody looks toward them, and something resembling a blush may be seen upon the cheeks of some of them in whom native modesty has not been extinguished by bad associations. The St. Louis Globe-Democrat, speaking for this latter element, enters into an argument to show that the Itepublieaua are not solely to DJame ior tne dencit. It admits that Mr. Cleveland left a large sur plus in the Treasury when he went out ol omce in lby. 5ut it says that this surplus was mainly used in paying off the pnblic debt, and that a bill was passed making a large re duction ol tantt duties. I hen it proceeds to argue that as the Eepub licans have controlled the House but twice in twenty years, that is, dur ing two Congresses, the Democrats are mainly responsible for any ex travagance in appropriations. This is ingenious, but it is not fair, and it is not true. Mr. Cleve land not only left to Mr. Harrison a surplus of $85,000,000 in addition to the gold reserve of $100,000,000 mak ing $185,000,000 in all, but he left an annual surplus of about $100,000, 000 in the revenue. Here was, count ing the accumulated surplus and the annual surplus revenue for four years, about half a billion of dollars surplus for the four years of Mr. Harrison's term. Some of it he used, as claimed, in paying the public debt before it was due, and many millions were paid out for the privilege of doing this. Mr. Cleveland did the same thing, but he did it under protest, because the Republican Senate would not permit a reduction of taxation except by making whisky and tobacco free. As the taxes on these articles were not felt as a public burden the Adminis tration very properly declined to ac cept this way of reducing the reve nue, and bought bonds at a premium in order to avoid a disastrous con traction of the currency by locking up so much money in the Treasury. While this was doing, however, Democrats insisted that it was a makeshift to which the Administra tion ought not to be driven; that the way to get rid of a surplus was not to squander it, nor to use it to buy bonds at a premium, nor yet to abol ish taxes on luxuries, but to make such a reduction of the tariff as would cheapen the prices of the nec essaries of life. The Democratic House passed,a bill for that purpose, which, the Senate rejected. So the Administration was obliged to keep down the surplus by purchasing the bonds when they could be had at f rices that were not too exorbitant, n spite of this palliative, however, Mr. Cleveland left a large surplus, as already mentioned, to hia succes sor. When Mr. Harrison came into of fice on a minority vote, the ill-luck of the American people decreed that he should have at his back not dnly a Republican Senate, but also a Re publican House. The party of spoiliation was fully equipped ' for indulgence in its favorite pastime of pronigacy. ut it had something more than its usual motives for dis sipating the public revenue. The surplus in the Treasury pleaded trumpet-tongued against the reten tion of unnecessary and therefore un just taxation, dfrom the moment that the result ot the elections of 1888 was known that surplus "was doomed. Resolved to perpetuate class privileges and the burdens which they entailed, the Republicans saw that the obstacle presented by the continuing and growing ' surplus must be removed. Either of two courses was open to them: To in crease expenditures or to devise a plan of reducing the revenue without relieving public burdens. They adopted . both. New laws were enacted adding millions to the ex penditures not merely for that Con gress, but for many years in the fu ture. Then the Mabunley measure to reduce the revenue was passed a bill cunningly devised to cut down customs receipts by diverting a large part of the Government reTenue into the pockets of individuals and into treasuries of trusts that had deservxl well of the Republican party by helping to corrupt the ballot in its interest. The surplus was annihi lated, as was intended, and a deficit followed. Whether the deficit was intended or not is not material. In their zeal to prevent a reform of the tariff the deficit was created, and the Republican party must bear the re sponsibility. DEATH OF Wm- B-F- FORT- Tb(Ti di.d ill this county F.i- day morning at 1 o'clock, a man not only remarkable for his age but for his ancestry as well: he was Mr. Wm. Benj. Franklin Fort, father of our esteemed countvmen Messrs. Wi ley B, and John W. Fort, of the Na hnnta section. The deceased was 83 years of age, having been born on June 14th, 1811, on the plantation where he lived and died, which con tains 1,500 acres of land, and where all the hereditary generations of the Fort family have been born, lived and died back to the time of King George III, by whom it was granted to the original Fort when all this section was known as Dobbs county, the county seat of which was New bern, and when Tryon was Colonial Governor, occupying the Tryon Pal ace in the "City of Elmt." The original Fort was a near rela tive of Benjamin Franklin, after whom the subject of this sketch was named, and there are now at the old Fort homestead, where the deceased died yesterday morning in Nahunta township, silver and gold knee and shoe buckles preserved through all the passing generations of the Fort family &s heirlooms from the Frank" lin branch thereof. Wm. Benj. Franklin Fort married Miss Evelyna Becton Ialer, who pre ceded mm to the grave r od years ago. She was a relatiye of the Isler family of t'.iis city, and was a sister of the late Mrs. Council Wooten, who was mother of Mrs. Judge W. T. Fairclotb, of this place: so that he had a wide family connection, running back through the years,with some of our most distinguished peo ple. Deceased was one of the oldest members of the Primitive Baptist church at Nahunta. His funeral will be held from the old homestead this morning - at 11 o'clock, Elder Jonathan T, Edgerton officiating, and the interment will be made in the ancestral burying ground on the plantation. OBSOLETE FINANCIAL FICTION- As the Philadelphia Times says, it is time to drop some of the obsolete fictions by which the current finan cial discussion is obecured. One of these is the fiction that the bonds authorized in the lesumption act were to provide a fixed reserve of $100,000,000 for the redemption of greenbacks and for no other purpose. If the act is construed in that liberal way, the "gold reserve" was all used up long ago. The actual gold obtained by the sale of bonds w?s $92,000,000, and since that time $97,600,000 of greenbacks have been redeemed of $53,000,000 of Treasury notes of 1890 have also been paid in gold. Thus the "reserve" has been entirely used up for its original purpose and nearly $60,000,000 in gold have been used hes:de to maintain the credit of the currency. The $53,000,000 of gold used in the redemption of notes issued in the purchase of silver exposes an other fiction that the uncoined silver bullion is the "basis" of these notss. They, like the greenbacks, are based on the entire resources of the Treasury. They and all other forms of the United States currency are interchangeable and ledeemable in gold. The purpose of the resumption act was amply to enable the Secre tary of the Treasury to meet all j)b ligaticns and keep the currency of the "United "States' at par. It referred only to the greenbacks because there was no other currency in question at that time, and a de ficiency in the general resources of the Treasury was not contemplated. liut in its purposes it applies entirely to the present situation. It 'Was meant to sustain all forms of cur rency on the gold basis. To call in Question the authority of the Secrea tary under this act to issue bonds to meet the- obligations of the govern ment, is simply to attack the credit of the. United States, . Magnetic Nervine quiets t the nerves drives away bad dreams, and gives quiet rest and peaceful sleep. Sold by Robinson ros,arus store, woiagooiOjJM.y. i HOLDING THE REINS. The night was clear, the sleighing good The cutter Beat not wide, She snuggled clo3e beneath the robe To hei fond lover's side, The horse was spirited and jumped With frequent tugs and strains, Until she innocently said: "Do let me hold the reins!'' They're married now, perhaps because She was so helpful then. She loves him well, and he loves her Well, m the way of men: And yet in ali their sweet delight One sad thought makes him wince: She held the reins that winter's night, She's held them ever since. Went one Better. It is an astonishing thing how some species of animals will cling to life, said Longbow as be hesi tated between the choice ot a coffee berry and a clove. I read in an au thentic work a short time ago that an alligator will go on fighting for hours atter the brain has been re moved from its body. How long have you been study mg natural history? aked Whop pers, with a rapid but comprehend sive survey ot the free lunch table Not long, answered Longbow. But I was thinking of the extra ordinary way a lobster I saw yes terday held on to his time on earth. I went into the Acadia and ordered a boiled live lobster. After I bad ordered It I told old Shuffles, the head waiter, that the last one I had was evidently boiled several days before it was boiled. Come with me, he says, and took me into the kitchen. There stood the cook, with uplifted knife, over an enor mous green bodied lobster that was frothing at the gills with paseion. 1 be unite came dowj, and Mr. Lob spread himself out in two equal divisions, but was livelier than ever. Two more blows severed the clawB from the body, but each claw continued to gnash its teeth with rage. One caught hold of the knife and tried to get it away from th cook, but the blade was so sharp it bad to let go. in another minute it was writhing on the silver grill with a vigor that would have shamed aoy one of Mr. Fox's most active martyrs. I thought thestrng gle would never end, but at last, with a deep sigh, he gave up the ghost, and as he did so, blushed a rosy red with ehamo at what be thought his weakness. What'lly' havt? asked Whop pers tersely. Same, responded Longbow, a gleam of triumph in his eye. As you say, said Whoppers as he paid for the drinks, lob&ters are ve.'y tenacious of life. But they're not in it with eels. Ia this another fieh storj? asked Longbow cynically, but with a faint suspicion of approaching dis comfitures. Well, I suppose an eel is a fioh as much as a lobster, retorted Whoppers curtly. But I was going to give you a sjecimin ot what the eel can do in the clinging to lite line, I was fishing for pike in Sloppy creek a couple of summers ago, and one day I pulled out the larg est eel I eyer saw in my life. I won't tell you how large he was, because it I did you might doubt the rest of it. He was not only bis, he was athletic. He was the con tortionest eel that ever mcked a bait off a hook. One minute he'd be pirouetting un the end ot bis tail, then he'd etand on his neck and go through all the evolutions of a skirt dancer with the rest of him, I had brought with me the biggest basket that I could find in Sloppyville, but, try as I would, I couldn't double that eel up and get him in the basket. Finally, when we'd both agreed on a breathing spell, 1 picked up an axe while he was resting and with one blow, cut him clean in two. Do yea think that quieted him? Not a bit of it. The two ends looked np at me with mingled has tred and reproach and before I could get the basket anywhere near them had jumped back into the cieek. Now comes the most carious part of it. What do yon suppose the eonequence wat? 1 bavon t the remotest idea, re p ied Longbow uneasily. Well I'll tell you, said Whopperr in that impressive way of bis that always made his friends squirm. Subsequent investigation proved that the two ends of that eel mar ried each other and raised a whole colony of bifucated eelettl Longbow looked at Whoppers Llpng and earnestly without utter tng a worq, Mlne'tf whiBkev; suggested ihe latter, as he jerurned the look with a frank, ingenuous smile. Ernest Graham Dewey in Life. - r , r-t ,.; The President and the Senate. . Nearly every Presidents who was not content to be a mere patty figurehead has had to battle, in one. way or anotner, 10 oerena nis con Btitutiooal right of selection in thoee appointments which require the advice and 'consent of the Sens ate for their completion. The ap proval of the Senate is an essential part of the appointment, but the initiative, the nomination, lies with the President, and he has no more right to surrender this func tion, either to the Senate collect ively or to Senators individually than'he has to demand that the Senate shall surrender its discre tion entirely to him. The idea that the President ehould not nominateor appofnt a citizen of any State without the previous approval of the Senators trom that State is a very old one. It has been the cause of some of the worst abuses of the appointing power, some of the most serious scandals in our politics, and some ot the most bitter conmts between the Executive and the Senate. Sen ator Hill has renewed the old fight now, over the appointment to the Supreme Court, in such a way as to leaye the President no ulterna tive but to fight it out, .The Senate had an ncqaestion able right to reject the nomination ul Mr. Hornblower, if the msior ity believed that he was not com petent for the high office for which he was selected. It would have the same right to reject the nomina tion ot Mr. Peckham if such a pretext could be imagined. But Mr. 1 ecknam s position as a lawyer and a mac is too well established to make that objection plausible, and if this nomination ehall also be rejected it will'be recognized bb an attempt upon the part of Sen tors to arrogate to themselves not only the right of confirmation or rejection, but the right of selection as well. This is un issue from which the President cannot shrink. Apart from the fact that no New York lawyer could be found fit for the judicial appointment who has not made himself obnoxious tobenatoi Hill by his disaproval of Judge Maynard, Senator Hill's attitude has made any yielding to him im possible. To appoint a man agree able to him would be virtually surrender of Presidential daty to partisan machinations. Mr. Cleve land was not elected President to make friends with Senator Hill; on the contrary his election was in no Email measure due to the fact that Hill was his enemy; and there is no other course open to him now than to carry on the fight which Hill has inyited to its conclusion. He cannot force the Senate to confirm his nominations, but he can cona tinue to make nominations so strong that continued opposition will cover the Senate with con tempt. Thiladelphia Time?. Unsanitary School Honaes. The report of Medical Inspector Taylor to the Board of Health on the sanitary condition ot the pub lie schools indicates that with all the work done in the last few years to place all the school builds ings in a proper condition for use much of it has tailed of its purpose, Either the school authorities haye been trying to repair the unrepair able or the work has been about in the wrong way. In each of sixteen sections ore or more school houses are leported in a defective canitary condition, the defects varying all the way from poor ventilation to overflowing we.Is, wet cellars, heating apparatvs that fills the school rooms with coal gas, filthy yards and defective drainage. In several instances the entire aban donment ot the buildings for school purposes is recommended. The complaint of the neglect of janitors to carry out the rules of tne isoara oi jaeaun is noi an un expected one, for while janitors are appointed to give places to politi cal favorites honest and faithful service cannot bo expected. Bat the defective school houses and yards are inexcusable. Attention has been called to these defects time and again. Some of the build" inzs have been closed by direction ot the Board of Health at various times. Money has been approprsaa ted and expended tor the necessary repairs and improvements. -I tis worse than discouraging to be in formed thai in sixteen or nearly half the schools sections of the city there are school buildings unfit for the reception of the children. Other defects in oar school sys tern jnd methods can be tolerated if not defended, but this cannot.- The law requires that schools shall be furnished tor an children ot school age. and a higher law de mands thatLthe schools so furiished shall first of all be held in build ings that do not imperii the lives or health ot the pu pi is. Attar all these years of experience, improve-' ment liberal expenditure "there should not have been aft unsani tary schop!t$jouse ia::t)Pfliia'd3phia, Either make the school healthy or close andseir the buildififis. Ptr. petual expenditure for repairs that do not repairnsnouia not oe toler ated, Philadelphia Times. SUNDAY READING. Made Up of Divera clip pings. He who feels no inclination will 'ever fail to find an excuse. Goethe. Sid-hearted, be at peace; the snow-drop lies tjuried in a sepulchre of ghastly snow; , But spring is floating up the southern . - skies, '. - . And darkling, the pale snowdrop waits below. Let me persuade, in dull December's day We scarce believe there is a months of June, But up the stairs of April and of May The hot sua chmb'eth to the summers noon. Yet hear me, I love God and half I rest, O, better! God loves thee, so all rest thou. He is our Summer, our dimed-visioned Best, And in His Heart thy prayer is resting now. " George Macdonald, ' THE PRIZE FIGHT. It eeems that the church people have been outwitted by the worldly folks again, says the Atlanta Joun nal. Governor Mitchell, representing the best moral sentiment in Florida and Governor Nortben, backed by the religious element in Georgia, seemed determined 1 hat the fight should not occur in either one ot these Siates. And yet it did occur at tie time and place advertised and there was no interference. At the hour named in the pro gram, the two heavy weights ap peared in the ring. Where was Governor Mitchell? It seems to us, viewing the whole affair, from this distance, that Florida's governor should have had the laws more thoroughly looked into before he made his boasts that the fight should not come off. It detracts from the respect which the people are accus tomed to pay t those high in au thority to have them back down from any position assumed in the interest of good morale. Florida's ex ecutive should never haye announce ed that the fight should not take place unless he intended to prevent it. It he contemplated allowing the decieion of Judge Call to determine the matter, it would have been bet ter to have had thab.decision some weeks ago and set at rest-, all un certaiuty. . 't. Florida's Governor has not come out of this affair with new lustre added to his tame. The "sports" were successful and -he moral sentiment has been set back a little. Prize fights are brutal, and, what is worse, there" collects wherever one is had, such a crowd of "sports" toughs, pickpockets, "gamblers of high and low degree, as would dis grace any community'. These fights should not be allowed, but there should be some law to prevent them, and Governors of States should not be placed in positions where they are hab'e to make spectacles of themselves. Nearly everybody, except the men who have a direct financial interest in keeping up exorbitant duties, concedes the necessity of reforming the tariff; nobody, ben yond a handful of theorists, desires or expects free trade, and certainly no true Democrat desire it for the benefit of England, a nation which the Democratic administration whipped in a wai for "free trade" of another kind, Col. John L. Branch, who died at Birmingham, Ala., on '"Jan. 18, is said to have been tho man who gave the order that caused the first gun of the Civil warto be fired on Fort Sumter. The credit has been claimed heretofore for thje late Eda mund Baffin; but it is of little consequence to whom the dubious distinction belongs. These is something -ot wholly incongruous in the' fact that the palace of Henr VIIF: In Fleet Street, London, now bears on its second floor front the legend "Carti er's HairCatting Saloon." Henry himself was somehat in the tonsor- ial ar, only he had a habit of re moving" the head along with the air. - .. Winston Serdineh A. H. Joyce, of Dan bury, who was here yestern day, is trustee for Dr. W. A. Lash who assigned yesterday. . Dr. Bern, bow, of Greedsboro, appointed J. o, Uox tiustee. Pure A cTcam of Tartar baking powder. High est of all In leavening strength. Latest United States GogaipuiNtitrilcKid Report Royalakig.Powdeu Qp,106, Wall St New York. AN AWFUL TRCTEDYi Thousands of lives hare boej?jacriflced thousands of homes rfrarj& tKttHlte by the fatal mistake of old-jspLooJ , physicians, still persisted in by some, notwithstand ing the light thrown. ulPWfli te subject by modern research,flhat ffWfiwnption is ins curable. It ?5&o7T onsoaiption is a scrofulous disease of tke lungs, .and any remedy wWch strikes right at these it of the ccmpajjit mast and will cure it. Such a remedy is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical discovery. It was never fccowDf to fail if givijAfair trial, antliis- is why the manufacturers sell it under a positive guarantee, and is the only lungt remedy possessed of such remarkable curative proper tifes as t) warrant its makers in selling on trial, -, Buoklen s ArfelftftV gfadiAtV Thb BestSalveVd: the""worlJr-forCuts, Bruises, Sores. Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and alll&kin Eruptions, and posi tively cures Piles, or no pay required, to guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. . Prioe 25 cents pez box. For sale by J. H. Hill & Son. i jiSERVING PRAISE. Wo vcsire to say to our citizens, that for years we have been selling Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Dr. King's New Lite Pills, Backlen's Arnica Salve and Electric Bitters, and have never handled remedies that sell as welt, or that have given such universal satisfaction. We do not hesitate to guarafifte them every time, and we stand ready td refund the purchase price, if satisfactory. result3 do not follow their use. These remedies have won their great popularity purely on their merits. J. H. Hill & Bon 'Drug gists, tn ELECTRIC BI? fRS. This remedy is iSectftnine so wel known and so ppulaf attflneed no spec ial mention. All who have used Eletric Bitters sing tnefcime song' 'of praise. A purer medicine does not exist and it is guaranteed to do all that is claimed. Elec tric Bitters will cure all diseases of the Liver and Kidneys, will remove Pimples, Boils, Salt Rheum and other Mfeetions caused by impure blood. will drive Mal aria from the system and prevent as well as cur j all Malarial fevers For cure of Headache, Constipation and Indigestion try Electric Bitter-ErAfTe satisfaction guaranteedpr money refunded. Price 50 cts.and pttlioftile at J.H.Hill&Son's Drugstore. .. ,ttr t&EAT TRIUMPH Instant relief experienced a per manent cure by most ppeecftMnd greatest remedy in the world BaconT Celery cure for Throatand. Lung. dts&ses. Why will you continue to irritate your throat and lungs witn mat te.rriDle hacking cough when J. H. Hill & Sa3Btgent will fu-nish you a free swjiple bottler of this great guarantsedWmedy? Its success ia simply wonderful, as your druggist will tell you. paeon's Celery Cure is now sold in every town and village on the continent Samples free. Large bottles 50c, ' k-l GLAD TIDINGS. The grand specific for the prcvailiny malady of the age, Dyspeppia, Liver Com plaint, Rheumatism, Costiveness, .General Debility, etc., is Bacon's Celery cure. This great herbal tpnttf stimulates the digestive organs, regulates-the Liver and restores our system fcjvigorous health and Buergie samples uree. iarife packages OUC .bold only by J. H, Hill & Son. Terrible Railroad Accident. Is a dally chronicle in our papers; also the death ol some dear friend, who has dlbd with Consumption, whereas, if he or she tfl taken Wto's Uure for Throat and Lung diseases in time, life would have been rendered happier and perhaps saved. Heed the waning! If you haye a cough or any affection of the Throat and Lung call at J.H.Hill & Son sWe agren and set atrial bottle free, Lare size 50c THE GOLDEN SECREt'TJOG LIFE Keep the head' cool, the feetwarm and the bow.els oper. Bacon's Celery Cure is a vegetable preparation and acta as a natural laxative, and is the great est remedy ever discovered fc r the Cure of Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint, and all Blood, Liver, and Kidney diseases. Call on J. H, Hill & Son sole agent, and get a trial oottie tree, .barge size oUc. Coffee 71 is rendered more wholesome and palatable n insteaa or using mna or cream you use the Gail Borden Eagle Brand Condensed' -Milk, or if you prefer it unsweetened, then Borden's Peerless Rrand Evaporated Cream. . Japnes LlVe'Pellets cure bilious ness, sour stomach and all kidney and liver trouoies. email ana mild, sold by Robinson'Bros. Golds boro N. C, Pimples, blackneads, moles, lreckles tan and sunburifTemdvetlJby Johnsons Oriental Soap. Medicinal. qld by Rob inson Bros., Goldsboro, N. C. M. E Robinson Bros. Druggists, will tea you mat Jonnson s Magnetic Oil always gives satisfaction and the best Magnetic Nervine, the great restorative will cause you to sleepjike a child. Try it Sold by xtobinson Bros. GolA'caoqa rrt-K 1 - ' "Our baby wsijalcahtjfcve bought one bottle of Dr. Bull's coughSvrup, and weie well pleased with it. fflrdid the baby good, Wm, Thomas, McKeesport, Pa,'' : : : i I have' been using aal7ation Oil Soy a lame back, and tlUnk it is the belt remedy I hve eeVuedC.'IV Durliag, iCen tral ttve-.fVass?' . K't . - 1 "I have usee Salvation u for frosted feet andb&ckwhe aDd found it to be the best remedy on earth. M. Maggie Nf&der. Mr ' Pleasant Jegtagrelaaa 9o.iTa,'' w r u i: U u it t ' t t r I? r I: f i it j i i
Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 1, 1894, edition 1
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