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-JfciSh, Jwnfli, -v-- i Iv 4 1 This Argus o'er the people's rights, Doth an eternal vigil keep Ko soothing- strains of Maia's sun, Can lull its hundred eyes to sleep" Vol. XVI. GOLJDSBORO, X. C THURSDAY DECEMBER 13. 1894 ISTO. 56 I ? ? -VO X UV I s! 5 U m , ; ; : : ; pj t cr 5 J i i. r I RELIGIOUS LIBERALITY. As the Atlanta Journal says, a beautiful illustration of re ligious liberty was given to Rich mond on Thanksgiving day. Dr. .Hoge, the Presbyterian preacher, at the invitation of Rabbi Colsech, addressed the congregation of Beth-Ababa synagogue. Dr. Hoge's address delighted all who heard it. Jew and Christian equally. He preached broad truths which all good men accept and upon which the virtue and welfare of the world depend. His remarks were based mainly on the event ful history and heroic deeds of the Jewish people but in this rec ord he found lessons which ap ply to all men and to all times. Dr. Hoge said that the Jewish people had cause to give thanks not only because of heir preservation through so many afflictions, but those who heard hiin should be especially thankful because they live in a land where they are free to wor ship God according to the dic tates of their own consciences. The sermon is said to have made a deep impression on all who heard it, and the example set by Rabbi Calesh and Dr. Hoge in arranging such an event cannot fail to produce good re sults. If we had more such re ligion the world would be much better. There is Nothing to rear. There is nothing in the cry that the country is in danger from communism. No nation can be in danger from comnunistic theories which is able to borrow at three per cent, interest fifty millions of dollars to borrow it, too, without notice, so to speak. There is a great deal of foolish talk in this free land ou the rights of the rich, and as to what ought to be done to prevent the wealth of the country from being concentrated in a few hands; but this talk represents so few per sons that it might well be ig nored. "The great heart of the nation," said Franklin Pierce, when Daniel . Webster had just died, "the great heart of the na tion beats heavily at the portals of the grave." So we say the great heart of the nation beats heavily when apparent wrongs are recounted in the hearing of the people; but there is not one man in a hundred in this fair land who is a communist or has any prejudice against rich men be cause tbev are rich. Richmond Dispateh. Possibilities in the Tenth. Savannah News. Congressman Black and Mr Tom Watson may find several big stumbling blocks in their way to a settlement of the tenth district contest after their own fashion. There appears to be a disposition in the district to kick at the way they are proceedim The people may conclude, if there must be another race, to bring in two fresh racers. Mr Watson's proposition seems to have been made in the belief that he is still the Populist candidate forCongress. and Mai. Black ap pears to have consented to the proposition is the understandin that he will continue to be the Democratic candidate after he has resigned his commission. As a matter of fact the election of November 6 put an end to the candidacy of each gentleman Mr. Watson was beaten; that cer tainlv put an end to his candi dacy. Mr. Black was elected, which, if there is any virtue m .... . -i -I 1- : election certmcates. enaea nis candidacy. Thus the election took the matter entirely out of the hands of the candidates. It is Major Black's priv'lege to re sign if he pleases. But when he resigns he will place himself along with Mr. Watson, in the N. C Baptists. Charlotte, Dec. G. The North Carolina Baptist Confer ence with 400 delegates present is meeting in Charlotte, and was called to order to-night. This morning and afternoon the pro visional convention of the Bap tist Young People of North Caro lina held meetings. Many speak ers told of the good work in their church of young people's soc ieties, and it "is probable that, with the approval of the Baptist Convention, a permanent State organization by the young peo ple will be affected. At the meeting of the State Convention to-night, Rev. R. H. Marsh, of Oxford, was elected President, and Rev. N. B. Broughton and Needham B. Cobb,-Recording Secretaries. - South Carolina. Columbia, Dec." 3. The Su preme Court begau hearing ar guments this morning on Sena tor M. C. Butler's petition to make permanent an injunction restraining the State Treasurer from paying election committees and managers at the recent elec tion, on the ground that the elec tion laws are unconstitutional. If this claim is upheld, it would of course make the Legislature which is to elect Senator Butler's successor and which is composed largely of friends of Gov. Till man, illegal. The Attorney Gen eral was first heard in return to the rule to show cause. He took the position that the election law constitutional. The Attorney- General also took the posi tion, and cited authorities to maintain it. that a beneficiary of the law and one who has acqui esced in the enforcement of a law, cannot bring an action allesrmfir the unconstitutionality of a law. One must allege special iu j ury to bring action. He cannot bring an abstract proposition for the Court to decide. Ho then alluded to the fact that Senator Butler was a beneficiary of the law, and that since 1882, when the law was passed, he had drawn 60,000 through the operation of the law. The hearing will be resumed to morrow. Thorough Inquiry into the Anne- man Barbarities. London, Dec. 6. Lord Kim of the Foreign berly, Secretary Office, was the chief guest at a dinner of the Eighty club this evening. He said in his speech that the Armenian atrocities had excited horror in every civilized country, and this feeling was shared fully by ihe British Goy ernment. Every effort was mak ing to secure an impartial and searching inquiry. The Foreign Office was in active correspon dence with the agents near the scene of the massacre and would not fail to perform its full duty to the country. An Electric Railroad. Baltimore, Dec. The El-kinson-Widener-Newbold syndi cate is about to begin the con struction of what they claim will be the finest electric trolley road in the world. It is the Washington and Laurel.and is ex pected to be in operation by April 1st, 1893. The road, it ;is estimated, will cost si, 000,000. It will be double tracked and laid with eighty pound steel rails. The trains will have a guaranteed speed of sixty miles per hour, the fastest schedule time for any electric or other railway. The Blood sig nal system will be used for the prevention of accidents. It is proposed to have the entire line in operation by midsummer. A Significant Letter. Washington, Dec. 6. The Republican Congressional Com mittee has sent out a significant letter in regard to contested seats in Congress. There are upwards of thirty districts wherein defeated Republicans have indicated their intention of filing contests. The committee has addressed to each of these contestants a statement notify ing him that he must not place any reliance on the large Re publican majority in the nextCon gress, but must rest his pros pects for success on the merits of the claimsjie advances. Prob able contestants were advised not to 'file their papers unless they were able to reinforce them with testimony, of the most un impeachable character. Is Your Life Worth Anything to others? Are there not persons dependent on your earnings for their support? Are they pro vided for in case of your death? The simplest and safest way of assuring their protection is life in surance. Business, pro fessiotcil, and working men generally, should in-. sure, for their brains or their muscles, arerthir capital and income too. Death stops them hoth. Insure in the - Equitable Life and death cannot stopyour salary or steal your capi- tal, and your loved ones will be safe from want. W. J. RODDEY, General Agent tor the Carolina, ROCK HILL, South Caroline. SCHOOL ROOM GYMNASTICS. A Paper Read Before the Wayne County Teachers' Association by Miss Mariana Cobb. If the aim and end of a child's school training is the harmoni ous development of his whole being, physical exercises must have a place in our daily pro gramme. We have all felt the necessity of change of position after long sitting. The reason is simple and not far to seek. Muscular life, as all other life, depends upon ac tivity. The nutrition of a muscle is furnished by the chemical change wrought in it by motion. Hence, to maintain a constant position amounts to the same thing or working the muscles without feeding them. It is far more tiring to hold a position than to exercise. Try this for yourselves and see. How long can you holdout your arm without moving it? Yet it can be exercised vigorously for a much longer time without fa tigue. Frequent change of xjosition is essential to comfort and to good health. In children, the neces sity for motion and change of position is greater than in grown people, because their delicate- bodies and unhardened, boney, frame-work are more sus cept:ble 1o the bad influences of improper physical conditions. Then, too, they are growing, and there is need for more fre quent motion because activity is not only essential to muscular health, but is the first condition of growth. In the school room the teacher rarely suffers from ihe tired feeling which comes after pro longed sitting, her work being such, as to keep her physically as wen us uitsiiicu.iy uli, aiiu. she often fails to appreciate the cause of he annoying restless Tips' nmnnr her rmnils. This rest lessness may be easily dissipated j Change of position will bring rest and relief. Let the children stand and sing a verse or two of some bright song. They will be much less wrigglesome when they take their seats, and much more attentive to their work, for their minds will no longer be distracted by fidgety feelings ar.d aching muscles. Every teacher who has tried it recognizes the value of such rest movement. If the bad effects of continued sitting were the only ills with which we had to contend, the child might be kept comfortable and in a healthy physical state with very little trouble or con sideration on the part of tne teacher. But this is not so. There are other and more ser ious evils resulting from poor ventilation and injurious posi-i tions evils which it is of the gravest importance that we at tempt to counteract. Ordinarily, at its desk, a child's chest is contracted, r The heart and lungs are compressed and lack room in which to perform their proper functions, the cir culation becomes sluggish, and the brain grows clouded. In study, and in recitation, constant demands are made upon the brain, which requires a greater amount of blood. This blood the retarded circulation fails to carry off rapidly enough, and the brain becomes over-filled. The result is congestion usually too slight for immediate ill effects beyond a clouded mind and a probable headache; but if recurring day ! after day, surely resulting in permanent injury to health and intellect. To counteract these bad effects, vigorous exercise is necessary. Exercise that will correct faulty positions, quicken the respira tion and circulation, and "brush the cobwebs" out of the child's brain by drawing off some of the unnecessary blood accumulated there. r ive or ten minutes wiii be . a sufficient length of time to devote to such exercises. With little children, it is better not to have a stated period, tor exercises, but to. have the rest movements as frequent and va ried as possible, relying largely upon their ikiy impulse. I find the following very happy in its effects when it is not desir able to have the ctiildren rise from their seats. We call it fo. ing to sleep. The children stretch their hands over-head, and lot their fingers and hands, arms, eyes, heads, and their bodies, "goto sleep." After a second or two of rest on the desk, they ivake up, first the body, ftheh the head, then the eyes, and finally their hand's, shaking them vigor ously overhead, in front, and at sides. Rest movements should be given to children of all sizes whenever, their, restlessness in dicates the necessity . for them. Thesse movements should be very brief they need not - take up more than a minute at a time. And here let me say to those wlio would urge that they have not thetima for such daily exer cises, that" the time so employed is time gained rather than time lost. The children are waked up, their circulation is quickened, their tired muscles relieved, and they are in a better condition physically and mentally for work. If there is any loss in the quan tity, it will be more than made up in the quality of work, which is unfailingly better after such ex ercises. The regular exercise, to. be most effective for good, should be given at or near the middle period of the day, since the rest lessness of the children reaches a sort of climax at that time. HE SUGAR TAX IN A I E. 1 HE SEN- As the Philadelphia Times well says, if Senator Quay will stick to his resolution to strike out the one-eighth cent a pound differen tial duty on refined sugar, he may succeed, if not in correcting an error of the new tariff, at leasL in causing his fellow Scna ators upon both sides a good deal of embarrassment. This resolution is in accordance with the recommendation of the President. If adopted, it would leave the . forty per cent, ad valorem duty on sugar, which is necessary for revenue, and remove an unnecessary addi tional protective duty which is merely a bounty to the Sugar Trust. . Senator Quay is clear-headed enough to see that the talk about free sugar is mere tomfool ery. He had the courage to vot against free sugar in the last see sion, it being really his vote that saved the duty Not only is tins aa valorem duty necessary, but it is all that is necessary. It gives the refiners sufficient pro tection while yielding the gov ernment an important revenue, and with the removal of the ad ditional specific taxes, the sugar schedule would be resonably se cure from change for a long time to come. This is the plain truth of the matter, considered purely in the public interest. All the chatter about the Sugar Trust and about free sugar is mere buncombe, and every Senator, Republican or Democrat, ought to be made to face the situation and put him self plainly upon Record. j This is about the only amend ment to the Wilson bill except the removal of the duty on coal and iron ore that it is necessary o consider. It is doubtful if even these can be passed, but they ought to be put to a vote in the Senate. Otherwise the tariff will stand, with no more than some uncontested amendments in detail, no' only through this but through the next Congress, and by that time nobody will propose any general changes in the tariff policy of the country, except- in the way of a further reduction of duties. Let Democracjr take cour age and gaforward. FooT-ballers should never lose their heads during or after a game, whatever they may do with their hair in the latter pe riod. A vital question in New York is whether the Tiger being laid out, they shall lay out reforms on lines of the Piatt stripe. Ths German Socialists have begun the present session of the Reichstag with a coup de the atre which is likely to leave i premanent mark of hostility be tween themselves and the loyal members throughout the year, To comment upon the bad taste of their proceeding in to recognize the Emperor would of course be absurd, as the dec laration of disloyalty was studied and intentional. xettliey may find that to announce their personal - dislike to the mon arch by a proceeding which involved a breach of manners was poor politics. If th$ Social Democrats are likely to gain by the pressing of the trials for lese majeste they are also likely to lose by any clumsiness in an at tempt to egg the government on to prosecute. -However, this is not the important point: the im portant point is that if.both sides are ready for fight, and the gov ernment certainly is, a crisis may be precipitated at any moment over the general antagonism bJ mceu sotiJiUBHi a Liu. iuj jjei iiiiiui, and" rioting will probably happen, in "addition to parliamentary rows. . THE BEAUTIFUL LIGHT. I've traveled many a weary league, Through many a foreign land; Across the Avares of a misty sea. O'er wastes of burning sand; I've sought for beauty in the North, And under the Southern skies But there's nothing fairer on earth I trow Than the light in my dear love's eyes The beautiful light, God bless the sight! The light in my dear love's eyes. The burdens of life press hard and fast, The way grows dark and drear, My purpose flags, my eyes grow dim, Aiy heart is filled with fear But a light breaks through, the sky is bright. All clear my pathway lies, For a love 6hines forth to strengthen me, In the light of my dear love's eyes The beautiful light, God bless the sight! The light in my dear e's eyes. This light gleams ever before mine A beacon so strong and true, To warn, to cheer, to urge me on In the work I have to do And so when life at last is o'er. And my spirit upward flies, May a ray stream down to greet me then From the light iu my dear love's eyes The beautiful light, God bless the sight! The light in my dear love's eyes. Chicago Inter-Oceau. FRESH FUN. TIIK iSHAUl' AND WITTY SAYING OF THK PIIESS MEN. Politician Where did you get all those shovels? Contractor Bought remof the city for 10 cents apiece. They were sold for want of use, you know. Politician I see. What are you going to do with them? Contractor Wait a few weeks until they are needed again, and then rent them to the city for 10 cents a day. New York Week ly. M iss Kitty Mamma, will we know folks in heaven, same &s we do here? Mamma I think there is no doubt of that, my dear. Miss Kitty Will I know Jane Gopplins? Mamma Who is Jane Gopplins? Miss Kitty She's the big freckled girl that lives over the grocery store down the street. Mamma If you are both good en ougn to go to ueaven, my dear, you will certainly know her. Miss Kitty (after some moments of profound cogitation) I won't have to speak to her, will I, niamma? Chicago Tribune. Judge to Witness Now, madam, want you to distinctly understand that hearsay is not evidence. How old are you? Witness I don't know, Judge. Judge Don't know? Witness I have no evidence of my age. Judge What do you mean? lam told that l am so many years old, Judge, but it's only hear say, unci you Know tnat isn t evi deuce. Mrs. Orsniann What on earth do you suppose the Sultan of Turkey has his horses fed dried currants for? Mr Orsmann To give them sand, I suppose. Anything else you want to know? Mrs. Closehall Do you know that I've induced Mr. Closeholl to give up cigars? Dovetail Really? Why, I've known him for ten years and I never saw hini g'.TJ up one yet. chamberlain's Bye and Skin Ointment Is unequalled for Eczema, Tetter, Salt- Rheum, Scald Head, Sore Nipples, Chapped Hands, Itching Piles, Burns, Frost Bites, Chronic Sore Eyes and Granulated Eye Lids. not sale Dy druggists at zo cents per box. TO HORS3S OWNES3. For putting a horse in a fine healthy con dition try Dr. lady's Condition Irowders. They tone up the system, aid digestion, cure loss of appetite, relieve constipation, correct kidney disorders and destroy worms, giving new life to an old or over-worked horse. 25 cents per package. For sale by druggist PROTECTION LABOR'S ENEMY. As the Florida Times-Union says, the closing down of the sugar refineries ought to be a sur prize to those who have de nounced the Democratic tariff as a surrender to the Sugar Trust, but it is by no means certain tnat men wno consider as a sur render to the trust a reduction of the protection it received from one-half to one-eighth of a cent per pound, could be sur prised at anything. The sugar rust may well paraphrase Pyrrhus' remark, and say of the so-called Democratic surrender: A few more snr renders to us of this kind and we arc undone." The Sugar TrusV under the McKinley bill, enjoyed a pro tection of one-half cent per pound on all sugars it refined. he Democratic tariff reduced this to one-eighth of a cent. To call such a reduction a surrender to the trust is silly in the ex- reme, and yet the Democrats would have done better if they had abolished the differential en tirely and taken from the Sugar Trust all its protection. It should take from every trust all its protection. - It would have car- ied ont its pledges by taking from every industry all its pro tection, except such as was nec essarily incident to a tariff for revenue. When the Democratic party, in control of the government, succeeds in carryinjr out its pledges to the letter, and en tirely overthrowing protection, the industries of the country will "be placed on a solid basis. As Ion" as we manufacture for narrow market, shut-downs will follow over-production, and abor will be thrown out of em ployment, w nen protection is abolished the world will be our market. Over-production will be almost impossible, and labor will find steady employment. As the Richmond State says Boss McKane, who is now a New York convict, doubtless thinks he is a badly used man. All that money and lawyers could do for him has been done, but in each instance the law has come in to interfere and he must serve out lis sentence. McKane, according to the reports, is of the belie that he is a badly used man. He was what he considered loyal to his party and used his power as a party boss. That he was su preme he considered due to his ability as a leader. There have been other leaders who have been supreme. Why should not he be also? We have no doubt that Mc Kane sincerely thinks that he has been wronged a victim of in justice. His conscience is doubt less, pretty clear. He belongs to the class of men of bluntest sen sibilities. His associations and training were such as to give him the idea that political daring of his kind was not the repiehen- sible daring of the burglar. Me Kane was a political boss. He had the exalted idea of the power of the political boss, and deliberat ely and openly disobeyed the law of the land. He had done so be fore without harm to himself, had known other bosses to be equally successful, and assumed that, as before, all the indigna tion would blow over. This is a common assumption of men of McKane's class. But the law has at last educated them, McKane, because of his want of a clear ap prehension of right and wrong in this instance, is t6 be pitied. but the interests of justice have been served by his imprisonment, CASTORIA is truly a marveloe thing for children. Doctors prescribu it, medical journals recommend it and more than a million mothers are using it in place of paregoric, Bateman's Drons. so-called soothinar sprups and othor narcotic and stupefying remedies. Casoria is the quickest thing to regu ate the stomach and bowels and give hn.thv sleep the world has ever seen, It is pleasant to the taste and absolute ly harmless- it relieves constipation, quiets pain, cures diarrhoea and wind colic, allays feverishness, destroys worms, and prevents convulsions, sooth es the child and gives it refreshing and natural sleep. Castona is the ch DSnacea the mother's friend. ' Castoria is put up in one-size bottles onlv. It is not sold in bulk. Don't al low anj- one to sell you anything else on the plea'or promise that it is "Must as txd" and "will answer every purpose, mo morphine or opium in Dr. Miles' F AM Puxs. curb Ail rain, "uue cent a dose. ONE HUNDRED Y EARS AGO. Col." Sam Sin-; son's Home life. Cor. Charlotte News. The oldest copy to be found in the State, of a North Carolina almanac, is perhaps, the one in our State library. It was printed and sold by Abram Hodges, of Halifax town, in the year 195, just one hundred years ago sup posing it to have been issued a month or so in advance of the incoming j'ear, as almanacs are now. Its title on its first page is "Hodges North Carolina Al manac," and is calculated for the latitude and longitude of North Carolina,' It is a very small book only 4 x 6 inches of 32 pages and is in a good state of preservation. All the State information it contains is the militia law of that day and the time of holding the Supreme Courts of law and equity, jcounty courts, and circuit and district ?s pe- courts of the United States. number of counties at that p riod was 58 showing that 38 counties have bee:! formed since that day. The time of holding Mecklenburg county courts was on the 4th Monday of January, April andOctober. As one feature of all almanacs is its ancedotes, it is remarkable that there is not an anecdote or joke in it. Con sidering this fact the philoso phic historian might conclude that 1795 was a serious time. This idea is somewhat strength ened by another fact, that it con tains the manual of arms for drilling military companies, an evidence that the martial spirit born of the stormy days of Re volutionary war was biill alive. The military gravity of its pages is however, relieved by a serio comic poem running through the top of some of its pages, en titled "The Lion and the Tarra- pin," written by some citizen of Halifax, July, 1793, who signs himself "Uolumbus. It is a narrative of a combat between a caged lion wnicn an iioenan is exhibiting in the eastern towns of the State and a swamp terra pin upn a wager of one hun dred dollars. It is needless al most to say that in the poem the monarch of the swamp comes off the victor. There are several comparisons and allusions to the mythic heroes of antiquity woven in the poem which indicates that the author was familiar with the classic literature of Greece and Rome. The almanac is interleaved, that is, it originally had a blank page opposite each monthly cal endar for the keeping of a diary or other memoranda. These leaves are all written over with dated incidents in the family, business, personal life of the owner, who, from the written name and date across the face of the first page was one Samuel Simpson, and in a note on very stiff paper forming a double cover to the book the address is Col. Samuel Simpson. From the items written on the inter leaves it is clear that he was a planter who owned a farm and fishery in one of the eastern counties. It is also evident that te was a man of family, owned nesrros, grew wheat, corn and flax, raised stock, seined fish, made and sold lumber and shin gles, travelled a good deal to va rious points in the eastern sec tion and was often sick with ma laria fever. The tollowmg are some of the memoranda: Feb. lo. 1 went to Italeisrh: drd, ar rived at Raleigh, 6th, left Ra leisrh for Kayetteville, loth ar rived at home, 29th taken sick, 24th planted English peas, 26th hauled seine, very few tish, fresh rises fast. As showing that our eastern farmers, at that day raised their own meat, I give the following: December 3rd killed hogs, 89 head, salted down 2,78 pounds. To this must be added from the record of a few weeks before; 17 hogs, weight making a total of 4,o37 pounds of hog meat for the year. There are many other items of marriages, deaths, quiltings, corn shuckings, elections, going to courts, visiting neighbors. sowing and reaping, the weather, etc., but to give any of them would be extending this article at too great length. I close with the remark that it would be a good idea tor every fofmot a.nn hncinncc man and keep a record of his home and ausiness me as 01. oamuei Simpson has done, who though long ago "passed over the river," yet speaketh to this generation, of times and seasons, a hundred years ago in this old copy of Hodges North Carolina Alma nac. Jas. H. Enniss. Editor and Publisher of Turner's N. C. Almanac. . . Raleigh,, Dec. 5th, 1894. WANTED: A position by a first class colored boy, 18 years old, to wait around house and yard. Uool at this office. referoncos. Apply J fRQYALISSffilJ I tip POWDER Absolutely Pure.' A cream of tartar baking pow dcr. Highest of all in leavening strength. Latest U. S. Gov meri t Food Report. ROY AL BAKING POWDER CO. 10(5 Wall st.. N. Y. "Oh, these Advertisements Tire me." Some advertisements do have that tendency. So do some reonle. and some books. Nevertheless bright peopl tisinsr understand that the adver- columns now-a-days carry valuable information about tilings new and rood Such is Cottolene The New Vegetable Shortening Common sense teaches that a pure vegetable product must be more wholesome than hog's grease. Cottolene is part cotton seed oil and part beef suet, refined and purified by the most effective process known. It is more economical than lard for every use, ana imparts a delicate, palatable flavor to food. Ask your grocer fcr the Genuine COTTO lene. Made only by N. K. FAIRBANK & CO., CHICAGO and ST. LOUIS. Right Arm Paralyzedl Saved from St. Vitus Dance. "Our daughter. Blanche, now fif teen yeara of age, had been terribly afflicted with nervousness, and had lost the entire use of her right arm.! We feared St. Vitus dance, and tried the best physicians, with no benefit. She has taken three bottles of Dr.1 Miles' Nervine and has gained 33J pounds. Her nervousness and symp-J tomsof St. Vitus dance are entirely, gone, she attends school regularly,! and has recovered complete use ot, her arm, her appetite is splendid.' MRS. B. K. BULLOCK, Brighton. K. T.' Qr Miles' Nervine Cures? ' Dr. Miles Nervine la sold on a posit! t guarantee that tne first Dottle will benefit. All drusgists sell it at tl, ft bottles for (5, or it -will bo 6ent, prepaid, on receipt of price, by the Dr. HUes Medical Co., Elkhart, lnL TO MARKET PfYTRONS: I desire to announce to my pa trons.and th3 pablic generally, that in order to better accom modate the extensive trade with which 1 have boen so lib erally favored, I have opened a second market a branch of my Arlington Market in the new stand beside tho Law building on walnut stroet, which will be always suppliod witn tne hnest 01 J'Q'jOU fX r:YjC. PORK ftND SAUSAGE DRESSED POULTRY, ETC. , Tho satos at this branch mar ket will bo ABSOU'TELY for cash. My book customers are requested to send their credit orders to my Arlington market, where alone my books will bo kept, i( - Respectfully, H. tJ. HAM Buy your fruits, fine candies and confectioneries from Chamberlain. Higgins & Co. Thoy are headquarters ana navetuu lowest t rices. fi hi t. - L 'f:J V M J 1 1 -
Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 13, 1894, edition 1
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