Newspapers / Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, … / Aug. 29, 1895, edition 1 / Page 2
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The Jlpglts. H. B.PftRKER, Jr., Receiver. SCBSCKIPTION PRICE: In Advance One copy, one year $4.00 One copy, six months 2.00 One copy, throe months 1.00 One copy, one month 40 Weekly Akgus, one year $100 Entered at the Post Office at Golds boro, N. C. as Second-Class Matter. GOLDSBORO. N. C, AUG. 29, 1895 GOLUSliOKO'S TOBACCO WAREHOUSE It Should lSe Advertised: A Special Issue of The Argus. The tobacco warehouse is pro gressing finely and will soon be ready for business, but what will be the use unless the farmers are informed when it is to be opened and requested to bring their tobacco here. The sole use of the warehouse is for the sale of tobacco, then the main object is to get the greatest quantity of tobacco on this mar ket possible, and there is no better way to do this than by telling the people of it in some way, and we would suggest that the people of the town, the enterprizing busi ness men of the place put their heads and shoulders together, and get up a special issue of the Argus to be issued next Thurso day week; the same issue an swering for the daily and weekly and advertise the warehouse and the day on which it will open, which will be on the 17th of Sept., in order that the people in the country may hear and talk of the tobacco break, that is to be in Goldsboro and will pre pare to bring their tobacco here and at the same time prevent them from hailing it 30 or 33 miles to other towns. Te would surest at the same time that each businsss man in the town Xut in an advertisement in order to advertise his business, his town and the warehouse which means a great deal to every citi zen here. And at the same time help pay the expense of the soecial issue of the Argus. Now the advertising of the ware house is very impor tant and a picture of the ware house two-thirds finished can be taken, and a cut made from it, which will look very well. In the same issue the history of the lot upon which the ware house is built, can be given, con cerning the cork oak tree which stood there brought here by Col, Tom Kuffin while congressman, which had been given him by Mr Sanders, our minister to Spain at that time, and many other things of interest can be written up. Let us talk about our ware house and our town, and our people, and let strangers ee that we are proud of Goldsboro, and we intend to have a tobacco market here, and we assure you that success will surely follow, Now if we are to have a specia issue, let us go at it at once. We would be glad to hear from any one on this matter, A KISS HIS FORTUNE. A kiss played an important part in the life of the famous Belgian statesman, Frere-Orban, who is now seriously ill, at his country place. In his youth the future minister was a poor student, bearing the simple Frere. He had great difficulty in earning enough money to keep him at the university till he was ready to pass his exam ination in the department of law. The young man fell in love with a Fraulein Orban, the daughter of a wealthy and aristocratic family, who opposed his suit. "If you pass your examination well to-morrow," said Fraulein Orban, on the eve of the trial to her lover, "come to the thea ter and to the box in which I shall be sitting with my par ents." "Will they allow me?" asked the student. "I shall see to that," was the determined young women's an swer. Frere was successful, and en tered the box in the evening. happy but frightened. The pretty girl, as soon as he had crossed the threshold, stood up, rushed towards mm before a word was spoken, and kissed him heartily on the lips. The aston ished parents were soon inform ed of tbe significance of the kiss by the daughter. As many other people had seen the young snrl s action, the parents decided lo make the best of it, and ac cepted young Frere as a son-in- law on condition that he add Orban to his name. Phis he did as a matter of course ' and made it famous. PRIZE HOUSE OR NO PRIZE HOUSE. What are the citizens of Golds boro doing about prize houses? Soon, ere we know it, the time to open the warehouse will be upon us, and not a prize house to be had in the whole town. What is to become of the to bacco which is sold on the mar ket here and who is going to buy tobacco and have no where to store it? Is this of great im portance? Is it not time to quit offering suggestions and go to doing something which will ma terialize in a real bona fide prize house, We ask these few ques tions to remind you of the fact that prize houses must be had. Are you not willing t help and at the same time ask others to LIST OF LETTERS. -o- In I'ostottice at Goldsboro, August lltli MEN'S LIST. A Armstrong Jessie, Atkinson Nathan, B Best, Troy; Berden, Wil liam. P Fenderson. J. W. H Herring, E A, Herring W S Hill Junius,. M Mathews, Ashley. S Smith. A. C. W Womble, Hugh; Winkle, II B. LADIES LIST A Asheville, Mattie ; Auston, Crawford, Sallie. C Course, Mary: J S. D Dardeu, Wellie, Deans T. 11. H Hardy, Nancy. J Johnson, Minnie; Johnson, Hattie. H Hill, Dolly. K King, Mary B. P Pearsall, Hattie L. S Stanly, Kena. T Thompson, Mary Lide. W Whitaker, Florence. ADVERTISED PACKAGES. LADIES LIST, V Vernon, R S. S Sett'e. Judge. B Bell, W S. H Harris JJ H. M Melton, W C. Portions calling- for above letters will please say advertised and give date of same, the regulations require.that one cent bo paid on all advertised f otters. J. W. Bryan, P. M. A Hull Fight. Gillette, Colo., Aug. 24. Two sleek Hereford bulls were slaugh tered in the big arena here this afternoon before the large au dience that had assembled to witness a programme of sports, the nature of which they were not fully informed of in ad vance. They saw a genuine bull fight, out were not very highly edified, nor were they pleased with the spectacle. They probably admired more the nerve of Manager Wolfe, who pulled off the fight in the face of the sheriff and the AdjutantGen eral of Colorado who were pres ent to prevent the fight. After the performance, a constable ar rested Wolfe and his associates and escorted them to Cripple Creek to be tried before a justice of the peace, but really to pre vent Sheriff Bowers from making an arrest and carrying them off on the night train to Colorado Springs. GLEANIlNtJv Items of Interest Clipped from our State Exchanges. Two of the Wilmington police men have been dismisse for con duct unbecoming officers. The passensrer and freight de pot was burned at BessemerCitv Wednesday morning. It was struck by lightning. Loss 1,500. Bear in mind the big excur sion to Richmond, Va., Septem ber 12th, under the management of Mr. R. E. Pipkin. It will be a delightful trip. The Raleigh alderman, at their next meeting, will rerommend the issuing of 200.000 worth of bonds for the permanent im provement of the streets. Maxton Scottish Chief: Kellv Dock was arrested and in de fault of bail was committed to jail Tuesday for shooting Henry McJNair s wife last May, was a year ago. Charlotte News: Mrs. Agnes Kicaball Brown, wife of Mr. J. D. Brown, died at her home on West Eleventh street, at 7o'clock yesterday afternoon. She was years old. Last Wednesday, in Fayette ville, Mr. Joseph N. Starr was ordained By the bishop of the Diocese of E. Carolina, cRight Rev. Dr. Watson, as a deacon of the Protestant EpiscopaiChurch. The Morgan ton Herald warns its readers against new brandy, saying: "It is cheap now, plenti ful and vile as a combination of mcKory asnes, rotten pomace and verdigrese can well make it." NOTICE. Having qualified a8 Executor of the last will ana testament of Mark Mo- zingo, all persons indebted to the es tate of said JYlozingo, are notihed to make immediate payment, and all persons holding claims against said es tate are notified to present the same to the undersigned or his attornejs, Allen & Dortch, within twelve months from the date hereof. This Aug. 23rd, 1895. AV. T, Smith, Executor, IN COMMAND OF THE ARMADA. Bereral f the Things Which Philip II. Forgot. In the Armada the crusading entht slasm had reached its point and focus, says Froude in Longman Magazine. England was the stake to which the virgin, the daughter of Sion, was bound in captivity. Perseus had come at last In the person of the duke of Medina Sidonia, and with him all that was best and brightest in the countrymen of Cervantes, to break her bonds and re place her on her throne. They had Bailed into the channel in pious hope, with the blessed banner waving1 over their heads. To be the executor of the decrees of Providence is a lofty ambition, but men in a state of high emotion overlook the precautions which are not to be dis pensed with, even on the sublimest of errands. Don Quixote, when he set out to redress the wrongs of humanity, for got that a change of linen might be necessary and that he must take money with him to pay his hotel bills. Philip LL, in sending the Armada to England, and confident in supernatural protec tion, imagined an unresisted, triumphal procession. lie forgot that contractors might be rascals, that water four months in the casks in a hot climate turned putrid and that putrid water would poison his ships' companies, though his crews were companies of angels. .He forgot that the servants of the evil one might fight for their mistress after all and that he must send adequate supplies of powder, and, worst f orgetf ulness of all, that a great naval expedition required a leader who understood his business. Perseus, in the shape of the duke of Medina Sidonia, after a week of dis astrous battles, found himself at the end of it in an exposed roadstead, where he ought never to have been, nine tenths of his provisions thrown over board as unfit for food, his ammunition exhausted by the unforseen demands upon it, the seamen and soldiers har assed and dispirited, officers the whole week without sleep, and the enemy, who had hunted him from Plymouth to Calais, anchored within half a league of him. A WEIRD SEA TALE. The Uecp HTystery of an Abnndonnel Ship and Its Missing Crew. One of the strangest stories about an abandoned ship comes from the Indian ocean. In 1S23 the i?ritish corvette Lizard was cruising off Ceylon. A ship came in sight with all sail set, and making pocd rpeed through the water. The officers took a long look, and one said: "There is something wrong about that vessel. Iler crojack is loose and flapping, and there is no man at the wheel. We had better run down to her." This was done, says the New York World, and when near it was seen that the ship had no crew, as there was no answer to the hail. When boarded there were no marks of trouble until, on raising a sail that was spread over the mam hatch, the body of a man was found, lie had been ironed to the luck-bars of the hatch co er, and had apparently been dead a week. On going into the cabin the body of an elderly man was found, lie had been stabbed to death. On examining the log-book it was on record that the ship was Spanish, from the Fhillippines, and named El Frey Antonio; but, strangely, the last entry was six weeks past, and spoke of abandoning the ship at a point a thousand miles away. bound for Malaga, Spain. She was left on the road to China. A pitcher of water on the table was intact. Could the vessel have come this long journey without meeting a storm, and how had the dead men got here? They had not been dead six weeks, and both were Lascars. The Prey Antonio was taken into Madras, the Spanish government noti fied, and their answer only made the mystery deeper. The ship had sailed from Celebes more than a year before, with six Roman Catholic priests as passengers, bound for Spain, and had no Lascars among her crew. And this was all. And from that far away time until now the story of El Frey Antonio is one of the secrets of the deep. HOW TO FIGHT INDIANS. A Recipe Given for the Benefit of Blood thirsty Boys. Jack now took off his blue flannel jumper and overall trousers, fixed them artistically together and stuffed them out with the coarse grass growing'every- where around us. Then he held the dummy beyond the edge of a bowlder in such a way as to look as if the bulge of his own body were protruding, says Lippmcott s Magazine. The old, old ruse succeeded admir ably, for instantly there came from the cover, about thirty yards away, a hurt ling shower of arrows; and as soon as Tom and I had fired our decoy shots a squad of hideously painted Apaches sprang up, and with uplifted toma hawks and terrific yells, rushed toward us. But not for far. "Now, boys!" shouted Jack, and at the crack of our rifles the three fore most braves went headlong down. For a few seconds the others stood bewildered, and then, as one after an other dropped under the storm of re volver bullets, fired so rapidly as to seem like the work of a dozen enemies, the surviving warriors darted off to their ponies and scurried away. Napoleon's Death Mask. The death mask of Napoleon, which was taken immediately after the de mise of the conqueror at St. Helena by Dr. Automarehi, was obtained under great difficulties. -There was not an ounce of plaster of paris to be had on the island, therefore the doctor scoured the cliffs in every direction for a piece of gypsum. This he at last found and calcined until powdering was possible. On this account the work was very crude, but this notwithstanding he had an offer of six thousand pounds sterling (about thirty thousand dollars) for the cast before it was a month old. Sev eral of the replicas are now valued at twenty thousand dollars each. Laurinburg Exchange: A mad dog made his appearance inCale donia settlement a few days ago. After biting a hog and another dog it escaped and was next i i . . -. ueara irom in an attacK on a colored man on the road. The man caught the dog by the throat before he could do him more harm than tearing his clothes and killed him with his fist. Raleigh Daily Press: Friday u. j'. ioliowav, who runs on the Southern road as extra flasr man, happened to quite a painful accident at Princeton. He step ped ott the train, and slipped i and fell, breaking his left collar bone. He returned on, the 5 o'clock train Saturday afternoon, while his injury is quite painful it is not serious and he is getting on very well, 7 NOT A WHITE CITIZEN. A. Florida Town Wholly Owned and Con trolled by Colored People. Eatonville, Fla., is a place wherein no white person lives, an incorporated city owned, inhabited and governed exclusively by negroes, with a colored mayor and colored officers throughout. It is said to be, says the New York Sun, the only incorporated place inhabited and governed wholly by colored per sons in this country, and it is as law abiding a place as can be found in Florida. "We have a lock-up here," said the oolored postmaster and ex-mayor, J. E. Clark, "but it's the idlest building in the place. It is hardly used twice a year, for we have no saloons nor low places of any kind, and, as nearly every man owns his own home, we all have a personal interest in preserving order. Although Eatonville is a city in law and in name, having received a city charter from the legislature, with power to make and enforce its own laws, it is, in fact, a pretty little village of three or four hundred inhabitants, lying at the head of Lake Sybclia, in the center of Orange county, one mile from the railroad station at Maitland. No colored people live in Maitland and no white ones at Eatonville. There is the best of feeling between the two places. Maitland has work, and Eaton ville has men and women to do it. No place in Florida has more of a West Indian appearance than Eaton ville. All the traffic on wheels is done on two or three of the principal streets, and the others are perpetually green with a beautiful cirpet of Bermuda grass. 1 nese walks are lined with rows of white oaks, which make of every lane and avenue a shady bower from the be ginning of January till the last of De cember. The houses are all of wood and generally small, but every house stands in its own little grounds, with flowers blooming in front, and bananas, oranges, limes, lemons, pawpaws, guavas and other southern fruits blos soming or fruiting, and in the rear a vegetable garden that produces food at least ten months of the year. Close to the head of the lake stands the African Methodist Episcopal and Baptist churches, and in the center of the town Is the public school, with its colored teacher and forty or fifty pupils. The free masons and odd fellows have their own halls, and there is a labor aid society. John Ileiston is the present mayor, and the city limits include just one square mile. TREATMENT OF SUNSTROKE. New Electrical Device by Which Patients Are Eanlly Handled. Of late treatment in sunstroke cases has altered materially. The old treat ment included warm drinks and hot applications to the body, with a view of drawing the heat from the head, as well as iced applications to the head. Now, says the New York Sun, the patient is immersed m very cold water and kept so until the abnormal temperature de creases. Some remarkable cures have been effected by this method of treat ment. The new apparatus is designed for the transfer of the patient to the bath. It is worked entirely by elec tricitv. A sort of hammock suspended. not from the ends, but from the sides between iron bars, is the receptacle for the sufferer. The end of this hammock at which the head lies is higher than the other end. The bars are suspended by chains from wheeltrucks overhead, running on tracks, and both the motion backward and forward of the trucks and the raising or depressing of the hammock bv means of the chain are controlled by the electric apparatus. On the entrance of the patient the hammock is lowered and he is gently slid from the stretcher into it. A turn of the motor wheel lifts him, and another turn sends him moving along until he is directly over a tub contain ing water iced to the desired tempera ture. Then the machinery lowers him slowly into the tub until only his face remains above the water. Ice is packed around his head, and he is left there until his temicratupe is lowered to a point where it is deemed safe to take him out. Then the machinery gently lifts him again and transfers him to a pallet at the side of the room. If a see ond iced bath is not necessary the pa tient is then removed to one of the ad joining wards. This method of hand' ling is not only attended with less jar ring to the patient than any other, but it also saves the doctors and nurses much exhaustive work, particularly in the case of heavy patients. The appa ratus was designed by Dr. Lewis A Stimson, attending surgeon to the House of Relief. DWELLING EUILT OF TUBES. Remarkable Structure Put Cp by a Ger man Inventor Its Advantages. A German inventor has built a house of hollow tubes, whose advantages are he says, a constant temperature and in cidentally strencrth. durabilitv. com fort and beauty, says the New York Sun. He first put up a frame of water tubing, allowing continuous circula tion to a stream of water. Around this frame he put up his house in the or dinary way. The peculiarity is that all floors and ceilings are crossed and re crossed by the water pipes. The water, having passed through horizontal tubes under the floor and ceilings, passes through the vertical tubes until all have been gone through. In summer, fresh cool water circulates under pressure through the network of tube.R. cools off the walls, and, after having run its course, flows mnRirlprahl-D warmer than when it entered. In its course it has absorbed much heat, which it carries away. During the long and Bevere winter the water en terinr throuch the basement in At-h heated to nearly one hundred degrees and then forced through the tubing. Of course much of the heat is left all over the bouse, and at the outlet the temperature of the water is about forty degrees. The speed of the cir culation oi water can De regulated sc as to allow the fixing of a certain tern. perature, which is equal throughout th mummy. 1,000,000 People Wear WLDouglasSHoes HAND SEWED BEST IN THE PROCESS WORLD. $5.00 $4.oo S3.U0 $3.50 $2.50 $2.25 For Boys For Mem ailYontlLS Wear W- Doo(lu shoe and save from ftl.OO to SS.OO at pair. All Styles and Width.. The advance in leather hasincrcased (ha price ot other makes, but the quality and prices W. I.. 1ukI)m ataoe. remain t lie same. Take no substitute ; see that name and price is stamped on sole. W. I.. Xtouelaa.lBOCKTOK. Mass. Sold by ' J ' ' f HOOD & BIUTT, tFid- $2.50 Goldsboro, N. C, TOBACCO EXCURSION RICHMOND, SEPTEMBER 12th, 1895. Special Sale at the Stonewall Warehouse Sept. 13th. We have also sprurpH "THP qhi itucdm - . , that ClaV. and Will h avp tobacqo shipped to us, r . ouycao. vv e Mdvti every manuTacturer and buver l Jj i j i , , pledged to stand by us Aitn yirr1 nnroo Reduced Rates have SCHEDULE : GOLDSBORO, - - 7.30 A Pikeville, - - - - 7.40 Fremont, - - - 7.50 Black Creek, - - 8.02 Wilson, - - - - 8.15 Elm City, - - - - 8.28 Sharpsburg, - - - 8.33 Rocky Mount, - - - 8.45 Battleboro, - - - 9. 00 If you cannot get empty hogsheads in your section, order them from us at once Ship to COOPER, CREWS, BERGER CO., Proprietors Stonewall Warehouse. for Infants and Children, nnOTHERS, Do You Know that Paregorio, 0 XI II Bateman's Drops, Godfrey's Cordial, many so-called Soothing Syrups, and tnost remedies for children are composed of opium or morphine t P Tot Know that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons T Po Ton Know that In most countries ruggists are not permitted to ell narcotics without labeing them poisons t Po Ton Know that you should not permit any medicine to be give- your duU Unless you or your physician know of what it is composed f Po Ton Know that Castoria Is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a list of Its Ingredient's is published with every bottle f Po Ton Know that Castoria is the prescription of the famous Dr. Samuel Pitcher. That it has been in use for near'y thirty years, and that more Castoria Ib new sold than of all other remedies for children combined f Po Ton Know that the Patent Office Department of the United States, & id of other counti ies, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to use the word " Castoria " and its formula, and that to imitate them is a state prison offenie t Po ToX Know that one1 of the reasons for granting this government protection was because Castoria had been proven to be absolutely haxmlesaT Po To" Know that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished for 35 cents, or ore cent a dose f Po Ton Know that when possessed of this perfect preparation, our chndraa may be kept well, and that you may have unbroken rest f V oil, Plicae things are worth knowing. They are facte. TTlo fac-slmlle atgnatnre of Clhlldren Cry for Pitcher's Castoria Weil & WILL INAUGURATE ON- Wednesday, June 19th, '95. The greatest money saving sale of ready made clothing ever held in this city or elsewhere. SOO SUITS, Of the newest fabrics in genuine spun, Clays. Cassimeres, light, medium and dark shades for Men, Youths, Boys and Children in Regulars, Stouts, slims and extra sizes, trimmed and tailored equal to the finest mer chant tailor work, Suits manufactured to retail for 16, 18 and 20 dollars, FOR $12.00 Suits manufactured to retail for 12, 14and 15 dollars FOR 10.00 Suits manufactured to retail for 9, 10, and 11 dollars FOR $7.50. Suits manufactured to retail for 6, 7 and -8 dollars. FOR 5. Suits, mauufactuied to retail for 4, 5, and 6 dollars, FOR $3.50. Ia aaditiou we offer unusual cuts Shirts. Undei wear, Straw hats, Sale begins Wednesday, June 19, 9 a. m. H.WeilSBros ' www 1 1 luiui amn o rnnm ;- ThmU U without being crowded. We are determined ,i a,c men. uay. i ne ouyers are all on that day and will send the planters home been secured at the hotels M. ai is on every wrapper. Bros. English Cheviots, Scotch, Home in Gents' Furnishings, Negligee Neckwear and White Shirts. Vf., ma r-i-i mi-,, r vv rtncnuuoc. Tor . , j. 1 11. n , 1 for our customers. $2 50 ROUND TRIP ND SLEEPLESSNESS CURED. VIGOR OF MEN Easily, Quickly, Permanently Restored. MAGNETIC NERVINE oureaweaknesses. Nervous Debility and all the evilsTtrom early or later excesses, the results of overwirk, worry, sicknens, etc. Full strength. tone ana development given to every organ or portion of the body. Improvement immediately seen from the first box. Thousands of letters of praise on file in oar office. Can be carried in vest pocket. Bent by mail to any address on receiptof price. Onemonth'streatmentineach box. Price $1.00, 6 boxes, 5.00, with Written Guarantee to refund money if not cored. Send to us for the Genuine. Circulars Free. NOTICE. Having qualified as administrator of Ingram F. Grantham, deceased, laie of Wayne county, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the said deceased to exhibit them to the un dersigned, or his attorneys Allen & Dortch on or before the 5th day of July 896. or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All peraons in debted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This July 5, '95 GEO. H. GRANTHAM, Adm'r NOTICE. W. R. Hooks, et al., vs Turner Sims and wife Mary Sims. To the defendants: Turner Sims and wife Mary Sims; The defendants above named are hereby notified to appear at the next term of Wayne Superior Court to be held in Goldsboro, N. C, on Monday September 9th, 1895, and answer or demur to the complaint which has been filed herein or, judgment as prayed in the complaint will be enter ed against them. They are further notified that this action is brought by the plaintiffs to foreclose a mortgage upon certain real estate in Wayne County. North Caro lina, described in said mortgage, which was executed December 4th, 1889; and the relief demanded consists in con demning the said land to the payment of plaintiffs' claim of 5 S5.00, with in terest thereon at eight per cent, from December 4, 1889, and in having the said lands sold for the payment of the same and the costs of this action. C. F, Herring, July 31. 1S95. O. S. C NOTICE. Having qualified as administrator, o Silas W. Cox deceased, late of Wayne County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned, or his attorneys, Allen & Dortch, on or before the nrst day of June 1896, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. AH persons indebted to said estate will please make im mediate payment. Jesse J, Cox, Administrator. June 1, 1895. North Carolina, ) Superior Coui t, Wayne County, f April Term, 189 E. J. Best et al, vs J. C. Welch and H. B. Tilden H. B. Tilden, defendant above named will take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court of Wayne County,N.C, for the purpose of having cancelled and declared void a certain mortgage ex ecuted by E. J. Best and Wife to H.B. Tilden, upon certain lands in Lenoir County, North Carolina, and for ex cluding said defendant for any interest therein. And the said defendant will take fur ther notice that he is required to ap pear in the next term of the Superior Court of said county to be held at the Court House in Goldsboro said county, on the 2nd Monday in September next, and answer or demur to the complaint in said action, or the plaintiff will ap ply to the Court for the relief demand, cid in the complaint in the said action. This the 16th day of July, 1895. C. F. HERRING, C. S. C- A.11 Free. Those who have used Dr. King's New Discovery know its value, and those who have not, have now the opportunity to try it Free. Call on the advertised Druggist and get a Trial Bottle, Free. Send your name and address to H. E. Bucklen & Co., Chicago, and get a sam ple box of Dr. King's New Life Pills, Free, as well as a copy of Guide to Health and Household Instructor, Free. All of which is guaranteed to do you good and cost you nothing, J. H, Hill & Sons Dru ists. Physicians all over the world recom mend J apanese Pile euro. It has cured thousands will cure you. Sold under a positive guarantee. For sale by J. F. Miller & Son. Goldsboro, N. C. 6ENTLEMEN, Get the New, Novel Discovery, PIGEON MILK Cures Gonorrhoea and Gleet in 1 to 4 days. Its action is magical. Prevents stricture. AU com. plete. To be carried in Test pocket. Bent by mail in plain package, -pre-paid, on wceipt ox Vria-. $1.00 per bo For sale by J. F. Miller & Son Golds- poro, JM. g. i DUKE Cigarettes IGARfffEsi r W.Dufc ke Sons & Co. DURHAM, M.C. U.S.A. VA. i MADE FROM High Grade Tobacco AND ABSOLUTELY PURE Greatest on Earth, James M. Broks, Washington Ave.. St. Louis, Mo., makes afiidavit thai he suffered from Rheumatism for years, until persuaded to try Drummond's Lightning Remedy, and that by its use ha has been fully restored. He says the remedy is the greatest on earth. This is high praise, but fully warranted Dy otner miraculous cures. Jf you want to be cured, send $5 to the Drummond Medicine Co., 48, Maiden Lane, New York, and they will send to your ex press address two large bottles of their remedy. This treatment lasts one month, and will cure any ordinary case Agents Wanted. ITCHING SKIN A warm ba'.:i v. . '.'a C :IC J - SOAP, zvA r -v-.-'e r.riv. -ition CUTICURA, .:.. ' .cr-'it skin aiiv, will afford instant icl.tf, ; nr.t x-r. t and sleep, and point to : s;vd, economical, aiu permanent cv.rc "o'c the most distress! of itchir., bun. mjr, bleeding, sj:dy, ;nd ciustVd rkT i and scalp diseavs, lifter pii'-si ji?.ns, hospitals, and ail other meJiods fa.i. Cuticura works Wom,:!s. av.d its cures oi lo turinc. d:-''"i:rm-, humiliatinn; humors ai.: t:;e most wonderful ever recorded m this or any age. Cuticur Rgmkuibs r wAi :liroue!ioil lb? vorld. Price, OrriCfKA. 50c.; Soap. 25c: Rksoi vhnt . 5i. Potter Dkcg and Chkm. (Joki. So'e l'rop., P.osk:;. "'All about the Wood, Skin, Scalp, nud Hair," frc. PIM PLES, blackheads, rci nnd oily sVm pre- vcuicu ana curea uy t-UTICUKA aoA- MUSCULAR STRAINS, PAINS and weakness, back ache, weak kidney, rheumatism, and chest pains relieved ia one minute by the Cuci' lr Anil Atlantic & North GaolinaRR DALY EXEPT SUNDAY. PASSENGER. . J l J JU, 3 no jJm Relieved Cuticura Renicdh NO. 3. NO. 4. EASTBO'D. AVESTBO'U. LEAVE AK1UVE Golfisboro 3 20 p: m. 11 25 a. m. Best's 3 40 U 03 l'VK LaGrang-e 3 49 10 52 a m Falling Crook 4 00 10 42 Kinston 4 12 10 32 Caswell 4 21 10 20 Dover 4 2 10 12 Core Creek 4 54 10 00 Tuscarora 5 00 9 50 Clark's 5 31 9 42 Newborn 5 58 9 30 Riverdale 5 50 8 53 Croatan 5 53 8 49 Havelock 6 05 8 40 Newport 6 18 8 2i Wildwood 6 24 8 19 Atlantic 6 29 8 15 Morehead city 6 37 8 07 Daily except Sunday. EASTBOUND. NO. 1 MIXED Leave Goldsboro 8 20 a. m Kinston 10 34 Dover 11 15 Arv'e Nuwbern 1 p. m Daily except Sunday. WESTBOUND NO. 2 MIXED Leave Newborn 2 50 p. m. Dover 5 00 Kinston 6 00 Arrive Goldsboro 8 00 Train no. 4 connects with W. & W train Northbound leaving Goldsboro at 1:25 a.m., and with Southern Railway train west leaving Goldsboro 2:00 p. m. and with W, N, & N, at Newborn for Wilmington. Train no. 3 connects with Southern Railway train arriving at Goldsboro at 3 00 p. m., and withW. & W. train irom the North at 3:05 p. m. No 1 train also connects with W. N. & N. for Wil mington. S. L. DILL, Superindent. W. S. CEADWTCK Prefeident WATER REk T)UE. Semi-annual water rents are due at the office of the company July 1, 1895. Please call and set le promptly. H. P. DORTCH. Supt tub Old Rename Sam'1 60HN & SON. Request the public to visit their placa as we have reraodlod and cb anged it to a neat Ba zaar. o We also keep on hand in onr Mammoth Refrigerator, THE FINEST OF Veal. Mutton, Lamb and Beet- The best shirting calicoes going this week at 4c. per yard, at JQS. EDWARDS i
Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 29, 1895, edition 1
2
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