This Akgus o'er the people's rights, Doth an eternal vigil keep No soothing strains of Maia's son, Can lull its hundred eyes to sleep' 1 :vn. GOIiDSBORO, N. C, THURSDAY JUNE lO. 1897. NO 18 L, BRIEFS. to shake things up, thciuake that is, one , do any harm. -w city ordinances arc now und.s of the printers, and ar the first ot tho coming jarle A. Humphrey is at aia from an extended .. ii trip as far out as the Iudian Territory. The men and women of Golds boro should never . weary in preaching and practicing "Pat ronize IIom Institutions." That man who conseuts to find auy degree of satisfaction in in. sipid misdoings and shabby achievements, has oniy a peri Ions margin between himself and positive bad conduct and s' rrow We should all aim for the best. ' ' The Geldslwro O uting Club' ' is the latest social combination among our young people. Its purpose, as its name indicates, is to have "outings" from time to time during the vacation season for the pleasure of its members and friends. A great mind is responsible for tbis: "A man conscious of enthusiasm for worthy aims is sustained under petty hostilities by the memory of great workers, who had to fight their way not without wounds, and who hover in ais mind as patronssaiuts, in visibly helping." The scheme on foot to organize a baseball club, which was pub lished in The Argus one day last week, eems to have struck a popular chord. If the ardent ad vocates will wait on orr :. tzt n y no doubt they will i; - ioi;.l ber- ally and we can l.ave tue cvxo. i Mn. W. 11. Hinnant, the effit-l ient assistant road aipster of thj A. ii N. C. R. K., viii have to change his residence from this city to owbern, in order to comply with instructions from the new management of that road which requires him to be close at hand when his services are needed in emergency cases. The "good fellow," the most agreeable man, is not always, in deed is seldom, fittest for the accomplishment cf great tasks. To be very popular is almost a sure indication of serious weak ness somewhere in a man. The boy's ambition should be to stand tho test when he becomes a man of such examination as "Is he straight?" "Is lie earnest?" "Is he true?" Character is the crown every one should strive for. It can be won by every honest worker. Ve had the pleasure of a bus iness call Friday from Mr. J. B. Brooks, representing the ire nowned B. B. Medecine Corns pany. He is well known to the newspaper fraternity, as he has been ' 'on the road" for years, and is always greeted cordially by the "craft" on his regular rounds. He has left his large dis play card in the big show win dow of J. H. Hill & Son's corner drug store and it makes all laugh who look upon it, and is very enticing to the average cit izen to buy a bottle of "B. B." The season for marketing to bacco will soon be hero again and nothing has been said or done to secure additional accommodations in the way of prize houses. In this matter tho Goldsboro market is deficient, and it will never be what it was intended tn make it &.bz$, the deficiency is remedied. Perhaps our warehouses handled all the tobacco they wanted last season and are contented with their share of business . If this bo so, we will not go forward this season, and if we do not go forward we will certainly go backward. . As the Snow Hill Rail road question was defeated in Greene county, it is now use- less for Goldsboro to vote or- that question, and no douht the elec tion will be called off. This un expected condition of afiairs is just what a great many in this city would have it. There is a spirit of city improvement that has taken possession of a large number of our people, and they now want the city administration to issue bonds for an amount large enough to make considerable street improvements, and to put down a system of sewerage and purchase the water works. All these things must come if we would keep up the forward march that was begun several years ago ' and that has brought our city to its present broad proportions. An opportunity is offered the present city administration - to . win fame for themselves, v Absolutely Pure. Celebrated "or its great leavenin? strength and heatMulness. Assures the food against alum and all forms of adul t oration common to the cheap brands Royal Baking Powdeii Co., New York. Scheme to Corner Whiskey. New York, June 4. The Jour nal and Advertiser to-morrow will say; For two hours yester day afternoon five telegraph in struments ticked oft a private message of over 10,000 words from Louisville to New York cap italists, a message involving a gi gantic scheme to corner two thirds of the whiskey in theUnited States. They are contemplating the formation of a pool to buy up 80,000,000 gallons of whiskey now in bond in the State of Ken tucky. The plan necessarily implies ad vancing the price of whiskey. Among the other reasons urged is the statement that the banks, which have loaned money on the liquor hold in bond, are afraid of a decline in price whic h will af fect the raciKj they 3 already loaned. Tho plan h .aitl to have orig inated with Samuel LI. Rice, President of t-he American Spirits Manufacturing Company, which succeeded the old whiskey trust. Julius S. Bache & Co., and Vice President of the American Spirits Manufacturing Company, admit ted yesterday that such a mes sage had been received in this city . The price which the syndicate would have to pay, would range from 39 cts. to 2,50 per gallon, the average cost, it is believed to be about 00 cts. At this rate the amount of rv;iioy' required to carry this stock of whiskey would be nearlv 50,000.000. Tats JOHNSON'S CHILL a FEVER TONIC. -f A TENDER IIEAKTED JUDGE. The Humane Sitting of Judge Robinson is Wilson Editor Gold to Deliver Address at A and M College Uriel's Raleigh News-Obisorver. Wilson, N. C,, June 2 (Spe cial) (J ur Superior court is in session, his Honor,Judge Robin sou presiding. The charge to the grand jury was indeed an able and masterly one, and couched ia ornate and most beautiful language, thus showing" not only an able and profound jurist, but- a thrilling speaker and an aca complished gentleman. His ruls ings have been just and humane, and all speak in warmest terms of praise of the genial and sunny spirited and tenderhearted Judge Robinson. A large number of trivial eases have been disposed of, and several persons have been sent to prison. Charles Ccwan was arraigned this morning for burglary, and his case will come off on Friday. The White Caps case, about which so much has been said and written will come ap tomorrow. ureal interest hangs around this case, as quite a number of the citiz ;ns of Lu cama section are implicated therein, and any amount of bad feeling has been generated.- Charles W. Gold, one of the able editors of that excellent pa-, per, the Wilson Times, will de liver the alumni address at the A. and M. Collegeon Tuesday next. Mr. Gold graduated at that institution iu 185 with highest honors and with a most brilliant record, He is highly accom- plished and brilliantly polished, and being as he is a man of brains and of culture he will de liver an able and thoughtful and charming and most edifying ad dress. Considerable improvements have been made at the popular admirably kept Eikwood Inn, and it is now a most comfortable and delightful resort. Good beds, neat and comfortable, with a good table laden with appetizing viands, make the Eikwood a de Jightful stopping place, TEACHERS' ASSEMBLY. Goldsboro Has Prominent I'lace on the Programme. At the forthcoming session of tho North Carolina Teachers' As sembly, it is with no little pride The A kg us notes the prominent place on the programme given to teachers of our Graded School. Superintendent Foust will de-livw-ad-iscoursc on "J 'Economy of Time in Teaching and a Conse quent Enrichment of the School Course." Mrs. M. O. Humphrey has charge of the subject "of Prima ry Teaching" for the entire As sembly, which is the most res ponsible and arduous task of any on the programme; but it is in experienced and competent hands, as Mrs. Humphrey is rec ognized throughout the State as the best Primary teacher in the profession Miss Minnie Slocumb, who is recognized as one of the most proficient teachers in the State, has charge of "Outline of Work in Vertical writing." . Johnson's Chill and Fe ver Tonic Is a ONE-DAY Cure. It cures the most stubborn case of fever in 24 Hours, ELECT GOOD MEN. A Circular Letter From Super mtendeut 01 Instruction mo bane. Raleigh, N . C . , June 4. State Superintendent of Public Instruc tion Mebane to-day issued the f ol lo'vifig circular letter: "To those whoso duty it is to elect cour.ty boards of educa tion : "I wish to repeat what I hac . said in a circular letter of ffio time ago. It is this: I am exceeding ly anxious that pol itics will have nothing to do with the selection of members of the county boards of education next Monday. We cannot expect to make progresss in our public school work unless we have quali fied, broad, liberal-minded men, and at the same time men who have courage to do their whole dcty in the interest of public schools regardless of neighbor hood quarrels, and factions. I want men who will help me in the great work of public educa tion. I care not what political party or church they may repre sent. Much, yes, very much dek pends upon our "bounty board of education. I have expressed my desire for good men, time and again- and I am well aware that every county in the State has good men, and now if those whose duty it is to select these do not do their duty, I can feel that I have done my duty ia try ing to secure good men . on our county boards of education." Take JOHNSON'S CHILL St FEVER TONIC. Respite For Durant. San Francisco, June 4. The attorneys for Theodore Durrant again appeared before JaJge Gil berf, in the United States Circuit Court yesterday and applied for a writ of supersedeas for the pur pose of staying the execution of sentence, but this was denied by the court.- An application for leave to appeal from this decision to the Supreme Court, of the United States was then granted. Although it is an open question whether, in view of the denial of the writ of supersedeas, the order of the court acts as a slay of pro ceedings Attorney General Fitz gerald told Warden Hale to take no action in tho premises pending the appeal. As the United States Supreme Court does hot meet again until October next, this virtually means a respite tor six months at least. Lump In Mq Breast Cured MRS. PERSON-- Six or seven years ago I bad a lump op knot to come in my breast, which made it swell so much that it became bo hard I could not make a dent in the broast. It was very painful and caused me to sutler so much that some nights I could hardly turn in bed or rest Nothing did me any good and I was very uneasy, not knowing how it would terminate. I used one half dozen bot tles of Mrs. Joe Person's Iiemedv. without storming on it, and it made a perfect cvre of me. , The lump disap peared gradually ana 1 nave never had any trouble from it since. LUCIE E. GASKINS. Windsor, N. C, May 17. '97. - All druggists in tMs city and J it, fcajmtn at ut. uiive. - ... - llii Wnat wonder it Is that some women are so heedless about the things that con cern them - most. They endure ail sorts of pain and misery with "Care lessness which would never be possiblt- if they 'realized the consequences. Comoarativelv few women understand that when they neglect their health because they are too busy or overworked or their minds are taken up with other concerns, that they are balancing on the edge of a fatal precipice. Any weakness or dis ease of woman's special organism is no trifling matter. A woman who through indifference neglects these troubles is laying the foiin dation for life-long wretchedness. A modest woman naturally recoils from the mortifying OTdeal of examinations and local treatment which doctors insist upon. But there" is no necessity for any such re- pugnant alternative. Dr. Pierce's Favorite" Prescription cures these delicate complaints positively and completely. It is a medicine devised for this particular purpose by one of the most eminent of living spe .-ialists in woman's diseases. Dr. Pierce has been for nearly 50 years chief consulting physician of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, of Buffalo, N. Y. During this time he has received fully ninety thousand letters from women who have been cured bv the " Favorite Prescription.-" Some o . these letters are printed by permission in one chapter of Dr. Pierce's great thousand-page book, "The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser." It contain advice and suggestions for self treatment which every woman ought to read. More than half a million copies have been sold at each. An absolutely free edition in paper covers will be sent for a limited time to anyone sending ai one-cent stamps to pay the cost of mailing only. Ad dress World's Dispensary Medical Associa tion, Buffalo, N. Y. For a handsome cloth bound copy send 31 stamp. STORM. IN TEXAS. Crops Were Damaged and Build ings Torn From Their Foun dations. Dallas, Tex., June 4. A severe wind and rain storm prevailed throughout a good portion of Texas yesterday. The wheut and oats crops are just about ripe for harvesting, and fears are expressed from alt sources that these crops have - been greatly damaged, though it is as yet impossible to estimate the extent of the injury done. At Fort Worth tho wind was unusually severe in a portion of tho city. Somo twenty resi dences in two wards were blown from their foundations, or other wise damuged, besides injury, to barns, sheds, and small store buildings. .One church, was struck by lightning and considerably torn up. The rain was so heavy that street car traffic was stopped, cel lars Hooded, and the streets im passable for a time . At Arlington, sixieen miles east of Fort Worth, a dozen or more houses were blown off then blocks or unroofed, and a number of houses on. the prairie for sev eral miles around the town shared a like fate . The Justice of the Pace of the precinct, S. A. Las- 1 rose were in a SOUTHERN MANNERS. ater, and" L. J. tenemeuthouse to atoms, both which was men beinj; blown badly hurt, the former, it. is feared, fa t dly. At Grand Prairie, four miles east of Arlington, six houses, in cluding two store buildings, were- blown from their foundations and badly damaged. One residence was set on tire by lightening and considerably damaged. The reason no lives were lost or persons hurt is that nearly every one has an un derground storm house, and these were sought when the storm cloud was seen approaching . Tutt's Pills Cure All Liver Ills. j I DoctorsSay; Bilious and Intermittent Fevers which prevail in miasmatic dis tricts are invariably accompan ied by derangements of the Stomach Liver and Bowels. ThSecret of Health. The liver is the great " driving wheel " in the mechanism of man, and when it is out of order, the" whole system becomes de ranged and disease is the result. Tutt's Liver Pills Cure all Liver Troubles. Thk proper study of mankind is man, and yet how discouraging at times. Such contrasts! , Such contradictions! A stratum of hardness next to a layer of ten derness, a great lump of meaness m ar sea of generosity and mag nanimity, in the same man's make up. Curious, but awfully true , The New York Journal of Commerce spoils what would otherwise have been a telling criticism of Senacor Morgan's jingoism and advocacy of un sound finance by a bitter attack upon the manners of the old South. Senator Morgan deserves to be condemned for his efforts to embroii the United States in difficulties with European na tions, but his conduct does not justify a sweeping condemnation of Southern manners either as they were in evidence before the war or are in evidence now. The Journal of Commerce does, ins deed, qualify its censure by the statement that "the new South is so far modernized and to so great an extent brought into har monious commercial and social relations with the rest of the world that the few remaining survivors of the slave epoch are not uninteresting subjects of sociological studj ." . To this it is sufficient answer to say that if the representatives of the "New South" have the manners of their grandfathers they will be equally a courteous, considerate and well bred as those more modern exponents of "good form" whom Ward McAllister had to take in hand and teach the elementary principles of de portment. The cultivated Southern man of the period dating from the Revolution to the civil war had all the qualities which are insep arable from good breeding, cou tempt for vulgar display, perfect courtesy in his intercourse with his fellow-men, a very admirable respect for women, and an utter lack of the coarseness of lan guage and angularity of manner which in some quarters have come to be regarded as a com mendable national characteristic, the eyidecco of a brisk "gat there" Americanism. If the "Oid SouthV manners were cf the plantation, it-should not be for gotten thit they M;ere also the manners of Washington, Jeffer son, Madison and Monroe, of Chief Justice Marshal and other eminent Southern men, but for whom American hisjory would he a dull and spiritless volume. If the new South, with its mod ern manners, produces men as great and patriotic as were born under trie plantation system tho future, of this mighty republic will never be in peril. Tho trouble with too many writers who condemn the man ners or tho "Uit oouth ' is their norance of the subject. They read some sensational work of fiction like "Uncle Tom's Cabin," and conclude that they have mas tered tho subject. Or, psrhsps, they turn to some incident in Congress in ante-bellum days, wnen tne passions or men were aroused by political excitement, and because there was a fisticuff between two men from opposing sections, they at once accept the offender us a type of tho South and proceed to belabor the people of a dozen States for the violence of one man. The politicians of the old South were not always the best representatives of the South ern people, although, in the main, thev were men of high character, perfectly honest and of unimpeach able courage. There were no Credit Mobilier scandals with them ; no suspicion that they dealt in stocks which were affected by their legislation. The sons and-daughters of the planters en joyed the advantages of liberal education and travel, and would have been at home in the most polished society of Europe with out the coaching of a lordly Tur vey drop. Moreover, the fact that New York's "Four Hundred" had to engage the services of a man of Southern descent to teach them the amenities of social life would seem to indicate that the "Southern manner" was worthy of recognition and emulation. Senator Morgan's sins against sound "finance and decency in our international relations should not be made the occasion of an attack on the Southern people past or present, for lack of manners. Mr. Morgan is probably the most reckless jingo in the Senate, but Senators Gallinger and Chandler, of New Hampshire, and Senator B'ry e,. of Maine, are also fire-eaters whom the ante-bellum South ern statesmen would have found it hard to excel. Are there no good manners in Maine and New Hamp shire beoause Chandler . and Gal linger are jingoes? And shall Massachusetts bo put under the ban because Senator Lodge breathes out firo and slaughter when under the malign influence of the god of war? TURKEY S TERMS REFUSED. Before Retiring.;.. take Ayer's Pills, and you will sleep better and wake In better condition for the day's work. Ayer's Cathartic Pills have no equal as a pleasant and effect ual remedy for constipation, biliousness, sick headache, and all liver troubles. They are sugar-coated, and so perfectly prepared, that they cure with out the annoyances experienced in the tise of so many of the pills on the market. Ask your druggist for Ayer's Cathartic Pills. When other pill3 won't help you, Ayer's is THE PILL THAT WILL - CUBA LIBRA. Mass meeting at the National Theatre in Washington, D. C. Washington, June 4. A large Constantinople, J una 4. The representatives of the powers assembled at the Porte to-day and had a conference with Tewfik Pasha, Minister Foreign Affairs, regarding the conditions for the re-establishment of peace bes tween Turkey and Greece. After the conference the diplo inats proceeded tothe Austrian Embassy. where tbey spent some time in exchanging views on the demands of the Porte. The conference wilL be resumed on Saturday. At the conference Tewfik Pasha urged as the base of the negotiations the original condi tions advanced by Turkey, namely,- the cession of Thessaly, the payment by Greece of an in demity of 10,000,000 Turkish, and the abrogation of the capis tuiations In favor of Greek sub jects in Turkey. The diplomats refused to accede to these' conditions, and contended for the modifications of them that were supported by the powers. Ultimately, it was decided that M. Nelidoff, the Russian Ambassador, should formulate a memorandum con cerning the ratification of the Turco.. Grecian frontier, that M. Cambon, the French Ambass sador, should prepare a memor andum regarding the capitula tions, and that Sir Philip Currie, the British Ambassador, should draw up a document bearing upon the question of the indem nity to be paid. These three memoranda will be submitted to the conference on Saturday. An armistice to last during the negotiations for peace was signed toxdav bv the Turkish and Greek crowd gathered at the National 1 representatives at Dhomoko, Theatre to-night to attend the ; Yesterday was .New Year's Cuban meeting in memory "of the! Day. in the Mohammedan Americans who have sacrificed calendar. The iuricish news Why will you buy bitter nauseating tonics when Groves Tasi.olnss Olitll Ton. to la just as pleasant as emon Sjrup. Your drug-gist is au orized to refund the money in ev er a wh er fans to cure Price - 50 tiioir lived for Cuba. Speeches were made by .Representatives Swanson cf Virginia, Greene of Nebraska, and others. Mr. should the belligerency resolution be passed by Congress but that Spain should be given so many days to take her soldiers from the island. He made light on the probability of war with Spain and said that if she de clared war against the United States 3,000,000 swords would gleam in the scabbards ready to fight and the Blue and Gray would march together to the music of Dixie. Had then5 boon a Jackson or Bryan in the White House; he said, he believed the fires of liberty would now be burning . throughout the is land of Cuba. Resolutions were adopted calling for prompt recognition of Cuban billigerency and arranging all who make the "honor and glory of the nation and the demands of the people subservient to the interest of the Spanish bondholders and the Sugar Trust." m m 1 Everybody Says So. Cascarets Candy Cathdrtic, the most wonderful medical discovery of the age, pieasant and refreshing to the taste, act gently and positively on kikney.s, liver and bowels, cleansing the entire system, dispel colds euro headache, fever, habisnal constipation and biliousness, .Please buy and try a try a box of C. C. C. to-day; 10, 25, 50 cents. Bold and guaranteed to cure by all drug-gists. MARRIAGE. For the benefit of sceptics, bigots, fools and cowards, disap pointed lovers, jilted "sweethearts and unfortunate married men, I would suggest the following quo tations as very appropriate to the subject of matrimony: , "Marriage has m it less beauty, but more safety, than single life. It hath not more ease, but lesB danger. It is more merry and more sad.' It is fuller of sorrows and fuller of joys. It lies under moro burdens, but is supported by all the strength of love and char ity, and those burdens are de lightful." ''They talk about a woman's sphere as though it had a limit; There's not a pleasure on earth or heavon, ' There's not a task to mankind given, There's uos a blessing nor a woe, There's not a whispered yea or no. There's not a uie, or aeatn or Dirtn, That has a feather's weight of worth Without a woman in it." The Nashville Exposition n has many inducements to offer, but none better to the afflicted than that long tested and sever failing Tonic ana Blood ruriftei(B. B. B.) Botanic Blood Bain-. It positively euros all blood and skin diseases, as thousands of certificates testify from the simplest pimple, to the foulest ulcer. Don't buy substitutes, said to be. "just as good," but buy the old reliable and standard Blood Purifier 'of the age. B. B. B. 81 per large bottle. For sale by all drug gists, J. II. Hill & Son., Goldsboro, N. U. . papers published pcotic sious in houor of .he especially referring to the victories cf the Ottoman All the high military officials and many distiu :;uisr civilians proceeded to the palace, where they paid profound hom age to the Caliph of the Faith-. ful. The dragomans from the embassies and legations drove to the Yildiz Kiosk to transmit to the Sultan the greetings of their respective chiefs. Athens, June 4, It is said here that the armistice was signed at Taratsa and not at Dhcraokc. It was inteaded to apply to the land and sea, but the Greek delegates would not accept the Turkish conditions without consulting the Govern? cient. The Cabinet was sitting at a late hour to-night discussing the conditions, which demand practi cally the raising of the blockade of the cost of Macedonia and EpiruE. a promise not to land troops or contraband of war on Turkish territory, and assur ances that vessels under the Turkish flag may enter Greek ports without hindrance. Greece objects to her deprival of the right of search, but will pro bably yied in deference to the powers. The delegates will meet again tomorrow at Taratsa, when, if they do not agree, the whole convention will probably be nullified. London, June 4. In the House of Commons to-day Sir Charles Dilise pressed the Government for a statement of their foreign policy before the adjournment of the House to-morrow night for the Whitsuntide recess, which would last until June 17. Mr. A. J. Balfour refused to make the statement demanded, saying that it would be impose sible to do so in the present stage of negotiations. , Mr. James Bryce, Liberal member for South Aberdeen, complained that the Government were making no progress in their Cretan policy. ONE OF "TWO WAiS. WARNING, We wish to caution all users of Simmona Liver Regulator on a subject of the deepest interest and importance to their health perhaps their lives. The sole proprietors and makers of Simmons Liver Regulator learn that customers are often deceived by buying and taking some medicine of a similar appearance or taste, believing it to be Simmons Liver Regulator. We warn you that unless the word Regulator is on the package or bottle, that it is not Simmons Liver Regulator. No one else makes, or ever has made Simmons Liver Regulator, or anything called Simmons Liver Regulator, but J. Ii. Zeilin & Co., and no medicine made by anyone else is the same. We alone can put it up, and we cannot be responsible, il other medicines represented as the same do not help you as you are led to expect they WilLBear this fact well in mind, if you have been in the habit of using a medicine which you supposed to be Simmons Liver Regula. tor, because the name was somewhat like it, and the package did not have the word Regulator on it, you have been imposed upon and have not been taking Simmons Liver Regulator at alLThe Regulator has been favorably known for many years, and all who use it know how necessary it is fur Fever and Ague, Bilious Fever, Constipa tion, Headache, Dyspepsia, and all disorders arising from a Diseased L'iver. We ask you to look for yomselvee, and see that Simmons Liver Regulator, which you can readily distinguish by the Red Z on wrapper, and by our name, is the only medicine called Simmons Liver Regulator-. a. 9. ZEILIX & CO. Take Simmons JAter llefulator. On a red hot day Hires Rootbeer --: stands be tween yotl and the dis- tressing ef-' fects of the heat WWW I 1 m t t - I civil 1 Wfc i ft V S & &J Ss s IS cools the blood, tones the stom ach, invigorates the bod j', fully u -e"l isuusiicfc uie liiuM. ling, temperance drink cf the high est medicinal value . Mad. oi.Iy by The Chftrlea f . Hire Co., P&ll. A pack& makeB 5 gUon. " " i Fi7 V! Ct'rns. Stops all pn.n. Maktw 'wnikintr easy. IffC. at Orup-pieta, HAER BhLSAM KsS&'tS 3iC1Sll5C9 mid bcactifius tho lfr rfcM--! Cures gcAlp diseases & hair falling IfronaroUUNSUIPTlyE or hare In iiTestif.n, Piuni'isi Ills .tr 1 et.ilit.y of anj kind usa GINGEa TOKIC. Innytio were iW'jo fcsjuncl aiTii'il liave renamed health Uy ita u&fc Itch on human, mange on horss, dogs and all stock, cures in 30 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. It never fails. Sold by M, E RobiDson & Bro.. Goldsboro N. C. :m9 DDOIDSJ I II I havo recently opened a fresh stock of o Fancy Groceries, ' Oranges, Lemons, B i nan as, Confectioner ies, Fruits. Etc.Etc, I have also a- SODA FOUNTAIN . . . i r . i .tiiiu l am prepareu m eerve rji all kinds of p.nld drinks. Mv iliv motto is "Ouink sals and .!!) , small profits." ;E, Y. Edwards, Walnut street, opposite .the Mayor's office. A. G. DAVIS, ATTORNEY-AT - LAW, GOLDSBORO, N. C. Oilce, corner Walnut & John Street. The bladder was created for one pur pose, namoly, a receptacle for the uri&ft, and as such it is not liable to any form of disease except by one of two ways. The first way is from im- peri'je t action of the kidaevs. The st3c- ond way is from careless local treat- met, t of other di3eases. CHIEF CACSK. Unhealthy - urine from i:j healthy kidneys is the chief cause ot bladaei troubles. So the womb, iike the blad der, was created for one purj. oe, und if not doctored too much is not liable to weakness or disease except in rare cases. It is situated back of and very close to. the bladder, therefore any pain, disease or inconvenience mani fested in the kidneysr back, bladder or urinary passage is often, by mistake, attributed to female weannoss or womb trouble of some sort. The erroiw is oasily avoided. To find out correctly, set your urine aide fur twenty-four hours, a sediment or settling indicates kidney or bladder trouble. The mild and extraordinary eifect of Dr. Kil mer's Swamp Uoot, the great kidney and bladder remedy, is soon realized. It you need a medicine you should nave tna oest. At arugsrists. 00 cents and 91. You may have a sample bottle and pamphlet both sent free by mail. Mention .the Daily Argvs and send vour address to Dr. Kilmer A. On justirv a w c- wi oi ascarewj, i mne namton. 1 . X. The rtronriet-ii tho finest liver and bowel regulator j of this paper guarantees the genuiDe made. ness of tkia offer. 4 The Jionot, reliable, lK-yea.r-iii;Kumblors are tho ber w heels lu buy, and you save 20. Lap brazed joints, fish-mouth reinforcements, ' dished " sprockets ft n d u. fc J. tires make this the most deBirable wheel made. Investigate Hr many advantages and satisfy yourself. Catalogue lri.. III Goldsbcro Hardware Co., CJOL.DSBORO. N. O Wood Wanted o Dry Tine wood in four foot lengths will be taken at this oilice for subscription to the weekly Ahuud. bcyeral cox'ds needod at un. On a dollar spent to " a purpose is worth more to tho world than many aimless dollars. '