Newspapers / Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, … / Sept. 23, 1897, edition 1 / Page 1
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a 30 5 (Kir 11 li i hi I in 1 II I II Ml M 2 M P This Argtjs o'er the people's rights, Doth an eternal vigil keep No soothing strains of Maia'e son, Can lull its hundred eyes to sleep' Vol. XVII. GOLDSBORO. N. C THURSDAY SEPT- 23, 1897. NO 20 LOCAL BRIEFS. Chickens are scarce in ma rket. Jack Frost will be a welcome visitor to our Southern friends where Yellow Jack has taken command. Uu. Wilbert C Massey, of Princeton, has accepted a posi tion as salesman ia the srore t Pittman Bror. Qcite an enjoyable birthday party was giveu at the home of Miss Maya Fields Friday night, and all who participated speak in high tei ins of the hospitality of the occasion. Rev. J. W. Garduer, of this city, was called to Greene county Thursday to perform the mar" riage rites of the Primitive Baps tist church for Mr. Zeb Barrow and Miss AdaMewborn,two pop-, ular young people from the country near Snow Hill. Ik a person will stay about the court house awhile, he will soon learn that the meddlesome tongues of gossips cause a deal of trouble. Some folks cannot keep a secret, unless they do something mean themselves. Then it is no trouble at all to keep sealed lips. The Arrington bridge across Neuse river is said to be in a dangerous condition and people from the other side of the river have to drive several miles out of their way to get here and are thereby put to great inconvens ience. The B-jard of County Commissioners should investi gate the matter at once. Before many weeks, we ex pect to see the new water works supplying water to our people. We are informed that the com pany is arranging to secure the most powerful pump to force the water from the lower depths possible, not only to secure an abundant supply but to get water of the best quality. Every citizen of Goldsboro, yea, more than that, every person in the sur rounding country, and every vis itor is interested ii the new wa ter works. The situation is sim ply this. With, two competing companies each bidding for pat ronage, our people will get bet ter water for less money. The town is big enough, too, to sup port both companies. Everybody we have heard speak of it, heartily endorses the Argus in saying that the county jail should be larger. It could then be better kept. Go to the jail, and see for yourself those miserable creatures locked up there in a small space liKe rats in a trapi and we think you will agree with us, Mind you, too, these people are there not to be punished bui simply for safe keeping until tried. Make the jail bigger and require it to be properly kept. The Argus has no patience with the sentimental folks who make heroes of crim inals. But we say with emphasis that the worst criminals should be made comfortable, to say nothing of people simply inpris on awaiting trial. Did you ever stand by the side ef the railroad, look up at the telegraph wires and wonder what messages were flashing through those tongues of metal which bid defiance to the loftiest mountain and broadest ocean, and speak in tones clear and distinct though the sea lashes into fury, and the King of the storm rages in all his power over the earth? There flashes the price of wheat, cot tcn or corn; there goes the news of bank failure, and financial ruin; there go loving words of congratulation to the happy pair who have just marched down the aisle to the sweet music of joyous wedding bells, and then the ever busy tongues tell the story of sickness and death, and the light of hope departs from the eyes, and cruel sorrow crushes the heart. Wonderful, wonderful is the story of ths wires. There is one thing certain, the people of the State will have to make some changes in regard to the management , of the peniten tiary. In a climate like ours where laborers can work nearly every day in the year, if the peni tentiary is properly managed it will be self-supporting. The peo ple of North Carolina are taxed enough when they pay, for the direst, imprisonment, and convic tion of criminals, .without being burdened with supporting them irf ter conviction . It seems to be the plan to envelope the manage ment of the penitentiary in a srreat cloud of mystery. But this is alt moonshine. If the peniten tiary is properly managed it wil be self-suDDortinj?. We do not intend the above for any particu lar administration or politica' ' party . ' . . Royal makes the food pure, wholesome and delicious. POWDER Absolutely Pure HOVAL MKtWO POWOFfl CO., NF VOflK. SATURDAY SERMONS. "I would give the world to have the experience of the brother who has jnst sat down," said a speaker in 3 religious meeting. "That's just what it cost me," was the reply. Give up the world for. Christ and He will work out in us the richness of His love and an eternal weight of glory. Not much cotton is being sold. The farmers are hopiDg for better prices. The weather recently has been very much liko a spell in October 1884. It was dry, hot and duety until October 22. Key. II. B. John has returned from Chatham county. His aunt, Mrs. John, and his two children returned with him . We notice from the State papers with deep regret that Dr. Geo. W. Sanderlin has again returned to the friendly walls of the Hospital in Baltimore, where he has gone for mental and physical treatment. Many of the great of earth have entered within the borders of the dark, lone land of insauity, and few have returned to the bright and of reason and hope, who did not after a time go back to that country of black despair whore reason is dethroned, and delusions and dreams reign supreme. Dr. Sanderlin was no ordinary man. Not only is he a finely educated man, but he was one of the best speakers the State ever had; in fact, we think he was tho best im promptu speaker North Carolina has bad in a long time. Dr. Sanderlin was a brave Confeder ate soldier, and a leading minister of the Baptist Church . His sad affliction is a loss to Church and State. "Come yet out from among them, and be ye separate," does not mean to live the life of a her mit or a recluse in the world, but o live such a different life from the sinner as to have the dif erence discernable even to the careless and indifferent. "Tfea bitterns or cosTftve, t a caeca ret candy cathartic, cure guaranteed Men would have you believe that they can be Christians and still bllow the vanities of the world. t is false. The religion of today, as some would show it forth, is to save one's miserable soul from hell without lettinc: the world know we have undertaken the job. To try and get into heaven with out traveling the path of straight ness is more than tor a man to draw a salary when he has rend ered no service. It is an attempt to defraud God out of the wages of righteousness. If you don't intend to lead a Christian life according to the revealed will of God, don.t bring disgrace upon God's people and God s sanctuary by suffering your name to be recorded on some church register. When 1 aul was converted on that Damascus road the first thing God said to him was to "stand. To-day God is calling to his chil dren to "take a stand." There is no greater need than for men who will assert themselves boldly. ONE OF TWOiWAFS. "Rie bladder was created for one pur pose, namely, a receptacle lor the urine, una. as such it is not liable to any form of disease except by one of two ways. The first way is from im perfect action of the Kidneys. The sec ond way is from careless local treat- men 01 other diseases. CHIEF CAUSE. Unhealthy urine from unhealthy! Kidneys is the cruel cause 01 bladder troubles. So the womb, like the blad der, waa created for one purpose, and 11 not Uoctored too much is not liable to weakness or disease except in rare cases, it is situated back: 01 and very close to the bladder, therefore any pain, disease or inconvenience mani fested in the kidneyn, back, bladder or u -inary passage is often, by mistake. attributed to female weakness or womb trouble of some sort. The error is easily avoided. To find out correctly, set your urine aside for twenty-four hours, a sediment or settling1 indicates kidney or bladder trouble. The mild and extraordmarv effect of Dr. Kil mer's Swamp Root, the great kidney and bladder remedy, is soon realized. If you need a medicine you should have the best. At druggists, SO cent and $1. You may have a sample bottle and pamphlet both sent free by mailt Mention tne uauy akgus and send your address to JJr. Kilmer & Go, Binghamton, N. Y. The propriet-jr of this paper guarantees the genuine ness 01 tti's oner. The man who takes his job work out of town to have it printed is no friend to the town These same kind of fellows when they come to die should send their obituaries to the same for eign job office and have them printed on manilla card-board and then tack them up on the town pump. They hardly deserve a funeral notice. Ex. Catarrh Cured. No remedy is as effectual In eradi cating and curing catarrh at ttotamc Blood Balm, (ts.u.JH.) it purines and enriches the blood, eliminates mi' erobes, bacteria, etc., and builds up she system from the first dose, thou sands of cases of catarrh have been cured by its magic power. Pot all blood and kin diseases, it has no equal Buy the old reliable and long tested remedy, and don't throw your money away on substitutes, palmed off as "iuat as good." Buy the old reliable Botanic Blood Balm $1 per large bot tle. For sale Dy all druggists ana J H.Hill&-8oitt The Hebrew Bakers Union, which has a membership of 700, notified the master bakers a week aero that unless au advance in wages was granted today a gen eral strike would be orderqd. The Hebrew bakers bad ar ranged to strike last week, but on second thought decided tojive the employers a week to consider the demands. HAVE YOU 1201 1 rAlvMt RnnM. Achefl. Old ores,! : Ulcers la Mouth, fiir-FaI!msr1 WrittCOOli tel. t1HMMH0. Won easnftmred U -alto x & amy. avtsMure bmk - r If you say you are a Christian, ive like a Christian. Don't be a it tie driveling coward- Rev. Sam P. Jones, in a recent sermon makes these pertinent re marks concerning the doctrine of 'holiness or "second blessing: "A man is never better than his heart. A clean heart is the need 01 every Christian man 1 or women. This should be the cry and fiflj plea and the earnest object o? every believing child of God: 'Create in me a clean heart, U liod! Thank God that many people seek and obtain it. I don't care what you call it, whether the second or third or thousandth blessing, it cleans out and then cleans up purifies the heart, cleans up the life, and, thank God, so benign and wondrous and so needed a work of erace can be prossessed by men and women 1 welcome it under any name, and have a profound contempt for the spirit which would depreciate he people who possess it, or the srreat erace which has come to them." Johnson's Ctllll and Fever Tonic Cures Fever In One Day. The Sinai gospel, indispensa ble in conviction, is the great de ficiency of the present age. In popular pulpits it is considered discourteous to speak of hell and damnation, and intolerable preach on it. A cultured clergy man, in a city pulpit, found i necessary in the process of his discourse to say "hell." He said it so softly that a lot of mon.;y loving merchants present thought The said "selL" some Univeraslists in the audience thought he said "all s well, while an old saint m the amen cornea actuary certified that the man said "hell. Any one can have Christ in Bweetness and pay the price. power who wl BUCKLlflN'b ARNICA SALVE The Best Salve in the world for Cuts DimtiuM! Rama TT1fAia Afa.lt. T? VirnTT Fever. Sores. Tetter. CharDed Hands Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Erup tions, and positively cures Piles, or no perfeofesatitrffection or momey rice zo cents per bottle, lor sale by UiUt Son. Fifty Years Ago. TKts lsHi cradle In which there grew That thoughTof a philanthropic braint A remedy that would make life new Por the multitudes that ware racked with pain. Twas sarsapaTllla, as made, 70a know By Ayer. some so years ago. Ayer's Sarsaparilla was in its infancy half a cen tury ago. To-day it dth. "be stride tho narrow world like a colossus." "What is the seoret of its power? Its cures I The number of them ! The wonder of them! Imitators have fol lowed it from the beginning of its success. They are still be hind it. Wearing the only medal granted to sarsaparilla in the "World's Pair of 1893, it points proudly to its record. Others imitate the remedy; tkey oant imitate the record X So Years of Cures. How Did Thomas McElvoy Es cape From the Terror? "New York, Sett. IT. The authorities at the navy yard, and especially the officers of the mon itor Terror, are considerably per plexed over the escape of Thomas Mciiilvoy, a bluejacket, from the monitor while she was in dry dock on Tuesday night. McElvoy joined the navy only two months ago, and he was evidently disgusted with his new surroundings, fcJe deserted within, a month. He was captured on Saturday and confined below decks on the monitor with a steel band around each ankle and a chain connecting them. On Tuesday night he re tired with his coinpny, but In the morning no trace of him could be discovered. The two gangways from the vessel were guarded, and the sentries all declared that Mc Elvoy did not pass out that way. Great efforts aie being made to recapture him. Newbern Journal: Sheriff Hahn does not usually have such 'board- ' as the one he had the other night, in the county jail. A col ored crazy woman en route to Goldsboro had to be kept here over niaht, and was put in one of the roouie :ue jrv.r. During the night the woman became con vinced that there were too many articles in the room, so she com menced by tearing down the stove pipe, and throwing it out of the window, then followed the stove egs, pieces of different broken articles in the room and finally the window panes and sash were broken and thrown out doors. These exercises were interspersed by vigorous cuss words. There was a ruin proscntcd next morning. If you w ant to quit tobacco usinp; easily and forever, be made well.strong magnetic, lull 01 new nie ana vig-or. take No-To-Bac, the wonder worker that makes weak men stroner. Many g-ain ten pounds in ten days. Oxer 40,- 000 cured. Buy No-To-Bac of your druggist under guarantee to cure. 50 CM o 9- tiooeiet aud samaie mailed Free Ad. Sterling Remedy Oo. Chi- C&uo or Mew fork. WilminAton Star: The Secre tary of the Treasury and the Postmaster General, after con sultation with the President, have decided to obange the color of the current twocent postage stamp from carmine to green of the shade now used on the Gov ernment notes. It is thought that green is a more desirable color than carmine, besides saving the Government about f 10,000 in the difference trx the cost between the two inks. Everybody Says So. Cascarets Candy Cathdrtic, the most wonderful medical discovery of toe age, pleasant and refreshins to the taste, act erentlv ."d positively on kikneys, liver and uowels. cleansing the entire svstem, dispel colds cure headache, fever, habisnal constipation and biliousness. Please buy and try a try a box of C. C. C. to-day; 10, 25, 60 cents. Sold and guaranteed to cure by alldruegista Fayetteville Observer: Mr. Ed ward Mazingo died yesterday at his home in Campbellton, aged eighty years. Edward Mazingo was a hero in many battles, hav ing fought in the Indian wars in Florida and in the civil war, and always accounted a good man and a brave soldier. HOW'S THIS. We offer One Hundred Dollars re ward for any case of catarrh that can not be cured oy Hall's Uatarrh Uure. r, J, Cheney & Co . Toledo, O, We. the undersigned, have known P. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe-him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligation made by their nrm. ' West & Traux. wholesale Drug gists. Toledo. O. Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and mucoiu surtaxes ol tne system, F. J. Cheney & Co., Props ., Toledo, O tT Uolu by druggists loo Boston. Mass., Sept. 17. Simon Davis, aged 13 years, stabbed bis cousin Abraham Saferstein. aged 12, at6:30o'clock to&night, and the latter died be fore reaching the hospita1. Botb were newsboys. Tbe fatal cut was made with a common pocket knife. " Davis had a new knife and was , showing it to his com panions, nourishing' His arms He -stabbed Saferstein acciden tally. Disturbanqa of the nervous system pay required. It is guarantee! to givend great sorrow, oiten cause tne nairr" ' Jr and restore the color with Hall's Hair Kenewer. A NAVY l'ARD MVSTERl. niid Cor from tT.t.jrmirnnl JfaiteAis Prof. W. H. Feeke, who ed more cases than any living: Physician; his success is astonishing:. We have heard of cases ot so years' standing; curea by him. Ho publishes a valuable" -work od this dis ease, which he sends with a lartre bot- tte of his absolute ore, free to any sufferers who may send their P. O. and Express address. yv o naviso any "no wibumik iu t buutbi frot.W. 2. raEKX, F. SM 4 C"rSU Bow Turk 00 No Sickly Green Stamps. Washington, Sept. 17. The s'ckly green postage stamp has had a knock-out. Bed will re main the color of the two-cent stamps.lt all came about through the discovery today of a torgot ten resolution adopted by the Universal Postal Congress, which met here last spring. Somebody in tbe Post OmceDepartment re membered tbe resolution and told Postmaster General Gary about it. Then Mr.Gary informed Secretary Gage, who immediately issued an order rescinding the previous order to the chief of tho Bureau of iLogravmg' and Printing to strike off the two cent stamps of the sickly hue. The resolution of the Postal Congress provided that after Jan 1.1898, the stamps of domes tic letter postage in all the coun tries composing tbe Postal Union should be printed in red. which is the color now used here. Tne delegates of the United States signed the" resolution, -and the Treasury Department and the Post Office Department are bound to abide by its provisions. The Treasury and Post Office officials still favor the use of the green here as a matter of economy, but deem it inexpedient to change the color for the few months be fore the international agreement goes into effec. St n3 Ir-OIT last and mil the Efffi Heed's Sarsaparilla has been advertised as a blood purifier. Ms great mres bare, been accompMahedi fteough purified hlood -cures of scrofula, salt rheum, eczema, rheumatism, neural gia, catarrh, nervousness, that tired feel ing. It cures when others fail, because it Strikes at the root of the disease and eliminates every germ of Impurity. Thousands testify to absolute cures of blood diseases by Hood's Sarsaparilla, although discouraged by the failure of other medicines. Bembmber that r Sarsaparilla Is the best In fact the One True Blood Purifier. r:il easy to buy, easy to take, HOOd'S PUIS easy to operate. 2Sc Lunatic at the Windsor. New York, Sept. 17. A man who gave his name as Rudolph Weiss, registered at the Windsor Hotel on Tuesday night. In con versation with the clerk he said that he was a Hungarian and was in this country on an official errand for his' Government. He acted queerly, but as he was not boisterous he was not interferred with. He went away on Wednes day bill. morning, after paying his Last night the man walked into the hotel, and, after strolling around the corridor for a time, went to the telephone closet and picked up the telephone book. The boy in charge asked him what he was looking for. "The White House number," he said. "Who do you want there?" asked the boy. "President McKinley," siid the man. "I want some money. I wrote him last week and he sent me f 100, but I've spent all but a dollar and need some more." The telephone boy summoned a policeman, who took the man to ihe East Fifty-first street police station. There he said he was 20 years old and a clerk, but refused to give any other information about himself. He was sent to Bellevue Hospital for examination as to his sanity. e HUMOUS in the blwoa. boils, pim- 4 pies, Mrafola sores, arepremptly. erad-A lcatei by Hood's asaparilia, the One True Blood Purifier, nerve tonic and health builder. Hood '8 Pills are easy to take, easy to operate, Cure indigestion, bilious ness, aoc. NEGRO PROSPERING, TOO. New York Times. The Rev, Richard Carroll, Sun day school missionary of the Aineiicaa Baptist Publication so oietyv cJne of the most widely known colored ministers in tho South, was in New York yester day . He said that in South Caro lina and Florida, in which States he travefc constantly, there is a remarkable increase of prosper ity among the people of his race. They are not only doing well in farming, buying land wherever they can get it, and improving their stock and equipment, but they are engaging in mercantile business successfully. The difference between this year and last is rcmaj kable. Crops and prices are good and labor is in demand. The colored churches are always faithful barometers of tbe financial condition of tho col ored people, and they are flourish ing as never before. On the sec ond Sunday of July a special col lection in the colored Baptist church at Columbia, S. C., yield ed $740. The negroes in Georgia are in better condition and more advanced in every way than those of South Carolina or Florida. In every part of the South, however, they are prosperous and hopeful. The clergyman has unusual views on the subject of lynch ing. In nine cases in ten. he says, the men who commit the crime for which lynching is the penalty, are loafers or bad char acters, without position, means or friends. In the sections of the Sou'h especially along the coast, where the negroes out number the whites from ten to fifty to one, that crime is almost unknown, he says, because the few whites there are of a high class, do not come into contact with any negroes but their own seryants, and they are well pro tected. The lynchings usually occur, he finds, in communities where th races are more nearly equal in number and intermingle more. He says the better class of negroes believe as strongly as the whites do in prompt infliction of the death penalty for the crime alluded to, but he thinks the guilty men should be killed at least under a form of law, and that speeial provision should be made for immediate trial before some adeqaate tribunal and quick execution. Skin on fir with torturing, disfiguring. Itching burning, blooding, scaly, and pimply humors, instantly relieved by a warm bath with CimcuRA SOAP. single application of CcncuRA. (ointment), the great Bkin cure, and a fuU dose of CVTK3URA. BESOfcVjarx. (fflticiFa h wM thromrhont tK. wnrla. Pott; T. pCor.. oJ Frops Boatoa. "Hew to Cnr Torturing Human, Ire. BABY'S SKIN Sutferina Mothers Read! When mv first child was born I had great trouble with my breast, it would break out with an itcmng flumor mat was almost more than I could stand. It was something like the thraoh and it seemed to poison my milk. Wherever the milk would touch me or the child it would cause the humor to break out, and wonld make the child's mouth so sore that I was driven to wean the child and raise it on the bottle. I had the trouble to return with five of my children, and came near losiner them all. I was sorrowful in my heart not to nurse my baoieg, put x could not uo it. and was driven to wean them. My fourth and fif'h child died as the dis ease settled on th bowels. We had all the benefit of medical treatment that the country afforded and spent hundreds of ao'lars trying to get well, and it almost broke me up Before the birth of my sixth child 1 met Mrs, Joe Person at Smithfield, aud from what she told me of her Remedy, I concluded to try it. I bought some of the .Rem edy and Wash from Mr. Hood, and be fore I had used the sixth bottle I was perfectly cured. At the birth of my aextehild-1 waa well and have ince had two children, bat have never had any more trouble with my breast, and my children were born well aoa neai thy and I was able to nime them. J don't know bow to express myself atout that medicine . I ha va never sees any thing like it, and I do not think there Is any other medicine known that will do what ft does. I would not take $500- for what it did for me, and if I could have known of it - years ago I would have been better off in the world tha i ;i raw af COAL STRIKE ENDED. Miners' Representatives Declare That the Struggle is Over. Columbus, O , Sept. 17. The National Executive Board of the United Mine Workers of America has issued a bulletin declaring the great miners' strike at an end. The document is signed by every member of the board and district officials. With this bul letin in the hands of tbe miners work will be resumed in all parts of the country, and by Monday morniDg it is probable that every one or tne nundred tnousand striking miners will be digging coal. The territory affected is Penn sylvania, Ohio, and Indiana, which will resume work in full, and a part of Illinois at the ex piration of the ten days' limit fixed by the convention. If West Virginia and a part of Illinois re fuse to resume tbe fight will be continued. Pittsburg, Pa.. Sept. 16 - Mine owners who gathered in the Monongah House late to night estimated that 5,040 coal miners worked today. By Monday all the mines will be working. The miners' convention adjourned to day. Operators will meet to morrow to appoint a committee to confer with the miners on the "dead work" scale. This will take a week to adjust, but will not interfere with the operation of the mines. CATARRH flSKZTOUR Druggist (for a generous 10 Gent Trial SUe- ELY'S G ream Balm a ntains no coca pine, mercury or any other injuriou areorbea. Uives relief at once. op ens and cleanses the nasal patsacea. Ailaps infiamation. Hoals and protects the membrane. Keatorea the senses of taste and: smell. Full alas B0 cents, Trial lOo, at druggists or by mail. Itch on human, mange on horse COLD IN HEAD druer. It is quickly nAhossand all stock cured in 30 .minu Ydy Wsxrfowl's; CSaniHiry Lotion. I COMPOUND. A recent discovery by an old physic lao. Successful! tuetl imonthij by thousand of Ladies. Is the only perfectly safe and reliable medicine dis covered. Beware of unprincipled druggists who offer Inferior ipeaiclnes In place of this. Ask for Cook's Cotton Root Compound, take no substi tute, or Inclose (1 and 6 cents In postage la letter and wewlUsesd, sealed, by return mat 1. FuU sealed particulars In plafa envelope, to ladies only, 3 tamps. Address Pond Lil Company. For sale by M, E.Robinson& Bro A magazine writer hits the nail on the head when he says that an independent in politics is a man who cannot be depended upon. The independent may originate ideas and politics, but he can not carry them out. In politics suc cess can be Obtained only through organization, and the independent has no use for parties, and they have nc use for him. THERE'S NOTHING SO GOOD. There is nothing: just as food as Dr. King's New Discovery for Consump tion, coughs, colds, so demand it and do not permit the dealer to send you some substitute. He will tot claim there is anything- better, but in order to make more profit he may claim something else to be just as good. You want ur Jiinsr's JSew Uiscoverv be cause you know it to be safe and re liable, or guaranteed to do good or money refunded. For coue-hs. colds. consumption and for all affections o throat, chest and lungs there is noth ing so good as is Dr. King's New Dis covery. Trial bottles free at J. H. mil & bon's drug store. Regular size 50 cts and tl. A move in the rieht direction has been made by leading: nesroes of Texas, who have called a con vention of their race to meet at Columbus. October 2. to Drotcst not against lynching, but against me crime which is most often its cause. The thoughtful negroes of the South can use their influence in no better ' way than this. With fewer criminal assaults there will be fewer naob executions. No 1! Theory Am The greatest jlaima for.&Q. (Swift i Specific) are made by those whom it has cured, and after all tbe most valuable reputation is one which is gtven by thos who speak from expericirce. We could publish a pageof what we, claim S.S.a. will do, but the people prefer to read of what it has done, and hence we giv the testimony of reputable, wejl-known people in different parts of the country, who gladly tell of horw S.S.6. has eared them of blood discaeeq. after trying other treatment in vain. ' No wonder S.S.8. hps socb staoocti friends. . The experience of those wfco take It to-day will be the same aa of those who twenty years ago found h tbe only cure. Blood diseases are obstinate, and cannot be cured by one medicine in a dozen which claims to cure them; so when S.S.S. is taken with satisfactory results, after ' a disappointing experi ence with other remedies, ft is not strange that it has grateful friends by the score. Mrs. JameS M. ThOmi'son, I never fails, Sold byBI. E. Robinson Pine Level i. C, July 1, 1897, . I &Bro, Goldsboro, N. O. DID IOU EVER Try Electi-io Bitters as a Remedv fo VOUr trnuhlfts? Tf nnt.. rnt. n. h-t.1.1 ni and get relief. This medicine has been curAnf All fpmRlA nnTn -nln.irtt.ca a.fltn a wonderful direct influence in giving su-engui ana tone vo roe organs. 1: you have loss of appetite, constipation headache, f .intino Brtnlln. ni vous, sieepiess, excuaDie, melancholly or troubled with Dizzy spells Electric " . " v 1 ULt JCT3U. learlth aria strength a,re guaranteed oy lis use. jrmy cents and $1 at J. Hill & Son's drug store. - H MR. WHLIAM SOWB US. Mr. William Sowers, of Bradford, Ohio. was cured by, S.S.S. fen years ago of a severe blood perl son, and writes that to this day no srgn of the dreadful disease has ever returned. He tays: "I had a terrible blood disease which is considered incurable, and was treated for a long time by tbe best physici aoa, but they did me no good. The disease seemed to get a firmer beftd'oa tne, ari attacked my tongue and throat, whicl were soon full of vile nlccrs. ' "I changed doctors several fhnesi and. afterwards took nearly. evetV blood rem edy on tbe market, without the slightest benefit. After five years of" treatment which did me no good wbateves, I was induced to try .S.$. . Tb4a remedy proved itself equal to the case, for in a few months I was entirely cttred'arid toy skin was vperfectly clear-and smooths X could hardly believe tbat tbe coqa was permanent, but ten years have elapsed and no sign of the disease baa yet appeared.'-' S.S.S. is a sure cure for Cancer, Ca tarrh, Contagions Blood Poison, Scrof ula, Rirerrmalsxji, Etorra, airdaU other blooxf -diseases' -which; -othe remedies nave -IK), eject ftcrreyec agon, V Purely Vegetable and ia the only blood remedy which is cnaranfeed to contain potash ox other harmful mineral. S.S.3. is sold by all druggists. . ' -m Books ou Blood and Skin Diseases will be mailed free to all who address SwifJ Specific Company, Atlanta, Georgia. KeliefinSix llours. Distressing Kidnev and Bladder diseases relieved by the "New Great boutn American Sidney Cure." This new remedy is a great surprise on ac count of its exceeding" DromDtness in relieving pain in the bladder, kidneys) back and every part of the urinarv passages in male or female. It r3lieves retention of water and pain in passing iu mmuai jLum.euiaieiy. u you want quick relief and cure this is vour rem edy. Sold by M E Robinson ir Sro. druggists. Goldsboro, N C FILES 1 FILES 1 FILES Dr. Williams' Indian Pile Ointment will cure blind, bleoding, ulcerated and itching piles. It absorbs the tumors, allays the itching at once, acts as a poultice an-f. gives instant relief. Dr. Williams' Indian Pile Ointment is pre pared only for piles and itching of the private parts, and nothing else. Every box is guaranteed. For sale bv drug gists or sent by mail for 50 cts and SI per box. Williams M'f'g Co., Glevo land, U Jb or sale by Robinson &Bre Goldsboro. N. O. URAL RETREAT, II. J.HAM, Prop. I have opened a first-class hotel at the village of White Hall con tiguous to the noted Whitfield Springs, known by some as the "Ninth Snrin. I o - The Water of this Snriner la fho finest of all. It is a positive cure for Indigestion, Dyspepsia, In somnia, and nervous prostration. its general restorative properties are wonderful. Fine climate and picturesque surroundings. My hotel in rnn vpm irtnfl t 1 .,1 beautiful walk to the Springs, ' and every guest is supplied with wauor ireuu irom ine spring as often as desired. A delightful neighborhood and social, hospitable people, My table is always supplied with the best the market and the . country affords. RATES o , Per week $5.00. ) Special rates Per month $20.00. ) for children Address . and families. M, 3m IAM9 Seven SDrin s IN O " Dr. FRANK BOYETTB Dentist story, Bordea Building, Front Room ' 'mm-Zi Goldsboro, N, U v -
Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 23, 1897, edition 1
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