A
7 1
V
It
,1
I
f" A.
I'll J If Ml! 1 If 1 13 Mi! I VC I Y- II I! ! li I )T IM II I 11 I I I IE I II I Ml H
National Bank Goldsboro
Offers to depositors every accom-i
mndiition that Safe Banking will
warrant.
(t . GEO-fl. NORWOOD, Jr., Pres.
li'A. J. BEST, Vice Free-
National Ranlr Hnldchnrn
uutiuiiui uu.ua. uviuuuvivi
. . . . j . -, ,
warns your Dusmess, auu ni
be glad to Talk or Cobresi-ond
with you.
OEO.fl. NORWOOD, Jr., rr-
M. J. BEST, Vio Pre.
' ' : , . : : : -
- - ' This AKGUS o'or the people's rights, No soothing strains of Maia's son, . , .
,. .. .. ' - Doth an eternal vigil keep - Can lull its hundrod oyos to sleep' '
Vol. XVII. GOLDSBORO. N. THURSDAY JAN. 2Q, 1898 HO 38
fli
Royal makes the food pure, ,
wholesome and delicious.
KoJI
POWDER
Absolutely Pure
ROVAl BAKING POWOER PP.. NEW YORK.
l. U A -i i m i fu i -
A ph siciarj tells us that a tec
kettle is a good thing for boils.
-
If
Mli, Louis Godwin, the County
Surveyor, has moved his family
from ear Ae Sampson line and
.jaade b home near Genoa,
wfi"erot hose who netd his ser
vices can find him at.all rimes.
.
With the best public school in
the Suth, good couuty roads,
and a hustling- Chamber of Com -.
merce to putGoldsboro's advant"
ages forward, our town ought to
accomplish much ofdevelopment
in populatioa aiid industries dur
ing this good year 1698.
Mr. J. EL Barrow, of the Jason
Etction nt Greene county, w?as in
the city Friday, wbtre he has a
number of friends and acquain
tances who are always glad to
see him. Mr. Barrow is one of
the lpadjng. farmers of his sec
tion. "
Mr H-A. Tuckpr,of the marble
firm of H. A. Tucker & Bro., of
Wilmingtor, is in the city where
they have a branch establish
cjeiit. Mr. Tucker teHs The
ARGUS that he has commenced
the erection of a $10,000 vault in
Oikdale Cemetery in Wilmington
for Col. M. K. Murcbison of
New Yoik. The vault has twelve
. catacombs ana will be completed
ia about two months.
The marriage of our young
frieud Mr. Juo. W. Howell to
Miss L zzle Underwood, the ami
able daughter of cur good friend
Mr. David Uunderwood, both of
the Pikeville section, wassolemn-
ized at the home of the bride last
week, in he presence of a num
ber oi relative aDd friends of the
young couple, Elder D Davis of
ficiating. . The Argus extends
its congratulations.
The sudden death of Mr. W.
James Sum merlin occurred at bis
home here Thursday night. He
nad done a full day's -work at his
'latksmith shop that day and
we'll homo and retired about 10
iclock with no special complaint
or ailment. He was in a cheer
iul mood and was talking to his
wife about two minutes before he
died. Neuralgia of the heart is
sa:d to be the cause of bis death.
Messrs. Geo. C. itoyall and
Jno. L. Burden, of the popular
and widely known furniture firm
i of Royal! & Borden, of this city,
left last Friday on their annual
purchasing trip to the great fur
niture factories of the far north
west and the New England
- States Their trade, both whole
sale and retail, 'is of such mam
moth proportions that it rf quires
them to visit the largest centres
of manufacture, where they buy
troods in car load lots, at first
cost and that is one of the se
secrets of their great success.
Me. A. A. Joseph Las pur
chased vthe business and good
will of the Einstein Clothing
Company, of" this city, and will
contiuue the business at the old
stand, under the Hotel Kennon.
Mr. Joseph since he came to our
city, with his charming wife and
interesting children, some two
years ago, has made only friends
among our people, and he is de
servingly esteemed . by all
who know him, and he will
continue to make friends with the
trading public as they come to
know him in a business way.
The Argus welcomes him right
cordially to the business circles
of our progressive eiy and wishes
him abundant success
, The proprietors of the famous
Atlantic Hue) at Morehead City
are preparing to make extensive
improvements to that dssirable
property. Already there has
been a quantity of material
placed in position for the work
that is to be done.
The marriage of our townsman
Mr. VV. G. Hollowell to Miss
Mollie Smith was solmnized at the
home of the bride's parents near
Four Oaks last week and the hap
py couple came at once to the
groom's home in this city, where
a reception was tendered thtm and
many friends and relatives were
present to extend their congratu
lations and best wishes. The
groom is the newly appointed agent
of the A. & N. C. K. R. in this
city and enjoys the respect and
confidence of the public generally,
with whom he is familiar by reason
of thenany trusty positions that
he has held from time to time.
Last and all the time Hood's Sarsaparilla
has been advertised as a blood purifier.
Its great cures have been accomplished
thiongh purified blood 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. Rembmber that
Sarsaparilla
Is the best In fact the One True Blood Purifier.
easy to buy, easy to take,
r'fi easy to buy, eai
HOOd S FlIIS easy to operate,
DIVERSIFICATION OF CROPS
4
v.
V J
-Several gentlemen frm the
northwest, representing a hundred
or more families "desirous of se
caring small farms in the South,
have been prospecting around Mt.
Olive this week, " and are now at
Cbadbourn. The Akgus is in re
ceipt of a letter . from . Montana,
and one from Arkansas, each ask-
in? information aa to farm lands
"for one hundred families. Now, if
the Chamber oi Commerce were an
active, hnstling,conferring institu
tion in our midst, all such matters
a this could come before them
and be disposed of to the upbuild'
in not only of Goldsboro -but al
80 the country round abcut.
Pail Argus, Jan. 15.
The Galveston News recently
offered several handsome money
prizes for the best articles enu
merating what the tillers of the
soil can plant and cultivate to the
best advantage, and how the
produce can be realized upoo.
A, special committee has charge
of the articles and will make the
awards. In the meanwhile the
News is priating many of them.
Some of them are very lengthy,
but Mr. A. K. Bradley puts a
deal of advice in a few words.
The basis, he says, of success
ful farming is live stock and
poultry. Live stock should be of
some standard breed, suitable to
the surroundings; shoulJ be well
fed, any surplus in them being
always ready for the best market.
While corn and wheat are great
staples, there is the sweet po
tato, an absolutely certain crop.
The possibilities of the sweet
potato are immense. They can be
on the farmer's table nine moa'lJs
in the year, and can be a part
ration for his stock for a length
of time. '
The farm should be fenced ail
around, and divided into fields,
All fences should be hog-tight.
Hogs and pigs should follow alt
crops, txcept cotton; nothing is
then wasted. Sweet potatoes, cow
peas, peanuts, sorghum and rye
make, the finest and cheapest
pork. Never keep a hog or pig in
a pen; it does not pay. A good
garden is absolutely necessary;
so also is an orchard.
Mr. Bradly goes on to sty that
the greatest cause of loss to the
farmer is the annual, sometimes
semi-annual crazes he is subject to.
if cotton be low he goes m for
corn and hogs. If cotton goes up,
he unanimously decides tnere is
more money in cotton than any
thing else, and the whole face of
his btate is covered with cotton
next season. , lhis ia done over
and over again. It is plainly seen,
says Mr. Bradley, that the all
around farmer is the only one who
can safely go through the , seasons
of low prices, tour-cent cotton
will not hurt him where he has
only a tew bales, and. plenty of
other things to sell and 'to eat.
The all around system, steadily
followed, will bring indepen
dence.
The last thing to be said is.-
don t overdo; don't have more
stock than you can take care of;
don't plant more of any crop than
you can cultivate; that means, do
it well; that implies a man of
sense, a business man; if you are
not, you will draw water and hew
wood.
. Barring a few sentences that
'are amplifications of ideas, this is
Mr; Bradly 's advice to the far
mers of Texas, it is good for the
farmers "of Texas it is good for
the farmers of North Carolina.
Mr. Bradley, at any rate, pre
sents in few words a plan for th6
diversification of crops, and it is
plain that what it lacks in detail
it makes up in comprehensiveness
and sound, sense, , ' j
One Year of Humiliation?
Ituleigh Post. -
About one year ag j Russell
Botlerism assumed control of tne
aff .-irs of this State iu every de
partment, executive, judicial and
legislative. Counties and towns,
too, in a large mijority of in
stances, passed , under the rod.
For one year the people have
experienced the return to power
of the same elements which dis
graced and dishonored them for
a few years just after the war.
No greater outrages occurred
then than have occurred and are
occurring now. Neither liberty
nor property or the rights of
property were safe then; they
are no 'ess threatened now. Pub
lic plunder ran riot then, it is
only restrained now by lavs
which Democrats engrafled into
the statutes followiug the former
spoliation. Wholesale robbery
of the pnople prevailed then,
repudiation of honestrdebls tiks
place now. Open and, shameless
lincentiousness shocked even the
devotees of bestiality then, while
the degree of rottenness and
scandal now prevailing compels
the man in the moon to hold his
nose while passing over the old
oommon wealth.
It was Holc'en, Kirk, and his
potted conglomeration then, it is
Russell, Butler, Hancock, and the
same elements now. In brief, it
3 negro ignorance and moral
depravity that ruled then, as it is
that which creates, sustains and
dominates to-day. The govern
ing power can rise no higher than
its source. The license which
ignorar ce, allied to debaunchery
begets, though kept in restraint
under civilized and honest power,
tears down the temples of the gods,
tramples justice and honor under
foot, lowers the social as well as
the public standard of morals, and
desecrates the very naone of -hu
manity as promulgated by the
Great Creator and law-giver,
when loosened by the cohorts of
wickedness- by fusion by Rus-
selI-Butleri3m.
Holden was impeached, and his
minions east into outer darkness.
The ides of next 1 November
will tell the doom of the present
dynasty.
Can honest citizens have any
doubt as to what that ddomvw.'ll
be?
NEW ENGLAND MILLS CUTT
Pimples, blotches, blackheads, red, rough, oily,
mothy skin, itching, scaly scalp, dry, thin, and
falling hair, and baby blemishes prevented by
Cuticura Soap, the most effective skin purify
ing and beautifying soap in the world, as well as
purest and sweetest for toilet, bath, and nursery.
uttcira
I S"M throughout the wotM. Pottm D. it C Coup., Sol
Props., Bo ton. 7 " How to Beautify the Skin," Iroo.
BLOOD HUMORS
Permanentlr Gored hr
CUTIOUiiA SKHKDIRS.
Col. Shook, of Pigeon Riyer, Has
It Right. ..
The Rleisrh Post says Col. J.
Wiley Shook, the eminent civil
service reformer and sage of
Pigeon River; in referring to thf
attempt of the Republican com
missioners of Buncombe county
to repudiate the county's railroad
debt, remarks: 'The Democrats
said if the Republicans ever got
control of the State and county
governments they would play
b 11, and I'll 09 d d if they
ain't a-doing it."
Wiley's expression is a little
more emphatic, possibly, than
necessary but not more than the
facts warrant." -.v" ' fflt''s.
He is riht. . The Democrats
warned the - people against the
crowd and told tbem the truth
about them The warnings was
unheeded, but it's neyer too late
to mend.
Johnson's
Chill and
Fever
Tonic
Cures Fever
In One Day,
If McKisson bad been elected,
Forker no doubt would have sent
congratulations to him as readily
as he d'd to Hanna. - -
-Tho tailor is engaged in a fit
V Cg occupation, ,
t
The New Policy Goes Into Effect
and Lower Hates to Prevail
in the Mills of Six States. -
Boston, Jan. 15. The opera
tives in over half a hundred cot
ton mills in New England States,
ceased to be paid undtr. the- old
schedule of prices to-day. Oa
Monday morning the . general
policy of the manufacturers to
reduce wages will " in effect in
nearly every mill centre in the
six States. The : reduction will
then' become operative in the
cotton miils of New Bedford,
Lowell, the Pawtucket and
Blacks tone Valley in Rhode Is
land, and in the States of Maine
and New Hampshire.
The Fall River mills, with the
exception of three coi porations.
rut wages in the month, as did
also the Amoskeag Company,' of
Manchester, and the mills in
Salem and a number of smaller
places.
Juawrenee, Mass., Jan 15.
Notices were posted in the cotton
mills of the Atlantic and Pacific
corporations, -here, "-...to day, an
nouncing that on and'after Janu
ary 31, a reduction of 10 per
cent, will be made in the wages
of the employes, the Pacific Mills
employ about 2,500 hands and
the Atlantic about 1,200. It is
thought that the operatives will
accept the reduction, as the
strike of about . two years ago
was unsuccessful.
The Lawrence mills are the
last in New England to join in
the general movement. Tne Ev
erett Pemberton and Washington
Cotton Miils here have . not as
yet announced a reduction, but it
is generally belieyed that they
will do so soon.
Pawtucket. R. I,, Jan. 15. In
th Blackstone Valley .next Mon
day, 7,000 mill operatives w;ll be
gin work at reduced wages. The
reduction is announced at from
10 per cent, to 11 19 per cent.
rhe operatives say that in some
instances the reduction is more
than announced. The mill bauds
are vigorously protesting, but
they have thus far decided to
continue at work.
If Foraker's expressions of es
teem for Hanna had arrived be
fore the Big Boss' election, they
ight have been coundered sin
cere. '
GRAY GABLES R0IIUED.
The Vanderbilts have secured
railroad lines from the Atlantic
to the Pacific. It was an older
Vanderbilt -that didn't give a
continental d n for th9 public.
The younger ones give a trans
continental. - - -; -
David B. Hill announces that
he voted for Bryac, and has rais
ed his old-fashioned shield, I
am a Democrat." It is reasonable
to suppose from his reticence up
to this time that Hill was asham
ed of his vote.
Cancer
Of the Breast.
Mr. A. H. Crausby, of 158 Kerr St.,
Memphis, Tenn., says that his wife
paid no attention to a small lamp which
appeared in her breast, but it soon de
veloped into a cancer 01 the -worst type,
and notwithstanding the treatment of
the best physicians, it continued to
6pread ana grow rapidly, eating two
holes . in her breast. . The doctors
soon' pronounced
her - incurable. A
celebrated New York
specialist then treat
ed her, but she con
tinued to grow worse
and when informed
that both her aunt
and grandmother had
died from cancer he
gave the case up as
hopeless. :
Someone then re
commended . S.S.S.
and though little hope remained, she
began it, and an improvement was no
ticed. The cancer commenced to heal and
when she had taken several bottles it
disappeared entirely, and athough sev
eral years have elapsed, n at a sign of
the disease has ever returned. - ..-
A Real Blood Remedy
S.S.S. (guaranteed purtly vegetable)
is a real blood remedy, and never fails
to cure Cancer, Eczema, Rheumatism
Scrofula, or any other blood disease.
Onr honks - '
will be mailed
free to any ad
dress. Swift
Specific Co..
Mr. Cleveland's Summer Home
Sacked From Cellar to Gar
, ret. ;v : ::;
Bostonx Jan, 17. A special to
the Globe from Buzzard's Bay
says that Gray Gables, be sum
mer home of ex-President Cleve
land, has been visited by burg
lars, who ransacked the house
from garret to cellar, and 1 made
good their escape without leav
ing the slightest clue to their
identity.
When the burglary" occurred is
quite as much of a mystery as is
the identity of those . who were
concerned in it. Brad Wright,
who has charge of the Cleveland
estate, made the discovery sev
eral days ago, and be immediate
ly reported the facts to the town
officials and notified Mr. Cleve
land. The amount of plunder
which the crooks took with them
cannot be known until Mr.
Cleveland has been heard from.
The great velocity of wind at
Fort Smith last Wednesday re
sembled very much a populist na
tional . convention, thousrh there
was greater damage done. v
'Many a poor'man has -lost, his
in trying to sound the depths of a
woman's love.
The march of improvement in
Greater New York-"goes merril-v
on. An old and. well-known Meth
odist church is to he transformed
lito a saloon.
False eyes should be made of
locking-glass.
5
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 effectual-
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 use of so many of the
pills on the market. Ask your
druggist for Ayer's Cathartic
Pills. "When other pills won't
help you, Ayer's is
THE PILL THAT WILL
Civil Service Canvass.
Washington, Jan. 15. The
c -wass of Republican members of
the House of Representatives on
the question of changing the civil
service law, which has been con
ducted by the Republican "steer
ing committee," . is about com
pleted. Of the 202 Republican
members of the House, the canvass
is said to show that a majority
varying from 18 to 40, is favora
ble to a change in the law, accord
ing to a degree of change proposed.
lhis last factor leads to some dif
ference of opinion as to the result
of .the canvass.
Representative Pearson of
North Carolina a member of the
committee, places the number of
Republicans who can be depended
upon, at 115. Mr. Evans, of Ken
tucky, another member of the
committee, places the number at
135 . Both estimates are based
on the canvass, the difference be
ing due to the attitude of cei tain
doubtful members. As a whole
the result gives satisfaction to
those who have made the canvass
to .favor a change in the law. This
is the case in the State delegations
of ; North Carolina, . Tennesseei,
Kentucky, West Virginia and New
Hampshire.
Beyond completing the canvass,
the opposition to the civil service
law is taking no active steps for
the present, the purpose being to
wait unt;l the regular civil service
committee of the House takes ac -,
tion on the bill, before it prepar
ed a modification of the law.
ARE YOU '
BANKRUPTinhealth.
constitution undermined by ex
travagance in eating, by disre
garding the laws of nature, or
physical capital all gone, if sor
NEVER DESPAIR
Tutt's Liver Pills will cure yoa
For sick headache, dyspepsia
sour stomach, malaria, torpid
liver, constipation, biliousness
and 11 kindred diseases.
Tutt's Liver Pills
an absolute cure
GOV. TAYLOR A CANDIDATE.
lie Wants to Go to the United
States Senate and His An
nouncement Creates a Sensa
tion.
Nashville, Tenn., Jan. 15.
This afternoon Governor Taylor
formally announced that he would
be a cendidate for election to the
United States Senate, by. the Leg
islature, which meets in extra ces
sion next Monday. This announce
ment by the Governor caused a
decided sensation, for he had re
peatedly and publicly f stated that
he would work for'the election of
Senator Turley, hie appointee .
There wiJi be three candidates be
fore the Democratic caucus, Sena
tor Turley, Congressman McMil
hn and Governor Taylor, and to
night the workers for each candi
date are claiming the nomination .
Louisiana Constitutional Con
vention. The people of Louisiana, not
only determined on Tuesday that
a constitutional convention
should be held, but they also at
the same time elected delegates
to the convention. Although the
Populists and Republicans put up
a joint opposition ticket, yet tbf
proposition swept the State by
at- least 40,000 majority, and
five-sixths of the 131 delegates
are Democrats. The white Re
publicans either refused to vote,
or else they voted in favor of a
convention. Even the more
thoughtful negroes pursued a
like course. There will not be
negro in th r convention. The
work of framing a new constitu
tion will be begun at Now Or
leans on the 8th day of nexl
month, and the conclusions of
the convention will not neces
sarily need approval at the polls.
"This," says the New Orleans
States, ''is not a victory over the
negro. It is a victory over negro
suffrage, over ballot box stuffing
and fraud, and over threatened
revolution It is a happy result
for white citizens .and it is a
blessing to the negro. He will
be more thought of than before.
He will be - protected in all his
rights, in hif life, liberty prop
erty and earnings. He will be
ttore respected, and instead of
being regarded as a threat to
civilization and an element of
gross corruption in our politics
he will have the good will, ?ud if
he be honest and industrious,
the , esteem of- the white man,
and instead of being spoken of
opprobiously, he will stand in the
country on his own merits as an
honest and useful citizen. Th'e
will be of infinitely greater ad
vantage to him than the posses
sion of the franchise which he
has everywhere, in every laud
and in every era, so grossly,
abused. Oa the results - of the
election - we congratulate the
white; people and the negro of
the State alike."
GETTING READY
" - Hverv flxnwitant mother has
a trying ordeal to face. If she does not
J.
The "middle of the road": Pop
0 lists have decided once mora to
yam o t n in t.Vio li-nnrt triat. has - Tin
lending.. , -
get ready for , it.
there is no telling
what may happen.
Chad-birth is full
of uncertainties if
Mature is not given proper assistance.
Mother's Friend
is the best help you can use at this time.
It ia a liniment, and when regularly ap
plied several months before baby comes,
it makes the advent easy ana nearly pam
laK. Tfc rptliflvea and prevents " morning
sickness," relaxes the overstrained mus
cles, relieves the distended feeling, short
ens labor, makes recovery rapid and cer
tain without any dangerous after-enects.
" Mother's Friend is good tor oniy one
purpose, viz.: to relieve motnernoou 01
danger and pain.
$1 dollar per bottle at all drag stores, or sent
by mail on receipt of price. .
tion for women, wUl bo sent to any addresa
upon application to K -
THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO..
- Atlanta. Oa. ;
" Tn Mr. Croker's effort to cap
ture the presidency he should
lay in a liberal supply of salt.
The "disposition of the Demo
cratic bird to fly the coop is un
raistakable.
A man will give up $1 for a
50-cent article he wants and a
woman will give up 49 cents for a
50-cent article she doesn't want.
The ' more we think of some
people the less we think of th- n.
THERE WILL BE A HOWL
Wages have been cut in the
New England factories, so that
the average pay of operatives is
now only $5.70 a week. It was
$6 43. One who reads Eastern
papers might think that wages in
the Eastern mills were at least
double the wages in Southern mills
but the truth is they are in the
average just $5.70 a week.
The recent cut do wise changes
the situation. It serves to show
that cotton manufacturing is about
to slip away from New England,
just as iron manufacturing did
many years ago. Notbtug can
stop the change that is: going on.
The mills are going to tie raw
material. Dmgleyism is impo
tent to stay the movement-. Jt is
beyond remedy.
What then? New Eng'and will
become the seat of money lords,
the sumtaer -resort of the entire
country. No smoke w.ll then ob
scure its clear air. No stacks will
hide its wonderful scenery. Then
loak out for squalls. Dingleyism
will then come in for denuncia
tions such as it does not receive,
but' deserves, to-day. Will New
England silently accept a tariff de
vised to give Western and South
ern manufacturers a chance to
name their own prices? Not if
New England knows itself. There
will be a howl against the villainv
of protection the like of which was
never before raised in this world.
And yet do not the people of the
Qld World pay the duty? It has
been sad they do.
Save The Children.
. When children are attacked with
cough, cold and croup, Dr. Bull's
Cough Syrup will prove a quick and
sure cure. Mr. Elmer E. Baker,
Blandon, Pa,, writes: "We have
used Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup for cough,
cold and croup, and found it the best
cough medicine and cure for these
affections. We never run out of it,
but always keep it on hand." Dr.
Bull's Cough Syrup is sold everywhere
for 25 cents. Insist on having It.
The telegram sent bv President
McKinley to Mark Hanna con
gratulating him on his election
was by no means creditable to the
chief executive of the nation. Fron"
the point of view of gratitude it
was no doubt proper. McKinley
owes more to Mark lianna than
he will ever le able to pay. But
that the president of the United
States should gush and slop -over
on the occasion of the triumph of
a bribe-giver, a corruptionist and
enemy of labor does not reflect
any credit upon Mr. McKinley. It
causes the public to think that
McKinley is as bad a9 Mark Harf-
na. jur. Moivinley might have
been silently happy at Mr. Hanna' b
election, but to have paraded his
great joy in the public telegram
was sufficient to convince the peo
ple that his joy at the corruption
ist's triumph was that of a per
sonal friend. There was a lot of
idiotic telegrams sent to Hanna on
the occasion of his victory. The
most idiotic, however, was that
sent by McKinley's private secre
tary, John Addison Porter. He has
8s few brains as an oyster. Of course
he has the advantage Of the oyster
m being able to talk. If the oys
ter could talk we have no doubt it
wold be superior to Porter. ;
1 D6iu Hie Town
To show a better, chearjer. or more
handsome stook of gooda than is now
on exhibition at my store on Walnut
street. I am bound to sell, I need
money in discounting my bills, that is
one cause of the cut prices ac below,'.
Shoes; - - : :
i 3,000 pair, nice, new, all leathoi
shoes. Leather 30c. half soles 10c.
Notions:.
Wire buckle suspenders, 10c, a
viot shirt 25c. latge towel for 10c.
Groceries: v
Coffee, cakes and candy ICc. flou
sugar, syrup, mo'asses, etc., cheap.
Dry Goods; -i --v -
5;000 yards of cloth. - Ext-H heav
white and checked horaeejur. 6c yard.
Hats. Hats: i .
The best $1 to $1.25, then down to
50c. Beys 25 to 60c. '- - - . j . .
Tobacco. Snuff i
C. C, Little Moses, Silver Dime.
Rose bud, only 25c lb, job lots 75 to 50c
F. B. Edmunds on.
THE HUSTL '
S accessor to E. Ldmundaon & Bro
Dental Roants
Dr. Chas. W CiRAiNr.FR
Has opened a suit of Dental rooms ove
A.1 1 T 1 1 1, r-.
mo iiabiuutti uau&t h)u . west uenc
street, and Jof ers ihis services to the
public . ' . -
vtever
sad
EM'S CREAM BALM is a positive cure.
Apply into the nostrils. It ia quickly absorbed. SO
cents at Druggists or by mail ; Bamples 10c by mail.
ELY BROTHERS, 5G Warren St., New York City.
Stop drugging yourself with quack
nostrums or "cures." Get a well
known pharmaceutical remedy tnat
will do the work. Catarrh and Ccld.
in the head will not cause suffering if
Ely's Cream Balm is used. Druggists
will supply 10c. trial size or 50c. full
sizb. We mail it.
ELY BROS.,
56 Warren St., New York City.
Rev. John Reld, Jr., of Great Fall's
Mont., recommended Ely's Cream
Balm to me. I can emphasize his
statement, "It is a positive euro for
catarrh if used as directed." Rev.
Francis W. Poole, Pastor Central Pres.
Church, Helena, Wont.
iiiHl
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
Ole&nsea and beautifies the hsJr.
Promotes a luxuriant erowth.
Never Fails to Kestore Gray
Cures scalp diseases & hair falling.
c,andgl.tOat Druggists "
SENT FREE
to Housekeepers-
4
Liebig COMPANY'S
v Extract of Beef
COOK BOOK,
telling how to prepare many deli
ca'e and delicious dishes.
Address, -Liebig
Co., P, O. Box 2713, New York.
.IS
Chiehcatn. En.Iiah nininnitd Itrand. -
OUVRQYAL PILLS
Original said Only Genuine.
Safe, always reliable- ladies ask ,
nonti Brand in Ued and Gold metaUiox
Jdo otberw Refuse dangerous ntbMtitw
vtioji&aTid imitations. A t Druegist. or send 4a.
an stamps for particulars, testimonials and
"Relief for T,dlf-
Mall. IO.OOO Testimonials. Name Paper,
br Al Uaomi. Druccta. PHlI.all., PA.
Welcome
Stoves
Andmany other kinds of Heating
and Cooking Stoves in stock
which are the
Best on the Market.
You will find it to your interest to
eee my line before buying. I will .
also do your
Tin Roofing and Plumbing
Promptly and
WU AKAJSTEE SATISFACTION.
Jotji) Slaligrjter
Walnut Street.
weare
AND
HERE
llTO
Here?
The reception and encouragement ac-
oiaea nas oeen nigbjy satisfactory to
cs, and of sucn a nature as to warrant
"S in the opinion that the public ap
preciate our efforts to I please. Our
stock of
UNDERTAKERS GOODS
is complete, of every kind. Our funeral
ear ; is furnished absolutely free. Cof
fins and Casket3 of every style and at
reasonable figures.
Our reception room and office with
stationery always open to our country
friends and they are invited to use it
for their correspondence. 1
Buggies, Wagons
and Carts Repaired,
and. work and pi ices guaranteed. -
G. U. & R. Co.
K. E. Bizzell,' President,
"i i Jno. Slaughter, Manager,
' Carl E. Stanley, Assistant.
WalDutt.. 00. Arus.
QOLDSBORO ;
- GOLDSBORO, N, C-
AILS KOWLim
: Invites che attention of merchants
to a woll-selected stock of goods suit- '
able to the trade of this section. -
' ! Specialties Groan and Roasted
CefTee, Bugar. Flour, Bait, Molasses
and Cheese, Prices and quality guar
anteed. '. ' - '.'
Thos, H. Hclmes, Pres.
' s L. M.Michatjx Man's.
County Surveyor.
I am now periranently located' at
Geroa postoflico, 5 miles south wtt of
Go!d8bovo . All persons desiring their '
lards surveyed at 2 per Day,
will do well to call on or address
Louis Godwin,
bounty Surveyor, GENOA. N. C.
J Jan 13, 18981 v - - w4t
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