Newspapers / Goldsboro weekly argus. / July 6, 1899, edition 1 / Page 1
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v. 1 This Argus 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" Vol. XVII. GOUDSBORO. JST.-'C. THURSDAY, JULY 6. 1899. NO 101 V. i ' ' ff 3Tlllft ffi" ftR fTTirf iTl flTTT f i T(T Si Mi S,iW ' ' Baking Powder Made from pure cream of tartar. Safeguards the food against alum. Ahim bating powders are the greatest menaccra to health of the present day. ROYAL BAKINQ POWOCR CO., MEW YORK. OUR LOCAL OPTIC. Misses. EstelIeTomlin3on, Minnie Best, and Mary Emma Giddens are, at borne again from spending a week with relatives and friends in ML Olive. Miss Emma E j wards is at home for vacation from Knox ville, Tenn., where she is employed as head trimmer in one cf the most fashionable millinery estab lishments of that city. Mr. J. Schwab is just back frcm sen extended trip through the en tire South. He says the cotton -crop is about as large this jear as last and, that the condition is bet ter than it was this time last year. Several country carts loaded with ripe water melons occupied Walnut street this morning. It is rather early for the luscious com modity, but our people are ready for them especially the "cullud" population. Tobacco barnes out through the country contiguous to Goldsboro ere already beginning to smoke, with the first curings of this year's crop of the golden leaf of. com merce, and a 1 our tobacco ware hoses are making ready for their opening on the first day of August. It is reported that a believer in Sanctification, and a good man, too, recently plowed up his field of tobacco, near this city, because be thought he had, a vision in which he was told that he was committing a sin to raise tobacco, one of the curses of the present day. Have you been out to the Park yet? .You would hardly know the place! And the work cf beautifying it has just begun. Both Messrs. Henry and Sol Weil have most liberal works designed for the place, which when completed audexcuted will make it already second to no Park in the State. We go for ward. Already the people are tal'iing of Pipkin's big excursion fo Nor folk, Washington and Baltimore, and many, are thus early inakiDg preparations to "take it in." Mr. Pipkin tells us that he will tave a special boat one of those fine Norfolk & Washington passenger steamers, chartered exclusively for his excursionists to Washington. The Atlantic Coast Line have decided to establish a flag station, for freight and passengers, on Mr. .Lotte W. Humphrey's farm, in j Fork township, on the Midland .road, to be known as "Grass- ;mere," the name of the farm. This twill be a great convenience to the farmers of that fertile neighbor hood both for shipping of tobacco and cotton to this market and for travel. Tee station wilt be equip ped with a covered platform. Dr. Paul C. Hutton arrived in the city last Thursday on .a passing brief visit to bis home and friends here, on his ' way to San Franscisco, whence he will .sail on July 12 for Manila, being ordered to report for service in tthe army of the Philippines. Dr. iHutton is just from Porto Rico, rind left his mother and sister, win? were with him there, in Washington, at the home of. his brother. Mr, Dan Hutton. And go, the pot office is to be moved iatp the Law Building da nder sTlease with the Government f o r ten y ear s . Wei 1 1 The people Twha have made tto office what it iie the people who hae made t Goldsboro the city Ihet it is and through whose enterprise " and . business energy this pott office is -, now rated in the second class, are, ;95 per cent ef them, at least, op posed to this arbitrary and par tisan aelion of the McKinley ad ministration. In the whole bis tory of the town the post office has always been somewhere con veniently located on East and . West Centre street, except the , short while, tinder a former Re s . publican administration, it was Io r -cat 34 ia the Law Building, This time it goes there for ten years and the people well, the people, no matter bow many, when they "dint" Republicans, don't cut any ice with tms administration. .. The Nelson Riverside Sunday School, named in honor of the late Rev. C. J. Nelson, has re cently been organized with Mr, D. E. Glisson. of this city as superintendent. It holds forth every Sunday afternoon, on the river bank, uear old Waynesboro, Among the large stock of piano3 and organs that the Andrews Music House, under the Messen ger Opera House, are exhibiting to too trade of tbis city is a ma nmcent I vers & Pond piano, that is indeed a thing of beauty, and in tone and finish is eaid to be the finest instrument ever exhibited in Goldsboro. The Argus has received from President Jas. D. McNeill, and other members of the State Fire men's Association, a handsomely printed invitation which says: "Your honorable presence and smiling countenance is desired at the Eleventh Annual Convention and Tournament, of the North Carolina State Firemen's Asso ciation, at Greensboro, on Augubt 1st, 2d, 3d, 4lh, 1899." A professional safe cracker visited Newton Grove, in Samp son county, about 22 miles from this city, last Friday, between midnight and dawn and blew open tne sale ox Mr, T. W. Underwood's store and realized $800 in cash. The job was well done, and no trace of the cracks man, save the fac that a strang er, wearing a plug nat, with a sandy gray mustache and carry ing a small hand grip, was seen heading towards Newton Grove, about sundown Friday even ing and has not since been seen. Goldsboro continues to add industrial enterprises to her al ready large quota of labor em ploying manufactories. This time it is "The Gem City Brick Company," for the manufacture of hand-made brick, and it is al ready in operation and has just completed the burning of a kiln of fine brick, 150,000, which are now ready for market. The new company is to be incorporated under tne above name, and its yard is located just beyond the Southern limit of the city, on the line of the W. & W. Railroad Success to the enterprise. TO CURE A COLD IN NE DAY Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Iruggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. The genu Id a has L. B Q on each tablet A BOSTON VIEW We havejast discovered why the Boston Transcript feels call ed upon to regulate and direct affairs in the South. Referring to the imperial policy which the ad ministration would have us en force in the Philippines (when we get possession of them) the Transcript says that imperialism is no new thing in this govern ment; that it began that the South has in 1861 and been practi cally a "colony" of the north ever since. If our amusing B aston contem porary can get any comfort out of this notion it is welcome to it. The prevalent opinion of the people of the South, however, is ! that this section is a part of the Union in the same sense that New England is, and that the South is worth quite as much to the general establishment. When Ben Hill declared in the house of representatives twenty three years ago that -'we are in our father's house and intend to stay there. "he spoke for. the peo ple of the whole Sou t la. We .are not only there, but we do not care whether such sectionalists as the Boston Transcript like our being there or not. The South has no desire or intention to ex plain or apologize for - anything inthe past. It is proud of its his tory and prouder of no part of it than that which - the Transcript considers just causa for sack cloth and ashes. The Transcript "colony" has had a rather large share in shaping the -course of the government since the war and intends to have its due in flu ence in doing so hereafter, not as a section but as an integral part of tbis great Union. To assist digestion, relieve - distress after eating or, drinking too heartily, - to prevent constipation, take "MasiiG "Pills" :t. - Sold everywhere. 25 cents.., . Now and again . you see two- women fussing down the street who look like sisters. You are astonished to learn that they are mother and daughter, and you realize that a woman at forty or forty five ought to be at her finest and fairest. Why isn't it so? The general health of woman is so in timately associated with the local health of the essentially feminine organs that there can be no rich cheek and round form where there are debilitating drains, and female weakness. Women who have suffered from these troubles have found prompt relief and cure in the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It gives vigor and vitality to the organs of wom anhood. It clears the complexion, bright ens the eyes and reddens the cheeks. No alcohol, ppium or other narcotic is contained in "Favorite Prescription." Any sick woman may consult Dpctor Pierce by letter, free. Every letter is held as sacredly confidential, and an swered in a plain envelope. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. "I commenced to take Dr. Pierce'-"! Favorite Prescription," writes Mrs. Martha H- Barham, of Newville, Prince George Co.. Va.. " in June, 1897, also his ' Golden Medical DiscovervJ and I cannot express the benefit I have receivda from these medicines. I was sufferingf with what the doctors called chronic indigestion, torpid iiver and vertigo. I alsp suffered with female weak ness. The doctor did not do me any good, so I wrote to you for advice. When I cdrnmenced to use the medicines I weighed only 112 pounds, now I weigh 140 pounds." Dr. Pierce's Pallets regulate the liver. THE TOBACCO MARKET. The Men Who An to Manage the Several Warehouse! This Season. Ever since the inauguration of a tobacco market in Goldsboro, only a few years ago, Goldsboro has enjoyed the reputation for paying the highest prices of any market in the State, This repu tation has abundantly increased the patronage of this market from season to season and it is confidently expected that the coming season will be no excep tion, Furthermore, this repu tation has been due to the vigor ous spirit of competition which prevails at all times among the large corps of buyers located on this market, and the coming season our already long list of buyers will be augmented by the introduction of several more, and the competition will not grow weakar but stronger. From this the warehousemen and the plan ter alike are benefited. The managers of ail the ware houses are gentlemen of experi ence and can be relied on to look after the interest of their patrons and while doing this they are guarding their own interests. Mr. Thos. Edmundson, the manager of the Farmer's Ware house for the sale of leaf tobacco, has engaged the services of Mr. Wm. G. Cathran, of Roxboro, who has had years experience in the tobacco business. Mr. Cath ran has already arrived in Golds boro and has begun active pre parations for the opening of the season on the 1st of August. Mr. Edmundson will bring to his as sistance other capable men of experence, and it ' is more than probable that this will be the most successful season of this warehouse, Mr. . S. W. Chamberlain, the popular manager of the old Goldsboro Warehouse last sea son, has associated himself with Mr. Walter P. Peterson in the management of this . warehouse for the coming season, Mr, Ch amber! ian, as is well known, has had years 3xperience on the Durham market,his former home, and he will spead bis time on the warehouse floor looking after the interest of his patrons while Mr. Peterson, who is a young man of excellent business qualifi cations, will do the office -work for the firm, . The Planters'' Warehouse, which was built only last year and ran a very successful season for the first one, will be managed the coming season by Mr. J. L. Faulkner,, who was one of the managers last season, and Mr. I. "J. Harrell, Mr. Faulknerhas been associated with the tobacco business for- years and is well known to the planters in this sec tion. Mr.' "Xobe" flarrell, as he is tetter known, is a very, popular young man of sterling business qualities and will prove a valuable assistant to his partner in the management of this warehouse. BANKERS AND MILLS. Baltimore Manufacturers' Record In aspeech at the recent meet ing of the Georgia bankers Mr. B. S. Walker, president of the Monroe Cotton Mills, arrl vice president of the Bank of Monroe, took the ground that it was within the power of the bankers of the State to improve materi ally industrial conditions of A Georgia. His speech was full o wise suggestions. He took the ground thatv there is no such thing as too many mills in Geor gia or in the South as long as a single bale of cotton is shipped for manufacture . outside, the Soutb, and that wherever there is a bank in a Georgia town and no cotoon mill, the bank has not done its duty, and has neglected a most important opportunity for increasing its own business and the business of every .individual in the community. He did not advocate apartnership of bank and mill. He merely wished the mills to be under the foster ios care of the banks, Such an arrangement would en able the mills to use the banks' money between November and May, returning it in time for the farmers to use it in making their crops; and the banks would no longer be obliged to send their moneys to city depositories for six months. Another advantage suggested was that the stock of a cotton mill owned by citizens of the town and by nearby farmers affords excellent collateral for loans. Mr. Walker did not stop at suggestions, but quoted in stances of successful co-operation of banks and mills in the State. His speech was a 6trong argu ment for co-operation, not only of banks, but also of other interests with individuals seeking t" build up the industries of a community. It is hardly . possible to start a mill of any stee in a Southern town without improving the gen eral condition of that town. A notable instance of tbis bas been given in the case ol Huntsville, Ala. The announcement a few weeks ago of the determination to build the Merrimac Mills there was followed by the beginning of operations in the city of a syn dicate which will build and equip an electricsltghting and power plant, operate an electric railway and develop real estate. On the heels of that fact comes the statement from Mr. W. T. Piatt president of the Chamber of Commerce, who has been active in promoting industrial interests of Huntsville, that two cotton mills, a new factory, a brewery, and a foundry are among the possibilities of the near future. The history of Huntsville may be duplicated in many Southern communities.lt will not be dupli cated il the citizens of those communities wait for outsiders to lead in development. - . BLOOD CURS SENT FREE. Cure For Blood and Skin Diseases, Ecma, Pimples, Scrofula, Blood " Poison, Cancer, Eto If you have tried sarsaparillas, patent medicines, and doctored, and still have old, persistent sores, pimples, distressing eruptions of the akin, pain ful sores on hands, arms or legs, itching sensation, Irritating skin troubles,' ec zema, scrofula, ulcers ; contagious blood poison, fever sores, mercurial rheuma tism, catarrn, dous, lace covered with little sores, cancer or any blood taint, then give B. B. B. a trial, because Botanic iilooa 13 aim is made lor lust such cases, and it cures to stay cured, thoee stubborn blood diseases that oth er milder medicines iaii even to Denent. B- B B, cures because it forces all the poison and impurity or blood humors out of the body, bones and entire sys tem. We offer to send to any sufferer a sample bottle of B. B J5. absolutely free. B. B, B. is an old, well-tried remedy, hence we know that it cures to stay cured, for the people , cured by B, B.B. years ago are well to day and free from all blood Impurities. .Cancer, Bleeding.. Eating; Sores Cancer of Nose, lip; face, ear or neck external or Internal cancer, bleeding.T eating sores, are all cured with B. B. B. at tl per large bottle. Write for trial bottle and a sample bottle of B. B. B. will be sent by return mail, all charges prepaid. Addres BLOOD BALM CO, 277 Mlt- chell St. Atlanta, Ua. Describe your symptoms nd free personal medica' advice ill be given. ITCH on human cured In 80 min utes by Woolford's Sanity Lotion. This r.ever fails. Sola "by M. E. Robin son & Bro., Druggists, QoldBboroN. O Ronndlap Bale Becomes Popular The American Cot&on Com pany nas met who marked suc cess in the development of its Roundlap bile business. List year "it had less than sixty press es in operation while this season it will havj over 300 atwork. .Its plant at Chicago, for building these presses is runnirg night and day and new locations are be iag selected as rapdy as pis sible. TO CURE A COtO IN ONE DAY Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. The genuine has L. B Q, on each tablet TROOPS FOR OTIS Washington, June 30. So widespread and etrong is the pub lic Bentiment in favor of mukiag the army in Luzon numerically adequate for its work fiat the government, bes-des increasing the regn'ars to he maxiuum of over 68,000, has concluded to en list at least an installment of the 35,000 volunteers f r which Con gress also pr jvided . There is not the slightest ques tion that the situa'ion on which Congress based its provision f.r volunteers now exists. It is plain enough that a better provision would have been to allow enlist ments of regulars as far toward 100,000 as should be found neces sary. But the next best plan is the one now to be adopted by the Gov ernment, namely, to recruit a force of about 10,000, or possibly 15,000, volunteers through the regular recruiting agencies. In tbis way the bo-c lied skeleton regiments, formed in the Philip pines, can first be filled, and then other regiments can be organized with officers appointed by the Gov ernment. The advantige of this mothod over taking Slate miiit:a regi ments in bulk, with their existing organizations of officers and men, is apparent. It insures the selec tion of men individually by skilled recruiting officers, whose exper ience makes them able to siy what applicants seem to hive in them the making of good soldiers; and then the physical aad"oiher .tetts they undergo are those of the reg ular service. Gen." Otis today has in Luzon, or on the way thither, or under order to go, all the troops he needs at present, because the rainy sea son makes decisive operations on a large scale impossible. ""We may go out from our lines and drive the enemy back from timo t time, but the hasty retrograde in which he is an adept soon interposes - the jungles and the swamps as an ob stacle to our following him. What we need is aa adequate force ready for operations on a broad scale after the campaigning reason be gins again: and for tbis purpose, with - the enlisting, organizing, equipping, drilling and transport ing, needed, we must start now.' biscovereefby a Woman. "Another great discovery has been made, and that too, by a lady in this country. "Disease fastened its clutqbes upon Tier and for seven .years she. with stood its severest tests, but her vital organs were underminep and death seemed imminent. For three months she coughed in cessantly, and could not sleep. She finally discovered a way to recovery, by purchasing of us a bottle of Dr. King's New Dis covery for Consumption, and was so much relieved on taking first dose, that she slept all night; and with two bottles, has been ab solutely cured. Her name is Mrs. Luther Lulz ' Thus writes W. C. Hamnick & Co., of Shelby. N, C. Trial bottles free at J. H. Hill & Son, Goldsboro; and J. R. Smith. Mt. Olive, Drugstore. Regular size 50c and $ 1.00 .Every bottle guaranteed. . -,. i i. He Fooled the Surgeons. . All doctors told Re nick Hamil ton, of West Jefferson, O.-, after suffering 18 months from Rectal Fistula, he would die unless a costly operation was performed; but he cured himself with five boxes Bucklen's Arnica Salve, the surest Pile cure on Earth, and the best Salve in the World. 25 cents a box. Sold by J. U. Hill & Son, Goldsboro; and J. R, South, Mt. Olive. Druggists. - THE VERY LATEST. The formation of a combine to operate the tobacco sales ware houses of Danville, Va ,Ms one of the latest things in the way of a trust. The combine has been chartered in New Jersey, where everything shady is chartered, with a capital of $1,000,000, and eight of the nine warehouses of Diovllle are in the deal. The American Tobacco Company, otherwise the cigarette trust, is probably at the bottom of this busines?, though it - denies it. This is likely its fiual step in destroy. ng competition in the sale of leaf tobacco on the Dan ville market, which is a very large one, and it looks as if it should b3 entirely t ff active. This step will lik-jlv be followed by the "tuilding of a few more churches, new gifts of money to colleges, and enlarged contribu tions to orphan asylum?. Charl otte O server. The Appetite ol a Goat Is envied by all poor dyspeptics whose Stomach and Liver are out of order. All such should know that Dr. -King's Nsw Life Pills, the wonderful Stomach and Liver Rsmedy, gives a splendid appetite, sound digestion and a regular bodily habit that iusures perfect health and great energy Only 25c. at J. H, Hill & Son, Goldsboro; and J, R. Smith, Mt. Olive, Drug Store. BAPTISED AT 103 Chattanooga, Tenn., Dispatch. At Oxanna Ala. Mrs, Maggie Pendergass, aged 103 has just been baptised. She has been a lifelong Methodist, but recently became a Baptist. She is so feeble that she had to be baptized while sitting in a chair. With a mioister'on either side she was lifted iu the chair and carried in to tne baptistry and gently im mersed She stood the ordeal well. - Mrs. Pendergass' husband died in 1860, and she has been supported by. her three unmar ried daughters,aged respectively 80, 78 and 76. NO CUKE NO PAT. That is the way all druggists sell GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC for Chills and Malaria. It is dimply T-oa aad Quinine in a tasteles orm. Children love it. Adults pre fer it to bitter, nauseating Tonics. Price, 50c. Don't worry over little things -big ones give you enough trou ble. ' A diseased stomach surely under mines health. It dulls the brain, kills energy, destroys tne nervous system, and predisposes to insanity and latal diseases. All dyspeptic troubles are quickly cured by Kodol Dyspepsia uure. It has cured thousands of cases and is curing them every oay. Its In gredients are such that it can't help curing. J. H. Hill & Son; Goldsboro, and J onn tf. omltn, Mt. Olive. Some persons are very retic cent because. they only say what they think, Thomas Bhoads, Centerfield, O., writes: 'I suffered from piles seven or eight years. No remedy gave me re lief until De Witt's Witch Hazel Salve, less than a box of which permanently cured me." Soothing, healing, per fectly harmless Beware of counterfeits J. H. Hill & Son Goldsboro, and Jno. R. Smith, Mt. Olive. If we could only tell in the morning what would happen be fore night we couldn't get up, Dr. Cady's Condition.- Powders are just what a horse needs when in bad condition. Tonic, blood purifier and vermifuge. They are not food but medicine and the best in use to put a horse in prime - condition Price 25 cents per package. For sale by M. E. Jttobinson and ro. ana uoiasDoro urug Co. in Goldsboro, and J. B. Smith Mt. Olive N. C. A man always feels better if he can blame his wife for every thing that goes wrong. Schools In Cuba nd Elsewhere. Prof. J. Draughon. who recent ly visited Cuba with a view of inves tigating the outlook for establishing a school in Havana, Cuba, next fall, on his return visited Savannah, Ga., where he arranged to open a well equipped Business College June 15. toi JJraughon now has nourish ing - Dusmess colleges located in Nashville, Tenn.,, Galveston and Texarkana, Texas. These colleges have superior courses of instructions, and special facilities for securing positions. See Prof. -Draughon's ad. elsewhere in this issue and write for illustrated catalogue. Special rates' will be given all who enter either of his colleges soon, MOST VIOLENT CASES HAVE shows no disposition to heal under ordin nPPFARFn AT FIRT ary treatment. JJo one can fell how soon these HI I LMIiLU HI rillOl HO will develop into Cancer of the worst type. . ,So many people die from Cancer simply be- MFRr PImPI F canse they do nofc know just what the disease isj HI LI II. I I III I LUOi they naturally turn themselves over to the doctors. , anT are forced to submit to a cruel and dangerous operation the only treatment whieh the doctors know for Cancer. The disease promptly returns, however, and is even more violent and destructive than uciuio. vlauoi j a ueatuy poison m other external treatment can have no come from within the last vestige of 1 'S ipiii S. S. FOR THE BLOOD because it is the only remedy which can go deep enough to reaph the rot of the disease and force it out of the system permanently. A surgical operation does not reach the blood the real seat of the disease because the blood can not be cut away. Insist upon S. p. S. ; nothing can take its place. S. S. S. cures also anyfcase of Scrofula, Eczema, Rheumatism, Contagious BloodPoison, Ulcers, Sores, or any"other form of blood disease. Valuable books on Cancer and Blood Diseases wjll be mailed free to any address b Swift Speciho Company, Atlanta, Georgia. il9 MASON'S Porcelain lined Pruit xJ ars ! JUST ARRIVED. Bought before the Trust's adyance. Prices Rock Bottom. Will meet any competition. Farter FaiKener Furniture Go. Tlie People's Friends. Use Koch's Disinfectant. The Perfect Cleanser The following' hotels use it: Mt. Vernon. Saliaburv. N. f. Gresham's S. A. Iu, Riley's Greenwood. S. C, Leatherwood's. .Laurens. S. C, Swannanoa, Asheville, N. C, Lexington Hotel, "Richmond, Va., Pee Dee Inn. Cheraw, 8. C, and Hotel Kennon. For sale in Goldsboro Wholesale by the Goldsboro Drug Company, and by all druggists and leading grocers. . Manufactured by CIENTIFIO GfiEMIGHL GO-. Goldsboro, N. C. Our New Stock of W. L. Douglas are here. All styles and shapes in Calf, Kangaroo and Vici Kid. When in need of a pair of shoes, it will pay you to see our stock. Coffins K O3ot.li. find Varnish Finistif .Wood and. Motalio, HTFUNERAL CAR FREE! PHONES .81, 96 O. U. If you are a lover of Tea, Anco Blend. The best on the market. and prices. Call and see us. Walnut Street. MOTT'S 00-3--.-XM-gU-8-00 g-iSsa-C'BB l)K Q PENNYROYAL PILLS of menstruation." They womanhood, aiding development of organs and body. No known remedy for women equals them. Cannot do harm life becomes a pleasure. l.OO PER BOX BY MAIL S14 Dy druggists, mi. jmoxX'S CHEMICAL CO., Cleveland, Ohio. tsTFor sale in Goldshoro by Rubervoid ' It contains no tar or asphalt. acicL alkali, and water-proof, etrong, durable and easily applied: Best roofing for barns and other outhouses, shelters, etc., on the market for the money, (Jail ana examine it. - : - Smith & Yelverton tne Diood, and an operation, plaster or effect whatever upon it. The cure must poison must be eradicated. Mr. Wm. Walpole, of "Walshtown, S. D., says: 'A little blotch about the size of a pea came under my left eye, gradually growing larger, from which shooting pains at intervals ran in all directions. I became greatly alarmed and consulted a good doctor, who pronounced it Cancer, and advised that it be cut out, but this I couid not con sent to. I read in my local paper of a cure effected by S. S. S., and decided to try it. It acted like a charm, the Cancer becoming at first irritated, and then discharging very freely. This gradually grew less and then discon tinued altogether, leaving a small scab which Foon drop- ntlA r-fF a-nA nl-n knnlK 1 .' Z 1 . - ; what threatened to destroy my life once held full sway." Positively the only cure for Cancer is Swift's Specific and Germicide. Shoes Hood &t Brit. Caskets and -R- Oo you should try our superb We have Teas, all kinds Bizzell & Wooten. , Goldsboro's Leading Grocers They overcome Weak, ness, irregularity and omissions, increase vig or ana bamsn "pains are "L.IFE SAVERS" to cirls at M. E. Robinson & Bro.. Druggists Roofing ! PERFECTLY CXEAN. Absolutely ! 1 f ; f . i", s 1' i. I, 1 I f wiim? PiRinvnr
July 6, 1899, edition 1
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