Newspapers / Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, … / Aug. 3, 1899, edition 1 / Page 1
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No soothing strains of Maia'sson, . Can lull its hundred eyes to sleep1 Vol. XVII. GOIiDSBORO, K. C, THURSDAY, AUGUST 3. 1899. NO 105 This AEG US. o'er the people's rights, Doth an eternal vigil keep Sajkiog Powder Made from pure cream of tartar. Safeguards the food against alum. Alum taking powders arc the greatest menacers to health of the present day. PCrL BM'INQ CO.. NP TOPX. " OUR LOCAL OPTIC. Holdsboro and Vicinity History In Brief: Epitome of Sayings and Doings, Wise and Otherwise. Run Down and Rnn in by Omnipresent Ubiquitous, Local "Grand Hounds." Master Leslie Johr son, one of the Akgus carriers, is quite sick, ne are sorry to learn. . The fare for Hollowell & Peter ' - ; . , . buu s eituitiua to iyioreneaa is only 1.00. They go, rain or shine. Even old scrap iron is now care fully gathered foreale. It has gone up along with its more aristocratic relatives. The mortality in this city the past month was very light. . Tht iiealthfulness of Goldsboro this summer has been wonderful so far. The death of Solomon Jones, a highly respected old darkey, oc cured at his home in Little "Wash ington last week. At this time the Argus will ' break the news gently" about a buggy factory tor Goldsboro It iecming and coming soon. It is all on paper now, but soon the industrial music of the saw and hammer will break forth ac companied by the chorus of the anvil. Particulars will appear at au cany uatu. Ham's Rural Retreat Hotel, at the Ninth Spring, is growing in nn blic favor and natronflco nil f,hf I time. The popular proprietor is untiring in his efforts to please his guesla and the large crowd of heskh and pleasure seekers at his place is a suui co cf gratification to his many friends The travel to Morehead still V, , , ' , u-' "-"-"." Hntcl r.ac; lo r. nnthmn -F -.tcl noted cool ocean bretzes. that Trrors We VJ for those have been lhe" comfort and de-. broken hearts the omiorting; light of the passing waves of grace of God. . - . ' v -humanity tbat have regularly It is not the rigfe time to eTi fiioded its spacious apartments iar.c,Q v, for years, us the summer seasons come and go. There is no place like Morehtad, 1 On the Tclar Bridge road, near Mr. Giles Kornrgay's place, there - reported to this office to be a dge in such condition as to uuueious, uuu kkiu io uavu u in this condition for a length of time. The Board of County Com- mi&sioners should take the matter in hand at oeco. The county Bhould be spared even tae possibility of a Mr. R, E. Pipkin's great ex- cursion to Norfolk and Washing- couia put upon it a fragrant and ton this week was such a pro - radiant garland of Christian hope nounued success, and was so eatis- and divine sole,ee, .-. factory to the hundreds who pa- Ba careful hjow you decide up trouized it, that ha has, been pre on the destiny, of Robert G. In vaikd upon to run ' another over gersoll. Who can tell whit pass the same route which he will do ?d in hi. "wind during that last the latter part ox August, and will mmat9 0 i . associate it with excursion priv llegea to Niagara Falls. The brick wails. iorv. the aadi tion to the JJayne Cotton Mill, nntx? Iho Knhhina Mann far". Ml r in or t Company, are ia course of erec tion. -When the improvements are completed the capacity of this Mill will be more than ni-ntl3: Tha mar.hinfcrv. which is of the latest pattern and which nriii n t.hA markst. Enma nt the finest cotton fabrics, has already been purchased' and will oe aenverea wnen me ouiiaing ux ueeu UUUJFiClc J - The Goldsboro Base Ball team went down to. mi. unvejast t? ri- day afternoon and -crossed bats with the team in that town. The score was 17 to 6 m favor of Goldsboro. Those who went say it was a very pleasant game. The absenpe of the usual "cussing appreciated by spectators. The Goldsboro noys are highly uuiu, owiu, ur juruww. nuia. gratified at the reception given len's Arnica Salve, the best in the them by the people of Mt. Olive world, will kill the pain and and their base ball team. ' ; promptly heal it. Cures Old Sores, The Watermelon market has Fever Sores, Ulcers,' Boils, FeU struck bottom. The price is down OD9 Corns, all Skin Eruptions, to zero, A representative of the Best Pile cure on earth. Only 25 ,kgsC3 was shown two checks to- cis. a box. Cure guaranteed. Sold , t;h for a car load, Oce was by J, II. Hill & Sea Drujist. for $4 and the other was for $15. In suCE case the loss to the ship per was more than $20. The market in the North is overs stocked, Goldsboro alone has been shipping from ten to fifteen car ioaas a a ay, ana it is very probable that watermelons are more plentiful in New York than they are in Goldsboro, and they are feeding them to the hogs here. Mr. Asher Edwards is haying the partition wall in his large store on the corner of East Centre and Mulberry streets re moved and the spacious building remodeled and beautified to a de gree that will make it the most imposing store in the city. It is his purpose to giye Goldsboro an up-to-date Department store, and to this end he is pushing the work with all possible dispatch. Mr. L. R. Waddellthe well known contractor, is in charge of the extensive improvements. In this new movement Mr. Edwards shows enterprise and .public spirit and faith in Goldsboro's future that are highly commend able. The annual dinner and reunion of the Bizzell family occurred July day at the home of Mr. O. W. Sutton, in Duplin county, who is directly connected by nisrciage with toe family. Mr. M. E, B z- zcll and family, Mr. F. A. Biz zell anch family. Mrs. C. G. Smith and children, Mr?. Lou Stevens and daughter, Miss Mary,andMr. Ed. button, all of this city, left that morning to be in attendance. These dinners and family reunions have been an annual . occurrence for several years on the fourth Thursday in July. There are ua ually between 70 and 80 members of the family present. TALMAUE'S VIEWS. Wha! the Great Preacher Thinks of the Sudden Dea h of Ingersoll. The Rev. DaWitt . Talmage wrote this about Colonel Inger soll God has taken him. We are filled with tenderest sympathy fnr his hrmsnhnlri Ac hnckmri and father he endeared himself unspeakably. The anguish is I deep and-rek less "We WOnder'numberi aa il wouldor a grocery- not al lhe overpowering grietl :man or dry goods man to tall you .. , . . , .... notable even to discuss how many commodities, and how the necessary arrangements fail: much of each, he has in his shop. the obsequies. How" cruel deatJfcf "We are sel'ins the Report? in is! Tears are wine to the King; oi? great agnostic's life. Theve are proprieties to be observed. There are feelings to be rgardeid. Ail the world kn'ows 'ibat Co.I onel Ingersoll fclught i.n brilliant and prolonged wry against Christianity, But h a has gone to judgment and is irA the hands of! the God to whom... -we" are all "ac-l countable. Whatever others may write or do aW, such a solemn! time as this", -wo certainly will! plant no nettles on his new-made grave and only wish that we momentr Perhaps in that mo- ! ment th truth of the Gosvel. which be could not v before see. may have flashed unrn him. and it doe3 no tokft earnest pray T . f- "J, er hal a secondtd. reach heaven, nor "Q answer a half second to ciecend.His mb'.he'r wasa grandJy g00d wonian,and God remembers .. . ' a euppacauon hfty. years as easily ss five minutes. ,-Do not take too much responsibility up cn yourself. His sudden going ought to make us all think. We had better feet ourselves - all right while life and health continue. .When tha dd w h . . 7 ... . Jordan strikes us it will be a poor time to light our lanterns, A Frigutlul fllundor Lwal fe cause, a. borribla HE IS HOIST BY , HIS OWfl PETflRJ) , Dr. Cyrus Thompson in Pit He Digged for T'Other. MR. MONROE- SCORES HIM (QUOTING from his gkeat SPEECH AT CLINTON." In 1898 He Said He Knew Every- thing About the Office ot the Secretary of S'ate, and Now it Appears He Doesn't Know as Much as a Grocery -man About His Stock. Cor. Raleigh News and Observer. To The Editoh: Will you "bindly allow me space m your col umns la give the facts touching my correspondence with the Hon. Cyrus Thompson, with ref rence to my proposed publication of the North Carolina Supreme Court Reports made necessary by your ref-ren co to the same in your to day's ssue. I Wrote him, and asked him for a et' itement of the number of Re ports, and also of -the different volumes. He wrote me, giving a lit of the a Reports he did Eot ' lave. 1 -wrote him that I wanted Lto know -what Report?, snd how ninny of each ho had. In reply, he wrote nia as follows: "W. G- Munroe, Attorney at Liaw, Joldsboro, N, C. "DostrSir: Replying to your letter received on yesterday, I beg lo ave to say that it will be as dif fi :ult for me to tell you how many S uPremo Court Reports I hae each on nantl anA now mnvy oi a greater or less number, every week, and occasionally are re printing a missing number; and while I should be elad to comply with your request, if it would be of interest to you or your profess sion, there is no way to do it ex cept to stop the work, and take an inventory of the stock on hand. 14 understood your first letter to be a common anquiry, and the only one, up to yours, made to this of fice by the profession. : 'Yours respectful ly, Ctrus Thompson, "Secretary of State." To whichvi-replied as follows: 'Goldsborou N.' C, July 22, 1899. "Hon. Cyrus Thompson, Secre tary of State. Dear Sir: Pardon me for troubling you about what may seem to you a small matter, but, to be candid with you, it is-to me a matter of mucITmoment. "I find Chat many of the most successful lawyers in North Caro lina have, only, broken sets of our own Reports: many, who are quite successful, have none at all. The imbression that had gained cur- rency, was, that the Reports were not to be had. Every patriotic man ousht to want this state of o tbiDga to cease, I had, therefore, (owing to the fact 'that I had pub lished annotations of our Reports, and correctod my own Reports in doing eo,) concluded to publish a new edition of the Reports, anno tated and corrected. "Many of the first lawyers of the State, have en couraged me in the enterprise, and not a few who have the Reports already have subscribed. You can easily therefpre eec, that it is of vital moment to me, and to the profession, to know the exact truth about this matter. "I had a dim recollection of having seen it stated somewhere, that it was the duty of a Secretary I of State to keep just such an in ventory as you seem to 'think would be such a burden to TTke, and lifting the flood gates of mem ory, on the-incoming tide was borne to me':- "L t's go a little farther, the State of North Carolina puts into jtha hands., of the Stcrttary of State the sala of Supreme Uourt Reports, two thousand of which are issued every year f torn thatwo sessions o? the .Supreme Court. VWhen I went into office the Secretary of State had na more idea than the m m in the moon (or a groceryman) how many vol umes of the Supreme Court Re ports he had on hand. Ho did not inventory them to me, snd take a receipj, for them. When I counted them up, I found tbat the Slate had about twenty thousand volumes, which sell at two dollars a volume, m ikipg forty thousand dollars worth of property ia the hands of the Sscretary of State. He did not know now many he had, I doubt if he had ever seen them. I KNOW HOW. MANY I have, and when go out-will tell my successor and let him receipt to me for them". At the hearing of which, 1 was carried back in imagination to August 19tb, 1S98; place, CJintOD; surroundings, a large and representative gathering of 'Populists of Sampson and ad joining counties'; occasion, to hear 'the opening of the Populist cam paiga', Dr. Ttr in peon's 'Great Speech.' "Now, in all candor, laying pleasantries aside, it does seem to me a "small request for one of your constituents to esk you to add to that inventory thoso you have received since, and subtract those you have sold, and let him have the result. It would be an interesting State document; "Thanking you for past courtesies and in dvance for the inven tory, I am "Very truly, "W. C. Munroe, "GeLlsboro, N. C, July 26, '99." THE.BEST PRESCRIPTION FORICWLIS and fever is a hottle of GROVE'S TASTE LESS Chill Tonic. Never falls to cure; then why experiment with worth less imitations? Price 50 cents. Your money hack if it fails to cure. AT SEVEN SPHISUS Ed. Argus: Seven Springs Hotel has been enjoying the big gest boom of its history. For more than ten days " the average number of guests has been above seventy and much of he time entertaining eighty-five to ninty people But many of the guests have stayed their time and are therefor e return ing to their homes, consequently any desiring to spend a season here, will find comfortable rooms and agreeable, accommodations. July 27, 189'9. . y LEMONS AS MEDICINE. They regulate the Liver, Stomaca, Bowels, Kidneys and Blood as pre pared by Dr. H. Mozley, id hid Lemoii Elixir, a pleasant lemon drink. It cures biliousness, constipation, indigestion, headache, malaria, kidney disease, fevers, chills, heart failure, nervous prostration, atid all . other diseases caused by a torpid or diseased liver and kidneys It it an established fact that lemons, when combined properly with other liver tonics, produce the most desirable results upon the stom ach, liver, bowels, kidneys and blood, Sold by druggists. 50c and $1 bottles. MOZLEY'S LEMON ELIXIR Cured me of sick and ner vous headache I had been subject to all my life, Mrs N. A. Mc Entire, Spring Place, Ga. MOZLEY 'S LEMON ELIXIR Cured me of indigestion and nervous Diostration. I eot more relief,. and at once, from Lemon Elixir than all other medicines. J, (J. cpeignts. Indian Springs, Ga. MOZLEY'S LEMON ELIXIR Cured me of a long-standing case of chills and lever, ry using two hottles, J O. Stanley, Engineer E. T. Va & Ga'Tt. li. MOZLEY'S LEMON ELIXIR. Cured me of a case heart disease and indigestion ot four years' standiner. tried a dozen different medicines. None but Lemon Elixir done me any good. Tulos Dletu, cor. Habersham and bt. Thomas tits., savannah, Ua. MOZLEY'S LEMON ELIXIR. X fully endorse it for nervous' prostra tion. headache.indiirestion and const! nation, having- used it with most satis factory results, after all other reuiedies had failed. J. W. Koilo, West End Atlanta, Ga. . t : LIKE ROtJNDLAP BALES Opinions ot Cotton Farmers and Ginners after, a Season's , Experience. The attitude of cotton ginaers and farmers towards the Round- ap cotton h&leaf the American Cotton Company, after a season's test of the machine, is illustrated by a letter received recently by the editor of the Manufacturers' Record, Baltimore, as follows; - Editor Manufacturers' Record: Some time ago you requested us to give you our opinion of the American Cotton Co.'s cylindri cal press. At that time we were unable to give our views cor rectly, "owing to the short time we had operated! the press. Now that the ginning season has closed, we can urquestionably say that the press is a success in every particular, not only from a ginner's standpoint, but as prac tical farmers. The results frcm sale of our cotton have been em inently satisfactory and much beyond what we had anticipated. The advantages to planter and operator are so many that it would take up too much space to enumerate them. It is suffic ient to, say that no one who has baled their cotton on this press wou'd now or hereafter patro nize any other. And why should they? Their ginning charges are ess than the sqaare-press peo ple charge, and they receive from one-quarter to onehalf cent per pound more than they could get in the square bale. There is no question about the round bale being here to stay, and we would advise the ginmen, especially those who are. near a railroad, to get in the swim at once and emplify iha" old aiage of the early bird getting the worm. They w'll not only bene- i themselves, but their friend?, the farmers, will gat the cream that the middlemen, the commis sion merchants, have been enjoy ing and getting rich upon. ' Io conclusion, to condense the ad- vantage?, will say that the bale is fireproof, waterproof, dust- proof , and proof that it is a labor sayingjand money making bale to the farmer. Yours Truly, . ' Morris & Moren, Keo, Ark., lune 7th. SUPREME X)URT REPORTS. A Goldsboro Lawyer Propose s to Pub Ish a Completa Set. Charlotte News and Observer. ' In a letter Xo the Secretary of Stato. Mr. W. C. Moaroe, of Goldsboro. announces that he is preparing to publish, as a pri vate enterprise, a complete set of North Carolina Supreme court re ports, annotated and correctecLHe adds that he bai already taken a large numbei of subscriptions for the work. ' . Before going forward with this enterpri-so, however, Mr. Mun roe desires to know of the Secre tary of State how many reports the State has oa hand and how many volumes of each number, This information the Secretary declines to sive. as he can t eee how it can be materiii to the en- terprisa proposed and he Cin see how it might be used to tne pre judice of the State and to the very great disadvantage of the legal fraternity in North Carolina. ; Heretofore" the State has pub lished these reports exclusively and is now selling them" at $1,50 each., The numbers of which only a'few copies are left might easily bo boaght up' arid sold eta very high price. jLondon, July 28 -Mr, Henry Iv". Lacy, manager of tha Parl iamentary corps" of the Daily News, say"3 in that paper this morning that important corre spondence i3 proceeding with the' object of reuniting the Irish party under a common leader, Mr. Lucy believes that the ef fort is likely to be more suc cessful than -the earlier attempts in this direction. The Advance in Pig Iron. In the July number of the North American Review Mr.' G. HMIult has a most suggestivo ar ticle on the relation of the iron market to national prosperity. The present advance in pig iron is no greater than that which took place in 1854"when iron advanced from $19 to $50 per ton; or in 1864 when the advance was from 18 to 75 per ton; or in 1872, when the advance was from $35 to $60; or in 1880 from $20 to $40 per ton; or from $9 to $17 in 1889. Says Mr. Hull: "It was not diss turbed finances or, loss t f confi dence which turned the tide of prosperity in those years. It was the advance from one hundred to three hundred per cent, in the price of pig jron. The loss of confidence and disturbed finances came months afterwards and were the effects of the turn in the tide. Fifty years ago one hundred pounds of iron were consumed in the United " States annually for each of its inhabitants; ten years ago there were three hundred pounds used for each person, and to-dav we are consuming iron at the rate of four hundred , pounds per year for each one of our 75, 000,000 inhabitants." Nor is this enormous consump tion of iron excessive when we consider that iron is used in the preparation of the food we eat, the clothes we wear, in transporta tion; in builJing, and,in facr,isthe life blood of manufacture. "What ever restricts the consumption of iron limits, to that extent, the growth of the people in wealth and prosperity." Now, according to Mr. Hull's idea, the trouble is not that iron is over produced, but that the sup ply of iron is not flexible enough to meet the demands of the' con sumer in times of great commer cial activity without ruining the furnace owners when the demand is not equally great. Ce-tainly Mr, HuUmake3 out a good case for iron when he points out that many enterprises in which iron is the chief factor have to stop when iron advances 100 per cent. The stopping of these works dsprives numbers of men of em: ployment and thereby prevents the manufacturer from selling as many goods as before. With loss of sales com ss loss of profits and failures and loss of confidence and finally a panic. r The remedy that Mr. Hull sug gests is that iron be carried on the the exchanges just as corn, wheat, pork, oil or any other of the great staple commodities are. Certainly, as Mr. Hull points out, thi3 pro posal has met with the greatest success when for fifty years a 6ix months' btock of. iron Las .been carried on the exchanges and the fluctuations in price have only been such as were natural and reasonable. Mr . Hull's suggos tion is a gocd one and has already been put into operation in the South, but the causes of panics lie far deeper . than the price of pig iron, and though we agree with 'Mr. Hull that a plan which will make the production of iron more stable and help th6 con sumer always to find a sufficient supply on hand, will greatly aid the stability of prosperity in this country, yet so long as men reach out for greater returns and so long as competition exists, there will always be the danger that more products will be made than the public can buy at prices which will pay the cost of pro ductionand whenever . that over-production , becomes too great-there will be a greater or less loss of - confidence and a greater or less panic. . That Throbbing lleadachei Would quickly leave you, if you used Dr, King's New Life Pills, Thousands of sufferers have proved their matchless merit for Sick and JServous Headaches. They make purdblood and strong nerves and bnild up your health. Easy to take. Try them. Only -25 cents. Money back it not cured, Sold by J, H. Hill & Son Drug gist, " LUETGEKT DEAD. The tVife Murderer Found Dead in His Prison Cell at Joliet. Joliet. Ill, ,i July 28-Adolph L. Luetgert, the wealthy Chicago sausagemaker, who was serving a life sentence in the peniten tiary here for the paurder of his wife, was found dead in his cell to-day. Drs, Werner and O'Malley held a postmortem . examination, dis closing the fact that Luetgert died from 'fatty degeneration of the heart, Frank Fry Pratt, a member of the Chicago Bar said tonight that Adolph Luetgert confessed Feb ruary. 1898, that he had killed his wife, HE HAD CONFESSED i'He told me he had killed her. said Mr. Pratt. He started to tell me some of tne details, but fell to cursing about the affair and I was unable to lead him back to an unfolding of the steps in the crime. It was in Febru ary, 1898, that I became acquaint ed with Luetgert, was connect ed with the Chris Merry defense, and in my visits to my client I became acquainted with the sau sage-maker. He "was told by one of the jailers that I Was a palm reader, and one day as I was passing his cell, asked me to rez.d his hand. I did so. I found the lines of fatality, or predesti nation, very strong, and I told him that there "were influences that he could not resist that led him on. I told him that from his hand I could readily see that he was not responsible for his ac tions in the sense of self-resa traint. He then said: - LO-VED ANOTHER 'Yes, that is so: I did kill my wife.I was possessed of the deyil and killed her because I was in love with another woman. He then started to tell me about the vat, and said his wife attempted to make a dying statement to him when the dogs began to growl aud he put an end to her. It was then that he switched off to cursing. As I considered it a professional one, iTespected it until death has now placed him beyond further human reach." A Thousand Tongues. Could not express the rapture of Annie E. Springer, of 1125 Howard St., Philadelphia, Pa., when she found that Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption had completely cured her of a hacking cough that for many years had made life a burden. All other remedies and doctors could give her no help, but she says of this Royal Cure "it soon removed the pain in my chest and I can now sleep soundly, somethings 1 can scarcely remember doing be fore. I feel like sounding it3 praises roughout the Universe." So will every one who tries Dr. King's New Discovery for any trouble of tho Throat, Chest or Lungs. Price 50c and $100. Trial bottles free at J, H. Hill & Sons Drug Store; every bottle guaran teed. . OLDEST MASON DEAD Died at the residence of Major J, M.Crenshaw, near Wake 'For est, on Saturday morning last. Mr. Robert Elliot Harris in the 96th year of his age, Mr, Harris was born in Wake county on March 16tb, 1804, in the house in which he died. He was,if not the oldest.among the yery oldest Masons in the State, He was buried Sunday, with Masonic honors, in the family burial ground, Robbed the Grave. A startling incident, of which Mr. John Oliver of Philadelphia. was the subject, is narrated by him as follows: I was in a most dreadful condition. My skin was almost yellow, eyes sunken, tongue coated, pain continually in back and sides, no appetite gradually growing weaker day by day. Three physicians had given me up. Fortunately, a friend advised trying 'Electric Bitters;' and to my great joy and surprise, the first bottle made a decided" improvement. I contin ued their use - for three, weeks' and am now a well man, I know they saved my life, and robbed the grave oi another victim. "No One Should fail to try them. Only aucis. guarauiee-J, at J , ii. mil Soft's Irug Store. DilPiekb FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION MAKES BOTH MOTHER AND BABY HEALTHY AND STRONG. A Purely Vegetable and Per fectly Harmless, Non-Aloo holic and Non-Narcotic -Preparation. BEDDINGFIELD WINS. And Abbott is Taxed With the Costs He takes an Appeal. Raleigh News and Observer, The decision of Judge Moore in the Abbott-Beddlngfield case, for the office of Corporation Commissioner, was yesterday sent to Clerk of Court Russ. This judgment is in fayor of Mr. Beddingfield and Dr. Abbott is taxed with the costs of tho case. Dr. Abbott appeals to the Supreme court, He is given twenty days to make up his case on appeal, and twenty days are allowed the plaintiff to file a counter case. "Circumstances Alter Cases." In cases of dyspepsia, nervousness, ca tarrh, rheumatism, eruptions, etc., the circumstances may be altered by purt fying and enriching the blood witti Hood's Sarsaparilla. Try it. Hood's Pills cure biliousness! sick aeadache. It now appears that the Gus- tus Van Wyck's boom never col- apsed, because there never was such a boom. NO CUKE NO FAT. That is the way all druggists sell GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC for Chills and Malaria. It ia simply Iron and Quinine in aUaatelos orm. Children love it. Adults pre fer it to bitter, nauseating Tonics. Price, 50c. lhe real pleasure of life is in having what we want when we want i , An Epidemic t biarriioea, Mr. A. Sanders, writing from Cocoa- nut Grove, Fla., says there has been quite an epidemic of diarrhoea there. He had a severe attack and was cured by four doses of Chamberlain's Colio Cholera a Diarrhoea Remedy. He says he also recommended it to others and they say it is the best medicide they ever used. For sale by M. E. Ko bin son & Bro. and Goldsboro Dime 'o. in Goldsboro, and J . Rj Smith, Mt. Olive, N. C. . The punsters are growing fat . over the opportunities afforded by the appointment of Mr, Root to the war office. ' Dr. Cady'a 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. ttobinson and Kro. and Goldsboro Drug Co. in Goldsboro, and J. R. Smith Mt. Olive N. O. A woman never thinks she has written anything worth reading unless she gets her fingers col ored with ink. TO CURE A COLO IN ONE DAY Take Laxative ilromo Quinina Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. The genuine,. has L. B. Q. on each tablet, A good resolution kept deed, noble. is m- TO CURE A COLD IN NE OAT All druggists refund money if it fail to cure. 25c. The genuine has L. B Q on each tablet.
Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 3, 1899, edition 1
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