'' iaiiifcj- - r .... '.r,,-?ii-::s&;.s'-vji,.;-. s i 1 ' . -. . . i- - - 1 1 - - 1 ' ' - This Aeg us o'jr the people's rights, No soothing strains of Maia's son, - ' Doth an ete: nal vigil keep. Can lull its hundred eyes to sleep" VOL. XVII. GOIiDSBORO, X. C, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER SO. 1899. NO 122 " ' i 7 ' ' f ' " ; t ; 7 3 , r 3 1 3 ' i 3 1 V; 1 ,1 i I I MURDER OF CAPTIVES The Charges Against Met calf Followed By Others. FrlTate Thorn Declare on Oath lie saw Captain Bishop Shoot Two Helpless Filipino Prison ers Charg es of cow ardice. San Francisco, Nov. 23. The accusation that Colonel Wilder S. Metcalf, of the Twentieth Kansas regiment, deliberately, killed an unarmed Filipino pris oner during the Philippine cam paign, avers the Examiner, has resulted in the disclosure that two surrendered Filipinos were shot by Kansas men atCaloocan; That a War Department inves tigation was held, and that the men involved including Captain Bishop, of Company M. and Cap tain Flahders, of Company I, were exonerated, Continuing the Examiner says: General Funston, who has been a staunch defender of Col onel Metcalf, reiterates his charge that five officers of the Kansas regiment were guilty of coward ice during the fighting between Manila and San Fernando. From Topeka, Kansas, comes on affi davit from Private Donald H. Thorn, of the Twentieth Kansas, in which he sweats that he saw Captain Bishop fire three shots into the bodies of two prisoners, who were lying helpless on the ground in the rear of the Ameri can firing lines. KIND4 WOKDS -THANKS. Dear Joe Akgtjs: Now that you have reached an enlarged edition of your valuable paper, the Argus is still at the head of the list, and as a first class fam ily newspaper, will continue to "fill a long felt want" that our city and county should be prouder of than ever. Its unlimited degree of usefulness and influence will be more strongly felt than in the past and as a Democratic worker it is strictly "in it'' at all times and under all circumstances, and may it continue to grow. Truly Golds1 boro and Wayne county are to be congratulated. Let them cont'nue to "pull to gether" and tbey will "go for ward" 'till they reach the very pinnacle of fame, upon the top most round of the ladder, with "Excelsior" for the watchword, and there can be m such, word as fail in its vocabulary. Truly, the Argus has grown to be a power in the land and will steadfastly increase as the years go by. That it may live long and continue in prosperity is the wish of A Subscriber. Mt. Olive, N. C. Chamberlain's Fain Ha1 m Cures Others, Whj Not You ? My wife has been using Chamber lain's Paia Balm, with good results, for a lame shoulder that has pained her continually , for nine years. We have tried all kinds of medicines and doctors without receiving any benefit from any of them. Cue day we saw an advertisement of this medicine and thought of trying it, which we did with the best of satisfaction. She has used only one bottle and her shoulder is al most well. Adolph L. Millett, Manchester, N. H.For sale by M, . Robinson & Bro. and Goldsboro Drug Co. in Goldsboro, and J. R. $mith in Mt. Olive. N. O. NOBLY DONE. The Argus tips its bat to the Philadelphia Times, from which we copy the following that ex plains itself: "Sergeant Bill Anthony de served a batter fate than that which overtook him. He had cer tainly earned a grave outside the Potter's field and bad a 'right to expect escape from the Morgue and dissecting room, even though neglect drove him to take his own life. Thousands of men in this broad land, where service to one's country is more or Jess appre ciated, would have saved the he.-, ro's body from humiliation had the thougbt of its fate occurred lo them. But not a man said a word and the body was ticketed for the city dead house and Pot ter's field when The Times stepped in and did a proper, natural thing. 'The Times has bought a grave and will bury brave Bill Anthony at its own expense. It is a mere bit of sentiment, perhaps, but never the Morgue, dissecting room or pauper's grave for this man's body. "Sergeant Anthony, wo give you the salute to the dead!" Kill Anthony was the "sergeant of the watch" on board the U. S. Battleship Maine, whose report of her blowing up to Captain Sigsbee will be told of him in the annals of all time. Hurrying to the Captain's quar ters, amidst the consternation and confusion and pandimonium and death that prevailed, and calmly giving his superior officer the of ficial salute he said: "Sir, I have the honor to report that the ship has been blown up and is sink ing." The poor fellow, perhaps de ranged from the effects of that terrible experience, committed suicide last week, in Philadelphia. Reflections of a Bachelor New York Press. Jjove is poetry, marriage is prose. And a man without either can never appreciate the other. The trouble with a problem novel is that its generally too much problem and not near novel enough. No man really appreciates what a wife might to him till he gets sick and has to pay twenty dollars a week to a nurse to sit and make him take his medicine. To be happy, a man before he falls in love ought to keep both his eves wide opeD, when be is engaged he ought to keep one eye half open, and after ha gets married he ought to keep both eyes shut. Used By British Soldiers in Africa Capt. C. GK Dennison is well known all over Africa as command er of the forces that captured the famous rebel Galishe. Under date of Nov. 4, 1897. from Vryburg, Bechuanaland, he writes: "Before starting on the last campaign I bought a quantity of Cham berlain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, which I used myself when troubled with bowel complaint, and had given to my men, and in every case it proved most beneficial." For , sal6 by Gjoldsboro Drug Co. and M, E. RobinfcOn & Bro. in Goldsboro, aid by J. R- Smith. Mt. Olive. N. C, Tetter Salt-Rlieum and Gemma. The intense itching and smarting in cident to these diseases, is instantly allayed by applying Chamberlain's Eye and Skin Ointment. Mary very bad cases have been permanently cured by it. It is equally efficient for itching piles and a favorite remedy for sore nipples, chapped hands, chilblains, frost bites and chronic sore eyes. 25cts. per box. For sal by M. E Robinson & Bro. and Goldsboro Drug Co. in Goldsboro and J, R. Smith Mt. Olive N. An Open Letter to Secretary . tJage. Corntassel, N. C. Nov. 16, 1899. Mister Secretary Gage: -I'm . i . . .1 T v in a tignt place, ana x ve peen reading about the gamblers of Wall-st, being in a tight place, and you offering to let them nave $25,000,000 to help them; cash tbeir chips-; so-I thought I would lay my case before you, and maybe vou would help me out, too. Five years ago I bet my muscle and indusiry against manifest destiny, "that, I could pay for a lOOacre farm ai the and of five years. I pulled off my coat and, with the help of a good wife and a pair of mules, I went in to wio. The first year I made a good crop of cotton and enough hogs and bominv for another year's eating. My cotton uniy brought me five cents a pound, and I was told that I bad pro duced too much: my muscle and industry bad been too active, and where I though I should reap a reward, I garnered disappoint ment insiead, and my cotton crop only brought enough to pay the interest on the price of the farm: and buy my wife and children clothes and shoes for the winter. Witb the buiding of spring and the rising of the sap, my muscles and my industry opened the jack pot of chance, with new hopes, and, although manifest destiny" sent the April cold rains to kill mv cotton, and the bud worms nipped mv low-ground corn in the bud, I raised the ante, re planted my crop and battled with crabgrass and hog weeds the summer through, and housed another good crop. But the gamblers of Wall-st, aod our loving cousins ait Liverrooj; were bulling and bearing the cotton market to such an extent that my product again only netted enough to pay interest on the debt hanging over my little home. From year to year I have fought the fight, while I watch ed my children growing up in ignorance and my wire ageing beneath the cares of povertv, ana now the nve years are out and tbe debt is due, and a panic is threatening me. I know there are only a few hundred thousand of us farmers in the same fix, and the financiers of our great country must be looked after first, Bu honestly, Mister Secretary, doi.'o you think that a man who ha a wife and fivo children to ca-e for, to feed aod to oiothp, io educate, so thv mav grow iaio intelligent. wz-nsb'p, ia.-souif what of a ''finaucier" f nedoes it on an income of $300 a year, without cheaitog a n-ighoor in a horse swap or leaving his bills unoaid? , I know the treasury reports show a per capita circulation of 20 or more, nut it doo'c circu- late down here to aod we have to do that extend on about $6 or $8 per capita. I cito under stand it exactlr, but it seems to me that our constitution meant to guarantep tqual rights to all, ana l aou c see wny tne specu lators, the men who play beyond the limit of ratioualism and re compense, sbould seek relief at the hands of the gcvernment when their haads it is found thy are ca'leo aod were biuffiag with a bobtail flush I notice the banks of New York, for the week ending Nov. 11, hold "nearly three million dollars less than legal rf quire ments." Does this mean thtthey are that much below the 25 per cent, reserve required by law? If it does,Mister (Secretary, don'c you think somebody has been us ing somebody's money that they bad no right to user I don't exactly understand these things, but me and a neigh bor was talking these matters over the other night, and we came to the conclusion that if you were going to use the gov ernment funds to help the Wall st. ox out of the Sunday ditch, we as contributors to that fund, ought to know why a panic in Wall-st. is any more detrimental to the interest of good citizen ship than a stringency of money among the producers, and how the government has any more right to go to the aid of Wall-st. gamblers, who haye no tangi ble values at stake, than it has to come to the aid of we farmers, who are battling against low prices for the products of our brawn and industry. I am in a tight place, too, Mis ter Secretary, and if vou help these fellows in Wall-st. without helping me, I shall always think you "hadn't ought to. ' - " Yours truly, Benj. Pinebdrr. A FEW REFLECTIONS. Dear Argus Standing on the middle ground between the old and the new South, I am following the thread of memory from one to the other and naturally draw a few com parisons. I remember well tbe dignified old gentleman that is spoken of now as the old Southern gentleman. We call to mind his stately bearing, his courtly man ners. He was willing to take time to sr. eak kindly, he was one of that type far above anything that can emenate from the dude ci garette smokers of this day. We look around us for the men who are to continue this type of men. We find men who by the restless rnsh of surroundings we fear can never develope into the old time gentlemen. Again, our memory clusters around those noble old women, who so silently and modestly presided as queens over those homes of the long ago. Their lives were filled with the noble calling of women. Around them the young people gathered for advice, their kind consideration for others was proverbial. In the mad rush of the present she still looms up, her modest demeanor makes a halo of brightness about her memory. Her style may be relegated tu the past, the modern artist may try to distort ber style, deft hands may try to weave a fabric to obscure ner. But noble Southern chivalry will not suffer it. She can not be improved upon. Her patient, modest disposition, so womanly was more precious, because in those days u had a valu9 more pr celss than rubies or finegok'. We wonder if the times have changed us,, or have we been in oculated with new ideas and systems. Has the cold north win3 brought us the new ideas. Has tbis evolution been a deve opment or have these things drifted to us, and shall we forget the noble qualities that made the people of the south the highest type of nure Anglo Saxon de cendents? In many respects let these old customs be apart of our1 being. Then as the old South merges into a new South and a newer South, we could be recog nized even if another Rip-Van-Winkle should visit us. The noble qualities and manners of these old people shine as distant stars, but we can borrow light from them to make ' our lives more radical as we appreciate the wis words of Solomon to convey Widsom. Lat 'us not in this restless age cut loose from all of the old moorings. It will be well for us to preserye invi olate some of the distinctive traits of our ancestors. If they are our prototypes in many respects it should not be denoted degen eracy, for the past has pre sented many qualities worthy of the emulation of this and future generations, . Ignis Fatus. And now the Dewey babies must be renamed. Theodore Thomas Is the tail end of the Dreyfus case. OFFICE KS ELECTED. Farmers' Mutual TTlre Insurance Associa tion of Wayne County. The Wayne county branch of the Farmers' Mutual Fire Insur ance Association, which met here on the 15th instant, re-elected James M. Wood, president; N. J. Smith, secretary and treasurer; A. J. Brown, local agent, and the following township supervisors: Goldsboro A. M. Prince, E. L. Edmundson, D. L. Edgerton. Foik H. T. Jones. Geo. Lt. Becton, W, M. Grantham. Grantham Dr. J. B. Kennedy, F. B. Jordan, M. E. Cox. Indian Springs J. H. Ed wards, Edward Holmes, W. R. Simmons, New Hope N. McN. Buie, Oscar Sutton, Benj. Casey. Saulston B. A. Parks, J. F. Hill, Geo. F. Butte. Nahunta J. W. Aycock, O. L. Aycock, Z. P. Davis. , Pikeville Albert Aycock, Theo C. Hill, J. T. Dees. ; Great Swamp Green Cope land, Barnes Aycock, J. K. Pope. Stcny Creek H. D.- Ham, J. H. Johnston, B. H. Lancaster. Brogden J. P. 0'Berry,,Wm. Holmes, Geo. W . Parker. . The report of the retiring sec retary and treasurer, A. J. Brown, for four years ending September I, 1899, was very gratifying in that it showed a phenomenal growth and success of the Asso ciation. The capital stock now amounts to something over S260, 000, and the annual cost. of insur ance has only averaged $1'40 per thousand dollar?. Some amend "aen s to the Con stitution and by laws were recom mended and adopted which will be sent out to each membt r. Fremont Items. Mr. C. C. Aycock is building an addition to his residence. Mrs. J. B. Exum, of Saulston, visited friends in Fremont Tues day. Miss Eleanor Greene visited friends in Wilson oyer Sunday, aid returned to school Monday. Mrs. Greene and Mrs. Mann, of Wnitakers, N. C, are visiting Mrs. Morgan, at the Academy. The wood work of twenty-five new desks was delivered at the Academy recently and the cast ings are to arrive soon. These are neccessary to meet the grow ing requirements of the school, Road builders should examine some work done on our streets recently. Several loads of leaves were hauled into a low washed out place &nd thtn about six or eight inches of dirt was spre; d over the leafy bed There is no patent, so far as we know, peud- ing on the process, consequently any who desire to do so may use it. Dr. L. O. Hayes, who recently bad an operation performed for Appendecitis, returned Friday from Dr. McQuire's Hospital in Richmond. The operation was entirely successful and, while the wound is yet tender, the Doctor is beyond all danger and will soon be ready to take up again his growing practice, The com munity rejoices to have one of our most successful professional men, whose life was at one time nearly despaired of, restored to health and usefulness. r ' M Fremont, N. C. Nov. 27th. General Vance Dead. Asheville, N. C, Nov. 28 General Robert B. Vance died at his home this morning after a lingering illness. He will be buried with Masonic honors Thursday afternoon. General Vance was a brother of Senator Zebulon Baird Vance. Will be roused to its natural duties and your biliousness, headache and constipation be cured if you take 'Pes L2 Sold by all druggists. 25 cents. A Wonderfu I JMscovery Not only cures, but it keeps well. Is sold bj an organized company of re sponsible business men and has the en dorsement of thoasand of Clergymen and nottd people throughout the coun try. We stw ait of that wonderful In strument, Elecirc'pois", and ask your careful examination into tbe cures it has wrought Col, A P. Nunally, of the Inter-Oc'-an, Chicago, writes: "Nearly three years xperiece with Electropoise only cocfirms the truth of our claim. 1 say to my friends that this instrument is a most ODderful in vention, and I wou'd not part with niiDe if I could not get another." Send address for our book giving letters from people who have been cured b7 Electropoise. ELEC I ROPOIsE CO., 513Fouttb Avenue, Louisville, Ky &2.75 3QK RMM GO At AHKiJlLj.;: &5. CO tVATET. O 7J PKOOF MACKINTOSH f" state jour heic-bt a .id weighty state number ol inches nrt!"tu aooj at breast, taken ovei -st un?ier ciat, close up under arms, anc we will s td you tb-'sccat enpreh t.O.J. , suijjtrt to examination. Ex arnnie and try it on at your nearest t;xpre.-s oilice, iud it found exaetl as represented ana tne moat wonaerru; TuJurt ou ever saw or heard of, ano ci'inl to any coat you can buj for i pav the express acrent OL'R IVEHUL OVIT.K PRICK, $2.75, and Tills V AniiMOSn Is latest 190t Btyle, easy fittinjr, made from heavy l.-arrpsw f, tan eti r, g-iiune jravih tovert Cioth; f 11 lerrth, double breasted. Sailer velvet c it. v. fancy plaid lining, water!::!" sewed teams Suitable for l' trh V.v in or Overcoat, and guaranteed iiKA1 KST VAV K eTr offered by US or any other house. For Free Cloth Samples of Mon's Mackintoshes ud to ft5.00. 34b and Made-to-Measuce Suits and Over- A- FHKK RtJPT.K ROOK Xa. V.UK. iririro. SEARS, ROEBUCK & Co. (Inc.) CHICAGO. Searst Boebucit ft Co. are thoroughly reliable. Editor) Pea Threshers and Bean Threshers. They thresh field peas ,and wax beans successfully. Hand, steam os horse power. If you are interested write me and 1 will call and show you their work. OSCAR SUTTON, Agt., Soven Springs, N. C. Gloady Toilet Ammonia WON 'T CLEAN YOUR BLOOD. But it will clean your Car pets, Hair Brushes and Soiled Clothes, better that 'anything else. l"No dearer than ordinary am monia and much better. , . Sold Only By The Opera House Pharmacy. JEK'NS FA S EUES, Props. E. Centre t-t , Godsborb, N. C. Farm for Sale or Lease. 14 i .r k9 3 In Indian Spring township, 7 miles South of Goldsboro, part of old Cobb place, 175 acres good river land, don't overflow.- 125 acres up hill clay subsoil. Good, for any corp. Best pasture in the country fine for truck and dairy, the farm i a good stand for a store and gin Terms easy." Three settlements oii place. Apply to MRS. PAVID WRIGHT SMITH, - Goldsboro, N. C. "NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION. Notice is hereby given that the firm of Hall & Prichard, general merchandise, doing business at Fai son, Duplin county, North Carolina, has this day dissolved partnership, by mutual consent. All persons oik -ing this firm will please settle ta once, HALL & PRI CHARD, Nov 24, .$9 -Faison.N.C f I r- it;- "z-r