No soothing strains of Maia'sson, Can lull its hundred eyes to sleep' Vol. XVII. GOUDSBORO, 1ST. C, THURSDAY, JANUARY 25. 1900. NO VSO This AEGTJS o'er the people's rights, Doth an eternal vigil kee p STATE DEPARTMENT Exercised: Davis' Tr'p to Africa Brings on Consider ab'e Talk. Washington, Jan. 22. Webster Davis, of Missouri, Assistant See retary of the Interior, has earned the displeasure of the administra tion through his actions in South Africa. The suggestion that has been made by cabinet officers that a telegram be Sent Davis by the President or the Secretary of the Interior, requesting him to return home at once or send in his resig nation. There appeared to be a warrant for Davis' pursuing such a course, however, and the sugges tion was not adopted. It. is the general opinion in administration circles that Davis is making h;m self altogether too prominent, and is seemingly not contradicting the impression in South Africa that he is going to Pretoria on a mis sion from the Government of the United States. The State Department and the Interior Department deny em phatically the reports that Davis has an official mission. At both these offices the statement was made to-day that Davis had not received a word of instruction?, verbal or written, about his South African visit, and the State De partment capped this . with the announcement that it did not know that Mr. Davis was going to South Africa until he left i Washington. There is very good j reason to believe that Davis bas incurred the displeasure of his im mediate chief, Mr. Hitchcock, Secretary of the Interior. There has been nothing in the press ac counts to show that Davis has been indiscreet in his utterances, but there is a suspicion here that Mr. Davis is inferentially giving the impression that he is an em issary of the United States. The administration officers aps pear to be really worried over the visit of Davis to Pretoria, particularly because he is going tberp, according to report, in a privatp car ot President Kruger, While Davis has a perfect right to go where he pleases in an in dividual capacity, the adminis tration fears that his official status in Washington will not be disassociated from his private status in South Africa, and will cause misunderstanding of th purpose of his visit in the minds of Boer and Briton, Damage Done by Ci cus Fire. Bridgeport, Conn., Jan. 20.- The damage wrought by the fire at the winter quarters of the Bar num & Bailey Circus here last night was fully 125,000. An in ventory ot tne stock which is being taken to-day already shows a loss of more than $100,000, and Supt. Hutchinson says the total amount surely will be 25,000 more. The fire is believed to have originated from a lamp left in the car shed by roofers who have been putting a tin roof on the building. It is supposed that some of the varnish, oils or paint, of which there was a great quantity in the shed, took fire from the lamp. The man who paid the tolls on Senator Hoar's speech is the man the people are looking for as keenly as Otis is hunting for Aguinaldo. JButler'a Cry toe Help. "Mortgage all but your soul to ANYBODY." Coming from Senator Butler and Secretary Thompson and i Auditor Ayer and Treasurer Worth, not omitting Chief Clerk Denmark and Bro. Cade, this ad monition to "co-operate" with any and all elements, without re gard to race or color, to continue the disorders and bad government which humiliated and injured the State from 1897 to 1899, sounded like hollow mockery, the mere echo of the wailings of departed and departing spirits to ex-Librarian Cobb, ex-Labor Commission er Hamrick, ex-Railroad Com missioner Otho Wilson and ex Sheriff Zack Garrett. This mortgaging-of the soul business for office is just where these last named statesmen drop ped their watermelon. Pay-day came in 1898 and the people fore closed. Another pay day ap proaches, when Senator Butler and "his associates" will have to pony up, and notwithstanding those who have gone before did not even save the homestead, the Senator pleads with them to mortgage all they have to help him and those not yet retired to "hold on." The statesmen on the "retired list," no more than the people generally, can see wherein they are to be benefitted by mortgaging themselves to keep Mr. Butler in the Senate and the devil turned loose to roam at will throughout the State. Exactly So. Raleigh Post. The Democratic party is the friend of the whits man; not his enemy. Indeed, being composed i exclusively of white men, it may j be said that it is the while man himself, Aod are the white men of North Carolina made of such stuff that they will turn against each other, and take away the right of suffrage from each other? Certainly not; and yet Butler and his Executive Committee have such a poor opinion of the illiterate whites in North Carolina that they are trying to persuade them to believe this monstrous falsehood. But the inherent good sense and intelligence of the Anglo-Saxon will prevail and it will be found that our white men are not to be duped like the ignorant negroes have been dupe J in times past by tneir artful leaders. The Democratic party seeks to promote the happiness, prosper ity and welfare of the white men, especially because they are all whites together and because in doing so, it best promotes the welfare of the whole State. c The truth is, the color line is a fact. The negro stands by his color; and the whites generally stand by theirs. The white race is fit to govern themselves. The negro race is not fit to administer government. They are not fit to govern them- selves, much less to govern the white race. The struggle in North Carolina is to secure the beneficent, just, intelligent operation of wise laws and the domination of the superior race over the ignorance of the black race. Is it not best so? Is it not prop er? Let all the whites stand to gether to secure this result. , Whan a Child Moved Ingersoll. N. Y. Press. Where a man of brains and kindly thought met a little child and was conquered by sweet ba byhood and trusting faith is best told by William Wordsworth Goodrich, an architect of this city. He never tires of telling the story.. and his hearers never weary of.j listening: j "It was on the 12th of January, 1898' he said, "when I occupied a berth in a Pullman car coming from Chicago opposite that occu pied by Kobet G. Ingersoll. In the next lower berth to his was a woman and her babe. The young wife, who was on her way to New York, had her berth made up early. She had prepared the baby for bed, and as she sat on the edge of the berth, the baby at her knees, she taught the baby its evening prayer, 'Now I lay me down to sleep.' "The child lisped the prayer as only a baby can. As the words, I pray the Lord my soul to take' were uttered, who should be standing with folded arms in a very reverent attitude in the aisle beside the bowed form none other than Colonel Ingersoll. "God bless mama, God bless papa, God bless everybody,' the and the baby mother lisped. spoke, "At the final 'Amen,' Colonel Ingersoll clasped the baby in his arms and kissed the child on the forehead reverently, saying, 'God bless everybody.' By this time all of the car occupants were onlook ers. The great Ingersoll held tjj.e wee little baby, cooing in his arms, and he was talking to it. Pinally he laid the child in the berth, saying; 'Good night, little one; good night.' Quick as a flash the little baby said, 'Dod bless 'oo.' "Ingersoll's answer was, 'Yes, veg God bless you Metric System and M-ire Co;n. Washington, Jan. 20. Secre tary Gage was before the house committee on coinage, weights and mersures to day and spoke in favor of the adoption of the me trie system. Mr. Gage also refer red to the need of fractional sil ver currency. He pointed out that at present the demand for frac tional coin was so urgent that the issue ran considerably beyond the 50,000,000 authorized by law, and he recommended that the legal restriction be repealed, leaving the treasury to deter mine the proportion of fractional coin necessary. No Factions in Ohio Chicago, Jan. 20. Governor Nash, of Ohio, who was one of the speakers last night at the Sons of Ohio Banquet, said yes terday: "There are no factions in the Republican party of Ohio to-day. The party is absolutely united and I look to see Senator Foraker re-elected two years hence with out opposition. Ohio, always strongly Republican in Presiden tial years, will this year give William McKinley the largest majority in the history of the State. The State is in a wonder fully prosperous condition, and the people are not going to turn to the party which stands for a reversal of present conditions." New York is inflicted with a ma chine politician, who is known as "Lou Paine" and the unloading of him is the toughest problem before the State. FIGHT ON THE TOGELA. THIRTI THOUSAND BRITISH STORM THE HEIGHTS. Bosrs Hold Their Own: Fighting Front Extends Over 1 Wen-y M-iLs. Pretoria, Jan. 23. Heavy fight ing is reported Saturday for twelve miles along the Tulega. The British artillery fire was the heaviest experienced during the war. It is estimated that thirty thousand troops were engaged in the assault on Tulega heights oc cupied by the Boers. The fighting front extended over twenty miles. The artillery fire met with no re sponse until the infantry attacked their positions. The British made three assaults and each time were vigorously repelled. The Boer generals were Botha, Shalkburger and Meyer. The British cannon numbered over forty. Every time the British stormed the Boer po sitions they were reinforced by fresh divisions, but their efforts were fruitless. Yesterday hostiii ties ceased and British ambulan ces were busy for ten hours pick ing up and attending the wounded. The garrison at Ladysmith at tempted t make a demonstration, but the Boer outposts gave an alarm and the attempt was pre vented. Saturday night the gar rison at Ldysmhh sent up rock ets, probably as signals to Buller. COUNTY CONVENTION CALLED To Meet In Goldsboro on Saturday, tebru ary 24. 1900. Pursuant to the call of Chair- j "XT !T i.1 T , man i. w joerry mo jLeunjuxa.iiu Executive Committee of Wayne , , t r i i ty met to day at 10 o clock coun in the business office of the Goldsboro Rifles and formally is sued the call for the Convention, which we give in full as follows: Go dsboro, Jan. 20. To the Democratic voters of Wayne county: Bv ord-r of the Executive Ct maaii.:rf of this county, the Couniy Convention is called to meet in thi city on Saturday, February 24, 1900, to select dele gates to tut State convention and to transact any other busi ness that may properly cjme be fore it. The township and precinct primaries will meet on Saturday, February 17, 1900, except Oold ooro, whic wi!i mi Friday n'.b', February 16, 1P00, to se lect delegates lor the County Convention. N. O'Bekry, Chairman. There are Enelish sparrows m Natal, but they are not nesting this summer it is summer there in the cannon of either side. A contemporary heads an article: "Money in Cucumbers."The general impiession heretofore has been that they contamed only colic. If Quay is to be admitted because of a charming personality, then Roberts should be, for he charmed three women to Quay's one. In his message to the Legislature, the Governor of South Carolina said that South Carolina is second only Massachusetts in the number of cot ton spindles, and that when the new mills under way are 'completed, the Palmetto State will be the greatest cotton goods producer in the United States. The businese has grown so that the State no longer ships cotton but is compelled to import it'for use in the factories. This is a marvelous showing and but illustrates the vast possibilities of the South in cotton manufacturing. GENERAL NEWS A row is on between the Paris Exposition managers and our com missioners there because, despite certain alleged rules and promises as to allignirent, Turkey is being permitted to build its pavilion as to overshadow the latter and make it look like an annex or a side show. However much sympathy may be felt for the struggling Boers among the American people. Congressional action in their behalf certainly would be in exceedingly bad taste. How would we have felt had Par liament by formal vote expressed it -self friendly to Spain during our recent war. A bill has been introduced in the JNew xork legislature to require the date of the canning to be placed on all canned goods. This is, of course, to prevent the sale of old goods as fresh ones, but it does not appear that the measure furnishes any means of preventing the fraud o- dating the cans ahead. There is much discussion as to the probabilities of this year's cen sus. Estimates vary all the way from 72,000,000 to 80,000,000. So far as the real welfare and greatness of the country is concerned, it doesn't mat ter one whit which of these esti mates is nearer the truth. Quality and not quantity is the thing to be coesidered. William E. English, son of the former Democratic Vice President lal candidate from Indiana, has re turned to the Treasury Department a check for $1,173 sent to him as pay lor nis services as captain ol a volunteer company during the war with Spain. He says he will not ac cept pay for service to his country in time of danger. oome of tne cares of tne newspa per editor are indicated in a suit for $10,000 damages for libel ; brought by Solomon Buikhalter, of jjaiayette, ma., against tne uauy Journal, of that city, because m a serial story running in that paper the name of the late Mary Burkhal ter is mentioned in association with otlier characters m tee fiction m a way, it is alleged, to cr.st obliquy on the family name. Objection is made by some of the citizens of East Orange, N. J , to acceptance of Andrew Carnegie's offer of $50,000 for the building of a library there, on the ground that because nearly all the residents are I wf11l-,r-fln .nc r.an hav all the books 1 . j tbay want, no such institution is needed. The acceptance of the gift l involves tne supplying ot a site oy : the citizena and the guarantee of $5,000 a year to support the library. The war in South Africa has di verted attention from the operations of the American army in the Philip pines. Yet nearlv every day brings fresh evidence of continued activity there, and while there have been no pitched battles, the aggregate of shirmishes, each with its proportion of casualties, shows that it is no mere pastime in which our soldiers are engaged. The movement begun by the Daughters of the Confederacy of Virginia to erect a monument to the poet priest,Father Abraham Joseph JRyan, is one which will receive the cordial endorsement of every true Southern man, woman and child. No nobler spirit ever lived than the be loved poetlaureate of the Southern Confederacy, as he was aptly term ed. His writing, his deeds and his memory are a precious heritage to the Southern people, A Pittsburg concern has received an order for some wire glass strong enough to walk on and fireproof, to be used on the Tower of London. Thus American visitors to the Tow er will add to their recollections of Julius Csesar, William the Conquer or, Lady Jane Grey, Sir Walter Ra -leigh, the Traitor's gate and the Beefeaters, the memory of good, solid Pittsburg glass with steel wire wound with asbestos yarn imbed ded in it. The Republicans of Florida, al ways early in the field in a Presi dential campaign, held on Friday at St. Augustine, their State Conven tion for the choice of delegates at large to the Republican National Convention. They recognized the "'color line" to the extent of choos ing two white and two colored rep resentatives. The proceedings of the conversion were orderly and har monious. There were r o contests to be carried to the National Conven tion at Philadelphia and no contro versis over the instructions of the delegates. It is not surprising to observe the name of Lord Rosebery cropping up in the English newspapers and in the London correspondence. His is the one name that suggests itself hopefully at the present juncture in r Hmglish politics. There cannot be any question that the present gov ernment is sadly discredited by the blundering conduct of the war into which it was brought by blundering diplomacy, and there is strong prob ability that it could be easily over thrown if the opposition had any efficient leadership. Commissions representing the States of New York and of New Jersey have made a joint report set ting forth the disirability of preserv ing the Palisades of the Hudson, now undergoing rapid destruction by the quarrymen, who find them a convenient store of broken stone for concrete paving and similar purposes- The commissioners point out the landscape value of this remark able formation, the small amount of land necessary to be acquired in or der to preserve it and the ease with which such a public reservation could be made attractive and profit able. A pleasant reminder of the past comes from the action of the Penn sylvania Legislature in arranging to restore the lost, disintegrated or buried monuments that marked Ma son and Dixon's line. Two English engineers, Charles Mason and Jere miah Dixon, drew this line a few years before the Revolution. Some years ago it signified the bloody chasm between North and South, but today, through the blessing of time and the wave of national feel ing set in motion by the Spanish war,it is only what it was originally; the boundary between Maryland Pennsylvania. MOLEI'S LEMON ELIXIE. A Pleasant Lemon Drink. Cures Indigestion, headache, mala ria, kidney diseases, fever, chills, loss of appetite, debility, nervous urostra tion and heart failure, by regulating the Liver, Stomach, Bowels, Kidneys and Blood. MOZLEY'S LEMON ELIXIR Cured me of indigestion. I had suffered for ten years. I had tried almost every medicine, but all failed. Since taking Lemon Elixir I can eat anything I like,; W, A. Griffeth, Reevvssviile, S. O. Motley's Louiou .Elixir Cured me of Indigestion and heart dis ease, after years cf suffering, when all other remedies and doctors had failed. N. D. Coleman, lieu 1 ah, S3. C, Mozley'a Lemon lUixlr 1 have been a great sufferer from dyspepsia for about fifteen years, my trouble being my liver, stomach and. bowels, with terrible headaches. Lem on Elixir cured me. My appetite is good and I am well. I had taken a barrel of c ther medicine that done tne no good. Charles Gibhard, No. 1515 Jefferson Sd Loaisville, Kj Moilej'i Lemon fclixlr Cured me of enlarged liver, nervou indierestion and heart d.sease. I wa 9 unable to walk up stairs or do any kind of work.- I was treated by many physicians, but got no better until I used Lemon Elixir. I am now healthy and vigorous. C. H. Balpwiit, No. 98 Alexander St., Atlanta, Ga. MOZLEI'S LEMON HOT URUPS Cures all Coughs, Colds, Hoarse ness, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Hem orrhage, and all throat and lung dis eases. Elegant, reliable. Twenty-five cents at druggists. Pre- ared only by Dr. H. Mozley. Atlanta, Administrator's Notice. The undersigned having: een ap poiafr d anJ qualified as t dministrator of Geo W. Sanderlin. deceased, all persons having claims sgainst said de cedent are hereby notified to exhibit the same to me at La tjanpe, N. C,, on or before the 20th day t f January, A. D., 1901, and all persons indebted to said decedent a'-e required to make payment to me. Ihis btn day of Jan uary, A, D. 1900. S. J. Wooten, Adm'r of Geo. W. Sanderlin, aeeeased. Administrator's Notice. Having qualified as administrator of the estate ol Garry Ay cock, deceased, all persons holding claims against his estate are notified to present them for payment oh or before Dec. 4th, 1900, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of tneir recovery; and all persons indebt ed to said estate are notified to make immediate payment to the undersigned Dated and posted this 5th day of December, 1899. B. F. AYCOCK", Admr. Fremont, 2ST. C. r.;Cady'sICoodlUon fowden are just what a horse kneeds when in bad condition. Tonic, blood purifier and vermifuge. They arenot food but medicine and the best In use to put a horse in prime condition. Price 25 cents per package. For sale uyM.E, Robinson and Bro. and Goldsboro Drug Co. in Goldsboro, and J. R. Smith Mt. OliveN. O.