Newspapers / Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, … / Feb. 2, 1905, edition 1 / Page 1
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r'tta&)ITesH ilif :-S6nii'tii-fi'11mif ' Wririii uri itli lull t m :i ') '51 . ixtuiLh v. hi. i tbple's rl tr an etsruil s'ltril keep No iOutnlng oif n rit, of Mala'B ori 0ir lull its hucf'red eves to sleep troi DSBORO. ..t,.. THOKSDAY, FJERRUA'KT" 2. 19Q5 KO 74 fi fill iffiWfrl 1f iiiwil! lifts - " ; 1 - " y -4 '4 - . 4 I "ft A j 1 GOSS m yf m I lili ITEM? OF INTEREST FROM DIVERS SOURCES. . The Latest Telegraphic News oi the Day Boiled Down to a Focus For Busy . Reader 8. V ' A $4,000,000 diamond has been discovered at Johannesburg, South 'Africa. That young man who wishes to prove that he is the most devoted lover in all the world should buy'it llox an engagement ring. " John L. Sullivan attributes his success and greatness to the fact that he never smoked a cigarette. Now, - will the ambitious small boy who has formed this pernicious habit con sider the consequences i The Southern Cotton Association has fixed ten cents a pound as the minimum price of the present cotton crop. Now you know what your cotton is worth, and you will be all right if only the other fellow, the man who buys, can be made to know it. V New York doctors have struck be cause the price of an autopsy has been reduced from $25 to $10. But the coroners are claiming in defense that I a charge of $25 a . cut by the doctors is almost as high as the charges which the beef trust makes for some of its cuts. Buffalo, N. Y., Jan. 28. Alonzo J. Whitman, known to the police of many cities as an expert forger, and who made a sensational escape last September from detectives by jump ing through the window of a moving train, was captured today at the home of his mother, in Danville. He has been with his mother ever since his escape. When the police entered 'the house Whitman ran up stairs and -out on the roof entering a cupola. Officers stationed outside, however, j detected the move and he was cap tured GUARANTEED BY J. H. HILL & SON. Hyomei the Only 'Cure for Ca tarrh Which Returns Your Money If Not Satis factory. It is seldom that a druggist has enough faith in the medicine he sells even when prepared by himself to be walling to refund the money if it does not cure; but Hyomei has cured so many cases of catarrh among the j customers of J. H. Hill & Son that ! they offer to refund the money to all who use it and report that they are not satisfied. Hyomei is the simplest and most convenient remedy lor catarrh ever offered to the public. Breathed through an inhaler so small that it can be carried in the vest pocket, for a few minutes four times a day, it will absolutely kill all the germs of catarrh and cure the disease. Ca tarrh cannot exist where Hyomei is " used. It has a two-fold a.tion, kill- ing all the germs in the air passages &nd lungs and soothing and healirg the irritated mucous membrane. . Some of the most prominent men 1 and women of the country have gladly given testimonials to Hyomei. After seeking relief in vain for years nS. this wonderful remedy has cured Vthem of catarrh, and it is no wonder that they want others to know of it. D. O. Groff, Editor of the Nicholas ville, Ky., News writes "Ever since I was a young man I have been trou bled with catarrh, and ip later years he disease became unoearaoie ny- omei has helped me to much that I wish to publicly speak of its merits, so that others afflicted as I have been may be likewise benefited. - -If you have catarrh, accept J. H. Hill & Sons proposition and U3e Hy omei. The complete outfit of Hyo mei costs but $'L and consists of an jnliMler. a medicine dropper and a bottle of Hyomei. ' AS TO OSTEOPATHY. Asheville, N. C, Jan. 27, '05. An open letter to J. Howell Way, Secretary of Medical Society of North Carolina: Dear Doctor: A copy of your circular lettef of January 20th, to the Medical Pro fession of this State, was handed me at the post-office just now,by a mem ber of the Buncombe County Medi cal Society, with the remark, "Have you seen that foolishness?" Your" letter in effect condemns the bill propsed by the Osteopaths of this State, and calls on the medical pro fession to take a united stand iu an effort to defeat the bill liinoauc in the Senate January lyui. . n : bill is as nearly asp.-sni' le an x duplicate of tne ex -ung law wmci. -creates the Stale Aituical Society, a body politic, an . ves it the power to appoint a. uiiil of Examiners who snail am on the qualifications of men w.uu desire to practice medi cine iu Noju. Caioiiua. Your letter is too luii. will De u-i. reply, ou ately some quote in full, and such .- lor the purpose of my . 10 take up separ statements you make in this leue. Fiist. f. this &es3i-. . secure some osteopaths m.u desiring to . Ni-rth Caioii; you evidently of the bupreun-. w ill be made at Legislature "to ,. legislation for tAuack doctors ii edicine in th.b statement ot t.td a decision ,. t m lub (.use of State vs. McKuighi, in which the court declares that osteopathy is not praetice of medicine. The bill to which you refer grants osteopaths not the right to practice medicine, but the right to practice osteopathy. Again, you say they feel "Their inability to pass such an examina tion in medical science as the men of the regular profession have passed." In this you fail to take into account that the State Board of Medical Ex aminers refused to examine an osteo path at its regular meeting in May, becau3e the Supreme Court, in the case of State vs. Briggs, in a decision handed down December, 1903, states that said Board of Medical Exami ners had no right to examine appli cants other than those of the regular medical profession. The osteopaths inability to pass an examination, therefore, is legal and not mental. . You say further, such Legislation is "not only unjust to the profession, but ruinously hurtful to the people, and such a bill is infamous in the extreme, unjust to the citizens of the State and an outrage .on the decent respectable medicrl profession who are striving to elevate and uplift- professional standards." . To this statement I wish to submit the fol lowing fact: The Legislature through a bill introduced at the instigation of your Society in 1803 gives Osteo pathy legal recognition in this State. The Supreme Court iu the caae of State vs. Biggs decided that the State Board of Medical Exauuneis had no right to examine Osteopaths or auy otuer scnool ot medicine which did uoc administer drug.- a-t a therapeutic agency. Its decisioo leaves the State cpen to those prac tices "which wiii prove degrading to the profession pi mediciue and render our state the haven of refuge for the ignorant and illiterate quacks of other states." a condition wh'ich Osteopaths as as well as the regular medical profession deplore. The bill introduced in the present legislature Jan. 19th, is an attempt on the part of the Osteopaths to prevent- the illiterate and incompetent men of the Ost'jopathic profession from com ing into North Carolina. Said bill requires that applicants who. appear tor an . examiuatiou shall present credentiale showiug an atteudauce in a reputable Osteopathic College of three years of not less than nine months yach. Again, to oppose this bill as you suggest in your cirpular letter does notfceep out incompetent men of any school, but on the other hand, if the bill is defeated, North Carolina re- mains open to the iucomptent as weH as the competent Osteopath?. The bill contains no clause which gives speciaLprivileges to our pro fession. As I have eaid above, it is modeled after the Jaw now in force regulating the medical profession who use drugs. This move on the part of 'the North Carolina Osteo pathic Society, is an attempt to join the regular profession in raising the standards of those who treat di seases bys.. Osteopathic methods in this state. '-.. - I would further calx-yotrr'Mtelitidn to the fact that twenty-seven States in the Union have legally recognized osteopathy, and by euch action have prevented the incompetent from r.ti. iii i .i Louiids. Your 4 -. . t propoaeu bill leaves M mi O.i ui.iia wide 0 en to such mcoinpt-ieiH o&itcpaltio as n ay be forced by liiv .. . litiogumcu oiother States to leave thotse biau & and hunt other locations. You &ay iiiat the bill is an attempt to lower tue standards ol tne luedical profession in North Uaiu.iiia. As I have said above,the propepeu law requires ilme tars of nine months each, or tw nr-ieven months,of every applicant fur license to practice in this Slate. ihe mini mum requirements- by jour law is four terms of not less than teven months each,ortweuty-eigiit months. Thus you see that the osiec-j ath re quires only one mouth less study of their applicants than you require of yours. 1 leave it w itn your common sense to say whether you would not prfer an education in any branch for three terms ot nine months to an education of four terms of seven months in four years. . .We do not ask for Ihe right to axamine any ap plicant who does,, not hold himself out to the public as jan osteopath in order to obtain patronage. We do not ask for the law to interfere with the practice ormethods of any school. We ask for no privileges not already given us by the decision of the Su preme Court of this State. We do ask for this bill, for two consid erations : That the people of North Carolina may not be imposed on by ignorant and illiterate men of our school and that graduate mem bers of our profession who have established a practice in this State, shall not be imposed upon by imposters, who may pretend to practice a system which they do not understand. I assure you, Doctor, that no sel fish motive prompted the members of the North Carolina Osteopathic Society to prevent the hill which you denounce, and I challenge you to show where in any particular this bill is infamous, or where it is un just to the citizens of this State. I challenge you to giva one proof that the passage of this bill, would lower the standards of the medical profes sion one iota in this State. ' I ami repectfully yours, W. Banks M each am, Sec. of the N.C. Osteopathy School. Thomas Queer is dead at Wooster, Ohio. Queer lead a very queer life. He had btcn mourned as dead for forty years before his actual demise. He quarreled with his wife, Mrs. Queer, fifty years ago and left home. Alter he nad been gone ten years news of his death was received. Ten years ago he returned and tried to come to terms with Mrs. Queer but failed. When Queer went away from home he left Mrs. Queer with two daughters who were also queer. He refused to tell how or where he spent the fifty years of his absence and there was something queer about his life.. Mrs Queer is still living at the age of 91. What has become of the Queer daughters is not stated. This - i i ! . is a queer wona anu mat was a Queer fami ly.' Quick Work. Mr. J. K. Wrenn. 307 W. Centre St. N. had neuralgia for a week. Two applications of GlobeOil cured i Globe Oil stops any ache or pain inli minute. Only 25c. a bottle, 145 W. Uentre St. iN. 1 Globe Tonic cures r.h'.umati3m. MRS. B. S. JEKMAN DEAD. A Woman Wliose Beauty and I Goodness Took: Hold of a Whole People. Raleigh NevVV and Observer. Mrs. B. S. Jerman, after an ill ness of only a few days duration, died lat Monday night at 10:45 o'clock, at the home of her husband, on the corner of North and Wil mington streets. Mrs. Jerman, who was Miss Isa- belle Montgomery, the daughter ot C. G. Montgomery, Esq., formerly of Concord, now of Anuiston, Ala., leaves a husband and two children to mourn her loss. She was married i to Mr. Jerman, who is the cashier of j the Commercial and Farmers' Bank, on May 16th, 1895. During her ten years residence in Raleigh she has won the hearts of all who knew her. There has been no more sadder, no more pitiable death in Raleigh in many years. It is the privilege that has the value all its own of a place that has not cut-grown the personal tonch and the all-embracing sym pathy to take the death of a sweet woman as a matter of a city's grief. Raleigh will mourn Mrs. Jerman, for her influence permeated the city, and her touch was well-nigh uni versal. It is hard to write of the death of such a woman. All people knew her. Her smile, her beauty, was a thing that touched and revivified and appealed in places that she knew not of. She was one of those beautiful ones, .whose personality, given graciously and openly, was re ceived as a tsort of beneficent inspira tion. There were those who loved her who had never spoken to her di rectly. Her charm was oi that sort that held hearts because of a sincer ity founded on a charity which looked always for good and found it her own clear vision. What good she has done, and she was always active toward those endeavors that make for hope and happiness, will never be reckoned. It was her per sonality, strong, and simple, unaf fected, exquisitely touching and ap pealing, that held the hearts of the people. Hers . was that double ,and generous quality which gives itself passionately to her own and was pro lific in the abundance of its worth to those who had no claim upon her. The pity of her death is swallowed in the goodness and recurring, word -the beauty of her life. The death of Mrs. Jerman comes as a personal sorrow to many in this city, where she had often visited and was greatly beloved by all who knew her, as is also Mr. Jerman, to whom in his so sad bereavement the deepest sympathy of his hosts of friends here goes out with abiding sincerity. DR. STOCKARD'S DENTAL OFFICE. Best Dental Work at prices in the reach of all. Corner John and Walnut streets, over old postoffice. jf100 Tr. 'K. Detchon's Anti Diuretic may be worth to yon more than $100 if you have a child who soils bedling ..from incontinence of water during sleep, cures oia ana young alike . It arrests the trouble at once. $1. ooid oy jwl. Ei. KODin- Saturdav. Feb. 25, will be the la-t rlav to 1 et the SI bottles or 35c of Globe Tonic. Samples free. JgfTcARE O.F THE TTHJ PESCASEi. OF THE THII JtJN j WELDON LADY TO WED. A Invitations Issued, to the Ap proaching Marriage of Miss Jessie Edwards and Mr. P. S. Roper of Virginia. Charlotte Observer. ' - Weldon, Jan. 27. Invitations have been issued to the approaching marriage of Miss Jessie Allan Ed wards, of Weldon, to Mr.' Paul Sputswood Roper, of Petersburg, Va. The wedding wil lakn place in Grace Episcopal church Wednesday, February 8th, at 4:30 o'clock in the afternoon. The ceremony will be per formed by the Rev. J. Taylor Cham bers. Miss Edwards is the youngest and last to wed of three charming daugh ters of Mrs. Cary Campbell Edwards. Mr. Roper is the eldest son of Mr. tud Mrs. Bartlett Roper. He is prominently known throughout Vir ginia and North Carolina in the business world, while socially his family needs no mention here. The marriage and reception will be a brillant society affair and' out-of-town people will come to the city to at tend the same. The three young ladies above re ferred to are well known and most pleasantly remembered in Goldsboro, where theyj have many admiring friends, each of them having, at dif ferent times, visited Mrs. Judge W. 8. O'B. Robinson, on Park Avenue. Quiet at Moscow. Moscow, Jan. 25. A correspon dent of the Associated Press who ar rived here today from St. Petersburg found no signs of troops at the depot or in the surrounding streets. The street cars are moving, but many of the stores are closed and there is scarcely any of the. freight traffic which ordinarily fills the streets. At all corners were posted bulletins signed by Police Chief Volkoff warn ing the people against public disturb ances, and forbidding them to as semble in groups. WINTER EATING RUINS STOMACHS "Now Is the Time You Need Mi ona," says J". H. Hill & Son. Think for a moment of the extra strain you put upon the stomach in the Winter. The hearty food, the late suppers, and the lack of exercise and out door life all weaken and strain the stomach, laying the foun dation for poor health and suffering. . Chronic stomach troubles, nervous irritability, and serious bowel and kidney diseases have often dated from a week of extra "good living." Nearly everyone is bothered with more or less headaches and back aches, furred tongue," poor appetite, dry, backing cough, heartburn, spots before the eyes, dizziness or vertigo, sieeplessness, lack of energy, los3 of flesh or a general weak, tired feeling. Now is the time when Mi-o-na is needed to repair the ravages and wastes the hearty eating of Winter has caused in the stomach and diges tive system. Thi3 is the only known agent that strengthens the stomach and. digestive organ?, so they can and will readily digest whatever food is eaten. A Mi-o-na tablet tak en before each meal will remove all irritation, infiamatioh and conges tion in the digestive organs, and .so strengthen them that they will ex tract from the food all that goes to make good rich blood, firm muscle, and a sound, healthy body. This remarkable remedy costs but 50 cents, and if its use does not re store your full vigor, vitality, and health,- J. H. Hill & Son, one of the best known drug firms in this section will refund your money. Unbounded faith like this deserves your cocA dence. Congress is grappling with the garden seed problem. All other pro posed legislation would as well sneak back in the pigeon hole and try to look resigned. , LEGISLATIVE COMMITTEE. Visit State Hospital Near This City. The joint committee of the gen eral assembly Senate and House appointed to inspect the State Hos pital near this city, f ir the care of thecolored insane, visitei that insti tution Saturday altemoon, arriving on the 12.30 train and leaving on the 9.40 train atnight, during which time they gave thi splendid piece of State property a thorough inspec tion, and, as they could ni t be other wise, were greatly impressed and gratified at the ability with which it is administered in every depart ment and detail by its efficient super intendent, Dr. J. F. Miller. The following constituted the com mitter : Senate: Messrs. W. R. Odeh, of Cabarrus, T. V. Long, of Iredell, and C. A. Webb, of Bun combe. House : Messrs. W. G. Cox, of Perquimans, W. M. Henry, of Transylvania, J. S. Hall, of Ro wan, J. E. Fowler, of Samson, and Dr. W O. Rogers, of Lincoln. Two S. C. Fires. At Bennettsville, S. C, yesterday afternoon, the Southern Cotton Oil Company's plant at that place was destroyed by fire. Loss of about $100, 000, partially covered by insurance. About 2,000 tons of cotton seed meal and a quanity of oil was destroyed. At Union, S. C, yesterday fire originated in the workshop of the Bailey Lumber and Manufacturing Company destroyed its plant and stables and the store of the Union Supply Company, the Jeffries build ing and the resident of Miss Emma Brandon. The loss aggregates $38, 000, about half insured. The Ma sonic Lodge loat properties valued at $7,00i, insurance $3,-00. The fact that California reports a production of 1-25,000,000 pounds of prunes during the p.tst year oSFers food for reflection as well as digestion. One hundred and twenty-rive mil- lion pounds of prunes! The quantity is appalling. That is one pound of prune for every person in the United States and sxne 35,000,000 pounds to scatter around -in Europe. Fur thermore, there were enough prunes produced by California in 1904 to give several prunes to every inhabi tant ot the globe an 1 still have a few over. Boar Ung-house frequenters can be excused for shuddering at such a stupendous output of prunes. Cranks have beea known to live al- together on prunes, under the delu sion that this Efruit promotes the em pie life and longevity. What goes witn uaiiiorma's izo,uuu,uuu pounds of prunes is not hard to an swer. They are eaten, and while the prune is nol universally popular, it dominates the dinner table to an ex tent realized by few people. Wood's Seeds. Extra Early Peas are usually one of the must satis factory and profitable crops to grow, both for home market and shipping. Wood's Lightning Excelsior and Wood's Pedigree Extra Early nrA fhft pnrlipst and most tyroduo tive kinds m cultivation, and are I in great favor with truckers wherever they are; planted . Special prices quoted in quantity. Wiritfl fnr TriAS frnrl Wood's Quarter Century Seed Book, I Celling all about the best Qarden I and Farm-Seeds. Mailed free. I T.Y.Wood&Sons, Seedsmen, j Kiuniflunu, - iviKbiniA. WOOD'S SEDS Awarded "I GRAND PRIZE - ST. LOUIS, 1904. ' SOLD MEDAL - PARIS. 1900. Executrix Notice. The undernamed, executor of the estate of A. R- RAVEN. . deceased, hereby noti fies those who are Indebted to said estate, to make Immediate payment to her, and tnose to whom the estate Is indebted to preeen t thei r claims to her, wlfhin 12 months from the dato hereof, or this notice will t) p:-;!dvl la i tar oi weir recovery. I ANNIE S. RAVEX, Exsslilx, I January 1, lbOO, 1
Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 2, 1905, edition 1
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