Don't Pay High Prices For Men's, Ladies' and Children's Oxfords and Sandale when you can buy them so cheap in all styles and shapes in different leathers at Bizzell Brothers' Shoe Store We have cut off one-half in some places, one third in others, etc. It will be to your interest to see our Oxfords before you purchase else where. Tan Oxfords at your own price. They must go. BDZZELL BROS. Slhioe S sum dHat s We have another good lot of Korrect Shape Low Shoes which were a little late coming in, there fore it enables you to get just the toe and shape you may want. Come by and take a look at them. Remember, if they break you get the second pair FREE We also have lots of nobby shaped Hats that have just come in, both felt and straws. Prices on straw goods very low now. Crow, Pricliard & Co., wliJfSt street 16 Bun oil tlin Gar load No matter how small your pur chase at this store you receive the benefit of the carload dis count. We are offering now the last ten of a carload of o SIDEBOARDS at prices that are bound to make them move. Come in and see. ROYALL & BORDEN THE ONE PRICE STORE. Chartered 1848 Purely Mutual. National Life Insurance Co. of Vermont. Percent This Co. held Jan. 1, 1906 Assets, $34,519,093.04. Gain 1.84 and Gained during the past Surplus, $3,821,751.51. Gain 1.55 decade Insur, $145,480,904.00 Gain 1.09 Sells the Most Modern, Profit-Sharing, Non-Forf citable Annual Dividend Policies of Life, Term, Endowment and Annuity Insurance. "Ask For a Specimen of Oar New Investment Insurance Trust Bond." SOLD BY NO OTHER COMPANY. By patronizing this old Reliable Company you build up your own state and take absolutely no risk. Its investments are limited to municipal bonds, to first lien mort gages of ample margin and loans to its own policy holders, dis tributed in forty-four states in which it does business. Nearly Three Hundred Thousand Dollars invested in North Carolina; $25,000 in Goldsboro bonds. Correspondence solicited. Agents wanted, apply to H. M. Hun)pl)rey, Goldsboro, N. C. Manager for Eastern North Carolina. The most Popular in use 777 -ffBtlUWlA PINS. A DESPERATE DEED. Three Men Slain By Explod ing Dynamite-Three More Will Die. Chicago, July 13-Three men were blown to pieces, three others fatally injured, and several others badly hurt, by an explosion which early today wrecked a shanty in the Mc Laughlin stone quarries at Bell wood, a short distance northwest of Chic ago. There was evidence that the ex plosion was the result of a plot on the part of people who are at pre sent unknown to the police. The dynamite shed of the quarry, which is at a considerable distance from the shanty which was blown up, was broken open, and the dynamite car ried to the building in which a num ber of laborers were sleeping, and exploded beneath the structure. The survivors all declare that there was no dynamite around the shanty when they retired for the night. The explosion aroused the resi dents for several miles around, and shattered many panes of glass a mile away from the quarries. A larger part or the body of one of the men killed was taken from a tree a hun dred feet from the place where the shanty had stood. Parts of the corpse were found lying all around the tree. All of the men killed and injured were Greek and Italian laborers. The officials of the McLaughlin Company denounced the blowing up of the shanty as deliberate murder, and said that in their opinion the crime had been actuated by a desire to rob the sleeping: men. Several of them were known to have consider able money. Louis Fappilo was said to have carried $1,000 in a belt he wore around one leg. Pappilo and his brother were killed and when the bodies were found both had been completely stripped of clothing. This was not the case with any other man who was in the shanty at the time of the explosion, and according to the officials of the McLaughlin Com pany bears out their theory that rob bery was the motive of the crime. Late in the day the police received information that led them to believe that the dynamite might have been placed under the building at the in stance of a woman who was jealous of one of the men who was killed. It is known that they quarreled the day before the explosion, and that she threatened him. 50 rolls of matting jnst received at Andrews & Waddell. TERRIBLE ECZEMA ON LITTLE BOY tributedTO householders. Physicians and people are urged to aid the in vestigators, and the hope is enter tained that their final report will make plain the source of typhoid contamination in the national capital. The case in question is full of in terest, for the findings, facts and con clusions of the commission at Wash ington may fit other towns and other water supplies. At present sand filtration stands approved by the best engineers and scientists, and the Washington investigation will neces sarily go over the entire problem. TWO MAGNIFICENT PIERS. FOB REGISTER OF DEEDS. At the solicitation of many friends I hereby announce myself a candi date for the office of Register of Deeds, subject to the action of the Democratic primaries and county convention. If nominated, which is equivalent to election, I promise to fill the office, as I have in the past, to the best of my ability. A. J. Brown. Goldsboro, N. C, July 10, 1906. Killed Seven. El Paso, Texas, July 12. Seven persons were killed in a landslide at Ocampo (Jesus Maria) Chihuahua, Mexico, and the city almost de stroyed. All the killed are Mexicans. Buy one of our Mosquito Canopies and sleep in peace. We are sole agents for the Dixie Canopies. Andrews & Waddell. Uncle Sam Will Build a Colonial City and an Unrivalled Approach at tbe Jamestown Exposition Next Year. Norfolk, Va., July 14. Of the sums appropriated by the United States Government in aid oi the Jamestown s Celebration to be held next year near Norfolk, Va., five hundred and fifty thousand dollars are specifically set aside for the con struction of buildings and the collec- tion of exhibits. Of this amount the larger part is the building fund. It has been the purpose of the Jamestown Exposition from its very inception to create a Colonial city on the shores of Hampton Roads, and the policy of the United States Gov ernment is to further this end by the erection of buildings all of which will belong to that distinct typo of architecture. Dotted here and there along the six miles of roadway con necting the Exposition with Norfolk are several fine examples of Colonial architecture, and in the city of Nor folk there are some houses which are perfect specimens of that type. It might be said that the Ameri can adaptation of the Georgian style, called the Colonial, reached its zenith in Virginia, as is attested by the splendid James river mansions, the Colonial houses of Middle Virginia, and that marvelous example of the purest type, the University of Vir ginia. None of the Exposition buildings will be reproductions of Greek or Roman temples; nothing bizarre will be shown in the outdoor decorations or interior adornments. The lines of the buildings will be chaste, and the gardens reminiscent of the seven teenth century. The whole picture will be a com posite of green foliage native flowers hard shell or dirt roads, and houses, large and small, built of brick, white columned, or of shingles interest with tiles. The bill appropriating the government money sets forth that "said buildings shall be erected as far as posible in the Colonial style of architecture, from plans prepared by the Supervising Architect of the treasury." This provision of Con gress is in line with the Architect's predilections, and as a result, the government will have, for the first time at any Exposition, a set of buildings between which there is no discord of style. To enable free and ready com munication between the ships of the fleets that will assemble in Hampton Roads and the Exposition shores, and in order to furnish a safe and ample harbor for small boats and launches, the government has ap propriated four hundred thousand dollars for two mammoth piers. 15o3tY1.ES TO SUIT ALL WBJTER&JUL STATIONERS iTAVETHEU, CSORKS CAMDEN N. 4. 28 JOKM ST.. NEW YORK Typhoid and Filtration. In previous years Washington has been sadly afflicted with typhoid fever, but last fall a large, expensive and modern filtration plant was put into operation. The hope was ex pressed at the time that the Potomac water would be rendered wholesome by the sand or mechanical process, and that it would no longer be neces sary to boil it in order to secure im munity from bacteriological diseases in its use and consumption. This hope has, however, proven de lusive, for the typhoid scourage is as prevalent in Washington today as it was last summer or at any previous time. If sand filtration will not rob water of harmful germ life, the fact. should be made known, for the very use of approved filtration induces many to be careless in the boiling of water. Washington is investigating the sub ject. An expert commission has been put at work, and every case of typhoid in Washington is to be. in vestigated with view of ascertaining whether the infection is of a local nature or is due to Potomac water brought in by the District and dis- PABDONED A W. Seventeen Year Old Lad Got Execu Ave Clemency. Governor Glenn yesterday granted a conditional pardon to Wesley Til ton, a white boy of Goldsboro, aged 17 years, who was convicted of lar ceny and sentenced to two years on Wayne county's roads. The pardon was obtained by Super intendent W. B. Streeter, of the North Carolina Children's Home Society, who has secured a good home for the boy, where he will re ceive proper training and encourage ment to be industrious and honest, Wesley is the son of a widow with six children, he being the only one who has brought sorrow to her home The work of the society is growing larger every month. The total jnum ber of children received from the be ginning is 155; of these 148 have been placed, and 7 are now in the care of the society. Eight children have been received since June 1st, when 11 were on hand, and of these 10 were placed in homes, leaving 1 in the society's care. Buy a cork lined Refrigerator from Andrews & Waddell. Mouth and Eyes Covered With Crusts Face Itched Most Fear fullyHands Pinned Down to Prevent Scratching MIRACULOUS CURE BY CUTICURA REMEDIES " When my little boy was six months old, he had eczema. The sores extended so quickly OTer the whole body that we at once called in the doctor. We then went to another doctor, but he could not help him, and in our despair we went to a third one. Matters became so bad that he had regular holes in his cheeks, large enough to put a finger into. The food had to be given with a spoon, for his mouth was covered with crusts as thick as a ringer, and whenever he opened the mouth they began to bleed and suppurate, as did also his eyes. Hands, arms, chest, and back, in short the whole body, was covered over and over. We had no rest by day or night. Whenever ne was laid in his bed, we had to Din his hands down: itxnxn... otherwise he would Altohso Hohxath. Bcratch hi8 face and make an open sore. I think his face must have itched most fearfully. 1 1 We finally thought nothing could help, and I had made up my mind to send my wife with the child to Europehoping that the ui air might cure him, otherwise he was to be Eut under good medical care there. But, lord be blessed, matters came differently, and we soon saw a miracle. A friend of ours spoke about Cuticura. We made a trial with Cuticura Soap, Ointment, and Resolvent, and within ten days or two weeks we noticed ays decided improvement. Just as quickly as thsU sickness had appeared it also began to.. dis appear, and within ten weeks the child was absolutely well, and his skin was smooth and white as never before." F. Hohrath, President of the C. L. Hohrath Company, Manufact urers of Silk Ribbons, 4 to 20 Rink Alley, June 5, 1906. South Bethlehem, Pa. Cuticura 8oap,blntmnt, and Fill are aold throng hoot tb world. Pottr Drug k Chem. Corp., Sole FropaBoataau mr Mmlla Tr , "How to Care lor th BMn.1 Duel over Dreyfus. Paris. July, 18. -The scene of tumultuous disorder which marked the enactment today of the law re storing Alfred Dreyfus to the army was followed by a bloody duel to night iiilwhich Under-Secretary of State iUnrraut was dangerously wounded by the sword of M. Puglie- si-Conti. The duel assumed the aspect of a veritable combat between the govern ment and the opposition, as M. Sar raut's seconds were Ministers Clemen- ceau and Thomson, while M. Puglie si Conti's were M. Millevoye and General Sacquet, who were drawn from the elements which bitterly re sist the government's rehabilitation of Dreyfus. Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad PARAGRAPHS. LOCAL TIME TABLE. Goldsboro and Beaufort, N, In effect June 10, 1906. EASTBOUND. No. 3 No. 1 C. STATIONS. p.m. a.m. Lv Goldsboro 3.40 8.00 Millers 3.50 8.13 Bests 4.01 8.21 LaGrange 4.13 8.31 Falling Creek 4.25 8.43 Kinston 4.40 8.56 Caswell 4.52 9.13 Dover 5.02 9.23 Cove 5.16 9.41 Tuscarora 5.26 9.51 Clarks 5.31 9.56 Ar New Bern 5.48 10.10 Lv New Bern 5.55 10.15 Riverdale 6.18 10.34 Croatan 6.22 10.38 Havelock 6.36 10.50 Newport 6.52 11.12 Ar Moreh'd City. 7.20 11.30 Atlantic Hotel 7.28 11.38 Ar Beaufort 8.10 12.20 WESTBOUND. No. 2 No. 4 STATIONS. a.m. p.m. Lv Beaufort 7.00 3.35 Atlantic Hotel 7.42 4.17 Lv Moreh'd City. 7.50 4.22 Newport. 8.11 4.43 - Havelock 8.27 4.59 Croatan 8.39 5.11 Riverdale 8.43 5.15 Ar New Bern 9.05 5.40 Lv New Bern 9.10 6.48 Clarks 9.26 6.04 Tuscarora 9.31 6.10 Cove 9.41 6.20 Dover 9.58 6.36 Caswell 10.08 6.46 Kinston 10.22 7.00 Falling Creek.10.31 7.13 LaGrange 10.47 7.26 Bests 10 58 7.37 Millers 11.07 7.45 Ar Goldsboro 11.20 7.55 No. 5 A.M. 7.00 7.10 7.18 7.28 7.40 7.52 8.04 8.14 8.27 8.37 8.43 9.05 9.10 9.28 9.32 9.44 10.06 10.23 10.28 11.10 No. 6J P.M. 5.15 5.57 6.02 6.21 6.36 6.48 6.51 7.15 7.20 7.36 7.42 7.54 8.08 8.18 8.32 8.44 8.56 9.06 914 9.25 Colonel Joseph Button naturally feels very much put out. The British papers are not inclined to give American cigarettes a puff. Love and common sensebut what has love in common with sense, any way. Things we would like to be thank ful for so seldom give us the op portunity. There's nothing new under th9 sun except methods of distorting truth. For shooting the "is-it-hot-enough -for-you" fiends this is the opon sea son. An evil doer is one who belies in doing others before they attempt to do him. Time amends a good many prayer?.. The man behind the plow makes an impression in the world. Beware of the friendly advice of your enemies. A supreme test of friendship is a loan. If we could all reach the top there wouldbe more demand for space at the bottom. No man is so powerful that some weak woman can't set her foot on his neck. A man always has use for at least one more pair of suspenders. No one ever saw a girl wear glovea to hide an engagement ring. Your independence might look like impudence in your neighbor. A crank is a person who thinks all Oilier people are cranks. . Learn to patient also when not to be patient. The road that cuts through right to riches has a down grade extension to ruin. Upright walking is the strongest talking. Even the so-called white liars are more or less tainted. The trouble we meet are as noth ing compared with those we manu facture. Any man possesses the ability to be as big a fool as he pleases. The scorn of egotism is as harmless as the slurs of ignorance. But the coat doesn't make the man not even a coat of tar and fea- hers. A man never realizes how unpopu- ar he is until he begins to acquire ame. .Hearts oi gold do not come by set ting the heart on gold. The walls of the house of happi ness are built of sacrifice. No man is civilized until he has learned to live with himself. Only few people make good in an emergency. A woman with a heart doesn't need any art to make the world adore her. One good thing about rainbow gold is that we can't squander it on bar gains. Buy one ot our Mosquito Canopies and sleep in peace. We are sole agents for the Dixie Canopies. Andrews & Waddell. DaiIy. JSunday only. CONNECTIONS. At Kinston and Newborn with Atlantic Coast Line, "Trains Nos. 1 and 4 connect at Goldsboro with A. C. L. trains as follows: No. 41,6outhbound; No. 42, Northbound: and with Southern R&ilway Trains Nos. Ill, Westbound and No. 112, Eastbound." R. P. Foster, R, E. L. Bunch, General M'g'r. Traffic M'g'r. Goldsboro, N. O. WANT COLUMN LOST Old gold cuff button, with initials "G. B. M." Suitable reward at this office. SQUABS I have a number of Squabs for sale at my home. M. E. Robinson, Jr. POTTED PLANTS I have a large supply of Begonias and Gera nums all varieties for sale cheap. Mrs. J. J. Robinson, 309 John St. S. FOR SALE: A five room single story house, with bath room, hot and cold water, and all modern improve ments, size of lot 50x110, Oak street, near George. For terms apply to THE ARGUS OFFICE. FOR SALE AT ONCE Cheapest 5-room cottage in Goldsboro; beauti ful lot and very desirable neighbor hood. Also a choice corner lot, Mul berry and Virginia streets. Ask Humphrey-Gibson Company. LOST Chatelaine and gold watch with diamond setting and initials E. G. B. Full name, Eula Bizzell, on inside of back case. A liberal re ward will be paid for its return to this office or to the undersigned. K. E. Bizzel.il,. ALL STEAM ENGINEERS. If you are a Steam Engineer, looking tor a good thing, send us your name and P. O. Address. We have a pro position that will greatly interest you. A good chance. Do it now. Limited. Menry W. Lord 25 Franklin Bldg, Baltimore, Md.