Newspapers / Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, … / June 18, 1908, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
J v. -A . . .... V .. -3 ' i $1.00 a Year, "This ArgU3 o'er the people's rights Doth an eternal vigil keep ; No soothingstrains of Maia's son Shall lull itshundred eyes to sleep." VOL,. XXII GOLDSBOKO, K. C, THURSDAY, JUINE 18, 1908. THE VETERANS MARCH AGAIN Spectacular Day of the Big Reunion oi Confederate Veterans. .All ol the States were well pre sented, Among Them Georgia, Carolinas, Mississippi, Virginia, Louisiana, Texas, irfensas, Tenn essee, Missouri, florida aosl SientucKy. STRONG FACULTY. Special to the AKOCS.) Kirmingham, Ala., June 11 This was the spectacular flay of the big re union of Confederate veterans, T hen gray-haired and age-worn soldiers who wore the gray marched once again Khn Ider to shoulder. The courts and oity offices, the banks and many stores and Victories weredosed, and the peo ple made the occasion a holiday. During the early hours of the fore noon crowded strains brought large numbers of visitors from all points within a radius of 100 miles of Birm ingham. These,! added to the great throngs already in the city, made the crowded one of ;the largest ever seen here. It was shortly after 11 o'clock when the signal guns to start the ?parade were fired. The start was made from Sixth avenue and Nineteenth - street, from which ;point thei line of march extended through First a venue, Twen ty-first street and Fifth avenue, thence countermarching on Twentieth street ':to Sixth avenue, Twenty-firsttreet to Park avenue and on Park avenue to Nineteenth street, where the.prooes- sion disbanded. The reviewing stand was located in front of the Confederate monument at Capital Park. The reviewing stand was .oecunied by Governor ComerH Mayor Ward -and other State And City officials and .especially invited guests from -other States, including t&e wives and families distinguished veterans. The principal features of the-aloeing day of the 18th reunion Confederate "Veterans todaywas the great .parade, 3 miles long, ithrough the principal street, led by the nwly elected com minder. Gen. -Clement A. Evans, of Georgia. As the grizzled veieians in gray maxebed bjv great outburst of ap plause greeted them on every side, and Gen. Evan in particular ws vooi f ereusly Applauded. General George P. Harrison, com mander of the Alabama division, wag the ckief marshal of the parade. Mar shal E. J. McCressin headed the col umn 'with Chief Bodeker an two Tilatoona of mounted police. Next in M line were the State And City officials in carriages, the Alabama National Guard, the Howard college cadets, Major General Harrison and his staff, and General Cabell and his staff, fol lowed by the sponsors carriage and the Forest cavalry. Then came the Confederate veterans, representing the department of -the Army of Northern Viijginia, the de partment of the Army of Tennessee, the trans-Mississippi department and the other divisions.. Allot the States were well repre-j sented, among them, Georgia, Caro-j linas, Mississippi, Virginia, Louisiana,; Texas, Arkansas, Tennessee, Mis souri, Florida and Kentucky. " : During the night the final decora tive touches were made, and today the! line of march was one great display ol flags and bunting. The most elabo rate decorations were to be seen along Twentieth street, through which brood thoroughfares the procession counter marched for six blocks. Handsome areees spanned the street at regular intervals. At Capital Park the Con federate monument and the reviewing stand were surrounded by a court of honor. . ... . . . ' '. ' . The applause, which was spontaneous . and load all along the line of march, became a veritable tempest as the vet erans 'moved past the reviewing stand. Board ol Trustees Elect Full Corps ol Teachers For Oar PhbUc Schools. The Bard of Trustees of the Golds boro Public Schools has completed the selection of ajfacalty for the coming year, and in all the career of these schools, grewing as they have from year o year, and requiring the ad dition of teachers to the faculty from year to year, we do not recall a faculty so Strong, and nose so large, as that which will have the care and training of the children of the communitp in these schools during the coming year. Every member of the faculty has been selected by Superintendent Woltz and considered by the Board of Trus tees with a view to special fitness for the workassigned to them in the grades. They are all teachers of ability and experience who have already won dis tinction in the profession. The pee- pleof Goldsboro are Indeed to be con gratulated that the children of the com munity are to have such a faculty in the schools thy attend. The following compose the faculty and their assignment, as elected by the Board with Mr. A. E. Wolte as superintendent. HIS LIFE FOR HIS WORD. A Hero Who Deserves to Live That the Country at Large May Give to Him Higher Honors. Gov. Hughes Wiss Gut in Bis Anti Race Track Gambling Fight in New York Legislatare Tc 3ay By a vets That MayXest a Life. AT CHICAGO. Contest Committee Ropes to Through and Git Home Today. Get $1.00 a Year. NO. 51 MITCHELL FOR GOVERNOR. HIGH SCHOOL. Principal John L. Hatheock. English Miss Francis Towers. History Miss Florence May-erberg Latin Miss Jennie Royall. Mathematics Miss Maria Graham Science Miss Nellie Cobb. vMusie and Drawing Miss Elizabsti Coleman. - Albany, June 11 The anti racetrack gambling bill, making it a felony to bet on horse races in this State, passed the Senate today by a vote of 27 to 26, the deciding 'vote being casi by sen ator Otto Feelker, who rose from his sick bed, contrary to the advise of h5s physicians, in order to honor Ms premise to Governor Hughes, the father of th bill, that he would be in his seat and vote for the bill if heliv cd until 2this afternoon. Feelker-had to be helped to 'hie feet to answer when his name was called and immediately after Jtis vote had been recorded by the clerk he sank unconscious to his seat and was car ried from the Senate chaaiber. His conditieu was critical at o'clock this afternoon. Chicago, June 12. National com mittee hopes to-day to dispose of the last of the 229 contests for seats in the National convention and go home. There is no doubt aa to the outcome of every contest. No Taft man will be refused his seat. The allies realize this. Considerable nervousness, how ever, is occasioned by the demands of j the labor organizations as represented by president Samuel Gompers, of the American Federation of Labor that an anti-injuetien plank be pnt in the! platform; for it is confidently asserted that if Gompers fails with the Repub licans he will take his anti-injunction plaE.k out to Denver and make an ef fort to Lave it sailed into the Demo cratic platform. At the same time, the Manufacturers' Associations are repre sented here by president James W. Van Cleave, opposing the plank, so platform writers find themselves be tween two fires, as to injunction and anti-iniunction planks. It is Under stood to-day that friends of Governor Hughes aTe so confident of the popu larity of the. New YoTk chief execu tive, so greatly increased by the pas sage of his anti-racing bills, that he may decide to remain in the Presiden tial ree. Be Is Farored for Chlet Exeentlve ci i Illinois .by President Gompers of Labor Federation. (Special to the Argus.) Chicago, Jane 11. Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, is due here to-night, and will argue the anti-Injuction plank of the platform of the Republican Na tional convention. Mr. Gompers, who comes from Washington, is reported as saying "I have no candidate. I am for measures not men." Asked as to his attitude towards ohn Mitchell, late President of the United Mine workers, for Governor of Illinois, he said "I am heartily in fa vor of Mitchell for Govenor. He is the kind of man needed in publie life." Further than this Gompers would not commit himself. Also Jim Howard Serving Life Sentence In Goebel Murder Case. 7A M-is-s Annie Abernethy. 7B Mis; Kate Lewis. OA Miss Lizzie Brooks.. 6B Miss Lucy Webb. 5A Miss Clara Spicer. 5B Miss Charlotte Ireland. 4A Miss Minnie Slocumb. 4B Mrs. W. L. Morris. 3 A Miss Mary Scott Munroe. 3B, Sec. II Mrs. Mary B. Giiewdld. 3B, Sec. 1 Miss Rebecca A. JElcm phrey. SJBCOND GRADE TEACHERS. Mrs. M. O. Humphrey. Miss Sarah L. Kirby. Miss Elise Fulghum. yiE(f GRADE TEA-CKERS. Mrs. Mariana C. Gareiesen. Miss Annie Farrior. Miss Susie Fulghum. Miss Mary Gray. iSf.lESLKAlf SCHWL. Mrs. If-jB. Frazier. ' All the faculty of the eoloared School, as constituted last year., re-elected. '. were Women as Well .as Men Are Made Miserable by Kidney Titrable. FOR SALE. .One good gentle farm mu'e, for cash or on time. ee i -1 JOSEPH EDWARDS. ' For Electric Motors and placing same in commission see Jno. S. Dortch. Kidney trouble preys upon the TEsnd, die courages anci lessens ambition; beauty, vigor ana caeertumsss seen disappear whenthe kid neys are out tf order or diseased. Kidnej - trotrbls has become .-o prevalent that it is not uncoonmos for a child to be born afflicted with weak kid neys. If the tiild urin ates too often, if the jrine scalds the .flesh or if, whenthe cfaik. caches an age when it should be able to fiontrol the passage, it is yet afflLxed wSth ed-wettiBg, depend upon it. the causa oi no difficulty is kidney trouble, and the t 'st step should bs tewardsthe treatmen o ?hesa important organs This unpleasant trouble is due to a .diseased condition of the idneys and bladder and not to a habit a? nost people suppose. Women as well as men are made mis erable with kidney and bladder trouble, iid both need the same great remedy. The mild and the Immediate effect oi Swamp-Root is soon realized. It is soM y druggists, in fifty cent and - one dollar Mzea." You may have a jample bottle by mail -ree, aiso pampmet ten- Home o sronp-Boot. ng all about it, Including many of the thousands of testimonial letters received from sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer k Ce., Binghamton, N. Y., be sure aad mention this paper. ' Don't make any mistake, but rememkev e ' name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmai amp-Root, and the address, Binghamtua Y.' en ew bottle Morts:aree' Sale. V.VT'V By virtue of a mortgage, executed by W. A. Tudor, to O. J,. Fitagerald .and registered in Book No. 44. Page 519. in office of Regis ter of Deeds for Wayne County, the undersign ed will sell for cash, at Public Auction, at the Court House door in Goldsdoro. on the 20th day of June, 1908, the property conveyed by said mortgage, to-wit: . , All fixtures, household and kitchen furniture, located in the Commercial Hotel formerly the Bridgers House, - ' EUROPE AGAltiST TMT. Amsrlcaas aesifiing Abroad Op psse Taft. . Special to the Aeoos. Kw York, June 10. 'Edward II. Batl-er, proprietor of the-BKifaio STews, hasust returned frn Europe and re ports a decided anti-Roosevelt senti ment on the other ide 'of the water,, particularly in France and Germany,; wfctre they teelieve the "'"big stick''''' largaly responsible ffor the t ecent finao1 clalipanie that has -so crippled inter-( national eotumro, as well as all bu inecs at hoaae tt&d abroad. But in Lo&don he found .a -sentiment ready to believe Roosevelt's denial that he pre cipitated tbeipaaiie. Americans pesidsng abroad, many of tnem, , bop Haft will be defeated, beaause he is Reoee.velth.-candidate. KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS. Ttm. 9. V.'jJjb um hieclii Oras.d Chancellsn BecuersoavlIIe Nail rissfi el Grand L8dg2 Meeting. (Special to Ihe Argus. J Raleigh, Jud. 10 By a votef 111 to 43 the Grand Lodge Knigk4s of Pythias today chose Hendersenville e ver Asfceville as the next place of an nual mooting. Thes. H. Webb Duke was elected 3rand Chancellor vice W. C. 'Crist, of Winstan-Salem. Tonight. a -social sessiera wiK be hold, -and tomorrow the srasd. lodge will' adjouca).. CROOK SHOOTS POLICE Cfeicago, Stxne 0-0. National const mittee to-day seated Tatl men ,fros the eleventh aitd thirteenth Missouri distaicts.' Tbcsie is. a little doubt now arnonO admisteatrailtton dealers that t&e ticket will be Taft:aoidCortelou. POWERS PARDONED OLIVER BELMONT DEAD. Soccurabei This Morair.g ta The irim Seargcnt's Call. (Special to The Aequs.) New York, April 10. Oliver Hazard Perry Belmont, millionare, and former memberof Congiess from the thirteenth New York district, and a delegate te the demoeratic national convention of 1900, prominent also in flnancial.yatch inff and club circles of New Yoris, Lon don and Paris died at six o'clock this morning, of peritonitis, following an operation for appendicitis. He married ten yeats ago the di vorced wife of William K. Vander- KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS. End of a Long Criminal Contro versy Covering More Than Seven Years in the Courts. Frankfort, Ky., June 13. Governor Wilson, of this State today signed and issued the pardon of Caleb Powers and Jim Howard, both of whom, after so many mistrials and much controversy were finally sentenced to life imprison ment for complicity in the brutal mur der ot Governor William Goebel, of Kentucky, who was shot from ambush and murdered as he approached to the Capitol steps on the mornipg that was to witness his inauguration as Gov ernor, on February 1, 1900. IAFT AND CORHLYOU. Forecast ot tbe National lepubH esa Ticket. . Chicago, Jane 11 This afternoon (the National eoeamittee took up the .contested, seats from tDexas. Jit is ex pected that the Tafit naeaa wilHee seated, though .vicious xehret that federal patronage was used in tbe State to kelp Taft are mot denied by many strong supporters of the War Seea-etasy. It looks today as though Ccntelyou may not get the nomination far-second place by acclamation. Thereis a boom for Congressman Sheham, cyf JSew York, and tie is com ing forward are ry strongly. " It isjfreely predicted, however, that the tieket will be Taft and Cortelyou on the rst ballot. ' " David D. Hill to See Europe. New-York, June 11. Former Gover nor David B. Hill will be one of the notable absentees from the Democratic National Convention at Denver next month. Mr. Hill sailed on the steam ship Baltic today and will spend the greater part of the summer in fSurope. It is his first trip abroad. : Mea Wiser Fitalij louided By flotei Criminal Ex-Convlc To day Id Butfilo. IiU!C"alos.June 12. DetectiveSergeatst 5eremiah &ynch, oldest eierrJber of the ilooal polies, and preominent in th capture' of -Leon Czohosh, aeeassin ef Psesident McKinley, wai -saot this, fasenoon asd probably fatalLy toy Otf Sttedco-f, afiesperate cateekjuet releas-t ed from Auburn state prison, after a twelve .estrs sentence !&r boiaing -up, and TobbiKg the paymaster of thei AmexicaniaEadlator Company. . Lynch undertook to rest HBuisdorfj i eusDiCiOUS cnaraetec xwincm me latter draw revolver and red,fL.ynoh getting thO'lullet in tfee groin. He was -removed to the Emergency Hospital, where his death is noor ex-pe-eted anyninute. Susdorf.WAS closed in sapon by the crow.d in the street and after a desper ate fight was (thrown down and drag ged fca police station. The Song of the Hair CASTOR IA Tor Infants and Children. ' Tfaa Kind Tea Have Always Bought , Bears the . . y ' 7 " Cignatnr of Cutx&Z3m There are four verses. Verse 1 . Ayer's Hair Vigor stops falling hair. Verse 2. Ayer's Hiir Vigor makes the hair grow, i Verse 3. Ayer's Hair Vigor Cures dandruff. Verse 4. Ayer's Hair Vigor makes the scalp healthy, and keeps it so. It is a regular hair-food; this is the real secret of its won derful success. The best kind of a testimonial " Sold for over sixty years." JOad by J. O. Ayer Co.. Lowell. Ki SARSAPABILLA. PILLS. - i : CHEEKY . PECTORAL. yers appointments by the Grand Chancel lor and the New Tyros. Grand Chanoelior Thomas H. Webb has announced the appointment of the deputy rand chancellor for each of the fourteen districts in this Domain in thei r numerical order, as follows: 8. A. Xoney, Wallaee; J. R. Turnage,, Ayden; gPred A. Mintz, Mt. Olive, W. D. Gosl-sr, Fayetteville; R. S. McCoin, ETenderson; C. M. Folsom, Hamlet; McBrSde Holt, Graham, A. H. Holland, Winston-Sale in; P. S. Carleton, Sails bury; W. C. W ilson, Charlotte; J. S. P. Carpetitser, Cherryville; S. B. Miller, Statesviile; E. C. Missildine, Tryon; S. W. BVutoe.iDillsboro. Thetanding committees appointed by Grand Chancellor Webb are. Judie&any Walker Taylor, Wilming ton: Marshall W. Bell, Murphy; A. A. Whitner, Hickory Finance J. H. Hoffman, Statesviile; F. L. Hunt, Asheville; A. B. Ellington, Greenville. State ef the Order A. E. McCaus land, Oharlotte; J. D. Pridgen, Dur ham; C.iCB. Brooks, Henderson ville; C. C. McLean, Greens bar o; O. C. Burtonf MounfrQIlead. Credenstirls George C. Goodman, Marshall;. R. Cofield, Ellenbore; L. J. Milborue, Kins ton. Correspondent N. R. ! Alexander, FayetteviBe. Uniform , ;Rank A. S. Bernard, Asheville; W. W. WUson, Raleigh; W- C. Crist, Salem. GiandTriOsunal C. R. Baker.Salis bufy.; D. J. Hill, Lexington; J. C. Clif toaJL, Dunn. THAWS RECONCILED. Barry and Evelyn Said to be Cooing Dove Like Again. '(Special to The ABaus.) . -New York, June 13 Dan O'Reilly says today that Harry and Evelyn are absolutely reconciled and she will ball on him every day in jail at Pough keepsie. On the other hand Col Bartlett, em ployed by Mrs. William Thaw, mother of the prisoner, transferred to . the Poughkeepsie institution where he can have homeopathic ' treatment, says Harry must choose between his family and their cash and Evelynfor Mrs. Thaw, the elder; has no use for Evelyn and desires never to set eyes on her again. Bears the . Ttia Kind You Have Always Bought SOLICITOR FULLER. Nominated by His District, an Commissioned To-day to Suc ceed A. L. Brcoks. Raleigh, June 13. Gov. Glenn today, commissioned Jonps fuller, of lur ham, solicitor of the ninth judicial dis trict to succeed a. L. Brooks, whose resignation takes effect June 30th. Mr. Fuller received the Democratic nomination for solicitor in the convey tion this week. PRONOUNCED HIS CASE INCURABLE Whole BodyARaw with Eczema Life was Intolerable Was Even Incased in Plaster Discharged from Hospitals as HopeiesSi SUFFERED 14 YIZARS 1 CURED BY CUT1CURA "From the age of three months unttf fifteen years old, my son Owen's life was made lntoler able by eczema in its worst fonm. He was all right until a red raeh broke out on his fore head, but we wore not alarmed at first. Very soon, however, the rash began to spread over his head and shoulders, and it caused him great aiscomrorc. 1 took him to a doctor and tried half a dozen other treatments, all with the same result: no improvement at alL The disease gradually spread until nearly every part of his body was quite raw. We had to strap him down in bed, for he used to tear himself dreadfully in his sleep. The agony he went through is quite beyond words. No one thought we would rear him. The regimental doctor, a very clever man, pronounced the case hopeless; at least, he said the only hope was that he might, , if he lived long enough, outgrow it to some extent. We had him in hospitals four times and he was pronounced one of the worst cases, if not the worst, ever admitted. From each he was dis charged as incurable; in fact he got worse under the successive treatments. At one hospital they incased him in plaster, and thia seemed to aggravate the soreness terribly. He looked so badly that no one liked to go near him and his life was a burden to him. We kept trying remedy after remedy, -but we had got almost past hoping for a cure. Six, months ago we purchased a set of Cuticura Soap, Ointment, and Resolvent Pills and persevered with them. The result was truly marvelous and to-day he is perfectly cured, his skin not having a blemish on it anywhere. Mrs. Lily Hedge, 51, Vaughan Road, Coldharbour Lane, Cambiewell Green, Eng., Jan. 12, 1907." , Send to nearest depot for free Cuti- . cura Book on Treatment of Skin Diseases. Cuticura Remedies are sold throoffhoat the world. Depots: London. 27. Charterhouse So,.; Paris. 5. Rue de la Palx; Australia, R. Towns A Co., Sydney; So. Africa. Lennon, Ltd.. Capetown, etc.: U.S. Potter Drug A Chem. Corp, Sole Props, Boston. NOTICE! Having this day qualified before th Clerk of the Superior Court of Wayne County, North Carolina as Administra- -tor of Eliza Mu.mford, deceased, notice is hereby given to all persons indebted to her estate to make immediate pay ment, and to all persons holding elaims against said estate to present the same ; to the undersigned for payment on or before the 9th day of May, 1909, or tha notice will be pleaded in bar, of their recovery. ..- . This the th day of May, 19C8J ' " P. A. Daniels, .- .' Administrator of , Eliza Mumford, de" ceased..:- '..--v ,-. Subscribe for tho ArguA f .i . TDrnTD) TCDID TTrVTT
Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 18, 1908, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75