Newspapers / Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, … / Sept. 10, 1908, edition 1 / Page 1
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if i 5 f 4 'i - l j $1.00 a Year, "This Argus o'er the people's rights Doth an eternal vigil keep ; No soothingstrains of Maia's son Shall lull itshundred eyes to sleep." $1 ear. K 1 1. YOLu XXTI GOLDSBOEO, N. C, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1908. ,, ..... ,.,....... -. I,,. , ... .. .,.. r'J 1 - - NO. 3 MARCH OF AGE WORN VETERANS. Cheered By a Continuous Mass of Paople That Lined the Streets' For Blocks. U 1:1 Every State and Territory Was Represented in the Column, Besides the Potomac Di vision, Made Up ef the Old Guard of Wash ington, D. C. TAFT AND FORAKER PRESENT. (Special to the Argtjs.) Toledo, 0.,vSept. 2. Cheered by a continuous mass of people that lined the streets for bltcks, 25,000 age-worn ytttrans of the Grand Army bravely covered the route ef the big parade to day. The parade was the big spectac ular event ot the national encampment and in honor of the occasion the day was observed as at general holiday In Toledo. The city department, the banks, and many commercial institu tions were closed. During the early hours of the ferenoon the railroads and interurban lines brought thousands of new visitors into the city lrem points In Ohio, Michigan and Indiana. Be fore 9 o'cloekj;? the downtown streets were threnged. Along the line of march at every available peint view ing stands had been built and son they bgan to fiil with spectators. The parade lormed 'on Sixteenth street. The line ol march led through Madieem i venue, thence to Collin woe, street, Jefferson and St. Clair streets and Michigan avenue, thenee to Fif teenth street, where the veterans were dismissed. The official reviewing stands were located in Madison avnu bstwesn Thirteenth and Fourteenth stresis. Oeeupyii.g seals en the offi cial stand wr th governors f sev eral States, the city oliieials oi Toledo and a number of invited guests f prominence. One stand was fiiied fer the most part with delegales to the O. A. K., and affiliated organizations and their friends. Another was oocu pied by disabled veterans who were physically unable to stand the strain f the march. Tears fell Irom the ey es of many a whitehaired soldier as he gazed at his old companions marching past the stand. A hush, almost of silence, marked the passage of the army at this(point. In the formation of the parade, To do Post, G. A. iR was given the place of honor, that of escort to Com-mander-in.Chief Charles fcG. Burtom. The line was beadod by a squadron 1 meunted police, followedi by the commander- in-chief audj his staff. Then eame a numbergot carriages containing several of the past commanders-in-chief and otherjjdistinguished guests. Every Statejand territory was rep resented in the colamn, besides the Potemae division, made up of the Old Cfuard of Washington, D. C. Massa chusetts, Xew York, Ohie and Illinois were the best represented in point ef numbers. Illinois was the first inline and was followed by the departments of the various States inthe following order: Wiseonsin,Pennsylvania,New Yerk, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Maine, California and Nevada, Rhode Island, Sew Hampshire, Ver mont, the Potomac, Virginia, Nebraska, Maryland, Miehigan, Iewa, Indiana, Colorade and Wyoming, Kansas, Dela ware, Minnesota, t Oregon, Kentucky, West Virginia, South Dakota, Wash ington, Arkansas, New iMexice.Utah, Tennessee, Louisiana, a Mississippi, Florida, Montana, Idaho, Arizona, Geergim, Alabama, North Dakota and Oklahoma. Ohio, as the host of the encampment, brought up the rear. Preceding the Ohio veterans Jwere the Battle-Flag division ef the National Asseciation ef x-Prisoners ef War. At a conspicu ous point in Madison avenue the vete rans were greeted iby the sight ot a "living flag," composed of 3,500 schoel children. The decerations along the line of march were thefmosti magnificent ever seen in Teledo. Duringi the night the final decorative touches) were made, and this morning the centre of the city bless omed eut in ene great display ef flags and bunting. Streamers of red and yellow, the official-colors of the L A, R., and flags and pennants of the national colors were the conspicu ous features of the decorative scheme. An enthusiastic feature et the day was when Hon. Wm. H. Taft, Repub lican candidate for President, appear ed and reviewed the parade. He ar rived on an early train from Middle Bass, Lake Erie, where he has been fishing. Tonight there will be a G. A. R. muster, followed by many camp fires. Messrs. Taft and Foraker will be pres ent this afternoon at a reception and an effort is being made to have them recencile their differences. A QUESTION OF HUMANITY. Attempt to Usurp Completely a Relm That Should be Exclusive. In the Charlotte News of a recent is sue August 24 appears the following under that paper's Raleigh corres pondence that should be taken note ef by every fair-minded citizen ef North Carolina: "It develops that in the course of lengthy resolutiens adopted by the North Carolina Association of the Deaf, just adjourned here, rancor, engender ed by the feud that has disturbed the administration of the affairs ef the State Scheol for the Dsaf and Dumb, at Morganton, cropped out forcibly in that an investigation is called for te determine whether, the elimination of deaf teachers is , the result ot pregress against fogyimB or the battle of the. strong against the weak, a battle which it is declared should not be waged at the expense of a generous public. The adoption of the oral method of instruct ing the deal by teaching them to act ually speak and to read speech from the inevement of the lips has created no end of trouble in the Morganton in stitution lor some time, especially when it came to dropping from the faculty certain -of the old deaf and dumb members of the faculty to give place to experts in the new method of instruction. "The resolutions adepted declare that since the State board of internal improvements holds that it has ne authority to investigate methods ot in struction at Morganton, there should be provision mad for such investiga tion by the legislature or other proper authority and that it is the unalterable belief -of the members of the associa tion, representing educated deaf mutes from all parts of the State,' that the combined system should be used if the greatest happiness and usefulness of the students of the institution are te be considered. The reading ef -signs and fluper spelling should by all means be continued, says the association, through the resolutions adopted, which will be presented to the next session of the legislature, and may come -up lor investigation by that body." Commenting on the above movement the Morganton News-Herald, which is on the scene, has the following, which the Argus endorses in full: "We don't pretend to know mueh about it, but from our view "up tree" the educated deaf teacher is bet ter suited to teach the deaf than any one else. It stands te reason it is na tural that there is more sympathy and a better understanding between" student and teacher, hence more rapid pregress of the deaf student under the deaf teacher. We don't know that there has been any feud over the ad ministration of affairs at the State Schoel for the Deaf and Dumb here, but it does look like there is an under current at work somewhere to "root out" the deaf and dumb teachers to give places to the "more progressive," as some are pleased to term them. As fer us we shall espouse the cause ef the deaf teacher, for we honestly berteve he is the best suited for teaching the deaf, and we are . glad to see them or ganizing for self protection. "Let's be progressive but progress in the right way. It is alright in many cases to have hearing teachers to teach the deaf and dumb, but let's not eli minate the deaf and dumb teacher. The eral department ef the deaf and dumb school is alright neone is kick ing against that but let us not de away with or lock lightly npen man ual training by the deaf and dumb." THE VERMONT ELECTION. Republican Plurality 28,000 Against 31,557 in 1904. Republican Plurality the Smallest in a Presidential Year Since 1892, When it Was Followed by a Democratic National Vic- tory falling Utt in Four Years of About Eight Per Cent. (Special to the Argtjs.) White River Junction, Vt., Sept. 2 The Republicans won the election in Vermont yesterday by carrying the State for Lieutenant Governor George H. Prouty, of Newport, for governor by about 28,000 votes over James E Burke, of Burlington, his Democratic o pponent. The plurality was the small est in a presidential year since 1892 when it was only 17,936, and was fol lowed by a Democratic national victo ry, but it was larger than in 1888 and only slightly less than in 1900. There was a falling off in four years of about 8 per cent in the Republican vote, while the Democratic vote fell off about per cent. The Independence League appeared for the first time and polled About 1,000 votes, while the Prohibition and Social ist vote remained about the same. An unusually large number -of local con tests for members of the Legislature, although bringing out a heavy vote and resulting in Democratic gains in the lower branch of the Legislature ap parently had no bearing on the guber natorial fight. As Vermont is the first State to vote during the presidentialcampaign, there was much interest throughout the eountry, in the size of the Republican plurality. The Afiurs is most sincere in wish ing them life's tullest measure of hap piness and prosperity., VM llftPiSUIflll BUSY DAY FOR VETERANS. Washington, Sept. 5 Prominent oarsmen from all over the eountry are arriving in Washington to take part in the middle states regalia which opens en the Potomac Monday. Seventy-five have entered tor Labor day aquatics. The Richmond club, New York club, and Philadelphia club hay arrived. Women's Relief Corps, Ladies of the G. A. R., Daughters of Veterans and Other Aux iliary Bodies Held Bus iness Sessions To day. Toledo, O., Sept. 3. The continuous round of receptions, reunions, excurs ions, parades and other features ef en tertainment that the veterans of the Grand Army and their lriends have enjoyed since the first of the week crave way this morning to a season of work. Promptly at 10 e'cleck the business sessions of the forty-second annual encampment opened in the Valentine Theatre. The auditorium had been elaborately decorated fer the occasion by the ladies of Toledo. Commander-in-Ckief Burton called the gathering to order and delivered his annual address. The session was devoted chiefly to the annual reports of the several officers and standing committees, including those of Adjutant-General Jere T. Dew, Senior Vice Commander L. F. Griffith, Inspector- General C. D. R. Stowits, and Judge Advocate General L. W. Collins. New officers for the year, including a com mander-in-chiei, will be chosen at the concluding session of the encampment tomorrow. The Women's Relief Corps, Ladies of the G. A. R., Daughters of Veterans a nd other auxiliary bodies held busi ness sessions today at which reports fer the year were presented and dis cussed. Four campfires are scheduled for various parts of the city tonight, in cluding a monster campfire oi Com mander-in-Chief Burton, at the Valen tine Theatre, at which several of the oast commanders-in-chief are to speak. Isllgnd las Her Ire ep Agai&st Ten tiwih and Means Business. (Special to the arkus.) New York, Sept. 2. H. A. Hyde, a prominent electrical engineer of Ams terdam, says that Holland is preparing for war with Venezuela and that if Cas tre dees not apologize he will be made to do so. He says there is great excitement in Holland ever the situation and that a wave of martial feeling is sweeping the country. Women as Well as Men Are Made Miserable by Kidney Trouble. tip, vr - JlftW if 1 Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, 4is courages and lessens ambition; beauty, vigo? and cheerrnlness socti disappear vhen the kid- $ neys are out of order Kidnej tro'jblti has become prevalen that it is not unoommcr for a child to be born J3 afflicted with weak kid neys. Jf the child urin ates too often, if 'th' .nne scalds the flesh or if, when the chik. caches an age when it should be ab'e to c.ntrol the passage, it is yet afflicted with -ei-wetting,. depend upon it. the car3t difficulty is kidney trouble, andth, ts' :sd should be towards the treatmen c1 nss important organs.' This unplsaan' rouble is due to a diseased condition the tidneys and bladder and not to a habit as nost people suppose. . . Women as well as men are mada mis erable with kidney and bladder trouble, fid both need the same great remedy The mild and the immediate effect c-Swamp-Root is soon realized. It is sole y druggists, in fifty sent and one dollar zes. You may have a sample bottle by mail ree, aiso pampniet tell- Home or 8we.mp.Roov ng all about it, including many of the housands of testimonial letters received irom sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer k Ce.. Binghamton, N. Y., be sure and mention this paper. Don't make any mistake, but remember fie name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's amp-Root, and the address, BiiigharntM ' X T W tvtttM- ARLY RISX&RO Tfcs fescm littla dEI MOREHEAD FOR CONGRESS. Everybody Down This Way Thought He Was a Democrat. In Greensboro yesterday the Repnb liran congressional convention of the Fifth district nominated Mr. John M. Morenead, only sen ot the late Col. Jn. L. jNIorehead, ot Charlotte, and a grandson ef the historic Governor Jno. M. Morehead, to make the race against Mr. A. L. Brooks, the Demo cratic nominee. Mr. Morehead is well known down this way, and better known on the seacoast, where, at Morehead City, he has a beautiful summer hme, and to all ef us his nomination from a Repub lican convention comes as a real sur prise, and we would hardly believe it or at least that he was affiliating with them were it not for the following telegram over his own name, sent from New York, where he was on business when the news of his nomination was wired hinu New York City, Sept. 2. 1908. Gilliam Grissom, Greensboro, N. C. Express to convention my appre ciation ot honor conferred. Will un dertake the race, believing that our Charlotte platform and nominees will appeal successfully to a public long since exhausted and disgusted with the agitation and introduction of dis turbing factors by the Democratic pol iticians in their desperate search for an issue for the coming election. I be lieve a conservative and business ad ministrationwill be demanded, and the Republican party can await the result with confidence. JOHN M. MOREHEAD. HON. F. H. BUSBEE. Beapeje His Remains Will Reach Ra leigh This Afternoon. The Funeral will be From Christ Church at Half Past Fire O'clock This Afternoon and Interment in Oak wood Cemetery. Raleigh News and Observer, Sept. 4. The remains ot Hon. Fabuius H. Busbee are expected to reach this city at 4 o'clock this afternoon. The irain bearing his body left Chattanooga on time yesterday and will reach Rich mond this morning. There the body will be met by a committee from the Raleigh Bar composed of Mr. A. B. Andrews, Jr., Mr. W. H. Pace and Mr. Murray Allen. Leaving Rich mond at noen they are expected to reach Raleigh at 4:10 with the remains. The funeral will be held Iroin Chrht church at 5:30. Mr. Busbee's death occurred at Seat tle, Washington, where he had gone to attend the meeting of the American Bar Association. He was taken sick while riding through the Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, and on reaching Seattle was confined to his bed. He grew rapidly worse and died Friday afternoon, the report of his death reaching here Friday night. Mr. Busbee was a comparatively young man and previous to tbis trip had appeared in good health and the news of his death was a great shock te his friends and admirers throughout the State. The body will be met at the Union depot by all the members ot the Ra leigh Bar. At 4:10 this afternoon the members of the liar will meet at . the Supreme Court Building for the pur oose of attending the funeral. The Grand Lodge of Masons ol North Caro lina is also called to meet in special communication in the Grand Lodge hall at 3:30 for the purpose of attend ing the funeral. i FOR HAY FEVER. Fe-ru-na is Sometitnes Used With Ex cellent Results. A CASE IN POINT. MISS MAYME E. SMITH. .-:?::yy:gsaifig888S MISS MAYME E. SMITH, 444 East Mound St., Columbus, Ohio, writes : "Have used Peruna for catarrh and hay fever. The results being remark able, I can highly recommend it to all who are suffering with the above dis eases. I am happy to be able to say it has helped me wonderfully." What is known as hay fever i3 in reality endemic catarrh, a catarrhal condition of the nose, throat, some times the bronchial tubes, induced by some local irritant. The irritation is generally due to vege tal emanations of some sort. Hay has been suspected as being the cause of this malady, hence its name, hay fever. It has been attributed to rag weed and other vegetation also. It is a very capricious disease, coming and going. A medicine that will help one case may not help another. Such treatment haa always been very uncertain and unsat isfactory. Peruna helps some cases without a doubt, although it is not claimed to be an infallible remedy for such cases. Man-a-lin the Ideal Laxative. REVIVO THE GREAT SUSPECT ARRESTED. Atlantic City's Board Walk Shoot ing Mystery is Still Holding the Lime Light. Atlantic City, Sept. 2. A man was ft caught in the tenderloin district today who is suspected of shooting Charles B. Roberts, the Baltimore millionaire, who was shot on the board walk while ohair riding with Mrs. Williams last week. The police refuse to give out the man's name or even officially admit that the arrest 1b connected with the Roberts oase; but a deteetive inadvert ently let out this much. The ohase ereated great excitement, and la now the talk of the hour. INSTANT RhLIEF OF ITCHING HUMOR Limbs Below the Knees Were Raw Feet Too Swollen to Get Shoes On Sleep Completely Broken by Intense Itching and Burning Well in Two Days and Says That CUTICURA IS AMONG HIS HOUSEHOLD GODS "God bless the man who first com pounded Cuticura. Some two months ago I had a humor break out on my limbs below my knees. They came to look like raw beefsteak, all red, and no one knows how they itched and burned. They were so swollen that I had to split my drawers open to get them on and could not get my shoes on for a week or more. I used five or six dif ferent remedies and got no help, only when applying them the burning was worse and the itching less. One morning I remembered that I had a bit of Cuti cura and tried it. From the moment it touched me the itching was gone and I have not felt a bit of it since. The swelling went down and in two days I had my shoes on and was about as usual. I only wish I had used the Cuticura Remedies in the first of my troubles. They would have saved me two or three weeks of intense suffering. Dur ing that time I did not sleep an hour at a time, but was up applying such remedies as I had. Henceforth the Cuticura Remedies will be among my household gods, rest assured. George B. Farley, 50 South State St., Concord, N. H., May 14. 1907." FOR BABY RASHES Eczemas and Irritations, Cuticura Is Worth Its Weight in Gold. The suffering which Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment have alleviated among the young, and the comfort they have afforded worn-out and worried parents, have led to their adoption in countless homes as priceless for the skin and scalp. Infantile and birth humors, scalled-head, eczemas, rashes, itchings, chafings, and every form of itching, scaly, pimply skin and scalp humors, with loss of hair, are speedily, perma nently and economically cured. Complete External and Internal Treatment for Every Humor ot Infants. Children, and Adults, con sists ot Cuticura Soap (25c.) to Cleanse the Skin. Cuticura Ointment 60e.) to Heal the Skin, and Cuti cura Resolvent (60c). (or in the form of Chocolate uoate Sold Corp. Coated Pills. 25c. per vial of 60) to Purify the Blood. Bold tnrougnout toe woria. rotter urug ac cneta. Sole Prons.. Boston. Mass. -Mailed Free, Cutleura Book on Skin Diseases. the Ihi Kind Yon Haw Always Bg TORER In the Spring, yi hen Na ture is Rejuvenating, Man should do the same. This can be accomplish ed by taking Revive,, but not by taking, "something just as good." This advertise ment says Revivo and Revivo pays for this ad vertisement, and the "something just as good" pays for nothing and amounts to nothing Go by' the name, RE VIVO and take no substitute. . E. Robinson & Bro. Are its selling agents in Goldsboro. REVIVO Revives Yoa. Try It. LACKSra NOTICE "Strike while the Iron is Hot" will not apply. This sets- thim.lold. I have moved my blacksmith and horse-shoeing establishment from West Centre Street North, t the new brick building specially erected for me on Chestnut street West, adjoining Robin son & Carter's Ice House, where I will be pleased to see all my fermer custo mers and the publio in general when they desire any kind of iron work and general repairing of vehicles and farm implements. My specialties are HORSE-SHOEING and TIRE-SHRINKING. Thanking the public for the liberal patronage heretofore extended ma, and assuring them of at all times endeavor ing to give satisfaction, I am, Respectfully, M. S. HARRIS. 1 1 - I la r u i I
Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 10, 1908, edition 1
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