Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / June 14, 1888, edition 1 / Page 4
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COMORO BUSINESS CARDS. Dr. JAMES II. POWELL'S Dbtjo Store in "Latv Btjildixg," Corper store, north end, keeps con stantly in stock Fresh Drugs, Patent Medicines, &c. Prices as low as at any drug store in the city. Also offers his professional services to the surrounding community, at day or night. MOORE & LLNDSEY, INSURANCE. REPRESENT Continental, Fire, assets, $5,239,081 Norwich Union, Fire, assets, 1,315,480 Hamburg-Bremen, Fire, assets, 1,129,604 St. Paul, Fire, assets, 1,541,061 Southern, Fire, assets, 439,684 Slate agents for the Fidelity Mutual Life Association, of Philadelphia. J. W. LAMB, Dfaler in Horses, Mui.es, Etc. "Horses and carriages for hire by the day or hour. M. MARKS, At the Dress Goods and Shoe Depart ments of Joseph Edwards. jfcifLadies call or send for samples. Ask fcr Evitt & Bro.'s Hand-made Shoes. PORTER & GODWIN, Contractors and Builders . Plans and estimates furnished on ap plication. O. R. RAND, Jr., Millwright and Machinist. Engines, Boilers, Presses for sale . Gins and Cotton F..T. IIAGE, Sr., Wall Paper Hanger and Decorator. Sign painting a specialty, flence solicited. Ccrrespon- R. A. WATTS, Dealer in Fine Jewelry, Watches, Etc. Repairing promptly done by experi enced workmen. 33r"01d Gold and Silver bought or exchanged for new goods. J. Y. JOTNER, Goldsboro. N. J. RorsE, Kinston. ROUSE & JOYNEK, Attorneys - at - Law. Will practice where services required. Claims collected in any part of the U. S. Dr. THOMAS HILL Offers his professional services to the citizengof Goldsboro and turrnnnrHnrr country. EtfP'Office over Pipkin's store. Slate r.t John II. Hill's drug store. S. PITTMAN, Dealer in Heavy and Fancy Gro ceries, Soda Water, Lemonade snd Shakes made to order. Milk five me a call. JOHN SLAUGHTER, Jr., Does all kinds of Tin, - Slate and Iron Roofing. HFMy aim is to please. BAKER & MILLER, East Center St., Dealers in Clothing, Shoes, Etc. Prices Lower Than the Lowest, f "Repairing on Shoes neatly done. W. B. PATE Jla3 replenished his stock of Fine Wines end Liquors, and invites you to call at his "Palace Saloon." Z. M. L. JEFFREYS, Broker and Commission Merchant. 21,000; bushels of Bale. Clay Peas for J. E. EARP, Heavy and Fancy ceries. Dealer in Gro- My prices defy competition. Country a-roauce bought and sold. S. H. BRYANT. Boots and Shoes made to order at low est prices and shortest notice . Repair ing neatly an t promptly done at lowest Jigures. Leather and Shoe Findings of cveij, inscription at the very lowest prices. I defy competition. Best stock carried in North Carolina. W. M. HINSON, East Center Street, Dealer in a well selected stock of Fancy Groceries, which are sold at prices to f-uit these hard times: My motto is: uick sale and small profits. " religious iiiADJNGlKiiiijjiiiflrn Bnsiness Cafis. Ye Arm My WHkiim.'' Tell me, pilgrim, faint and weary, Traveling o'er this pathway dim, Are you shedding light around you, Are you witnessing for Him? Do you try to tell the story Of the precious Saviour's love! - Are you hungering and t hi; sting Evermore your love to prove? Are you seeking out the lost ones Whom the Master died to win? Are you showing them the fotmtaU That can wash away the ir sia? Are you looking by the wayside For the weary ones who f ill? Do you take them to the Saviour, Who has promised ret for all? Do you love to read th9 Bible, Is it precious to ycur soul? Are its treasures growing richer As you travel toward the goal? Do you love to talk of Jesus More thn all the world beside? Doesic bring a holy comfort With his poople to abide? Have you made a consecration Of your time and earthly 6tore? If your all is on the altar, Teen the Master asks no more. Thus, O pilgrim, 6houli we journey, Showing lorth the Master s praise. With our lamp all trimmed and burning, lhat the world may catch their rays. A Godl Ilome. A little boy, three years old, whose father was careless, prayer less and irreligious, spent several months in the dwelling of a godly family, where he was taught in the simple elements of divine truth. The seed fell in good and tender soil, and the child learned to note the difference be tween a prayerlss and a Christian dwelling. Oue day, as some one was conversing with the little fellow about the great and good God, the child said: 'We haven't any God at my papa'i house!" Alas, how many such houses there are in the world houses wtere there is no prayer, no praise, no worship, no God. And what houses are they for children, ay, and for men and women, too! How much better is the pure atmosphere of Christian love than the cold, selfish worldliness of a godless home. Messenger of Peace. The Fultliful laborer. I see a young man devoting himself to the service of the Redeemer. I see him taking bis stand as the firm advocite of every good cau?e, and lending his efficient co-operation to all measures which look to the promo tion of virtue and happiness among his fellow-creatures. I see him, possibly, exchang ing the pursuits of business, or the practice of a liberal profession, for the ministry of reconciliation. I trace him through all that variety and opulence of labors which attach to his high vocation, the teacher, the guide, the comforter, the sympathizing friend of his people, joyful in their joy and sorrowful in their sorrow. I behol 1 him going forth year after year, in sunshine and in storm, bearing precious seed and scatteing it broadcast over his plantation, sometimes with a weeping and sometimes with a hope ful heart; and then at last I see him, this same faithful laborer, returning as the sun goes down to his Father's house, bending under his yellow sheaves and rejoicing with a joy unspeakable and full of glory. And 1 turn from this scene to ask what there is in all the splendor of earth in its riches and in its renown, in it coronets :.nd in its dia dems that shines with a beauty so ineffable and so glorious as these same yellow sheaves! iDr. H. A. Boardman. I raying: with Children. The loving instruction of a mother incy seem to have been thrown away, but it will appear after many days. "When I was a little child," said a good old man, "my mother used to bid me kneel down beside her, and place her hand on my head while she prayed. Ere I was old enough to know her worth, she died, and I was le.t too much to my own guidance. Like others, I was in clined to evil passions, but often felt myself checked, and, as it were, drawn back by a soft hand upon my head. When a young man, I traveled in f oreiga lands, and was exposed to many temptations; but when I would have yielded, that same hand was upon my head, and I was saved. I seemed to feel its pressure as in the happy days of infancy, and sometimes there came with it 8 voice in my heart, a voice that was obeyed: "Oh, do not this wickedness, my son. nor sin against woo. " "My mother prayed for ma a long while, and then was taken home. Fifteen years after sho died, ber prayers were answered, and I was converted. Then I began to pray for my father. I longed above anything else for his salvation, and seven years after I be gan praying he was converted." This was about the substance of a testimony given in during the week by a man who was endeavor ing to encourage others to continue "in stant in prayer" for the salvation of those they loved. A Celebrated Bible. In the congressional library at Washing ton there is one book which amid the myriad tomes of bibliotbecal lore that adorns the walls of the celebrated gathering.commands and receives the attention and admiration of those who pass through its spacious aisles. It is a Bible. To describe it literally, it is of Bize about 15 by 12 inches; its leaves are of parchment and on every page are written two columns of sacred truth. At the head of every page, as well as at the beginning of every chapter, the initial letter is beautiful ly expressed by a large Jotter in colored inks, and within its compass is portrayed some figure or character illustrative of the chap- ter which follovs. Not a stain or erasure is seen upon a single page ; amid the lone rec ord of Bible truth the words of Jehovah and the teachings of Jesus seem most strikingly grand and beautiful from the purity of the page, the beauty of their transcription. Five years were exhausted in this toilsome work, and the result was a production un equaled in the handicraft of art and unex celled in all the works of literature. The book has its own keeping; within a glass re ceptacle its pages lie open for inspection, and when one more curious than another ventures to lift the lid of the case it is only to find that every page is spotless and every letter perfect. A beautiful legend is connected with this book; that long years ago in the fifteenth century, one who had immured himself in monastic life for certain great sins which he thought himself to have committed, sought by prayers and this system of penance to propitiate the divine favor. Five years of patient, unremitting toil were given to the task. Daydawn and night darkness found him ever and devotedly at his work, until at last the final page was written, the last word inscribed. He lifted the page and kissed it, and closing the leaves, turned from his labors for rest. The day was passing Into darkness when he lay down to sleep. It was "he peaceful repose of the weary and heavy laden; his spirit was ex haled and the morning brought no awaken ing. The silver cord was loosed, the golden bowl broken, and in the golden streets of that new and better Ufa. "wherein dwelleth righteousness, " le wai forever at peace. Beautiful, grand v beautiful, as was this magnificent transcription, it was not all that was needed to securo the d:viue acceptance. An easier path is opened to us, the whisper tags of infinite love come falling upon our hearts, "I am the way, the truth, and the life." The narrow way is opened, the pearly Kates are ajar, and we who will may enter In, assured of the jcys and rewards which ire promised hereafter to tiie chosen people of God IUus. Chr. Weekly. The Pear. The pear grows wild over the whole of temperate Europe and western Asia and as far south as the north of Persia. Its cultivation in India is of ro very long standing. Homer and Theophrastus mention it, andth3 Rom:ms cultivated a great number varieties in Pliny's time. Among the apples which the lake dwel lers in Switzerland and Italy gathered, pears are sometimes, but rarely, found, having an existence as ancient as the Trojan war or the foundation of Rome. From the Caspian sea to the Atlantic oean the wild pear exited very anciently,-UQutketpingt ' M. S. WITHEREN GTON Keeps constantly on hand Horses and Mules of the best breed. B5?Horses and Buggies for kire. JAS.H. BATES, Fashionable and Artistic Barber Have a full force of competent and gentlemanly assistants. fSf-Hot and Cold Baths. J. C. EASOX & SON, Dealers in Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots and Shoes, and everything kept in. first class general store . 3iF"Prices lower than ever. RUSS & O'NEAL, The leading Boot, Shoe and Harness Manufacturers in the city. Shoe Findings and Leather for sale lower than elsewhere. DOCK SMITH, Dealer in Foreign and Domestic Wines and Liquors. Your patronage is solicited. Corn Whiskey $1 .00 per gallon. JOSEPH J. SCOTT, House-Mover. Plans and estimates cheerfully fur nished on application. Hfnavc only experienced workmen in my employ. W. A. RICHARDSON Keeps constantly on hand a well selected stock of Heavy and Fancy Groceries for family use. Get my prices before buy ing elsewhere. D. P. IIASKITT, One Door East of Express Office. Furniture repaired. Manufacturer Of Picture Frames. A nice lot of Room Moulding on hand. 3F"General Undertakers supplies. J. L. DICKINSON, Dealer in Heavy and Fancy Groceries. When you come to town don't fail to call on me, as I aim to save you money in jour purchases. DEPOT OF ROBERT PORTNER BREWING COM PANY, F. W. Hilkeb, Agent, Gold3boro, N. C. "Correspondence solicited. Emperor William is Dead! KORB STILL nANGS! Wall Paper for Everybody. JEiTVFull satisfaction guaranteed. E. w. cox, Real Estate Agekt. Office the second door from the corner of John and Walnut streets. B31P,Collection3 of House Rent3 specialty. ICE1 ICE! Have iust received a car load of nure i , T j- a t it Kennebec Ice direct from Maine. Orders solicited, teed to everybody. Full weight guar- Ice delivered free in any part of the city. John Meeoan. GOLDSBORO STEAM DYE WORKS. Host complete establishment in the State. Ladies and gents' goods cleaned or dyed in the most fashionable colors. Correspondence solicited. Address, Goldsboro "Dye Works, Goldsboro, N. C. HAYWOOD FREEMAN, Citt Hack Driver. Meets all trains, day or night. Pas sengers transported in any poition of the city. Orders left at Mr. J. R. Grif fin's store will receive prompt attention. It. W. NIXON. - - SWIFT GALLOWAY. IIIXOII & GALLOWAY, Attorneys at law, Goldsboro, N. C. Office : Room No. S, Law Building, up stairs. A Fatal Error Prevented. Fond Mother "I am very glad you ire so happily married, my son. What ire you going into this store for?" Son "'A little surprise for my wife. I'm oing to buy her the most elegant dress I can find." 'My son, do you wish your wife to look up to you, respect you and ilways defer to your judgment?", "I nope" she will." "Then never select any thing for her to wear. Let her do hei wn shopping." Cmaha World. The last letter Miss Alcott, the poetess, ever wrote endsd with the ward: 'Shall I never find time to diet" FIRING ON CHARLESTON. an xzcxmra sottBA&Dxsir? THE CIVIL WAR- 6 How the Doomed People tareA While fteaeral Gilinore'i Swaraj Angels Shelled tire Xiy. 'OWe calm higkt in August, J$G3, s rtrang noise was heard in the air. It was a noise that some people had become Tamiljar with but one that to ths women and children in Chnrlctt'dn was entirely unknown. Seme people compared it tc the blast of the last trump, others to the howl of the hyena, and others to the concentrated noise of 10,000 locomotive? rrahlng through a tunnel in the air and condensed into a scream oi tne most harrowing intensity. It was the first Swamp Angel messen ger sent into Charleston by the late Gen eral Gilmore. The watchman at St, Michael's steeple sounded the alarm and the firemen and other people hurried out in haste. The shell came frdm a masked battery which General GUrAora had erected in the marsh at the 'extreme south end of Morris Island, and On the southern bor ders of the creek which separates M6rris from Folly Island. In a straight line it was over five miles distant from the city. The battery had been constructed under the greatest difficulties and in what was considered an impossible place. The idea of a gun throwing a projectile a distince of five miles had not at that time penetrated the minds of the average public, and the arrival of the first mes senger from the Swamp Angel was as unexpected as it was unpleasant. The battery was the famous Swamp Angel. It consisted of a single 8-inch Parrott rifle, mounted in the marsh and surrounded by an earthwork of circular shape. It burst at the thirty-sixth round, and that was the end of the Swamp Angel proper. After this the bombard ment was directed from the batteries on Morris Island. It is said that the eleva tion of the gun3 was so great that they could only be used to fire a half dozen times; and as a matter of fact the peo ple who remained here during the bom bai dment became so accustomed to the sound that they could tell by the sound when a gun had burst. As may be readily imagined, a Btam pede followed the first night's bombard ment. Dozens of train were sent out of town the next morning carrying thou sands of women and children. General Gilmore's gunners soon at tained a wonderful accuracy in firing their guns. It was ;aid that the Swamp Angel shells were loaded with 'Greek fire," but this was never verified. Fires frequently occurred, and the firemen al ways promptly turned out, taking the chances of the shells. A fire at night in variably awoke the Swamp Angel to re newed activity. The shells were sent in generally at an average rate of one every hi teen minutes, occasionally wnen a gun would burst there would be a sus pension of operations at the Swamp Angel end of the line, sometimes for several days. In 18(54 there was a startling change in the condition of things. By this time those who were compelled to remain in the city had become used to the Swamp Angel. Up to this time not more than i two or three people had been killed, not withstanding the fact that fully five thousand had ben almost constantly un der fire, to say nothing of the exposure of the liremen, who, besides doing mili tary duty at night along the water front, were called upon frequently to subdue the flames in the shelled district. On t it. o a i t 1 u? i I in? was fired in the lower wards. The alarm was sounded and in five minutes the engines were on their way to the scene of the conflagration. The boom of the alarm bell and the bright glare of the fire invariably caused the Swamp Angels to wake up and re double their attentions to the "doomed city." An engine, the Phoenix, was on its way to the fire? dragged by a dozen or more men. In Hayne street an ob stacle was met. A messenger from the Swamp Angel plunged into the earth di rectly in front of the men, and making a hole six feet wide and as many feet deep, buried itself in the ground. A half dozen men were precipitated into the excavation, and the engine, "Old Betsy," followed suit. The shell did not ex plode, however, and beyond several pain ful bruises nobody was hurt. While the men were getting the dust out of their eyes and trying to lift up 4kOld Betsy" the "bojm" which signi fied the advent of another messenger from the Swamp Angel was heard. The every one stood still and listened. A few seconds after the boom came the pe culiar and excruciating "whistle" which marked the passage of the messenger through the air. The whistle was not familiar. There was an indescribable tometkinsr about it that made one shiver. It was not the old, familiar peicussion shell scream. A few moments later and the mystery was explained. Just as every one was "lying low" awaiting the crash, there was another explosion very near, followed by a dozen baby screams and a dozen sharp reports, while a flash of light illuminated the scene. Then it, was realized that our friends, the enemy, wanted blood. It was a fuse shell, something which no man could dodge. The advent of the fuse shell led to the complete evacuation ot the lower part of Charleston, and from that time until the "Union came in" that portion of the city was abandoned to the rabbits, the wild p;geons, and the bats. Work on the fortification "breastworks" that had been started in Meeting, near Queen street, was abandoned, and, although Fort Sumter still held out, the fate of Charleston seemed settl?d. Charleston 8. C.) JVeirs and Courier. A Cnrions Creature. A curious creature was brought to San Francisco by a ship which arrived there the other day. It has some characteris tics of the crocodile, but is covered with a coat of short bristles, or hair, which gives it a most peculiar appearance. It has been domesticated to" a certain ex tent, and will permit the captain or any cf the crew to approach it, and receive their caresses with evident pleasure, but if a stranger approaches it distends its big jaws and shows fight. The crev call it a "woolly crocodile." It is activo and weighs about forty pounds. New York Graphic. 5JACOBS.OH FOB SWINE. CURES Hog Cholera and all Diseases of Hogs. 3QEXERAL DIRECTIOXS.-Vs freely in the hog swill. If they will not eat drench, with milk into which a email quantity of the Oil is put. Sold ly DrvggkU and D:aleri Zi-ewhtrt. THS CHARLES A. VOQEIE CO.. Blltlwora, 111 SCIENTIFIC ANpjN aUSTBIAfc. Frencn ydrferAan . has "succeeded i prodteitg artificial silk. . A, repeating cannon invented C7 Bra son has been trie ai Brosschart, in Bel gium, Vtrhich. can throw twenty-seven snots a minute. . , . A new war vessel hai be,ea ordered by the British Admiralty, which is to be named th2 Blake, of 9000 tons burden ihd 20,000 horse power. Pin statistics prove that each inhabi tant of the United States consumes one pin per day. TWs makes necessary the daily manufacture of sixty millions of pins. About 200 towns throughout the United States are endeavoring to have electric lights ; in about fifty towns com panies are bsiag organized for electric , A Vienna cngnieer named Fisher hit just taken out a patent for a new smoke abating process. He proposes, by means of electricity, t6 condense the Bolid part of the smoke as it arises from the coaL the carbon thus solidified filling back iato the furnace., The bacillus of cancer is hard to find, and Dr. Senger reports to the Berlin Clinical Society that he has been unable to verify observations claimed to have revealed the organism. Cancer appears tc be peculiar to man, as it has never been inoculated in the lower animals. The new machine just invented for printing postal cards prints them from the roll, and turns them out in packages ready for delivery. It runs them off at the rate of 300 a minute, with paper bands pflSted around each twenty-five. It is said one man can look after two machines. "Dry rot' the enemy of builders-is It contagious disease of timber. 000a authorities state that it can be carried by saws and other tools which have been in contact with infected wood, and that such transition and impregnation is often the cause of the mysteriously rapid decay of originally sound timbers. An Austrian has patented a process for getting a thread that ean be spun and bleached from wood, which is cut in long lengths and boiled till it will cleave apart in fibrous bunches by 6baking in water. It is then shredded by hand or by ma chinery, and spuri like hemp. This give3 a very fine thread, and less boiling gives a coarser one. . It is found that, besides gas, a ton of ordinary ga3 coal will yield 1500 pounds of coke; zQ gallons of ammonia water, and 140 pounds of coal tar. Now, de structive distillation of this amount of coal tar gives about 70 pounds of pitch, 17. pounds of creosote, 14 pounds of heavy oils, and about 9 pounds of naphtha yellow. Paper bottles are now in extensive use for containing such substances as ink, bluing, shoe dressing, glu?, etc. They are made by rolling glued sheets of paper into long cylinders, which are then cut in suitable lengths, tops and bottoms are fitted in, the inside coated with a water proof compound, and all this is done by machinery almost as quickly as one can count. Heavy machinery is now run by ar- tcsiau well power in many parts of France, and the experience of the French mow that the deeper the well the greater the pressure and the higher the tempera ture. The famous Grcnclle well, sunk to the depth of lb'00 feet, and. flowing daily some 500,000 gallons, has a pres sure of sixty pounds lo the square inch, the water beingalso so hot that it is nsed for heatin" the hospitals. "Then let the moon usurp the rule of day. And winking tapers show the sun his way ; For what my senses can perceive, I need no revelation to believe " Ladies suffering from any of the weaknesses or ailments peculiar totheirsex.andwhowill use Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription accord ing to directions, -will experience a genuine revelation in the lienefltthey will receive. It is a positive cure for the most complicated nnd obstinate cases of leucorrhea, excessive flowinar. painful menstruation, unnatural sunDressson--. prolapsu?. or falling of the womb, weak back, "female weakness." ante version, retroversion, bearinc-down sensa tions, chronic congestion, inflammation and ulceration of the womb, inflammation, pain and tenderness in ovaries, accompanied with "internal heat." 'The Drink Traffic and the Native Races" is one of the subjects selected for discussion Bb iue next meeting 01 ma cnurea lAiagne-'s which will be held in Manchester, England, in October next. Happiness, v. The foundation cf all happiness is health. A man with an imperfect digestion may be a millionaire, may be tne Husband or. an angel and the father of half a dozen cherubs, ind yet be miserable if he be troubled with dys pepsia, or any of the disorders arising from imperfect digestion or a sluggish liver. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets are the safest and surest remedy for these morbid condition Being purely vegetable, they are perfectly harmless. Persons who fqney they need alcoholic stimulants will find that a tumbler of milk, heated as hot as can be sipped, will be an. equivalent that is as satisfying and more en during in its effects. Thousands of cures follow the use of Dr. Safe's Catarrh Remedy. 53 cents. It is estimated that not fewer than 8000 alcohol-made lunatics are turned loose from the saloons upon the homes of the people once in every twenty-four hours. Botanic Blood Balm. The puerile effort on the the part of any one to decry the inestimable value of iopikz in mod ern medicine may deceive and mislead the Igno. rant, but is truly ridiculous to physicians and other students of medical science. It is a base characteristic of quackery to promulgate such falsity, and with financial gain an only object, is indeed disreputable. In the cure of the wont form of Blood PoisonIodide of Potash is indis pensable a fact acknowledged by all intelligent physicians combined (as in the case of B. B. B.) with certain vegetable ingredients every fault of the drag is removed, and it does not dis order the stomach or clog the kidneys. The following testimonial comes unsolicited : Keshesaw, Ga., Sept. 11, 1887. B. B. B. Company Mt Deab Sib : We had all despaired of my wife ever recovering. Her mouth was one solid ulcer, and for two months or more her body was broken out with sores un til she kt a beautiful head of hair, also eye lashes and eye-brows ; in fact, 6he seemed to be a complete wreck Now comes the great secret which I want all the world to know : That three bottles of Blood Balm medicine has done the work which would sound incredible to any one who did not know it to be so. To-day my wife is perfectly healthy, and has a three-months' old babe, also perfectly healthy. Very respectfully, H. L. Casstdt. WtoftAs'ii Saion Hon. , Many of the houses in SaxQii i.vil ages kai auWcdptloA it v wMenl .Often, says the Companion, these sentences Jriginality seeming ..to reflect the phSacterlstics of the mB-ot Jho fellewiag. examples of such homely literature are taken from "The Land Be yond the Forest :" " TilT money I get from my t?;' My roof.alas! must be covered with straw,'' of course adorns a thatched cottage. Another has a more serious ring : Within this house a guest to-day. 80 long th Lord doth let me live; But when He bids, I mtastawavi Against his will I eafinot striva the mistrustful character Jf the Sar thus finds vent: 4 Trust y6drsclf .td every orie ; '.TiS not wise to triht td node. , JJetter, though, to have no frieni, T?an on many to depend." Another wise body writes: ' How to content every man, Is a, trick which no one can; if to do 60 you can claim, ' ' Rub this out and write your name-" 4 Profitable Practice. Citizen (to Physician) "You havea large practice among the wealthy and fashionable class of people, haven't you doctor." Physician "Oh. my, ye?; why many of the finest monuments and tombstones in Woodlawn cover former patients cf mine" Neva York Evozh One of the best publications for the rising generation to be foUnd anywhere ii The Youth's Companion, an illustrated weekly paper prinjel by rerry, Mason & Co.. of Boston. Thaptpjlar.tr oT The Companion is is demonstrate-! by tha fact that it has more than 400,000 subscribers, rittributed through all the States and Territories. Its merit ispioved by J he large and feteady in crease of its subscription list. It u a bright, churn interft&tinar iiaoer. well printed and at tractive in appeal ance, and adapted for the entertainment of the bovsand eirU. and the older folks as well, and the publishers deserve to he ronsrratulated on the success of their efforts to please their readers. The subscrip tion pried is. f 1.75 a year. Printed wtekiy, and fully illustrated. One of the finest collections of orchids in the world is that of Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, the Eng'.ish statesman and manufacturer. It is valued at 1100,000 and fills nine conservatories. Conventional "3Inn" Resolutions. Whereas, The Monon Route (L. N. A. & C. Ry. Co.) desires to make it known to the world at large that it forms the double con necting link of Pullman tourist travel be tween the winter cities of Florida and the summer resorts of the Northwest; and W'hft-enit Tts "riinid transit" svstem is un surpassed, its elegant Pullman Buffet Bleep er and Chair car service between Chicago and Louisville, Indianapolis and Cincinnati unequalled; and hereas, Its rates are'as low as the lowest ; then be it Resolved. That in the event of starting on a trip it is good policu to consult with E. O. McUormick. lien l ra3. Agent juonon noute, 1S5 Dearborn St, Chicago, for full particu lars. (In any event send for a Tourist Guide, encloee 4c. postage) Farmers and others who have a little leisure time for the next few months will find it to their interest to write to B. F. Johnson & Co., of Richmond, whose advertisement appears in another column. They offer great inducements to person to work for them all or part of their time. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Thomp son's Eye-water. Druggists sell at25c. per bottle Ib General DeolliTt Emaciation, CoKsmPsiox. and Wasting is Children, SCOTTS EMULSION of Pure Cod Liver Oil with Uypophosphites, is a most valuable food and medicine. It creates an appe tite for food, strengthens the nervous system, and builds up the hody. Please read: "1 tried Scotts Emulsion on a youug man whom Physicians at times gave up hope, bince be began using the Emulsion his Cou?h has ceased, gained flesh and strength, and from all appearances his life will be prolonged many years." John Scixivan, Hospital Steward, Alorganza, l a. NERVES! NERVES!! What terrible visions this little word bring before the eya of the nervous. Headache, Neuralgia. Indigestioa, Sleeplessness, Nervous Prostration All stare them in the f.ioc. Yet all these nervous troubles ean be cure.' by usinj i For The Nervous The Debilitated The Aged. THIS GREAT NERVE TGNIC Also contains the best remedies for diseased con ditions of the Kidneys, Liver, and Blood, which always accompany nerve troubles. It is a Nerve Tonic, an Alterative, a Laxative, and a Diuretic That is why it CURES WHEN OTHERS FAIL. $1.00 a Bottle. Send for full particulars. WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO , Proprietors, BURLINGTON. VT. 8. N.TJ.-23 r: nn ARVELOUS 1 u MOUU DISCOVERY. Wholly aallke artificial ayatema. a'are al mind waaderlnc. A ay aaak leaned U reading. Classes oflOH7 at Baltimore. 10O5 at Detroit, 1 OU at Philadelphia. 1 1 1 3 at Washington, 1 1 at Boston I arve claaaea of C.lumbla Lawotudents at Yale, Wellesley. Oberllni UnlversitTorPenn.. Mich igan University. Chautauqua, ftc. Ac. Kndorsed by Richard PaocToa, the ScientiRt, Hon. W. W Artor. Jidah P. Bexjamix, Judite Oibhox. Dr. Brown. E. H. Cook, Prtn. N. Y. hlate Normal Colletre. &c! Taught by eorrexpondenre. Proapectiu host tote from PROF. LOISETTE, 231 tlfth Are..N.Y. Olnir's Pills.' Rheumatic RumAl Oval Baa. Ht raaad. 14 rill. .DW1.'fBOlit.U.9ru Worid'i KEhlbttteaa trace '887- 100 atylea. 9ti to M00. Tot Caao, ay raymrau. at all Oratt Worid'i rM to WOO. TorCaat, togM.40pPn4ta.trta. PiAnon, w. a... VHHH, mi ppn no, DM, atiaoa Hamlin do not hcattau to maka tba astraordhv ary claim that their Piaaoa are superior to aU others. This they attribute aolely to tha remarkable Improvement ti0.dS,7T.hf 2A"ivBOW knWB lh MASON A H AUXIN PLAMO STRbiOIB - FuU particulars br iiaiWliiil CfcTOIJ.lM TresMot 8C CHICAGO, 14 Wabash Aa KW TOBK. at aVaat 14U 84. (Unloa aoara). bound A Good Name At home is a towr of strength abroa1-$a; stie jl miliar proverb, and It is fully Termed ,y ; j, . ,'., of Hood's Sarsaparllla. 1hs n rords ,f teentlatibii aiid' praise tor this mroi v.. v, - r, fcelTed from our fi lends aal n:-igMT,, u:.i f,0lj the time it was fairly Introd aced up tv lie ;es lb ere has been, and is now, more of Hood's Sarsaparilla Bold In Lowell, Mass.'.where n is made, thin y j;. other aarsaparlllaa and tlood purlflcrs coni! lai. This "good name" mon? people who have l.eo Hood's Sarsaparilla and its propretor f.,r y- should certainly be stroni evid. n e to p.vip"e u other cities ana w' l"j -- u aii Ui rtl ot this medlelnfc Seud fcr Nx tonuinin; .,Jht inent of curefc ... Salt Rheum "After the failure (cf three tla'.lful plir,-. enwniyboyof salt rteuni, i tried Hr .i3 f rUla and Olive Continent. I ha-e iow u twiiMof Ointment ihl one and a La r i- EareaparQla. and the boy is to a'l apiiea-atiffi c. pletely cured. Jle is .uow,four y. ar 0: 1 a: a LJ been afflicted sln.-e he fix uioai.s of Mbs. p, SASKtr-so. j:ewha 1 St, Lo-;:. M.,s- tlood's Sarsapariiiei BoldbyaUdrugstUta. $1 ; six for $r- Pr.-inrt-i oaij by CI. HOOD CO, Apothecaries. Low, ;i, -1 OO Poses One Dollar Silk and Satin Ribbons FRP ! Isrre inipr -$ koM-ti Am, ri ( Will- lit'i-.-mm, h wnilnrtadltpoMonri bl, for mH fS.. t.. ti r Vir to any one'p.l!of purehliig irgly, WeiiisiiV-tKi n mnUing- in m bt.iiiiu tli. eulir lliKk t "Silt J ffcitin KIIlon ltetm:int of m, ri r u-.r larn theM houm, who Imported ilio tinet fowl: 1 h-w c o-i. mar bf Arprnde upona4ixriTo anyUimK " I f"'.ifl.x tyt in Um it b-i tor of Ammca. lot lliry Trn rw fy,. nuihins likr it rvrr known. A fnwi I.ii-:h f r ill it laities; beautiful.rlt-pint, cli . poo.l at.-olut- ly i l l e. bar txiwndtt! tbouwii.U .f l..ll:.r in lliis dir- i u. u. I ., ffrran iommtrlr, vari.il, find most complete rtm. w fn'j. boo, taCTyom-MraWeliadoiidwi.lili,an.1.ill - -li .X amalitT, adapt'-il fur neck-wt ar, bonnet Mrinp,lt ii lniau.m.., bom, aearta. dm trinniinr, ailk quilt ork.rv...i of iocm remnanta rniira thno yard, and irli ial. i.rk. Thou? innanf,allilMi paiMroi arenm aml U-r s'vi,-.,al BMT tic dVpMldcd on a brau'ilul. wrUurd, tafai in'.!- lclt. rant. Ilotv tsgrt :t Imx enntainiue at n:!lria Jluorriitent if th" riMMii 1 rrt. The l'rartical lloanrkrrprr Mini l.aditV f irrMtidr 'm , wiblturd moutlily at, u. knowlrdrrd, by t!io coni irnt to judr. to br ilir lm n. dim! of tue kind in the not Id. Vtry L.rj;e an:l htwuv m-lt il lustrated: iTularrk-er3ct. fxryear; toI3.ot'iiuJi will nditt'TO foratrial ynr, and wiil aUKT.. Irrtt box of the ribbon. : 2 aubKTiptionaand t box-. . cU ;4 aabaorllrtkml and 4 h-'W.IS I On-nt poatap-i'atnwiii,. bearnt for tna than $1. l.rtll friend, to J-.in you th!. r. tine- 4ubTiptkieand 4 Iim lor only l; can d Biinutr. TnealKwe ofir is bed on tbia fart : ii -!. .r-. j tbc periodical rW. rred to, for ra year, want it lb-r a.t. r. t-A h, vi the full pri.-e for t ; it i. In after yrars, and tu- n ... that we make nvnwT. We tnak tbia pat ciirr in rj.r r . ....m rare ..HIkrnnr Milwrilwra. who. not i iw. but n it .nrij-rr.ra 1 hem ftfr. .Iinll frwar.1 Ua i! h f 1" am, the m.jority of thnn will wb-h tnwnw tbr.r f ,:!nr. tiou.turt nilldoM. The in.m rwjuircd i butitsu . ifr. u 5 f the tirice would have to l.y t any m.t ut t tu S ImilkTintiTUH'itt offer !uferir ribbons. Jitut baip. n r3 known; to will not fully nrpteHaw" nntil ilt'ti.iiMi. Safe dVbWnr pTj.rrmUf-d. Moury refund. d to any onriM 1" fcctly MiUni'd. llritrr ml tbi.out. or aend at outf.l-r j'.'l Ably H wont nptxranain. AJdrea, U. lULLLi.1 f h CO- riKJJsUttS. rOETLiJD. If am. The E:. TEBS'GUIDE:! isbuocl ilrch and iScp.., each year. It i3 an ency clopedia cf useful ir.xo:'. matioa lor all who pus chase the luxuries or ths necessities cf lite. We caa clothe yea and furnish you 'vith all the uec:ssary and unnecessary appliances to ride, walk, dance, t-lc.?, eat, fish, hunt, work, go to church, or stay at home, and in various sizes, styles and quttntitios. Just figure ovtf. what is required t o do all thofie things COMFORTABLY, and you. can make fair estimate of the value of the BUYEBii' aTJIDE, which will be sent upon eceipt of 10 cents to pay postage, MONTGOMERY WARD A CO 111-114 Michigan; Ave.. Chicago. Ill "OSGOOD" V. 2. S'-aciirl S'Xci. Sent on trial. Freij'it TZSi paid. FuUyWarraiitcd. 3 TON $35. Other sizes proportion ately low. Agents well pnid. initialed Catakgit free. Mention this Paper. SI 00 to $306 zXFZ&SSii u. Agouti preferrel who can furnish Uinr oa horses and vlv their whole time to the luisii.e. Spare momenta may t e profitably emplovi-.! a!vx A few vacancies in town and ci'le B.F. JOH.M SON ft CO, 11)13 Main L, Richm .nd. . FREE Hv return m!i. Foil rrlpifnii. Moody's Sew TMil'irSvtitcmof I'r st lit tin. MOOOV &z CO..C'lin-ii;i! it!.0 S5": SS av eta, iunuai worm nil Line not uMer the hurec a f at. W r.vs Brewer Safetr Kelu HalJr r Co, i!.::y. GOLD ta worth T per ih rerora Et eJ n worth UOJu, but U aotd at 35c. a box by dsjitrc RERBHAND FIFTH WHEEL. tetPWiwl II Kit BK A N I f'O.. r-me.t6 at home and make more rr.fvej woriiii.; f TlhinacUe in the worM Killir x Adilni-.. lu r i l o..Aa.-J-' HUGHES' TOHir Cut. ix Remedy for LS AND FEVER IT WILL Cure the Most Obstinate Cases, At an ALTERATIVE, it cleanse the relievpa liilloU: a-d IrlS. la TOXIC. It give toae aaa u-eii:a. TRY IT! Proprietor ha-re many letter! teMlfylag tM merits ot this vaiiiabi remely I a M a I a rl a I rfv t r i '-1 every family ahoul 1 tivt It In the liuuae a ways read for uat. Price per bott'-. Si. 6 bottles, S3 or aala by Diu,'v.t ni 'J'-n-nil Men-h 'n. Lec!ure on ROUGH ON RAT3." fKJ 'It' LO Cll-a.' out Jijit Li .r-. m;- I.C-1 ' ' with crvsi atulsrur about Ui-Ir U ' pwta 15c. jox "t it in a ot - : BED BUGBS"S. creviofs wlr ?re.:-,e cannot be ai,r-'' 1 1 J Water Bacrs, Bit-tl.-a, li u a -v, t l &c. For two or tiiree ri-Lis avVw.-r Bprinkle Rorcn ort Hats .'ry. Nr.'' powder, in, aboutan-i -r?m r riret uanv the. moruii dotra tho d tne inseuis ircui uret tocisnr . wilt rli, Jr n- i v. ; . , 'a WATER BUOSr.-- houe they mitt tlrink !urn;r tlio r.i. ' . ; Potato BiiPi. Is5-ovt3 oa Vines. "tc : , fpoonful of tbe po-T-.ci-, veli f. j l t. k' f. Bhaifn in a kej f --.if r. r-rl 11 J '- 1 onplel with sprickii.) pet, pprjy ?Y'-. Whisi broo.Ti. Keep it we'll stiiT.'J t'-'jv - 25c. and 1 Iixes. sr. fii? ('': ' ."c Hop", with box.s. CftOUKO C-i-'K-. . RAB31TS, SpaiTows, Oojhers. t a ; ' cleared out by'Kouh on lints. air- ir; ROUGH OH MflLfiPJA.i? Fever and Acw, diiils, bvr l-:n f ') at Dru?2tsts, or prepait i-y r -K. a. W'ELLfi. Jtu'scy Cay. J. LYulH'S Patast CoEMnatisalBH S'SHT. 0 Per Cent. - la lrtec. Send fov Cstnluia?' a' K to the e r !L k a ESS? J ML mu ) vhIL f (u-m J Ih "HI 1 11 m.iK.V3 Hi - III i Iri cf "i. d dr Cm Y ssi' .t: I .er waah it all v - J rain r-ine. v.hnx a'lA J V
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 14, 1888, edition 1
4
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