Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / May 4, 1893, edition 1 / Page 1
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TT .rlKAD rOLBSBORO LIGHT KSTAUMSIIED 1887. GOLDSBOllO, N. C, THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1893. VOL. YI. XO. 34. I JtA Mj DYSPEPSIA Is that misery experienced -when suddenly made aware that you. possess a diabolical arrangement called stomach. No two dyspep tics have the same predominant symptoms, hut whatever form dyspepsia takei 27tc underlying cause is in the LIVER, and one thing is certain no one will remain a dyspeptic who will "Trf " correct mi Expel foul pws, Allay Irritation, Assist Dictation and at t'uo same times Mart t7;e Liver working anZ (ill bodily ailments will disappear. "For more than three years I suffered with Pyspepsire i;i its worst form. I trieil several d.jcturs. t ut tiey afforded no relief. At last I tried Simmons Livr Regulator, which cured me in a short time. It is a good medicine. I would not Le without it." James A. Koanb, Philad'a, Pa. See that you get the Genuine, with red 2 on fron' of wrapper. . PKttfAKKD ONLY BY 3.11. ZJfcllLIN & CO., Philadelphia, Ta. THE N. Y. RACKET STORE Jiim opoi mi K:i-t Walnut stre p !r. U. A. Smith's tin- t". 1 1 . w i 1 1 rcvohit next Hire, Clothing ! i. -ii I T' in nl'.7.) , sp'.l K). en from (-"e. and up. nil lis suit-; from s"J.'J."i ::1- from si. (l and up. toi ls, .ys" :i and n uooas ! n ,. n A ,1 I -t e. and ) (pialil y. p.T yard per yaii standar' Notions ! 11 indkrrcli'., It-.. 1 bullous d -rigors Cents' Furnishing Goods (1 Shoes ! hoard of. Men's !e front and hark. 1 -h t i t- only r.'r. dr -! !m 1-. . A. M. SHRAGO & CO., Prop'rs. A Happy Welcome s ( ; ! ' A NTEEI T THOSE WHO will rail at lay saloon, which is orkrd at all times 'with the choicest of line- ! ic a :nl I Ml : 'Vte.1 Liquors and Wines ! Ail the latent drinks manipulated I'V compounded killl'iil men. ami Domestic and 1 N! A I.AKOH LOT OF FINK it ina oi ti Wh'okcv inv plat Mr. Cnlien H.'.uell o:;!d he plca-al to so is headquarters. s with n his frieni and Jas. L. Dickinson, At John (linn's Old Stand. We Take the Lead! t-hc vcrv host IBIEIlE-SiF1 That ha 1 u cit v. th. Desi Quality and Lowest Prices! Million. Pork and Sausnge Ahvav: nd. We pay the highest t prices for cattle. S. Cohn & Son, ( I i V 1U Ti UKKS (:o,!i.si;()l!l). X. Dental Prosthesis XT ITi; (I'SOXIDKO A Specialty! TIIEOKEA'I -t anaesthetic for i. abvavs on hand. oral surgery Charges lil- known. a!wa oral. Dr. J. M. Parker. Oiiiee:-!' it re St., West, Ooldshoro. L. S3 SHOE centFeWn. And other specialties for Gentlenu n, Ladies, Boys and i Misses are the j Best in the World. Sec descriptive, advertise ment which will appear in j this paper. Take no Substitute, tut Insist on having Y. L. ! I)Ol (iLAS' SHOKS.with I name and price stamped on ' bottom. Sold by ' HOOD & BRITT, GoldsborO. UKI'AIKINO OF- Buggies, Wagons, Carts, &c. K crvlhing in the blacksmith line done on short notice and at lowest liv oigprices. Oivomea call when in need to ha e repairing done. J,. K. JOHNSON. ( (pposite John (Jinn's Store. Tiso's Remedy for Catarrh Is the Ilet, Easiest to Une, and Cheapest. n Sold by brucKfots or sent by malL 32: V v- "'ST'V i AKP'S IK(l'LAH CHAT. I hi' Old Philosopher Discusses Hit Notrro Ouestiori. Wo se-o that there has boon an other negro burned burned in Geor gia burned mainly by his own race. That last is a good sign a sign that they are beginning to appreciate the sin of those horrible c rimes that al most every day are committed some where by the villianous black tramps who at' to be found in almost every community. When the negro, as a race, begins to preach against these horrible crimes in his own pulpit and to write against them in his own newspaper and to talk against them by the fireside and in the field, these outrages will ceae. But all the negro papers I have seen make large capital out of the lynehiugs and burnings and breathe out threats of retaliation. : but attach little impor tance to the crimes. In this they have the sympathy of Northern fa natics and Northern politicians who have for thirty years encouraged their revenue by tire and assassina tion. In Southern negro schools and colleges that have been established with Northern money the white im ported teachers have made their pu pils believe that they were an op pressed race, and were kept under the ban of persecution; and if they had their rights they would have so cial equality with the whites in churches and schools, and some of the Northern religious papers have openly advocated the settling of the negro problem by miscegenation. Even so great and good a man as Rev. John Hall. D. D.. and LL. P. came out in a two column philipie against the ".Horrible Tragedy" at Paris. Texas, and all along through his article used the large type head lines win h as. "lied hot irons soak ed with oil cast into the flames." and so forth, and he appealed to the -nds of the freedmen to help them j avert these awful outrage He i s the World's Fair is to be vis- ! itcd by all nations, and how can we hold up the great exhibition and j laud our civilization in the face of the head linos. "Toxans burn a negro tm.vderer at the stake?" Will Dr. Hall never learn to put himself in our place? Will the North ern pe alone? pie never let us and the negro j Are we to have no credit fori inim not m it v or intelligence? Ilav we lived with the nem all our lives. a:id do we not know him bet tor than those who see him afar otf ? Shall we be penned up with them on a limited space and under the most foolish and malignant federal laws and in it be allowed to protect our selves and our wives and our daugh ters? I say it with all the sincerity that the mistaken interference of our Northern brethren with the negro problem has been the prime cause or ail the negro s misiortunes. of all the outrages and all the lynch ings and burnings. Senator Ingalls, being at last out of a job. lias laid aside his hobby and says there will be no more politics founded on the negro. He ought to know, for he rode that horse for twenty-live years and rowelod his sides until the ribs were bare and his friend Tourgee rode behind until his crupper was sore and it is a fit time to turn the old rip out to die. Now let North ern philanthropists shinny on their own side and look after the jioor and wretched in their own cities. If it could be done we would gladly put a million of our poorest negroes against a million of their poorest whit' s on exhibition at Chicago and let the world see the difference the difference in flesh and health and contentment and hilarity. Here is the happiest race upon earth and the easiest to control if let alone by their conceited or pretended Northern friends. But what I was going to say to Dr. Hall and all of his sort your legislation has penned us up with these people and we are going to protect ourselves. If we find a rat tle snake, or a mad dog. or a hyena going about loose, shall we not kill him? 1 'nave lived in the country for years aim leit ine common appronen sion the apprehension of some awful grief, and I sar now that if it had come 1 would have joined my neighbors and burned the vile brute at the satke with as much serenity as 1 would kill a gorilla. T have road O'overnor Hogg's proclamation and (.iovernor Northern's and the edito rials in some of our papers and have, wondered what was the matter with me. Why can't I feel that these lynching and burnings are horrible and barbarious? Maybe I am like the poor fellow at camp meeting who ! d I" would like to get religion but hecouldn t tool that lie was a sinner. I can't feel that way. If I had been at Paris where I could realize the awful brutality of that negro's crime ! "j" upon that, poor little innocent child uld have joined the mob. Yes, I could have seen the brute torn limb from limb and his flesh eaten bv the dogs. I felt just that way when the negro cut the School girl's ! prepared specially to cure those diseases , " -,. t . i from which thev alone suffer, and often throat near Madison m my own,.,, Mvuw 1:.thVr than consult a physi St ate and threw her mangled body chin- as periodical pains, weak hack, ia the ditch. Such a negro or such ! prolapsus, and all uterine troubles. , Purely vegetable, and guaranteed to a white man is no more to me than a iyi. .satisfaction in every case, or money wild beast that has no soul. You j refunded. may call it revenue or barbarity if you please, but to my mind it is an evidence of the purest love of help less innocense and the deepest sym pathy for the sufferers. I want no man to argue the matter with me. I would not tolerate discussion over it with a Northern man who has had no experience nor with a Southern one who has never felt the apprehen sion. Let the officers of the law do or try to do their sworn duty, but when the case is clear ond the proof posi tive or the crime confessed, it makes no difference with me whether they shoot him or burn him. If the burn ing will bettor serve the purpose of intimidating and preventing of sim ilar crimes by other brutes, then let them burn. In the olden times they stoned them with stones, according to the scripture, and there was vir tue in the remedy. But the modern philanthropist cries educate them educate them just as if there was any reform in education without moral and religious training to go along with it. side by side. There are less than two hundred white convicts in our penitentiary and over two thousand negroes. Most of these negroes never knew any thing of slavery, for they are under forty years of age. and a . large ma jority have had some schooling, but they grow worse instead of better. Before the war there was not one outrage to whore there are fifty now. and yet our Northern friends say it is from ignorance of the law or from lack of education. It is neither. It is because of their race traits for in dolence and stealing and the grati fication of their passions and appe tites. Before the war these traits were fettered by fear, but now they feel no restraint. The old-time ne groes are still good citizens, made so by early training, but the average negro of to-dav has fallen back in- stead of advancing. The heathen Chinee is a Christian compared with him. How far, or how long this in carceration of negro convicts shall go on. I know not, but I do know that the methods of modern civiliza tion in the South will have to be changed. There is too much liberty in the youth of the negro and of the white race too. Parents and teachers are not respected and reverenced bv the children as thev used to be. The negro used to fear the lash, and it was a wholesome and salutary fear. Now it is the calaboo.se. the jail, or the chaingang, which they do not fear. I verily believe that a good whipping will do a young negro more good and last longer than ten years in the chaingang. There would not be five hundred negroes in our con vict camps to-day if all the misde meanors had boon punished at the whipping post. But modern philan thropy would cry out, "Oh. horrible! horrible!" The very men who per mit the poor and the wretched to starve or to freeze in the miserable garrets and lofts of the tenement houses would be the first to cry out against us. The very men who ship rum to Africa every day to be bar tered in the slave trade would raise their sanctimonious eyes to heaven and ask the friends of the poor down trodden negro of the South to rally for his protection. How long will these Catilinos abuse our patience? When I ruminate upon these things it makes me tired very tired, and keeps me from being calm and se rene. It makes both sides of my head ache and I have to take a dou ble do.so of my medicine. But I am getting bettor now, and can stoop down and help the little orphan pick strawberries every morning. We have a great time together, but I am like a hen with one chicken. The children used to follow me about, but now I follow the children. Bill A hi. Pith And Point. The manner of giving is the gift. Intelligence lies in music's finger tips. The needy man is mindful of his friends. The penalty of" originality is singularity-. Expediency is frequently another name for compromise. Ciifts should be a matter of inspi ration and not of calculation. Experience is the most costly and the most indispensable thing. A man requires a vast amount of space in proportion to his size. Inclination enforced to meet op position becomes determination. The brightest rainbows ever play about the fountain of our tears. If you would make the right sort of character for yourself, be consis tent. I How a lieuntiful Flower wan Named. j All old legend tells of two lovers, I walking bv the river Rhine. The ladv '; hogged her suitor to pluck a little nalo- j wer, growing on the i.anK. in drowned; hut, w hile sinking, lie threw the flower to her, and cried: "Forget ine not!" Thousands of women will never forget what Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription has done for them. It is A NATION'S DOINIiS. The News From Everywhere (Jathered and Condensed. Buffalo. N. Y., had a 10(1,000 fire Friday. The Second National bank of Col umbia. Ten n.. closed its doors, Fri day. There were 21(5 business failures in the United States during the past week. Two women sandbagged a peddler, Emanuel Jacobs, near Hazelton, Pa., Monday, taking all his goods and cash. An explosion at the Buck-Ivan hoe tunnel near Leadville, Col., Tuesday, killed five men and seriously injured several others. Much damage was done by floods and wind in Illinois and Wisconsin, Thursday. Thousands of acres of wheat wore ruined. At Pocahontas. Ya., Tuesday, John Calloway killed John Dillon in a dispute over a five-cent game of dice, and then skipped. Frank C. Hargraves. Theodore Heitzberg and W. II. O'Brien, all well-known men, committed suicide in St. Louis on Saturday. Henry Schroeder and his sister and George Rein fold t were drowned Saturday in the harbor at San Fran cisco by the capsizing of a skiff. At Indianapolis. Ind., William A. Krug died Monday, aged 103 years, lie was born in Lancaster. Pa., and voted at 21 Presidential elections. The town of Boles. Ark., was al most entirely destroyed by a cyclone Friday, and seven persons were killed and a large number injured. A cyclone wrecked forty buildings at Osage City. Kan.. Thursday, kill ed Anderson Wagner and his wife and injured twenty other persons. A fall of top coal in the Locust Spring colliery near Mt. Carmel. Pa.. Friday, killed John Swenger and fatally injured William Mcllvain. Three colored children named Ed wards were burned to death in their home near Aberdeen. Miss.. Monday, while their parents were away at work. An explosion in the blacksmith shop at the Minnesota mine at Tower. Minn.. Monday, killed three men and nine others wort' injured, two fa tally. Rev. Claude Wilson, a young di vine of the Methodist church at Col umbus. O., committed suicide Thurs day with "Rough on Rats." for being disappointed in love. The house of Dan Erickson at Bradford. Minn., was burned Mon day night with all the household ef fects and the man, his wife and two children were cremated. A jury in Boston, Thursday, gave Mrs. Susan L. K. Cleveland a ver dict for $10,000 in her suit against Charlotte' W. Lyman for alienation of her husband's affections. J. W. Hoxie. nged I52, a well-to-do business man ef Atlanta, Ca., mys teriously disappeared Saturday while' on his way to the bank with a large depeisit. Foul play is feared. A tiger belonging to Soils' circus got loose in an express car en route to Cleveland, ()., Monday, and had the car all to himself, no express being delivered along the route. Dr. Robert W. Buchanan, who has boon on trial in New York for the past few weeks, charged with jiois oning his wife was found guilty Tuesday night of murder in the first degree. A destructive cyclone swept over Oklahoma, Tuesday, laying flat everything in its path. Over one hundred persons were killed ami over five times that many injured, some serieiusly. The naval review at New York, Thursday, was a magnificent spec tacle, and, though postponed for sev eral hours on account of rain, was carried out in all particulars accord ing te program. Charles Schmidt, aged 40, shot and kilhxl Henry Horn, aged -18. on Monday, and then killed himself. The men were partners in a chicken ranch at Fairhaven, Wash., and quarreled over a division of the prof its. For forging a che'ek that won $12. 000 worth of jewelry from Mexican jewelers, Robert Knox, a young American, was sentenced to T2 months' imprisonment and $800 fine and his wife to six months and $22." fine. In a fight between Italian and Hungarian miners at Milnesville, Pa., Friday, two men were killed, two others were pitched down into a deep mine hole filled with water and six or eight other men were badly wounded. During an entertainment at the MetlNxlist church at Fairview, Ta., Thursday night, a panic was caused by the explosion of powder used feir colored lights in a tableau. The large audience made a rush for the door and trampled on one another in their wild rush to escape. No one was killed outright, but some were so seriously injured that they will probably die. Crazed by drink, William Burke, of Rockford, 111., killed his mother Saturday night. A cyclone at Ponca, I. T., Satur day night, killed five people and overturned houses. Geo. II. Morgan, a lawyer of Har risburg, Pa., ended his life Monday by cutting his throat. Several persons were seriously in jured in a saw mill explosion. Fri day, near Oakley, Ya. An attempt was made at Chicago Friday night to steal the ashes of Christopher Columbus. Nine men were killed in a log drive on the Fence river near Men ominee, Mich., Tuesday. Falling 40 feet from a coal breaker, at Wilkesbarre, Pa., Saturday, J. J. Brown was instantly killed. Two negroes were hanged for mur der at Bonham. Tex., Friday, in the prest'iice of 15.000 spectators. A railroad colludon near Somerset, Pa., Tuesday, resulted in the death of seven persons and the injury of several others. The tow n of Cisco. Tex., was wiped out of existence by a cyclone Friday night. Seven eoplo are known to have boon killed. Robert Hodges, aged (12. a wealthy retired merchant, committed suicide at Baltimore, Sunday, by putting a bullet in his head. Ex-Governor Me-rriani. of Minne sota, has boon sued for $50,000 by Thomas O'Connor, a life convic t, feir false imprisonment. A little daughter of Joachim Schultz. near- White Haven, Pa., was burned to death, Friday, while kindling brush piles. The World's Fair at Chicago was opeiie'd by Presiele'iit Cleveland Mon day. He pre ssed a gold button and elec tricity did the rest. Edward R. Bunnell, a prominent farmer of Walla Walla county. Ore gon, killed his wife and daughter and then hanged himself Friday. Matthew Nobakor, butcher, 25 years old. was shot and killed on Sunday night, at St. Louis, by Isaac Dickson, colored, in a saloon row. Frank Francis, a wcll-tevdo farmer living ln-ar Midville, Ga., was killed Friday by Summer Rocket, a colored farm hand, who has boon arrested. As a result of desjiondency over the' death of his sen, George Hinch cliiVe. of Philadelphia. Pa., commit ted suicide Saturday night by inhal ing gas. Being financially embarrassed, Nathan T. Hayes, proprietor of the Eagle hotel at West Chester. Pa., drowned himself Tuesday in the city reservoir. Herbert Marsden. an ac tor, com mitteel suicide at Philathdphia, Thursday, by dosing his coffee with cyanide of potassium. He was a heavy drinker. J. C. Haven, a proof reader, dis appeared! fremi Me'tnphis. Tenn.. Sat urday. and so did Mrs. David Lamp kin, taking with her $5,000 of her husband's money. John Peterson, one of the negroes arrested on the charge of assaulting a young white girl. Mamie Baxter, near Denmark. S. C. reventlw was lync hed Tuesday. In a scuttle fer possession of a gun in the hands of John N.Burneston.at Be'ngies, Md., Friday, his brother William was instantly killed by its accidental discharge. Amy Simmons, a negro woman, was jailed at Florence, S. C, Mon day, on the charge of burning the house and two children of Hannah Ilarllee, near Florence. An upturned cooking stove at the household of Solomon Kelly in Pitts burg. Pa., Saturday, ignited the clothing of his seven-year-old daugh ter, burning her to death. Near Thompson, Ga., Saturday evening, Adolphus Jones, colored, shot and killed Joshua Jones, color ed, from Ambush, while the latter was ploughing, and then escaped. The infant child of Mrs. F. Y. Freeman was poisoned with mor phine at Columbus, Ga., Saturday, by its negro nurse, Laura Brans ford, for becoming incensed at a rep rimand from her mistress. John Halton, of St, Augustine, Texas, while in a fit of mental de rangement Sunday night, killed his wife ami his seven children, while they were asleep, secreted their bdics, and then committed suicide. Miss Rose Burghold. aged ISfa New York society lady, who a few' days ago eloped with a young man named Alexander to Chicago, cut her throat with a razor in a hotel there Sunday night, caused by the desertion of the voung husband. A Hundred Year to Come. Wouldn't yon like to live mitil the year A. 1). 2iMK), just to see the pe-ople and the world generally? Who knows hut you might, if you observe the laws of health, and kep the stomach, liver and bowels in full action. The Ix'.st medicine known for this is Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. They are small, sugar coated granules, but powerful to cure: produce no nausea or griping; easy to take, ami a sure cure for biliousness, constipation, headache and diseases pro duced by an inactive liver. A conven ient ves't-pooke-t ri'ineely. ALL OVER THE STATE. A Summary of Current Events Tor the Past Seven Days. Wilmington had a $15,000 fire Tuesday afternoon. The store of II. Cohen & Co., was burglarized at Sniithfield Tuesday night. John Hill, a well-known farmer of Rockingham county, committed sui cide by banging Friday. His mind was unbalanced. Col. A. M. Waddoll, of Wilming ton will deliver the ojiening address at the Teachers' Assembly at More head City in June. Pink Pattern, of Asheville, made an attempt of suicide, Friday, by jumping from a three-story window. His mind was unbalanced. While cutting trees. Monday, Fla vins Harden, of Lenoir county, was killed by a large limb falling upon his head, fracturing the skull. In the selection of only three talis men in Granville county court Mem day, the Third party sheriff called in the box twe negroes and one Thirdite. Two negre women, Julia and Hen rietta Street, mother and daughter, were jailed at Carthage, Wednesday, on the charge of killing the new-lnn-n babe of the latter. Mary Hawk, a woman of bad re pute in McDowell county, after re fusing to leave that section was rocked Saturday night by a masked mob and seriously injured. John Johnson, a notorious negro, was seriously cut at Wadosboro. Tuesday, by P. J. Coppedge, Jr. The negro was under the influence of liquor and very insulting. Two ladies. Mrs. D wight Morrison and Mrs. Dera Johnston, while driv ing into Concord. Tuesday evening, were thrown from the buggy by the runaway horse and badly hurt. Mrs. John Wike. of Jackson ceiun ty, caught lire Monday while cook ing and was fatally burned. Her husband in trying to extinguish the flames was also burned to death. A strange fatality is nqiorted at the home of William Cook, a farmer of Cabarrus county. Within a week he has lost his wife and one son by sudelen death. toth dropping dead. Robe-rt Todd, of Mecklenburg county, in a dispute with a woman over the ownership of a mule. Tues day, was savagely attacked by the woman, severely lieaten and almost kille-d. G. M. Geaues. of Durham, while visiting the ' Smoky Hollow" dis trict. Tuesday, had his skull cut open with a hatchet in the hands of John W. Lee, a carpenter formerly from Reidsville. The contract for the erection of a public building at Reidsville has boon awarde'd to Brown & Carter, of Wilmington, for $12,105. The ap propriation for the completion of the building was $25,000. Mrs. B. F. Fulton eloped Thurs day fivin Walnut Cove with a young man taking about $1,500 of her hus band's money with her. Fulton is in Hot Springs. Ark., and has been no tified of his wife's infidelity. Edinboro Seurlock, colored, of Cumberland county, made an at tempt Sunday night of roasting his little daughter alive by iouring ker osene oil over her head and face and setting lire to her clothing. Seur lock has fled. Lieut.-Col. David M. Bogart, aged 47, of Washington, N. C, was thrown from his horse at Newborn, Thursday evening while on parade, striking his head on the macada mized road, fracturing his skull. He died Friday morning at 2 o'clock. A young married man named Cape 'heart who recently came to Charlotte establishing there a com mercial agency, decamped Saturday night for parts unknown, leaving several bogus checks in the hands of merchants, and various bills unpaid. The Press Association. The members of the State Press Association who were in session at Newborn last week, finished their work Thursday morning and ad journed. The meeting was well at tended and much interest was taken in it. There were some spirited dis cussions and sharp debates. The following officers were elected for the ensuing year: Jerome Dowd, president; Z. W. Whitehead, first vice-president; W. F. Burbank, sec ond vice-president; R. A. Deal, third vice-president; J. B. Sherrill, secre tary; H. A. Foote, orator; . V. McDainnid, historian; W. C. Erwin, poet. Executive Committee: S. A. Ashe, J. A. Thomas, H. A. London, E. E. Billiard and Thad R. Manning. Delegates to the National Edito rial Convention E. E. Hilliard, W. F. Burbank, Jerome Dowd, J. D. Kernodle; alternates J. B. Sherrill, W. W. McDairmid, F. M. Williams, W. L. Cantwell. The time and place of the next meeting were left with the executive committee. A resolution condemning the type founders trust was adopted by a large1 inaj rity. The Billville Itanncr. We have bought a cylinder press, and our old handpress is for sale. It can be used either as a corn-sholler or a gridiron. We have just returned from hear in' Riley read ' That Old Sweetheart o' Mine," and we ain't quarreled with our wife in six hours. Billville's only physician has moved his office next door to the coffin fac tory. You ring the night boll and the undertaker does the rest. The Billville postoflico is still sen-king the man, and the man is still running away from it. It's $ and a government inspector every year. We have sent three alligators and a petrified negro as Billville's exhibit to the World's Fair. The nigger was lynched before he was petrified. There are sixteen male candidates for the Billville postoflice. and they're every one trying to marry the widow in order to get her to re sign. Our bette r half is kept busy these days bonding barrel staves to make crinolines. She' is the leading milli ner of Billville been leading us for years. Telegraphic communication with Billville is off for the present, the women having cut tiie wires to make crinolines with. Fashion is a terri ble thing! A foreign apiointinent would In most acceptable to, us just at this time. The white caps have suggest ed it and have given us twenty-four hours to get it in. Our relations came to Billville in order to bear Riley read, and tlu-y are now spending the summer with us. All groceries and live stexk thankfully received. We were short of wchkI when the winter struck us last week, ami we had to di all our writing with hot bricks at our feet and a mustard plaster in the middle. Our uplMiintment still hangs tire at Washington, notwithstanding we stated in a recent editorial that we wi.-hed Cleveland was twins, se's there'd be more of him. We have received an invitation to spend the summer at a seaside hotel, and our wife has bought a quarter of a yard of blue flanneLlo make bath ing suits for the girls. The Billville band serenaded us on our return from Washington, but as soon as they found out that we had missed an office then' charged us $ fer corn licker and expenses. Major Jones delivers his famous lec ture on "Lynching" at the town hall Monday night. The major knows what he is talking about. He has made a success of every man he lynched. We intended to give our lecture on "The Georgia Colonel" at the town hall Wednesday night, but as the colonel is looking for us with a shotgun we have postponed it on ac count o'f the weather. Last week our minister converted three men who have been owing us $! a pieH-e for six years; but when we called on 'em to settle up, they answered us by singing: "Religion's paid it all all the debt I owe!" Our oldest mule broke loose Fri day night and is now oil his way to Washington. We suspect that he is after a government pension, having tin 'own a Confederate during the war and brayed like thunder at the surrender. Bad luck seems to follow us; our office took fire last week, but the miserable fire department extin guished the flames before we could get a chance at the insurance. The paper, therefore, will not be en larged, unless the next fire is more successful. As a tree nourishes in proportion to the richness of the soil, so the" human boelv thrives in accordance with the quality of the blood. He-ne-e the neces sity of keeping the vital fluid rie-h and pure with Aycr's Sarsaparilla, the In-st blood medicine vou can find. Friendship which flows from the heart cannot lie froen bv aelversitv. An operation or injections of carljolic acil are extremely dangerous. Try Jaj anese Pile Cure. Positively guarantee-! bv M. E. Hobinson & Urn. Absolutely Pure . A cream of tartar baking powder. Hishest of all in leavening strength. Latest U. S. Government Food Rejiort. Koyal Halting I'ow Uer Co.. IOC VU St.,N'.Y. For Old and Young. Tut 1 T.I vr Vill t a k i nelly on the rliilcl.tbedelirate leinale or iiilirui lei age as upon the vigorous tnuu- frlre (one to Ibo weak nlnrntrh, bow -.!. kieliicy and Madder. To tliesc organs llteir htrentlicniii? qualities are courier!" nl. ranking tbcin to tr form llieir fuuctiouM a in youth. Sold Everywhere. Office, 140 to 144 V'ashiarton SL, N. Y. GRAND - DISPLAY -OF- Spring Goods -AT THE- NEW YORK BARGAIN STORE. Choicest aud Newest Shades -IN- DRESS GOODS. NEW NOVELTIES -IN flii -AND Wash -:- Fabrics! Special Drives in Shoes and Hosier. A NEW LINE -OF- HATS AND KUGS. Trunks and Valises -AT Bed Rock Prices. -(iENTS'- Furiiisliing -: Goods A SPECIALTY. Stationery Just One-Half the Rep ular Price. Come to See Us ! We are headejuartcrs for UA11GAINS IN- General Merchandise Evervtliinj Goes at One Price! CTTolite attention given to all ami those who trade with us one time will lie sure to come again. ltespect fully. JM F. OTI1ERL1M), Ftop'r. Wc. H. T. lluzclllue, Warreu,
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 4, 1893, edition 1
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