Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / Sept. 21, 1893, edition 1 / Page 1
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IT IT IjOLDSB oro JUHT n KSTABLISilKI) 1887. GOLDS1JOKO, N. C, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1893. VOL. VII. NO. 3. S M 1 j 1 li Hi ilEADI DYSPEPSIA Is that misery experienced -when suddenly made aware that you. possess a, diabolical arrangement called stomach. No two dysjtep ties have the same predominant symptoms, hut whatever form dyspepsia takes The iiKtlcrlyhtfj cause is in the LIVER, rtu'l one tlv.v.g h certain no one will remain a dyspeptic who will It win correct Acidity of tlio Stomach. Expel foul gaties. ,lly Irritation, Arf.ibt Digestion 'and at V.io same tiiuo Start the Liver wnvldng ana all bodilif ailments will disappear. For more than thre years I s-.:fT-red with rys;:psi.-i in its wo:t "form. I tried several doctors, l.ut they afforded no relief. At last 1 tried iiiimo:is Liver Regulator, which cured me in a ihurt time. It is a uood medicine. I would not t without it." James A. Roane, FhiUJ'a, Pa. See that ijnti get the Genuine, with red 2 on front cf wrapper. . HlsrAEED ONLY EY J. li. ZilllJX Si CO., Philadelphia. I'm. THE .be-i o . RACKET STORE ! :l a. U ill! Muill" ollice. re i ill! ii ill in tn:l I prh Clothing "Sl.'.IHI. up. men frm hi Ywnih-.- it - lip Dry Goods! ii i w hili !t lc. C..H. Notions ! Gents ruriiisiiing oooas and Slices ! At I'lV . - U.-er II s u-k. -r 1'.. A. H. SHRACC CC Prn'v-C 1 VV., 1 tup 10. i We Take ine Leaci 1 ! T!i :i i- - er n S.r.titri:t ' .r-tv Best Guaiitv and Lowest Prices! tliiltoji. Fori; and Sausagt Al: ' .;i,.,t 1 S. Cohn & Son, - ; ur, i;i . n. c. ST. MARY'S School for Girls, Ualcitrl A.i-.em I'.i Carolina. Fii'iy-See, to i'l.v-i REV. B. SMEDES, A. M. Asne.ine rti: (5p b1' I in LT 1)1- nii-h um'ni . N . t ' Dental Vr:: Prosthesis A Specialty! : . 1 1 1 ( ; Asi'i j k t ; i; i'.A'i'- Dr. J. M. Parker. ( If : I s:.. West. Nhoro. A Happv Welcome s i.r ;: I ' l'ii re ! no--!: wild ilil WilKS ! .I and ipcited Cigars, iti:-i:u c AN1;' l.A! INK TO ( 'aroiiua N,,!h .l,iil:trter-. nui and 'hi- ir Jas. L. Dickinson, At .hilfii Ginn's Old Stand. A Mothf r's Influence. It is scarcely possible to exagger atf the influence a mother may have j over her offspring. She is. or should be. with her children almost contin uously during the formative period l of their lives, when they are most impressionable. The father's intlu Vnce is less direct. He furnishes, unconsc iously perhaps, an example to the child good or bad, as the case may be but the mother is a precep , tor as well as example. If she be a good mother, she will have more eon , tro! over her child through the influ ence of love than the father can gain throu.Lrh the inliuer.ee of fear; in fact, respect and love are the only influ ences that can be relied upon to guide a child aright. The rod. once considered essential, has long since passed into disrepute, for it encour ages deception. Hut the mother who has won the heart of her boy punch es him more severely than bv a rod when she manifests her grief over his misconduct, and she keeps him j true to himself and to her through the benign influence of love. j The boys when thrown out into j the world and subjected to tempta-1 tion might yield to them if they had only to face a father's anger, hut the Gambling in futures is a sin. Bet t bought of their mother's grief makes ; ting on anything is a sin. for it is a them strong to resist. Fortunately j mode of getting something for noth the maternal instinct teaches most ing. It is demoralizing in the ex- women how to be good mothers, for ! trcme and results in ruin to thous- j my sympathy. What are these or it is impossible to teach the art by J ands of those who engage in it. but i ganizations anyhow, but nionoiolies. precept except in the most general j wav. The prime duty of the mother! is to care for the physical and moral ; analysis it is betting whether it will well-being of her off-spring. If the go up or down. There were no r4. -child is to lie strong and healthy, he j 000.000 bales Itought or sold, neither must have plenty of exercise, and ! real nor ideal. The speculator says . that means that while he is young, j to the bucket shop. "I'll bet you that at least, he must be allowed plenty j cotton will go up within thirty days of opportunity to play and not to be and I will put up a margin on 2."0 overworked with studies. The noise j bales." "All right." says the bucket . and his employees on our road from ; be tried separately. . he may make must be tolerated to 1 shop, "put up $5U0 and I'll take the j Atlanta to Nashville. That is all Battered and hacked beyond rec some extent that he may not be driv-; bet." Cotton drops instead of rising right and we hop' it will continue, ognition. the sailor victim of a brutal en to eok his amusements away from i and the 500 goes up the sjout and j The mystery is how a railroad can murder was found on a Detroit dock home, for home should be the place ! the speculator is a sadder but not a pay its men at all while our "Whole Wednesday morning. of highest enjoyment and greatest freedom. Tin child who can be made to love his home is surrounded by the best "f moral influences. It is not merely that he escaped tempta tions, but he avoids bad associates. Both the girls and the boys should ! In-kept under home influences dur-: hiir all their earlier years. aHl when the time comes for them to gi OUt into the world tlu-y should still be ' uiiih r the watchful care of father or mother until they have learned by degrees how to care for them selves. The mother's influence should last ; through life, but there time when the hoys at lea ir.es a 1 should be put under the father s can , 1 , , , , , snould be able to set them a He good ; example and be their compauioi '.they approach manhood. ti n as i the ideal wav the meal way ot caring tor children, fullv realized in many thousands of happv homes. But in the two ex v- i t femes of society the very poor and very rich there are mothers who neglect their children and fathers who are neither examples nor companions for the vounir. The poor may be driven to neglect of ihcir children ov hard mcessity or by tilt The ri tish lo of fasl vices that make them poor. h have neither excuse. A sel-1 e ot pleasure or the demands ; ion win load a mother to turn th. c.oei-i a uiuii oci loauiusc and then to a tutor, so tne nine one ; grows up with no knowledge of a 1 mothers love ar.-.l care and scarcely more than a jiassir.g acquaintance with the busy father. What the re sult of such neglect of the rich and tho poor may be depends ujton the the bucket shops come in or how they I j(, j,t dan- now to stop the locomo accident of circumstance. The pir can influence the price. Milliona'u'es ' tive and the car that carries the boy or girl is under special tempta-: like the Imnans put large moneys in i Fnited States mail, lions to wrong-doing arising from cotton every year and make money. Weji ()f .uj these brother poverty, but the neglc ted child of j for it is their business, and they un-1 htHtAs ' an .. to all this and in is exposed io u-mpiauous 01 1 another kind. ; 1.1s j l'rr bn j been saved j power of a 1 during the f id is weak morally as ther. Both might have v the influence and nother's love exerted irmative period, when ' children's hearts and minds respond ; promptly to the impressions made upon them by their associations. I Hare Curios Tor the State Library. ! A few days after the great hurri caise of August 2s and 2!. a lot of ; candles were washed ashore from the ' wreck of the old blockade runner i Beauregard, at Carolina Beach. Mr. William A. Willson left some of these cannies with tie .Messenger to tit' i forwarded to the State Library, and i they were sent in accordance with his wishes, along with a niiunie ball j which was also picked up on the i ! teach. In acknowledgement of th-se curios, the State Librarian writes as ; follows: j Rai.kioii. Sept. lo. is;i:5. Messrs. Jackson iV. Bell. Wilming- ' ton. N. C Dear Sirs: The box of "cantlles" came to hand a'.i right and in "good condition." Accept thanks for your kindness and con sideration in the matter. I can assure vou that vou have been in- si runiental in addiny to our i-iVil.H tion one of the "rarest curiosities nf ; the age." and one which attracts more attention from and affords : more pleasure to our numerous visi count tors than any i Iher. on the "history" and "association- con i uected therewith. Again thanking i you. I am yours, etc.. j ' J. C. El.I.INTToN. I State Librarian. AW OX "FUTURES." He Does Not Agree With Bishop Keener in Ever j Particular. Let us tote fair with the figures. Bishop Keener says in the Nashville Christian Advocate that "the mer cantile world in the South is now controlled by the wholesale gambling and massive frauds of cotton futures; that the centers of New York. Liver pool and New Orleans have yielded to this collossal scheme of hazard j until the production of the staple has ; no effect upon its market value." i He says that '-during the past j three months there have been sold in . Xew York and elsewhere 5i;.000.000 j bales of cotton." This would be ; 224.U(t(i.OOO bales for this year's crop. 1 All of this, he says, "is purely imag- inary value except the 8.000.000 bales that were raised and this ideal cot -, ron that was not made would yield j 7.841 M MM MM 10. and this is the figur- j ing against which the planter has to ! make headway. All the gambling (U'I1S 111 T111S eouniry ami m uie ixiu-1 en-15adcns of Europe are child's play compared with this huge monster , that envelojH'S in its coils the for-1 tunes and even the lives of myriads." i I cannot see how dealing in futures ; affects the price of cotton, for in its ; wiser man. .Another specuiaioiot the other way. perhaps, and won. and of course he tries it again. The shop will bet either way. and like the dealer in a faro bank, always comes out ahead in the end. The shop has no interest to bull or bear the cotton. Th: hop knows its con- tomers and the average of all the bets, and can hedge to suit it. Now that is the way 1 understand ; it. It is no getting up a corner on cotton. It is simply backing a man's judgment with his money. That $5oo was the stake: and while it re- presented 250 bales, it was really the yalve of only 15 bales. This solution would reduce the bishop's tigur. from 5i;.000.ooo bales to ruoo.ouo i as the amount lost or won in i bales t three months, what it has to do with fixing the price 1 cannot see. Livenool still fixes the price and !,-ii tl,.. Tn.li-i .-ron to lu.hi liv it :iml it seems to be uniformly fixed every year in proportion. It is the farmers really who fix the price when they fix the acreage to the crop. England- America agents still examine care-1 fully and cautiously into the crop j condition ot everv county m tne i South. England knows the condi tion and extent of the crop in tow county t totter to-day than any farmer m it. for she does not rely up- i . -i on one si lurce 01 iinui maunii oui on several. Ihere is not a ouyer or dealer in Georgia who does not rely uinm the last reitort sent him from ome great house in New York that s connected with English or New England mills. 1 cannot see wher oersianu u. oui uicn .un no oucki 1 shops, nor do they make colossal for- tunes by sjoculation. They back their judgment with their money and are able to hold their purchases until there is a profit. I believe there is tto much odium neaped upon ncn men. too mui n ma - lignant abuse of money kings and millionaires. I reckon we would all get rich if we could even the preach ers. It grieves me to hear some of these politicians trying to array the I toor against the rich and to stir up strife and bitterness among the peo- Men who m-osi ered" w III 1 I u',c l,1 m my yW 1 espected ov e - 'd sin Tl.e sri'tur it a sin. n siiip uits -l'a' dP lt did not use to be that wav provingly of Abraham and Job and Solomon and tell us of their great j wealth, and how the Lord blessed i them. I Itelieve that there are gotd men now who are rich and they do j gixxl with their money. If they did ! not I don't know w hat would become ; of the p. tor and suffering when pesti lence or famine or storms afflict them. But there seems to lie a feeling of unrest and bitterness among certain I classes all over the country. Some-i bily is making the working peopl believe that they are imposed upon by the rich and "bv the government. - . - ii I see in a Rome paper that they have t 'organized in Chulius district, in! of, . ..... .. t lovd county, "'a bread brigade. ,. - , ' ', , ... ; Dr. l ieree s rleasant l'ellets. these and have 4o0 members and they have ; 1H'!lets are small, sugar-coated granules, signs and grips and passwords, and I eah-ulut.-d to start the liver and digest , ., . ., .,, , live organs into healthy activity, and have sworn that they will have lo j t!leIvllV ,)lW vh- ., ,lispe, cents a pound for their cotton, debt gloom. or no debt, and ther will hold it at the muzzle of a "Winchester." Surely that can't be so. Is it possible that the spirit of anarchy and communism is taking hold of our people? Bread brigade! Why, there is not a farmer in Floyd county who is suffering for broad. There is none in this county. Corn is abundant everywhere. It used to roll in here from the West bv the carload, but it don't come now. There are hundreds of farm- f.rs jn Rartow who will have corn uiui fooler and meat to sell. Our farmers are better off to-day than any other class in the community, They come and go when they please. They have health and strength and good water and are never visited by storms or pestilence, such as have lately come upon our seacoast. They iaVe cattle and hogs and chickens -Am eggs and "garden sass" and the schoolhouse and church are not far away what a pity they cannot for a little while look in uion the poor of Europe and have their hearts- touch- ed with gratitude that ' they live in this "blessed land. Labor is too hard ! upon capital too threatening too exacting. These may seem strange words for me to use. but they are true. I am as hostile to monopolies ' and trusts and combines as anybody, but when I read of these great strikes in a time like this, it shocks 1 no watch worn of most of them is "if you don't pay so much we will; quit and when we quit nolxWly else shall take our places." That did not use to be the law, and how it conies ' to be the law now I cannot under-; stand. j But we are gratified to see such kind relations between Mr. Thomas ' unaiu ml system is paralyzed, lher is hardly enough freight business now to pay for the axle grease. One day last week there were only seven loaded cars going north over this great road, so I was told. Below Atlanta there is nothing to load and yet the lease of the Western and At lantic costs 120 a day. Railroads and factories have their troubles, and but few make a fair rate of interest i .... ti,..;.- .-..t ti..-. w-,m.i..r ; ti.ot ' s-i.i. ii. -oi will inv..vt in tl..m where strikes and violence prevail, Now. I do not wish to be misunder-1 stood. I have respit t for all these organizations where theyresiioct the riirhts of other people, but when I those employed on one road say to tln ir 'n.ilv rs vu shall not carry1 my freight that comes over another j oad where, there is a strike, their j lemand shocks the judgment and minion sense ot mankind, w hen tne strikers assault and intimidate .1 1 T 1 ..I.. .11.. 1. oiners who wimiu iuui. nui k. or w hen they allow any violence to tie done and the track torn up and the l,K-omotives disabled, it is simply an outrage upon the law of the land and ,f ,,ersisted m. wi sure v hnmr this r I counirv into a monarcnv hkc inose oi r.uroite. where u tawes a sianuing army ot halt a million soldiers to i lirotect citizens and their t.ronertv. . ; vefV Class Who ai'C HOW unpor- ; tunate for the government owner- i ship of railroads should remember i tluit trik.-s nre not tolerated amnmt that strikes are not tolerated among government employes, neither in the ; ..,, ,,r naval or oublie works or the railway mail service. Strikers . j haVt; n,a(1 u aj Ia,H.rs Und IHJ- riitdicals come to me weekly that breathe out enmity to capital and are tainted with communistic prin- tainted with communistic prin- ciples and in mv opinion these pub- . ,". , , hcations are doing a world of harm, . , , . Ihev are educating the worKingrteo - ; i t tl that tlu.n. should u. a division a division. In the awful davs of the French revolution three ! communists went into tne naiiw Kothscniids ami cried iuhtiv. equal- ltv. fraternity we . i right: i nave uo.ooo.otto irancs m ino t'' There are Co.ooiM.oo de in it ranee: here are yours. and he 1 threw tlave fralu.s uxm tW counter. !.U rt'st to t'ome " , aml get their s. said he. But we have not come to that and I hope we never will. It becomes all our considerate people, whether poor or rich, whether employers or employed, to be reasonable and tol - erant. and to respect the rights of and teach others so to do. Bill Ari1 A Man Theruiiiiurter. Lean men make the lst thermome ters. Fahrenheit never invented Wtier ones. If the weather is warm and sun ny, they are cheerful. If cold and fros ty, the'v :ue irritable and snappy. If , damp ami cloudy, thev are downcast ! gl"'y. But if either lean or fat ! men are suffering from biliousness, i H.a,ia,-he. constipation, or indigestion. the weather will always lie damp and ..i. ..!,- ;., !,..:,. i is... A NATION'S MINUS. The Hn From Eferywhere ('athered and Condensed. Chicago has a sugar famine and many confectioners have shut down. Five hundred persons are reported in a starving condition at Alex andria, Ind. A fall of rock at Cameron mine, Shamokin, Pa., Tuesday, crushed to death Denis Burns. At Shenandoah, Pa., Friday night, lightning struck and killed John Boscavage, a lad of 18 years. Yellow fever has broken out afresh at Brunswick, Ga. Several deaths in the last week have been reported. It is stated that Virginia negroes will run a State ticket to be voted on at the coming election in Novem ber. Hurled from his carriage, Wednes day, E. H. Carr. a prominent citizen of Milesburg, Pa., was instantly killed The Pennsylvania coal works are resuming operations, and thousands are at work again at their old wages. Ill health induced Charles E. Montgomery, of Williamsport, Pa., to hasten death with paris green. Friday. Burglars stole $1,000 from John P. Jackson's house in Medford. Mass., Friday night, and badly injured Jackson. An unknown man was hurled from a Delaware river bridge at Easton. Pa., Thursday, and his Imdy has not been found. By the decision of Federal Judges at San Francisco, each Chinaman arrested under the Geary law must A gill of cholera medicine swal-; lowed by the 4-year-old daughter of ; John Cooer, of Norfolk. Va., cu..csua , p.u.cu lata. . Robert G. II. Huntington, secrc- tary of the Chicago House Building Association, is missing, and so is ' flO.oou oi the association s money. Annis McLeod was shot and killed early Thursday morning at Napance, , burglar whom he found tint., oy 1U Ids llOU The murderer es- leaped, j An autopsy upon the body of Mrs. , j E- K- Thomas, of Willow Grove. Pa., , i Thursday, revealed the startling fact ' tliat sne 'arne IO ,ier " dv swai lowing her false teeth, Cutting his throat on a Buffalo. (N. Y.) street, Tuesday. Ferdinand S. Kalinky, an Italian, went wan- dering about and died soon after his wounus were uiscovereu. E. M. Reid. a prosperous farmer, 1 , -. , . . . . . . , , was held up and roboeu oi f.iis near Anniston. -Ala., Tuesday. The high - wavmen were a white man and a ' negro with masks, both hands un - 1 covered. . ... . ... ..... . ... . rorest nros in ine sH'in)n aixiui v:0,..,,i tJ.xir. w; l-it ; ,vrourr,lt .instruction to property. , Many fanners lost all thev had. ; , .... o. junction t-ity, ten mues irom ie- ion City, ten miles frc ..a. p was almost entirely j jestrovei I ' Jesse Mitchell, colored. was lynched at Amelia Courthouse. Va., Thursday night, after being twice convicted of rape upon a white child two years old. and each time secured a new trial on technicalities. The third trial was to have taken place Friday. Trying to arrest Roselius Julius, colored, in Jefferson Parish. La., ! Friday, Justice of the Peace Victor Estopinal and his son were shot and j killed by Julius. They were accom-j kiiicu oy juiius. iney were accom- pained bv several deputies, but m ., t i i ii i i the confusion winch followed the ,-i ii- ' snooimg tne negro iuuue ins escape. , .... ... , An epidemic of suicides occurred i in New York Friday. These de- votees of self-destruction were: M. fv,i;.,.r .iai, "w u-uii ..in " ""r''" t.. .. ...l,.-. ti.- l.if i w aincs oirnoi i. ii" nn. "- nave come iori,w jfl,.!,tir eii-.ft- iimontl .. u.. u..u.-.-. - - - Hannah Solomon, aged Ni, who broke her gkull by leapin from a window; Charles Groff. a helpless young car - penter. with spinal diseas.N who shot h in pregenoe of h5s bal)V. Wm Gyson. a 50-year-old silk weaver, who hanged himself from a door sill. and an unknown German who shot j himself through the temple in Cen- j tral Park, though he had $52 in his pockets. ! Carroll ton Ia Thursday nit pauj rcher Will Archer Polk Hill. Ed Guyton. and Ellen I Fant, all negroes, were shot to death . in jail by a mob of masked men. The ; prisoners were accusxl of burning a mill and gin house, and their at tor- i ue" was making an effort to secure j their release on a writ of habeas j corpus, it was the intention oi tne mob to take them out and hang them, but on gaining entrance to the jail the prisoners made such an up - roar that the mob was afraid the town would be alarmed, so they butchered the neeroes in their cells, The whole count v is excited over i the killing. A Card. Fayetteyillk. Sept., 18!.. To His Excellency Governor Carr, of the State of North Carolina. I will speak unto you words of truth." As one of the inhabitants of our beloved State, lmrn and in part bred within her lines none the less do voted, none the less interested, none the less patriotic because I am a wonlan, because I cannot vote, be cause the laws of my Master hold me as an infant, scarcely past the idiocy of its first few days, whilst she con fers the franchise, the offices, the emoluments upon the most ignorant, half-witted, drunken, degraded and selfish of men men who will sell their votes, go reding to the im11s. and slink thither under the " party lash," all pride, all self-resp'ct, all certain of the weal of the land gone, crushed out the willing, ever eager, tools of corrupt and entirely self seeking leaders, who more and more deceive, aoathize and lower Dubl it- tone and morals by their pernicious influence, by their open hatred of the pure. the upright, the honest and the honorable, whose chief engine is the circulating of vile slanders against the purest, noblest and I tost of men and women. This is a time of fearful demoral- ization iervading all classes. The ., . . . . . , . evil one is busy in our midst and it is apparent that he finds many will ing subjects. I Therefore it In-hooves the execu- 4 .i i r i 1 into the manners ami ways of tho officials who come within his ap- pointing power, and those who do not should not escajK' his scrutiny. I and such as prove unworthy should j have his recommendation for dis-1 missal. ; Because of these reasons, and in ' the face of these facts. I hereby de- ' sire, request and ask you to look ; into the conduct of E. G. Barrel!. quartermaster general of North j Carolina, ami let it n- seen if his conduct is such as Ut oines an officer and a 'gentleman during his trip to uncago with upwards oi inreo nun-, dred as good people as there are m North Carolina his excursionists. who accepted his terms ami advanced . mm au the money ne asneu ior me j necessary excuses f the journey. T ;i;l.- von not to shut out the tcsti- nny of these iooplo. as the News- i Chronicle-Observer has done, but ! 'ive Col. E. G. Harrdl a fair trial and the witnesses against him a fair hearing. j 1.-fiiv.w-tfullv :ind siii.iT.-lv Mrs. Rebecca Bi.eosok State pajR'rs please copy. Tarheel Hoys and (iirls. We find the following malicious lander in a South Carolina news-1 1 naocr. and copy it simply to how i ; the young ladies ami gents oi tins - ! part ot tarheeidoni now 1 1 1 .. .... grOSSlV, - : : iny nae ueeu imsiepies. -nn-o. misrepresentiM: 1 "When a timid young tarheel wisl''s i to express himself to his girl, he : takes a piece of fat pine, trims it ia ; the shape of a capital I. and passes it to h s ' r . That means I Dine for r- - i th him. she strikt a match and sets the splinter on fire, This means. I make light of your pining. If she likes him. she hands ; him a lightwood knot, which means; nine not When the boy foes to ! pine mil. w m n i my r1"" ' leave, he gentlv puts Ins arm around the girl, kisses her. and puts some srtft'pitch on the end of her nose, which means, ta(r)-ta(r) till wo nn-et again." Edgefield Farmer. " " Yes, How Is It! We read in a Republican pajn-r as. indeed, one can read in almost any sort of a newspaper these days that "money is easier." "loans can Ik j had in New York at ft per cent." and 1 that "there is a general resumption of manufacturing." We call atten- j , , . , ,! ;. , lir, foregoing quotations, and shouid like! . . T, . , to know, if it is true, as the Repub- It. ..11 ,,1 ... licail puiJCis anri:c. aim as a iium.i . r ... , nf Temihl can Congressmen have as- j st.rted in their ' extru session of Congress liegan. .. . ...... i . . .mat tne paiuc was causcu noi .... .- r .i ti lnucil I)V 1110 OlVratlOIlS OI I UO DI1CI- ! . . . . u.. .1 ... ..t i ,maii act as uy ine icai m ia-iihi- i cratic tariff tinkering." how is it that ! the lnins are resuming business be-! 1 fore th; tinkering has 'tiegun? Charlotte Observer j Masked robbers held up a Mineral Range train between Calamet and Range train between Calamet and : Hancock. Mich.. Friday, and at the j point of revolvers, forced the ex - j press messenger to fork over a cool j fTO.OOO cash, after which they ! est'al)e w'tn eir booty. Four men ' iave )et'n arrestt ou stiv,n' sus - r"'"- j ()V j,.a ti,o fall: One by one our dear ones die. O. to keep then with us still! Loving hearts send up the cry. Wife and mother. O how dear. Fading like a mist away. Father, let us keep them here. Tearfully to ("ml we pray. "Many a wife and mother, who ' d'mwl to die Wause she suffer j m.r :iW HV jike a vampire, and baffles 1 the skill of the family physician, can U - j J'' 'i'i j Prescriiit ion, the greatest Ihmui ever oniermi i.v man o,. -aK. sun.-nug. I conferml hy man on w,-ak. sutr.-riiig. iSThi what their name. ALL 0VEK THE STATE. A Summary of Current Events for the Past Seven Hays. Senator Vance returned to his mountain home last week to take a rest. ' Trinity College has adopted the new Handlxiok of North Carolina as a text book. All the county commissioners of the great Democratic county of Catawba are Thirdites. It is intimated that about a third of the corn in Rowar. county was destroyed by the late freshets. The tobacco factory of Eugene I Johnson Winston, has been closed for a violation of revenue laws. I Pamlico, th North Carolina trot- tmg stallion, won a S2.000 purse at Chicago. Friday, his time being .pi The Wilmington cotton mills, after a stoppage of four weeks, resumed operations Monday morning, giving mletl employment to several lmn - j lnHl minds. j The President pardoiuil B. F. ..!: j t.0inbo. of Greenville, now serving a j term for illicit distilling. Senator Butler and Mr. Perry interested i themselves in his behalf. : .. . , I While wrestling with a convict, , , . William Woods, son oi .upt. Woods, of the road convict forc in Ala mance county, on Monday, ruptured a blood vessel and died in a few I minutes. j At Hope Mills. Cumlerland county, : Saturday night, the fast mail on the Atlantic Coast Line, ran over and killed a man named Faircloth. He had been drinking and was lying or j sitting on the track. The coroner's 1 jury decided that he came to his death by his own carelessness, Tlu, Com.(.j Stm.t iu;uav (,. j,a(iv SOine time ago ceased to operate tl f i wh- h ,.uns f t, dcMt to the Odell Manufacturin Company's store, obviously becaus it was not a pav ing investment The ; for; entt.rprise was too big a thing . tjM. amount (,f traffic, hence its do I lnjSt, J. L. Crowell. as trustee, ad j vert;S(.s hv road, rolling stock j,r,,jH.riv. etc.. to b LUt.ti,,1K' old at public In attempting to cross the railroad tracks at Seventy-sixth street. Chi cago. H. Fulton Griffin, a govern ment clerk, employed at Washing ton. D. C. was killed the 14th inst. Mr. Griffin was a clerk in the Second Bl'XToN ' -vuuu 1 - lm aiiti v.as apjomiei s"o . s i iun uiiui-i j;eii from North Carolina. He was alout ! erally in making the much needed . 24 years of age. and graduated from I capacity of the institution larger for Columbian Law School last year. He j is said to have lieen an exemplary young man. While Bill Hick-el :i eolored Well , , , . t inri, nas t liaeii in Cleaning nui .1111 - a well recently, lie had an extterionee ; ;,mit,1,.r.J.Mt" ii!;irsl , wi : j marks another"evont" in Bill' 1 0hvkered career. Just as he reached tl t f t. fT:M,:.,.r , ,w tl 'i.tv.L- ..n,i l;n j took tu"mhl(? to the bottom a dis- i . . .. i i:mee oi twonty-nve or thirty feet. and was j " secured! !,,,,.,. , , odnesday evening at the "ol'th Carolina Insane Asvluin. little - -V' K'-"""-"""'' ; j ,f superintendent. Dr. William j j K- wh1- playing in a bedroom . on the .nd fl'r of the main ! building tf the institution accident- j ally fell against a large windowpane. 'thereby crushing through it and! ; plunged headlong to the hard walk ' twenty-five feet below, without, as j far as can bo ascertained, serious re - After a suspension of little over two months the First National Bank of Winston will resume business next Monday. J. C. Buxton, who has had charge of the institution as bank ..vfiniitifr u'fw Atif'isiA nt-.si.l.iit - ' " J .v.,...- .... . - . , . . ..... John tr. Miller. late of Danville. a.. . . . . . Th" People's Bank, which suspended a few weeks ago, will reopen ltofore October 1st. The announcement is I . every citizen, and I is proving a boon to business. The Shelby Aurora savs that J ! Morrison, a lad of 1 years. Wvanre i intoxicated at Jesse Street's house, ! at Cliffdale. in Cane creek stti. -n of Rutberfortl county, and departed, veiling, homeward, last Saturday yelling, homeward, last j night. One-fourth of a mile from; ! Jesse Street's house he fell into a' -small gully or ravine that be. m onies a ' j branch when it rains. There he lay j ! drunk and senseless and let the , water and mud dam up against his i head and hod v until he was drowned i i At Goldston. Friday. Mr. A. J. Goldston. a merchant of that place. ' and also a farmer, went to a negro's house, whose dog had been killing Mr. Goldston s sheep, taking his gun ; along. The two men had some hot 1 words, and resenting an insulting Hig-hest of all ill j struck the negro with the breech of : his gun. The lick exphtded the gun. i ton's body, killing him instantly, ! He was highly esteemed, a goxl citi- I ploretl. On last Tuesday, Mr. Sidney S. Strowd. of Baldwin township, met with a horrible and probably fatal accident. By some mischance he fell from his tobacco barn. and. as he struck the ground, face downward, the short stump of a bush pierced his left eye to a depth of three inches. His son. who was with him, pulled the piece of wood out, and Mr. Snowd walked to the house, a short distance off. but soon Itooame unconscious. a;.d it is thought he will die. While feeding a cotton gin at Rolterdell factory, three miles east of Rockingham. Allen Baxley met with an accident from which he died I the l."ith. While he had the breast I oi ine gin rais.ti. mm was cleaning j tu. saws th,.v t.au,lt ljis ,,.ft arm just ajMvl. tlu. u.;st aiul aiIllnst .. , tilv . stI.ip,H.d it oflI,.sl aml ,nusdi, I , j up to the shoulder. The saws also s ruck his left side ltetween the fourth and fifth ribs and oiK-ned a gash through which the pulsations f the heart could 1 plainly ob- served, and badly lacerated the membrane of the left lung. After living in great agony until morning, he died from the effects of his in juries. Mr. Baxley was alnnit 27 years of age. and was highl y esteemed as a good citizen. Why Me Can Stand It. "After the Ball" has proven a Uiiianza to its author. Charles K. Harris, of Milwaukee. Wis. Ho is of Hebrew extraction. 2 years old. Up to this time over soo. 000 copies of the song have been sold, and it still runs. He can stand the infliction of having it sung so much as it brings him an income of Sl.uooa day. He is a red- i,a;m After bluo-eyed man. anil until the Ball" ids chief occupa tion was giving lessons in picking the banjo. The Insane Asylum. The executive committee of the North Carolina Insane Asylum were in session last Tuesday and Wednes day. Besides transacting the usual routine business, the erection of the new addition to the institution was considered, the arrangements per fected with the contractors for com -oletinir the work as raoidlv as oossi- ; Tm.lv aIV st.v;.riil' ilUIlUmi thousand brick, besides sand. lime. lumber, etc.. m abundance on the ground, and what looks more like re lieving the anxious families of the eastern section of the State, some of j whom have their own flesh and blood looked up in jail on account of in- 1 their admission and supiort. News- j Observer-Chronicle. The ISillville Kamier. We learn that Cleveland has an- '""III 111. IS lOSUJlJl"!!!"!!". , ,,. i ... . .. i , r i 'Ul " 'V1 ' country namtHl after him. There are very few privates in Georgia at this writing. All who are not going to the United States Senate are candidates for Governor. We sjH'nt three weeks in the Con gressional gallery at Washington. We were not aware that the lunatics at Milledgeville had cscaiod until we arriwl tlu.rt. ; ; hen our Congressman was run- ning for office he favored bi-inetal-isni. but he lost his mind on the way to Washington, and as there is no reward out for it. ho can't tell what he favors now. .rr You Nervous Are you all tired out. do yon have that tired feeling or sick headache? Vou can Ik iv!i- tl of all tltt-si- symptoms ItV ! taking Ihid"s Sursaparilhi, which gives nerve, mental aim iMHhiy sti-engin aim thoroughly purities the hlood. It also creates a good appetite, cures indiges tion, lleal t l.lll l) ami dysjtejtshl. II.m-I s Pills ; aetion and sure -ay to take, easy in tTect. 25 cts a Ih. The mo-t delicate, the : to all pleasures consi-ts the pleasures of others. most sensible in promoting j themselves to Maine if they fail to lent the wonderful curative qualities of Av er s Sarsapanlla. Ia purifying the Mood, this medicine strengthens every organ of the IhhIv, ami even the most abused stomach i- soon restored t healthy action. A sound discretion is not so much in dicated ly never making a mistake as by never rcjteating it. A cream of tartar baking j l.. 1t:rvfiiiiio sdrHtnrtli Tgitf.at i " (loveniment tootl Le j ixjrt. - Daiti1 PoVJrri Dnwflr Pa KJai oamg owoer to., I 10( W all St., . 1. 4W Jibsolately v Pure S L
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 21, 1893, edition 1
1
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