Golds i 71 EADJLIGHT boro ESTABLISHED 1887. GOLDSBOEO, N. C, THURSDAY NOVEMBER 23, 1899. VOL. XIII. NO. 12. f In constant pain when onl Is that dragging, pulling sensation wun you irom morn till night ? Why not put the medicine exactly on the disease ? Why not apply the cure right to Vu.. $ You can do it with V3? Immediately after the r uister is applied, you feel' its warming, soothing m iiuence. Its healing remedies' quickly penetrate down deep into the inflamed t'ssues. M Pain is quieted, soreness is re lieved and strength imparted. No piaster was ever mcde like it. No plaster ever acted so quickly and thoroughly. No plaster ever haJ such complete control over all kinds of pain. Placed over the chest it is a powerful aid to Ayer's Cherry Pectoral ; relieving congestion and drawing out all inflammation. FOR TASTELESS IS JUST AS COOD FOR ADULTS. WARRANTED. PRICE 50cts. C.AI.ATIA, ILLS., NOT. 1G, 1SS3. Par Mudidne Co., St. Louis, Mo. i.-iiticmoTi: Wo sulii last year. TOO bottles of f.ifVK - TASTKI.Ki-S CHILI, TONIC und have t' - i-'lit ihr'ii already this year. In all ourex- lu!i( i(u rt li years, in the drn buMneas. have m-v.T .i hi ::n Hrtii-le that gave such universal satis ftu.it.uu as ) uur Tunic. ours truly, ABNEV.CABB &C0. iale and guaranteed by all Wood's Seeds. Seed Potatoes For Fall Planting. We have just issued a special cir cular " A New Idea about Planting Ivt-itoes," recommending the wis d' :vi uf experimenting with planting H,r!y Potatoes in the Fall. We will mail circular free to any one in terested upon request. CANADA FIELD PEAS vn in November and December t.-.i:.e a large-yielding and most i-'ritious forage crop early next vMr. Write 'for circular giving price and information. T. Y. WOOD & SONS, Seedsmen, RICHMOND, - VIRGINIA. WooJ'g Descriptive Catalogue for 1000 will be '.. January 1st. It piv.-s full informa- i a!. iint all Seeds adapted for plant ing in the South. Send your name a . 1 address and we will mail Catalogue as soon as issued, T. C. BRYAN Tin and Sheet .Metalworker, Tobacco Flues, Stove Pipe, Valley Tin, Roofing, Plumbing, Kepairing, Etc.. Vow can save money by seeing me iM'l'ore placing your orders. All work done by experienced "len with dispatch, and guaran teed. Thanking the public for their I't patronage and soliciting a "iitinuance of the same, I am Respectfully, T. C. BRYAN, Walnut Street, THE III'STLER. Under Sealed Orders. Out she swung from her moorings, And over the harbor bar; As the moon was slowly risino- She faded from sight afar, And we traced her gleaming canvas iy the twinkling evening star. None knew the port she sailed for, A or whither her cruise would be; lier future course was shrouded In silence and mystery; She was sailing under "sealed orders," lo be opened out at sea. So souls, cut off from moorings, (Jo drifting into the night. Darkness before and around them, ltu scarce a glimmer of light; 1 hey are acting under "sealed orders," And sailing by faith, not sight. Keeping the line of duty Through good and evil report, 1 hey shall ride the storms out safely. Be the passage long or short; tor the ship that carries (JcrTs orders Shall anchor at last in port. A Mother's Influence. In the training of children there is no influence more potent than that of the mother. She is brought into the most intimate relation with the children at the most impressionable period of their lives, and if she is gentle and just the memory of the care she took of them lasts in the children's minds throughout their lives. The father's authority may be respected, but that of the mother is most willingly accepted. Of the lives of,most men we know little or nothing, but of those who have so distinguished themselves that the smallest details of their early train ing and experiences have been sought out, a very large majority exhibit traces of motherly training having great influence upon the conduct of the sons. The mother governs usual ly, and properly, through the affec tions; the father more often by force or threats of punishment. Men are good upon compulsion only while the compulsion lasts or when there is dread of exposure to punishment. Dut men are good at all times when they are guided by right principles instilled in them by a loving mother. The boy who is restrained by fear of punishment from his father if he should be detected in the commission of some offense will take the chances of detection sometimes. The boy who thinks of his mother, and what she would feel or say or think if he should go wrong, runs little risk of falling under temptation. If he should be detected in the one case he could stand the punishment; in the other the sufferer would not be himself so much as one whom he loves. In the one case the only bond to hold him to right living is fear of punishment which he may brave; in the other he has to stifle his con science and consent to bring sorrow to one who has nourished and cared for him. The mere existence of af fection between mother and child is a safeguard in the latter case. What would mother say ? is a query that has saved many girls and boys from wrong courses. They all know what a good mother would say, and if they sin at all they must do so in the face of such knowledge. A gentle, kindly, sympathetic mother may shape the destiny of her children. Her influence extends far beyond the age of maturity; that of the father terminates as a general rule at a fixed date. It is, of course, possible for the father to assume with his children the relations of a mother, but as a general rule the father is too much occupied as the bread-winner and in various social duties to become the companion or friend of his children, especially dur ing their early years. Rightly or wrongly the mother alone is brought into close relations with the children during the formative period of their lives, and they learn to love her with a fur different feel'ini? from that which is inspired by the father. The mother's iufluence becomes, therefore, much more potent than that of the father. He may be obey ed as a matter of duty, but. the mother is obeyed because she is loved. Both have authority, but the mother has in addition the claims of deep affection. Hence the influence of the mother, if wisely exercised; is .rreater than that of the father in the formation of character, and it is an influence for good throughout the life of the man who has been blessed by an intelligent and affectionate mother. Long after he has reached maturity the son of a good mother remembers her precepts, keeps her memory as his guide, and exhibits , . .n i;r n mrt rmr's inflil- in nis uprigut me c mv,..i.v.. - ence for good. Ears of corn as big as saw logs! Three of them chained to a wagon make a load for two heavy horses; each kernel as large as an ink bottle nnd five of them would make a meal c cV, fnr n. family. This is the (11 lliuou " - story that comes from Kansas. ri,.i,lln,i Pan Cure8 other8' Why Not You? Mv wife has been using Chamberlains Pain Halm, with good results, lor a ho Her that has pained her continually for nine years. We have tried . all kinds ceiving any benefit from any of them One day we saw an advertisement of ":sn -nH thouerht of trying it, r lnoe nil OOCIOTS n illiuui v. Shich we "Ud with the lest of sa isfac on She has used only one bottle and her shoulder is almost 1. fi pq! L Millett, Manchester, N. II. or 'ale Lv M. E. Robinson & Bro., J. H. Hill I Son, and Miller's Drug Store, GoldLvo; 'and J. B. Smith. Mount Olive. SMI THE IS THE KLNU. Bill Arp Tells of His Recent Visit to Pelzer, S. C. A few days ago I received a letter from a friend and it was post-marked Pelzer. He said 1 was wanted there to talk to the people, and he ven tured to fix the day and the compen sation for the loss of time and waste of tongue. I had never heard of Pelzer nor could I find it on my antiquated map. But I did find it on one of later date, and supposed it was some small village that had a cotton mill and a dam on the Saluda and some tenement houses.' Never theless, I accepted the call, for the offer was liberal. The next mail brought a similar invitation from Piedmont, another mill town, only six miles from Pelzer. So I journeyed from Atlanta to Greenville, and there changed cars for my destination, which was only twenty miles away. It was night when I reached the place. My good friend, Mr. Padgett, who is the dem ocratic postmaster, took me to his house. I had not seen the town, for it was quite dark. "What is the prospect for an audience?" I inquired. "Very good," he said. "I think you will have several hundred people out to hear you." "Why, how large is your town ? What is your popula tion?" "About 7,000," he said. I was amazed. A town twice as large as Cartersville and I never heard of it and it is not on my map. He ex plained by saying that it was only twelve years old, and had four large cotton mills that employed over 2,000 operatives, and consumed nearly 100,000 bales of cotton, and the com pany owned some 3,000 acres of land, and all the houses and stores and churches and several miles of the river. "Did you advertise me pret ty well?" I asked. "Oh, yes !'' he said. "We church folks told it to everybody we met, both in the town and in the county-, and they said they were coming." "Publish it in the papers?" said I. "No, no. We have no papers here, and no printing office.- We didn't even have a poster or a hand bill, but we talked it a good deal." ! Well, I listened and woudered, and my confidence was shaken. After a bountiful supper a little mixing up with the children, we went to the large church where I was to hold forth, and found it already pretty weil filled. In a brief time I stood before more than 500 people, and was inspired to make my best effort, for I had an orderly and attentive congregation, and we all fell in love with one another. I never have had a more gratitying lecture occasion. Next morning was spent in viewing the city and the mills and the library. The merchauts carried immense stocks in large stores, and there were many nice residences for the managers and heads ot the various departments, but they were all built and are owned and leased by the mill company, i his company owns ana controls every foot of land and everything that is on it. Captain Smythe, of Charleston, is the king, the czar, a big-hearted, brainy man, and everybody respects and loves him. He is a son of that celebrated Presbyterian minister of Charleston who during his ministerial life, was a notable man in religious circles. I remember that he was one -of my father's friends. "Who is your may or?" said I. "We have none; no mayor nor aldermen, no municipal corporation, no marshal nor ponce. Captain Smythe runs the town. Everybody who comes here for em ployment is investigated carefully. His antecedents must be good or he can't stay. We have no lawyers nor editors; don't need any. We allow them to come in and look around. "Did you know that I was a lawyer?" said I. "Oh, yes; but we learned that you had quit the practice and reformed, and so we invited you." "I don't see any negroes about here." said I. "No, we don't want them. There are a few, but they live outside. Some of them cook and wash for us, but Captain Smythe dnn't want us to mix with them or depend upon them. He wants every body to depend upon themselves as much as possible." "And so you have ruled out lawyers, editors and negroes?" "Yes," said he, "and there are no saloons or blind tigers or . cigarettes." "How about doc tors ?" I asked. "Oh, of course we have doctors; yes, we have two doc tors and one dentist and four preach ers, all select, and one photogra pher." The company has agood public library and pays a man to keep it I visited mill No. 4, an up-to-date mill in all respects. It is operated by electricity that is generated two miles distant at some falls of the Saluda river. This mill amazed me, No coal and no steam. It is 128 feet wide and 528 feet long and is four stories high. In one great room I saw 60,000 spiudles turning. In two others there were 1,400 looms. It requires 1,100 operatives to attend to this mill, and it takes 56,000 bales of cotton for a year's supply. Just think of it. The superintendent, Mr. Guy, had the elevator to stop about half way up between floors so that I mitrht have a good view of the ma chinery and the busy boys and girls in this spinning room. This room he called his children's room; not the children's room, but my children's room, he said. Scores of little chaps not more than ten years old who looked their love for him. Tbe3' were the brightest and healthiest children I ever saw in a mill," and earn from 25 cents to 60 cents a day. Many of the grown girls earn from 60 cents to $ 1.25 a day, and the average pay of them all is 62 cents. This is good wages, for their work is easy and healthy. The rooms are never too hot or two cold; for the temperature is kept uniform by fans and heaters in the basement. No grease or fatty matter is used on the machinery nothing but pure miueral oil. These children are required to leave the mill at certain periods and go to their public schools, which are supported by the company. I visited the school and found 300 of the pupils gathered in the large room to receive me and listen to a brief talk about ray old school days and some words of encouragement to cheer them up. Mr. Guy, the efficient su perintendent of mill No. 4, is an Augusta man, and has been in the mill service for forty-four years. In the packing room I observed that all the bales are marked to Shanghai, Ch ina, and I heard that China is the best customer of southern mills. That government used to buy from New England and old England, but they buy all their good by weight and not by the yard, and in course of time John Bull and the yankee got to mixing white clay with the starch to make the cloth weigh heavy, and so they turned their trade down south, where people didn't adulterate everything they make to sell. Said Mr. Guy to me : "There is no sizing in these goods except that made of pure boiled corn starch." Nearly all the capital in these great mills is from the south; and there's millions in them, for Pied mont is on the same river and is only five miles away and has two large mills and another is going up at Belton, a few miles below. In fact, the traveler through upper Carolina is hardly ever out of stent of a smokestack. In a few years that State will consume all the cotton that is grown in it. What a glorious prospect. All around Pelzer and Piedmont the farmers are prosperous; for they have a regular, eager market for everything they grow, and I saw their wagons coming in on every road. I visited Piedmont and sta3'ed a day and night. It is a duplicate of Pelzer, though not so large; having about 5,000 people. It is most effi ciently managed by Mr. James L. Orr, Jr., a son of the governor and statesman. He too, is a king and a czar, and his word is law about everything. He is respected and oved by every man, woman and child in Piedmont; and the stock holders have nothing to do but look on and receive their dividends semi annually. Piedmont is more elevated than Pelzer, and the views from her hills are charming. And then her flowers; oh, the beauty of them. Out door chrysanthemums and roses were in all their glory. Mrs. Richardson sent my wife a box full by yesterday's express that excelled anything that I ever saw in a conservatory. She gave a caution to the expressman in these lines on the box : "If you desire to climb the golden stair, Handle these flowers with exceeding care. If you exjK'ct to play the golden harp, Speed them with safety to Mistress Arp." The lyceum and public library at Piedmout is an interesting place to visit and is liberally patronized by the workers in the mills. Connected with it is a home made insurance or benefit association, a kind of savings bank where for a deposit of ten cents a week the family of the depositor gets forty dollars whenever a death occurs. This is of course to provide for funeral expenses and a decent burial. In this library is the finest collection of Indian relics I ever saw anywhere. Fortunate people to have such philanthropic guardians. Old Father Pelzer does not live there, but he is near enough to keep a fatherly eye on these numerous children. He is a Charleston millionaire, but lives at his up-country home, not far from the beautiful Mill City that he found ed and which bears his name. Just think of it, my Georgia friends; 60, 000 spindles turning in one room, and 1,400 looms weaving in two others. Why should not every cot ton growing county in Georgia, yea, in South Carolina, do likewise. Our county produces ten thousand bales annually and surely our farmers can build a mill large enough to manu facture it and double its value. Ised by Itritlsh Soldiers in Africa. Capt. C. (i. Dennison is well known all over Africa as commander of the forces that captured the famous rebel Galishe. Under date or .Nov. 4, 1H'J7, from Vryburg, Bechuanaland, he writes: "lieiore starting on tne last campaign l bought a quantity of Chamlrlain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Kemetty, which 1 used myself when troubled with bowel complaint, and had given to my men, and in every case it proved most beuelicial." For sale bv M. E. Robin son & Bro.. J.H. Hill & Son, and Mil ler's l)rug Store, Goldsboro; and J. R, Smith, Mount Olive. A NATION'S DOINGS. The Sews From ETcrjwhere Gathered and Condensed. In a fire at Magnolia, Ark., Thurs day night, twenty buildings were consumed, causing a loss of $75,000. In a duel at Gallup, N. M., Wed nesdays L. E. Densmore killed A. Maxwell and was himself fatally wounded. At New York, Saturday morning, Carl Kern, an electrician, died at one of the city hospitals. He had lived a week with a broken neck. While working at the Jerome Park reservoir, New York city, Tuesday, George Craitch, a laborer, was hit by a falling pipe and instantly killed. Disobedience of orders caused a crash between a freight and passen ger .'aio at Bibbsville, Ala., Friday, in which Engineer Patterson, who was not at fault, was killed. By the falling of an aerolite, near Crescent City, 111., Friday night, the residence of John Meyers was par tially wrecked and the neighborhood thrown into a panic. At Chicago, 111., Friday, Cornelius Corcoran shot four of his children, killing two, and then committed suicide. From his actions prior to the tragedy it is believed that he was insane. While sleeping with three other children at the home of her parents in New York city, Tuesday night, the baby daughter of Edward A. Felton was kicked to death by one of them. On being reproved for some mis behavior, James Johnson, a negro about 20 years old, killed his grand father and grandmother, Frank and Sukey Bakers, with an ax at Mid ville, Ga., Wednesday. At Danville, Va., Tuesday night, four tobacco factories, several dwell ings and a number of smaller houses, together with their contents, were consumed by fire. The loss will prob ablj' aggregate $60,000. A freight train on the Norfolk and Western Railroad jumped the track at Crooked Run, Va., Wednesday afternoon, derailing ten cars. Two brakemen and a tramp were killed and another employe fatally hurt. While engaged iu a fist fight on the Philadelphia and Reading Rail road track near Enterprise, Pa., Monday night, John Yunsk and Con rad Winske, Hungarians, were run over by an express train and instant ly killed. At Chicago, Friday, Michael Emil Rollinger, who murdered his wife last December aud then set fire to the house in an endeavor to hide his crime, was hanged in the county jail, In an impassioned speech from the gallows Rollinger protested his in nocence. In Pickens county, S. C, Wednes day, Dr. Thomas E. James, a promi nent physician of Greenville, that State, and his son, Wade Hampton, were shot and killed by Sam Lanier, one of Pickeus county's most pros perous and progressive farmers. The attempt made by the doctor and his son to carry away from her home the wife of L.anier caused the horri ble tragedy. Lanier surrendered to the sheriff. Foreign Affairs. The revolution in Colombia has now become widespread. Houses in Santiago, Cuba, were damaged by an earthquake, Friday A Belgian syndicate has secured the Chinese Imperial Railway from San Kowchia to Pao Ting Fu, 80 miles in length. Three American saloonkeepers of Havana were fined and imprisoned because they refused to cater to colored Cubans So far 23,500 British troops have arrived at Cape Town as reinforce ments, and 7,290 of them have been sent to Durban. Sugarplanters from the Cienfue gos district of Cuba will go to New York in the interest of lower duties on Cuban sugar, Orders from Aguinaldo found in Filipino trenches instruct the natives to harrass the Americans, but not to oppose their advance. American troops in North Luzon captured the wardrobe of Aguinaldo's wife. Aguinaldo himself is believed to be out of danger for the present. The Turkish Government has con ceded to Germans a railway exten sion to LJassorah, a river port in Asiatic Turkey, 270 miles southeast of Bagdad. Monsignor Francis Satolli, Arch bishop of Lepanto, and formerly Apostolic Delegate to the United States, will shortly be appointed Vicar General to the Pope. It is reported that State Secretary Reitz, of the Transvaal, has threat ened to have six British officers executed unless Nathan Marks, supposed spy, held at Ladysmith, is released. General Joubert, the Boer commander-in-chief, who, it now seems certain, is still alive, is said to be moving south in Natal with an army of 10,000 men to meet the expected British advance. National Capital Matters. From Our Regular Correspondent, Washington. Nov, 21, 1S99. Republican members of the House are scrambling as eagerly as though the big prize the Speakership had not been awarded months ago. The chairmanships of committees and the patronage of the House are the prizes for which they are now strug- ling. Cannon and Hitt, both of Illinois, have been assured of retain ing their places at the head of the Appropriation and Foreign commit tees; consequently there is no fight upon either of them, not because the selections are acquiesced in but be cause they know that fighting will be useless. The biggest fight is over the chairmanship of the Ways and Means committee, which carries with it the floor leadership of the party. Payne, of New York, was chairman of that committee, after the death of Mr. Dingley, in the last House, and he claims it again. But several other members, including Dalzeil, of Pennsylvania, and Hopkins, of Illi nois, think they have equal claims, and as Mr. Payne is not over popular with members they are getting strong backing. The fact that Illinois is al ready booked for two big chairman ships will probably operate against Hopkins. A big shake-up is likel3T in the membership of the committee on Banking and Currency, which was packed by Reed for the especial purpose of preventing its reporting a financial bill. In this House it is to be packed for the purpose of re porting a financial bill, the one de claring for the single gold standard, to which Mr. Henderson is thorough ly committed. The job of reorganiz ing the committee was made easy for Mr. Henderson by the failure of some of its most prominent mem bers, including its chairman "Joe" Walker, of Massachusetts to return to the House. The old Reed officers of the House are all fightiug for re election. The cruiser Charleston, wrecked off the coast of the island of Luzon, although one of the oldest ships of our new nav3r, was worth more than half a million dollars, and that sum may now be added to the large and rapidly growing amount that this country is paying for imperialism. What readers of this paper have known for some time that Boss Piatt was scheming to get Governor "Teddy" Roosevelt on the ticket with Mr. McKinley next year is begin ning to be fully understood by friends of other would-be running mates of Mr. McKinley. That Piatt was working with the knowledge and consent of Roosevelt has been sus pected from the first, and now it is practically certain. Roosevelt told a prominent New York republican the other day that if the party man agers wished him to run for the Vice-Presidency he would accept. Humph ! of course he would accept, and be almighty glad of the opportu nity, too. According to what seems to be trustworthy information, the admin istration is secretly dickering with Aguinaldo. It is said that General Otis was instructed to open commu nication with Aguinaldo and submit certain propositions from this gov ernment to him, and that Otis re plied that he had forwarded the dispatches to General Maexrthur, with instructions to get them to Aguinaldo, if he could find him. Not a word of information as to the na ture of the propositions submitted to Aguinaldo, or rather which this gov ernment is trying to submit to him, can be had in official circles, further than a statement that they relate to Spanish prisoners. Why the preliminary report of the Philippine Commission, which was forced by Mr. McKinley for use in Ohio, did not throw any boquets at General Otis has been ascertained Admiral Dewey put his foot down on the report containing a single sen tence of praise for Otis. And that isn't all that has become known Admiral Dewey, while declining to criticise Otis, told Mr. McKinley that if the American army had been commanded by the right sort of an officer there would have been no war with the Filipinos. That is said to have been the principal reason for curtailing the authority of Otis, by fixing it so that Generals MacArthur, Lawton and Wheaton would be left free to fight the troops under them in their own way during the present campaign against Aguinaldo. Very few democratic Senators and Representatives have yet reached Washington, for the session of Con gress shortly to open. But those who have been in Washington since the State elections have all been dis posed to regard the outlook for dem ocratic success next year as decidedly favorable. With a majority of votes in the President's own State, where vast sums of money were used, against his party's candidate, they do not even regard that State as sure to go for McKinley. It is, they be lieve, merely a question of uniting the anti-republican vote to elect the next President, and the republican Congress may assist materially in doing that. Negotiations are now in progress to secure tariff concessions from Brazil, ALL OVER THE STATE. A Summary of Current Eveutsfor the Fast Seien Days. One mad dog is on an average kill ed each day at Wilmington. Eleven divorces were granted at the recent term of Wake Superior court. Gen. A. D. Cowles, late Adjutant General of the State Guard, died Saturday at his home in Statesville. The North Carolina Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church South will meet in Washington (N. C.) December 7th. During the absence of its parents, a 5-year-old son of Hamp. Queen, near Johustown, drank a quantity of whiskey from the effects of which it died Saturday. Chairman F. M. Simmons has is sued a call for a meeting of the Dem ocratic State Executive Committee to be held at Raleigh on the night of December 11th. A pension of $15 a month has been granted Mrs. Bagley, of Raleigh, mother of Ensign Worth Bagley, who was killed at Cardenas during the war with Spain. At Marion, Monday, Mamie, the 11-year-old daughter of Baxter Mc Kelvy was burned to death. Her clothing caught fire while she was standing in front of a stove. At Aberdeen, Saturday night, Vince Pope, colored, shot Janie Brown, also colored, with a pistol from the effect of which she died Sunday night. Pope is in jail. While attempting to follow its mother to a neighbor's, the 18-months-old child of Wiley Barringer, who lives iu Cabarrus county, fell into a creek and was drowned, Tues day. At University Station, Thursday morning, B. F. Long, Jr., of States ville, who was a student at the Uni versity at Chapel Hill, was run over by a train, receiving injuries which terminated in his death Thursday night. In a row over a woman at King's Mountain, Saturday night, a negro named Fewell shot and instantly killed another negro named Moore, Fewell fled but was chased by blood hounds, caught and is now in jail at Shelbv. On Saturday, ex-Sheriff Pritchard and Jacob Blalock, of Mitchell coun- t3r, attempted to arrest Hunneycut, the murderer of Greer Phillips. Hunneycut shot and killed Blalock, and Pritchard a moment later killed Hunneycut. The State Normal and Industrial College at Greensboro has closed until January 2, 1900, on account of a lever epidemic wnicn nas oeen prevalent among the students, caused by defective sewer pipes. Fifty-one cases and three deaths nave oeen reported. In the Superior court at Wilson, Saturday, Joe Jefferson, the slayer of Calvin Barnes, was granted a new trial, he having appealed from the judgment of the Criminal court. The Solicitor appealed from the de cision of the Superior court judge and the case goes now to the State Supreme court. While surveying the lands com prising the Anson State farm, Capt. N. A. Ramsay says he discovered in unlimited quantity an excellent grade of roofing slate. If this be true, and there is co reason to doubt it, it may be that the State has come into possession of a veritable bonan za, in the purchase of this farm. The Wilmington and Newbern pa pers say the oyster crop this season is very short. Dealers have ad vanced their price from 75 cents to $1 per bushel, with no guarantee to fill orders sent even at that figure. During the last month in Newbern oysters have sold at $1.50 per gallon, an unusual price for the ordinary oyster. At Clayton, Wednesday night, Jim Barbour, a blacksmith, while drunk shot Policeman Hol.and in the stomach. He had threatened to shoot the officer if he ever attempted to arrest him. When Barbour point ed the pistol at him Holland struck it down. Though shot in the stom ach Holland wrenched the pistol from Barbour, who fled while Hoi land shot at him. At last account Barbour was in custody and Holland resting easy. Baking Powder Made from pure cream of tartar. Safeguards the food against alum. Alum baking powders are the greatest mcaacm to health of the present day. ROVM. BAKIM Sowm CO.. WTW YOSX. Headache bad? Get Dr. Miles' Palo nils. Acts gently on the , Kidneys, Liver and Bowels CuaNses the System OVERCOMES 'm9 BUT THE GtNVIMt - MAHY O tY !AlTGeSYRVP(. roa bvau oraufcjrv reru. tot ntwnu. ISA SYSTEM BUILDER.GIYES APPETITE ft & CORRECTS THE LIVER. SfC TASTELESS 4 5413 Chill tonic is sold Strictly on its Merits. If is The best Chill Tonic at the smallest price. r'r voup monev refunded if ails to cure you. tp For sale wholesale and retail by The Goldsboro Drug Co. We have a book. prepared epeclally for you, whl:b. w mall rree. li ireais ui mo iinmiuh dinorders wormH. etc. that every child is liable to, aud for which prey s Vermifuge baa been successfully used for a half century. On bottle br mil for Be. VE. a S. f KLi, Baiuaurc, a. fPyny-Pectorall A QUICK CURE FOR $ COUGHS AND COLDS Very valuable Remedy in all affections of the 1 THROAT or LUNGS! Large Bottles, 25c. DAVIS & LAWRENCE CO., Limited, Prop's of PerrT ravis' Pain-Killer. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM CIhmm and toantifua the halt Pram luaraat growth. Kaver Tails to Bertore Gray Hair to lta Youthful Color. Can KaJp dup.m a hair taliiuf. Vk, aad S 1 uu at DrugglM 1 CHICHESTER'S EHOUSH ENIIYROYAL, PILLS SAFE. Al.a.orrlmM. Ladle. I'rurrl fcw CIIHIlMlMln .!.; 1. .!. ia UED -oll ctallie boll. rmiel with Mat ribtoa. Take ao at her. Rrfaaa DufttMi abtltatlaa mm4 lailla. Hmmrn, S.J ot joar brwcitm. urnix t Partlealarm. TeatlaMalaJa aad "Keller fr ldltm, Utlmr, tj r t.r M .11. 1 II.OOU Tallanah. Skl kr " I all UrilCUl IKBtaMT WMWW Maatfoa thU pair. Madlaaa 1'ark. riULA . OUR BUSINESS. The business of a druggist or apothe cary properly consists of the taking of the crude drug or chemical, and by the different processes, bring it to the proper state for administration to the sick. To do this requires both ability and con scientious work; neither alone will do without the other. We do not intend to be egotistical, but we do want to say this, that we be lieve we are perfectly equipjed with re spect to these two qualihcations, as well as to others, such as cleanliness, buying the best drugs, moderate prices, atten tion to customers, etc., etc. There fore we consider that we are well situa ted to accomplish all that could be ex pected of any first-class pharmacy. If we can serve you in any way, try us. We will endeaver to do all in our power to treat you fairly. THE OPERA HOUSE PHARMACY. JENKINS k FARRIES Propr's. Uuder Opera House. Goldsbiro, S. C. SEED WHEAT. For Southern Farmers. All the best and most Improved varieties, specially selected and trrowo for our Southern Boil and cUmate. Write for Price List and .Descriptive Kail Catalogue Klvin fu:l Infor mation about all seeds for Fall sowing. T.W. WOOD & SONS, SEEDSMEN, RICHMOND, VA. ROBERTS ii look ro rue I yf J NOMEceNuiNfr 0 SESbKLB without it mm m lj r v f