f i III? (f -r i . OLDSBORO EADL1GH ESTABLISHED 1887. GOLDSBORO, N. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1901. VOL. XIV. NO. 41. So many J have hair LI mat is n rn and dull, f J mm It won't r g r o w . f What'st f ft g i w the reason? Hair L J need s help just as L J inrtlliniT p!cn I , U.I; iwmg VIOV, UUtb U I rnntc f- r , quire feeding. When r hair stops growing it r loses M acts almost instantly on such hair. It awakens new life in the hair bulbs. The f j effect is astonishing. , lour nair grows, be t. comes thicker, and all 3 1 1-..CC : i I uaiiuiuu ib iuiiiuveu. M And the original f) color of early life is p j restored to faded or ijray hair. This is always the case. $1.00 a bottle. All druggists. I ha (1 Aver's Hair Vi.rr.t- I i.ui rt'allv astonished at Mm i' "1 it lias linne in keeping mv n.. ir I mm coming out. It is the I ii.inc 1 have trie.i, antl I !' "'iitir.ue to recommend it to II!) lll.'Ults." JlAxriE Holt, S ?t. -ii, ISO. liurlicgtou, N. C. If you do not ol-tain th benefits e of the ILsir In:. J. V. AXEK, Lowell, Mass. Best For The South. Wood's -SSs special refer TTt i enee to their I Him 111 adaptability to I III I I I E I 11 1 Southern A U.X. LLL 17 soil and climate tin. I give tlie rJUlJUD. everywhere. If your mer chant dues imt sell Wood's Seeds write for Special 1'rice-lir.t. Circular itrtni; prices ami infornta t:.n ab..it Turnip Seeds, Crimson Clover, Late Seed Potatoes, German Hillet, Buckwheat ami a:l .-seasonable .-.-is, niai.f.i un rt'.urst. T. W. WOOD & SONS, Seedsmen, - Richmond, Va. ooi.s FALL CATALOG t'E issued 1:1 August. T.-iis all about Crimson Clover, Winter Vetches, Rape, Rust Proof and Winter Oats, Seed Wheats, Grasses, and Clover 5eeds. Vegetable Seeds for Fall Planting. Hyacinths, I ulips, etc. t'alnu'ue mailed free. Write for it. Frey's Vermifuge .e.l ,,.- ,,f t!l.-m. K1'l til.' flt,.mH .-.-t nii. u-il ,,r.l,-r.-.l : pijihH worms; iu nut :r.-.. sm..,. B..ttl.' I,y mail -iV. E. A. S. FREY, Baltimore, IVid. is llit.'ri'9U l aii'l ulii know MARVEL VS hirlingUSray S;'.J The new s.ri,f 7 I IIJrC. I' 1 .-.i: n..t mi..ly Ihe ' I. hut stamp for il : - 1..I.-.1 I k-rnh''l.li i-'ivea I i: I I.. a.-.-.M mi UteZrUfCfl Scholarship POSITIONS GUARANTEED. Under $3,000 Cash DepoTt Ha.1 road Fare Fatd. Open all year to Botli Fex s. Vory Cheap Boar4. Georsla-Alabari.i KtisinoBS CoIiejfC, Macon. Oaorgi. BREAKFAST SUPPER. E P P S ' S GRATEFUL-COMFORTING. OOCOA BOILING WATER OR MILK. That M.ame TturU run bo rtiretl wltD It Miles' M.KV1; I'L.VSTEIL On -J 25c. a. 1 look's S 1 MBQINP I niTit i-fnsrnit att.-nti'in fro.n The fl I n..r T:..'ir want, are nmnefiuH, but that I I i.i. itai.i... -.in, uic. v, rretal.io r.-me.ly I Now! W V l: t:.e bottles with HIRES. I. rink it note. Every glass- lul contributes to good health, l'urifies the blood, clears the complexion, makes rosy checks. Make it ut home. . f CKi;on . Charles -a i-.T.tn. E. Hires i'u;.rs, jjf Company, wni. for J Malvern, t.i offer. ' 'Zj pa. I Rootbeer - rsf . averv voman 4S e.t-.M"St C..liveliiit. It I (euoats lu.taull,. H.,m)rk. - To-Day. lo-day, wliile the sun sliines, Work with a will: To-day all your duties With patience fulfill. 'J'o-dav love the mimilnosu That's better than pold. And the truth seek, whose value Can never be told. To-day hold the kindness That thinks evil never; He who kindly to-day is, Is kindly forever. Live to-day, in the U'auty Of earth, sky and sea; Tor beauty fails never To you or to me. To-day scatter brightness Wherever you go; (iladness conies with the giving; Waves grow as they tlow. To-day is the summit Of duty and life. The path of endeavor, The arena of strife. To-lay is ours only; Work, work while you may; There is no to-morrow; But only to-day. The Waste or Tublic Money. In an article on "The Waste of Public Money," published in the Saturday Evening Post, of Philadel phia, former President G rover Cleve land sounds a warning to the people against the dangers that lie in reck less extravagance in public expendi tures. AmoDg other things he says: "If the aggregate mass of our peo ple are at all blameworthy on ac count of the present advanced stage of public prodigality it is largely be cause they overlooked and tolerated its small beiinnintrs, when atall times they should have been vigilant and uncompromising. A self-ruling peo ple, responsible for every miscarri age of their government, should above all things constantly remem ber that nothing multiplies itself more abundantly than national ex travagance, and that neither an indi vidual nor a popular government can easily correct or check habits of waste. "While easygoing indifference and toleration produce bitter fruit, an infinitely more dangerous and threat- ing conditiou is presented by the fact that many of our citizens have passed beyond the stage of mere in difference and, by accepting the bribes of selfish and personal advant age which public waste and extrava gance offer, have been stimulated to find excuses for their existence. Thus is disclosed the manner in which fa miliarity with these pernicious agen cies, and especially participation in their spoils, dulls the popular con science and distorts the people's con ception of good citizenship. "Those elected by the people to public places are apt to subject themselves to any contagion among the people even to the surrender of individual conviction and the aban donment of individual conception of sworn duty. No elected officeholder cares to invite political martyrdom by refusing to obey the behests of the influential constituents, and con scientious scruples are overruled by the plea that a public servant must be obedient to the will of those he represents. "Another astounding occasion of public waste and extravagance has grown out of the abuse of our na tiou's tender regard for those who suffered in its defense. Through the efforts of unprincipled pension agents and attorneys a lavish administra tion of extremely liberal general pen sion laws has resulted in numerous undeserved allowances, and these have been largely increased by thou sands of pensions granted by special laws to those who have failed for want of merit under general statu tes. These beueficiaries have thus learned that earnest support of a party leader, or a pledge of partisan return for especial Congressional favor may be relied on as promising substitutes for pensionable disa bility. "The lessons of extravagance and paternalism must be unlearned; econ omy and frugality must be reinstated; and the people must exact from their representatives a watchful care for the general welfare and a stern re sistance to the demands of selfish in terests if our government is to be an enduring and beneficient protection to a patriotic and virtuous people." A Business Directory. There is no danger that a business announcement will fail to attract at tention because it appears in a news paper which contains a great deal of advertising. On the contrary, peo ple look for information to the news paper which is used by many busi ness men. The value of every ad vertisement in The Headlight is greater because of the number of advertisers. The Headlight's ad vertising columns are regarded by the people as a business directory. Be sure you are right, and then you won't get left. A Good Coujrh Medicine. It speaks well for Chamberlain's Cough Remedy when druggists use it in their mvn families in nreference to ailV Other. ..i i,... o c.l.l ( .-.i.il.f.i l .in's ( 'ouirh Rem edy for the past live years with complete satisfaction to myself and customers," says Druggist J. Goldsmith, Van Etten, X. Y "I have always used it iu my own family both for ordinary coughs and colds and for the cough following l;l grippe, and tind it very etricacious." Sold by M. E. Robinson & Hro., J. F. Miller's Drug Store, (loklsboro; J. R. Smith. Mt. Olive. , LABOR'S LOXU WAR. Arp Wants to Know When the Conflict Will Come to an End. L-abor and Capital. When will the long protracted struggle cease Away back in history there was a war that lasted thirty years, but this war has lasted longer than that and seems to grow more bitter as the years roll on. In the good old times it did not affect the south, but like a pestilence it spreads and there seems to be no remedy. All of the women most all of the men, outside of the capitalists have heretofore sympathized with the toilers in their demands for less work and better pay.- They have bitterly denounced the heartless managers who would wear out the life of a child before it gets grown who would keep them caged in factories from early morn till lamplight, with not an hour for recreation. No May day, no play day, no ball game, nor marbles, nor fishing, nor frolic of any kind for the boys; no hunting wild flowers or blackberries for the girls, no youth ful pleasures, no recess, no Satur day; but from year to year it's ' Work work work, in the dull De cember light, And work work work, when the wea ther is warm and bright." How sad it is to see them toil as if in a treadmill, and to hear them sigh as they glance from the windows of their daily prison, and with longing eyes, whisper, 'Oh! but to breathe the breath of the woods and llowers sweet. With the sky above my head and the grass beneath my feet." And this is sad, pathetic, and but for heartless legislation and legisla tors, would have long siuce been remedied. It is the good side of hu man nature that arouses sympathy for the poor, and Leigh Hunt never wrote a sweeter line than that of Abou Ben Adhem's plea for entrance into Paradise : "Write me as one who loves his fellow man." In ruminating about the wants of the poor I have often thought that the greatest want and the best boon to a toiler was a home. Home one of the sweetest words in any lan guage. Its best definition is in the heart, for language fails to express it. Indeed there are some languages that have no word for it no syno nym. The French has none and substitutes only an abode ordwelling place. The best definition is found in the old Sanskrit, the sacred dialect of the Hindoos and Persians. The word is Kshema, and means a permanent place of rest and se curity. Would that all the poor, all the toilers, all the women and chil dren in the land had that a perma nent abode a place of rest and se curity. No landlord to call for rents no expiring lease, no uncertain ti tle; but a home where the good wife can plant her own vines and adorn her own yard with flowers and feel thrvt they are hers and her children's. Why didn't Mr. Carnegie think of this and give homes to the poor, in stead of books. Fifty millions of dollars would have given comforta ble homes to one hundred thousand poor families and given a perma nent place of rest and security to at least half a million of the toilers. The time was when a Methodist preacher was not entitled to a home no more than a Roman Catholic priest was to a wife. He must abide for a year iu any house that was cheap and vacant. He must be the exemplar of humanity and unselfish ness, for they said that the Savior was born in a manger and his softest bed was hay. But there is some more scripture that demands the best of everything for the priest hood, and that says : "Touch not My anointed, and do prophets no harm." A better civilization now provides a good comfortable parsonage in al most every town and village and I am glad of it, .not so much for sym pathy for the preacher, but for his good, long suffering and patient wife and her growing children. Wo man loves her home and loves to adorn it with fruits and flowers. When the Methodists get strong enough to build a parsonage they should not stop at the finishing of the house, but have a permanent committee of ladies to plant vines and roses and make gravel walks, and establish a garden with such things that do not pass away and perish with the year. Plant fruit trees, make an asparagus bed and don't forget the strawberries and raspberries, and here and there plant some of the old time garden herbs, such as sage and balm and parsley and calamus for a sweet breath and mint for the children's colic. Fix the place up for a home and when the good wife leaves it, of course, she will leave it clean and leave it with regret, and her succes sor will be happy and talk about her to the neighbors. If I was a bishop I would allude to this at the general conference, and lay much stress on what John Wesley said, that "Clean liness was next to Godliness." That is not in the Bible, but might have been and done no barm. Yes, the kindhearted people have generally been sympathizing with the strikers, but the case at Dayton, O., has discouraged them. We see that Mr. Patterson died suddenly this week. He was only sixty-nine years old and the opinion is that his grief and mortification over the great strike caused his death. A nobler rich man never lived or died. He was the president of the National Cash Register Company, that em ployed 2,300 men and women. For seven years he has sought to make his extensive works a model for all the manufacturers of the world and a workman's paradise. From time to time he has reduced the hours of work and increased the com pensation. The cottages for his peo ple were models for comfort good gardens, nice flowers a skilled man sent free to show them how to plant and grow flowers, a free library of well selected books, hospitals for the sick, good nurses, good beds, all free and no lost time charged against them; bath rooms with hot and cold water and time given to bathe; clean towels and soap. For. the women and girls he had toilet rooms and bathrooms and brushes and combs and even curling tongs provided; so fas and cots to recliue on and books to read. Everything was made as much like home as a loving mother would have provided. Half of every Saturday was theirs. Mr. Patterson was happy. He believed he had solved the problem of capital and la bor. But about Jhree years ago a labor union was formed and its committee began to hunt devilment. Not long ago they discovered that the 2,000 towels that were furnished the bath rooms free were washed every week by some poor woman w ho did not be long to the union and they demanded of Mr. Patterson that he have his washing done by union folks. He refused and the committee ordered a strike. Then he declared that his men were not charged for the baths nor the towels nor the soap, and he would stop the whole business, which he did. Next they ordered the dis charge of his superintendent because he was not a union man. This was refused and they struck again. They also ordered that two union men who had been discharged for bad work should be restored. He restored them and paid them regularly $15 a week for each, but gave them no work, saying that they were not competent, but he would pay them. And so they hunted around for other things and finally ordered a big strike, and it has been on for weeks and no settlement. Up to date the loss to workmen in watres amounts to J 120, 000 and aU these poor fami lies are in distress and would ro back if the union committee would let them. It was at Dayton where a few months ago the union crowd pursued some non-union men and knocked them down and hammered their fin gers to a jelly with stones, so that they could not work any more. Mr. Patterson's work have been visited by progressive men from all coun tries, who wanted to see how he managed that great business without any clash between his capital and their labor, and now they sa, "I told you so. 1 knew it would not last!'' It made me right sick to read about it, for it is much worse than I have told it. Is our sympathy for the poor all wasted? No no! It is those contemptible leaders who got on the committee and wanted to make a big fuss out of nothing. With the great combination trusts on one side and the union strikers on the other side, we, the unproductive middle class, who make our living by our wits, are in a bad fix. But thank the good Lord we still have meat and bread and strawberries at our house. lull Arp in Atluutu Constitution. Pointed Paragraphs. It's a poor flower that never has a scent. Love in a cottage isn't all cottage pudding. A laugh on the face is worth two in the sleeve. Family jars are not all to be found iu the pantry. Even a calendar is no good unless it's up to date. The Sheriff can't bo judged by the company he keeps. The fellow who cats with his knife deserves to be cut. Asthmatic people make hay fever while the sun shines. We get the professional beggar with a touch of winter. The quickest way to convince a man is to agree with him. The lazy man firmly believes that half a loaf is better than none. The rooster is a tidy bird. He al ways carries a comb with him. Mr. W. S. Whedon, Cashier of the First National Bank of Winterset, Iowa, in a recent letter gives some experience with a carpenter iu his employ, that will be of value to other mechanics. He says: "1 had a carpenter working for me w ho was obliged to stop work for several days on account of being trou bled with diarrhoea. I mentioned to him that I had been similarly troubled and that Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy had cured me. He bought a bottle of it from the tints gist here and informed me that oo dose cured him, and he is again at bi work." For sale by M. E. Robiusoa A Kro., J. F. Miller's Drug Store, GoWs boro; J. K. Smith. Mt. Olive. AT HOME AM) ABROAD. The News From Everywhere (fathered and Condensed. Lightning killed three men at Scott Lake, Mich., Monday night. Secretary Gage bought $G5,950 worth of short term bonds Saturday. The battleship Wisconsin is ex pected to better the record of the Il linois. Julian Phelps, United States Con sul at Crefeld, Germany, has re signed. A foot of suow fell night before last around Leadville and Cripple Creek, Col. The National City Bank of New York will ship $300,000 in gold to Europe Monday. The paper mills strike at Holyoke, Mass., was declared off Monday, the strikers winning, The art gallery at the Pan-Ameri can Exposition in Buffalo, N. Y., was opened Friday. The largest cold storage plant in the country will be built by the Swifts at Detroit, Mich. Arbitration on June 24 is expected to settle wage troubles among iron moulders at Chicago, 111. Bishop Edsall, of North Dakota, will accept the nomination as Bish op Coadjutor of Minnesota. On a perjury charge, James Calla han, suspected of complicity in the Cudohy kidnaping, has been held for trial. Sitting on his son's doorstep, Cal vin S. Bushnell, aged 50, was found dead at Fishkill Landing, N. Y., Tuesday, Chairman Hanna named J. Blod gett, of Grand Rapids, Mich., as member of the Republican National Committee from that State. The State Department has issued a warrant for the surrender to En gland of Charles W. Inman, wanted wanted in Loudon for larceny. An injunction to restrain striking machinists from picketing the plant has been asked by the Punch & Shears Company, of Cleveland, O. A horribly mutilated woman's body was found at Jacksonville, Fla., Monday, the murderer, supposed to be William Munden, being at large. The Mississippi Good Roads As sociation has been organized and the Legislature will be memorialized to compel counties to adopt the con tract system. The corrected time of the new bat tleship Illinois, making allowance for tidal variations, is 17,43, or slightly better than the unofficial time first given. The Huntley Oil and Refining Company with a capital stock of $2,500,000; chartered at Houston, Texas. It is to prospect in twenty five Texas counties for oil. At a picnic at Henderson, Ky., Friday, the mother of Hugh, Ches ter and Mintan McAhar, aged 15, 13 and 10 years respectively, saw her boys drown while bathing. J. S. Fowler, tried in Andersou, S. C, for false imprisonment and assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature, in connection with the slavery cases, was acquit ted. Repairs to the battleship Oregon, rendered necessary by the damage sustained when she was wrecked in the Gulf of Pechili, will require about six months on the dry dock and cost fully $250,000. Rudley R. Walke, a grandson of the late Rear Admiral Walke, com mitted suicide by inhaling gas at his boarding place in Brooklyn. Busi ness reverses are thought to have caused him to take his own life. The Secretary of the Navy has ap proved plans for a chapel at the Na val Academy to cost $400,000. The building will have the dimensions of a cathedral and will be in keeping with the other fine buildings now under construction there. E. D. Strong, of Texarkana, Tex as, has given his 7-year-old son upas a victim to kidnappers. The boy was put on a railroad train at Waco on June 1st, to be sent home, a dis tance of 250 miles. Parents and friends have not heard from him since. Foreign Affairs. Queen Regent Maria Christina opened the Spanish Cortes. The French Senate began the de bate on the Law of Associations. President Kruger says he is net takiug part in any peace negotia tions. Prince Volkonky was dismissed from his position as Censor of Thea tres at St. Petersburg. The foreign Ministers at Pekin op pose the American plan of arbitrat ting questions pending with China. In organizing the Philippine Courts the judges are not to be sworn to uphold the United States Constitution. Admiral Sir Edward II Seymour, in a speech at Shanghai, said that Great Britain would have to reckon some day with Germany's oavai power. Financial and Commercial. Special Correspondence. New York, June 18, 1901 Increased activity in the retail distribution of seasonable merchan dise and a decided improvement in crop conditions throughout the country have been features of the business situation during the past week, In the industrial field labor troubles have caused some slacken ing of activity in a few departments, but there has been no serious inter ruption of work in important bran ches. jThe possibility of extending la bor strikes is, however, a cause of uneasiness in some industries, l lie improvement noted a week ago in the textile trade has been main tained, and the situation in this branch of manufacturing is grad ually shaping for complete recovery from recent depression. The build ing and allied trades are active. The wheat harvest has begun in the Southwest, and will become general during the next fortnight. With good weather until after the harvest the wheat yield will probably exceed all previous records, and the acre age and condition returns with ref erence to corn, cotton and other crops foreshadow very satisfactory results of the agricultural season in all parts of the country. Business failures during the past week, ac cording to R. G. Dun and Company, numbered 179 in the United States and 23 in Canada, against 1J2 in this country and 21 in Canada during the corresponding week last year. Cotton prices have declined and recovered J of a cent per pound as a result of speculation and variable crop advices, but the crop situation as a whole has improved, and there is very little activity iu the trade. Manchester advices have been more encouraging, and there has been fair buying for export; but domestic spinners have continued to operate conservatively for actual wants. The cotton goods trade is still un satisfactory, but it shows improve ment as contrasted with recent con ditions. The export demand has led to advances of J to J of a cent per yard in some makes of brown goods. While home trade cottons have not changed in price, there is a steadier feeling all along the line, and the announcement has been made that the anticipated reductions in prices of bleached goods will not take place. Domestic buyers are show ing more interest, although their op erations are still generally in mode rate sized lots. The wool trade is very quiet. Manufacturers appear to be in no urgent need of fresh sup plies, and are awaiting a concentra tion of larger stocks of new wool in the seaboard markets. Interior prices are firm, and in many cases above the parity with ruling quotations in the Eastern distributing centres. The woolen goods trade shows fur ther improvement, and prices of some of the more staple lines, the production of which is well sold ahead, have been advanced 5 per cent.; but the general range of val ues is unchanged. The situation and outlook, however, are more encour aging to manufacturers than at any previous time this season. The Bankruptcy Law. Washington, June 17. The semi annual reports of the operation of the Bankruptcy law for the period ended March 31, 1901, has been sub mitted to the Attorney-General by E. C. Brandenburg, in charge of bankruptcy matters in the Depart ment of Justice. It shows that during the period 9,510 voluntary petitions were filed, as against 8,000 for the preceding six months, 12,120 for the six months ended March 31, 1900; 10,124 for the six motuns enciea oepiemoer ou, 1899, and 9,052 for the six months ended March 31, 1S99. The report shows that a large per centage of those taking advantage of the voluntary feature of the law are old insolvents seeking this means of resusciating themselves in the business world. Her Hat Ablaze in Church. New York, June 17. While the Rev. Francis Xavier Pauletige of the Church of the Annunciation in Wil liamsburg was delivering the bene diction at the close of yesterday's vesper service a young woman sit ting in a front pew leaned too far forward and her hat caught fire from a candle. Somebody shouted Are. There were a thousand persons, most of them young women, in the church, and there was a wild scramble for the doors. The pastor kept on with bis benediction while his assistant, the Rev. Father Hahn, seized the burning hat from the girl's head and threw it on the floor before any barm was done. Two missionary priests walked down the aisles and soon re stored order. Cotton Gins For Greece. The Georgia agricultural works at Fort Yalley has just shipped to far away Greece a complete ginning out fit, consisting of a CO-saw Centennial cotton gin, feeder and condenser. This is but the first installment of several gin outfits to be shipped to ireeee and other foreign countries OVER THE STATE. of Current Events Tor the I'ast Seven Days. Sanfoiu, Moore county, has voted $15,000 of bonds for water works. The Scotch-Irish Society of Amer ica will hold its annual meeting in Charlotte next May The Supreme Court awards a new trial In the case of J. A. Perry, ad ministrator of Pink Perry, against the Western North Carolina Railroad Company. In this case the plaintiff got judgment for $7,0fM damages in the Superior Court. The little five year-old-son of Mr. Washington Torrell, at Haw River Monday afternoon was playing with matches, it is learned, and set his clothes on fire. His clothes were burned entirely off and after three hours agonizing pain the child died. In the list of appointments in the army by the President, reported iu the Washington Post of June 7th, we see the names of Francis II. Camer on, Jr., and Oliver H. Dockery, Jr. The former gets a cavalry and the latter an infantry appointment each as first lieutenant. Mr. Moore Parker, of Raleigh, graduated from the famous textile school at Lowell, Mass", a few days ago, and was awarded the only me dal offered by the New England Tex:le Association. The medal was for the best work done in the cotton mills in the past three years. The 11 year old daughter of Mr. John Boyles, whose home is four miles out, in Davidson county, while lifting a cooking utensil from a stove Saturday morning had her apron to catch afire and before assistance came was so badly burned lhat she died that night from the effects. Rev. Frank Royal, who was for three years supported by the Frank Royal Society of the First Baptist church of Reidsville, N. C, as a mis sionary to China, has professed a be lief in the faith cure doctrine and was baptized in Chicago the other day by Dowie, the crank, with his face downward. Dr. Thos. W. Lingle, a native of Rowan county, who took such high rank in scholarship during his colle giate career and has since taken high rank in the world of letters, has de cided to go to Brazil. He has re ceived a very flattering proposition to go to that country and occupy a chair in a leading institution oflearn- ing. At Rocky Mount Saturday morn ing at b:30 o clock, twenty-six car rier pigeons belonging to Edward Hetrick, of Harrisburg, Pa., were liberated in front of Hotel Woodard They resumed a uorth wester ly course as soon as liberated. It is said that there was a $1,000 bet that a certain one of the homers would arrive Harrisburg first. On Tuesday, Mr. M. A. Proflitt, lineman for the Western Union Tel egraph Company, noticed his little child picking continuously at its nose. He looked in the little one's nose but could see nothing and decided to take it to his family phy sician. The doctor made an exami nation, with the result that he re moved a screw an inch long. It had been in the child's nose so long that it had rusted The gold miners who have been operating a hydraulic plant in the Catawba river have made the discov cry that the black sand in the bed of the river is rich with gold. An assay of a quantity of this sand recently made shows a yield of $320 per ton. This is an extraordinary rich yield, and if all the sand in the company's workings hold up to it the result will be a veritable bonanza. Old gold miners have always claimed that there is eold in the sand of the streams in the Charlotte section, and back in the fifties the sand was work ed with good results by the primitive system of panning. Supreme Court Rules Amended. The rules of the State Supreme Court have been amended by strik ing out the word "twelfth" wher ever it occurs and inserting the word "sixteenth," and also providing that the fall term shall begin the fourth Mondav in Ausrust. (adding four weeks to the term) so as to conform to the new act increasing the num ber of superior court districts. Rules 5 and C are so amended as to require that transcripts on appeals shall be docketed seven days before the call of the district to which they belong otherwise the appellant will be sub iect to a motion to dismiss. Rule 12 is amended by requiring a copy of the brief when printed to be de livered to the opposite counsel at least twenty-four hours before the case is called for argument, and co pies of transcrips must be sent each member of the court at least twenty four hours before the case is called for argument. The Supreme Court decides in a 6 team boat case from Beaufort that this state can tax a prorata part of the capital stock of all companies doing business in several states in cluding this state, not restricted to the tangible property here but meas ured by the proportion of the busi ness done in North Carolina. A! A Suinnu How In Avoid Malaria. The State Agricultural Depart ment gives out the following : A careful and observing citizen of the state says: "It is settled by the medical faculty that malaria is com municated by mosquito bites. It is reasonably well settled by expe rience that if the castor oil bean is planted near a house or its leaves placed in a room that mosquitoes will disappear. It will be a cheap and probably a pleasant experiment if those living in malarial .sections will plant a few castor beans. They can be had of any seed house and are besides a great improver of the soil. The agricultural department will be glad to hear reports or re sults of such experiments. Scrofula Few are entirely free from it. It may develop so slowly as to canse little if any disturbance during the whole period of childhood. It may then produce irrcirularitv of th Stomach and bowels, dyspepsia, catarrh. and marked tendency to consumption before manifestina itself in much cutaneous eruption or glandular sti-cllins. It is best to be sure that you are quite free from it, and fur its complete eradica tion you can rely on Hood's Sarsaparilla The best of all medicines for all humors. REAL ESTATE BULLETIN! FOR SALE During the next 30 days: 28 acres very valu able land, lying East of City, and in Goldsboro Township. Desirably located, only ten min utes drive from Post Office. PRICK 81(500. Terms Reasonable. HUMPHREY-GIBSON GO, Goldsboro, N. C. Opposite Hotel Kennon. BICYCLE - BARGAINS. You Will Save Money by buying your bicycle of me. I keep the largest and liest selected stock in the city. Barnes' White Flyer Chainless, Is a !eatity. I also sell the Eagle, Co lumbia, Reading. Monarch, Racycle and other well-known makes. The Racycle is warranted to 1h the easiest running wheel in the world, otherwise the manu facturers will pay you $1,0), deposited in a bank. New And Strong Wheels Made by the American Bicycle Co., all standard goods, ranging in price from $17.50. ., $l'.", $10, $t" ami $(). You can buy a cheaper wheel but nothing like the makes I sell. The I test is always the cheapest. B'rcycle.iepairing and supplies, guns and revolvers for sale. OLD WHEELS BOUGHT AND SOLD. Powder, shot and gnn shells, (ieneral jobbing done with neatness and dis patch. ;!d. silver and nickel plating, (iun locks, trunk locks and keys all kinds a secialty. T. H. STANTON, Goldslooro, 1ST. O. VIRGINIA COLLEGE For YOr.Ni; LADIES, Roanoke, Va. Owns S j.t. 21st. 1HII. thieof the lemdinigScliuuls fur Younx Iji.lie in the South. New buil.linirs. f.iunos ami equipment. Campus ten acres. IVrand mountain scenery in Valley of Va.. famed for health. Kunipean and American teachers. Full course. O.nMfrvatory advantages in Art. Music and Klocution . Students from Uiirty States. Kor catalogue addresa MATT1E 1". HARMS. President. Itoanoke, Va. b, I PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM 5J Clww and bMotirw tb halt PruntAM a luxuriant growth. JJ never Vaila to Hestore Oray vtfgsf Hair to Iu Youttiful Color. s ' I Cure Km.? d.rmi at hair taUioc. Kj. Oc,pdl Wat DniEgiWJ ftm CHICHTSTER'S ENGLISH Penhyroyal pills MUwk " CH1CHESTEK S KNGL1SII f wHh bl.ribbftn. Take other. Kefaae Duirrtm f alMtllatloaa aaa latlto- tmmf tar I'amralara, IMIwww ui Keller rr Uttmr It r- mrm Hall. 1 o.wM Tuoe.l.. S4 by 21 Drutguu. f aiea ester C'a.iloal I aellM I'uk, fUlLl. f A. x COMPOUND. A recent discovery by an oil physician. SucccsshUh uttA morUAlg by Utouadl of 1 vwii.tkiA tnedlclna diaeov- ered. beware of unprincipled druKetet who offer Inferior medicine In place of tula. Ak for Cook a Cottoj Hoot Coapoes D. take -o tubl . ( or I nckwe 1 an 4 0 cent In postage In letter, and we will end. ae'd. by return maiL l ull aealed particular In plain envelope, to ladlea only. jtaoipa, Andres Pond Lily Company. N'. S 1 isiicr tiiock. LfetxuK. alUkv wtoartilr ttiei Pleaswre or a. Irlv. A finecarriaedoiitjesthepleasiireof drlr Ins. Intending buyer f carriages or littf ness can save dollars by sending fr th large, free catalogue of the Elkhart Carriage mad Harness Mfg. Co- Elkhart. Ind. Edarnt Tour Itowel With Cascareta. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever I0c.35c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists r-fuod moue&