Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / Jan. 11, 1886, edition 1 / Page 8
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' " " ."-"'1 ' ' " T-. "'. ' 4 - '' 1 . , . . -1 THE GOLDSBOBO MESSENGER, JANTJARY: 1 X, 1886.--DOTJBL At f -- STATE NEWS. V '- ) v The Week's Gleanings from Our , Exchanges , J items of Interest tie State Over . I At Wilmington Tuesday, niht, Julius Muller's store was partially burned. , ; -U V ' Preacher Hammer, of Randolph county, who, about the middle of elop with a married woman of Randolph county and fled to! Arkansas is reported to hav hw arrested at Little Rockland will be brought to the State upon a requisi tion. ',). Of the twelve convicts who escaped fromTthe stockade ou the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley road, in f Stokes county, only four are said to hve I been recaptured. MosFuf the other? came from the eastern counties, aud have5 ere this returned to their old homed, it is supposed. The Catawba river is in a freshet and one county bridge has been swept away in Lincoln. The Charlotte 'Ob server -sas: This is the." highest rise 8 known in the Catawba for the past ten , years. The water yesterday reached to within a. few inches ot the top of the stone piers upon which the fine iron bridge of the Carolina Cen tral Railroad Company is erected. The water is far beyond the banks and "the vfTllev of Uhe Catawba , looks .like a vast inlany lake. iN wbern Joernal: Mr. P. H. Kor negay, an enterprising and energet ic young man of Kenansville, Duplin county, is in the city taking steps to erect a tannery. .fHe expects to 0e ready for work in, about three weeks, making leather Bv the Tucker pro cess. This will create, a demand for t'i- hide. m H ttu. action that are no w shipped North. We welcome Mr. Koruegay aud hope he will be able io make, as we are sure h will, the tan ning business profitable, and will n Newborn a most pleasant piace toiive. ' ' ' . " Suow Hill Enterprise: We are hap py to ehroniclejthe fact that A.r R. - Morgan has leased the LaGrange Col fleiiate' Institute property for a term lor years. Mr. S. 'H. Lfarigley, of Pitt bounty, committed suicide by taking morphia on the 24th of last month, Mr. Langley stood very high in fitt for quite a number of years, anil accumulated a good deal of prop erty; but latterly he has been worship pmir too freely at the tempting shrine of Ba -chus; his- property in conse quence has been gradually4 slipping from his hands. ;K - Rockingham Rockvtv A colored wo man, .near CapePs, Mills in this county, had her hand badly torn from tb& explosion of a gun on, Christmas moruing.- We were shown by Mr. W A . Graham the- charge drawn from the eun which John Lee had THE COTTON SEED QTTES- ; . - TION. . . . Mr. Edward Atkinson icf Boston once said that "if cotton would grow as well in the Noxth as it does in. the South , that they could afford to raise it for the seed alone. - When , I- first heard this I supposed it all buneomb, but from late tests of the value of cot ton seed as feed stuff, both in the South and Canada, I am satisfied he is correct. Prof. John A. Myers, in Ms address before the Cotton Planters' Association, at Vicksburg, November, 1S83, said: "When corn was worth $1.11 pVr hundred pounds, cottonseed meal was worth $2.32, and cotton seed $2.08 per hundred pounds." At this rate, a ton or seeu is worm as iceuiui stock $41. tiO, and a ton of cotton seed me. 1 only $10 40. Next, analysis and actual experi ments have shown that a ton of cotton seed is worth as much for5 manure as a ton of commercial manures that is spld at $45 per torfj and many thou sand tons are sold in the cotton States at this price, and I doubt if all the seed that could be spared from feeding could supply the wants of the planter if no commercial manure were put on the market. - An experiment made at the A. and M. College in feeding cot ton toattle showed that flesh could be put uikTcattle, even in mid-winter, for iess than two cents per pound. By this. means, if fed to cattle on the plantation, they will pay $35 to $70 per ton. In my country not a ton is sold to mills; all are bought by the cattle men, and they have paid this winter and iall $7 per ton at the gin and some are hauled fifteen miles to the cattle ranches. While I do not know now long the hulled seed, with the oil in them, could be fed to mules without hurt, I do know of a inan who fed a pair of fancy h jrses on them for three months, and ttfey -did well and Had a nice coat of hair. Vicksburg Jovrnal. TOBACCO BY AS AFFECTED SOILS. No plant, says the Western Tobacco Journal, is more sensitive to an excess of water in the soil than tobacco. The presence of standing water either on the su-faee or on the subsoil, isfposi onous to the plant, include disease and decay. A well drained soil, there fore; is of first importance to the to bacco grower. t The physical character of the soil makes a marked difference in the char acter of the product, With soil of the same chemical constitution the one most highly pulverized will grow the longest and make the finest product. A . J ! 11 ' t sanay son win produce a por porous, thm, light colored article delicate in its tissue, but coarse as to fibre. A heavy clay soil gives greater thickness to a leaf than a sandv soil witn more gum and oil m its tissues M:iscelIanoa8. ' ;v ' ''- -:0:-- - . ' ' A 5rwpHf r pnppninw the Principle mt a Democratic AdmlnUtratloa WIU I AM DORS H El MERt EDITOR AND PROPBIETOR. Dai:?, ton flay anil eekly. Editions. THK WKKKI.y -tTAK. A Sixte-Piie NewPaprr fasucd every Wednesday. The ablest, brighest and most interesting weekly published. The latest news down to the hour of going to press. Original stories by distinguished American and foreign writers of Action. Humor, Poetry, Markc , Financial, Agricul tural aud Household Departments, all under the directien or trained journalists, the ablest in their respective department. IU sixteen pages will be found crowed with good things from beginning to end. The Daily Star. Thfi DATTT Star nnntaina oil nnra v-w..Mut WM.M. UUV AlTTO JA. the day m an attractive form. Its special cor- icspuuueucc uyuaoie irom ionaon, 1'aris, Berlin. Vienna and rnhli feature. . At Washinirtnn. Alhnnr and nth oi nova nan. tees, the ablest correspondents, specially re- wuuwi uj x mjs oxak, iurnisnea tne latest news uy special wire 10 lew x orK. Its literarv 'ffiatnrfta dtp nnanrrxmocil The Financial and Market Reviews are un- usaiiy iuii ana complete. Terms of the Daily Star to Sitrsortbers free of Postage in the United States and Can ada, outside the limits of New York City: Every day in the year (including Sunday) $7 00 Daily, without Sunday, one year. 6.00 Every day, six months, 3.50 Daily, without Sunday, six months 3.00 Terms of the Weekly Star to Subscribers. Per rear $ 1.25 Clubs of Ten 10.00 Clubs of Fifteen (and 1 extra to organizer 15.00 Address HK -I R 2e and 28 North William StT, New York jan4-tf Ear 1886. p e r's Bazar ILLUSTRATED. Harper's Bazar is the only paper in the world that combines the choicest literature and the finest art illustrations with the latest fashions and methods of household adorn ment. Its weekly illustrations and descrip tions of the newest Pans and New York styles, with its useful pattern-sheet supplements and cut patterns, by enabling ladies to be their own dressmakers, save many times the cost of suDsonption. its papers on cooking, the man agement of servants, and housekeeping in its various details are eminently practical. Much attention is given to the interesting topic of social etiquette, and its illustrations of art needle-work re acknowledged to be un equalled. Its literary merit is of the highest excellence, and the unique charaoter of its humorous pictures has won for it the name of the American launch. 'a Pew And Christmas ; Is Upon Us H ob o day- : Saf s If 101 IffiiFIK! K I -T 1 I I V'lS SSI ' Don't Fail to Call and Examine our Immense Stock for the 11 raoe OUR iTORE IS HEADQUARTERS FOi T-l HOLIDAYS ! " . f J YOU can.get anything you want for CHRISTMAS, such as Fne Candies, (both. French and nPlain' Goods), Fine Chocolates, Bon Bons, Fancy Creams, &c; Nuts, Raisins, Figs, Flori a Oranges, Pine Apples, Bananas, Graphs, Apples; French Mied Cndy4n 1 and 5 pound boxes suitable tor the Holidays. 7$ TO 100 DIFrEpEWT KINDS Of ClWnV, A LARGE STOCK OF Cigars, Tobacco, Snuff, i : Pipes, Matches, Paper Bags, Cakes, Crackers, Raisins, Nuts, Fruits, &c, &c, -W3E3: 9 COUNTRY MERCHANTS Will do well to call and see us as our Stock is complete in every particular. We are receiving, every day, Large Quantities of Apples and Oranges, which we offer at Baltimore and Sew York Prices ! SUCH BARGAINS WERE NEVER BEFORE OFFERED! COME AND SEE AND BE CONVINCED ! ! Hcasj SaTed is lfnsj Haie! And tie waj to fw Scasj is i Buy foods lev. Don't forget our Old Stand, where we havo been for years, Corner under the Gregory House and Walnut Street. . . - decU4f V.. " OOLDSBORO, K. C As we propose tore tire from the Clothing Business entirely and confine ourselyes strict . - ly to the sale of DRY GOODS and BOOTS aii SHOES; and articles pertaining to these lines we will offer our i Entire Stock of Men's, Boy's and Youth's Clothing At mm iifaetep'g Oot whlen captured by deputy sheriff Pat-: t V h gT tG 6 f Stli'ry n ST 1 ZTL VTh hi. i.itfl of111?r fibres- Nor is it so liable to helc tiisnn. The chare cons-isted or 11 buckshot and 73 duckshot. Anoth- f er instalment 6t the colored popula tion embarked for the far Wmt from our depot on Saturday night last. The 'Crowd, all sizes and . both sexes, numbered GO or 70 there beini bQut 40 tickets sold. There seemed to be no agent in charge here. The ' Clinton Caucasian tells a roman tic story of the meeting between Rev. H. S. bpivey, now ot balina, Kan sas. Thev parted at Goldsboro in 18C(U the son going into the Confed erate army. Afterwards he rose to . the ranK, pt colonel. Alter tne war he iwent tcLthe Northwest. His father thought him dead. In 1872 he wrote his father- T he-letter was mispla,ced andj wasnot found until, recently, when Col. Spiyey's mother (who has si nee died) found the letter in a box Of old papers. A correspondence en sued and Sunday Col. Spiyey andhis daughter arrived at Clinton. There wits gruat joy at the meeting'. Wilmington Star of Saturday says: Jlrs. N. P. White, who was so badly burned on the 5th mst., at , her resi dence about six miles from Wiloiiug- willin all probability die, from injuries she received. The death er little son is also teared, as it is ueht he inhaled the flames.. The it seems, wa built in a corn e-i by he children, and when the flames sprang up they were cut off by them from ihe door. In endeavoring - p -v-e, the children Mrs. White fell to reavw, . he door-way, and into the fire ne 1V" out of I arid the child were pu- VniilrltncT hv her dauarhter: but not to th of th fin she the field fire. Light colored soils, whether sandy or clayey, yields a product that wil rcure to lighter colors than a dark, col ored soil. x Alluvial soils, as a general rule, pro duce a large leaf in size, but bony, coarse and jharsh. Limely soils or those derived from the crumbling down of limestone rocks yield a product large, leafy , thin, but highly porous, smooth and fine, with a verVsmall amount of erummv mai ter. New land makes a product that ripens rapidly, and when cured is lighter in color than it would be if grown upon old land ot the same character. A Bonanza, Mine of health is I to be found m Dr. R. V. rierce'B "favorite Prescription," to the: merits of whjch, as a remedy for female weakness and kindred affections, thou tanas leetity; -f The finest Tobaccc in the city; Snuff of all kinds at Griffin Bros. and t A. large and beautiful line of Children's Uarnagesjuat received at T k FijchtlkR'& Kkbk's A full and! beautiful line of Colors in EmbroidrySilks, Spool Silk and Twist, T at Mrs. E. Moore's. IMF ST SSXjJLj I have the Largest and Neatest Assortment of Toys and Holiday Goods befbre nearly every particle of cloth- ind on her person was burned on. T?o10;Ui Nem-Obsever: There are now reported to be 43,000 volumes be-1 ever offered in this City My eeleotion ot FINE CADJE?, Fruits, Nuts. &c. for the Holiday trs" i inQuali'" ' . cauuu, ue excelled mt i itc x wave marKea mem so IlARiiR'S fiiUIODIOALS. Per Yeur. HAKPER S BAZAR $4 00 HARPER'S MAGAZINE.. 4 00 HARPER'S WEEKLY 4 00 HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE. 2 00 HAKFKK'S FRANKLIN SQUARE LI- . BRARY, One Year (53 Numbers) .... 10 00 Postage free to all subscriber in the United btates or Canada. The volumes of the Bazar begin with the nrst Number for January of each year. When no time is mentioned, it will be understood that the subscriber wishes to commence with tne Number next after the receipt of order. Bound Volumes of Harper's Bazar, for three years back, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail, postage paid, or by express (provided tne rreight does nt exceed one dollar per volume), for $7 00 per volume. Cloth Cases for eacbr volume, suitable for DindinK-, -will be sent bv mail. Doatnaid. on re ceiptof fl 00 each. Remittances should be made bv Post-Offiop jHoney uruer or urart, to avoid chance of loss JVewhpavers are not to cow this advertisement ... . . T ' . - wiirmit tne express order of Harper Brothers Address HARPER BROTHERS. New York 3 ,r 1 886. Harper's Young Pe p! e. AK ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY. The position of Harper's Youna People as th leading weekly periodical for younsr readers is well established. The publishers spare no pains to provide the best and most attractive reading and illustrations. The serial and short stones have strong dramatic interest, while tney are wholly Tree from whatever is Derni uiuus or vuiifsny sensational; me papers on natural history and science, travel and the facts of -life, are by writers whose nm(. give the best assurance of accuracy and value illustrated papers on athletic sports, games, and pastimes give full information on these subjects. There is nothing cheap about it but its price. An epitome of everything that is attraotivfl ana desiraDie m juvenile literature. Boston Courier. A weekly feast of crood thine-s tr the and girls in every family which it visit. Brooklyn Union. It is wonderf ul in itswpalthnf nint.nro in formation and interest. Christian Un ion, N. Y, TERMS: Postere Paid &2 Per Yat VOL. VII. commences November 3, 1885. Single Numbers, Five Cents each. Remittances should h mmio Yiv iof nm Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss. Newspaper are not to com this ndiu-tieim, t without the express order of Harper Brothers. Address HARPER tc BROTHERS, New York aeczi-tr A Merry Clr Ciioiee Toys istmas! A Happy New Year! I m hm Goodc We liespectfully Call Your Attention To Our Annual Offering Of NEW AND l-LEGNT CHRISTMAS f0V LTIES These Goods have been carefully selected and advantage taken of a Large Shrink age ui v aiues, wmuu enauies u w oner a large Assortment of Rich and Artistic Holiday Novelties at Very Low Prices 1 WITHOUT FRE GHT OR OTHER CHAH8ES. . We are aware of the fact that most of the Closing Out Sales advertised are for th pur pose of getting rid of old shelf-worn stock and replenishing with new, but our object is to close out and clean out our entire stock of Clothing M Beure from llns Brancb of altosretlier. We are consdientiouslv no such inducement has ever before been of fered in this community, and we solicit an early and critical examination of burstock, which is complete in every line of Mens', Boys', Yoths, and Childrens' Clothing. We do not advertise to sell these goods at 40 or 50 per cent lower than anThnA else, but for reasons stated above, AT MANUFACTURERS' PRIME COST ONLY J?oZTrQ M0RE' Plea8e -thU, caH at once, and urc .hr ..oia.u ouu ioyue wx,s. rauioKrapn Aioums. Autosrraph Albums. Snran Aih.,ma Tl 11 oVl Via rra fl anflnmnn'o hafll m . uuiubua xcDoiuts a ra ven ru? companions. Novr ti in ivoni, uiocks. j?ine xoiieisets JManicure Sets. PI ushijtlor Cases Plush Jewel Boxes laoies. i-iusn Mirrors. worK Boxes. Writinor Dfisks Pino vy, nn., """p., " wiijwiuiujws. iiuki iaiiLcrns in &rxc Variety. Toy bteani Knc-inpa Mechanical Fisrurea. DollCftrriatra. W norm a T ar w iv, r: . r.e ln. 1.n.e8- . M . . .mvfuui iiuiouo, OU1IU r I VrtOrSfiS. in Knrnitnr Bedsteads. Cradles. Etc. Etc. -WE HAVE A BEAUTIFUL STOCK OF- Smoker'8 Jumeau Dolls. Folding decU-tt RAIL ROAD STREET, OPPO.-ITE DEWEY BROS., SILTER WARE AUD OHOIOB HUT A foirItics Glass War J It is Universally ConeeTTnaToirSockr E'iqc, $lT)6y . holiday aood! always nave Deen me ricnesi ana most aesirable in the Market. We shall continue to do aB in M. E. CASTEX & CO. - 1 74 West Centre 8treet, Goldsboro, N. C. dec7-tf North Carolina. ) low that any body can have erajnped room iwill not contain all these, so that many are in the office - of the Superintendent ot Public In stfuction, in closets in various parts of ttie capitol, and in a spare room of tie agricultural building. rYester ' day the Secretary of State received , $351.90 from New Hanover county from one tax payer in payment of the amjuunt"due on property sold for taxes and bought in by the State. This is the larf.e it amount yet received in oncasevJ The party in question owed Ste and county taxes aggregating ;$8ib. We are pleased to announce tha!t we have again secured the ser vici&s-as soliciting agent of the News an-'t Obeerver, of Mr. Richard Battle who was so loner connected with this narW. Rev" Mr. Hammer, ,. of the Methodist Protestant church, a resi dent of Kandolpn countyr who ran away with a fartner's; wife, about two weksgofeas been arrested at Little ; KgCKAri., ana laiiea. Washington Gazette: We regret to hear Of the death Of Mr. J . O. Sim- 2- mons, at Panteg6, which took place or last Saturday. S. W. Perry was i bitten by a mad 4kg on last Saturday i nkrht. We regret to hear that Mr. H. 1j. Davis, at iieaa or rungo, naa his house accidently burned last Sat urjay. The Windley trial wiH cost I the ieountv abdut $2,000.r--On Sat last, while Mrs. Amelia Beach- amJwho resides on the river a ,fe mil4s from town, was preparing, din ner her clothing caught firer and she i was soon enveloped in flame. Being alone at the time, the unfortunate woman in her terror rushed out into the ODen air, and the-hurficane blow ing very rapidly, served to render hef Condition an .almost nopeiess one. She I would have burned up immediate- Tv had not her husband and others near by. heard -ner cries, and arrived upon ine scenes at ouw. muwu d&ftculty tljey succeeded in extin guishing the fiery mass, but not until the entire lower portion of the body had beii iUerally roasted. She was .suffering horribly at last accounts. f ienty to Eat and a Good Time Xmas! I will have, at Wholesale, : 3 Barrels Find Applesall prices; SO Boxes Fine" Florida Oranges, all prices; 45 Boxes Fire Crackersj SOOO pounds Fine and Plain Candies, and 300 Bushels of FINE NORFOLK OYSTERS ! which I will have opened every day at myi J Oyster House, by the ! PLATE, QUART, or GALLON ! And will sell, by the Peck, Bushel, or Barrel, wholesale, at Norfolk Prides. Send in your orders. They are the Finest ever put on this! Market by any dealer, and they are positively wpcucu nt my uysiur nouse m inis uny. 9 Don't fail to give me a call. vill pay bought my goods to sell and they wilt ue oum ml prices to pi ease everybody. JNO. T. EDMUNDSON, iJnder Opera House. GoldsboroEL C, Decrl4, 1885-tf Superior Com' Dissolution Notice. The firm of Herring & Rand, machinists. uuiug uusmess in voiasooro, is this day dissolved by mutual consent Mr. O. R Rand has bought Mr. Herring's interest and will, continue the business ; he also assumes all habi xtu s and is authorized to collect all debts due the firm. JASS.-HERRING, Jan. 1,1886. O R. RAND. NOTICE. . AH persons indebted to the late firm of nernng & Kand, either by note or account, are requesiea to maKe .immediate settle ment. as inHnltrpn'a'4rTinrt- Ka rrixmn LJan.4,'86.-3t. O.RRAND.Jr. D. A. HUMPHREY, , Agent or i janl-tf Q0LDSB0EO, N. C. Iflsoraice Layer Raisins. Currants. Citron. DatP v juo u uauu av ' f C0GDELI& octl5-tf - Btcam Bakery yyavne County. k Navassa Guano Company, vs M. T. Edgerton and V. 3, Edgerton. Let the def-hdrtnts take notice that an action, entitled as above, ha? been com menced in the Superior Court for" the county of Wayne, to subject the land's in Wayne county, claimed by defendant. V. B. Edgertn, to the payment oi a judg ment in favor of plaintiffs vs Edgerton Bros., obtained in the Superior Court oi Wayne county, and that they are hereb required to appear at the Superior Court for the County of Wayne to beheld on tht 6th Monday heiore the 1st Monday in March, 1886, and answer or demur to the complaint of the plaintiffs, to be filed in the ffice of the t lerk of said Coilrt during the first three days of said term, or the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. A. T. URADY. Clerk Superior G-urt Wayne County. Bryan & Burkhkad, ) Attorneys for Plaintiff, f decl4-6yy aortn rarolina, ? o n Wayne County. ) " .vy'- J. W. Britt, J. P. Britt and others, Rob't. T. Britt, Benj. H. Smith and others. Before A. T. Grady, C. S. C. Notice of Motion to Confirm Sale. To Benj. H. Smith, Jas. 'P. Smith, Wm. H. Smith, Elijah Lassiter and wife Bettie A., Bate Johnson and wife Mar . tha J , and Simon P. Waiters and wife .Nancy J.: t i-o isrotico. That the Commissioner appointed to sell the lands described in the. complaint in the above entitled cause has filed his re port,vand that you can file exceptions luereio, n any you nave, on or before the 15'h day of .January. 1886 on which day at 12 o'clock, M.; a motion will be made before me at my office in Goldsboro in said county to confirm said report. This 21st 3av of December- A" ; D lftftS. dec25w4w A. T. GRADY. C S. C. W. C MUHROE, S9. C3 OFFICE: Room No.. 3. in the Law Building. Will practice In the adjoining counties 1886. H a r P e r's We e k I v. ILLUSTRATED. Hamtcr's WkekLiY has iiow. for twentv years maintained its position as the leading il lustrated weekly newspaper in America. With a constant increase of literary and artistic re sources, it is able to offer for the ensuintr year attrac&ons unequalled by any previous vol ume, embracing two capital illustrated serial stories,-one by Mr. Thos. Hardy, amongr the fore'iiost of livinir writers of fiction, and th other by Mr Walter Beasant, one of the most tn T riaiinrui bum "viviiow, KxoiL'lltv 11- lustratio s of unusual interest to headers in all sections of the country; entertaining short stories, mostly illustrated, by the best wri .ers, and- important papers by high authorities on tne Chief topics of the day. Every one who desires a trustworthy politi cal guide, an entertaining and Instructive fam ily journal, entirely free from objectionable features in either letterpress or illustrations, should subscribe to Harper's,, Weekly HARPER'S PERIODICALS. - .s Per YrUT, H AKPER'8 WEEKLY. . u i $t 00 HAKPKll'S MAGAZINE I 00 HARPEU'SBA2AU.i 4 00 HARPER'S yOlj NO PEOPLE 2 00 HARPER'S FRANKLIN SQUARE LI BRARY, One Ywf (52 Numbers) ..... 10 00 Postage Fret to all subscribers in the . United States or iJanada. ' - The volumes of the Weekly "begin with the rst number.for January of ach year. When no time, is, mentioned, it ,vrllJ.bo- Understood that the subscriber wislies to commence with the Number next after the receipt of order. Bound Volumes of Harper's Weekly for three years back, in neat cloth binding, will be. sent, hv mail Td-mro rvaid. o'r bv exwresi"fre of expense (provided the freight does not e ceea one dollar per volume, ror $ 7 uu per vol ume. Cloth Cases for each volume, suitable for binding, will be gent by mail, postpaid on re ceipt of $1 00 each. - - - Re-Hittances should be made by Post-Office Money Order r Draft, to vpi chance of toss; Newspaper are not fo copir'fhis julverfteeingnt wUluyut therpreMX)rdertof K9.iveT & Brothers Address HARPER & BROTHERS, Neir York. 1886. ; Harper's Magrazine. ILLUSTRATED. The December Number will begin the Sev ?Rtr"?cond ylume of Harper's Magazine Miss, Wpolflon's novel, "East Angels," and Mr Howell's "Indian Summer"-holding the fore most place in current serial fiction will run through several numbers, and will bofollowed ov serial stories from It. D. Blackmoreind Mrs. D. M. Cralk. A new editorial depart ment, discussing topics suggested by the cur- reui jntjrai.ure oi A-nencaand Kuropo. will be contributoa l?y W, p, Howells, beginning with the January number. The crreat litora- event of tte year will be the buoacation oi'i series of papers taking the shape of a storv and depicting characteristic features of Amer ican society as seen at our leading pleasure resorts-written by Charles Dudley Earner and Illustrated by 5.s. Reinhart. f he itfagl Jtlne will give especial attention to American rrti?t",and " by leading AmericJS jfT flfl finif n r ' n7 rp r. nn Mim, Darpetg, Oil Olatb, mm 100 B0XES KA,slNfr 100 ' FIRfi CRACKERS, 50 FIGS, (new), 1000 UT3' i liOOO ??oiNt2p8i I QQ BBLS. APPLES, I 25 BCKETS FRKkcH CANDY, 5 nool!- , J Mr stoefcof HEAVV OKOCKRIE5 i 111 T . a. ! large and complete. Ail4 1 wani is lor you to come and see me before you buy. i0K LESS than any! other housefntcfivnr UARPER'S PERiuDICALS. Per Year. HAKfKtt BMAUAfilWB 4 00 HAnrfiK 8 HEitvijlc 4. ni Attr JitV B UAAtt..... jnn HARPER YOUNG PEOPLE .....i 2 00 tiAjii riiv r r ixADi i.ijii ByiJARE LI- UlvAKr . one Year (53 Numbers) 10 00 Postage Free to all tubscribers in tht United niate8or tanaaa. - The volume of U Magazine begin with the Number for Jutland Dtfcemberof each vpar. When no mo IS -specified, It will be under stood imfct MwsurjscriDer wishes to begin with the current Number. Bound Volumes of the Magazine, for three years b4ck, in neatuloth binding, will be sent by Biail, postpaid, on receipt of $3 00 per vol ume, vjocn uases, ror mnding, &o cents each oy man, postpaid. Index to Harner's "Mac-Rzinfi AlnhAhfni Analytical, and Classified, for Volumes 1 tn an inclusive, from June, 1850, to Jane, 1880, one vol., 8vo. Cloth, 1 i 00. I Remlttanaes 8hould . be made by Post-Office jjjoueyiwaerTjr imtrt, to avoid cbahce of loss. Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement wunoui ime express order or harper & Rhyth HARPER k BROTHERS, New York Mattress, HakiDg! Raving naa a long experience in the Mattress Uusmess, I would respectfully inform the Public, generally, that I am now prepared, and pay special attention to Moss, Hair, or any other kind of Mattress mattresses maae io order. Will also contract .to tuxnisn ? mattresses in quantity iiesired. , any wm in. Send for, Prices. Address . XQUIS JSCUHMEL. Goldsboro, N. C., Sept. 7 tf 5f PEWDER HOTEL, Bargaw, Pender County. On line 'ot ' Wilmington WeldonR."R, H miles from Wilmington.--Table well supplied with the best tt e market fiords. lirRatfis,of Board very reasonal le. Mrs. R. M. CROOM. oct26-tf -- -- PTODTietrw - riattfthReed, and Willow Rockers, Carpet Folding Hockt-rs, every tye of Wo d and Cane Seat Children Rockers. y Chamber Sett- Poplar, Walnut, Cherry, or Ash Wood or Marble 1 ojt " - OUR STOCK OF - ISfLARGER THAN EVER, CONSISTING IN PART OF Raw Si k, Hair Cloth and Brocaded P nh. ' Also Ehkv Chairs and, ockere. Marble Tod Tablt b of Gverv StirlA and izh.. J - - 'A "l u. Ij S O t' secretaries, I3ook Coses Writing Desks, What Nets, Wa'nut and' Maple Extension Tables, Salts, Sideboards. Bnreaim. Wh tamUJ and a Large Assortment of Every Style of Chairs. yur aiocK ot Uarpt, Oil Cloths an Rne., i9 l arger tlian ever .nd we ffer the same, for the next 30 Dass at Prime n! T Cos'. OUR OF STOCK ;T,a88 Xaref Tln Ware, Wood and Wi'low mmP uoo'f8 9 complete and will be Ware. Cut'erv. T.nmna nr.dr sold at n martably Iaw Vr ce. ALL WE ASI1GIVE US A CALL AND EXAMINE OUR oxwa, iiiafUKii YQg PURCHASE . " ',' mm : , ,.. . ft-'' 1 K . ! AI80 ft LarfTfi I iri f Fimn.a'..luA.'. lS'l"S v- ' . every description made to order on nhnrf . Ti..i... . V. rj rueHTL .4. 1 i fir .1 ' "VI J. i
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 11, 1886, edition 1
8
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