Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / Feb. 4, 1886, edition 1 / Page 4
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BONITZ. EDITOR iGOLDSBOKO, N. C, THURSDAY, - - FEBRUARY 4, 1886 THE MESSENGER. ESTABLISHED IN 1867. Published everv Monday and Thursday, at the Mbssknoer BiiiT.DiNO. Price $3.00 a year: ri.OOfor three months. Served to townsub- crers by carrier at $1.00 for three months inhoninntinn Twvflhln in miVflnr.e. AnvERTiAiNn Rates: Per sauare (IV inch pace $1.00 for first, and 50 cents for each sub sequent insertion. Liberal discount to lare mAvortinftr and nn vpnrl V eontractfl. ty"The Transcript and Messenger, a W olumn weekly, the cheapest and lanrest politi cal raber published in North Carolina, is alfo published from the Messenger press, bui - nrlntiAn Oft twrnnnum : 100 for Six months The Transcript and Messenger has- the larjrest circulation of the political papers in North Carolina. Secretary Bayard has suffered an other terrible domestic affliction in th rather sudden and unexpected death of his estimable wife. Coruinpr so soon after the decease of his beloved daugh t?r, who was such general favorite with .nil vchn had the honor of her ac quaintance, the blow is i peculiar! severe one, and insures for Mr. Bay ard the heartfelt sympathy of the en tire American people, without regard to race, creed or politics. It is to be hoped that the large sum required will deter the House from any further extension of the Civil war pension list,' and that if the general pension list is further enlarged it will be carefully guarded. There is little demand outside the circle of pension agents for such a large increase. It is getting to be the most serious prob lem of government since the railway and other land grant jobbers have met with a rebuke at the bands of Mr. Cleveland's administration. Let us stop squandering the public money. Let the people speak, especially the people of' the 'North, and let dema gogues be silenced by their voice. The President has appointed the following Assay Commission, to meet in ' Philadelphia February 10,18S6: Senator Harris, Representative Mc Creary, Thos. K. Bruner, of N. C; Prof.T.C. Chamber!m,of Wis.; Prof. C. F. Chandler, of N. Y- Prof. John A. Church, Arizona; Walter B: Dev ereaux, Col.; H. L. Dodge, Cal.; Prof. T. M. Drown, Boston ; Prof. B. W. Frazier, Penn.; Dr.' W. p Lawyer, Mint Bureau; Prof. J. W. Mallet, Va.; II. T. Martin, N. Y. Prof. Ira Rem Pen, Baltimore. Ex-officio members are Judge Wm. Butler, of Philadel phia; Controller of Currency Cannon and H. G. Torrey, of the New York hAsshv Oliiee. Our energetic. Representative in Congress, the Hon. W. J. Green, has introduced three bills of practical im portance. These are ''to check frauds in the makeup of articlesof diet, drink and medieine ;" another, "to prevent a counterfeit or imitation article being sold as genuine butter," and another to provide for terms of the district and circuit courts of the United States at Fayetttville. It is, certainly of much importance that something should le done to prevent the adulteration of food and medicine. As to the holding of the Federal courts, we have all the time held that Goldsboro would be the most eligible point for the courts f Eastern Carolina, and here they ought .to be held. - A memorable, amusing and dis graceful scene occurred at the close of a recent day's proceedings of the New York Assembly, says a dispatch in the World from Albany. The moment Speaker Husted declared the House adjourned Clerk Chickering in sten torian tones bawled out: "I have a package of passes here for the mem bers of the House, who, will please come up and get them." Then he proceeded to call out the members' names. Many of the old members, astonished at the proceedings, which were as unique as they were startling, remained seated, but the new members rushed up to the desk. At one time a line ten feet deep surged in front of the Clerk's desk, like so many hungry wolves howling for provender. Such a scene never before was witnessed in the Legislature. It is reported from Washington that the bill now pending before the House Committee on Invalid Pensions to re vive the payment of arrearages of pensions aud extend the time for tiling claims until 1888, is receiving consid erable attention from members outside of that committee. The bill, should it become a hiw, would take an enor mous amount of money from the Treasury. p Chairman Matson, of the Invalid Pensions Committee, told a Star reporter that Commissioner Black's estimate is that it would re quire three hundred millions of dollars to pay all the claims contemplated in the bill. The measure not only pro poses to revive the payment of arrear ages, but it eularges the classes of pensioners. Among the Democrats there is a strong feeling of opposition to the bill, on the ground that its enactment w&uld put a peremptory stop to all plans for the reduction of taxation. Democrats maintain that tVlAir rnrirc? tirkn tt (liatnuacnrangnnnf be construed into any unwillingness to vote pensions. They say that the passage of a law at this time contem plating an increased expenditure of $300,000,000 would be a blunder. The committee have not yet reached any conclusion upon the bill. THE BLAIR BILL. j The.. glair JEdueatipnaj llM it is thought, will pass during the present session of Congress. The 'Messenger hopes so, and is glad to learn that the North Carolina members are in favor of its passage, both in the Senate and House. They could not be otherwise. The Democratic party of North Caro lina pledged itself in favor of the bill. The General Assembly, by nearly a two-thirds vote, instructed our Sena tors and Representatives to vote for the measure, and the voice of ourpeo pie is evidently in favor of its passage The opponents of the measure claim that it is unconstitutional. There is a great difference of opinion on thi point; many of the ablest men of the nation hold that it would not be nn constitutional. The people are enti tied to the benefit of all doubt, if there is any. The bill finds at least a pre cedent in the distribution of the sur plus funds by the National Govern ment to the States in 1837. We have thus briefly alluded to this important measure because an article published elsewhere, taken, from the Republican New York Evening Post might place us in a wrong position The Messenger has always favered the passage of some such educationa bill, and both parties in North Caro lina are nledcred to its support. The Blair bill may not exactly be what it should be, but its aims are timely and wise, and, perhaps, the bill may be so amended as to overcome all the pxes ent objectionable features. SHERMAN'S SILVER BILL. ; The project that was discussed last summer and then called a compromise of the silver question has been revived bv Senator Sherman. It is in brief to discontinue the coinage, but not the purchase of silver. Silver certificates of denominations not less than $10 are to be issued on bullion bought and held in the Treasury. Other features in the proposed measure are stated in our Washington correspondence. Whatever may be the outcome of the acritation, it cannot be denied that this plan meets with some favor and is better than most of the proposed compromises so-called. We are not prepared to advocate any settlement of this question other than that which would come naturally from letting tinners alone. The Messenger be lievers in two standards of money, and contentls that the whole world is com ing back to the double standard. It is disposed to regard with favor the ef forts of the gold speculators and the bondholdiug class to further depre ciate, to degrade, the silver dollar. THE SENATE'S QUARREL. The Senate is acting in a very par tisan and very undignified way about matters that- are not partisan. For several weeks it has tried to bulldoze the Executive into surrendering pa pers on file concerning the removal and appoiutment of certain officials, pretending it j wished them for infor mation. Its last dodge was to call for the papersn the Duskin case of Ala bama. j The President took tUeJ unanimous advice of his Cabinet and refused these papers. Tbe Democratic Senators in caucus afterarci upheld the course of the President. They adopted a resolution to that effect, using the words, ''cor dially support." The country sustains the President, for he is acting in a manly and digni fied way. He could not yield the point involved in the dispute because that would be to abdicate the Presidency. The Senate does not lackinformation. The only purpose it has in making the, demand on the Department of Justice) is to embarrass the President and the Democratic party. It is a small pro ject to show that Mr Cleveland hais not stuck to his principles as. a civil service reformer. If there is one thing of which the country is well satisfied, it is that the President has kept his pledges and carried out the principles of his party's platform. The high old frauds; like Mr. Edmunds, who live on partisan ism, may as well settle down to the conviction that they are going to get nothing1 out of President Cleveland. BISMARCK'S GERMANY. j Tacitus describes in his ''Germania'' a noble race of freemen warriors, somewhat rude and wholly unlettered; and modern investigators have found that these ancient Germans were a thousand years behind their neighbors on the Mediterranean, Adriatic and Ageau, in all the arts of polite life. But in high individual manhood and love of liberty they were not surpassed by any people of any age or clime. These barbarians conquered the civil ized world and erected on the ruins of the powers they destroyed the great States of modern history. ' One of these, in some important respects the greatest except our own, has the in telicity to be ruled bya statesman whose acts are more accordant with the spirit of the tyranny of the past than with the constitutional liberty characteristic of this age. '.; It has chanced that Prince Bismarck has always won his measures by asserting as a pretext their necessity to the Ger man state and fatherland. In his ex traordinary speech before the Landtag in defence of the Polish expatriation scheme he s?iid that the primary cause of the Government's action was the ll'l-lnTrilltTT p flin Dnlnn 1 S crown. The Polish agitation m Ger-1 many,: Prince "Bismarck said, had always appeared to him an element of danger, f; and had compelled: him; to keep a vrafph upon Russia. The Poles had been "constantly and not always unsuccessfully endeavoring to set for eign States against Prussia. !"Hence," continued the Chancellor, "we have determined to buy out all the real es tate offered by Polish nobles in Prus sian Poland and place German col onists on the lands hitherto occupied bv the exDelled people. In order to make the colonization inure perma nently to the benefit of the Empire, the colonists will be prohibited from marrying Poles. The Government would never concede the restoration of Poland." Prince Bismarck denied that religious prejudice had anything to do with the Government's attitude. It is generally conceded that the speech is equally capable of being interpreted to foreshadow either a dissolution of the Reichstag or a coup d'etat. Across the German ocean the auto crat could almost see with a long-range glass the outlines of a land whose set tiers and occupiers were mainly Ger mans. Since Hengest and his follow ers landed on the coast of Kent four teen hundred years haye passed. In that time the free constitution of the Saxon and Frisian tnbes has expanded into a noblo system of representative government. It is the opinion of Freeman, one of the ablest of the En glish historians, that while in many ways the English have more widely diverged from the ancient type than the Germans who staid in fatherland, they have 1 preserved the spirit anc forms of the political institutions of their ancestors, except wherein they have made improvements, while those who are named Germans have not always done so and have yet very much ground to recover. Comparing the scene ins the Landtag with that other scene in the House of Commons, which scenes ! occurred almost at the same instant, one is moved to accept the scholarly! historian's remark as literally and pronouncedly true. The Germany of Bismarck, alas to say, is not the Germany of Hermann, the Arminius of the Romans. And still. "the spirit of liberty sings in the wind." i Even 1 this generation may witness the beginning of the disen- enthralment, which is the beginning of the disenchantment of great Ger many, the centre and mainstay of Aryan civilization on the Continent of Europe. 1 OUR WASHINGTON LETTER. The President Declines to Furnish Certain Information. Pan Electric Exposures and Sen ator Vance's1 Strong Denial. i i Staff Correspondence of the Messenger. s Washington, January 30. In a nutshell the conflict between the Ex ecutive and the Senate, sitting as an executive council,; is as follows : The Senate desires to convict the President of violating his principles, and the President is determined that the Ex ecutive Departments shall not furnish information to support any such at tempt. The occupant of the White House is not by any means apprehen sive that such attempt would be sue cessful if he were to grant tbe Senate the information desired. But he has too high a sense of his responsibility to the people and too clear an appre hension of the limitation of power in the Senate to yield to demands that the latter has no right to make. The Senate has now made several distinct issues with the President, thus show ing a disposition to pick flaws, if pos sible, and take advantage of any cir cumstances. But Mr. Cleveland, while disposed to be obliging, is not by any means a man to be bullied. The whole matter has been carefully canvassed in cabinet sittings. Yesterday a final decision in the two cases made a test of by the Senate was reached. In the Alabama case the Attorney General has sent a letter to the Senate in an swer to the resolution calling for "all documents and papers in relation to the management and conduct of the office of U. S. Attorney for the South ern district of Alabama," in which he says : "In response to the said resolution the President of the United States directs me to say that the papers which were in this department relating to the fitness of J. D. Bennett, recently nominated for said office, having al ready been sent to the Judiciary Com mittee of the Senate, and the papers and documents which are mentioned in the said resolution and still remain ing in the custody of this department having exclusive reference to the sus pension by the President of Geo. M. Dustin, the late incumbent of the of fice of District Attorney of the United States for the Southern district of Ala bama, it is not considered that the public interests will be promoted by a compliance with said resolution, and the transmission of papers and docu ments therein mentioned to the Sen ate in executive session." The Cabinet was unanimous in ad vising the President to take the course pursued. Mr. Vilas was the only member not present when the subject was considered. The President holds that the Senate in executive session may ncit concern itself with the admin istration of an office. It is only in im peachments or in its legislative capac ity that it has a right to papers and other information touching the con duct of an officer of the Government. The Democratic Senators were in caucus this morning for more than an hour. They agreed by formal resolu tion to "cordially support the Execu tive." Those Senators who are under stood as being opposed in toto to the policy of the Administration on other issues side with it in this matter as heartily as those known as administra tion Senators. It is the opinion of Democrats generally that the attitude of the Republicans and the firm re sistance of the President draws to the latter the whole party, and that he has been strengthened by the demand for papers, 'lhe Republicans did not hold will meet early in the coming week and probablj resolve to make no con firmation wihout. "information." ': Mr. Sherman comes to the front in the Senate with a proposition ; which, on its face, appears to be a compro mise of thfe silver question. The bill which he introduced Thursday is in its central principle . the jsame as the scheme mooted last summer, and known as Warner's plan. It is there fore, in any view of the subject, an "Ohio ideaf The proposition is chief ly prominent now because its sponsor is senator Sherman, l he out-and-out silver or bi-metalist Congressmen of both houses, repudiate it as a conces sion to the gold interest. The bill enacts that the coinage of the silver dollar provided for by the first section of the act to which this is an amend ment be discontinued from and after the passage of this act ; that the Sec retary of the Treasury is authorized and directed to purchase from time to rime silver bullion in bars, not less than nine-tenths fine, at the market price thereof, not less than 2,000,000 ounces Troy per month, nor more than 4,000,000 ounces Troy per month, and shall issue in payment therefor coin certificates of the United States in de nominations of not less than $10 each. corresponding with the denominations of the United Stages notes ; and the bullion so purchased shall be retained m the Treasury for the security and for the payment of tbe same ; and the amount of such certificates at any time outstanding shall not exceed the cost of the bullion purchased by such cer tificates, and the certificates thus is sued shall be receivable for customs. raxes and all public dues, and when so received may be leissued ; and the Secretary of the. Treasury shall redeem in coin the said certificates on their presentation for redemption at the omce ot the Assistant Treasurer of th United States, in the city of New York, in sums not less than $oU. That an holder of standard silver dollars or gold coin of the United States, or gold ouiiion, at its mint value, may deposit 'Qe same witn tne ireasurer or any Assistant Treasurer of the United States in sums not less than $10, and1 receive eoin certificates therefor simi.1 lar in denomination and legal effect to the certificates provided for in thf preceding section. The coin deposited for or representing tbe certificates ci.oii s rr uuw.cru .u luc .lxcuij ioi iu payment or tne same on demand. -tne ouujcti ui (iu iiuciiiauimiii ropy- ngnpnas long oee-i mooted, Doth in this country and abroad. The foreign countne nave oeen more iorward than our own to recognize property in ideas, especially m literary ideas. But the matter is now placed in the strong est lights before the public by a move ment concerted between the best class of publishers and the American au thors. On the part of the first-named the impulse proceeds from the inroads made hv nnhlishers who issiia pvpps- ively cheap editions in this country piraieu irom ioreign autnors and puo- iishers. 1 he American author is stim ulated to ask for a copyright law by two prime facts 1. As long as these pirated prints flood the country, at nominal cost, the Americau people will neglect their own authors who publish in this country, and buy the cheaper books of English authors re printed here. The lack of copyright reciprocity with other nations perpet uates this injustice to our own writers, rnereby discouraging American Jitera- ture. 1. But another consideration with a growing class of authors the writers ot notion ana some otners is tliat without international copyright their productions are pirated in En gland just as those of English authors are here. Injustice befalls all, though heretofore lhe English writer has J 1 J. 1 A CC .eemeu .o uo me greater suiierer. oeeujeu, x bay, ueeauhe uium sueu is not tne actual condition : tor the tact that English books could be reprinted uere ror noxning, except tne cosi or printing and binding, has been the chief drawback, at least for a long while, to American authorship. For two or three davs the Senate Committee on Patents has jriven pa- tient and intelligent hearing to mem bers of the American copyright leagrue and others, for and against the Haw ley bill, which proposes to confer upon citizens of foreign countries the same rights of copyright that are conferred by the governments of such countries upon citizens of this country. Among the literary men present at these sit tings were Rev. Dr. Howard Crosby, James Russell Lowell, dmund Clar ence Stedman, George Ticknor Curtis, Samuel L. Clemens (Mark Twain), Horace E. Scudder, J. B. Gidder ; and of publishers, Henry Holt, of New York, and S. Dana Estes, of Estesand Laniiat, of Boston. Most of the per sons who spoke favored the enactment of the bill. The New York TForfcT broadside on Thursday against the Pan Electric Telephone Company has excited much interest in all quarters. all Quarters. The World rjaTtX.8 &T8r sures were mostly old matter, re- vamped, and were probably intended tor enect on tne suits to De Degun nere in a few days against the Bell Com pany bv the Pan Electric. So far as thev relate to Senator Vance I have his authority for the statement that they are a "naked, scandalous, bare footed, baldheaded lie." He says that neitherin his own nor in any other name has he been at any time inter ested in the stock of the Pan Electric or other telephone company. But there would, he insists, be no harm in it if he -were a stockholder. Public opinion, I think, has all along con demned Mr. Garland and others, Sen ators, ex-Congressmen, &c, for be coming identified with such projects. But there is undoubtedly a broad dif- ference between the Pan Electric and the Credit Mobilier. The Senate discussed Dakota again Thursday. In a communication to the Speaker of the House Secretary Bavard savs that none of the employes of the State DpnartmPtit can be diSDensed with. Citizens of Arkansas petition for the election of United States Senators by lnvetlgatlon into tne aouses or tne r?J:i7r xxi: lowing : Acting nearly always without auiuomy oi mvv, uv jTMUrt. .uuuuCaa for hpflw drinks and litrht literature. The Senate discussed the Sioux In ;. dian reservation and the Dakota meas ures on Friday. The Hous-e was occupied all yester day on private bills, it being the regu lar calendar It passed 50 pension bills at the evening session. Both houses adjourned yesterday (Friday) until Monday. Fifteen employees of the Patent oiT.W - , men., messengers, &c, in the office - of the District Marshal have received no tice to quit. . i POINTS. Ulala M. Warden has been commis sioned postmaster at Mt. Nebo ; B F. Edgerton at Uree ; Joseph M. Steven son, at IPratt. New j postoffices and postmasters Loyd, Lincoln county, Charles W. Beam; Orleans, Lincoln county, Pink ney B. Bess; Bismarck, Johnston county, Richard C.Creech; Gold Rock, Nash county, Robert R. .Gay ; White Hall, Bladen count v, John Q. Nye. Hon. John S. Henderson has re turned.; Adjutant Gen. Jones is here to at tend to two or three bills before the Military Committee of the House. Among the visitor of the last half week are' Messrs. Coleman, of Win ston, and Weddington, of Charlotte. A prominent correspondent remark ed to me the other dv thnt th onlv j . ... Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads, and the Colonel riddled the vulnerable record of Mulligan's man. Col. Cowles tells me he hs assur ance that the Committee on Expendi tures of the Department of Justice will report his measure or frame a bill in accordance with it. It is a bill to change the fees and other compensa- non or me marsnais, cierxs, c, oi the Federal courts into n salary. The committee favorably reported his reso lution calling on the Secretary of the Treasury for a statement of the amounts paid these officers during the last fiscal year. C. W. H. New Advertisements. FOR SALE. On time for good paper, one LARGE 13A.Y HUKiSE, perfectly s uud and gentle between I O and 7 years old. Pric 1 75, OO. Apply early to ieb4 5t W. H BORDEN. "VAT TVrPT'IVT, 5 f v illNiLk . t i rru Large assortment j.jst received. The lot .braces the Finest ever shown in Goldsboro. Call -early and make yout i selections WHITAKER'S BOOKSTORE. feb4-td AuroraMals and FemaU Acadsm? A TTTT A "VT n AURORA, N. C. bpnng bession opened Jan. 26th. and loses June 11th. 18d6. Pupils may enter at any time in the ssion and charged from entrance to end I OI session. Tuition and boaril moderate. This school is situated in a moral and progressive town. P or further information apply to ieb4-lm R.T.BONNER County Work House The Board of "Wayne County Commi- sioners will meet at iao lck, the 10?1 inst., at the Poor H- use, to pel -rt a, 8upr inr.enaent and guards 'or the prisoners entenced to labor. All parties desiring these ositions are requehted to present their applications in person at the abovi named time and place B. F. HOOKS, Chairman. Feb. 3, 1886 -td Argus copy. Ni " H'j Having obtained letters of ad ministra- tion from the proper Court upon the es rate of Geortre O. Rup.han. d-p,-(i. TSTo tice is hereby given to all persons bavin. ,-iaims against said deceased to pr. sent them to me by the 19th day o J.nuarv, 1887, duly authenticated aecordin o 'w or this notice will be pleaded in bar K meir recovery; ana all persons indebted to said deceas d are requested to make uav mcui iiiiuieuiaLeiy . UtilKLES J. KOKNEQAY. Jan. 18, 1886. feb5-w6t Administrator FLOUR, MEAT, SU AR, COFFEE, MOLASSES, TOBACCO, PIPES. AND SNUFF, ALSO Cups and Sau ers, Limps, Bowls and Pitchers, Goblets, Tumblers, Dishes, Buckets, Tubs, Wash Boards, Brooms, Soap, AND EARLY ROSE May be found, Cheap for Cash, at wiuie . edmun dson's jnHjW tsi UKi, In Kornegay Building, Walnut Street Goldsboro, N. C feb4-tf For Sale Or Rent! A House and Lot on William Street, formeily occupied by John T. E mund- -on; 5 rooms, large garden, eood water Applv to J. F DOBSON, febl-2w Goldsboro, N. C. WANTED ! A white lady, of intelligence, t ac a housekeeper and do the general work in a family of four, a gentl man and three children. To a suitable petsoi. a Derma nent tdtuation is offered. For further in formation address F J. WOOD AMD, febl-wswtf Black Creek, N. C. WANTED ! Information of the present whereabout- of Thomas Brown, a colored laborer on Me wovernmeni w urns on n-ne and T riv,ers n nptitv and oblige. I and 1885. Pleae K RANSOM, New Berne, N. C. mm, mm. m mhl Mm I will teach on the above instruments . ... ''"'mcuia, aiso Rin?in? in tnlr!ahorr Potrnn.r,, n n xw w v. a. uki"ii(ii:i, i icspcv,wuiijr KMR.iieu Apply at IlU81Ci stores. KesDectlullv. Jan. 28,'86 -lm M. A. GEORGE W. C MUftR ATTOKNEY-AT-L A W, 30X.0 XV. Oa i OFFICE r Room No. 3, in the Law " ' ' f.Mdrw. 8 ' man in the House whom he ever heard in G Idsboro, on Monday, the nrsi aay oi The attention of parent and iruannanM get the advantage of Blame in discus March, 1886, the following tract of land, $ the fH c of . sion was Col. A7M. Waddell. It was situate near the vilUge of Milton, on the A,BLTIT0ENS?XCEliENT KAttpYv!" nrhiiaOioHo muo pi, o ; - o f ho snnth Rido of 'he oublic road from Dudley kkasonaiilr cHAHf:''1" NOTICE FARMERS New Advert lementB. NOTICE Mayors Office, ) Goldsboro, N. 0.. Feb. 1, 1886 f Proposals to furnish the City of Golds boro vith Trees, Elm, Oak, Sugar Ma ple, &c; will be receive-i at this Office until the 20th day of February, 1886. Said trees to be from three to pix Inches in diameter, straight, free from blem ;fco onH fmm nine to twelve feet to first limb. Tn be delivered before the first of Manh, 18S6. ' tebl-3w J..W. GULICK, Mayor, Rv virtiift of a decree of the Superior Court of W'avne County, in the cause of T. w. Faison. Adm'r. KC v. uunenne - price and others. I wH sell for cash, nnhii,. mirtirin Rtthft Court House door .w , . , to Mount Olive, and bounded as follows n the north by the lands of Stephen Her- ring, on the west by the lands of the W. Sr. w n n fii . and on the south and ea?t by the lands of Nincy Wa.le, Catherine Price and the heirs of Nt-lly Thompson, "cc u, containing eim o) acrco, muio u less. ' l. vv. r"Aisun, Adm'r of Sally Price, dee'd. January 28,1836.-ieltd .NTPH(DIB o All persons are hereby notified not to cut or haul wood, timber, tence rails, or any other thing from my Dr. Kirny -Atkinson land, in New Hope Township, in Wavne county, as I intend to entorce the law against h11 trespassers on said land, .-xcept necessary firewood for my tenants in the hour-es on the farm. tint iflrwl wt 4n VnvA down my fences and to keep their stock out of my fields, or they will be shut up and charged fc .r accordingly. As some trespasser, not having the fear I of God be'ore his eyes and moved and in stigated by the devil, has been hauling away fence rails from off the outside fence on my larm, l will pay f iu,uu lor vidence sufficient t convict any person f thai or any other trespass on said land Feb. 1, 188rJ-3w C. H. Ii ROOD EN. BOX MEATS, FLOUR, MEAL, &C. h;; A ' 5 Boxes C. R Sides Barrels Mess Pork. T 1 T71I .II 1 v. lTV ur " grue.r 111 KurriilQ K prnaonu fill i ;i r I p n.irrQi0 xr.OocL., 20O Bushels Oats. 200 Bushels Corn. 200 Bales Timothy Hay. 1UU Uases Matches, Potash, Lye, &c. Large S:cck cf Canned G:ods ! ' lOO Barrels Irish Potatoes (for seed) Jry fiocta,M, Shoss, Crockery . G-lasswarc, efce. In fact we offer a Large and well as- sorted btock of Groceries and General Mercanoise either at Low Figures for Cash. ED&ERT0Nb& HHLAYSOH. Goldsbon FLOUR, &c. 40 Bbl8, Cuba Moias9e9 20 " S7r,p' 10 " NeW rlcans Molasses, 100 25 25 25 25 " Flour, all grades, " Sujrar, Sacks Coffee, Cases Potash, " Lye, oO Boxes Crackers, all fresh goods, 0 Cases Star Lyo, 2q " Tomatoes, 25 Peaches g Boxers Tobacco, 10 " Cream Cheese, All the above goods for sale low for cash. R. B. PIPKIN. Goldsboro, N. C, Jan. 28, 1836.-tf OUH 2T0PE S Taken last Year are all doe and we MUST HAVE THE MONEY I COME ANDEE US ! We have the Largest Stock of Buggies, (all kinds) Columbus. Nor folk, Cincinnati, and Home Made, that is kept by any one establishment m the State; and we can, and will, Sell Cheaper, and all who contem plate buying will Save Money by calling, on us. BORDEN, JONES & CO. Goldsboro, N. C, Jan. 25, 1886-tf MODTTIKDIBf The copartnership heretofore exis'inc between S. D Hankins and J. A.Corbett merchants doing bu.-inessat Mt. Olive un C under thi-fijrm name and style of Hankins & Co , his this day dissolved bv mutual content. Mr. S D Hankin will cjmiinue the busin-ss, assumes all liabih ti s and is authorized to collect all claims due tie fiim. 8. D. HANKINS, v . - - - a a.. v 'in onu. a. n ikRRrr v., v.,otiu. CO, looo o w t ?aSnl T.ch& e interest of Mr. J. A. Arbeit in the business of Hankins t do i a ML N C- 1 continue to do a General Merchandise business and ?S5P,SfiikeRU,s . ful' Sto"kf Goods, eWhi" 8611 M low s can be boughl Thai kful for the patr w7,w7 ' Af ,p a cont nuanpfthesame.' ivcpecuujiy, S, u' HA-NKINS. Mm, Syrup, 1 reSDeCtlllllV Nm( Rinm. .. J U J . Educational. La Orange Ccllegiato iDsiilate. sjiing Term Begins dnday Feb. , " We offer increased facilities without a ditional expense to Ftudcnt9. ' Rrv. A. It. Moboaic. Principal. Mr. Zeb. V. Taylor, Professor of'pen,n ship nod Hook Keep'n. cn,n Mhs. Wm. Speight. Primary hopartmmt Miss Clyde UnoDics, Muslo. ""'iit.jr CCTFor terms and full narticnln -, dre- the Principal at LaGranee T L County, N.C. . 7lt Statmille Female i Um, -v - STATES VI LLE, N: at "PpK spring TKTiM of this institution UJlLrf' JBPH?!? F ,R5. .oo1!33 FANNIE EVekitt January!. 1886-if iWjJ;,. - pp A (TH TMOrpFPTTrpTl L JjHUJLj XIX OJ.11 U IK RALEIGH, N. C. The Spring term commences on the lSiv of January. 1886, and closes fi rst WtslnV. day in June following. lslDt8- The attention of parent lookii,rrr. first clas9 school fo? their dmo,?..... . called to the following ad vantages cliinJi tor Peace Institute : fe 41010,1 Music, Art; and Modern Unguwrcs in-,. passed. Le? K,,rTjSdtSeiS!fh,l?fJh9 mUnicatlon with every place in n. ,".5 m Principal office connected by telephone w Ji Tine pa I omce connected by telephone .V lejrranh office. Cllmatoof ltaleigh Tproverb .i I i ai. Iiuiid In most conveniently arrant. . any in the State; heatod by su-am an.lihtf b T leepln-rooms of pupils arrant iZ La,? "WS'SS - tor, danger from fire In use of opeq fir '"" a siovcs oemg mus avowed, a well as W ,h mbi electric bells are through the whole n.i.ii tn.-1 ne religious advantages. A II the Prr testant churches are represented In luinih While Peace Institute is under the aun.ni of Presbyterians, it is by no means KvtHrian Pupils on the first Sunday of eaeh month au tend churches of their patents' choice. 5th Expenses less than anv Femai., S.mi nary off ering same advantages. For Board, including furnished r.m servant's attendance, lights, laundry, with tuiti'-n in all the English branches, Latin Calisthenics, for term commencing Jann' ary 18, aud ending June 6, 1836, 1 125 00. Payments one-half in advance and hi! ance 1st of April. Spcrial terms for tw or more pupils from same family or neigh borhood. Correspondence solicited. For Circular containing full n.irtirnlarR n,i. dress Rev. R. BURWKM7.fr xnv dec24-2m Raleigh, N.C. Full facultv. Thoron fh inatrnf.fi. enequippea raboraKines. Best nu.ri and religious influences. Flexible curric ulum. Ilealthv location. oions uegin in beptembcr and January I ?luaents received at any time. . ocna ior catalogue. I it. r . President. Wp8 f lit K laiUlll VallSy Eill'RiJ M m m mm , CONDENSED TIME TABLE NO. 13. MOM DAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1885- MAIL AND PASSENOER TRAINS KOltTII BOUMJ ?,n' f:3.) A. M. nuuD uwi, . Q-54) .r,1,c- -: Ore hiii, .. r Lll)ortv. " V" Arrirc at Greensboro. " .00 S7 uiuner at I-ayettcvllle. MAIL AND PASSKNOEU TRAINS SOUTH BOU!fI. iA-averecnDoro, N.C , 0:50 A.M. l-':0) M. 1:45 p. M. 4:(K) tt:15 " 7::W " LiDerty, " ... ore nui, San ford, " layetteville, " Sho Heel. " Arrive IJonnettuvlllo, " .".' l3Ciinner at San ford Freight and Passonper Train leavpn n.n. a p. m., arrlvinf? at Shoe iieel At 4 i n Fayettuvillo daily it 8 i. n (cMA i Sanford with Frefhtand 1 Wnler Tra m fo l(alelgh) leaves Sanford at 11 W a?m and arrive- at Greensboro at 6:40 p. m. Leaves Greensboro dally at 5 a m leaves aAL1:,A- m- audirrlverFamte- villeat 2: 40 p. m. ay. JNO. M. ROSE, Gen'l Pass. Ak'U W. M. 8. DUNN. . , Gen'l aup't. HEW YORK. PHILADELPHIA and NOifOU RAILROAD. . THE ONLY DAILY LINE BETWEEN THE NORTH AND SOUTH. HOUR3 Quicker than any other route EW YORK and all Points EAST. &!ied,l taking effect March 29M. 1R. jMorinowna. stations- xsH.n.iwnA. Lv. 6:0 p. m. 1'ortsmQuth Norfolk Old Point Wilmington Iialtimoro Philadelphia New Yopir 6:: " " 7:15 " 3:15 A. M. Ar. 6:45 " lv. 4:05 " Ar. 7:00 " Ar. :) A. 9:15 8:.'10 11:51 7:35 1 1:0 it stom at all local atjttin. ' ' i Lv. 8.-00 off passonRere. w "u aJ,u Q.nrS.T5M NeT York w,th a" Railroad and Steamboat Lines for IJoston. 1,i.m,an.Sloep?C8tnin between Cape Charles' Philadelphia and New York. wTi018.011 8,116 mt Company's offlw. foot of Wide Water street, and W.T.WALKE, Atrtnt, under Atlantic Hotel. IT w t.ttxtxiALLAN f AUNDERS, Aent. H. W. DUNNE, Superintendent. R. II. COOKE. General Passenger and Freight Agvnt, HENRY L. STEVENS. Attorney and kmk at b KENANSVILLE, N. C. Practices in 11 the Courts of the coun ties of Duplin, 8ampson and Pender, and m the Supreme Court of the Srate. Prompt afention given to the collection ot claims in any part of the State. July13-6m EXCHANGE HOTElT WILSON, N.C. i When visiting Wilson stop at the Ex j SAMPLE ROOMS FREK mct9 -W , e I iooi. r rni una uwu H VVTY Trnarwr... . sena ror cataiomia. 1st. -An experienced and hla-hly aocomniii, ed corps of teachers in all branches Eft" taught in first class seminaries f()r y0i nir t y dies and Girls. Advantages for inet r Qaviflson CollepI C. and baturdHys at 6:30 a.m.. ShoSllLlat 52 Frelflrhtand lWni. t.i I change Hotel. OoIdaiiniYi of r j gvjuu lkjus, ana a wen 8ui"-
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 4, 1886, edition 1
4
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