Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / Feb. 4, 1886, edition 1 / Page 7
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HE GOLiDSBORO MESSENGER, FEBRUARY 4, 1 886 .-DOUBLE SHEE i. . iLcgxQ) We are receiving the Handsomest Stock of and Winter Good Ever Offered In This Market. Fall Call and! JWe have a Complete Stock and at Lower Prices than ever. Goldsboro. N. C. Sept. 3, l88o.-tf Wiliifeir Crop Arid the whole profits of a year, by foolishly experimenting with so-called Cheap Phosphates, when you can get LISTER'S GUARANTEED ""sis Pure Which will give you an increased yield, and permanently improve and enhance the value of your land. This has been proven by the universal satisfaction which it has given the farmers for the last 35 years ; each year adds to its success and popularity. If you have no knowledge obtained from the use of I Mill 3 Lite's Fhsiphi ask some of your neighbors who have used go nov!2-tf D. P. HASKll FUMERA3L DIRECTOR! Two Doors North of Messrs. Henry Lee & Co., Goldsboro, N. C. OUR STOCK OF ; ' Metallic, Cloth Covered and Wood Cases and Caskets ! Is the Largest and Most Complete in the City. AGENTS FOR STEAM MARBLE WO R ICS and IRON and WIRE FENCING ! Furniture Repaired with Neatness and Despatch, P.rices and Work (Juaranteeil. GoM shorn N. C. .Tan: 28. "80. i ja't'Miss the Opluilj .A. LAEGE o)c5Ml!aAl vMs, L'aip Rota ui At Actual New York Cost ! O THElR As ou Will Finfl Respectfully, I I Goldsboro, N. C, decl7-tf Via A Iff ENTE Oabil aLXLca. See XJsS BP RISE The undersigned respectfully inform the citizens of eurrounding country that they nave -Ou Railroad Street, opposite Messenger Office, where thv will kee) on hand and manufacture ! MONUMENTS HEADSTONES Arid all kinds or Cemeterv Work in American and Italian Marblb. also dealers in Red and Grey Granite. Parties living at a distance ii need of anything in our line should send for our new Photographu ; Designs which we Bend by mail to any address, free. We guaranty satisfaction in material, workmanship and prices. Call on ex address CHAS. E. MALPUSS & OO.. : -uay8-tf GOLDSBORO, N C Examine our New Styles of fliu fiy . itor write for testimonals and catalogues to GOLDSBORO, N. C 1 & SOJN, D. P. HASKITT of Supplying Yourselves ! STOCK OF GmO O DS; Tltem Anywhere ! , r C A DD AD laaa nTVIIW,l. Goldsboro and openeu a Blankets I GOIMOBO s in all Branches 80. 82 and 84 West Centre Street To the Citizsns oPWayne, Duplin, Johnstar, Sampson, Lanoir and Greene. I wish to let one and all know that I have opened . in the Kornegay Building with a well selected stock of Crockery, Lamps, Glass and Tinware. I am ready and anxious to accommodate you and make your hearts happy by sell ing you Goods Cheaper than you have been buying them. It is useless to enumerate what I have in sto-k. Come and ask for what you may need, and your needs will be supplied Give me a trial before buying. HFRemember that I am in the Korne gay Building, Respectfully, dec21-3m WILLIS EDMUNDSON. . W. Rfloore Takes pleasure in saying to her friends and the public that she is prepared to show them a fine selection of Htary and Fancy (hois, Hats, Bonnets, Caps, Zephyr Work, Em broidered Shawls, Gloves, Hosiery, Silks, Laces, Fancy Flush Velvets, Felts, Hand Bags, Perfumery and Jewelry, Stamped Tidies, Scarfs and Splashers. Great Bargains in Hosiery, Corsets and ; Towels. S T IsL IP I Gr and Embroidery in Arasene, Chenille, Kensington, or Silk, done to order. I have added a Dres Making Depart ment to my business, which is in chart of a practical and thoroughly reliable N on hern D ess Maker. and Perfect Satisfaction is Guaranteed. fiSTCsisli Prices fully as Low as oth ers, i oct5-tf A WEEK'S READING FREE! FOR SIX GOOD FAMILIES. mmkI your name and the name and address of fivt of your neighbors or friends on a postal card and get free for yourself and eachof them aspeoimen copy of THE GREAT SOUTHERN WEEKLY, The "Atlanta Constitution." OUR THREE HUMOROUS WRITERS "UNCLE REMUS'S" Word Famous Sketches of the Plan tation Darkey. "BILL ARP'S" Humorous Let ters for the Home and Hearth Stone. BETSY HAMILTON'S" adveiv Ltures told In "Cracker" Dialect .V'ar Stories, Sketclina of Travel, News I'oeins, Fun, Adventures, "The Farm," The Household, Correspondence, A World of Instruction and Entertainment! Twelve Pages. The Brightest and Best Weekly, 'leases every member of ihe Family. END A POSTAL FOR A SPECIMEN COPY, FREE Address. "The Constitution, Atlanta, Ga- L.D. G( g i d d e n s GOLDSBORO, N. C, Watchmaker and Jeweler. I A1C Still at my old stand, sign of Street Clock, (see cut), with a good selection ol AND JEWELRY, which I will sell very low prices. at I am also prepared to ao any kind of i And Jewelry REPAIRING as cheap as the same utass ui wuiJi KsCki L7r done anywhere. I. you do not think so try me. july6 tf L. D. GIDDENS. GREEN. FOY & CO.. Bankers and Commission Merchants. Of fice: South Front street, New Berne, N. C. have first class facilities for trans acting a General Banking Business; will receive deposits subject to check or draft atsight; will buy or sell exchange on New York, Phi adelphia and Balti more? will make loans on well secured naner. and make liberal cash advances on onttf.n rnrn. rice and naval stores, and hold nn storage or make sale for one com mission, either in this market, Norfolk, Baltimore or New York. mar9-lyr METROPOLITAN HOTEL, Penn. Avenue, feetween 6th and 7th Streets, WASHINGTON. D. C Offers all the accommodations of a First WOP Rlrs.E wawloch watc Dock Class Hotel. Miscellaneous. I OWE if Y LIFE. CHAPTKB I. " I was taken sick a year ago With bilious fever." "My doctor pronounced me cured, but I got sick again, with terrible pains in my back and sidts, and I got so bad I Could not move! I shrunk! From 228 lbs. to 120! I had been doc toring tor my liver, but it did me no good. I did not expect to live more than three months. I began to use Hop Bitters. D rectly my appetite returned, my pains left me, my entire system seemed renewed as if by majric, and after using several bottles, I am not only as sonnd as a sovereign, but weigh more than I did before. Xo Hop Bitters I owe my life life." K. ITZPATRICK; ub in, June 6, '84. 2i CHAPTER II. "Maiden, Mass., Feb. 1, 1880. Gentlemen I suffered with attacks of sick headache." Neumlgia, female trouble, for years in the most terrible and excruciating manner. No medicine or doctor could give me relief or cure, until I used Hop Bitters. "The tirst bottle Nearly cured me;" The second made me as well and strong as when a child, "And I have been so to this day." My husband was an invalid for twenty years with a serious "Kidney, liver and urinary complaint, "Pronounced by Boston's best physi cians "Incurable!" Seven bottles of your Bitters cured him and I know of the "Lives of eight persons" In my neighborhood that have been saved by your bitters, And many more are using them with great benefit. "They almost do miracles?" Mrs. E D. Slack. How to Get Sick. Expose yourself day and night; eat too much without exercise, work too hard wi hout rest, doctor all the time; take all the vile nostrums advertised, and then you will want to know How to Get WELii which is is answered in three words Take Hop Bitters! "None genuine without a bunch of green Hops on the white label. Shun all the vile, poi sonous stuff with "Hop" or "Hops" in their name. O U? -A- CAROLINA MUSIC HOUSE, JNjy AJLLj. Manager. Organs, Sheet' Music, Music Bo.ks, &c, SOUHERN DISTRIBUTING AGENT FOR BOOSEY k CO., London, SCHUBERTH & CO., Lcipsic. PIANOS from ORGANS from $48,00 to $500,00 $175,00 to $1000.00 Sifiht L: ding Makes tO Select from -PIANOS- CHAS. M. STIEFF, 1IENUY F. MILLER & SONS, HAKDMAN, NEW ENGLAND, WESEit BltO. 01GANS BUItDETT, TABER, SOUTHERN GEM. 'Catalogues by Mail Free." A five years guarantee (riven with each In strument sold. All freight paid to your near est depot, fifteen days allowed for examina tion in youf own homes, if desired, before purchasing. A complete outfit Stool, Cover and Instruction Book given with each Piano, and Stool and Instructor with each rgan. Six months privilege of exchange, in fact every inducement olfered to buyers that can be hon estly carried out Send us your orders and we guarantee more than satisfaction or no trade. PIANOS AND ORGANS Sold for Cash or on Easy Installment Plans. Special inducements offered Music Trade. Large and complete Stock. Evans' Ten Cent Music. Orders for Music will be promptly and care'ully filled same day they are received, if in stock, and if not will be ordered at once. $Address all Letters, Orders oraSommuni- eations of any kind to HENRY MILLER, Manager Carolina Music House. Lock Box 700. Goldsboro, N. C. jan25-tf HEAD QTJ ARTE R S FOR Fr a all Hnr folic Mm 1 1 UWUllUiiUlli Uj M IU1 M I take pleasure in informing my friends, and the public generaly, that I have re-opened my OYSTER SALOON! Next door to John W. Edwards' Sample Room. and opposite the Messenger office, where I will be pleased to meet them. Having nad many years experience in the he business, in this city. cannot be surpassed in 1 am satisfied that 1 serving them to suit. -Families supplied by the Measure at the Lowest Market Price. I return Thanks to the Generous Public for past favors, and hope by strict attention to business to merit a continuance of the same. W. L. EDWARDS. Goldsboro, N. C, Sept. 7-wswtf Dr. W. E. FINLAYS0N, CHESTNUT STREET, Gold sboro, N. C, Keeps pure and Fresh Drugs and Brown's Iron Bitters. I will sell Patent Medicines ten per cent less than usual price. Call on me; I am always about my place of business, and will take pleasure i in waiLinti OH ail V UllC 1x1 xiccvi ui all y thing in my line. Kespecttuuy, declO-tf Dr. yy . M. t in l,a i sur DR. H. D. HARPER KINKTON, N. C. Offers his professional services to the citi zens ot Ktnston ana aaiaceni counties. Baa recently ul?cd P an ol flee with all "tffiZSSk rarKleri1 conv- oiences, and xlli is enabied to dc work with comfort and dispu ch. He hit made : perative Deastr niiiog, cien ing, extracting, trtiatmg fec , a special tj for several years, and is connaem o giv in g satisfaction- Call an'' eisi me m outfit OfRf ir Orxr rirnt& K'W Dr. A. O'DANIEL, ODerative and Mechanical upciauvo DENTIST! Office : Oyer Hood, Britt & Hall's GOLDSBORO, N. C. r Store. HOQ CHOLERA PREVENTIVE. Correspondence of the Raleigh Obserrer.l In the report of the Commissioner of the Department of Agriculture for the year 1SS0 we find a long: article from the pen of Drs. H. J. Detraer and Law, covering 183 pages, contain ing the results of a great many exper iments on hogs and chickens infested with cholera, accompanied by numer ous colored illustrations. This important subject (for on it de pends cheap meat for all classes) seems here to have been most fully and pro foundly discussed ; and for the pur pose of giving information to the many farmers of this State, we having no experience in the preventives herein mentioned, but having suffered the loss of many thousand pounds of pork through this dread disease, and fully believing that the preventives, coming from such a high source, furnish almost a sure remedy, propose to cull these pages, and to get at the gist of the matter by putting it in a con densed form, so that all can digest and apply it practically. This report can be had by applying to the aforesaid Commissioner at Washington, D. C; or I have no doubt that each Representative in Congress will supply such of his constituents as may apply to him for the book. Hog cholera is a disease of the hog, attend ed by a cough, very great diarrhoea, great loss of appetite, and consequent ly great attenuation. It occurs most frequently in summer; very cold weather stopping itentirelj-, or greatly reducing it in quantity and virulence, by freezing the earth, thus preventing the hogs from uprooting it and setting free the germs which de velop it. It develops itself in from seven to fifteen days, the animal dying in about twenty-five days, more or less. Dr. Detmers cultivated the Schizophytae, a microscopic animal cule procured from lung exudation-of the diseased animal in milk, albumen and in water, and successfully inocu lated hogs that were free from the dis ease. Before the disease had devel oped itself (a few days after the inoc ulation) he gave them in their food ten drops of a ninety-five per cent so lution of carbolic acid, the cheapest and best remedy which can be had, three times a day, to the one hundred pounds of live hogs ; see pages 556 567, and though thus inoculated and thus treated, they never had the dis ease, whilst those that were inoculated and were not thus treated, died with cholera in from twenty to thirty-five days. So also' those hogs that did not have the disease, and were not inocu lated, but were fed on the solution and suhject to contamination partly, never had this disease. A small pe. cent, of the hogs that had the disease, which were trea'ed as above, became eventually well, but were always small and runty and were of little value to their owners. There fore the remedy is mostly a preventive one, consequently it must be used be fore the symptoms of cholera appear, otherwise it seems to do little or no good. Therefore it is best to kill end to bury deep all diseased hogs, irame diately on the discoverj'of the disease, and to keep the well ones away from the places where the diseased hogs bedded or were penned. A great number of hogs were experimented on, and in nearl. every case that was thus treated before the symptoms or chol- era appeared it was prevented. Those uuns mat liny i unu i lie uisenc nnc uui very subject to the contagion a second j time. The disease is generated in piles of manure and in filthy pens where the hogs lie huddled together. The best and cheapest disinfectants for these places are chloride of lime, chloride of zinc, sulphaTe of iron (copperas) and sulphuric acid, to be freely used in all the yards and buildings which the hogs sleep in or frequent. James Law, page 517, says hogs have apparently a similar disease to the cholera which this remedy does not prevent, caused by a different worm, inhabiting the intestines, lungs and bodies of the ani mal. Thus, on page 517, he describes a supposed cholera which was onlv cured by the free use of tobacco, which cleared the hogs of worms. Very dilute sulphuric acid, a very cheap remedy, is perhaps the best remedy; but owing to its corrosive ness it would be very dangerous to handle, unless much diluted in the drug store beforehand. PLEURO-PNEUMONIA. Commissioner Colman Wants a Half Million Dollars to Kill It. "Washington, January 30. The house committee on agriculture had a special meeting to-day, at which the several bills looking toward the ex tirpation of pleuro-pneumonia were under consideration. Commissioner of agriculture Colman; ex-Representa tiye Wilson (Iowa); Dr. Salmon, of the department of agriculture; Col. Curtis, of the New York board of in spection; Major Towers, of Kansas City, and JUr. Flerdy of Maryland, I i ' .... i i. : p BaueLgiu m sum ui measure tnat wouia exiermmaie ine disease. All seemed to think the ap- nrooriatiou for the work should be at fM.cr 400 000 Dr. Salmor statpd that no deletrious results had followed the consumption of beef cattle af fected with pleuro-pneumonia, al though it was very fatal to the cattle. Mr. Wilson treated the trade in calves in the east and west, and the practice of buying calves at seaports for ship ments west. Pleuro-pneumonia, he said, could be transferred in that way He recommended that all subjects be killed as soon as the disease is devel oped. The committee were of the unanimous opinion mat importers should bear all the losses sustained by the importation of affected cattle; that the cattle should be killed and the importers not reimbursed by the government. A Wise Reform. The habit of administering quinine in powerful doses, as an antidote to malarial maladies, was once dangerously common. Happily this practice has undegone a wide reform. Not only the public, but professional men have adopted, not whol ly, of course, but largely, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters as a sale botanic sub stitute for the pernicious ; alkaloid. The consequences of this change are most im portant. Now fever and ague sufferers are cured formerly their complaints were onlv for the time relieved, or half cured the remedy eyentually failing to produce anv appreciable effect, except the doses were increased. A course of the Bitters, persistently lollowed, breaks up the worst attacks and prevents their return. The evidence in lavor of this Eterling specific and household medicine is of no ambigu ous character, but positive and satbfactory and the sources whence it proceeds are LABOR, WAGES AND IMMI GRATION. The annual report of Commissioner Charles F. Peck, of the New j York State bureau of statistics of labor is full of suggestive material. Mr. Peck devotes most attention to the wages and home condition of working wo men, strikes, and the drivers of street railroads. He estimates that 200,000 women are employed in various trade in New York and Brooklyn, and from his statement it appears very clearly that the condition of these female bread-winners is much improved in those trades where they have organ izations. And it speaks well for the thrift and self respect of these women that though their wages are as a rule smaller than those paid men in the same or similar occupations their deposits in savings banks are propor tionately larger. The commissionershows that strikes are steadily becoming less and less frequent, and are now only restored to as an extreme expedient. Arbitra tion is growing in favor and the com missioner recommends that the State pass a law under which disputes be tween capital and labor shall be re ferred to a jury. "Arbitrators' he remarks, "cannot command respect unless there is a reserve power be hind them.'" flo acknowledges the efficacy of the boycott, but thinks it is a two-edged weapon, and should be handled, therefore, with caution. Like Commissioner Hadley, of the Connecticut board of labor, Mr. Peck is inclined to look on the further imi trration in large bodies of foreign la borers as a menace of our industrial classes. "Many of these foreigners,1' he writes, "manage to subsist where an American would starve, and care little for the mortalities and refine ments of life." If the are allowed to pour in as in the past, the native laborer must accept the conditions of the competitor or "ero in search better country." He cordially of a dorses trades unions, wh eh, clares, are "the salvation workingman." he of A Captain's Fortunale Discovery. Capt. Coleman, Fc.hr. Weymouth, plviDg bet ween Atlantic City and N. Y., had 1 cen troubled with a cough so that he was un able to sleep, and was induced to try Dr. JvmgsJNew .Discovery lor Consumption. It not onlv gave him Instant relief, but allayed the extreme soreness in his breast. His children 'were jsimilarly affected and a single dose haoMhc sme happy effect. Dr. King's Ne Dis overy is now the standard remedy in the Coleman house hold and on txard the schooner. Free Trial Bottlesof this Standard Rem edy at Kirby & Robinson's Drug Store. Good at a pinch a tight shoe. The Fortune of ? o. 19 It. Charles street Yesterday, at noon, a reporter for the I'ica yvne met in the reception room of The Louis iana State Lottery Company's olncn Mr. Loon Marthe, the well known proprietor of No. 1M St Charles street. He had tailed to transact a little business, and taking out his pooket book he displayed a lottery ticket, which was stamped (il.225, one-tenth of the First Capital Prize in Dee. 151h l)ra winr one-t-nth of $151,000. or il."),000 for one dollar. .V. O. I'ica- yune, Der. l'.t. Picture Frames of all kinds, sold cheap at Fuchtler & Kern's. Motto Frames 25 cents. t "I've Got Tta on My List." Busbee'b New Form Book, Allen's Forty Lessoii3 in Book keeping, Miss Cleveland's Book, Chamber's Encyclopedia, 10 vols. E. P. Hoe's Works, per vol. $2 50 1.50 1.50 20.00 1.5' Miss Alcott's "Little Women" series, 1.50 Ked-Line Poets, handsome, only 1 00 tam Jones' Sermons ami Sayings, 1.00 Shannon's Filt-s, at manufacturer's prices. Binding Cases, ditto. HEA I)(J UjJ li TERS FOR SCHOOL BOOKS AND SCHOOL SUPPLIES. A nice line of Papers, Envelopes, Pens, Pencils, Inks, and in tact everything usu ally found in a lirst-class Bookstore. 13" Orders by mail receive prompt at tention. WIIITAKES'S BOOKSTORE. jan28-tf 800 TONS Fresh homl Land Plaster! For sale very low by TH0S. F. BAGLEY, Wilmington, N. C. Also Salt, Molas-es, Sainit, tz. janll-lm IWTTILCIE By virtue of the authority contained in a Mortgage Deed executed to me on the 11th da of January, 1884, by A. W. Big gins and Pennina A. Iliggins, and duly registered in the Registers office of Wayne county. Book No. 50, Page 538, I shall sell, at public auction, for cash, at the Court House door in the town ol toids boro, on the 11th day ot February, 188G,a cetain tract of land in Pikeville town ship, Wayne county, adjoining the lands of Enoch Edgerton, Gray Talton and others, containing 50 acres, more or less, and fully described in faid Mortgage. H. DANNENBEKG. Janury 11, 1886-4w Mortgagee. TleSiirlBsBoase, Smithfield, N. C, Under New Management Having parchnsed the well-known FDL LER HOTEL, and knowing the wants of (he traveling i nbne. l snail spare to oains in uiakiDK the acc moiuation first -clasH in every ( articular The best cooks, and trained servant rmplojet UayTelegraph office in tn notei W B.SURLE3, onv3-1y Proprietor PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM tlM popular feTorita for drearfnc tba hidr, Kactorlnr color when gray, acd praranunc; Dandruff. It cMiaaaea tha aeaip. atopa tba balr vunng, and is aura to piaaaa. tO. H4 fl MM I 2. O. WOOTSM, ttoey-kt-Lkw Snow Hill N. C. Special attention given to collection ot Miscellaneous. W OA PITA I. ritlZK, 975 OOP gl Ticket only 05. Fharr la prportln Louisiana State lottery Company. HV U Krrrtry certify Oiat wt iwi- mu l4 arrupe nenU Jot U IK MtmlMy Ntf Quarterly 0r J Uie Luirwna State Lottery (Xm") urui i ptr o nagt mndovtrol Ikt Drmwimgt tkemsdvu, and hat ike ihm arc etmdticted with koJty,amu, and " r toward alt partiet. and w auOuirU Uu ""jvmir t mm Uu certificate, wtlk fxo-4mUa rf our . Wura attacked, in iU advrttsrmenU." We the undersigned Banks and Bankers will fuy all IVizes drawn on The .ouisuma State Lotteries tchiih may it fresrnied at cur icunters. J. II. OGLESBY, Pres. Louisiara is atioi al Bank SAMUEL II. KENNEH A. BALDWIN. J res. Lew Orleans flatioEal Bank. iiitx rj-umiro ia Isti u r M ycre by tb Lt-Ris-Uture for .dat mu n.U u..o (;L&rtla .. ,,u Wt.i i'h & cael' of f,,v- (),wm to wti L a rcM-rtv '01 (1 ol over $5.MMt a riutv tn-vr oCco ly an overwhelming iiuir v;te It tri.c&'.a rnte a rrt of ttie pn-rrnt rtatr Corutl.u turn adopted December 2d, A. D.,187! The only Lattery ever voted on ' and en-doi-ted by the jjle of a ny Mile. It never Mcale vr postpone. ItaUrmnd Mlnal Nmhrr lrmn Uhr plc monthly. and the Extraordinary Draw ing regularly every threfc months instead of ftemi-Annually aa heretofore, belnninr .tlarrit. 188 t. A PI.KIIII OIM'OKTINITV T I A FORT IT r . S KCON I) C, UA Nil DKA WINO CLARS II, INTHK ACADKMY OF MUSIC, NEWOHLF.ANM, TUKSDAY, Krl,,M., 1( 18 Monthly Drawing. CAPITAL PRIZE $75,000 100,000 Tickets al Five; Dollars Each. Fraction t, in Fifth in proportion LIST OF PK1ZTC8. 1 CAPITAL PHIZK $1mn l do ao .OfiO do uf i-tmoo ri.to lo.uo JUTO Iii.ii W : 10.009 l 5 10 30 11 10 300 5110 1000 9 0 9 do PKI.KS do do do do do do do 300 30.0110 100 JO.uno f0 25.01 35 25.UW APPUOXIM ATION PHIZKS. Approximation Prizes of 1750 .7.vi do do , Mm do do . 2TiO l'.H7 Prizes, amounting to i H uMt(l.L lot rutc to cludi t)'U'd Ik ui0tf I) t( the ttfloc ol the v.onipk.iiy in Nw Or- ieers. For farther Intornnt'on write clearly, MlvlBit ad :te 1M)-1 Al. OTh. KuTfiHn Mou. y Ordcf. or Now York Kxiinn In ordluary Iftor. cnrroDcy ty Euic (h'I puu ot 5 ana tjpwara nt our ixpt nio) . llr 1 31. A. DAI'I'IIIN, New Orlmtn, la. or M. A. I1AUPM1N, Wfiohlrutnn, D. Miti? P. 0, Kins Criers Pay Me ani aiir s Rciiser..J Letters to NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK. New Orleans La ATTEiSTION! Fanners ai Gioners Having received the agency for the Barbiur Gcttsn M Crushers for the counties of Wayne, Sampson, Du-j plin, Greene, Lenoir and Johnston, we1 would respectfully invite the attention ot i Ginners and Farmers to their usefulness. They are highly recommended and SUPPLY A LONG-FELT WANT, Every Ginger and Farmer should have one. For prices and particulars call on or address HENRY LEE & CO., Wholesale Grocers, aujrSOlf PLANS AMD EST MAJtS FOR House Building! In all its branches, complete or In de tail, including HI all II VII II tflllll Iron Work, Wood Work, Tinning, Ga$ Fitting and Plumbing, Plastering, Painting and Glazing in fact, for anything required for th3 erection Ot either wood, brick, stone or iron buildings. Ornamental and Monumental Gran ite and common stone work, a specialty, i At my tin shops we do all sorts ol tin work, roofing, &c. Wood work, sash. doors, etc., on short notice. MILTOIT HARDING. March 20, 1885.-ly i L. SIMOT & COi, (Successors to H. Brunhild & Bro.) W1I0LESALK DEALERS IN Liquors, Cigars -AND 114 North Water St., WILJU1JVG TON, - - jr. a BRANCH Or H. BRUNHILD & BRO, RICHMOND, VA. Sole Agents for i HICKS 6l BRUNHILD BROS.; Manufacturers rf TobacdD, nov26tf RICHMOND, V, IF. B. LOF T I A f TOR WE V AT LA W, GOLDSBOUO, N, C. Will retrularlv attend the Courts of, j Wayne, Wilson, Greene, Lenoir and Jones j counties, and the Supreme Court at Ral eigh. STOfflce on the first floor of the build ing recently occupied by.Urainger & Bryan. aul3-tf S JE O X . I will take pleasure in ordering any Book or other article in my line that I )Y. Ol i ma r ir THE mn mm MM ll Mi may not nave in siock. jucave your or- Hdt Hat otrlv mm rwothlA & ROBBLNS, Proprietors apr9-tf very numerous. declO- J. B. WHITAKER, Jr. SELDEN
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 4, 1886, edition 1
7
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