Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / April 22, 1886, edition 1 / Page 3
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m i r v ? i niscfllanfoun Attend td it Now. f ny suff ering people drag themselves about rith failing sircusm, iccuuR tuai mejr are ItPftdily sinking into the grave, when by using barker s Tonic they would find a cure com ;ncing with the first dose, and vitality and strength surelycomingack to them i. . - r 'I artl oo yeara fjm, imvo won biuh. mmriy an ,.. life, and ought to know something about npdicine by this time. I have used Parker's r it the best remedy I have ever known. In i now find no other medicine necessary. l-nr 'weakness, debility, rheumatism, and that r . 1 sv-tv-k An Acta an t Ta n -frnw rV4.rV i suffered "so long, it has no equal. Iilo not see Lw ruv one can afford to do without so valu- aide a medicine. jiksjiattig . ukaves, .or- l'st wid Front streets. Providence, R. I. Parker's Tonic irenared by Hiscox k Co.. N. Y.l jki bv all- Druggists in large bottles at One poliftr. It Law hn Boxs Meat, 10 " Sugar,. 1 5 acks Coffee, JO Mfasses 220 Bush -Is Oats. 1 OO acs ?alt, 25 -Hoxes Tobacco, 25 Cases Horsford's B. P. gO Ajioss Matches, JO Bbls Irish Potatoes. P0TA.SII, lye, soap, starch, dry GOODS, NOTIONS, BOOTS, SHOES, HATS, HARDWARE, WOOD WARE, &c, &c. j-Tlie :ibove goods must be 'sold. BEST & THOMPSON. Oold.b)ro!N;C1Feb.8;86.-tf BOX MEATS. FLOUR "MEAL, &G. 'J5 Boxes C. R. Sides 50 Barrels Mess Pork. 125 Barrels Flour (all grades.) f 11 Barrels Kerosene Oil. ! 13 Barrels Sugar. 22 Barrels Molasses. ! 200 Bushels Oats. . ' . - 200 Bushels Corn. -200 Bales Timothy Hay. 100 Cases Matches, Potash, Lye, &c. targe Stock of Canned Goods! 100 Barrels Irish Potatoes (for seed) i - - . t Affnr a T.nrcro nhd well as- sorted -Stock of Groceries and General i ATorranriiif either WHOLESALE OR RETAIL, . n at Low Figures lor asn. Yours, &c, EDGERTOII & FIHLAYSOH. Li ... t n TT-.l. 1 C UOldSDOrO,lN.V.,reu. i, ou-u Notice! 300,000 POUNDS C. R. Side Meat to Exchange, pound for j ' . pound, for GOOD COTTON, payable on November1 next, on good security, at AYCOCK BROS., & COS! r; Fremont, N . C febS-tf - Forty Lessons in look-Keeping, GRADED AND HIGH SCHOOLS. I Clear, Correct, Concise. ENDORSED BY , Bingham, Burwell. Lewis and others. Any Teacher can understand it. Price $1.50. To Schools $1.00. Postage . prepaid. Six Lessons sent free. Agents wanted. i GEORGE ALLEN, Kp24-tf Newbern, N. C. g! I -Having had a long experience in the Mattress Business, I would respectfully mform the Public, generally, that I am now, prepared, and pay special attention to iOTERE A. TILING- Moss, Hair, or any other kind of Mattress Mattresses made to order. Will also Mntract to furnish Mattresses in any quantity desired. ; tF Send for Prices. Address EOUIS HUMMEL. wldsboro, N. C., Sept. 7-ti s E..FAISON. W. E. FAISON. ttoriie vs-at-Ija . ': CLINTON, N. C. Jill practice in Sampson, Duplin, Bladen, Wayne and Pender counties, and in the 'I Supreme Court of the State. ."Hefer, by special permission, to A. F. Jotinson, Cashier Clinton Loan Association, Clinton, N. C; E. J. Lilly, Esq., Fayetteville, 2 c- and Maj. C. M. Stedman, AVilmington, Jy C. decl7-tr , SAMUEL BEAR, Sr., i WHOTjESAF.E dealer in- Tobacco, Cigars, &c. Highest Cash I'rices Paid For iWool , Beeswax and Purs! IN GOOD 'ORDER. k plauk Otter W Hrown (Jttor . ..... : 2T ox (cased) ." 00 ox (open). 70 onicased) ;: 0 'jprosum 11 i - "asneu Wool s Tl n washed Wool.. 23 Hurry. Wool W -Cash Paid on Delivery at 18 Market St. ILMlNGTON, N. C. mar9-w to junl yry wwa, v---? wii..!. j p Mattress Mann BALLADE OF MARECtfAL NIEL A. J. JCDD. ; Great the glory, sweet thy (fame. Won at Solferino's fray, I Prat8es fans' to thy great name, Gallant hero of the day : r I air Italia owned thy swaTT Soldiere true, with hearts of steel, i Rich llbat on there did pay To thy mem'ry, MarechafNiel. Shafts of stone thy deeds proclaim As enduring marble may, i And a grateful country's claim Blazons forth In long array With ornate and proud display, Thus men show their patriot zeal, And their willing homage pay To thy mem'ry, Marechal Niel. Soldier brave, with heart of flame. Though thy gallant form be clay, Many a stately, high-bred dame Wears thee on thy heart to-day, 'Mid the gayest of the gay. On thy rose heart lays the seal Of her lips in coy delay - To thy mem'ry Marecbal Niel- ENVOY. ? , Rose or warrior? Who shall tell ! What a fond heart may conceal ? 'Tis sweet incense, anyway. To thy mem'ry, Marechal Niel. WHATHEH SIGNS. ,tnre'n Mhii of I nll-at in; the Coming of a Storm. .The wind rises, foivtellins: a storm. It oric and moans at tin window as if it lamented Die evil it was owerless to prevent It is a sound which tries tlie nerves already sinking :is" the electric stimulus is withdrawn from 1 lie air.- The low spirits we are unable to account for ire often caused by the suspension of the bracing, positive electric current during a change of weather, loo slight, per haps, for us to notice. This sinking of spirits unconsciously leads sensitive peo ple to regard the cry of the wind as a sort of banshee warning of disaster and wreck. This is one of the oldest super stitions in the world, for before the time of Virgil and Theocritus, when to Greek and Etrurian an eclipse was the frown of an offended deity and a comet was a lierv messenger ofAiTath. the sigh of the wind was full of unutterable jwjilents. In olden days, when 'window frames were not as close as burs ami chimney Tannics offered pipe for any tune the w ind chose to play upon it, imaginative cotters wove many a legend of demons f the air and witches shrieking discord and horror, as if Thp cloudy air was filled round about With howling cries and wot ul, Availing plaints. Old-country tradition is full of such 1ales, and we are all primitive enough to feel a touch of creeping dread at the eldrich voices of the wind, forgetful that the clamor and wailing is only the wind forcing itself through a crevice too small for it. The world is full of superstitions which have arisen as naturally as the childish dread of the wailing of the wind. But ou must be sure that these well-worn ideas have neither meaning nor worth before you throw them away. A super stition is not always a. '-thing to be Jaughed at, a truth which the latest re search 'of science strikingly illustrates. In plates on the. west coast of Eng land, on the calmest, quietest of days, a t range, hollow moan is heard from a 'distance 'at sea. although the waves lie deeping at one's feet. Fifty years ago the coast folk believed it the voice of a spirit, by the old heathen Saxon name of Hucca. which foretold tempest and woe. You hear the voice now. ominous as of yore, but yon know that it ishe noise of a storm so far off on tin; Atlantic that its swell has not even reached hore. Sound travels so much faster than currents of air that the tempest reaches the ear long before 'the first ripple of wind touches the cheek. Sound in air travels about thirteen miles a minute: in water four times as fast, out stripping the speed of any tornado known. The shore at these places gathers tin; sound as in the drum of the ear. and currents striking eastward carry the roar of storms which are sweeping niidocean hundreds of leagues away, not a blast of which may ever vex the shore. It is wonderful what carriers of sound, and motion the great empty spaces of the ocean are. Before a gale is felt in the British isles a heavy swell sets the lightship swinging at the station of the Kish and Cockle (Ja4, while at Valentia the surf rises twenty four hours before the storm reaches that projecting point.'' In the bay of Mon terey, California, the billows come tear ingin from the Pacific while the day is perfectly calm. A cyclone off days , at sea has sent these surges to tell the shore of its work. When distant hills hwik clear, sailors for bode storm. When instead- of its usual haze. Blue hill, as seen from Ded ham. invites the eye, to ; pierce its dells and woody paths inJ singular clearness, we know it is the last of our good weather for awhile. How is this? A great (ionium observer says the moisture in the. air washes its dust and impurities awav: leaving this beautiful clearness. But this reason fails to be satisfactory. Why isn't it as clear after a rain as well as hefore it. when we know the woods fold their bluest mist about them, as if to keep their recesses fresh? 1 prefer the theory that the air ' before a storm has a retracting quality which brings distances near, like the glasses of a tele scope. How does it gnin this quality at cue time and not at another? Perhaps oy the different arrangement of -its mole cules by the alteratioh of the electric current so that various layers of the air act like' lenses in a degree. One finds the anie lense-like .quality in the air of Arizona plains when mirage is visible, and on the northwest, prairies, when at times it is like lookin prism, alid the slopes purple and laid with through a great are outlined with roseate tinges of enchanting harmonv. You have heard of the old signs and sayings about the right time of ihe moon for sowing seeds and expecting rain at such a quarter, and yoii have laughed at'the idea that the nrooii had anything to do with theafl'airsbf the. earth beyond giving light like a - big lantern. "In fact," writes one English scientist, "the" influence of the moon on the weather is as mythical as its intluence over human life." Presently the same writer speaks of "the powerful agency of the moon in causing tides of ocean and of air. sub ject to the same lidal influences.' Farther he declares that -changes of the weather are associated with various aspects of the moon." Mr. Park Harri son, one of the closest' observers of modern times, after studying a mass of observations, concludes that there is a tendency in the moon to - warm the earth at her first quarter ami cool it at the think slightly but perceptibly. Mr. Cilaisher, the celebrated meteorologist, finds that there are more north winds in one-half of the moon's eriod and more south winds in the Other causes quite sufficient to affect such susceptible things as the germs of seed. But leaving the slight additional heat o-iven by the moon out of the question, research brings a new and serious phase of the moon's influence before us. The ruoon is a radiator ami reflector of the sun's heat, which pours upon her for a period fourteen times the length of onr day, part of which flows into space -and part comes to earth. In this period of THE QOLDSBORO MESSENGER, APRIL 22, isolation the moon receives hot only heat, but a portion of that intense vital and electric force of which the sun is the center and source. At her third quarter the moon has been exposed to the uninterrupted heat of the Kim fnr 9fiA hours, absorbing quantities of vital heat and electricity as well. Why may not it be also reflector and radiator of this electric energy, which we find diffused throughout nature, quickening the seed in the ground, the leaf in its sheaf, the blood w ithin our veins, the tissues which overlay our frame! Science detects a tide of nervous electric force at its fullest about .10 o'chx-k in the forenoon, and from 3 to 4 in the afternoon, when human strength and life are at their best, in the hours opposite which they are at their lowest, when llw. sick feel feeblest, and when ihe dying find re lease. Tin; hours of its ebb ami How are as well know n as the tide of ocean, ami beyond a doubt such " a current exists in lower forms of organic life. All things jK.int to ihe sun as the royal source, the moon as the dispenser and regulator, of this magnetic life. Ad miral Fitzroy, founder of the weather service of Great Britain, fairest and most exact of observer, writes in his. weather book that all the phenomena agree with the idea of such an electric influence on the part of the moon, and farther that it explains . all unreconciled facts in meteorology. Thi being true, it re deems from absurdity the dependence of mankind! for centuries on the aspects of the moon for signs of weather, for times of sowing and - reaping, for weaning of children and young animals, in short, the most delicate operations of nature, sensitive to influences we duly feel and distantly perceive. When all scientific men agree that, whatever the reason, certain changes of the weathc and cer tain changes of the moon happen to gether, we have not far to look for a code of weather signals available In land or s(-a. The old superstition was that the moon eausetl the change- of weather, in which lies the mistake, just as if we believed that the cautionary signals of the weather bureau caused storms. That the moon's changes agree with the change's of weather as with the tides is a belief on which we want the experience of twenty thousand strict observers.- -A". Mai and h'.rpres. How Prominent Men Head. "Do you know there is a good ileal of character shown in ihe wav men read the jrapers?"" said a well-known hotel clerk to ihe -reporter. "Of course, you don't see it. any more than an ordinary observer sees character in the way men eat; but there is, nevertheless. 1 have seen all the prominent men in the coun try re:Ml tin; papers time and again, and not two in a thousand read alike. My attention was tirst called to tjie subject some years ago bv Horace Greeley, who was an omnivorous reader of the papers. I have been a constant observer ever since. Horace was the queerest reader you ever saw . ' He would begin at the lirst column and read every line down Jo the advertisements. According as he read he would crumple the paper up in his hands. When he got through, the paper would be rolled up in a ball. Aft er he left the hotel in the morning to go down town to his oHice all the pajers would be strewn around the floor like so many paper balls. It used 1o amuse the guests of the house, and was the oc casion of many bottles of wine. Some folks said it was affectation, like Gree ley's great white coat: but I never thought so. To me it indicated an un conscious, sturdy character which looked straight ahead for results, while paying very little attention to details or circum stances. Oh. yes: General Grant also had his peculiarities. He usually read one pa per through and through. He would stop in the middle of an editorial and reflect. (Irani was a slow reader, but' when he put down a paper he could tell you all the news and discuss a question with great discrimination. He used to say that one paper was. all he had time to read avday. Whatever was worth reading in his estimation, was worth digesting and remembering. People who knew Grant will recollect what an exhaustive! memory he had for detail. He could relate every circumstance con nected with any important event that occurred long before the war. He -used to say he didn't remember all about the 'war, but he knew 'more than any one else about the great events in wliidi he had personally figured. There is no doubt whatever that General Grant's predominant'characteristie displayed it self in his manner of reading. He was slow, patient and painstaking in every thing, but when he once; arrived at a conclusion there was no dislodging him. "Lincoln never cared for the news of the elay that is. he newer cared te reael it. He! usually hael his private secretary tell him what was in the papers. He wouhl read editorials, though, by the hour. When he! stoppeel at the hotel he; wouhl reael the eelitorials in every paper the first thing in the morning. He useel to say that men's views were all he caret 1 abeut. It made no differ ence about the details of how a thing happened. If he knew the causes of it. ami the bearing it would have upon matters in general, that was all he wanted to know. "General MeC'lellan was just the! eq posite. He ca reel more about the cir cumstance's of a gooel story than about the result. If he knew that a certain bill was passe-el er defeated in congress he wouhl reael all about its career, ami then form his own judgment. MeC'lel lan, of course1, respected the opinions of others, but he! always made it a rule tej be self-reliant in thought as well as in action. On a certain occasion, a few years be-fore the war. McClellan ami Greeley we're both staying at. the! hotel. They were! fast friends. One! evening the conversation turned-upon the slav ery question, ami Mr. Greeley who was an artleMit aelmirerof Wemlell Phillips, called General Mcdellan's attention te an attack maele- against his character in a leading NewV York paper. It had grieveel Horace that he almost shed tears. Mc 'h'llan burst into a hearty laugh, ami. turning to Mr. Greeley, rather pointedly, asked him if he hadn't had experience enough' to know that it mattered little what 'any newspaper said about a man. Horace was shocked at such an unexpected remark, and couldn't be maele to believe that the general meant it. A man in Buffalo proposes to chain a Bib&sto each telephone in the country, so tjiMwhile waiting for replies persons will Imve something to reael of a nature to repress profanity. If erTong Debilitated Men You are allowed a Jree trxal oj thirty days of the use of Dr. Dye's Celebrated Voltaic Belt with Electric Suspensory Appliances, for the speedy relief and permanent cure of Nervous Debility, loss of vitality and Manhood, and al kindred troubles. Also, for many other dis eases. Complete restoration to health, vigor and manhood guaranteed. No risk is incurred. Illustrated pamphlet, with full information, terms, etc., mailed free by addressing1 Voltaic Belt-Co. Marshall Micb. An Idea fbr Farmers Boys and Girls Mention has been made of the young people of the farm. . There are a score of ways in which, country boys and girls may become interested in out-door recreation, and through which they will lead more contented lives. The long ings for the pleasures ami enjoyments of the great city world, of which they know so little and desire to know so much, may be satisfied, in a measure, at home. A great deal can be accom plished by association: to them more than to their parents the isolation of country life is a source of dissatisfac tion. Why not find a partial remedy in the citib? There is scarcely a rural neighbor hood in the eastern portions of the Unit ed States where a club of fifteen or twenty young eople, with a definite ob ject in vioAV. could not be formed in a very short time. It might le a lawn tennis club or a driving club: a shott ing, fishing, 'or athletic club for the boys or. perhaps, better than these-, an outing dub, that wouhl include' walking, driving, tennis, boating, shooting, fishing, and the many out-of-door pastimes that young people of both sexes indulge in. During the winter months there would be skating-meets ami sleigh ing-tours, to extend over sev eral days, and ice yachting, which wouhl give amusement to both sexes, ami be indulged in wherever there are streams or inland lakes. hven the bicycle- and tricycle should have a place in the barii with the family carryall, both for the relaxation of muscles strained ami sore from long hours of bending over uncongenial toil, ami ns a saving of hoise-llesh on many an even ing erraml to town. Let there be asso ciations ami clubs, and perhaps club championships with inexpensive prize's for excellence in special fields of sport, and the most beneficial kind of mental ami physical relaxation ami recupera tion will result. And perhaps if the ohl fedks we're very, very gooel they might beeonie associate members of the- club, ami renew their youth. OiilhKj. Kais.ing Pears in the South. Gen. George .Sheridan has often bevn mistaken for the other general of the same name. He was at the white houc o:;ee during the Hayes administration when a delegation was announced. It was a horticultural convention which had called to pay its respects. Presi dent Hayes asked Gen. Sheridan to ac company him to the1 reception room, most of them thinking it was P. H. Sheridan to whom they were: talking, (ien. Sheridan finally became reticent, ami the president sought te en-a"v him in further talk. The ennvcrsatiem between them ran about like this: Hayes--General, have yon much fruit in Louisiana? Sheridan O vtv. Wei have- eran'vs ami apricots ami grape's in profusion. Hayes Do you'have any of the hanlv northern fruits- apples anel pears? Sheridan There' are a few apples raised along the northern boundary of the .state. Haves Do vou ever raise pears? Sheridan- Always, if we have' three ef a kind. There was a niemient's icy stillne-ss. anil then a big, fat fruit-grower, with a roguish eye, unable to hold in. began to snicker, anel in less th air a tw inkle' of an e ve' they were all guffawing. The president himself laughed with the rest. --Xnr York Tribune. Bucklen's Arnica Salve The Best Salve in the world lor Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever j Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and pos itively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Kirby & Robinson, Goldsboro, N. C. Buy a Piedmont Wagon, manufactured at Hickory, N. C. For sale by HUGGINS & FREEMAN. Goldsboro, N. C, aprl-tf To Magistrates! The law requires you to return all fines, fcc, received by you, to the County Treas urer, within thirty days after they are paid to you. '. "" TT1 I shall attend at the Court House on the first Monday of each month, when such fines can be turned over to me. JOHN H. EDWARDS, mch25-lm County Treasurer. NOTICE. By virtue of a mortgage executed by Jeff. M. Jenkins and wife, the undersigned will sell for cash at the Court House door in Goldsboro, orfSaturday, May 1st, next, a tract of land in Nahunta township, con taining about sixty acres, adjoining the lands of John E. Davis, Jefferson Brad shaw and others; and one lot in the town of Fremont, on which said Jenkins and wife reside. For a full description oi said property reference is made to said mortgage registered in Book 53, Page 539, in the office of the Register of Deeds oi Wayne county. Wm. H. GODWIN, mch29-td Mortgagee. IS TO BUILD TJP A GOOD T JEt A D FOR Fin! Family Sroceries ! AND In order to do so I have laid in a Full Stock of Fine, Fancy and Staple Grocerlesjjnd All of which I will sell at the lowest prices DON'T FAIL TO CALL AT SPIER'S FAMILY GROCERY! West Walnut St., Goldsboro, N. C. A FULL LINE OF Foreign Delicacies mh22 ALWAYS ON HAND. tf If 1886.-DOTJBLE SHEET. 1lrflDfU. unCMItl UALI.ll vricV when applied into the nostrils, will be absorbed effectually cleansing the head of catarrhal virusJ cretiona.-. It allav? HAYft.VT.Fl inflammation, pro-r iDmemorane of the na$al passages' from tddiHnn.i OO In R . mmnlotsU heals the sores re-l svures me sense of taste and smell. Not a Liquid tr Snii!T.HAVr- A Quick Belief o , cie 18 QPPed into each nostril and is wrreeable to use. Price 50c. by mail or at druggists. Send for circular. ELY BROTH ERS, Druggists, Owego, N. Y. oct26-wswly Farmers Can't Get Rich MAKING COTTON AT 8 CKNTS PER POUND. But by practicing ECONOMY they may continue to live at home and save a little every year. One good place to economize i? in the purchase of FERTILIZERS. AH the manures that can be made at home must be made there, and all that are bought must be good but cheap. The N. C. Ph&sphate Co., is prepared to meet the emergency by offering to Piasters a valuable Lime Phosphate, found in North Carolina, ground in North Carolina and specially adapted te North Carolina soil. The excellence of out PHOSPHATE is ac knowledged by such planters as Mr. T. T. Oli ver, Pine Level, N. C; Mr. J. S. Beston. Golds boro. N. C: Mr. Geo. H. Yancey, Middleburg. iX. C; W. P. Roberts. State Auditor, and by hundreds of others who have tested its merits. We offer this PHOSPHATE to our Planters at the LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES and on reasonable terms. Fancy prices must take a back seat. Cheap and good home-made manures are the demand of the day and our LIME PHOSPHATE is the thing you want. Analysis by tie S.Experinent Station. ANALYSIS NO. 233?- Bone Phosphate, 11.16 per cent Phosphoric Acid r.l per cent Lime, Carbonate fti.36 per cent Magnesia 0.81 per cent Potash, 0.40 per cent Water, only, l.:C) per cent Call on or write the N. C. PHOSPHATE CO., feb25-3m RALEIGH, N C. A. WILLIAMSON, Manufacturer of Fine fl a 1 1 il Made Harness, AND DEALER IN WHIPS, BLANKETS, ROBES, BRI5 DLES AND SADDLES, CART BREECHING, HORSE BOOTS, DOUBLE AND SINGLE WAGON HARNESS, HALTERS, CUR RY COMBS AND BRUSHES. A Ko. 1 Hand Mi Harness for S12.S0. Machine Karnes?, 7.50 to $12.50. KORNEGAY BUILDING, GOLDSBORO, N. C. "Repairing of all kinds promptly at tended to. nov26-tf NERVOUS DEBILITATED MEN. You are allowed a free tria lofth My daysot the use of Dr. Dye's Celebrated Voltaic Belt with Electric Suspensory Appliances, for the speedy relief and permanent cure of Serron Debility, loss of Vitality and Manhood, and all kindred troubles. Also for many other diseases. Complete restora tion to Health. Vigor and Manhood guaranteed. So risk is incurred. Illustrateel pamphlet in sealed znvelope mailed free, by addressing VOLTAIC BELT CO., Marshall, Mich. L. SIMON & CO., (Successors to H. Brunhild & Bro.) WHOLESALE DEALERS IN ( . Liquors. Cigars AND 114 North Water St., WILMINGTON, - Jf. C. BRANCH OF H. BRUNHILD & BRO., RICHMOND, VA. Sole Agents for HICKS & BRUNHILD BROS., Manufacturers of Tobacco, nov26tf RICHMOND, VA. Parties who have not set tled their last years accounts with us will do so at once. We will not extend further credit to those who have not paid up. We shall not de viate from the above. H. WEIL & BROS. Goldsboro, N. C, Jan. 25, 1836-t Having accepted the general agency for Burnham Bros.' Imeroved Standard Turbine Warn, Wheel I am now prepared to offefVr one hav ing water power special indlments to buy the Burnham Wheel, wsich is the Best and Cheapest "Water Wheel in the market. For prices, &c., address the undersigned, general agent for the counties of Wake, Harnett, Johnston, Sampson, Duplin, Onslow, Jones, Craven, Carteret, Pamlico, Beau fort, Edgecombe, Nash, Wilson, Greene, Pitt, Lenoir and Wayne. Very respectfully, O. R. RAND, Jr. Goldsboro,N.C.,Feb. 11786.-tf Notice lo 11 Owners. m No doubt you all think the Times are not like they used to be---especinlly in Money Matters. You also know that when the Farmer complains the Merchant does like wise. But now to Business. Our SPRING was bought with an eye to business ; and were purchased down Low, and will oe sold cm, leuictrKaDiy jlow figures. So if you will only give us a call whn irrm aro in - ' - J w v v AAA V- U1UO" boro we will guarantee to suit you in Style, vuanty, etna irrice. WHAT IRE OUR NEW STOCK CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF Sprmg Ami we will take as much pains to suit you in a Calico Dress as we would in a fine Cashmere Dress. We took extra pains in our seleciion of CLOTHING I And all we wish is for you to Call and Examine. No Prettier Stuck of OTrr ' . (C r- " V Can be found in the City. flats, Shoes and Gent's Famisliiiit Goods! The "Favorite" Shit is still the "Leader!" C J3rIjADIES, please oblige us by sending for samples of anything wanted in our line and we will be pleased to send them. tiTPersons at a distance will save money by calling on us. Our reputation for fair, square, and honest business has been established, arjd. we guarantee to continue as we have heretofore, by giving value received Dollar for Dollar and Yard for Yard! fif We are still at our old stand in our handsome storeopposite the Gregory Hotel Again asking or a s-hare of your patronage, we are, very respectfully, So Goldsboro. N. C. Dr. R, A. SMITH'S DRUG STORE! ' When you are in Goldsboro be sure to visit my Drug Store on Walnut Street, on door East of the Post Office, where you will find a Large and First Class Stock oJ n"3fl- P 2 !GP - . ft 1 1 j M f ratent .Medicines, Soaps, Combs, Brushes, and Toilet Articles OF EVESY DESCSIPTION, Tax s, g, to ts Cjsjtt Clean ur &qtim Cbomxj I A competent Drutrgist lias charjrc of the Prescription Department, and the Drur Store H open every day in tho year. Having no partner to divide profit with and no ctore rent to pay. i can afford to give you a better trade than any other firm in the City. The secret of di increasinir sales is due to moderate prices, fair dealing', and polite attention to al). i The entire public is invited to give me a call. Very Respectfully, y-My office is in the rear of my Store, and oroniDt attention. w HENRY MILLER. Manager. Plat os, Organs, Sheet Music. Music Bo:ks, sc., &c. SOUTHERN DISTRIBUTING AGENT fOR BOOSE Y & C0., LONDON. SCHURrajO.LEIPSIC. $i75NT?i,f6o'o.oo. ls48).o8A,N.ssfr50omo.oo. 1 ng JaoJooocoooe 9W ddres all Letters, Orders or Communications of any kind to mchl-tf Manager Carolina Music Houae, (Lock Cox 700J Goldsboro, N. C. 1M M A tl fl ! VP I v .- v t Tbe latent novelty in Pper and En velopes "The Mikach" just received. CSstZY t)GE ViHting Cards, Pa per and Envelope. Correspondent's rubinet, containing two sticks Sealing Wax, Brass Seal and Candle. Will display alxnit the 15th the largest variety o KdSTSB CXD8 and Nov elties evei shown in the city. Merchants supplied at liberal discounts. WHITAKER'S BOOKSTORE. Goldtboro, N. C, apr8-tf -::- Sail ! i i ii V ' t ! TOOK CI I Wearing. Apparel!. n ni H ? 'W' Jf HU. We still hold our reputation in listen a m March 259 1885. o 0 all calls, tn either city or country, will recer Jan7-tjf Eight Uito&g Hakes to Select Frcm. FIA2T0S UXUX11UH1, EMERSON. WES Eli EKAPONP. ESEK BRO. -0S3AN2- BURUETT. TABER AND SOUTHERN GEM. iUttaloyuv by Jin it. Free. PIANOS AND ORGANS Sold for Cash or on Easy Installment Plans. WANTED IN GOLDSBORO. An energetic business woman to solicit and take orders for The MA DAMP. CKISWDI.n Patent Vjjy SkirtSupportingCorsetn. t These advertised and sold by lady can vassers the mstten rears, which. 1 V wlth tfuir 'ufxrioritv, has created rJJJXwA large demand for them through out tbe United states, and any lady who gives her time and en ergy to canvassing for them can soon build up a permanent and profitable business. They are not sold by merchants, and we git ertlutire territory, thereby rivta? the apent entire con trol of these perwr cori'ts In the territory As signed her. We have a large number of agents who are making a grand success selling these goods, and we desire such In every town. . Ad dress, MME. GRISWOLD Si CO., K3 Broad way. New York, aprl-wlm ' 1 7 1 i
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 22, 1886, edition 1
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