Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / May 3, 1886, edition 1 / Page 4
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HBGOISBORQvMESSBNapBJiMASSSeDQTJflliEt'SHEET. rip )(zy(S A. BONITZ, J. HOWARD BROWN, - - - - Editoi. - Manage. GOLDSBORO, N. C., MONDAY, MAY 3. 1886. ::p PCBLISHED KVERir MONDAY A NO THURS DAY. AT THE MESSEVOEU iiL'JLDIXG. - PBICF $3.00 A TEAR. : Served to town fcbscibehs bvcarkie. at $1.00 for three months. j Subscription payable! strictly Vr ad vance, j j I Advertising Rates Per square (U f inch SPACE) $1.00', FOR FIRST, AND 50 CfcXTS FOR EACH SUBSEQUENT INSERTION-. LIBERAL DIS COUNT TO LARGE ADVERTISERS AND ON YEAR LY CONTRACTS. z 64 column iceekly, tie cheapest n?id largest political paper pvhlisloed in North CartUna. is aim wupd. from the Messenger press. &tbrription, 2.00 pera.wvm: $1.00 for six month. Ttie Transcript axd Mes senger has Vie largest bona fide subxerip tion list of any paper in North Carolina. Address ! j THE MESSENGER PUBLISHING CO., 1 Coldsboro, N. C. 1t is siid that capitalists aie organ izing1 against the Knights of Labor. . " The President is right as regards the tariff. It ought toj be reduced in the moderate; way proposed in .Mr. Morrison's ijill. Why should this measure, which is generally under stood, be discussed all summer? Three weeks debate is plenty and to spare. No Mr. Powderly is right. He is wanted specially where he is. He "might make .a good Governor of Penn sylvania. But some of the politicians could do that, whereas not one of them coiild take his place at the head of the Knights of Labor. Let him stay where he is, and may God spare his valuable life, a very longtime to come. They do say that Mj Samuel Jack son Randall, from a Pennsylvania standpoint, knows precisely what he is doing in the Congress this spring. Our Uncle Sammy is dethroned as a leader, discounted as a prophet, out of line with popular movements, but and herein is the secret of some' things he can give his enemies every i ad vantage that accrues from all these things and beat them in the manoeu vres of the floor and j the committee room. He is great oriP strategy, is our Uncle Sam, and, Bill jMonison don't you forget it so often. i The President has appointed Col. I A. B. Andrews, President of the "West ern North Carolina Railroad, a com missioner to examine a division of the Northern Pacific Railroad in Oregon, and report upon the same. His com missioners are E. Prentiss Bailey,, of New York, and Thos. W. White,; of Mississippi. The News-Observer well adopted the plan of commissioning men for work with which thej are familiar, and in which they have risen to eminence. The compliment, is one which will be appreciated throughput North Carolina. as well as by its recipient.-? Col. Andrews will leave for Chicago and the WTest in a few davs Fiery little Greece has been at last prevailed upon by Frauce to abandon her war preparations. This has great ly angered the people of the former country. Greece has simply deferred her grand scheme for the absorption of Macedonia. She has outstripped Bulgaria in the affections of the Mace donians and. in the number and wealth of Greeks settled there 1 as compared with Bulgarians. Bulgarian authori ties admit this. Greece recognizes the fact that p, great Bulgarian monarchy at her very door would be fatal in time to her existence, and wouldfrom-fKel start overshadow her in importance. Hencejshe insists on the execution of the treaty of Berlin, the handing oyer a strip of the Macedonian province Messrs. Holman, Wilson, Cannon, Butterworth and Randall have been appointed a sub-committee to consider the proposition to repeal all permanent indefinite appropriations. These ap propriations are for the expense! of collecting customs, coining the stand ard silver dollar, steamboat inspection service, arming and equipping militia, supervisors of elections, I marine hos pital service, soldiers' home, and sev- eraLminor matters. The purpose of repealing these appropriations is to give Congress the opportunity to re view these expenditures each year and to know just what the expenses are. The provisions for! the interest on the f und wi are. public debt andj the sinking 1 be left permanent as they Ihe Alexandria uasette thinks : it fortunate for Virginia that the "result of the local option elections in Rich mond, Lynchburg and j Manchester was agamsi me sumptuary pronibitory liquor lav, and it is hoped that a sim ilar result may be obtained in all the other cities and in the counties of the State in which such, elections may be held. Ifiprohibitory laws! would pre vent thej abuse of liquor', the whole .people of ;the State, including the liq uor manufacturers and sellers, would support them ; but when the manufac ture of liquor within the State is au thorized by law, and when it can be bought just across the j State lines, eyery man of common sense knows that the enforcement of such laws is utterly impossible, and that the only effect of their adoption would be to deprive the State of the revenue she receives from the license tax." ' - THAT ALBANY HOWL.; Ever and anon some partisan Radi cal at the North, evidently for politi cal purposes." or anxious to" revive bloody shirt memories, assumes to be intensely horrified at what are mere and harmless evidences of true man hood and good citizenship on the part of our Southern people. The last of such exhibitions comes surprisingly from Albany, New York, and the ova tion extended to Hon. Jefferson Davis at Montgomery last week, affords the opportunity for their ungracious out burst. i Let them howl ! They will learn nothing! They forget nothing! They wave their bloody rags for political purposes onlyv and the rational, rea sonable and patnotrc people or all sec tions can easily recognize in their howl the bitter venom that prompts it. The South can stand" their frantic appeals to the prejudice&of the North era people. As the Charleston News and Courier well says, "such appeals are simplv arrant nonsense. ' The spirit of 18G0 did not outlive 18G5. Fiercely as it burned during the four years of the war, it was quenchedjn the life-blood of the best and -bravest of those who would have established its fire upon a perpetual altar. The flag that was folded in the presence of Grant's overwhelming legions on that sad April morning was folded never to be unfurled again. Not until the marble sword which lies by the sleep ing form of Gen. Lee at Lexington is drawn from its scabbard will the hope thathe so long sustained by his mighty arm bloom again in the hearts of the people he loved and defended so well. Is not this enough f "The tribute to Mr. Davis was pure ly a personal one. He is the embodi ment of a dearty loved cause, around which many tender memoriesand sen timents cling. He is loved for his own sake, and for the sake of all that he- alone represents. He is honored be cause; in honoring him, the people of the South honor those whom he led, and over whose grave he and they as semble this week to raise a fitting me morial. It is impossible to dissociate his name and fame, his courage and devotion, from theirs. His presence stirs the hearts of the living with rec ollections of the noble dead, and Mr. Davis himself recognized and acknowl edged his representative character in the part assigned to him by his former fellow-( itizens on this occasion of his appearance in public." There is nothing to regret, nothing to apologize for in his reception. INTERESTING HISTORY. We surrender much of our space this morning to a brief review of the' dark days of 1861 the organization of the Southern Confederacy and the in auguration of Jefferson Davis as its President. These are honest and healthful memories, and we reproduce the same merely as a matter of interest ing history, worthy to be kept and pre served, and not in any boastfulness or spirit of disloyalty. , The days of 18G1 proved the inaug uration of a dark period for the South, but that period is nevertheless precious and filled with tender memories. And these memories will grow until they be even more precious and of deeper interest to our children. That unfortunate and-rrible strug gle ended twenty-five yeajigo. The South was subjugated, but not crushed in manhood nor subdued in spirit. To day her people are as loyal to the Union as are the people of any other State. ,The South would not to day change the result if it could, but her people are not ashamed of the past. Although defeated, and for a time sorely and outrageously tortured and humiliated by "the powers that be," or rather we should say, by a Radical faction, to-day the South shines bright and grand before the world in all that pertains to valor, chivalry and the greatness of a bra ve people. We have still our desolated homes and firesides, and what family has not' its unhealed wounds ! But to-day the South Holds its head proud and loyal. Our peer less Robert E. Lee and our beloved Jefferson Davis, and our heroic and gallant Stonewall Jackson, are revered and stand, side by side with George Washington, Abraham. Lincoln and Gen. U. S. Grant. We are again a united country and a united people, but tender memories of the past re main precious and sacred, and will continue so for generations to come; The old grey coat will be an heir loom in the Southern cabin when the continental buff is forgotten, and the sword of the father, who followed " Stonewall" will be the badge of hon orable an"ry. Whatever the South may achieve to whatever greatness and power she may attain no living 'man will see the time when the mon uments that mark the graves of her Confederate soldiers and patriots will not be the rallying points for her true hearts and the centres of her noblest emotions. And the people of the North cannot begrudge us these privileges. " Its rea sonable, brave and sensible men will not. They can but esteem the South ern people for their valor, for their courage, for their graceful submission when finally overpowered and subju gated, and now that this country is again peacefully and happily united, applaud the loyalty of our people to the Union, and this loyalty no one has a right to question. Try Lister's Special Tobacco Fertilizer. For sale by W. S. Fabmer. my 3-2 w j j, ,., FATHER RY ANf -r- It is as if a personal bereayemen had visited the Southern people Father Ryan dead! He who .was the song writer of our day'of defeat, who chaunted so gloriously the praises o Lee and of Jackson, and who mourned so sincerely . "The cause though lost still just." His resonant and pathetic verse is a part of our. daily lives, and even a phase of our political being. Withou "The Sword of Lee" and '"'The Con quered Banner,? how tame our annals let him conceive who can. Here was a noble soul bursting the bonds of con ventionality and singing in splendid and nervous stanzas the deeds and sufferings of his people No fear could restrain this pure, passionate mind ; no craven prudence coerce this manly, uncorrupt,: most loyal heart He poured out in burning strains al of the feeling of his own and the South's deep nature. Ah, dear God was this folly ? Go, then, and arraign Kossuth, convict Victor Hugo of mad ness. The poet must, like the orator and the mountain torrent, gush forth spontaneously. Leave state .craft to others. Lee, the leader, f retired in good faith to teach the youth of his country the lessons of patience, self reliance, uprightness and rational pro cress ; Davis, the statesman, to a life of, study, review and literary activity Ryan, the poet, must needs tell the story of agony in wprds that immor talize the aeronized ones. Who is there who does not admire his free and fear less spirit ? Who now would stigmatize his sorrowing but sublime and most moving strains as "echoes of armed treason ?" In all these long years this glorious man has done what he could to alle viate the ills of his people as well as to place their cause before humanity to command respect and sympathy from all high minds. -By lecture, by letters by personal appeals in very many ways has Father Ryan labored for the erood of the Southern people. His love, though burning and heroic in some of its aspects, was in others gen tle as woman's. Hundreds of in stances could be cited to prove his steadfastness and tenderness, and al through the land are those who love him with beautiful devotion, and who join in ascribing to him all sweet graces and admirable virtues and ex alted talents, and who shed tears of gratitude as well as of sorrow. A precious life has been given to us, and the heritage passeth not away, neither now nor ever more. mar THE OLEOMARGARINE HUM BUG. Notwithstanding the report ot the Judiciary Committee, the Committee on Agriculture in the House continue to report bills for the suppression of the oleomargarine humbug, so much detested by farmers and dairymen. Col. Green was chairman of the sub committee which considered and framed the measure reported by Chair man Hatch last Friday. The measure is of much importance in some, quar ters, ana may oecome so in tnis sec tion if the oleomargarine business is permitted to expand; It is on this ac count we devote attention to it as well as because it is qf general interest to an agricultural community The bill imposes a special tax upon manufacturers of oleomargarine of. $G00, and upon wholesale dealers $480. Any person who carries on the manu facture of it without having paid the special tax shall be fined from one to four thousand dollars. Manufacturers are required to file, before the Collec tor of Internal Revenue, a bond in a sum of not less than $5,000. They are required to pack in wooden packages of not less than ten pounds, to be branded as the Commissioner of Inter nal Revenue directs, subject to a fine of $50 for the failure to do so. A tax of ten cents a pound is also to be paid by the manufacturer. All imported oleomargarine shall pay, in addition to the import duty, an internal reve nue tax of fifteen cents per pound. Any dealer who receives or offers to sell any which has not been branded or stamped according to' law shall be liable to a fine of $50 for each offense. Any dealer who receives any from any manufacturer who has not paid the special tax shall be liable to a penalty of $100, and a forfeiture of all received or purchased. It also provides for the appointment of an analytical chemist in the office of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, whose duty it shall be to decide what substances, extracts or compounds shall be taxed, and his decision shall be final. It is provided that oleomargarine may be removed from the place of manufacture for ex port without payment of the tax. Any attempt to defraud the United States of the tax shall work a forfeiture of the factory any apparatus used in the manufacture and subject the owner to a fine of from $500 to $5,000 and im prisonment from six months to three years. Any failure to do anything re quired to be done by this act shall subject the party to the payment of a penalty of $1,000. The last section provides that all fines; penalties and forfeitures imposed by the act may be recovered in any court of competent jurisdiction, one-half of the fine or penalty to go to the informer. It will be seen that this is a strin gent measure. Of its constitutionality there is great, doubt . In fact, it is hardly practicable under our present system of government to extirpate uch frauds, t : M C . r-.v THE COWBOY CELEBRATES The cowboy M never niggard in anything. : W hen ne goes on a "tear he literally "paints the town red." When he revolts from authority, au thority eomes to a sudden end as i struck by any number of Iowa cyclones and Sumatra volcanoes. It is nO use to oppose .'the cowboy if there be enough of him to give him full confi dence. Three of the cowboys usually suffice for this purpose, and on a pinti-h two have been known to bring chaos One cowboy is quite as much as the average village cares to tackle, excep on-muster day. Why the cowboy is so much more demonstrative than the Comanche or the catamount has not been revealed in any of the natural histories. On that account we call for a new wa3 o handling the subject. But we would rather have the cowboys handled in propria persona, if we had to reside in the places where they most frequent Inasmuch as we are not likely to se cure a scientific report from the Smith sonian Institution on this topic of alas, too recondite learning, it rray serve some purpose to consider the cowboy in his outer character, so to speak ; that is to say, in his average condition of devil opment. We read that out in wild Dakota, at a city named Medora, on a recent Saturday evening, the cowboys of the Bad Lands indulged in a dance in a lead mg notel, ana airuougn no one was killed, the event is worthv of notice The Marquis de Mores, having re turned from the East, he has started operations at his Medora ranch, and the cowboys were rejoicing over the arrival of their source of financial sup ply. The hotel was filled with tran sient gentlemen, most of whom were called to the place by business rela tionship with the Marquis. The dance was at its heierht at midnicrht, all the female population oWhe Bad Lands being present, and the cowboys were determined to show their mettle. A midnight revolvers were drawn, and from that time until morning the fusil ade drowned the music of the orches tra. Every bedroom in the hotel was shot into, and that no one was killed is looked upon as a miracle. Dr. Wil liamson, of Bismarck, occupied a room near the ball room, and his door was perforated. In the morning he picked up numerous bullets in his room, and it is believed that his life was saved by the mattress, under which he remained during theanight. Every guest wras paralyzed .with fear, ard from the number of doors shot into, all are grateful that they escaped with their lives. Not once during the night did the danciner cease, the women and men cheering as each voile- was fired OUR WASHINGTON LETTER Internal Revenue Measures Report ed and to be Reported. More Been Accomplished in Four Months than Heretofore in Many Years. x i tali Correspondence of the Messenger. 1 Washington, April 27. The House accorded to Col. Orreen a leave of ab sence to-day for ten days on important business. Mr. Skinner and the rest of the Congressional party which went to North Carolina last Friday, returned this morniner. Ihey are delighted with their trip, and Mr. Skinner hopes for good results, at least a favorable report of the inland seaboard naviga tion. The party visited the Chesa peake and Albemarle Canal, the Pas quotank River and Croatan Sound. They did not find time to go to New bern or Wilmington. Chairman Tucker, of the Judiciary Committee, iays tnat he .v ill atone for the failure to have considered the in ternal revenue measure reported from his committee by calling it up at the earliest opportunity and endeavoring to get it passed, perhaps under a sus pension of the rules. In the Senate to-day the Payne case came up on the submission to the body by the presiding omcer ot the report of the investigating committee of the Ohio House of Representatives. Sen ator Pavne made a personal statement of some length, in which he alluded to the tact that the majority or Republi can report did not mention Donavm at all, while the Democratic or minor ity report spoke of his appearing and eriviner as. authority for his chareres one William A. Taylor, who denied in his 1 -O A 1 i testimony any xnowieage ot me mat ter. Mr. Pavne read his own letter to the chairman of the committee, in which he offered to submit his private books, dispatches, &c, to inspection, wnich offer, although accepted, was -a . a t never availed of. He claimed that the fact that he was not called in the light of the correspondence just read vindi cated him. But he was content to eave the matter in the hands of the Committee on Privileges and Elec tions. He asked for that reference, and it was made. Senator Payne criticised severely the action of the Ohio House, which, after its commit- ee had exculpated the tour members accused of having been bribed by him self or his agents, had transmitted this so-called testimony here after it had refused to print it. He spoke of it as a base attempt to circulate scandalous gossip. The Senate took up the mter-btate Commerce bill, and Mr. Cullom made some remarks upon his pet measure. The cause of non-action in the con firmation of Gen. Rosecrans as Regis ter of the Treasury is a charge that the General was concerned in land rauds in California. This his friends indignantly deny. lne bill to erect a duplicate ot tne President's house, for use as a private residence, just back of the present ojuiidmg, at a cost or )uu,uuu, passea e Senate to-day. lien, uawiey ad vocated rather the purchase of a site adjoining on the West for executive offices. Only a few votes were cast against the bill. The President of the Bell Telephone Companv was before the investigating. committee of tb,e House to-day .His name is jjotoesyauu ue uansiium .uux- ton.-Mass. He ?avi a short historvo the organization, and showed that Mr Kanney once owned stock in it. bee retary Manning is a stockholder in the Troy company. The total stock of the local companies, licensed oy tne reii Company was $50,000,000, of which the parent company held about $22, UUU,UUU par value, or between $16,00U, 000 nd $17,000,000 market-value. The House Committee investigating the extravagant expenditures of the signal aervice sav in their report tba the expenditures were made in good faith although without, sufficient an taonty orlaw. A number of civil and military nous mations of no gre it importance to our people were made yesterday. Second Lieut. Frank P. Fremont was pro moted to 1st Lieutenant. The President has vetoed the bil licensing the use of the dead bodies o paupers and criminals by the medica colleges and surgeons of the district lhe American Surgical Association will meet here Wednesday at the Array. Medical Museum. Senator Mitchell, of Pennsylvania is seriously ill in that State. Mr. Whtehorne, the new Senator trom lennessee, was sworn m yester day. It now appears likely that the site tor the new Library of Congress wil have to be condemned by the Govern ment, inasmuch as the property hold ers hold orr tor high prices. Mr. Herbeit, of Alabama, a member of the joint commission which has for two years been investigating the va rious scientific bureaus, introduced bill in the House 3'esterday prohibiting the geological survey, alter June JO 18SG, from expending any money for paleonrolotic work or publications except for the collection, classification and proper care of fossils and other material. No expenditure is to be allowed for the general discussion o geological theories. The bill provides that printing and engraving for the geological and coast surveys, the hy drographic office of the Navy Depart ment and the signal office of the War Department ' shall hereafter be esti mated for separately and appropriated in detail tor each. Mr. Herbert cal culates that the operation of this bil wnl effect a saving of $250,000. Col. A. B. Andrews has been ap pointed bv the President to be a mem ber of the commission to examine and report upon forty miles of the North ern Pacific Railrdad, that part in the Cascade Mountains. Representative O'Hara is the North Carolina member of the Republican Congressional Campaign Committee lhe committee will soon organize. A new postoffice has been established at V ashti, Alexander count, Hum phrey T. Campbell postmaster; an other at Purgatory, Duplin county Henry A. Williams postma ster. Other postmasters commissioned Atlantic Samuel E. Hamilton; Paint Fork Nathan W. Anderson ; Stump Sound, Mary E. Capps : Table Rock, John Nantz : Durants' Neck, Benjamin F. Gregory; Qtiallatown. Marcraret I. Miller; King's Creek, Harvey A. Fra zier. April 28 Senator Kenna has been chosen chairman, and Representative Kobertson, or Kentucky, secretary, of the Democratic Congressional Execu tive Committee. The Senate has confirmed Col. Robt. P. Waring as Assayer of the Charlotte Mint. Lieut. Gov. Stedman, of Wilming ton, and M. Glennan, Esq., of the Nor folk V irgiman. postmaster at Norfolk, are in the city. Mr. Johnston leaves tor Asheville to-night on important Vtusiness. He will be absent tor a fewmavs. Gen. Cox made a shorrstatement in the House to-day, explaining why a resolution of enquiry addressed to the Secretary of the Treasury had not been considered by his committee The House sent the resolution, intro duced by Mr. Taulbee, of Kentucky, to the Committee on Reform in the Civil Service, with instructions to re port by Saturday. It is an enquiry as to whether there are persons on the roll of the Treasury Department who perform no service but employ substi tutes who receive less compensation than their principals. It is said that here is good ground for the enquiry and tor action by the Congress. Col. Cowles took part in the consid eration in the morning hour to-day of certain bills reported by the Commerce Committee. C. W. H. GOING FOR JEFF. DAVIS. A Few Albany Cranks Protest Indignantly. Resolutions Condemning Mr. Da vis and the Montgomery Celebration Adopted. Albany, April 29. The call issued for the mass meeting to-night to pro test against the ceremonies at Mont gomery, Ala., is as follows : lo all who believe in preserving the union: We cordially invite all hose who fought tor the preservation of the union and all who sustained and encouraged those who fought in that bloody but glorious contest for human liberty to meet at the assemblv chamber at 8 o'clock this evening, and to unite in denunciation of the re surrection of Jeff. Davis from the ob- ivion to which a loyal and patriotic people had consigned him. We invite them to protest against the glorifica tion of disloyal deeds and men, the re vival of sentiments, repugnant to hose who . fought for the Union, ab horrent to the loyal north and unbe coming to the subjugated south. It is oo soon to forget the sufferings and sacrifices of a loyal people. It is too soon to forget treason and traitors, however much we forgive them. Let us unite to repeat the resolve of Abra ham Lincoln on, the battlefield of Gettysburg, ''That these dead shall not have died in vain: that this nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom and that government shall be by the people and for the people." lhe meeting called this afternoon in the assembly chamber to express indignation at the reception to Mr. Jjavis in .Montgomery and his speech on that occasion was called to order by Gen. Henry A. Barn um whQ moved nat speaker li. U. Husted. of the as semblv. take the chair. This uro i nuo done. Gen. Barnum in introducing Gen. Husted, said he needed no intro duction. Hewas loyal to the cause of the Union." Speaker Husted then addressed the meeting as. following : Ladies and Gentlemen For the courtesy embodied in this compliment I tender you my most heartfelt thanks. This meeting has been called to give expression to the indignation felt at me .actum wnicn naa oeen taken in Montgomery, Ala., and to show to the people of the Union that as the city ot Albany was among the first to seiid troops to the front in the war of the uu;nn. srt it i the first to denounce a renewal of the principles on which that war was brought m ioui. 'c nrpd war. When I say Jef rinru. T ftav what I mean. The I v A evil MS m " people of the south made no declara it w mfldft bv the arch-con en;in f thom all. seconded by the Senators who followed him from the capital. The people of the south were dragooned. The war was began , con tinued and we supposed it was ended when Robert E. Lee laid down his arms, but now the principles are re d the legal citizens of Al bany meet here to-night to declare a renewal of filial relations ana ioyuy. When he made these assertions Jeff. Davis committed a greater crime than when he declared war. 1 say tna noithpr ho nor anv other man, in view of the grand reults achieved by the bloody war. has any right to make such assertions, and we are , prepared to meet them in the forum, in the church, in the social circles and at the polls. If this is the leading issue we welcome it. Gen Barnum introduced the follow ing: . Resolied. That treason is odious: tha the Union of the United States of America, and the liberty which the A mericau oriuci pie of popular govern ment illustrates, i worth the blood of all citizens of our beloved country. Iu moving the adoption of this reso lution, Gen. Barnum said lhat tne people of Albany mourn to day around the graves of the noble men who died to uphold the union. They were Kill ed at the behest of the man who was received with so much honor yester day. I am here to-day to say that these men did not die, that now the people shall put flowers in his pathway and make him the central figure of the world. I believe, my fellow-citizens, that this meeting is the first of a series that will be held through the length and breadth of this land to declare in the words of Gen. Sherman: "The war of the rebellion was wrong, eter nallv wrong, and that for the union was right, eternallv right." Hon. John Raines addressed the meeting in a similar strain. Rubber Gossamers at prime cost'. Only 90 cents and $1.20. Mas. E. W Moore New Advertisements. WANTED ! The undersigned wishes to employ for the next school year, a young gentleman of experience in teaching, to teach Math ematics. Book keeping and Penmanship. A graduate and master ci Penmanship preferred. For particulars address, with references, J II. MOORE, NdhUDta Academy, my3 wswtt Fremont, N. C 7. S. 21T.INEEE OFFT.E, Wilmington, N. C, April 30, 1886. O EALEl) PROPOSALS in triplicate for about 8,000 superficial feet of Lumber and 3 kegs of Nails for uje In repairing a fence at ort Macon, N. U will ue received at thl of fice until 12 o'clock noon, on the fifteenth (15) day of May, 1885. Specifications and blank forms of propo sals may te obtained on application to this omce. The riurht is reserved to reject anv or all bids. W. H. BIX BY", mav3-td Captain of Engineers, U.s. Array. Exchange Hotel, "W IL8 ON, IV . O. Under the management of MRS. F. A. BARDIN, t (Late of Clinton, N. C.) E2F Special attention given to the care of Commercial and other guests mj3-tf STIMPSQN, PUT & Ci, TfUICK flD fBUIT COM! I'M MERCHANTS (37 North Market and 27 Clinton street,) BO:- CD J . Daniel Reid, Agent, Goldsboro, X. C. Prompt Sales and Prompt r Returns ! REFER TO: Faneuil Hall National Bank. Roatnn Fmi and Produce Exchange, or any Mercantile Agency in the United States. may3-lm A FEW WORDS To fie Reunited' At my old Stand on East Centre Street i Keep, always, a Full Line of d lm Groceries -AND- GERMAN DELICACIES ! BOLD FOR- Lowest Living Prices! Don't Forget It! IIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR ALL KINDS OF COUNTRY PRODUCE. JOSEPH ISAACS. East fVntro Qt-, t, Goldsboro, N. C, April 22-tf North Carolina, 1 Sujxrior Court. IVavne County. ) April Term. Mary Darden, Flaihtig, .vs. Henry Darden, Defendant. SUIT FOR DIVORCE. This is a proceeding mmmonri : Superior Court of Wayne County by Alary Darden.Plaintiff. v tt- nAtd Defendent, for Divorce. 3 To.Henby D arvkk Greeting : iou are hereby notified to appear be rore the Honorable Court to be held for the finnntv 0fWofl Court House In Goldsboro, on the 6th Monday before the 1st Monday In September, A. D , 1886, and answer on - r. w ine complaint herein. Witness. A- T. fJwuW: rriv Af ..u Cort at office in the city of Goldsboro. on the 12th day of April, A. 1J. 1886. 1 ' ' ; A.T.i GRADY. -i April. 29,1886.-6'-'.- V.sJc. Ms New " Advertisements. vJ ESS E N G EJR I L ' J I I i nA:-MOUs V HI! I J."-At'- BO N ITZ." Pronriei r r; MONDAY EVE; MAY 3r( THE W ?WM PIS-IIC PARTY ! i A Cluster of Novelty Ftars, UnpioH'(.ri, , In the Annals of Amusement.' 1 Champion Lady Reel and Jig Dancer! Refined Character, Sketch Art sts' Excellent Music f -New Soncs ' .:- . Splen-iid Orchestra! MTUXI PitVX I Frr COME! LAUGH, AND GROV.rT' . POPULAR LOW PRICES: General. Admission 5o ( nf9 Children i5 (vnts Gatxery 35 Centi JWNo extra charge for reserved se tt at Kirby & Robinson's Drug Store. , M ESSEN G EH " Opefk;floue! T U E S A Y f M A Y 4".Jggg Mrs. Ida SerTST THE ' "8INQINO;BEA3)EB,v anrl Teacher of Dramatjc Action In the X,. York school of Acting, will ylvo one of rn'r PoDuUirj "Ida Serven's readings are flne"-.V,i - ,; Her aUi. ; " "Ida Sen on la a novelty amonar Homtior Ists.botnasasinjrerand reader. .V. 1". Triftn "Her ringing' Is as aelightful as her n,i Infra." Watertown Kepvbliean. At 8telnway Hall "Pleased the au.licn.-i. mlghtly'-A". Y. Time. "u "Manner amlablo and winning vcrsatilitv wonderful perfect naturalness, almost cliii.f like." Vhrladelphia Tim. General Admission ij conu Graded Ssiiool Pupils 20 Cents Gallery J5 (jents ANOTHER-:- MUSICAL -:- THE AT! Opera House ! SATURDAY MAY 871886, The management of lhe Oprra Hoiish tak t pleasure In announcing the rc-appoar-ance for one night of the . "Boston liar Concert Ctmpany," IN GRAND CONCERT, aswnring another of the most unlqe and ehannlriK-. hitrlwlass Entertainments ever on"erel to the amusement anl tnusle-lovlng public. EXQUISITE MUSICS REFINED HUMOR ! TOUCHING MUSIC. AND ; Dramatic : Rcc.lals! IX I O Jil fit i General Admission; 75 Cent?. Children ro cw Gallery......... 50 Cents. Reserved Seats (Tickets for sale at Kirby & Robinson'a Drue St. ire Si 1 .on Special Reserved Seat good tor two, vvjcnuqman ana L.aay) $ 1 .r0 Noith Carolina. ) Superior Court, r. f Puforc Clerk. Wayne County, Eliza Smith, Widow, Ac, Plnintijf. vs. Mark Smith. Rutus Rmiti. V--i if Smith, Henry 8mith, Bur well Edmund son and Naucy Edmundton, his wife; James P. Heath .and Annie Heath, his wife,.. William Smith, James Smith, Benjamin Smith, Elijah Lassiter and Bettie Lissiter, his wife ; Bate Johnson and Martha Johnson, his wife; Turner Smith, Robert Peel and Sally Peel, bis wife; Simpson Smith and Marcs Smith, his wife ; James Newsom, Lcroy John son, Jack Johnson, Becky Daniel, Thomas Smith and Avy Smith, his wile ; H J. NewEom and Joab New torn. Defendant. "... PETITION FOR DOWER. Tkis is a special nroceedi in the Superior Court of Wayne County, North Carolina, by Eliza Smith, w idow, for dower. To William Smith. Jamot Kmitl, Rpn- jamin Smith, Elijah Lassiter and wife, ueuie; uate Johnson and wife, Martha; Leroy Jobnscn. Jak Mnnn nri innh Newsom. -., You. and cach bf VOtl. rllirliv noti fied to appear belore the undersigned at ' his office in the Court Hon Kft In thf ritV ot Goldsboro, Wayne County, North Car olina, on 'Monday,"" the 7th day of June, A. D., 1888, at 11 o'clock, A. rf, and an swer or demur to .the .complaint in the above cause, a copy of which! is on file in said office, or the Plaintiff will take judg ment against you forthe relief demanded in said complaint. Witness. A. T. O M.dv I ilrlr nf Bftid vajuii, ai omce in the City o County .of Wayne, on the April. A. D.f 1886-- . - Goldsboro, 8th dav ol C Goldsboro, N. C , April 16 6W Having purchased the PLANING MILL ruup J3KTY recently ownid by Mil ton Harding, we would (respect fully announce to the public that wc are prepared to furnish 1 Drackeis5StairWcrk9Scroll Work, Mm BALUSTERS, NEWELS, Mantels, Store Fittings, Moulding, tPicket Fencing complete, ready to put up. Also Dressed Flooring, Ceiling, Weatherboarding, &c, at prices which de fy competition. Give us a I call before purchasing elsewhere. NATHAN 6'BEBRY CO. Goldsboro, N. C, March 29,'86.-lm NOTICE ! Certificates Nos. frOQ, 838, 2031?. of the Capital Btock of the A. & N. C. R. Co.; ihaving been lost, application 10V duplicates tf thesame will be made. ' api9-4
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 3, 1886, edition 1
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