Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / May 27, 1886, edition 1 / Page 7
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THE GOLDSBORO MESSENGER, MAY 27, 1886.-P.OUBLE SHEET. uHTDTcS) 4500 1700 600 42 40 30 Bushe Bushe MENMADRIK; & ffllJMIPIHIIEIE9& WHOLESALE Prices Guaranteed to meet Northern GLORDOU TT TTHfllE ffUJlBILIKD JOE The Original Champion of Low Prices ! ' .'"r- i :s Hjis iu&t returned from the Northern markets with the Largest and Most Handsome Stoqk of Goods! Ever seen in Goldsboio, 61 anyother'city in the United States. M entire Stock this time was bought-under;thhamniers of Sheritt' an i Bankrupt Sales, mm 9 Hats, Gentt' Furnishing Goods, Notior.s in variety, Carpeting, Floor and a full line of FURNITURE - WARNE are all aware and have satisfied yourself, that I am the first lou I rrii . 4- r r x" n tViO nrlr-P J of "roods in There is daily o mplaint and argument among a certain cla-8 as to JL A UJ H Of o-oods as I lo? X m told that I might ji st as well sell for a higher price and sccu-e a greater r.rofit. 'in answer ito this I leply that I am doing business to suit myself and to please my customers. It apptats to m. as if I have donea well in Go daboro by selling goods a low. prices as many have who demand high ra'es and gre it pr .fits. : ' U ' I Believe in Honest Dealing -Ijnict Sales ana Small Profits ! Now to satisfy you that I am honest and in earnest in the above I will mention the prices of a few articles, namely : An elegant line of satins in all colors in Spring shades, the former price being 85 and 90 cents. I am selling at 20 cents A handsome line of GKOS-GRAIN SILKS for Ladies dresses "of all colors and shades, the prices formerly having been $1 10 cents: selling now from 35 to 45 cents per yard. . A full line of double width Ladies' Cashmers and Henrietta Cloth and all other latest styles of LADIES' DRESS GOODS just out this season. The"Snost handsome Patterns in Shade that has ever been seen, the former price of these goods was $ 1 25, i am selling now at 25 and 37$ cents per yard. i iuustiiiug , A p.T1-,a, QTMnT v winur n. qttt v i? v nf oil chorine ar.A c.m a i a rrf ti, nf TTAMmTRfl F.nftlXfl and INSERTIONS to be sold out at wrrtrthTtr irnod? were consigned to me by a rnrrorriipcq nf nrioes for anything that I can the benent oi the same 1 VC l UlVku v- f A fine line of LADIES' JERSEYS to ZEIGLEB'S SSOES And DR. WARNER'S HEALTH ' - 1 ,50O dozen pair It has been given up up by most of our young men that it is the most Handsome, Neatest, Nobiest Selection of ready made CLO THING ever seen in Goldsboro; an eUgant line of Cork Screw, Four Button Cut-away, in all shades and color, both Frock and Sack. Prices heretofore $25.00, am selling now from $5.75 to $7 75 per Suit. An elegant line of All Wool Cashmere Suits, sacks and frocks, which have been selling for $17 and $18, I am selling now at A7 full line of BOYS? YOUTHS AND CHILDRENS SUITS at half price demanded, and sold for, elsewhere. The best line of Shoes for ladies, men, girls, boys, children, infants, &c. Ladies Slippers in variety. Good honest goods 1 WBLeLsure andaU fopiS SUk pSSJs of latest style shades at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. My Friends Remember and Take Notice ! This is the truth 1 but am eivine vou wholesome facts, of which n mv return home the rush has been am questioned every day by my customers in this way : "Why, sir, it does .not look like the hard times that I hear so many complain of. pnonirpM is that 'il buy all my gooas ior uasn, no rem w pay, auu nave icai u. s uy SI that ; I am selling 'my goods too cheap. The goods are mine, belong to me, I can give them away if I feel so disposed, aXtS that before the end of the next thirty days it will be so close to the "give away" there will be in the savin r isl no fun in it ldo not believe in gasing nu uw u6 1 mtah all 1 say "lacis wimoui uuuuu. "T lit T A 1 t. -m - t- , m i ,1 ; f.i.t TTarrnprfl grdesire to cXhe atten ion o f my to codSriSsSe week, IS 1 can wait on lo come during tne wee, aa x . ow lo '" "rriu 1" "fit mg my nouse. ror yuui uwu uti" painted in large, plain letters, T O S The . 3 .,, Din thPTP vmir arp ,MTTn5J?r S SSAN one cent a yard as I did wiien i commeuueu Ott GOLDSBORO, N. C, April 26-lm , .VniT .nnntrf merchant Wishing to uuy goous cao save co pci ccub. auu i3& j "i""01"5 '"v" V1 WLny counir,uici lcll: . n t. remarkablv low nrices. All responsible parties wi-hing to buy goods on time until .iET? them, a xTink to suit, of my entensive stock of Dry Goods, Clothing, Notions, &c. Also Meat, Flour, Table Linen and House Furnishing; Cocks. This Department, as all others, is well stocked; and we are displaying at present a nice Stock of Goods at Remarkably Low Prices., i IFXook at our Stock before buying elsewhere. It .will pay you. H. WEIL & BROS. Bushels Prime White Corn. s Seed and s Waterpround Meal. - a a m . m ons vvneat Bran, ons Prime Timothy ons Cow Feed. GRAIN AND HAY or Western Markets. Write or Call for The above mentioned Stock consists & m Book, Pants Gocd., Cashmeres. A full O.l C ohs, .atchfls(fOr Lajies f - J Goldsporo. M TT IB IB IPIK'irCIES house in Hamburg, Germany, (on the other get for them. And now I am willing to give be sold at 40 cents on the dollar. -An eiegani line oi- CORSETS I am selling at 25 cts cheaper of LADIES and GENTS' HOSERY at I do not wish to deceive you in any way by saying this, that I will convince you when you come to immense, irom tne time inai i open ray "Why, sir, Mr. Edwards, how 1-3 L l. i. I do not want to make you believe the SnnniiPS this fact, those wishing to buy extensively ill please make it convenient them, perhaps to their advantage, avoiding the rush f Saturdays. . imoortant and interesting point to you is not to make a mistake in find- modation lhavehad placed right in ID "W Chamnion of Low Prices ! safe and will gro away contented and perfectly satisfied. I am bound to be the CHEAPEST MAN, I am now the CHEAPEST MAN if I should sell everything Respectfully, uuSluc tlVlfLOW OF MJW fttiu, CASH! Feed Oats. Hay. D E A LERS. Postal Quotations. mch8-tf O O of line of LADIES DRE-S GOODS, nl Gentlemen,) Valises, Trunks, and only man that has ever why 1 should 9 o 20 cents on thfi dollar. Thps 9 ftOfi These $2,000 side) and I am authorized to sell them to all of my good d friends and customers than any other house in the city. 5 cents a pair. J and the other, to induce you to my store, see me uoors unui x ciuse iuem In my store I is it you appear to be busy all the time; in V.-. AT.r nnnn.n. 1 1 NEWS - s who seem in reality to be idle?" My answer to all such "moon is made oi green cheese," but to all, front of my door a sign, on which is .A. IR, ID the the for ADMIBISTBATOR'S NOTICE! The undersigned haying duly qualified as Administraton, with the will annexed, of the estate of Mrs T. R. Carraway, de- ceased, hereby notifies all persons having claims against said estate, to present them to him, duly authenticated, on or before April 25, 1887, or this notice will be plead ed in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment. J. F. MILLER, Admr. with VUl Annexed. Goldsboro, N. C, April 26, 1886-w6t Miscellaneous. MI AIMI IS TO BUILD CP A GOOD FOR- Fine Family Groceries i AND- In order to do so I have laid in a Full Stock of Fine, Fancy and Staple Groceries aad All of which I will sell at the lowest prices DON'T FAIL TO CALL AT FAMILY GROCERY! West Walnut St., Goldsboro, N. C. A FULL LINE OF Foreign Delicacies mh22 ALWAYS ON HAND. tf AND TO ARRIVE. One Gar Load Oyster Shell Lime, 25,000 LBS. MEAT. 500 300 BUSHELS COKN. BBLS. FLOUR, MOLASSES. KEROSENE OIL. CASES BREAD PREPARA TION. LYE AND POTASH. BOXES SOAP. CASES OYSTERS. t SACKS COFFEE. 25 10 25 50 75 50 25 One Car Loafl Haydtn Flonr, cheap. Tobacco cheaper than anybody else in town. At M.L.LEE & CO'S. Goldsboro, N. C, March 18. if ATTENTION! Farmers anfl Ginners Having received the agency for the kkr Cotton hi for the counties of Wayne, Sampson, Du plin, Greene, Lenoir and Johnston, we would respccttully invite the attention ol Ginners and Farmers to their usefulness. They are highly recommended and SUPPLY A LONG-FELT WANT. Every Ginner and Farmer should havt one. For prices and particulars call on or address HENRY LEE & CO., ' ' Wholesale Grocers. au30tf Five Cold and Two Oliver Medals, awarded in 1885 at the Expositions of New Orleans and Louisville, and the In ventions Exposition of London. The superiority of Coraline over horn or whalebone has now been demonstrated by over five years' experience. It is more durable, more pliable, more comfortable. ana never breaks. Avoid cheap imitations made of various kinds of cord. None are genuine untess 44 Dr. Waenee's Coraline " it 'prfnM on inside of steel cover. . - : , FOR SALE BY ALL LEADIIQ MERCHAITS. WARNER BROTHERS, 353 Broarlwov. New York City, ALLEN'S Forty. Lessons in Book-Keeping, FOR GRADED AtlDHIGH SCHOOLS Clear, Correct, Concise. ENDORSED BY Bingham, Harwell, Lewis and others. Any Teacher can understand it. Price $1.50. To Schools $1.00. Postage prepaid. Six Lessons sent free. Agents wanted. GEORGE ALLEN, sep24-tf Newbern, N. C. ' STOKES Mm STEEL RAILS. k How They are Made by the Bes semer Process. j Within sight of the battlefield where Braddock veas defeated in 1755, near the present city of Pittsburgh, the Messrs. Carnegie have made amends for that repulse of civilization by the great victory of peace which is known in the commercial world as the Edgar Thomson Iron and Steel Works. Here iron ores are made into Bessemer steel rails before they are allowed to cool. The ores from mines in Pennsylvania, in Michigan, in the South, and from abroad are unloaded in heaps, between the walls of which are roads for carts and paths for wheelbarrows, laid out as streets in a city, far below the tops of the little mountains of ore and coke and limestone.. Here the proper ad mixtures of different kind of ores, and with them of coke and limestone, are made and hoisted to the furnaces. These burn day and night, seven days a week, and to create the blast the power of a. long row of enormous en gines is required. Though singly they would have that almost inaudible mo tion of the great .Corliss engine, in combination their own motion and the blast they produce make a roar of power more like elemental forces than Of machinery of man's devising. At the Carnegie Works the pig-iron stage of Bessemer steel manufacture is avoided. The molten iron is not al lowed to cool, but is coveyed in iron cars directly to the Bessemer 4 'con verters." The 4,converter" is the elliptical vessel, swung high above the floor, in which the iron is convert ed into Bessemer steel. It swings on axles at either side, and the molten iron is run into it while.it is in a hori zontal position. Another great blast now does its work, this time of cold air. and as. the converter cradnallv regains its vertical position the blast is started before the metal reaches the bottom of the vessel. With a crreat roar the flame shoots upward, and the oxygen is absorbed by the silicon and manganese, lhen the flame increases in size and brilliancy, and becomes first orange and afterward purple, and when the carbon is removed it sub sides. The converter is now tipped over, and the . metallic mancranese (spiegeleisen is generally used) that is necessary to complete the making of steel is added, and the flame and cinders shoot higher than ever, with great brilliancy and much noise. The space about the converter for a mo ment is failed with flying flame and sparks that make as brilliant a spec tacle as can be conceived. All that now remains to be done is to pour the punned molten mass trom the con verter into ladles and thence into molds, where as soon as it becomes solid, it is Bessemer steel in ingots. It is not allowed to cool, but is loaded bv hydraulic derricks on iron cars, and drawn by a locomotive into the rolling mill. There every ingot is placed in a furnace and again heated red-hot. On iron trucks the reheated ingot is con: veyed to the blooming train, where it is forced between rollers time and again, every time within a narrower space, until it is considerably elong ated. The ponderous machinery moves it on to a solid carriage, where it is cut into pieces, or 44blooms," each of proper quantity to make a rail. The rest of the process is simple, but it is simply Titanic. The next rollers the block of steel reaches elongate it still more, and shape it into a rail. The rail is cut smooth at each end by circular saws as quickly as matches are sawed from blocks of soft wood, the difference being that this saw-dust is red-hot sparks. The rail is straightened by the eye under another steam-hammer, bolt-holes are bored at either end, it is now allowed to cool for the first time since it ceased to be ore, and is ready for the market. The manipulation of the red-hot metal, whether in molten or malleable condi tion, from the blast-furnaces to the last process, is almost wholly a ccom- olished automatically; at the Edsrar Thomson Works the onlytuel used is natural gas. How a Wise Man Built His House. Manv of our readers will lind their own experience rellceted in the follow parajrniph taken trom the last num ber of the Central Law Journal, where it is used to illustrate another subject. A gentleman wished to build for him self a nice mansion, and, of course, was exceedingly anxious to have the appro bation of his friends and neighbors. So he asked the advice of all. lhe lirst said, "Here is a nice site, and I should build such a stvle of house.1" The second aid, "I don't like that site nor the stvle of house." The third came along, and was utterl v amazed at the selection o the site made bv the others, and of theii total want of taste in architecture. He said. '-Leave off all that: here is the most exquisite plan for a house." Am so it went on until the gentleman be came disgusted with his advisers, ami went and selected his own site and adopted his own stvle of architecture. and builded a house lo suit himself. By a multitude of counselors there is wis dom, but the house builder s exenence in seekintr the advice of his neighbors found it different, and was probably . wise in rejecting all their suggestions. and following the plans his own juug ment dictated. The moral here con veved does not end with locating ot a house site or the erection of the build inc. It will be generally .found best to fallow nne's own impressions and taste rather than to defer to others. i ' , , -mm- 'Couldn't vou get a place on the pa Mr r;:iiri?" "So. There are no vacajicies.e.xccpt on the editorial stall, and 1 caii't write editorials. I never -could compose two consecutive sentences IninVJifci' .'Well, but couldn't you wnfe the book reviews?" "No. I don't ihijtr :ihoiit books: 1 m no leader. r '"Well, yori might read proof.1' Can't rend aloud. Asthma, you know Couldn't read aloud ten minutes. ' -Well. Ill tell voir. Great scheme; just the thing for you. Lecture." Drookly n Eagle, y ADVICE TO, H0THEBS. JL vnii rfutnrhfld lit nftrht and broken of rourrestbyasick child Bufferin and crying once and Bret a bottle of Mrs. Wikslow' an.wn SmiTP IflR CBILDRI9 TEETHING wifn via I n ni iuilluu - icvui . w - VZri I. i.iiUhle. It will relieve the little sufferer immediately. Depend up- on It, mothers, there is no mistake about it. It cure dysentery and diarrhoea rejrulates the stomach and bowels, cures wind colic. softens the rum, reduces innammatMjtu ana rives tone anc a wmriw'i Rnnranro 8TRTTP TOR CHII- H tnna nl PnBriTT 10 iBB-wiiuw Bjreurui. Mi Tmvrm fi nieasabt to t?ir caste; and is u-i .nrim nt nna ef .the old9t arvi best female ntad P VnitI RtAten. and is for sale rJldTUTtststnrouirn- out the world. Pricey cents a , A large and beautiful line of Children Carriages just recer?eVat y. OVJ hi f t FrCHTLXB x Kraft ,One isj well off in a garret at 20," sings the; light-hearted IJeranger; but the newspapers tell other tales of the workers in the great art centers. The cheapness, of Europe is a delusion and a Miare. t It is so only on condition of goin" ithout til in its. of 1 would not think of living at home. llie hrM ti,,,,. went abroad.11 a ladv once told line. -I had so little nionev that 1 lav awake nirhts i)lannintr howI eouid get through on it. I learned a great ileal, but 1 should think anv on a fool now who did as I did. trnor- ui; e of the risks I ran was mv excuse." But there are numbers of tliose poor students still in Europe, and the straits to which tliev are reduced are often iatb'tic. EsiK-ciallv the slender, black- obed maiden, with their pale, eager aces, their eves so wide oihmi to all the wonder and enchantment of the old world, so veiled to misconceptions of their own character, are pathetic fig- ures. Sometimes tliev are prettv; almost al- wavs thev have a certain charm of bright-even! indeivndeuci'. Thev :in CJ7 . f ' usually older than tliev look; but many ire far too voting for the cxixcd ami peculiar life thev lead. Henry James has sketched the tyje in us own fashion in "A Handle of let ters: 'he looks at everything, goes even-where: passes her way. with , her clear, quiet eyes wide open, skirting the edge of obscene abvses without sus pecting; them: exciting, without know- ng it, the most injurious suspicions:' and alwavs holding her course, passion- ess, stainless, fearless." The Germans are kind to these strangers within their gates, but to themselves they make emphatic reflec tions on that barbarous America whose athers so ship off their daughters, who spend their all on instruction and trust to luck to get home. Sometimes their trust is vain, ami I recall one charming voung woman who lad stranded in Paris ami was earning a meager living as a copvist. She had come abroad to studv rive vears before. and she was not likelv to return soon. She kept house like a bird, up four long flights, and she frankly admitted her economies in bread and beef. It was picturesque, that little room. with its sunny window. it brick floor, its walls lined with her pictures, but it required some philosophy not to call ler isolation a tempting of fate. A word, too, should be said, on the growing fashion of sending girls abroad to travel alone or with onlv "a compa nion of their own age. It seems in credible that persons who can afford chaperonage for their daughters often send them without it. trusting to luck and the good nature of other American travelers to help them on. A gentleman told me not long since that in his vear abroad he had alwavs - . . i . . . - ... V some one oesKies his wite on lus hands. Now it was a countrywoman absolutely alone, now a pair of young girls, now an invalid with a prettv daughter whom she had no strength to chaperon. There is even a book recent lv adver tised as the doings of two girls alone aoroau. ow, we nave no wish to re call the proprieties of thirty years ago, when a woman could hardlv make a nindred-mile journey alone; but there is a limit here, as everywhere, ot good sense and prudence. LippinvolC s Mag azine. Very Bemarkable Eecoveiy. Mr. Geo. V. Willing, of Manchester, Mich., writes: "My wife hns been almost helpless for five years, so helpless that she could.not turn over in bed alone. She used two Bottles of Electric Bitters, and is so much improved, that she is able now to do her own work." Electric Bitters will do all that is claim ed for them. Hundreds of te-timonials attest th-ir great curative power. Only fifty cents a bottle at Kirby ot lfobinsou s Drug Store, (ioldtboro, IN. C ''When I return from uptown, 'r said a big man who weighed over three hundred bounds to a little chap, "I'll drop in on you the small chap, fit. ICl rvc?li ' nin nil n as he fell down in a ; LEMON ELIXIR. From North Georgia. Mrs. NiA. McEntire writeH from Sprinjr Place: For manv years I havo been a rreat sufferer from indigestion, eick headai-hes and ner-ous prostration caused from biliousness and constipation. I tried many remedies, but frot no permanent relief until I used Dr. Moz- ley s Lemon Klixir. l am now in oeuer neaun than for manv vears. Mv daughter has been subject to chills and fever from her infancy. I could g'et nothing1 to relieve her; the Lemon Elixir has restored her to perfect health. W.A.James. Bell Station. Ala., writes: I have mffered greatly from indigestion or dys pepsia One bottle or Lemon Elixir uone me more good than all the medicine 1 ever took. 50 cents an4 $ 1.00 per bottle. sold by Druggists, rrepareu oy ti. jnoziey. M. D. Atlanta Ga. mavl-lm SALE OF Valuable Lands ! Pursuant to an order of the Superter Court of Wayne county, granted in case of H. E. Faison, administrator d. b. n., oi Jas. Williams, dedeased, vs Willis Martin and wife S. E. Martin, et al, heirs at law of said decedent, the undersigned will, on May 29th, 1886, at Mt Olive, JN. C, sell by public auction, certain parcels of land situated in Wayne county, near the town of Mt. Olive, belonging to said Williams' estate, and described as follows : 1st Tract being lot No. 1, of the di vision made by his heirs, on which dwell ing house and other building are located; encumbered by dower of his widow. Mrs. Jane Williams, an l containing eighty one LSI) acre8,;more or less. 12d Tract being lot No. 2 of said di vision, beginumg at a stake on Mt. Olive road, thence s. w., 181 poles to a stake, thence s. 17 e., 49 poles to a stake, thence n 61 e., 83 poles to a stake, thence n. 58 e., 151 pole to a stake on Mt. Olive road, thence with said road to beginning, con taining seventy-one (71) acres more or less. ! 3dTradt being lot No. 3 of said divi sion, beginning at a stake on run of Thun der Swamp, runs s. 56 w., 142 poles to a stake in the Mt. Olive road, tnence s. 4ii e . 21 poles to a stake, thence s. 55 w., 224 pole:! to a isUke, tnence s. oi e., m poies to a stakei thence n. 54 e., 43 poles to a stake, thence n. 59 e., 19 poles to run of Thunder Swamp, thence down the run of saia swamp to Deginning, conmiums bcv enty-five iand three quarters (75) acres more or kiss. Terms !of Sale 10 per cent of bid cash, balance in equal payment, due in six and twelve montns, wun mierest irom day of salt, and title reserved till purchase money paid in full. ' 1 HENRY E FAISON, ' aprl9-td . Adm'r and Com. FARMERS! Allow me arain to call vour attention to the CAROLINA COTTON PLOW. Call and examine it. W. T. YELVERT0N. Goldsboro, N. C, May 10, 1880-tf Our Giddy Girls Abroad. Miscellaneous. CAPITAL PRIZES150,U00. metUformU Ou Monthly and Quarterly Drawtn. ole Louisiana StU Letter? Company, t)4 i prr that tk mm art mmdueUd with konaty,aim$t. -in good faith toward au partus, and author H imVWT It IN HU NTIVMU, Wtt fOWtmiKI rifnatmrtt attached, in iu dfrtivmunt " irrt. We the under si med Jin nit R.,mk- U'ill pay all Prites drawn oh The Louisiana State Lotteries vshich may be firevenied a: our counters. J. II. OOLESBY, Pres. Louisiana atior.al Bank. J. W. KILBUETH, Pres. State Katioi.al Bank. A. BALDWIN, Pres. New Orleans Nation al Bankw UnprecedenteTattraction ! Over Half a Million Distributed. Louisiana. State Lottery Company. lneorcoratM In ISfts for sa v.n t th. in ltar for tncatlon&l and (fbartuttle parpo Kim a capital or f i.o i,oi v to wblrn a Tcr fnnd ot over MO,ooo tap olnce hcoc adda-l iij an OTerwDOiming popular rotr li trtc&u WM mad a Dart Of tha ir.-ant Stfo f-.n-ttrri tlon adopted Dooombcr id, A. D., 1879 lla Urand nInkIc Number I)rar1ii will take place monthly. It tuttr tcale or iwf lloi.t. 193 d Grand Monthly EXTBAOEDINABY 'QUARTERLY DRAWING. Iu the Arndrmy at JIulc Nrw itrlran. Tat adity, Jnu 15, IS SO. Under the pariooal npcrvUlou ai.d roane ment of Gen.G T.6E UREGARD,o( Louisiana. & Gen JUBAL A IARlY, of Virginia. Capital Prize, $150,000. 'oilce. TlrkrU nrr Ten Doll Halve, 93. Fifth, Trnih list or raizBS. r oaljr. . -io,o 0 . . S5.000 , . 0.0(I0 ,.- 40.oo; . 10.H, T..V4? 1 1 1 9 50 100 200 600 1,000 t'APITAl. fKlZ . Uf ijO.OKI. .V Oti). . io.lt U. . 1'1,'M II. . (1KNI) I'KIZtt OF LAK.tK PHIZES Ul LAKOL 1'HIZh.S UK PK1ZL OF 5f0.. 300. . ).. . 10".. 50.. APPROXIMATION rB'B8. 100 Ai'proilmatlon Prizes of tvOJ.. 100 ' " mo., 100 " ' " T5.. i.iiTtf Prize, amounting to S&Va; Application Tor ratoi to clubs should bo mad t only to the office of the Uompauy in Nw Or loans. For further Informat'.on write clearly, Klvlng full address. POHTAl NOTEN, Eiprese Hon ey Orders, or New York Exchange In ordinary letter. Currency by Expret (fct onr expense) addressed ?1, A. DAUPHIN, Now Orleans, La. Or M. A. DAUPillN. Washington, D. C. HrtR P..0. Hons? Criers Fay Mc aud aflflrt Registered leU -is to NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK. New Orleint Li. Alteiiln Tfiicters ! We would Call the Attention of TRUCKERS who wish Seed that we have on hand Extra Early Peas ai Beans which we sell cheap for Cash. We would also say to our friends that we do not profess to keep a Cheap Drug Store ! But those wishing to buy PURE DRUGS At a Living Profit, ca: find then at csr Fla:. Parents Needing SCHOOL BOOKS will dd well to consult us before buying. ALSO MANUFACTURERS OK for disguising Quinine and other nauseous medicines. KIRBY & ROBINSON, Messenger Building. Goldsboro, N. 2., Jan. 14 tf Tie Snrles Honse. Smithfield, N. C. Under New Management. Having parchiidthe welj-known FUL LER HOTEL, aud knowing the wants of the traveling public. I shall spare do rains in making the accommodations first-class in every particular The best cooks, and trained servants employee furTeiegrapn omce in tne notei. W. B.8URLES. onv3-lj Proprietor. " look here! The Greatest Medical Discovery of the age is Dr. Wm. H. Peterson's Infallible Cure for Piles or Hemorrhoids. It. cures without pain ; without the use of knife or Ligatures, and nas never tailed to cure where the directions have been faithfully followed, aa hundreds of testimonials will show. To all persons who are afflicted with this terrible disease, we say, give us a trial:' Our motto is: No Cure ! No Pay ! But we Guarantee a Cure if our di rections are followed. Address Wm H.TETERSON, M. D.f Aurora, Beaufort Co., N. C. feb5-tf SvPB O X -A- Xi . I will take pleasure in ordering any Book or other article In my line that I may not 'have in stock. Leave your or ders as early as possible. declO- J. B. WHITAKER, Jr.
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 27, 1886, edition 1
7
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