Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / June 7, 1886, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE GOLDSBORO M.SSENGiR, JUNE 7;. 18b6l. DOUBLE SHEET.. Miscellaneous.: o Read this Carefu.ly. The following: letter from a well-known Western lady explains itself and Is worthy of careful reading: , ; " "I wish to sav to the sick and those that are feeble an 1 weak from any cause whatever, that In all the vocabulary of medicines they will find the most virtue ana xne gTearesi Den en t from Parker's Tonic. . I have been an In valid for five or six years past, and given up to die by the most skillful physicians of Kan sas and Colorado, but Parker s Tonic has kept me alive, and raised me up after everything else failed. I have organic heart disease, com bined with spinal and great nervous debility, and have cold sinking spells with no pulse, and the only medicine that will bring on a reac tion is Parker's Tonic. I have never known it to fail in curing a cold if taken in time, and it will relieve pain quicker than any remedy I have ever tried. I send you this because I would like for others to know how much good it has done me. It Is just as good for children. Try it and be convinced." MBS. D.SHULTZ, Louisville, Kansas, P". O. Box 92. ? - Parker's Tonic 1 Prepared by Hiscox & Co., N. Y. Sold by all Druggists in large teottles at One Dollar. raayi9-wswlm M Lew Inees. Boxes Meat, 1 OO BbU. Flour, 1 O " Sugar, J 15 Sacks Coffee, 1 O Bbls Molasses, 22 O -Bushels Oats, 1 OO Sacks Salt, Hoxes Tobacco, Cases Horsford's B. P. SO Gross Matches, 1 O Bbls Irish Potatoes. POTASH, LYE, SOAP. STARCH, DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, BOOTS, SHOES, HATS, HARDWARE, WOOD WARE, &c, &c. 3"Tke above goods must be sold. BEST & THOMPSON. Goldsboro, N. C, Feb. 8,'86.-tf BOX MEATS. FLOUR MEAL, &C. 25 Boxes C. R- Sides. 50 Barrels Mess Pork. 125 Barrels Flour (all grades.) 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. : Large Stock of Canned Goods ! 100 Barrels Irish Potatoes (for seed) Dry Gr.i::.:,"-':-:, C;:ckcry, G-lassware, o&c t r- ma nfFar a T.nrcrc and well as sorted Stock of Groceries and General Mercanaise euner WHOLESALE OR RETAIL, at Low Figures ior vasn. Yours. &c EDBERTOH & FIIJLAYSOH. Goldsboro, N.C., Feb. 1, S6.-tt VALUABLE THEIELD PROPERTY FOR SALE. We offer for sale four building lots on Third and Market Streets: 1. Lot, corner Third and Market streets, opposite D. H. Graves' brick store, and in front of Sasser, Woodall & Co's lot (on which they are about to erect a oncKarug store.) Size, 30x90 leet. Price, $2,000. 2. Lot just West of foregoing, fronting 25 feet on Market street and running back 90 leet. Price, $1,000. 3. Lot West of preceding, fronting 25 feet on Market street and running back 90 feet. Price, $750. 4. Lot West of preceding and same size. Price, $500. Terms One third cash, the remainder on five years' credit and interest at eight per cent., payable annually. Purchasers will be required to put up brick or stone buildings. No wooden building allowed on any of the lots. P0U & MASSEY, Attorneys for J. B. Alford. Smithfield, N. C, May 14-lm. . Up Among the Clouds 4,000 FEET ABOVE SEA. LEVEL, 1,700 FEET ABOVE ASHEVILLE, Magnificent Scenery. Temperature from 50 to 75 Purest Air and Water. THE WATAUGA HOTEL, Blowing Rock, N. C. v Everything New. First-Class Accommoda tions. Keasonable Rates. Accessible Loca tion. Excellent Table. Plenty of Ice. AH the Delicaces of the Season. Mrs. and Miss Braidy, of Davison College, have charge of the Housekeeping Department. Guarantee more Keasonable Kates than any house with eq ual attractions and accommodations. For Circulars and Terms, Address WAT ATJ3A HOTEL COMPANY, ap26-wtf. BLOWING ROCK, N. C H. C. Phosphate OR C0PR0LITE MANURE . M 1 Chnp:sl Ferlfc; DiacoTersi ! AL80 Building Lime and Agricul tural Lime. "Send for Circular and Prices. ' FRENCH BROS., mchV88-tf Rocky Point, N. C. . Stalssvi hull Cige, STATES VILLE, N. C. THE SPRING TERM of this institution wil. begin Wednesday, January 30, 1886. The last year has been a very prosperous one. The attention of parents and guardians is di rected to the full corps of ABLE TEACHERS, the HEALTHY LOCA TION, EXCELLENT FARE AND REASONABLE CHARGES. Send for catalogue. MISS FANNIE EVERITT. January 4, 1886-tf Principal. Grain -:-Cradles ! . o And extra fingers to repair the old ones, at W. H. SLIITH'S. Goiasboro, N. C, May 17-tf SM The Outlook. heart, dear heart, the slow years grow more Dulled is the1, music of the world to me. No lijrht is in the wide, deejy heavens above . mo . - . .. No thrill 5a In thn nacciAnntu cnVfnnrp ceo The chords of life are janjrled sn discordant. i rainu me oi trie music once tney mart''. And now that life has grown so ' blank before me.. turn me to f ne past and seek its shade. O friend;sweet friend, the great. years unre- lenting Have hastened on and robbed us of ' our . youth: Robbed jib of many 6hy and tender graces. Many fond dreams, much of our eany5truth: And left us dregs where once life's wine was leaping; ' , The glow, the sparkle, the bouquet, are gone; wnatnave we leltto keep our nearte from railing, ' . As the pale years leap swifter on and on? Only the memory of the hours departed. Only 4he after-glow from oif th; years, On'y nur thougjts grown tender with brod- ! g. And got tened by the fall rf many tears. O friend, sweet friend, iif narrows to this treasure. I have but une delight the thought of the?; This I shall hold when, drifted from life's har bor, I float out on death's shadowy, shoreless sea. Hattie Tyng Griswo'.d in Brooklyn Magazine. BEYOND HOPE. It was at a '"'meet" in the Roman Cani pagna that Sebastian Dexter lirsfc saw lJnda Lyle. She was riding, as was he, and he never forgot the picture she made as she turned towards him in her saddle, the young blood mantling, in her clear cheeks, her eyes glistening, her flaxen hair roughened by the wind that swept the broad bare plain, escaping in shin ing tendrils from under her little jocky cap. She was the incarnation of beau tiful, innocent, joyous jouth. He fejt, with a thrill, as he looked at her now, that she was changed since then. It had not been so many months ago, and yet Linda, child as she looked at that moment, sitting on the low hassock by the corner of the woodjfire, that gave a gleam of home-like comfort to the great high-ceiled Roman room, with its disabled old furniture, had, by some subtle and indefinable difference, be come a woman. As though her thoughts had myster iously fallen into a train analogous to that of his, she looked up and said: "To-morrow is my birthday. I shall be seventeen. Is not that a respectable age 'To-morrow ? Seventeen ?" he repeat ed, It flashed across him that he was thirty-five. "I am glad you told me." 'Oh, I didn't mean " she faltered, blushing suddenly all over her fair throat and face. "I didn't think " "You didn't mean to remind me of a present,'1 he laughed, rilling up the pause. "You didn't think I would take it so; and I did not. But you did know you ought to know that I should not have forgiven myself if the knowl edge had not come to me in some way." He added in a moment: "I ought to know everything that concerns you." The blush that had been fading out of her cheeks came again at this. She turned her head away; a strange tremulous feeling of happiness stole over her. She clasped her hands, on her low seat, about her knees. The leaping firelight played on her delicate face. Her hair, in two heavy schoolgirl braids, hung down her back to the floor, showing pale against the plain black dress that followed the out lines of the slim girlish figure with a sort of virginal simplicity. With eager eyes Sebastian Dexter dwelt upon the whole silhouette, ardent ly followed with his gaze the soft curves of cheek, and chin, and throat, the rounded outline of the ear, half hidden under the close-clustering hair, the up ward curve of the long lashes that as sented the heavy lids, the droops of the full lips, a trifle wistful, though the girl seemed so happy. Beyond their little firelit circle the large old drawing-room lay in the gath ering gloom of the deepening afternoon a short winter afternoon. The dull rumble of. carriages on the Corso near by came through the stillness. "Dexter would be going off to a dinner-party presently, Her mother would be going also But Linda, as not yet "out," might sit there and entertain him a little while. How many times he had blessed the worldliness of that mother, which made it so more than probable that, if a visi tor came at this hour, she would pot be able to receive him. Growing unaccountably nervous at the sikmcer Linda spoke of her mother now. "Mamma seems so long dressing," she said, stirring a little restlessly. "I you will be tired waiting." She glanced shyly up at him from un der her full lids. How handsome he was! And then as her glance met his, her eyes dropped again quickly. "I want no one but you," he said. His voice was hoarse, and its low tones seemed to pierce her through and through. She made, by a blind impulse, an unconscious movement to rise, but at the same moment he had bent forward. "Linda!" His strong warm grasp was upon her hands, her breath upon her, cheek. "Linda, do you love me?" Slowly the heavy white lids were raised. With the shyness of a woman, and the innocent candor of a child combined, she looked up into his eyes. "Linda, Linda! Tell me!" came the passionate whisper again. The man was white under the emotion that Hwayed him. He had bent back the fair golden head, and was searching her face with burning eyes that devoured all its sweetness. "Tell me! Do you love me, child?" A low "yes," soft as a breath, and the flower-like lips had been crushed in a sudden fierce kiss. But the next moment he had relin quished her, starting to his feet, and Linda, swift as a deer, had glided out of the room. Sebastian Dexter did not stand there by the mantel of that firelit room many minutes, but it always seemed to him, as he looked back upon that time in after years, like some long age. Everything about him seemed to have changed. The leaping shadow upon the tapestried walls were like wierd images in some strange phantasmago ria. The sudden silvery six stroke of a Louis XVI. clock by his side sounded, in the silence, like the clinching of some irrevocable deed. . . , What was this that he had done? He stood there in as great mortal agony as ever man had to face, and yet live through. In a mechanical dim way it forced it self upon his consciousness that Mrs. Lyle might come in at and minute. This made him stir. He went through the long suite of re ception rooms, where lamps were burn ing on the old consoles, and throwing a subdued light over faded carpets, ana brocade hangings, and paintings in dull frames, and in the ante-room Found the servant. "You will tell Madame Lyle I hap pened to remember a pressing engage ment, and could not wait to see he," he told the man, as the latter held his sur tout for him. Out in the narrow street, with frown ing old palaces on either side, he went, and in a few moments was on the Cor- so. it was an angnt; a lew belateu car riages were rolling in divers directions. He hailed a passing cab. His dinner- E arty was at half past six. He took his ostesss hand only one minute before. "If you had failed mel she murmur ed, raising a mock warning finger. "Madame!" ; "No; you are not suffering with a deathwound, and nothing short of that would make such a crime on your part possible. But you don't know what I have in store for you. " Yon shall take the English h cress and beauty. Miss Blood, in to dinner, ohe :s :u be your neighbor." A few seconds later Dexter was seated beside Miss Blood, the heiress and beauty. bne was a faultlessly pertect creature. and she talked well. Dexter devoted himself as much as beseemed him: was brilliant, as usual; acquitted himself faultlessly. At ten o'clock he took his leave and went to a ball at the French embassy. An hour later, Mrs. Lvle, likewise coming from a dinner-party, swept through the rooms, making a little stir as she went. She was still a very beau tiful woman; and she held her own against all competitiors. "Ah," she said, pausing before Dex ter and lifting her heavy fan in admoni tion, "never run away as vou did this evening! What was the matter? Was my toilette too long an operation? Ah, yes; an engagement, so you leu worn. I am afraid mv little Linda did not en tertain you as well as she should." Something in the way she lifted her full, golden lashes though thev were so unlike! reminded him of Linda. He bowed ' with perfect ease, he smiled, he mad 3 the proper remarks, but his lips where white. He felt as though he could not look this woman light, frivolous worldly as she was in the eyes. "7e beau Dexter re" said one of the French secretaries, a shrewd, amiable looking man with a gray mustache, "is commencing to go down. He does not look as well as he used. Harassed, driven, I don't know what." His companion, to whom he had just given his arm, was Miss Blood, arrived a moment before also. .She looked at Dexter as they passed. She would not have been sorry to trans fer her hand from the diplomat's coat sleeve to his. "Do you know him? But he is not English?" pursued the Frenchman. "No. He is an American. I knew a cousin of his once. They are from Bos ton, I believe." "Ah! I have heard nothing of his private historj except that they tell me his family is among the best over here," he added with naivete. "In any case he is very fortunate. Family, that is a thing not many Americans bring here. It is enough that they have millions, like Mr. Dexterre. garcon." Besides being so beau Very near Gesu, in Rome, , there is a smaller church, inconspicuous without, and within poor in comparison to all those other countless ones that hold en shrined some unpurchasable work of art, some priceless treasures. Yet, like many such another church all over Italy, its mystic half-darkness, its incense-perfumed stillness, has doubt less been a haven of rest to many a weary, suffering, or cohtemplative spirit that has wandered within its walls from out of the garish bustle of the every day world. Linda Lyle, though a Protestant, had taken a habit of stepping inside this little church on certain days in the week when, 'with her old Italian maid, she returned from her Italian lessons at the house of an elderly and impover ished countess in the same street. On the afternoon following the ball at the French embassy, Dexter was making his way thither. It was one of the days of Linda's les sons, and some instinct told him she would be more sure than ever to enter the little church that day. He knew all the most trivial incidents f her life. He could have laughed at the boyish eagerness with which he had learned them all, if laughter had ever more seemed a thing which could pass his lips. As he lifted the heavy curtain on en- Ltering, a youngish priest was passing ost. He had a passionate yet ascetic face. For a second he raised his eyes to Dexter" s. Something in the latter, for a moment, arrested him. A fellow-feeling in his soul said, "This man. too, has suffered. 11 Suffered? During the long night watches when he had paced his room it had seemed to Dexter that he had gone through purgatory. What was left now of the passion, the remorse, the wild battlings with temptation to do a des perate deed at whatever hazard was a dull iron apathy. Yes; she was there at the entrance of one of the side-chapels, the old woman near her. Presently they moved to go out, and then he stepped out of the gloom near the column where he had been leaning with folded arms. She started at sight of him, her sweet face suffused with a divine blush. The old woman fell back. She had never known her young lady to have any such adventures before. But what will you? Youth will be youth. She had not forgotten her own romantic days. "Linda, stop a moment; I want to speak to you." They were alone in the partial seclu sion of the side-chapel. A light burned dimly on the flower-decked altar. In another part of the church a muffled voice had commenced intoning vespers to a handful of worshippers. "Linda, I asked you last night if yon loved me. I had no right." The sen tences, hard, abrupt, unmodulated, fell from his lips without change or tremor of a muscle. "I am married already." He stopped. Linda was standing with loosely-clasped hands a little away from him. She made no movement, no outcry. These two might have been talking of the commonest things. But the change that came over her face converted it from warm pink tinged whiteness to a dull grey hue from the countenance of a happy girl to that of a blighted woman. The metamorphosis was more tragic than any words, than any cry could have been. It cut through Dexter's be numbed consciousness Tike the lash from a whip. I "Linda!" he said hoarsely, the veins swelling on his . forehead, "don't look like that; vou will kill me!" He made as though he would have stretched his hands towards her. She shrank back a little. "No; please don't." The voice was not more than a whisp er. The monotonous chanting still went on. To the end of hislife Dexter never heard an intoned service withont a shiver. " She turned slowly, but he made a rapid stride forward. He stood in her way. AH his passions an agony of despair, r an agony of loss were un chained. "You shall not go from me so! Listen at least, to my vindication. Good God! such vindication as it is! .The woman whom I married years ago, as a wild boy, was not worthy was such as you, poor innocent child, cannot know. When I found it out when I woke from my mad act, I would have divorced myself from her. I could; but I had not the courage. I shrank from publicity; from the. exposure of my voutnful folly; from the mire through which my people's good name and mine would be dragged. In my pride I covered it all up. I left her, I supported her. I paid her to keep away. "She is now what I cannot tell such you, child. No one knows my secret; but she is living, ind I I deliberately stole your love. Linda; touched your pure lips with mine But you may at least know how mad I was. Howl loved you " She raised her hand with a faint checking motion. He bowed his head. "True. I have not the right to tell you of my love. The very word from me is pollution. But Linda, Linda!" His heart-hunger was in eyes and voice. "You will at least say good-bye!" "Good-bye." He put out his hand. Hers dropped at her side. She turned. She was gone. His hand dropped also. She had not touched it. Well! what els'J had he ex pected ? He reeled into the rapidly darkening streets as one drunk or dazed. The chanting still went on, reached his ear in muffled, faraway strains, sad as the wailing of lost spirits, as the curtain swung back in its place. That evening he was leaving in the night train northward about 11 o'clock. A Tate moon, pale and mishapen, rose in a clear sky, as the train whizzed and flew through the dark stretches of the Pontine marshes. But before his eyes there was one face, blanched, blighted, all the youth and hbpe and gladness crushed from it evermore, and he knew that so he should see it, with an endless agony of remorse, waking and sleeping, through all the coming vears. The Indians of Mexico. That is a superb idea started by Gov. Jose Maria Ramirez, of Chiapas that southernmost state of the republic, so little known, but which is taking the initiative in a matter of great import ance, the education of the Indian in Mexico. To educate five million In dians, the "great unwashed" of Mexico, is a task of stupendous proportions. To do this Gov. Ramirez makes the proposi tion that the president of the republic appropriate $1,000,000 for this purpose for the first year and as much in after years as may be nccessarv. These Indians are in a proportion of 30 per cent of the entire population of Mexico, and they speak thirty-five idioms and sixty-nine dialects, while most of them are entirely ignorant of Spanish. They swarm the streets of this and everv great Mexican city, lab bering in their incomprehensible lingo; Nahua, Culhua, or Xixime, as the case may be, naked, brown, bare-shouldered. dark-eyed descendants of the old Aztec, Toltec, Chicemecas, and other tribes whose romantic history may run coeval "with that of Egypt and its famous Pharaohs. In some parts of Mexico these savages still retain their independence, as do the laquis m Sonora, and the Chan Santa Cruz in Yucatan. These are the more warlike tribes. But the vast majority live a dark life in the far away stretches of sierra or among the emerald valleys of this land. Thev toil not, neither do thev spin; thev cultivate not, neither do they, manufacture They never. export, for they live far from the iron-footed locomotive or the beaten pathways of commerce, and are often jealously self-contained, reserved, and secluded. They live in the solitudes of the virgin forests on the gray sierras, occupied in holding their primitive farms and al most in a constant clash over boundarv questions. They are always ready tools for any enterprising chief or cacique who wishes to raise a revolution, and fight like the Swiss mercenaries under the man who will pav the best. These Indians never permit the cross ing ot blood bv intermarriage with for eigners of any race, nor will they favor colonists, witli but a tew notable excep tions. Like tigers in their lairs these mistaken millions, manacled with the chains of mental and social slavery, lie hiding among, the mountains of Mexico. To tame them and to teach them is the spirit of the noble scheme proposed by Gov. Ramirez. City of Mexico Two Republics. W.- ADVICE TO MOTHERS. Are you disturbed at night and broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and crying with pain of cutting teeth? If so, send at once and get a bottle of Mrs. Wikslow's Soothing Syrup for Children Teething. Its value is incalculable. It will relieve the poor little sufferer immediately. Depend up on it, mothers, there is no mistake about it. It cures dysentery and diarrhoea, regulates the stomach and bowels, cures wind colic softens the gums, reduces inflammation, and gives tone and energy to the whole system. Mrs. Winsiow's Soothing Syrup for Chil dren Teething is pleasant to the taste, and is the prescription of one of the oldest and best female nurses and physicians in the United States, and is for sale by all druggists through out the world. Price 25 cents a bottle. feb25-lyt WANTED! Energetic, wide-awake men, to act in the Eastern part of North Carolina as Collectors and Agents for the eale of the world-renowned Singer Sewing Machine! Satisfactory inducements will be offered to the right parties. (fTFor particulars, address, with refer ences, Imager KuiMuiag Co,, f may 20-lm V GOLDSBORO, N. C. DrTw. H, FINLAYS0N, CHESTNUT STREET, Goldsboro, N. C, Keeps pure and Fresh Drugs and Brown's Iron Bitters. ' I will sell Patent Medicines ten per cent less than usual price. CrCall on me; I am always about my place of business, and will take pleasure in waiting on any one in need of any thing in my line. Respectfully, declO-tf Db. W. H. FINLAYSON Grain Cradles, For sale low by ' may20 , HTJGGINS & FREEMAN. " Miscellaneous. . Elys, CataddH Qxtu Behef at once W l '(,?! nMoN and Cure. f C'igb COLD in HEAD, fcW IHrin catarrh, vmfvmirm HAY f fiVEB. 2?ot a Liquid, Snuff or -Powder, Free ! from injurious Drvgi and Offen site Odors. HAT "FEVER A particle s aPDlled into each nostril and is agreeable. Price 50c at Druggist; by mail. regisiereo, ou eta circulars tree. JSlil liWiJtiKits, Druggists, Owego, N. Y. , oct2ft-wswly BEST GOODS ! lowest Prices Very large Stock of GENERAL - MERCHANDISE ! Dry Goods, Hats, Eoots and Shoes, Hardware, &c. OF VARIOUS KINDS. I HAVE THE GOODS YOU NEED I WILL SELL AT LOWEST x PRICES CALL, ANDSEE ME! J. C. EASON. ' Goldsboro, N. CL, May 6-3m Mrs. E. W. MOORS, (2d Door Opera House.) MILLINERY ! 8hade Hats In Cantons, 20 cents. Black and Colored Straws, 25, 33 and 40 cents. Trimmed Hats, In every rstyle now worn, at similar low prices. Ribbons, Flowers, Pea&ers, In Endless variety. REAL OSTRICH PLUMES, IS and 18 inches, 65 to 75 cents, great bargains' Scrim and Madrass Curtaining: at 20 cents. As Cheap as can be bought, n 43-PROMPy ATTENTION TO ORDERS.-6 Send for Samples and give me a call. MRS. E. W. MOORE. Goldsboro, N. C, May 10, 1886-tf NERVOUS DEBILITATED MEN. Ton are allowed a free Mat cf thirty day of the me of Dr. Dye's Celebrated Voltaic Belt wltb KUtfi-ta SnarmiMorr Arrnllanee. for the PDeedr relief and permanent cure of Kervout Debility, om r,f mtniitH mud ManJLorxL. and all kindred troubles. Also for many other diaeasea. Complete restora tion to ueaitn. vigor ana nannooa KTiaraniweu. So risk la Incurred. Illustrated pamphlet in tealea mnrinmi maltAd fr. tT addreasins VOLTA10 BELT CO., Marshall, Mich. A. WILLIAMSON, Manufacturer of Fine AND DEALER IN WHIPS, BLANKETS, ROBES, BRI DLESAND SADDLES, CART BREECHING, HORSE BOOTS, DOUBLE AND SINGLE WAGON HARNESS, HALTERS, CUR RY COMBS AND BRUSHES. A U I Hani Hads Harness for S12.SD Machine Harness, 7.50 to $12 50. KORNEGAY BUILDING, GOLDSBORO, N. C. t3FRepairing of all kinds promptly at tended to. nov26-tf L. SIMON & CO., (Successors to H. Brunhild & Bro.) WHOLESALE DEALERS Liquors. Cigars AND 114 North Water St, WILMINGTON, - JV. C. BRANCH OF H.BRUNHILD & BRO., RICHMOND, VA. Sole AgentJs for HICKS & BRUNHILD BROS., Manufacturers rf Tobacco, nov26tf RICHMOND, VA. Glenvvood High School, JOHNSTON COUNTY, N. C. For Males and Females. Literary and Musical Departments. David L. Ellis, (University of Nash ville,) Principal. Miss W. A. Cakver, Teacher of Music Tuition and board as low as any school of equal merit in the State. Fall session opens July 19th. For Circulars, giving full information as to rates, course of study, &c, please write to the Secretary of Trustees, H. N. Bizzell, Glenwood, N. C, or to the Prin cipal, New-Berne, N. C. apr8-wtf "george w. bucher, ABCHITECT AM) BUILDER! GOLDSBORO, N. C. - Designs and estimates furnished for all kinds of work. Personal and prompt attention given to all work entrusted to my care. FINE WORK A SPECIALTY! apr29-tf P. O. BOX 595. Baud Male Harness :mnnMEAnn fame SMASH! I ! T H EM DOWN!! FOR ONLY THIRTY DAYS! - - , 1 ou cannot put off buying Spring and Summer Goods any longer. Why not make your selections now while the btock is Fresh and the Assortment is complete f You will not find any such Stock in the City as jou can find at my Palace Establishment. My Stock of PRINTS is large and pretty. My Stock of LAWNS is unusually large and attractive. My Stock of WHITE GOODS em races every style. "THE FINEST OF THE SEASON" Is pronounced to be HAMBURGS, ORIENTALS, TORCHONS AND LACES, &c, &c.f...&v DfilsSGobpS, NUN'S VEILING! CANNOT BE EXCELLED ! lWel! jripldr,! oylie f Trail CL0THIB16 Is filled with an entire New Stock of stylish Lower tlian tHo Lowest. liHOEsT Of every imaginable size and style, for all ages and sexes. t3yNow, if you want a Fashionable Hat, see my stock before you buy. The throng of people which has crowded my store for the past few weeks show that my prices defy competition. WHATEVER YOU CAN BUY ANYWHERE FOR TWO DOLLARS, I WILL SELL YOU FOR ONE DOLLAR. This is my Standing Challenge I For 30 days we will make things I ively Don't fail to Call Look out for the Golden Eagle. may20-lin ASHER EDWARDS. Q. 3F. Pianos, Organs, Sheet Music, Music Books, &c, &c SOUTHERN DISTRIBUTING Aol ' " . BOOSEY & CO., LONDON. SCHUBERTH & CO., LEIPSia siTslte.oo I $48.o8At.s $?oooJEigLeadirig Makes to Select From.- Sold 49-Address all Letters, Orders or Communications of any kind to mchl8-tf Manager Carolina MO EBR ILODCOIK AIT TTEinS I 3?2E BBS! All Havana Tobacco, anal only costs you 5 Cents, some thing never done before in this city We are selling this Cigar for less than it cost to manufacture them, and will seL only 5,000. Come and try them. We also handle the. following Celebrated 5c Cigars: "Navy Fives," "La Cherita," "Our Lead er," "Rail Road," Trovadore," "Art," and "Billet Doux." 1 FlNETOR4CCa SNUFFrPIPES,, smoKer.- Articles, dbc. Fine Conns .A.t "Wholesale and Retail. C3r3F2.3EJb-uJb-1,I3Xr "JfcaiJHLOS.-. i Corner xaacioi Jan. 25, 1880.-tf ' T I O E3. T wonld rfiRneetfullv inform mv friends and the public generally, that I hare per manently located witn Air. n a. vt aus, in th Wa.tr.h Clock and Jewelv Repair ing department and! hope by strict atten tion to give entire sausiacuon 10 an wno may favor me with their work. Will also h rAeasen to wait on them with anvthinz in the Jewelry line. Can always show as nne a StOCK or Uiocra, n aicnea, ouver- ware and Jewelry as can De louna in ine State, and at prices as low. rff All work warranted 12 months at the Parlor Jewelry Store of R.A. Wattts. W. P. GRANGER. Goldsboro, N. C, mch25-3m fi)JnVn II n V U Li 130 my large variety of I , i,' DEPARTMENT and well-made garments, and will be sold B7. .A. PIANOS- STEIMY Sen.mYlbonb. WXUiai IF HI, EMEKS0N WE8EK BttO. nnnn WW A u u u u BURDETT. TABEK AND SOUTHERN OEM. Catalogue by JJai, Free. for Cash or on Easy Installment Plans Music House, Lock Box TOO.) Goldsboro, N. C. IS. tCH33 OlttX, i, Fruits, lis, k, k, Gregory House, GQLDSBQEQ A. iT. 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. I A eradnata and master nt PonmnnaVifr-1 preferred. For particulars address, with references, T TT .rAnnn U. JUL. JXLJJlVTjt my3-wswtf i Fremont. N. C. I RAITTA 8nd six cent for postars, and A K H 17. P. reeetT free, a costly box of goods U ft llii-Hl whlcb will lislp all, sf altbsr sax, to malts mora money rUbt away thaa anything elsa in t Ms world. Fortunes awsit tbs workers absolutely sure. Terms mailed free. Txo Uo Anjsrta. MsJ&r i pov-ly
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 7, 1886, edition 1
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