Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / Oct. 21, 1886, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE GOLDSBORO MESSENGER. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21. 1886. 3" om K?rn rtf 3 o CO d. n l8Cc Ianeous. Attend b it Now. i draff themselves about feeling that they are e grave, when by using would find acurecom iose, and vitality and ? back to them, ive been sick nearly all .now something about I have used Parker's 'ian a year, and consid mve ever known. In p medicine necessary. . rheumatism, and that and pain from which no equal. I do not see to do without so valu 4 Hattie N. Graves, : eets. Providence, R. I. raS5withth9thy For wcakn esfWt cor- kasl L fOQtf c "Tonic BoldbyallyH-j Tiinr. on-r : Oct.. N. Y.l in large bottles at One sepiy-wswim iC-SALE? business akiJkesidence lots will be sold to theiighest bidder, at the stations on the on and Fayetteville Branch Railroad fa the days named below. If TERMS OF SALE: One-haif cash, balance in twelve months, with nou bearing. 8 per cent. lniert'&K nfprPSt. "UHUS re$rirorl until aaid nntp 13 pai's- . 1 .5 A V4 UUVAA KENLY, Si Formerly kj as Watkins. OCTOBER 20th. LTJCKNOWY . Formerly kV.Wn as Popes, 11 o'slock, OCT. 2lBt. BENSON, . I OCTOBta 2lst. 240'clock P. M. Oct4-td. ; . Last Notice! As I am compelle iolwind up my offi cial business as' Shifrol the county, I hereby give pofciuveiotSce taall indebted to me for taxes or ciierWise, that I shall expect prompt segment by November 1, 1886, as otherwise shall be forced to collect by .distress. Having indulged and accommodated manv. I trust now, ;at this call will not be in vain. To indige longer is out of my power. D. A. GlANTHAM, Slierf 'Wayne County. Goldsboro, N. C.,,Se& 30 188G-td Are the l'equirementsoli customer in buying Goods, ad. . ; We are Prepared to Hriii Pequiremsnts! i We keen first class goods We buy them Low, nd wc sett them at Sma. Profits, subject to "return if not satisfactory Thereby we have built up a good trade whii is Increasing daily. v We keep aFulstbckof Provi sib l s 1 Such a MEAT, LAUD, FLOUR, JUG AH, COFFEE, i To Supply the Wants Cthe Inner! Man. . . S And we keep the MstriaV such as DRY GOODS,' BOOTS. S?)E8,'; HATS, &C, Wherewith to Cithehlm. BAGGING ana 'W'MmsaJf Remember we do not conSie ourselves to Retail. i.Sil?y ; Fliolesale, and Merchants, and those ho buy Goods in quantities, 'will save naoaej ljr g-etting- our prices Dei ore placing lucirmis. BEST & THOMPSON. Goldsboro, N. C, Sept. 30, ljsai j il Go, General Commission teiants, B?FSSf AT WSOLESALIpSIAIL! Box Meats, Hess Pork, Flour (all grades) Sugar, Coffee, S. G. Hams, Lard, Meal, Corn, Bran, Oats, Dr Roods', IS" Ions, Shoes,ockery, Lips; j GlKware, Wool Ware, Ba&ets Cheese, Butter, Red "(7'iad K Oil, Snuff, Tobacco, MolassesivroPi Bagging, Arrow and Dels Ties. AT LOW FIGURES FOR TEE CASH. E3, 3F cfc Cp; Goldsboro, N. C, sep iii ' NOTWITHSTANDING THAT " :he dog days are upon i 'us, YOU CAN FIND AT SPIER'S FAMILY hOSipi West Walnut St., Goldsboro, N-c A Good Supply of Fine Groceries' alid Foreign Delicacies, Snuff, Tobacf Ci gars, Tin, Wood and Willow Wai fp which he is offering at very Low PlC(f FOR OSl3-f raTDon't fail to call on him before Parl chasing elsewhere. julyl' H Now in Store g Car Loads Prime Timothy Ha J. C Tons Wheat Bran. . T J TO Tona Mlxea ow rwu. rtC Cases Soap. Cases Bali Potash. c C Cases Concentrated Lye. Tobacco, Snuff, Starch, Cotton Bas . B. M. PRIVETx ce FOR SALE! mail RAfe. in eood order "I Finlaysi ting. uu. , at Lw I LOVE YOU. BT ELSIK SERRANO Prejty blue eyes, so kind and true. Gaze in mine with love's own hue. Do you know how sweet from you Comes your answer ever new : " I love you ! I love you 1" Pretty eyes, that pierce me through : Ne'er a lover ever knew, , When sweet kisses first hedrew Warm from lips of crimson hue, Joy like mine, when fond and true. Soft you whisper : "I love you !" Pretty eyes, how gay are you ? Your craze in mine seems to strew All my life with morning: dew : Fair and radiant is the view. Ever sparkling:, ever new ; Ever constant, fond and true, As you whisper, I love you V INTERVIEWING WITH THE CAMERA. A New Dispensation Dawning Upon the Journalistic AVorld Pictures Taken. A new dispensation or the fine art of inter viewing has dawned upon the world, atid M. Nadar is, its prophet. N. Nadar is well known as one of the most accomplished photo graphic artists of Paris. He went to see M. Chevreul on the occasion of that scientist's centennial birthday, and exhaustively inter viewed him for Le Journal Illustre. But not merely with note book and pencil in hand. Oh, no. Those implements were subordinate ; merely the small arms of thV fray. The big gun was the camera. For an hour its deadly bore was trained upon M. Chevreul, and in unbroken succession it recorded upon quick acting dry plates his every attitude and gesture; aye, every expression of his counten ance. Here the veteran looks up with the pride of a teetotaller as he exclaims, "I am a century old, and I have never yet tasted wine." Here he clasps his hands upon his staff and challenges the aeronauts to come and give him a balloon ride. Here again he bends across the table and wags his head with scorn, as he tells how a rival dared not come to his laboratory and beconvinced on some point of dispute. And so on. There are a dozen of them in Le Journal Illustre, and a hundred more in M. Nadar's portfolio. Published in connection with the text of the conversation that was conducted while they were being taken, they are almost as good as an actual visit to the old chemist, and establish beyond doubt the success of M. Nadar's idea. Henceforth the reporter, in Paris at least, must carry a note book in one hand, and in the other an instantaneous, automatic camera. New York Tribune. Business Sense. A man, noted for shrewdness in trade, is approached by an acquaintance who has just come from the country. "What's- the news in flie country!'' the shrewd man asks. "I, am sorry, but I've got bad news' for you." "You don't say so. " "Yes, your wife is dead." "My gracious :" the shrewd man exclaims, "I would not have that happen for for $50. No, let me see. Well, say 845. Arkansaw Traveler. A Brotherly Iteunion. When Hood's barefooted battalions struck Schofield's men at Franklin, a beauty spot of Tennessw, in the bend of the Harpeth river, there was as quick and sulphurous a tussle as ever happened. In it all Capt. S. B. Watts, a young Mississippi lawyer, was tripped and lost his sword to Capt. S. M. Knapp, a young Ohioan. The other day Capt. Watts journeyed 1,000 miles and . got his sword back. The brotherly reunion was at Myer's Lake, Ohio, where the ex-Confederate found himself the guest of the survivors of the One Hundred and Fourth Ohio. Chicago Herald. A Comedy of the Customs. A new use for cattle has been apparently found in Prussia, where a lnd of "smugglers" employed a cow in their attempt to avoid the tax on lace. A strong 10-month-old cow was wrapped round with a quantity of lace valued at 1,000. Over this was fitted a false skin so ingeniously constructed as to defy detection. They passed the cow quite easily at the cus toms office,' the men there admiring her size and leauty, some of the excise officers even offering her feed. Country Gentleman. Beginning in Early Youth. While the orchestra was playing the prayer from "Rienzi" in the Louisville Music hall the other day a vigorous baby struck in with a lung solo right in one of the most delicate passages. Conductor Damrosch stopped the orchestra and sat down. "When the little one had been quieted he remarked that while it was a good thing to give children a musical education, there was such a thing as begin ning too early in life. Then he iesumed his baton and the prayer was repeated. New York Sun. Italians Take Good Care tf the Hair. "Why is it," said a lad' friend on the car, "that those Italians will braid and nui-se and beautify their hair and never wash the skin? Some of the loveliest heads of hair I have ever seen were on women and men who never seem to have washed." I am told the Italians have a sui?rstitious regard for the hair, which the' care for as the cro wn of physical perfec tion. The rest of the toilet is a myth to them so far as the mder classes are con cerned. Buffalo News. His Wife's Tombstone. A gravestone in" a cemetery, at Bethel, Conn. , was erected by a man over the grave of Ins wife, and is a rough bowlder which was brought from a neighliormghill. It was selected because, as the husband said: "It was on that stone that my wife and I sat when I proposed to her and she said she'd have mo. A Valuable "White Snake. A white snake that a Maryland clergyman has is valued so highly by him that, in re fusing $000 offered for it by the representa tives of the National museum at Washington, he stated that it would take $20,000 to buy it. "Beholden." Instead of "Much obliged," "Thanks," or "Thanks awfully much," the Anglomaniacs in New York say "Beholden," or "Very much beholden to you." So, at least, observes The Buffalo Express. Vicksburg Library. The prominent young men of Vicksburg, Miss., are taking steps toward organizing n literary and library association, something the city hasn't had since before the war. Brooklyn Bridge Receipts. The Brooklyn bridge receipts on a recent Monday were $2,795.72, the largest taken in on a single day since the structure was opened. John W. Mackay says, in reference to the report that he was negotiating for Houghton hall in order that Mrs. Mackay might be able to entertain the Prince of Wales: "There is no reason on earth why I should purchase a home in England. My business interests, my pleasures, my habits and my friendships all call me to the western world. It is well enough to travel in Europe, but for steady living the United States is good enough for me." One son of Gen. Fremont is growing rich in Montana and the other plows the saltj main in a naval officer's uniform. The oroDrietors of Salvation Oil, the roatABt cure on earth for pain, will pay a large reward if any certificate published by them is not found genuine. i m ni.vi TTarrvfmnear&ir&in with , 1 UUl vim auu uim. i o heir Grandmother's recipes for Coughs, etc., but the people know Dr. Bull's Cough fiyrup too well. A MAID OF THE. MIST. One of Our Girls Who Impaled a Cloud on the Point of Her Parasol. "I would like so much to touch a cloud with my parasol." She was young and strong, and for the first time in her life of 10 years was in the mountains.' She stood oa the long, wide veranda of the hotel at Manitou and looked up at the white smoky clouds curling about the lower mountain peaks with the eager, puzzled,questioningeyesof a young, imptilsive girl. To the left and i:i front of her the swelling, almost precipitous slopes were bright in the sunlight. To her light the low clouds were boiling down the moun tain glen, shutting out the view of Cameron's Cone and saving along at a level that took them squarely against the lower cone of Hia watha mountain. Around this they moved like a sailing vessel feeling it; way along a dangerous coast. Then they flouted oli with the wind into the space between the inter vening peaks and touched even the top of the high hills in front of the hotel. It seemed as though she could in a short walk reach a point where ehe could, in fact, touch the clouds with her parasol. The score of people sitting on the broad porch of the hotel watched the young girl as she" climbed up the hill straight in front, and watched her as she took the mountain trail that led her through the light white clouds, sailing along probably - 1,500 feet above them, for the people at the hotel were at an elevation some 200 or 300 feet higher than the summit of Mount Washington, and the incline toward elevations 7,000, s,000 and 9,000 feet began not 100 yards away. With their glasses they could see the girl, as she stood half infolded in the whitish vapor; then, after aliother interval, they could see her beyond, as she half emerged above the line of those floating clouds. So dear was the atmosphere that the cheers of the young men across the glen, at an elevation somewhat lower than the one reached by the girl, could be heard by her and those in the hotel. Manitou Letter in Inter Ocean. Public Holidays in I?nglaud. Sir John Lubljock, who succeeded in secur ing so many public holidays in England, has introduced into parliament a shop hours' regulation bill, which, it is expected, will pass by a large majority. It is to go into opera tion on Jan. 1 next. By its provisions, shops of every class, with the exception of taverns, refreshment houses, tobacconists' shops and news agencies, are to le closed not later than 10 o'clock on the evenings of Saturdays and holidays, and not later than 8 o'clock on the evening of every other day of the week. Where any shop is found open after the hour at which it is required to bo closed, the occu pier is liable to a line of '5. Chemists and druggists will not be liable to a fine for sup plying medicines after the hour appointed, but they must not keep their shops visibly open after the hours named. London Letter. A Mute Dramatic Club. A curious entertainment was given recently in Brooklyn, N. Y. It consisted of a repre sentation of the play of "Hamlet" by a. deaf and dumb dramatic club. When it is said that the whole of the dialogue was interpreted pari passu by word of mouth by the treasurer of the club, who stood upon a table on the right side of the proscenium, it will perhaps be imagined that the whole thing was inex pressibly tedious. As a fact, however, the speaking portion occasioned no delay, but had, on T;he contrary, to measure its pace by the digital expression of the iersonages. The Ar gonaut. Greeting to Mr. Bancroft. There was a stirring scene in Worcester, Mass., the other day on the occasion of a pub lic reception given to George Bancroft, who was born in the town, but has not visited it before for nearly fifty years. When Mr. Bancroft entered the hall the audience rose as one man to greet him, and every head was at first bowed and then uplifted as ringing cheers broke the stillness that had for some moments prevailed. Mr. Bancroft, with his snowy hair and stately, dignified manner, was an impressive; picture as he bowed right and left to the warm salutations of his towns men. Chicago Times. Shingles of 1771. The old shingles on the Unitarian church at Brooklyn, Conn., were recently removed to make room for new and better ones. One of the first pastors of the church nailed them with big headed wrought iron nails to th" steeple in 1771, and under them Gen. Israel Putnam often has sat and listened to the dis courses rare in those days giving liberal interpretations of the scriptures. It is stated that the shingles Avere "l ived" by men who afterward fought with Old Put at Bunker Hill. The shingles are remarkably well pre served. Chicago limes. The Pastime of Ant Fighting. The popular pastime of the youths at Reno, Nev., is ant fighting, The boys scrape up a shovelful of these busy insects from one colony and carry them to the next nearest colony, dumping them together. The result is immediately a pitched battle, which is foueht most viciouslv. the little warriors lit erally tearing each other to pieces, until the last or the interlopers is dead. They fight in pairs, or in threes, fours and bunches, as it happens to come handiest, but it is always "fight to finish," and no quarter asked or shown. Chicago Times. Something Uncomplimentary. Pedestrians on Mulberry street were amused at seeing an Italian woman seated on the curbstone trying to scrape "War ranted 49 lbs." from the abdomen of a male infant which' she held in her lap. The brand was in bright red, and had been transferred from a flour sack that had been used as r. swaddling cloth. The woman seemed to suspect that there might be some thing uncomplimentary to the child in its meaning. New York Letter. Clanging of the Bells. A peal of bells, in direct imitation of the famous peal of the Strasburg cathedral, is being specially cast for the production of Sir Arthur Sullivan's cantata, "The Golden Le gend," at the forthcoming Leeds festival. The cantata opens with the clanging of these bells, the scene being the spire of the Strasburg cathedral, from which Lucifer and powers of the air are trying to tear down the cross. Cleveland (O.) Leader. The Cirave of Jesse'James. A correspondent of The Woman's Journal has been visiting the grave of Jesse James, the outlaw. A simple monument bears his name and age. The grave is like a bed of flowers, and sweet scented blossoming shrubs stand at the head and foot. A Boston Fledge. A Boston pledge how being circulated for signatures reads: "I hereby promise not to remark that the leaves are not turning as beautifully as last year or that it is cold un usually early." . A New Amusement Wanted. The New Orleans Picayune calls for some new form of sensational amusement that re quires no brains, and is cheap, to take the place of the skating rinks. Excitement in Texas. Great excitement has been caused in the vicinity of Paris. Tex., by the remark able recovery of Mr. J E. Corley, who Loiniaoo Vi a srm1d -not tnrn in bed. or raise his head; everybody said he was j e rronTt;vn A triAl bottle OI Dr. King's New Discovery was sent him. Finding relief, he bought a large bottle - T -n- iriTur' New Life Pills: by the time be bad taken two boxes of Pills and two bottles of the Ducovery jie was well and bad . gained in flesh thirty- 81 Trial Bottles of this Great Discovery for Consumption free at Kirby & Robinson's. Literary Women Abroad. Lady Anglesea, the former Miss Minnie Kins, of Georgia, is here, still a very hand some woman, and at the Hotel Thermal a really reinarkable group of women read Shakespeare together every afternoon Fanny Kciable, Mrs. Richard Ritchie t Anne Thackaray, author of the "Story of Eliza beth,'") and Miss Louvestre. daughter of Emile Louvestre. Theb three literary ladies add their quota to the famous power which has made Aix-les-Baiues remarkable this summer. Fanny Keinble his perfectly snow white hair and looks grand and tragic. Her fine eyes have not lost their power. She is very stout, but carries herself well. Mrs. Ritchie suffers much from ill health and the over-brainwork she has indulged ia. She is still, as she always was, the most delightful of women. She married a man twenty years younger than herself, her godson, and has several children! She seems very happy in her marria-e. Aix-les-Baines Letter. A Yellow Dinner. A lady at Newport has just given a "yellow dinner," which would have delighted the heart of Oscar Wilde. In the middle of the table was a large basket of golden rod. now one of the favorite flowers in fashionable so ciety ; grouped about it were smaller dishes of marigold, scattered over the network table cloth, beneath which was a yellow cover. The candles were yellow, with yellow shades, and the candelabra stood oa yellow plush mats. The ladies, dressed in yellow, were presented with gilded palm leaf fans tied with yellow riblons. The bonbons were yel-. low, the china a yellow and gold, and yellow fruit was served as dessert. Boston Gazette. A Lawyer's Novel Plea. A very subtb plea was put forward recently at Offenburg by the couisel of an individual who was i ing tried for having used insulting language resjx-cting the late King Ludwig II of Bavaria. The lawyer proved that the au thorization for the trial had Jieen signed by the king on June 3 last, biit that the report of the medical experts, read in the Bavarian assembly on June 8, had established the fact that the king, at the time he signed the docu ment, was no longer a free agent. The court entered a nolle pros, accordingl-. Boston Transcript. Charter Oak for Dinner. A temperance orator was given a wooden nutmeg made of a piece of the Charter Oak at New Haven, Conn., some time ago, and put the curiosity in his museum. His wife got out of nutmeg one day, took out the one which was in the museum, and served it up to her husband in custard for dinner. It. was highly indigestible, but that temperance man now boasts of having had apiecoof the Char ter Oak for dinner. Chicago Times. Invited to the Execution. There is in jail in the City of Mexico a young man who is awaiting execution for the murder of his mother. Last week several of his friends received nicely printed cards worded as follows: "Francisco Del Moral has the pleasure to in vite you to be present at his execution, so that you may be able to judge how a man should die." New York Graphic. Figured It Out Exactly. When Brodie, the newsboy, jumped from the East river bridge some of the newspapers said that he was thirty seconds in reaching the water. The Maufacturer and Builder has figured it out exactly, and demonstrates that he droppetl from the bridge to the water i:i just 2.8 seconds. In thirty seconds he would have fallen 1 4,752 feet if there had been room to fall so far. Exchange. Oliver Optic's Future Honle. William T. Adams (Oliver Optic) will make Minneapolis his iermanent home after this winter. It is said that he will enter into business in that city with his son-in law, Nr. Sol Smith Russell, the actor, who. with this winter's engagements, will close his . profes sional career. Detroit Free Press. The Crowd Came. A Knoxville, Ills., ix)lieeman, who acted as doorkeeper at a dramatic ierforaiance-, gave i password, instead of door checks, to those who left the building before the curtain rose. Within a short time nearly every one in X.ow knew the password, and before the first act was over the house was crowded to sufftxv. tion. What Befell Two Lucky Men in r alias. Mr. J. V. Spellman, the dairyman, is known to everybody in Dallas. He came here ten years asro with two dollars in his pocket. He has made money, owns property, attends to his business as carefully as ever. Yesterday he learned that he drew $5,000 in The Louisiana State Lottery. He held a one-tenth of ticket announced as the second prize. Mr. Charles W.Swindell, who holds another one-tenth, is a young man, well known, his position in the ticket office of the Mo. Pacific K. It. bringing him into daily contact with the citizens. No body who knows them doubts for a moment that they have each been lucky enough to get $5,000 on the investment of one dollar. The Dallas (Texas) Evening Times, Sept. 17. SALE OF THE ATLANTIC HOTEL At Morehead City. By virtue of a decree of the Superior Court of Carteret county, made at March term, 1886, in an action wherein John M. Wilson and T. S. Stevenson were plain tiffs, and John Gatling and wife, and oth ers, were defendants, we shall offer for sale at the Atlantic Hotel, in Morehead City, at 12 o'clock rn., Monday, October 25th, 1886, all that parcel of land lying in Morehead City, in the county of Carteret, and State of North Carolina, being known in the plotoi said town as squares one and two, on which the Atlantic Hotel is situa ted, bounded on the north by Bridget street, on the east by Third street and on the west by Fourth street, situated on both sides of the Atlantic & North Caro lina railroad track, and containing four acres, and fully described in the pleadings in said action ; with all the buildings and appurtenances thereto belonging. Also, at same time and place, all the in terest of John Gatling and his assignees in 12,000 acres of land lying on Bogue banks, between the Atlantic ocean and Bogue sound, near Morehead City, adjoin ing the lands of the United States, with the buildings thereon ; also, at the same time and place, all the personal property, in the hotel and out-buildings, consisting of parlor, dining-room and bed-room fur niture, kitchen furniture, crockery-ware and all necessary furniture of a large hotel. Terms : Pergonal property cash. Real estate $7,500, remainder in one and two years, with 8 per cent Interest from day of sale ; upon failure to meet deferred pay ment entire balance to become due. Title retained until full payment of purchase money. SPIER WHITAKER, ' F. H. BUSBEE. Sept. 23, 1886.-td : Commimoner. FOR SALE! o A desirable Farm of 1GO acres lying about 7 miles south of Goldsboro (old Ev erettsville) with dwelling and necessary out houses. Also House and Lot in the southern part of Goldsboro, on William street. For particulars address Prof. J. S. MIDYETTE, Trustee. Wheatley, Ark. Or call on C. G. Smith, Goldsboro, N. C. sep27-lm HAVE YOU SEEN The Nice, New and Nobby Fancy Goods, in Brass, Bronze, Plush, Oak and Glass, at Whitaker's Bookstore. Call and examine and get a foresight of what may be expected when the holiday season opens. 1 v ' I I I I Fall no WEIId "We are now prepared to offer to the Public one of the Largest and Best Selected Stocks o Merchandise it has ever been ir pleasure to offer. We have Goods of every grade, and we are candid when we say that we believe we can suit most any one in Quality and Price. fcf3 Don't send North for your Goods this Fall. We can use the Money at Home to as good ad vantage as Northern firms and will give you as good values for your Money as any House you can trade with. We will suit you both in the Qual ity of Goods and Price. Whatever you buy from us, that does not suit you exactly, we are right here to take the Goods back or exchanp-e them. In our Dress Goods and Wrap Department We are displaying all the Novelties that are out. We have an Elegant Line of Ladies, Misses and Childrens Wraps in the Latest Styles and at very Low Prices. At the same time we would call your attention to our Stock of HOSIERY. GLOVES BUTTONS, FANCY GOODS and TRIMMINGS which is complete in every particular. Our Shoe Department Is likewise complete. Every pair warranted to be Solid Leather and give entire satisfaction. Wc sell at the Lowest Possible Price and will save you the Jobbers profit, as we get all our Shoes jdirect from the Manufacturers. Our Clothing and Gents Furnishing: Department Is Full and Complete. As heretotore, we keep only the best makes in this line. In addition we were lucky to get hold of large lots of Goods in this line which we bought considerable under regular prices. We have one lot of 100 Suits which we are offering at $7.50; they are all wool Cassimer, and the original price was $14.00 Another lot of Union Cassimer Suits wo offer at $5.00 per Suit, original price $10.00 It is impossible to enumerate the different Bargains we have, therefore would only request an examination of our Stock. - 111 our Merchant Tailoring Department We are prepared better than ever before to make your Clothing to order on TEN DAYS NOTICE. Our Goods will be made up with the greatest of care and skill, at very reasonable prices, and we guarantee satisfaction in every case. Laundried and Unlaundried Shirts, Underwear, Hosiery, Gloves, Suspenders, &c, in the greatest profusion, fill this Department. These Goods have been selected with the greatest of care. We can suit the most jastidious taste at popular prices. Carpets, Rugs, Mattings and Oilcloths. In this Line, as in the rest of our Stock, we are displaying the Newest Designs of every grade and at prices which will be hard to duplicate in Northern Markets. We keep a full line of Carpets always in stock. Do Us The Favor To Examine Our Stock Thoroughly before purchasing or ordering. It is our determination to get you to buy your Goods Id Goldsboro, if sufficient Stock, Variety and Low Prices can accomplish it. This LsfNo. Idle Talk ; We Mean What We Say, and shall endeavor to do our part to accomplish this end. Therefore we most cordially invite you to call and Examine our Fall Stock. Respectfully, H Oir Is replete with a Large Stock and Varied 'Assortment of Desirab'e and Seasonable Goods. We guarantee to Duplicate any Bill in this ,1 department, no matter where bought, and save you Freight and Expenses. 200 Bales North Carolina Plaids. 40 Cases Printall Styles). ISO Pieces Dress Goods. 50 Bales of Unbleached Domestic. 15 Cases of Bleaching (all Widths and Grades). 500 Pieces Pants Goods (all Kinds). 300 Pairs of Blankets. 500 Dozen Mens, Boys and Childrens Hats. 200 Dozen Undershirts and Drawers. GOO Cases Shoes, all Styles and Grades (Special Bargains). A Complete Line of Hosiery, Notions and Fancy Goods. Be Sure and Examine Our Stock Before Ordering. We will make it Interesting for you. ThT JJLJLLd WEIIL 25000 lOOO 500 25 IOO 25 150 Pounds of Side Meat are received every week. Bundles of Arrow Ties. Rolls of Bagging (different weights). Barrels of Sugar. Cases Soap. Cases Lye. Gross Matches. As well as other Goods in the WE 8eptI3 "II f m mm il I II II Mil I OF1 Ld i 25 Cases 50 Boxes Grocery Line which will be sold Wholesale winter pen 1 WEST-CENTBE STREET, GOLDSBORO, N. C. Go ! ! 3B3RjOSd BKO D iMftM 250 Barrels of Flour direct from the Western Wheat Growing Section. 25 Barrels of Snuff (Gall & Ax and Lorillard 25 Barrels of Molasses. 25 Cases Potash. Soda. S Tobafco. and Retail at very Low Prices. wswlm Iw110nti.3 LUia . .. . 7 -I
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 21, 1886, edition 1
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