Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / Nov. 1, 1886, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE GOLDSBORO MESSENGER. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1. 1886. Miscellaneous. Profit for Everybody. Parker's Tonic kept In a home is a sentinel to keep sickness out. Used discreetly it keeps the blood pure, and the stomach, liver' and kidneys in working order. Coughs and Colds vanish before it. It builds up the health J "I sell large quantities of Parker's Tonic in my drug store. Among my customers, a doc tor, has been prescribing it for the past two years. He was nearly dead himself, and tried every remedy known to his profession, with out any relief. After he had used four bottles of Parker's Tonic he began to grow in flesh, anfi the imnrovement in his health was abso lutely wonderful. He now recommends it to every one." J. E. Dabbow. Calamet Ave. Pharmacy, 113 Twenty-ninth Street, Chicago. 111. Parker's Tonic Prepared by Hiscox & Co., N. Y. Sold by all Druggists in large bottles at One octl9-wswlm Dollar. fe Are Here To Stay! :o: . Our friends in town and the country are hereby respectfully notified that we are still on deck, ready to supply our cus tomers, at short notice, with the best Beer in the world which is Portner's Tivoli, and "Vienna Cabinet Beer" in kegs, ' half barrels or bottles. We have recently made new arrange ments and improvements in our Depot and Bottling Establishment, and promise now full and entire satisfaction as to quality;, prompt attention and general dis patch of business. Orders solicited, Respectfully, It. PORTNER BREWING CO., W. Hilker, Agt. Goldsboro, N. C, oct4-lm ElprM, Finlayson k Co., General Commission Merchants, QFFE& AT WHOLESALE OR RETAIL ! - Box Meats, Mess Pork, Flour (all grades) Sugar, Coffee, S. C. Hams, Lard, Meal, Corn, Bran. Oats, Dry Goods, Notions, Boots, Shoes, Crockery, Lamps, Glassware, Wood Ware, cSsX Batten Red C" and K Oil, Snuff, Tobacco, Molasses, Syrup, &c. Bagging, Arrow and Delta Ties. AT LOW FIGURES FOR THE CASH. r E5- 27". c3 OO- Goldsboro, N. C, sep6-ti Hay, Crackers, Baskets, NOTWITHSTANDING THAT THE DOG DAYS ARE UPON US, YOU CAN FIND AT SPIER'S .HHU HaOMRT! West Walnut St.oldsboro, N. C.j A Good Supply of Fine Groceries and Foreign Delicacies, Snuff, Tobacco, Ci gars, Tin, Wood and Willow Warej, &c, which he is offering at very Low Prices, FOR DASH I Cgp-Don't fail to call on him before pur chasing elsewhere. ' julyl-tf a ififll ISA Cll i W I Im ha I fa t w w n , Manufacturer of Fine AND DEALER IN WHIPS, BLANKETS, ROBES, BRI DLES AND SADDLES, CART- BREECHING, HORSE BOOTS, DOUBLE AND SINGLE WAGON HARNESS, HALTERS, CUR- -. m n -kTT-v TITITTO LI L'U A No, 1 Hand Hade Harness for S12.50. Machine Harness, $7.50 to $12.50. KORNEGAY BUILDING, ; . GOLDSBORO, N. C. CRepairing of all kinds promptly at tended to. nov26-tf LIME, PLASTER, CEMENT! ' i 2jQ Barrels Fresh Itock Lime. J00 Barrels Plaster. ( Barrels Cement, Ovr (Portland and Rosendale.) QQQQ rounds Plastering Hair. 40 ,000 LATHS. B. M. PRIVETT & CO. Farmers ani Ginners Having received the agency for the Barbour Cotton Seed Crushers for the counties of Wayne, Sampson, Du plin, Greene, Lenoir and Johnston, we would respectlully invite the attention 01 Ginners and Tanners to their usefulness. They are highly recommended and SUPPLY A LOHB-FELT WAHT. Every Ginner and Farmer should have one. . I For prices and particulars call on or address HENRY LEE & GO., Wholesale Grocers. auptfOtf ALABASTI1TE! The best preparation made for CJJEAN ING WALLS; white, and different tints, for sale low by " 1 HUGGINS & FREEMAN. mayao-tf . Sanfl Me Harness, TABERNACLE SERMON. DR. TALMAGE PREACHES TO MER CHANTS AND BUSINESS MEN, 'The School of Hard Knocks" the Sub ject of Ills Discourse Business Life a School of Patience and Christian In tegrityIn lucements for Knavery. Brooklyn, Oct. 31. The services at the Brooklyn Tabernacle are attended by large numlers of merchants and business men from all parts of this country, and from foreign lands, and the following sermon, preached by the lit v. T. DeWitt Talmage, D. D., this morning, was timely. He selected for the opening hymn of the service that beginning: Must Jesus bear the cross alone. An J all the world go free? The toxt was Romans xii, 11: "Not sloth ful in business; fervent in spirit; serving the Lord." Industry, devotedness, Christian service are all recommended in this one short text. What! is it iossible to conjoin them? O yes! There is no war between religion and busi ness, between Bibles and ledgers, between churches and counting houses. On the con trary, religion accelerates business, sharpens men's wits, sweetens acerbity of disposition, fillips the blood of phlegmatics, and throws more velocity into all the "wheels of hard work. To the judgment it gives more skill ful balancing; to the will more strength; to industry more muscle ; to enthusiasm a more concentrated fire. You cannot show me a man whose business prospects have in any wise been despoiled by his religion. RET. T. DEWITT TALMAGE. The industrial classes are divided into three groups producers, manufacturers, traders. Producers such as farmers and miners. Manufacturers, such as take the corn and change it into food, or the wool and flax and change them into apparel. Traders, who make a prolit out of the transfer and ex change of that which is produced or manufac tured. Now, a business man may belong to one of these classes or he may belong to all of them. Whatever be your avocation, if you plan, calculate, bargain; if into your life there come annoyances, vexations and disap pointments, as well as gains, dividends and percentages; if you are harassed with a mul tiplicity of engagements; in a word, if you are driven from Monday morning to Satur day night and from January to January with relentless obligations and duty, then you are a business man or a business woman, and my subject is appropriate to your ase. We are apt to speak of the moil and tug of business life as though it were an inquisition or : a prison into which a man is thrown, or an un equal strife where, half armed, he goes to contend. Hear me, this morning, while I try to show you that God intended business life to le a glorious education and discipline, and if I shall le successful in what I say I shall rub the wrinkles out of your brow and un strap some of the burdens from your back. I have first to remark that God intended business 1 if e to be to you a school of Chris tian energy. God started us in the world, giving us a certain amount of raw material out of which we were to hew our own char acter. Every faculty' needs to be reset, rounded, sharpened up. After our young people have graduated from the schools and colleges and universities, they need a higher education, that which the collision and rasp ing of everyday life alone can effect. En ergy of soul is wrought out only in the fire. And when a man for ten, or fifteen, or twen ty, or thirty years has been going through business activities, his energy can no longer be measured by weights, or plummets, or lad dors. It can scale any height. It can plum met any depth. It can thrash any obstacle. Now, do you suppose that God has spent all this education on you for the purpose of making you a more successful worldling, of enabling you to more rapidly ac cumulate dollars, making you sharp in a trade? Did God make you merely to be a yardstick to measure cloths, or a steelyard to weigh flour! And did He intend you to spend your life in doing nothing but to chaffer and higgle? My friend, He has put you in this school to develop your energy for His cause and kingdom. There is enough unem ployed talent in the churches, and in the world to-day, to reform all empires, and all kingdoms and people in three weeks. O, how much idleness and strong muscles and stout hearts! How many deep streams that turn no mill wheels and haul on the bands of no factory? God demands that he have the best lamb out of every flock, the richest sheaf in every harvest, the best men of every genera tion ; and in a cause where the Newtons and the Lockes and the Mansfields of the earth were proud to enlist, you and I need not be ashamed to toil. Oor fewer idlers and for more consecrated Christian workers! Again: God intended business life to be to you a school of patience. How many little things there are in one day's engagements to perturb, and annoy, and disquiet you. . Bar gains will rub, and men will break their en gagements. Collecting agents will come back empty handed. Tricksters in business will play upon what they call the "hard times," when in any times they never pay. Goods placed on the wrong shelf. Cash books and money drawer in a quarrel. Goods ordered, for an especial emergency failing to come, or, if coming, damaged in the trans portation. People who intend no harm go ing about shopping, unrolling goods they do not mean to buy, and trying to break the dozen. Men obliged to take up other people's notes. Morei counterfeit bills in the drawer. More bad debts. Another ridiculous panic. Under all this friction men break down, or they are scoured up "into additional bright ness. How many you and I have known who, in the past few years, have gone down under the pressure, and have become petu lant, and choleric, and crabbed, and sour, and pugnacious, until customers forsook their stores, and these merchants have become insol vent, and their names were pronounced with detestation! But other men have found in this a school for patience. They toughened under the exposure. They were like rocks, more serviceable for the blasting. There was a time when thej had to choke down their wrath. There was a time when they had to bite their lip. There was a time when thoy thought of a stinging retort they would like to utter. But now they hare conquered their impatience. They hare kind words for sarcastic flings. They have a polite behaviour for discourteous customers. Thej- have forbearance for unfortunate debt ors. They hare moral reflections for the sudden reverses of fortune, liow are you going to get that grace or patience through hearing ministers preach about It Ob, no. If you get It at all you will get it in the world, where you sell hats, and plead causes, and tin roofs, and make shoes, and turn banisters, and plow corn. I pray uoa that through the turmoil and sweat and ex asperatio of your everyday Ufe you may bear the voice of Christ saying to you: If patteace possess your soul, let patienc have a perfect work. - Again: God intended business life to be to you a school for the attaining of knowledge. Merchants do not read many books, nor study many lexicons, nor dive into great profounds, yet through the force of circumstances, they get intelligent on questions of politics, and finance, and geography, and jurisprudence, and ethica Business is a hard schoolmistress. If her pupils will not learn in any other way, with unmerciful hand she smites them on the head and on the heart with inexorable loss. You went into some business enterprise, and five thousand dollars got out of your grasp. You say the five thousand dollars were wasted. O, no! that was only tuition. Ex pensive schooling, but it was worth it. Mis fortune, with hard hand, comes upon a man and wakes him up, and by the very force of circumstances business men get to be intelli gent. Traders in grains must know about foreign harvests. Traders in fruit must know ' about the prospects of tropical production. Manufacturers of American goods must know about the tariff on imported articles. Publishers of books must know the new law of copyright. Owners of ships come to understand winds and shoals and naviga tion. And so every bale of cotton, and every raisin cask, and every tea box, and every cluster of bananas, become literature to our business men. Now, what is the- use of all this intelligence unless you give it to Christ? Do you suppose God gives you these oppor tunities of brightening up your intellect and of increasing your knowledge merely to get larger treasures and grander business? O, no! Can it be that you, have been learning about foreign lands and people that dwell un der other skies, and yet have no missionary spirit? Can it be that you have leeii learning the follies and trickeries and hollowness of the business world, and yet you are not trying to bring to lear upon them this gospel which is to correct all abuses, and abolish all igno rance, and correct all mistakes, and arrest all crime, and irradiate all darkness, and lift up all wretchedness? Can it be that, notwith standing your acquaintance with the intrica cies of business, you are ignorant of those things which will last the soul long after bills of exchange and commissions and invoices and consignments and rent rolls have crum pled up and consumed in the fires of a judg ment day. Again: God intended business life to be to you a school of Christian integrity. No age of the world ever offered so many indu cements for scoundrelism as are offered now. There is hardly a statute on the law books that has not some back door through which mis creants can escape. How many deceptions in the fabric of goods! Commercial life plies the land with trickeries innumerable, and there are so many people in Brooklyn and New York who live a life of plunder, that when a man proposes a straightforward, honest busi ness, it is almost charged to greenness and want of tact. Ah! my brethren, this ought not to be. But I have to tell you that it re quires more grace to be honest now than it did in the days of our fathers, when business was plain, and there were no stock gamblers, and woolen was woolen, and silk was silk, and men were men. How rare it is that you find a man who can from his heart say: "I never cheated in trade. I never overestimated the value of goods when I was selling them. I never covered up a de fect in a fabric. I never played upon the ignorance of a customer, and in all my estate there is not one dishonest farthing." There are those who can say it. They never let their integrity bow or cringe to present ad vantage. They are as pure and Christian to day as on the day when they sold their first tierce of rice or their first firkin of butter. There were times when they could have robbed a partner, when they could have ab sconded with the funds of a bank, when they could have sprung a snap judgment, when they could have borrowed inimitably, when they could have made a false assignment, when they could have ruined a neigbtxar for the purpose of picking up some of the frag ments; but they never took one step on that pathway of hell fire. Now they can pray without being haunted with the chink of dis honest gold. Now they can read the Bible without thinking of the day when, with a lie on their soul, they kissed the book in a custom house. Now they can look into the laughing faces of their children without thinking of orphans left by them penniless and houseless. Now they can think of death without having their knees knock to gether, and their hearts sink, and their teeth chatter, because their is a judgment where all defrauders, and jocke-s, and tricksters, and charlatans shall be doubly damned. Now they can read in the Bible without flinching: "As the partridge sitteth on eggs and hatch eth them not ; so he that getteth riches, and not by right, shall leave them in the midst of his days, and at the end shall he a fool." Alas! if any of you, for the purpose of get ting out of temporary embarrassment, dare to sell your soul, or any portion of it. You may wake up in the midst of embarrassment and say: "No one is looking. This transac tion may be a little out of the way, but it is only once, only once." On that one occasion you not only wreck your spiritual nature but you despoil j'our business prospects. You put one dishonest dollar in an estate, but it will not stand. You may take a dishonest dollar afid put it down in the very depths of the earth, and you may roll on the top of it rocks and mountains, and on the top of those rocks and mountains you may put all the banks and moneyed institu tions, piling them up heaven high, but that one dishonest dollar down in the depths of the earth will begin to rock, and heave, and upturn itself until it comes to the resurrec tion of damnation. You cannot hide a dis honest dollar. In the review of this subject there are two or three things I want to say, and the first is, let us have a larger sympathy for busi ness men. I think it is a shame that in our pulpits we do not oftener preach on this sub ject and show that we appreciate the sorrows, and straggles, and temptations, and trials of every day life. Men who toil with the hands are very apt to be suspicious of those who move in the world of traffic and think that they get their money idly, and that they give no equivalent. Men who raise- the corn, and wheat, and rye, and oats are very apt to think that grain merchants get easy profits. The first is very apt to be jealous of the brain. Plato and Aristotle were so opposed to all kinds of merchandise that they said com merce was the curse of the earth, and they recommended that cities 6hould never be built any nearer the seocoast than ten miles. But we have become wiser than that, and you know that there are no harder workers than those who plan and calculate in stores and banks and counting houses. What though their apparel te neat, what though their manners be ! refined, do not put them down as idlers. They carry loads heavier than a hod of bricks, they go into exposures keener than the cutting of the east wind, they scale mountains higher than the Alps and Himalayas, and maintaining their Christian integrity, Christ will at the last accost them, saying: "Well done, thou good and faithful servant: thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will make thee ruler over many things; enter thou into the joy of thy Lord." I also enjoin you to quit all fretfulness about business matters. Is there not some thing in your own household that you would not give up for the worldly success other men have? Besides that, if these trials lifted you up, you ought to bless God for the whip of discipline. The larger the note you have to pay, the greater the uncertainty of busi ness life, the better for your soul if Jesus Christ leads you; triumphantly through. How do I know? I know it by this principle that the hotter the furnace the better the refining. There have been thousands of men who have gone through the same path you are now going; through with an aehing heart. There are multitudes before the throne of God who were lashed with cares and anxieties innumerable and were cheated out of everything but their coffin. They were sued, they were ejected, they were im prisoned for debt, they were maltreated, they were throttled by constables with whole packs of write, they ware sold out by sheriffs. they had to confess Judgments, they had to compromise with creditors, and their lnct hour on earth was disturbed by the fact that their door bell "was rung loudly and angrily by the hand of some impetuous creditor, who was surprised that that sick man should be so impertinent and outrageous as to die be fore he had paid him the last three shillings and sixpence. Oh! how men are tossed and driven! I had a friend who went from one anxiety to another; a good and great heart he had, but everything he put his hand to seemed to faiL Misfortunes clustered around, and after awhile I heard he was dead, and the first word I said was: "Good! he has got rid of the sheriffs." There is a great multi tude of business men who on earth had it hard, but by the grace of God they stand tri umphant in heaven; and when the question is asked of them. uWho are they?" the angels of God, standing on seas of glass, will cry out: "These are they who came out of great tribu lation, and had their robes washed and made white in the blood of the Lamb." Once more: I want you to seek business grace. Commercial ethics, business honor, laws of trade, may do very well for a while; but there will come a time when the ground will slip from under your feet and the world will frown, and the devils will set after your soul, and you will want more then than this world can give you. You will want the eternal reck to stand on. For the lack of that grace you have known men to forge, and to maltreat their friends, and to curse their enemies, and you have seen their names bul letined among scoundrels, and spit upon, and blistered by scora, and ground to powder. They not only lost their property, but their souls were .mauled, and putrified, and blasted for eternity. You could count tip scores of such persons, while there are others who, tossed on the same sea, sustained by the grace of God, have all the time kept their eye on the lighthouse. Men coming out of that man's store say: ''If there ever was a Christian trader, that is one." Stern integrity kept the books and waited on the customers. Light from the future world flashed through the show windows. Wrath never stamped that floor, nor did sly dishon esty cover up imperfections in goods. Love to God and love to men were the principles that ruled in the store of that Christian trader. Some day the shutters are not let down from the store window and the bars are not taken from the door. Men pass along and stop, and stare, and go up to read a card on the door which announces: "Closed on account of the death of one of the firm." That death it is talk in commercial circles that a good man has gone. Boards of trade pass resolutions of sympathy, and churches of Christ pray: "Help, Lord, for the godly man ceaseth." He has made his last bargain. He has suffered his last loss. He has ached with his last fatigue. The results of his Christian industry will bless his children after he is dead, and bequests to the kingdom of God will gather many sons into glory. Ever lasting rewards in place of business discipline. There "the wicked cease from troubling, and the weary are at rest." A Curious Disease. Deacon Amos P. Kendall of Palmer, Mass., died recently of a curious disease that had caused the death of his grandfather, father and two brothers. In effect it was paralysis, and yet it came on very gradually, without any shock. Less than a year ago deacon Kendall noticed a lameness in a finger on his left hand. The disorder developed gradually, until about five months ago the left hand be came helpless and dangled from the wrist. Next the calves of his legs were attacked, and in a couple of months more he was forced to stop walking, and soon after he was un able to move the left leg at all. His mouth and throat were then approached, the muscles controlling the salivary glands weakened, which caused a ceaseless flow of saliva. After that the progress of the disease was rapid, and at the time of his death he had lost his speech save a few guttural sounds, was un able to swallow or to move any member save one arm slightly and turn his head somewhat. The paralyzed portions retained the sense of touch and his mind was perfectly, clear to the last. New York Sun. A Diminutive Infant. The smallest baby in Connecticut is a York state youngster, born two months ago at Long Lake, in the Adirondack. She is the child .of David K. and Emily P. Mix, who are visiting in New Haven, and weighs two and a half pounds. She is well formed, sound of lung and appetite, is thirteen inches long, her wrist is seven-eighths of an inch in circumference, her hand is one inch across the back, her ankles an inch and a quarter in circumference, and her foot is an inch and a quarter long. Her eyes are blue and her hair is thick and dark. New York Sun. Without Reference to Earthquakes. The certainty of the success of Southern enterprises is shown by the regularity which has characterized the Grand Monthly Draw ings of The Louisiana State Lottery the 198th of which events will take place on Tuesday, Nov 9, 1886 without any reference to earth quakes or other interferences. Gen'ls G. T. Beauregard of La., and Jubal A. Early of Va-, will scatter some $265,500 all about the earth. For any information apply to M. A. Dauphin, New Orleans, La. Do not forget the day. Boots for the Grafted School ! Boots for Ererfloly. You will do well to consult before you make any purchase. -o- Patent Medicines Toilet Articles. Prescriptions Carefully Compounded. MANUFACTURERS OF for disguising Quinine ari' ; other nauseous medicines KIEBY & ROBINSON, Messenger Building Goldsboro, N. C, Sept. 23 tf Building Lime! Delivered in Goldsboro, in Small Lots, At 91.15 per Bbl. Special Mates for Car Load Lots. also N. C. Phosphate, Phosphatic Lime, and Ag. icultural Lime. tarSend fr Circular. ' ': FRENCH BROS., aufflS.'86-ti Rocky Point. N. O SCHOOL BOOKS! mot! in Fill and WEIL, cLsieL. We are now prepared to offer to the Public one of the Largest and Best Selected Stocks o Merchandise it has ever been our pleasure to offer. We have Goods of every grade, and we are candid when we say that we believe we can suit most anv one m Quality and Price. Don't send North for your Goods this Fail. 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 exchange 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 4r)T time we would call your attention to our Stock of HOSIERY, GLOVES, BU 1 1 ONS, 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. We sell at the Lowest Possible Price and will save you the Jobbers profit, as we get all our Shoes direct from the Manufacturers. Our Clothing and Gents Furnishing Department Is Full and Complete. As heretoiore, 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 10( Suits which wo are offering at $7.50; they are all wool Cassimer, and the original price was $14.00. Another lot of Union Cassimer Suits we 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. In 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 nd 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 lastidious taste at popular prices. Carpets, Bugs, 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 in Goldsboro, if sufllcicnt Stock, Variety and Low Prices can accomplish it. This Is No 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, iff WEI3L Is replete with a Large Stock- and Varied Assortment of Desirable and Seasonable Goods. We guarantee to Duplicate any Bill in this Department, no matter where bought, and save you Freight and Expenses. 200 Bales North Carolina Plaids. 40 Cases Prints (all Styles). 150 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. 5QO Dozen Mens, Boys and Childrens Hats. 200 Dozen Undershirts and Drawers. OOO Cases Shoes, all Styles and Grades (Special Bargains). A Complete Line of Hosiery, Notions and Fancy Goods. C3f Be Sure and Examine Our Stock Before Ordering. We will make it Interesting for you. 1 WEIId .III 25000 Pounds of Side Meat are received every week. lOOO Bundles of Arrow Ties. 500 Rolls of Bagging (different weights). 25 Barrels of Sugar. lOO Cases Soap. 25 Cases Lye. 150 Gross Matches. As well as other Goods in the WE13L cLQL aeptI3 III! of a Mammoth Stocfe OP Ulnter mm i ft DlDUt mm Grocery Line which will be sold Wholesale WEST-CENTRE STREET, GOLDSBORO, N, C. Mill ! Goods ! ! rtn BJR0 Id 250 Barrels of Flour direct from the Western Wheat Growing Section. 25 Barrels of Snuff (Gail & Ax and Lorillard'sV 25 Barrels of Molasses. 25 Cases Potash. 25 Cases Soda. 50 Boxes Tobacco. and Retail at very Low Prices. wswlnv
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 1, 1886, edition 1
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