Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / Nov. 11, 1886, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE GOLDSBORO MESSENGER. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11. 1886. .1 I Miscellaneous. ifflvnaCordimL CUR ES DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, WEAKNESS, CHILLS AND FEVERS, MALARIA, LIVER COMPLAINT, KIDNEY TROUBLES, NEURALGIA AND RHEUMATISM. is Invigorat- - TT eves NEW LIFE to th TT is i ins and Hehtful to take, Mdof great value ts a Medicine Tor weak and Ailing: Women and Chil dren. De- i rTTTYTTTTTTT Mi mm www Vrhole SYSTEM by Strengtheninf the Muscles, Ton. ing the NERVES and completelyDi M jesting the food. MWl CO N l A i n a no hurtful Minerals, is com posed of carefully .elected Vegeta ble Medicines, combined skill . fully, making a Safe and Pleasant Remedy. For Bale by 11 OrnzRlxt 1 Ororer. fOU not keep XH.IVi COKiH.tL, rcuj KIU. Will KUl, A Book. 'Volina. by 1 e a d i n g physicians, telling how to treat dis eases at HOME, mailed, together with a set of hand some cards by new Hcliotype process on receipt of 10 c. Slimil.l-the deaJer Deal it Si. Ol, uU full SIM PKKPAKtD OKLT T Volfna Drug and Chem BALTIJIOKE, BD., C ical Company, S. A- I ATTENTION! Hants and Farmers IN NEED OF SUPPLIES! 25,000 LB3 MEAT 250 BBLS-FLOUR' 300 K0LLS bagging- bundles Ties, boxes cheese. O CASES BItEAD 60 PREPARATION. CASES LYE AND POTASH. BARREL SUGAR. BARRELS MOLASSES. TOBACCO, SOAP, SNUFF, Etc., In Store and to Arrive this Week! (let Prices Before Buying Elsewhere! fCdtton sold on Commission. Good weights and highest prices guaranteed. M. L. LEE & CO. Goldsboro, N.C., Sept. 27. tf . NOTWITHSTANDING THAT THE DQgDAYS ARE UPON US, YOU CAN FIND AT FAMILY GROCERY! West Walnut St., Goldsboro, N. C, A Good Supply of Fine Groceries and Foreign Delicacies, Snuff, Tobacco, Ci gars, Tin, Wood and Willow Ware, &c, which he is offering at very Low Prices, lEOIER- CASH! tyDon't tail to call on him before pur chasing elsewhere. julyl-tf Mrs. E. W. MOORE, . (2d Door Opera House.) MILLINERY ! Shade Hats in Cantons, 20 cents. Black and Colored Straws, 25, 35 and 40 cents. Trimmed Hats, in every Style now worn, at similar low prices. I Ribloons, Flowers, Feathers, In Endless Variety. ! REAL OSTRICH PLUMES, 18 and 18 inches 65 to 75 cents, great bargains. Scrim and Madrass Curtaining at 30 cents. As Cheap as can be bought. j -PROMPT ATTENTION TO ORDERS.- Send for Samples and give me a call, i MRS. E. W. MOORE. Goldsboro, N. CIay 10. 1886-tf i ATTENTIOU! Strawberry Plants! Grape Vines ! Pear Trees ! Peach Trees !; CHOICE PLUMS ! ; I am prepared to supply and put out the best varieties of strawberry plants, grape vines, pear trees, peach trees, choice plua.9, etc. I guarantee them to live. I'artiesliaving grape vines to trim should do so now. Orders for trimming or plant ing receive prompt attention at reasona ble rates. J. N. WOOD) oct21-SV Goldsboro, K. 0. S7 PLASTER, CEMEIIT1 50 Barrela Fresh Rock Lime; I QQ Barrels Plastei L( Barrels Cement, , u" (Portland and Rosendale.) 2000 Pounda phwterlng Hair. B. M. PRIVETT & CO. JUST RECEIVED ! Large and Fall Stock oi Dry Goods, Notions, Boots, Shoes, &c. Just received at n EDGERTON.FINLAYSON & CO'S. Goldsboro, N. C, sep6-tf NIP AND TUCK. Old Nip and Tuck! What glorious luck kV; To have the chance of hearing! Come, one and all, Both great and small, Take heed, the time is nearing: Just show your pluck, And boldly" chuck Your money in your trousers; Then. straightway callr Get tickets, for4all To hear the famous rousers. The bills are struck, And thickly stuck On bulletin and picket; So pray forestall The crowded hall, And early buy a ticket. MAIDS Otf A LARK. ' Fan Ikly and I were just emancipated. It was owing to some little misdemeanor too trivial to be mentioned here. Miss Snip, the illustrious head and front of the pensioiinat des demoiselles, had politely given us leave of absence of an indefinite period, advising us to spend said ieriod in the country or the benefit of our health. Fan and I had precipi tately packed off to a beautiful little village far f jj-om the ears of our respective and re-sjxH-ted parents, and prepared to inflict a long visit uion the establishment of a certain bachelor uncle of mine, yclept Tom. Uncle Tom thought at first we were a couple of lunatics when we drove up to the door of his quiet residence, where he sat on the veranda with a frightfully handsome fellow beside him, both indulging in the luxury of two fragrant Havanas. We were tired and dusty, our faces needing washing most decidedly, and our hair was taking "views a3t" all over our faces. We stood at the gate, ordering the driver to take down the baggage, when I distinctly heard Uncle Tom, jumping up, exclaim: "Who in thunder can it be, Dick?" "Some of your wives or children, I should presume. I've always expected it; it doesn't astonish me at all. If the fatigue of their journey should bring on an illness, I shall be happy to offer my professional services." "Confound your joking, Dick! Don't you see there are two pail's of petticoats, and all the appurtenances thereto pertaining, coming right here upon us ; and I know no more who they are than if they rose out of Hades; and you won't say a word to help a poor rascal out of the scrape. The deuce, here they come !"' "There's a lunatic asylum ten miles from here, and the ladies' drapery is rather dis composed ; put this and that together, Tom, and" "And come to the conclusion," interrupted I, "that, although appearances may be against us, yet we are not two escaped Bed lamites; but only your most dutiful niece, Lottie Richardson, and her most dutiful friend, Fanny Ilsly; and we've come to make you a visit; and, to begin, Uncle Tom, how do you do? And who is this impudent jack anapes here laughing at me? And what have you got for supper? And how can you make T)ut to support life in such a little out-of-the-way den as this? And ain't you glad to see us? And don't you think I look better than Fan here if my bonnt is smashed in?" . My mouth was here, stopped by Uncle Tom's mustache as he attempted to kiss me, and then I had to make another speech in order to get him to kiss Fan, so that she wouldn't be quarreling with me as soon as we got upstairs. Uncle Tom, bachelor though be was, didn't seem to feel badly about it ;' and that grinning man, who still sat there stroking his whiskers, had the audacity to wish that a bevy of nieces would fall upon him from the skies, even if they came with smashed headgear and dirty faces. The impu dent wretch ! I cuffed his ears and told him that would answer hia turn ; but he tcok this as a signal for a general fight and chased me all over the house and yard until my hair all tumbled down over my shoulders and he finally kissed the back of my head, mistak ing it for my face. "What shall we wear?" said Fan, as soon as we got in our room and prepared to dress for tea. "Something killing, pray; for that Uncle Tom of yours is as handsome as Jupiter, and I'm forty thousand fathoms deep in love with him." "I always knew your time would come, Fan, when you mercilessly held me up to ridi cule Ixicause I held my music teacher's red hair in adoration, and could not sleep nights for thoughts of Jim Badgely's colored whis kers. The Malakoff has surrendered; Bala klava is won ; hurrah for the maid who has shown the white feather ! All hail to the con quering hero ! Three times three for Uncle Tom!" "If you've finished, please to designate the articles of wearing apparel with which I shall robe my unpretending self this momentous evening." "Beauty, when unadorned, is adorned the most, Fan." "Which means that I shall" "Wear a white something, Fan; but not too much; that rose muslin, for instance, with no neck or sleeves, and your hair per fectly plain." And you?" "Oh, it's no matter about me; I'm not in love. I'll go in the white wrapper." "The idea" "Silence, Fan; Uncle Tom won't care; and what lo I care for that other old bass wood slab?" "I'll wager this bracelet he'll break your heart in a week." "Done; and I'll wager that set of laces we're both dying for that he shall propose to me in a month." . On descending to the parlor we were intro duced to the gentleman we had been discuss ing, as Dr. Richard Webb, and I took the op portunity to whisper to Fan to know if she thought I was a foolish fly to lie caught by such a Webb as that? "We shall see what we shall see," quoth that infatuated damsel, glancing askance at Uncle Tom, but pretending to look at Dr. Webb, as ho fastened some crimson roses in my hair and in the girdle of my white wrapper. What a charming evening it was! How we lingered over the tea table an hour, the doc tor" and I quarreling amiably all the time to soe who should have the most of the cold tur key and jelly, and Uncfc Tom satirically beg ging me all the time not to be at all bashful andto have another biscuit. I had complied with his request so often that? I fully expected to need Dr. Webb's professional services be fore morning, and he offered them to me gratuitously. But, finally, human nature and its stomach could bear no more, and we ad journed to the parlor, where Fan and Uncle Tom went to singing sentimental duets in a manner perfectly alarming to mutual friends, and the doctor and I soon left them for the garden. Fan and I raised the most terrible excite ment in town for the next week. The church bell rang at midnight, and all the inhabitants of Pepperville congregated in the streets, minus nearly all of their usual habiliments ; peaceable and virtuous people found hens tied to their doorbells, making unearthly cack-lings- timid women saw ghosts, and the min ister 'lost the sermon he left quietly on his study table Saturday night. The cook vowed all her victuals were bewitched, for the pep per got into the pumpkin pies and the ginger into the soup. There was cold water placed in the vinegar cruets, and i there were apple dumplings made and stuffed with cotton. At the end of the week Fan and I proposed to have "a lark," and set ourselves quietly about our preparations. We had each of us a nice set of boys' clothes made aforetime for a masquerade; and one evening we sat in our room with these spread out before us. "My hair is so nice, Lot, I hate to have it shingled, and what do you suppose Mr. Tom WiAfig for Mr. Tom; I hate to lose my hair as bad as you do; but we can each wear a switch, and just think of the fun !" Only say fun to Fan and it was enough. She sat down and the scissors soon did, the work: Fan's hair was cropped close to her head. My own shared the same fate, and then we commenced the job of entering the horrid habiliments with which civilization in vests a masculine in this Nineteenth century. After some female imprecations (perfectly harmless, I assure you,) and many rounds of irrepressible laughter, we stood in panta loons, and liable to the sheriff. I fastened Fan's mustache on and tied on my own whiskers, and when thus arrayed would have defied our grandmothers (long since in Abra ham's bosom) to have known us. Uncle Tom was away and we stole out of the house unnoticed and along a few streets till we came to Dr. Webb's stable. Here we stole stealthily in, took down the harness, placed it upon a splendid black horse tha finest one anywhere in the country placed the horse be fore an elegant new carriage, selected a nice whjp and in five minutes were safely in the street with our prize. "Now speed away, my bonny boy," sang I as I touched the beautiful creature with the whip and we dashed off into the moonlight. We knew that the country was infested with horse thieves and that much alarm ex isted among the owners of nice animals, and our intention was to frighten the doctor, raise the neighborhood, have a good ride and bring the horse back while everybody was off hunting for it. So we drove rapidly on, en joying the splendid moonlight and the cool evening breezle, and almost forgetful of the scrape we were in, until Fan suddenly looked around and saw two men on horseback about a mile behind us. - We had been riding about an hour and had gone about eight or ten miles. "We're followed, Lot." "As I expected." "But you won't let them overtake us?" "No; and I did not mean they should get in sight of us, but we've driven too slowly. We'll turn on to this road and around home by Lima." "But, Lot, I've just been thinking what if they should catch us." "I've heard of their hanging horse thieves to the nearest tree without judge or jury." "You'll look well a hanging, Lot your legs are short; but, I vow! I should cut a ter rible figure, with my long limbs a dangling. So if you please, ma belle, touch up the blessed nag." "In case they should hang you, Fan, what word shall I send to your friends?" "Hang me! And how do you intend to es cape, pray?" "Turn state's evidence?" "Lot." "Well?" "Dr. Webb may have my hair to cover that small bald spot on the top of his head." "Hang it, Fan ! do you know that man is going to overtake us? Go 'long, Thunder bolt!" And Fan hit the fiery horse an unmerciful blow with the heavy whip. Thunderbolt did go along; Fan and I clapped our hands and hurrahed, cheering him on. I hadn't the slightest idea what we should do were we overtaken, ami Fan was so.reckless she didn't care; so we rode on, laughing and singing, while every moment our pursuers gained on us. "Hold on there, you infernal horse thieves!" shouted they, close upon us. "Softly, friends don't call hard names!" shouted back Fan, hitting Thunderbolt an other blow. He renewed his speed, and we heard fresh swearing behind us. At last the end came; the horsemen dashed in front of us and took hold of the horse's head, and de manded, authoritatively, who we were. I wouldn't speak; and Fan, whom nothing daunted, sang out in a high nasal tone: "Oh, don't you remeniler sweet Alice, Ben Bolt?" It was so ludicrous that I should have laughed had I been dying, and this infuriated our captors. "Give an account of yourselves, villains. How did you come by that horse?" "We met, 'twas in a crowd, and I thought he would shun me, but he didn't," drawled out Fan. "Where were you going with this horse which you have stolen from Dr. Webb, of Pepperville, sir?" "To Dixie's land I'se bound to travel." "You'll travel to the county jail, sir, in a hurry. Mr. Smith, out with your papers." "This world is all a fleeting show," said Fan, loftily. And the man proceeded to read his warrant. "You surrender yourselves prisoners, do you?" said the sheriff. "The old guard dies, it never surrenders," answered the unsubdued prisoner, chucking me under the ribs. One of the men jumped into the carriage and attempted to seat himself between us on the seat. We changed the position of our limbs a little and he sat down on the bottom of the carriage with a crash. "Hark from the tombs a doleful sound," screamed his poetical prisoner. "Give me the reins, sir," said the man, jumping on the seat and taking them from me. "What a curious thing it is to suffer and be strong," quoth the mustached Miss Ilsty. "A diet of bread and water will soon bring you to terms," said the sheriff, savagely. Man wanU but litfle here below. Nor wants that little long, meekly replied his prisoner. "Are you crazy, or J are you a fool?" he thundered. "If I am mad, there's method in my mad ness." "Is your accomplice here deaf and dumb?" "Poor moonstruck lad!" "Where do you expect all your misde meanors will land you, ;you villainous fool?" "Land me on the other side of Jordan." The man gave it up now, and kept silent till we reached the jail, where we were soon safely deposited. Neither of us would deign to make any explanation of our conduct or appearance, and coatented ourselves by ask ing to see Dr. Webb the moment he arrived. W e marched off to the cell appropriated to us and sat down, looked at our quarter and at each other's elongated visages, and then gave the old walls the benefit of an uproarious peal of laughter. Dr. Webb and Uncle Tom did not arrive till morning; and when they did, walked into the cell with stern and sullen faces,expecting to find two hardened wretches, as they had been represented to them. They looked at us a moment; Fan rose and de murely folded her arms, and I executed a pirouette around the cell Blank amazement covered their visages at first ; but as they be came fully convinced of our identity, and the whole farce of the adventure broke over them, they relieved themselves by such a loud and long-continued roar of laughter as the walls of that old jail seldom heard. In a few min utes we were on our rciad home, Fan and I having promised it should be the last scrape we would ever get into. But before six months we both of us got into a worse scrape than ever before; that is, we embarked in matrimony. Fan is my aunt now, and the doctor is my "Stop, Dick! You shan't kiss me but once a day, sir." New York Sunday Mercury. Shy and Sensitive Bruin. The bear of the Adirondacks is a shy, timid, sensitive brute. He prowls around in the raspberry and blackberry bushes, chewing berries with a pair of jaws that could chew up the leg of a strong man. Should the bear see you gathering berries in the same patch before you see him he will run run like a Turk. It is of no use for you to run af ' er him ; you can't catch him. But if you see the bear first and do the running yourself he will keep on eating berries. Brooklyn Eagle. Ely's Cream Balm has cempletely cured me of a long standing case of catarrh. I have never yet seen its equal as a cure for colds in the head and headache resulting from such colds. It is a remedy of sterling merit Ed. L. Crosly, Nashville, Tenn. I find Ely's Cream Balm good fcr ca tarrh of long standing. M. F. Lasley, 1934 West Chestnut St., Louisville, Ky. The Autograph Collector. The autograph bore, is a prominent person at large meetings and conventions. Usually the collector is a woman of most sociable dis position, whoee designs would not be suspect ed from her innocent manner, but after a lively and agreeable conversation she surprises her victim by the demand for an autograph and will not be refused. A prominent clergy man of this city was recently conversing with a young woman of apparent culture and re finement, when suddenly she pulled from her pocket a small book and asked if "he would oblige her with six autographs! It appeared that she had undertaken the duty of collect ing for her five dearest friends. Boston Jour nal. v The Very Bet Oranges. The very sweetest and richest oranges are the black or rusty-coated fruit. Pick out the dingiest oranges in the box, and you will get the best. Another way to choose oranges is by weight. The heaviest are the best, because they have the thinnest skin and more weight of juice. Thick skinned oranges are apt to be dry; they either weigh less because of having so much skin, or because of the poverty of the juice in these particular specimens. A slight freezing of the tree causes this condition3 in otherwise fine fruit. Newman (Ills.) Inde pendent. A Picture's Big Profits. "There may be some profitable panoramas in Chicago," said a young man who occupied a berth on a Minneapolis sleeper, "but let me tell you of a panorama property that I know of. It is a "buckeye" copy of the Gettysburg picture, and cost, with its tent and para phernalia, about $5,000. A friend of mine had it at the state fair at Minneapolis last week and cleared $8,000 above expenses in six days. He has made $18,000 this summer. How is that for panorama? Chicago Herald. Offended at LaUouchere. C. B. Harness, the English crank who in vented the ammoniaphone, which he claims is bottled Italian air and can make a high tenor out of a basso profundo, has sued La bouchere, of Truth, for libel because he made fun of him. Boston Transcript. John Tyler Cooper. Mr. John Tyler Cooper, the anti-Prohibitionist candidate for mayor, of Atlanta, Ga., is a grandson of President Tyler and also of James Fennimore Cooper. Quails Damaging Grapes. Quails are so plentiful in the vicinity of Petaluma, Cal., that the grape growers are offering a bounty for their heads the little fellows causing much damage to the grapes. Women Journalists. Julia W ard Howe says that while some of the best work of the press is done by women, so also is some of the meanest, but she care fully refrains from mentioning names. The Latest "Fad." The latest "fad" among fashionable ladies in New York city is to go coaching with then gentlemen friends on the new Fifth avenue stages in the dusk of early evening. The Wife of the Claimant. The wife of the Tichborne claimant is sing ing in a concert hall in New York, while her husband, whose lecture in this country ended so disastrously, is on his back, ill. ine Pope's Gift. t His holiness Leo XIII has given 10,000 francs to the sufferers by the Grecian earth quakes, and an equal sum for the relief of the victims of the Tonquin massacre. New York World. Bitter Bread. Complaint is frequently made by those who use bakirig powders that they leave in bread, biscuit, or cake raised by them a disagreeable, bitter taste. This taste fol lows the use of all impure baking powders, and is caused either by their containing alum (introduced to make a cheap article) by the impure and adulterated character of other ingredients used, or trom the ig rorance ot their manufacturers of the proper methods of combining them. These baking powders leave in the bread a residuum formed of lime, earth, alum, or other deleterious matters, not always, lhough frequently, tastable in the .food, and by all physicians classed as injurious to health. The Royal Baking Powder is free from this serious defect. In its use no residuum is left, and the loaf raised by it is always sweet, light, and wholespme, and noticeably free f rom the peculiar taste complained of The reason of this is be cause it is composed of nothing but abso lutely pure materials, scientifically com bined in exactly the proper proportions of acid and alkali to act upon and destroy each, other, while producing the largest amount of rising power. We are justified in this assertion from the unqualified statements made by the Government chemists, who after thorough and exhaus tive tests recommended the "Royal" for Governmental use because of its superiority over all others in purity, strength, and wholesomeness. There is no danger of bitter bread or biscuit where it alone is used. A baby carriage costing $375 is be ing described in the papers. This is enough to make anv editor shiver at the thought of his ife indulging in twins. Fall River Advance. If You Wish a Good Article Of Plug Tobacco, Ask Your Dealer For sepl6- "OLD KIP." wsw6m Miscellaneous. :;i:RlillL BOOKS! Bills for ttt liraiei Stlil 1 Boob for Everybody. You will do well to consult before yon make any purchase. MEHJ9 Patent Medicines . Toilet Articles. Prescriptions Carefully Compounded. MANUFACTUREBS OF for disguising Quinine and other nauseous medicines. KIEBY & EOBINSON, Messenger Building Goldsboro, N. C, Sept 23 tf II! MMM ! Op n of a Mammotli toeik OF Ml 1 lu Uiiter Goods ! ! WEIL, BRO 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 any one m Quality and Price. lAp" 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 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 miTs si'ssr stock of :"0SIKRY' dLOVE8- 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 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 lOO 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 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 mad up with the greatest of care and skill, at very reasonable prices, and we guarantee satisfaction in every case. La uiid riod 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 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. 1 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 sufficient 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, ifcL WKEL- & Is replete with a Large Stock and Varied Assortment of Desirab'e 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). ISO Pieces Dress Goods. GO Bales of Unbleached Domestic. IS 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. t3T Be Sure and Examine Our Stock Before Ordering. We will make it Interesting for you. WEIL & liiwj 2500O 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. ml D 250 Barrels of Flour direct from the Western Wheat Growing Section. 25 Barrels of Snuff (Gail & Ax and Lorillard's). 25 Barrels of Molasses. 25. Cases Potash. 25 Cases Soda. 50 Boxes Tobacco. As well as other Goods in the Grocery Line which will be sold Wholesale and Retail at very Low Prices. IRT WEILi septI3 WEST-CENTRE STREET, GOLDSBORO, N. C. wswlm
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 11, 1886, edition 1
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