: ; t i - I I ; 1 . I : w . 1 , . ii l i n i i . -ii n i i ..... . -. i !tBE News and Observer T "T" , The News and Obsert Mini QiTinra oo. PiwMtnrron. tWtkti Dti)f 'exeei Monday and Weekly. riAfrsc ttr. ajva Uy, on ytif - . v -7 0 sixi.-.t . ............. 8 0 " thr ' J ?5 Liy, out yLf, k' " J CO " six month, " i , 100 No name entered without payment, mad mo tper tent after -expiration of time paid for. . tUing for any ipse me office of Tub New. OusaavEA. tst ude Kajsttevillf Street ! OTjWS AINU ViobJhLK V JgJK. J . - ? : u w . " V -ii. . -T! , ' . i ' ' - ' - ' 61 " ..... Q VOL XVtt- RALEIGH. N. C. SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 11: 1881. NO. 228 I JTSfini i . : .- ; ! ;i4uiANK0US. pi u , Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, 'I Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swellings and Sprains Burns andScafds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear mtid Headache, Frosted -Feet and tars, and all other Pains . and Aches. i No Preparation On earth equals St. Jacobs On. at a afe,urr, timplr and cheap External Remedy. A. trial entails bnt the comparatively trifling outlay of Ccnta, and every one suffering with paia can have cheap and positive proof of ita claim. Direction in Eleven "nguagea. BOLD BT AU yfQI8T8 UP DE1EEB8 H A,Y QELEK. As CO., - 3 JWwor. JTA V. BJJL, GREAT GERM DESTROYER! i . ' ; PROPHYLACTIC FLUID! Pitting of Small Pox prevented. I moors purified and healed. Gangrene prevented and eared. Wounds healed rap idly. r . Tetter dried op. - It Is perfect y harm le.se For Sore Throat it is a rare euro. SHALL PCS; EEADlCATi, Oontaion dotroed Sick Boom purified and made pleat-ant. Fevered and Blck Person relieved , and refreshed by bathing with Pro - ptaylacUc Fluid ad ded to the water. Soft White Con pl'xirnj secured by ita nee ia bath iiK. v . Impure Air made harmless and puri fied by sprinkling Darbt's ; Ftuiu aboaU To purify the Breath. Clean tha Teeth, it can't be rarpaMod. C ' ajrrU rl iered and cored. XrysipelM eared. Burns relieved in staatly. 8ca s prrrented. - .' - :t DIPHTHERIA PEEVENTED. Choler diaaipated. Ship Fever prevented by ita tue. Removes all unplea sant odors. In cases of death in the home, it should always be used kbont the corpse it will prevent any unplea sant smell. An Antidote for Ani mal, or Vegetable Poisons, Stings, Ac Dangerous effluvia of nek rooms and hos pitals removed by itaue. Yellow Fever i Eradicate 1. FETES CUBED. 1 .! In net, it is the tree' Disinfectant and Purifier 1 FKKPXKXD BT J. 2. ZSXLZH & 00., ; ICaaoiaetariag Chemists, Sole Proprietors. 30 DAYS TRIAL AXLOWED. i U, ISM WE WILL SEND, ON 30 DAYS' TRIAL, Electro -Voltaic Appliances snflertnc from Xervesis Weaka ese sa, O rad sstlity, loss of nerve force or vigor, or any diaeaae resulting from Altera and Othxb C'At'ua. or to aair aMe aBlicted with Klteumay tUm, Neuralsia raraWxis, Bpinal DUBcultlea, Kidney or Uver Troubles, taoie Back, Sop tures, and other Diseases of the Vital Oraanai Also wobbi troubled with dlaesafe peculiar to their sex. Speedy relief; snd complete restoration' to health uaranteed. Throe are the mly Eleetrle Appllanem that stave ever seesMntlrueled ! eiealiB BrUt- ripiem. Their thorousn emcary na been prao- tically pioven With the wosxterfsil aieeess, mtut inry naive s ' ealarmsf(t from medteal and aelets-' ttfle men, and from hdrt whs have aeen Mlekly and radically cared ay their aae. Svnd at once for Illustrated Pamphlet, flving 11 Information :free. address, ; VOLTAIC BUT 00 KarahalL TU $ AYera, Parker & NorriSj , TCE0L33ALS 0500ESS i AMD mm MM, rocerles by the package to the trade at ljw Also BAGCJIXG ANf TIES Onr motto To Sell. Merchant will iave monejr by callin arid exaona Si; prices. oice. . NOTICE is hereby ;iven thst the partner ship Ix-tween K B Barbee, G D Kn-ja0i Claude B Barbes was dissolved ou the 'irith esv of November 188'. o Jar at relate to t,hi . ,iiiilllii,allfc-iiy tmm mid Clauds a u rbee, e naviax sold bu ia. terest in the saws to K B Barbee and U li Band. All debts due to the aaid partuertliip snd those due by th-m will be aettled wxh'and by the remaining; partner, who will eonliua the business under the firm of lUnd k Barbee. j EliRARIIKK, . ! G D RA l. , ? CLAl'DK B BARMfp ; Penori indebted to the firm .tj .'.aoA ttsrw bee Bros wiil please call sn ' settle tneir ia dsbtednessatonce. JiAND A BAEBEK. decMn ' 1 v i . i I, ' ? jOalteasi's TrtaO -aTrlJwy'a fta adln;. j George W. Phmuner, a yoong Chicago lawyer, was called. 'I owe Plnmmer $20," said the pris oafr. MIt will cost the government $100 to jprove thai. fact." The prisoner went ong in the midst of confusion, with a harangue addrasaed loMr. Corkhill, wind ing up with (he statement : "You will make this trial cost $200,000 or $300,000, the way you are doing it." ; The witness said he met the prisoner in Chicago in 1874: he came from New York and rented deskroom with the witness : they became quite intimate; the prisoner seemed to be doing a collection business ; hev had some cards printed "Uharles J. Oniteau," New York, and aaid bis clients era high-toned people. "That tme, iBtarnrpted the prisoner. !?He aaid. also,'' the witness continued, that he was 'high-toned, too, and he wanted hia cards to be in harmony with both his clients and himself. Mr. Corkhill asked the witness if he had had any financial transactions with the prisoner. "I owe him $20," reiterated the pris oner. "Fhiinmer is a very good fellow." ?!The "witness described at some length the prisoner's Inter-Ocean scheme, and was frequently interrupted by the prisoner, wo once said: "I had the brains, but not the money, ilf I .had had less brains and more money I would have gotten along better." ;After the witness had been interrupted several times, he turned to the prisoner and said : "It seems that your close rela tion with inspiration and the Deity has corrupted your manners." This raised a laugh, in which the prisoner joined. i "That isn't very bad, though, for a west ern pun," said the prisoner ; "that's pretty good." I The witness said he never saw anything about (iuiteau that led him to believe he (the prisoner) . was insane. "I think," said the witness, "he was a man of consid erable ability, but somewhat conceited and vain, but, being late from New York, we expected that." He said the prisoner was better mannered then than now, and did not interrupt. "I did not have you on the stand," said the prisoner. "I have talked on thb case more than I ever did in my life before, be cause I am after absolute truth. If a man comes on this stand and talks a lot about me that ain't true, I am going to correct him." j B. McLean Shaw, a New York lawyer, the next witness, testified that in 1873 the prisoner rented office room from him ill New York; one time Guiteau had an oroide watch, and said he was going to "stick" somebody with it; Ouiteau went our, and returning in great glee said he had "stuck, a Jew for $25 on that waUh." To a question the witness answered-: "Guiteau said he intended to become noto rious." , . K "That's false," shouted the prisoner. "That," continued the witness, "if he couldn't become notorious for good, he would for evil. I asked' him how he ui tended to get it, and he said he would snoot soma of our great men." " I "I say-you are a liar," roared the pris oner. MYou are a low, dirty liar, a sneak ing liar. I'll publish him all over the world if he comes here to this trial to traduce me in this way." The court tried to silence the prisoner, rho continued to interrupt the witness with abuse, but did not suoceed. "That's fie 'most brazen-faced lie I ever heard," howled Guiteau. I "That's , false," roared the prisoner, that he would imitate Wilkes Booth. I said he would get hung;, and he said that Iras an after consideration.'' ' Frank: Bartlett, of Chicago, was put on the stand and asked the question : ; "Did you see anything in Guiteau'a eon duct that would indicate that he was of fcnsound mind ?" A. "Nothing whatever." I The Prisoner "What has that to do with the condition of my mind ? From Che middle of May till the 1st day of July I had a chance to go crazy a hundred limes. Laughter. That shows the very stupid work on the part of the prose cution. If you had to pay so much money, TJorkhill, you wouldn t do this, but the tax payers have got to pay it." " The District Attorney The defense has endeavored to show by sporadic acts tbat this man was insane ; we are showing his conduct to rebut it. j "I have been strictly virtuous for six or seven ears," interrupted the prisoner; "mark that down. You are picking up my whole record from infancy, and I say it is an outrage on decency." I The District Attorney We present this testimony- because we want to show that what the defense calls insanity is nothing more than devilish depravity. It was with some difficulty that the ap plause which greeted this remark could be quelled.' The witness remained on the stand until adjournment, and was pestered all the time by the prisoner. Court adjourned till Monday. Upon being asked as to the truth of the report that he had approved the findings of the court-martial in the Whit alter use, Qen. Swaiin, judge-advocate general of the army, replied that Mich statement was en tirely unauthorized by bim. He declined to say what his decision would be, butbaid that it was now nearly completed, and would be hubmiued to the Secretary of War in a few days. Second Artistnt Postmaster-General Elmer says that not a single complaint has yet been made by Western or Southern Congressmen about the cutting down of star routes; that not a single protest has been made in any of the eases where star routes were cut down, although it was predicW by the alleged star route ring that Cobi:rcnsmen would make a perfect onslaught upon the department because of iu action in cutting down -and reducing star routes. By Tejegraph. MTRDER AT SHELBY. A Merro Man Beats His Sou to Death. Speciil to The Nkws akd Observer. Shelby, N. C.,- December 10. Amoii Horn, a negro, aged forty years, was jail id to-day for a horrible crime, per petratec upon his own son, Burt. Horn, a lad of 6. He inflicted upon the boy blows with a whip and a stick, and also kicked him in the most cruel manner, the injuries being bo terrible that the boy died. The fac s in the case were ascertained by a coroner's jury. The remains had been buried, put suspicion was excited. The remains were disinterred and an examina- lion made, which showed the horrid wounds J and made plain the guilt of the unnatural father. It was found that the Btomachl spleen and left side of the liver Were swollen and bruised. The negroes of the vicinity are greatly excited and swear vengeance upon the murderer. W. H. M. The Cotton Crop. Mobile, December 9. The following is the botton exchange report for the month of November : 56 letters have been received from 39 counties in this State. The' weather during November was favor able for 'gathering the crop in 30 counties and unfavorable in 9 ; but it wis generally more faiorable than during the Bame pe riod lasd year in all of the counties. In 11 counties a small top-crop has been made ; all the other oouaties report none. .ricking has been finished in 28 counties, and will be completed in the remaining 11 about tie middle of December. The total yield, ail compared with last year, is re ported i is the same in 3, and as 25 per cent, lets in 16 of the more productive counties and in the 20 less productive counties as 27 per cent. less. Little or no damage was' done by frost. In 119 of the more productive counties 67 per cent, of the rrop is reported as having been marketel, and in the 20 less productive counties 67 per cent. Mississippi The weather has been gen erally favorable for gathering the crop, more so jthan last year. A small top crop is reportjed in Wayne county; none in the others. Picking is about finished in alL The total yield, as compared with hut year, is estimated at 22 per cent less. Little Or no damage has been done by frost. About 7J0 per cent, of the crop is reported as having been marketed. New Orleans, December 9. Ths following is the cotton exchange report for November: Louis ana The weather dnrinc the month has been very favorable, compared with last year decidedly more favorable. There is no top crop. Picking is gener ally finished. The yield is 11 per eent. less tha i last year. There has been no damage ; Vom frost. Seventy-five per eent. bf the ciop has been marketed. I Arkansas The weather during the month has been generally favorable; com pared wi th last year more favorable. Some counties report a small top crop, but it has been destroyed by frost and worms. Pick ing is finished; the yield is 40 per cent less than lasi year; 65 per cent, of the crop has been marketed. f Memphis, December 9. The regular monthly cotton report of the Memphu cotton exchange for the month of Novem ber, incl iding the districts of north Mis sissippi, north Arkansas and west Tennes see, embraces 76 replies. Fifty -eight re tort the weather for the month favorable lor picking, and eighteen unfavorable; compare! with 1880 , 68 report it more favorable and 8 about the same; 62 report no top crop; 14 report a top crop but .it did not mature; 58 report that picking is completed, and 18 report it will be finished Srom December 5th to December 15th. ?he estimated yield compared, with that of last j ear is 49 per cent. less. All re port frost, but no damage has been done, llesponsis indicate tbat 70 per cent, of the crop has been marketed. Charleston, 8. C, December 10. The report of the Charleston cotton ex change Tor November is based upon 54 replies received from 27 counties, of an average late of November 30. All except II report the weather during November as'favon.ble, and in comparison with last year more favorable for gathering the crop. I'orty-three state that a top crop has been made, but some of them say that it matured only partially. Picking is ex pected t be finished on December 15th bj 14, ' hile 29 report picking as nearly finished, and 11 as entirely completed. The totil yield, as compared with last year, is estima ted as the same by 2, as j by 3, J by 14 i by 28 and i by 10. The frost came too late to do any damage, except to kill som ; of the immatured top crop. Tha proporti n of the crop marketed is reported by 2 to be i, by 6 1, by 7 i, by 21 f, by 18 i, Bh owing that an average of about i of the y teld has been marketed. Galveston, December 10. The cot ton exc sanste report is as follows : One hundred and, four replies have been received from seventy-seven counties. Average date, November 30, forty-four counties report the weather during No vember is favorable, and thirty-three as wet anc. unfavorable. The weather has been nore favorable for gathering the crppthsn at the same time last year in fijiy-twol counties, and less favorable .in twenty-fve. Fourteen counties report top crop!; twenty-one some and forty-two none. Picking is over in fifty-four coun ties, and will be finished in twenty-three by the 5th of Decemb. r. The' total yield, as compared with last year, it is estimated, will average forty per cent less. Thirty four counties report damage by frost, aad lorty-three report no damage. (Seventy six per cent, or the crop has been mar keted. Vaw-tlcalare of tha Bnralaar of tha Vienna Opera House: j ViENNAj December 10. The evening researches show that the npper gallery must have fallen into the pit, where tte only remains found are small fragments of bone. Beyond doubt 900 gallery tickets had been issued. One hundred holders of these are known to have jumped from the windows. Competent judges fear that the lo4 of life will be found to be fully seven hundred. Nothing has been beard of the members of the orchestra. The subscription raised I on toe Dourse now amounts to Xi,uuv. All the newspapers have subscription lists. The Emperor has given a large sum. An official of the theatre states that; it was absolutely impossible to lower the iron cur tain, owing to the frightful rapidity with which the flames spread. j The audience at the theatre last night was larger than usual, owing to the fact tbat the day was a holiday. The cast con sisted of actors Ferrency, Lurdor, Wilke, Rudolph and Leindon, and aetre-ses Stahl, Fischer and lona. There: were about 200 persons on the stage and! in the adjoining dressing-room at the time: of the outbreak of the fire. The ballet! corps were mostly only half dressed. On the extinction of the lights all rushed for the stage door, and many were knocked down and trampled upon, but most of them reached the street without serious injury. The galleries were crowded and the pit was fairly filled, but owing to the earlioess of the hour there were only a few persons in the stalls and boxes. In the i panic the persons responsible for the safety )of the theatre neglected to use the means for telegraphing to the fire engine stations,1 whieh they had at their disposal j The audience were consequently left for ten minutes straggling wildly in the darkness for means of exit ) The life aaving brigade arrived with ladders, torches and jumping sheets; Per sons saved with the aid of these sheets jnmped from the windows by dozens at a time. In an hour and a half the whole building was a roaring furnace. The per sons whose bodies were first recovered seem to have died mostly from suffocation, but the other bodies present a shaking spectacle. Many have their feet burnt off. At this hour, 9 a. m., the fire is still burn ing, and it is not expected that i'- will be extinguished for some time. Up to 2 o'clock this morning 150 charred corpses had been conveyed to the hospital.! The loss of life is now estimated at from 200 to 300. I Later, iThe building is still ?n fire to-night The funeral of the victims ia fixed for Sunday. The imperial family have contributed largely to the relief fund. The managers of all the theatres here an nounce special performances for th ben efit of the sufferers. The number of per sons actually reported to be missing is 609. In regard to the origin of the fire, the superintendent of machinery -states that the scenery beeame ignited is the lamps were lit by the electric current!. London, December 10. The Stand ard Vienna dispatch says all th? per formers except three of the chorus were saved. Barron Rotohschild has subscribed 10,000 florins to the relief fund. Among the missing are three professors and a member.of Parliament. A Tarribta Holocaust Six en Ilea to Death aad asaajr Injured. Burned Pittsbcro, Pa., December 10. News is received ot a terribly shocking holocaust, which occurred at Rock Cut, seven miles from this city, this morning about 3 o'clock, by which sixteen men were burned to death and a large number fatally in jured. Later horrors in Pittsburg follow, close upon the heels of each other, j Last evening a terrible explosion ocenrred at the Keystone Roiling Mills, 14th ward, but this morning somes another which ex ceeds in borror anything whieh his oc curred in this vicinity sinee the terrible destruction of iife caused - by the collision at 28th street Between 2 aad 3 o'clock this morning a frame boarding house, lo cated on the . line of the Pittsburg end Lake Erie Railroad, some seven, miles be low this city, was set on -fire by the fxplo- sion of a lamp, and of ;fifty persona known ; to . be j sleeping, . only twenty-four escaped aJfve. .All were more or less burned So rapid was the-progress of the flames Jsome were literally, voasted to death without the possibility of an effort being made to! res cue them. A Ton i UMltr Shot. NASHvrLXie, Tenn., December 10. John J. Vertrees shot Senator Smith, of Fentress county, in the left shoukhfr in the rotunda of the Maxwell House Tester day afttrnooo. The wound will not rove fatal. Vertrees had charged Senator Smith with bribery and corruption in voting for the State debt bill during the last regular session of the Legislature. In the Senate yesterday, Senator Smith denounced Vertrees as a liar, and upon ad journment of the Senate Vertrees sought him at? the Maxwell House and shot ibim. Senator Smith claims that he was taken unawares. He states that he was seated reading a newspaper when Vertrees! ap proached and fired at him without giving him any warning. Vertrees' friends assert" that Senator 8mithwaain the act of rising and drawing a pistol when Vertrees shot him. Great frauds Olaoovorod. Topeka, Kansa8, December Great frauds on the Atchison, Topeka; and n- vi;t 1 I j? ! i ranta re nauroaa nave oeeu uiscoverea. They consist of a combination' among Iboes section men boarding house keepers land others along the entire road, by which fictitious names were carried on 1 the j pay roll. It is 'supposed two hundred men have been engaged in the seandaljand from one to two hundred 'thousand dollars stolen. Eighteen men have been arrested and placed in -jail The list included 4lfy prominent nd rieh men. Attachments to the amount of $80,900 have-been issued and a -large -amount of property levied Bf Iseellaaoooa. Washington, December, 10. The Secretary of State, with the approval of the President, will very soon make public all instructions sent by the department to Ministers Hurlburt and Kil pat rick, in re gard to the difficulties between Chili, Peru and Bolivia. Austin, Texas, December 10. The an nouncement is received of the death of Hon. Rudolph O Doom, of Jasper county, on the 5th inst. He was formerly a Republican member of Congress from this State. Nashville, December 10. A special to the American from Lebanon iuys: At 10:30 p. m., a fire broke out in Murphy & Wilson's livery stables, wbioh were de stroyed, also Hogers foundry company's establishment The court house is now on fire. If it catches Dryfor's grocery the whole square is gone. The court house cannot be saved. The Wilson county Neict office is burned. Absolutely Pure. Made from Grape Cream Tartar, No other preparation makes aoch light, flaky hot breads, or luxurious pastry. Can be eaten by dyspeptics without fear of the Ills resulting from heavy Indigestible food. Sold only in cans, by all Oro era. Rotal Baking Powder Co., New York. GOOD COFFEE. Everybody wants It but very few get tt, because most people do not know hoar to elect coffee, or it la spoiled in the roasting or making. To obviate these difficulties has been our study. Thurbers package Coffees are selected by an expert who un derstands the art of blending various fla vors. They are roasted in the moat perfect manner (it is impossible to roast well In small qu&ntltlee), then put in pound pack ages (ia the bean, not around,) bearing', our signature as a guarantee of genuineness, and each package contains the Thurber recipe for making good Coffee. We pack two kinds, Thurber's " No. Si," strong' and pungent Thurber'a "No. 41 mild and rich. One or the other will suit every taste. They have the three great points, good quality, honest otksh ttfy, reasonable price, Atk your Oroeer for Thurber'a roaMed Coffee in pound pack ages, "No. S4" or "No. 41." Do not be put off with any other kind your own palate will tell you what is best ( Where persons desire It we also, furnish the "Ideal' Coffee-pot, the simplest, best and cheapest coffee-pot in existence. Grocers who sell our- Coffee keep them. Ask for descriptive circular. Bespectfully, Ac., EL4F.B. THURBEB A OCL, Importers, Wholesale Grocers and Coffee Boasters, New York. P. 8 As the largest dealers in food pro . ducts in the world, we oonalder tt our In terest to manufacture only pureand whole some goods and pack them in a Udy.and satisfactory manner. All goods bearing our name are guaranteed to be of superior quality, pare and wAofesome,lnd dealers are authorized to refund the .purchase price in any case where customers have cause lor dissatisfaction. It is therefore to the interest of both .dealers andeoo etunersto use Tasroer'a brands. FOR CHRISTMAS We have made and are still making due preparation for the fes'-ive Christmas season, now close at hand. MEATS Hams Strips. Sides (new c: op), Dri-d Beef all kinds of Pott-d Metta, Ac CANNED UOODS All varieties of Froito and Vcfretables. Pie Fmit8, Preserved Fruits of all kinds, Fruit Jellies, Finit Ratters, C nned Milk, Okra and Tomatoes and Succo tash tor soups, etc. COFFEES Raw coffees of hslf a desea different kind, from cheapest to be t; ro-st coffees, pare and of best brands. BAKING POWDERS Five or six kinds of the most poiiul r manuf e urer FLOUR The Grevn Springs, we assert. no hesit tin(l, the best flour ever offered in Ra leigh, and otbr r grades of flour. Cake and Crackers in great variety. Candies, Nats, Raisins and a great variety o? other confectioned s. Tea of "heathen Ch-inee' nanus ot euphor -ioas s and and fine flavor. Soaps for washing and the toilet, abstersive, -erasive and perfnmative, round, square and oval, white, red, brown, green and hriedled. , A great variety of novelties in the fisney grocery lint, including all the delicate, a west, our. nannrrt and appet zing fl tvor of sauces, eatsaps, extracts, essences and osndmenta of all descriptions H e expects large lot of rHAT TURKBYd in 41 r e for ChrUUusa, aad will i ry to keep ia aapply ef eggs and other . f rnit and souatry vegetables common to the season. Give c a call when you go to lay in your Christmas supplies. MOORE &PEGRAM, Corner HilUbors and Salisbury streets. ' PaseamWr 10, lsl. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. HffQfl(LBi? gpjafjj asata aHSjavaafaeajasja For the Cure of Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Bronchitis, Croup jenza, AsthmaVhooping Cough, IdJ Jcjpient Consumption and forth re-J bief of -'onsumDtive persons in ad van J feed i ges of the Disease. Fox Sale - i hi Jruggists.-.Price, sk Cents, MW TYPHI 1 11 LI If 1 11 U i We have lost adled to oar already COM PLETE OFFICE a good many new faces jut type, and are better prepared than ever to do all kinds of PiiffliFMCYTBINilG SUCH AS Letter and Note Beads, iBlll Lends, Statements, Account Sales, Letter carealars. Note circulars. Band Bills, Posters, Ae. A NICE LINE OF Wdiiig tsi Iiriltlklfey. BEAUTIFUL DESIGNS IN HEIf Y EAR C AflD S. .Orders for New Year Cards may be left at Alfred Williams A Co.'a. DZZELL -A WILEY. -HALEIOII. M. C. 1 YEARGAH.PETTY&CO. i Are Daily Receiving Ex tra siss Crochet Qui ts; 10-4, .1-4 Bed Blanket '; - White and Bed. Twilled and Plain Flannels; alxtra heavy, bleached, crown and fancy col ored Caeton Flannels; Bilk Warp Fiann-U; Embroidered Flannels; 60-inch Bed Ticking will hold fe then. Every variety of shades and price in Silk Handkerchiefs J CHILDBKN'3 FANCY HOSIERY, Including -lull regular French made and .shaped d:nble kneel Hose for Boys. Ladies' extra and over sizes and lengths; Ladies' Fleeced Hose; Ladies' Solid Black; Ladies' and Misses' Black and White,Hose; Cashmere Hose,. GENTS' AND .LADIES' MERINO HoSE--We sail a large tcade in Paasy aad Fiae Hosiery, and keep the stock up all the year round. Heavy Wool n and Air Wool O A. IMERE For Men's and-Boys1 wear. C -A. ORZF 0? S Body Bra .els, Tapestry Bru&ssls, Three Ply, Imperial Three Ply, Supers, . Estra'Swpers, Fiaes. C A R PE TOOK f E R I W- . PERSIAN DAMASK, i, , 4 4 to match, suitable for Hallways, Dining Rotm , Venetian Stairways and Trackings. AUo.en all grades, C C Cs. YEAROAN, PETTY & CO. For Sale. A .PAIR OF BLACK MARES, 4 years old, 16 hands nigh, good roadeiera, soand, gentle and a dead mateh in. oolor, speed and size. Can.be bought fpr 3QQ, Present owner baa no use for a pair of Lorses. Address or call to see W C GORHAM, nov29 dlOt Wyaon, N. C. ill 3 O tt e as -a sj t O CO O CD as Ul ft oe k .... 4S St its ' t t NEW ADVERTISEMENTS, P0RTH AROMS A STATE LIFE tSsSUI-TClS COMPANY. iojaHATio ia 1872,) RJ.LETOH, N, a aeo,Te t erplaa to PeUey Hekler. F. U. Omneron, W. K. AndmQ , Theo. H. Hill, th, JR. Burkt lt "od. 1784 99 ' President Vice-President. See'y and TVeaa. Med. JXree'er. W. W. I RaynUr, Piof. X P. dtnith, Amid Med. Director. Advisory Actuary The on iv HOME Life Insurance Com pany In North Carolina. One of the moat sucqossful Companies of ita age In the Dulled States. Has already issued be tween two and three thousand policies. All of. ita lund.i In vested at bona among our uwd people All loseea paid promptly aad in cash. Rates as low -as those of any axafc-oiasa Company. Has THREE dollars of as.au for overy Douo.aof Uablllttaa, Agents wanted in every- county In. the -State to work for this meat excellent and firmly astabliabed home Institution. For I a formation address N. C. STATE LIFE INSURANCE CO. febl4-tf Raleigh, N. C. EW YEAR CARDS, Oo, hand and to arrive. ED A AHDS. BIIOUGHTON A CO.. Raleigh, N. C. W EDDINU CARDS. Th verv Js'ast. J-DWARD3, BROUGflTON 4CO. XiTOP IN V ITATIONS, J-L Newest Styles. EDWARDS. BRQUQHTPN & CO. ORDERS OF DANC1 Q, In varkd deaigna -' ED WARDS, BEOUQHTON A CO. COMIC BU81NBS8 CARDS. Just the thing for the holidays. EDWARDS, B ROUGH TON CO. 46 W. HEIR:? OFBT.JBLILDA," The popular novel by Msjor John Moore. Pricejedncad to fl. EDWARDS, BROUGHTON & OO. PRINTING. ; . Any hind you want. EDWARDS, BROUGHTON & CO. INDINO " Of every description. EDWARDS, BROUGHTON A CO. PEARSON'S LAW LECTURES, ; Indispensable to Law Students. Price $5. EDWARDS, BROUGHTON '& CO. BAILXI'8 FIFTH NORTH CAROLINA DIGEST. . No lawyer's library complete without it Price ti 60. EDWARDS, BROUGHTON & CO. USBEE-8 CRIMINAL DIGEST, . ' Price $5. EDWARD3. BROUGHTON & CO.. Steam Printers and Binders. Raleigh N. C. THE JEIV STORE Is tbe Leadtaf Ketallllouie In NortB Carolina for. Fine Dress Goods! . i' I am shewing GREAT BARGAINS, and would ca'l special attention to my Brocades, Black Silks, &c. Extra Qualities, Hone t Gocds. Also, full lines of DRESS GOODS In the LATEST SH ADES AMD COLORS. I have a splendid assortment of Table Damasto, Toweio and Vapktna!! "BLANKETS are amongst my spe cialties. K. fl. ftOfiMOl - to WlUiama A Ha-, wood. Feriilizeis for Wieat. TOO Sacks Walton, Wbann A Co.'a Raw Boae Si par phosphate. . 190 Barrels Superphosphate and Potash, ready or Immediate delivery. WILLIAMSON & UPCHUKCH. November it, 188L A 3 ... 3 Si 3 i ST 40 t"1 u . eJ5 fig u 8"8 .HPS Q M - " t h rxf r 11 i Ii , 7 - -:--"tt:i'' , -Si; . . v.:. .'li-V.-:.' upon. s f

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