c MISCELLANEOUS. Opium Is VIy used 'in rTunu- no opiimu, IS use in ACM1IS. RBTTES n o i of "Hi? Vufis" Hid "Richsi L'EyAF ToLcco, rr ' h ITIUS kVz I us i T J m a.mus. Insist on having these, and thus BE SURE of the BEST. rk of BULL.' m r lihoul , non Vrnuine wi Watch the papers for our large advertisement; different portraits of leading men each time. A HOME DRUGGIST TESTIFIES. Popularity at home is not always the best test of merit, but we point proudly to the fact that no other medicine has von for itself sucii universal approbation in its own city, state, and country, and among all people, ad Ayer's Sarsaparilla. The following letter from one of our bcst kuowu Massachusetts Druggists should be of interest to every sufferer : RHEUMATISM ,. ...-- II 1 1 " Eight rears auo I had an attack cf T t .11 t lUlL'UIUHMSin, SO TercJ that l couid not move from the bed, or dress, without help. 1 trieii several reme dies without much if any relief, until I took Avkr's Sausaparilla, by the use of two bottles of which I was completely cured. Have sold large quantities qf your Saksa rARiLLA. and it still retains its wonderful popularity. The many notable cures it ltas effected in this vicinity convince me that it Ss the best blood medicine ever offered to the public. OFF. Harris." lliver St., Buckland, MassMNay 13, 1882. Sil T RHFI1M overseer in fhcSfweli UfU.1 I 111 UU III l Carpet Corporation, was for ver twenty vears before his removal to Lowell afflicted with Salt Rheum in its worst form. Its ulcerations actuallv covered more than half the surface of his body and hmb&. He was entirely cured by Ayer's 8a.rsapauilla. See certificate In Ayer's Almanac for 16S3. PREPARED BT Or. J.C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Ma. Sold by all Druggists; si, six bottles for f& 1 lytctp div i 20 27 Boxes and Grates, T7E SHIPMENT OF VEGETABLES AND J? Fruits, in snooks or ready made. YELLOW PIKE LUUBBS. A full stock of Roach Md Dressed Lumber , CA'hs. Ao., for BulUiar purposes. mw Orders by the cargo. Domestic and For eign. solUMleu. ' apUidAw PARSLEY A WIGGINS. PARSLEY & WIGGINS, MANUFACTURERSIOF SASH, BLINDS, DOORS ORNAMENTAL WOOD WORK, lpiutf; . MO nv kind, The Daily Review ham th IsLMPUl '072a uie circulation, of any newspaper FRIDAY; AUGUSTS, 1884. STATE NEWS K instnn Free. Press: There was much dissatisfactiou last Saturday, in the Re-i nnhiioan ranks, at the nomination 01 Jas. K. Davis for Sheriff. . Many were the ReDublicans who swore they would not vote or work for his election. We now wait to see whether Davis will be able to apply the party whip heavily enough to force them into line or not. Durham Plant: The - increase of the valuation ol property in Durham town ship from June 1st, '63, to Jmie 1st. '84, is &2.000.ix:o. w.ii. micks gain ercd from one patch Saturday roomirjg 132 niuskmelons and it was not a good day for melon?, either. Mrs. Lvdia Guess, who lived a few miles above Durham, died last week. She was 98 y-arfyld. During the past Spring op one occasion she walked to Dorbam. Pittsboro Home: Our neighbor, Mr. II. A. London, is to deliver the address on the accasion of the celebration of the 01st anniversarv ol the Fayettevllle In dependent L?Kht Infantry, on the 22nd inst. W. D. Hardin, T)t Bear Creek township, informs us he made sixty-live gallons 01 cicer irom one tree nor did he taxe all the apples Irom it. He knows ot apple trees that he thinks raust be nearly a hundred year3 old, and are still bearing fruit. Clinton Caucasian: Crop reports trcm lower .Sampson and Southeastern Duplin are ilattering. Cotton and corn are both very fine and the larmers in that section are happy. The Dem ocrats in Clinton yesterday raised a pole which towers 125 ieet abve the ground We think that the pole is the irghest in the btatc. Un Us top floats t beautiful Cleveland and Hendricks lag. One device is a pair ot huge tin scales. Last baturday the Demo crats ot Lisbon township met at Ingold to form a Democratic club. The meet ing was addressed by Messrs. F. P. Jones, EW. Kerr, and E. T. Boykin. About 75 names were enrolled and the club organized for faithful work. Durham Reporter: Duke & CVs mammoth tobacco factory is being rapidly built. It will be one of the argest and Lnndeomest business houses n the South when rompleted, but none too large for ihe rapidly increasing trade of this firm, as their orders for cigar ettes exceed their present capacity. Ttey are now the second largest firm in the world in the cigarette trade. i he foundation and future of Durham' success 7 large tobacco factories, one fo which is thu largest in the woiM; the largest warehouses for the sale of eaf tobacco in the ftouth; immense cotton and woolen mills soon to bo in operation apd a thrilty, thorough going people, who are determined to win in any event. Goldsboro Messenger: Mr. H Hollingswoith, at Magnolia, has a splendid piece of cotton of the peerless variety, averaging over 200 bolls to the sialk. One stalk has 120 bolls on it. Between twenty and thirty bushels of fi. h were caught last Friday in Smith's mill pond, about six miles rom here. The water was turned oft or the occasion, and severat parties rom town engaged in the sport. Mr. Bud Parks, who was one of thorn, told us that he saw a cart backed into the poud and entirely tilled with fish, be ne as much as one mule could pud. The catfish predominated, alter which came thtf perch, and those that we saw were beautiful specimens. There has not been so great a capture ot fish in this section for a number of years. Charlotte Observer: News received rom Salisbury last nieht was to the effect that Captain A. B. White, the freight conductor who was so badly crushed in Tuesday's accident, was in a a-orttal condition, and the doctors could give his Iriends no encouragement to hope that he will survive. We are told that he is injured internally, besides having three ribs broken and his skull fractured. There is a big row going on among the liepubiicans ot the Fifth District, in consequence of the result of the convention held in Greensboro on August 7th. They are in open revolt and have called a mass convention to meet at Reidsville on the 28tb inst. In the nomination of Dr. Wheeler they "ay the will of the people was thwart ed ; and the doctor is of such character and standing as doe3 not entitle him to the support of the "great Republican party." Greensboro Patriot: Over 100.000 chickens have been shipped from Greensboro by express in the last 60 days. Mr. Stout, a Randolph man, lives within hearing distance of the C- c & 1. v . K. it. whistle. He went out yesterday and saw the train for the nrst time in nis me. lie is 72 years old. lie is a shoemaker bv trade and his first thought at seeing the iron horse was that it would soon ruin his busi ness in the saving of shoo leather. Im pressed with this thought, he turned and disconsolately walked off. A well digger in au adjacent township niayeu a great trick on the neighbors. When he had dug down about 20 feet the well caved in just as he got out .He then hung his coat near and wan dered away. Neighbors found the coat and, supposing the digger to be at the bottom, cleaned out the well, and when they got through the man himself drove along with a cribbing. More than prayers were said there. Graham Gleaner: The crowd at the Baptist Association at Gilliam's church Sunday was estimated at over. Ave thousand. ! There were people there tenting who lived forty or fifty miles away. Mr. J. B. Montgomery, while moving some wood a few days . - l A. IB agu. wugni a wnoie lamuy ot opos sums, numbering thirteen in all. The lamuy was composed of the mother and twelve young ones large enough to runabout. -Mr. Sidney. Cates, of u range, while assisting ia raising a tobacco barn last week, fell from the top of the barnulling one ol tha logs off with him. The log fell noon bis nend. crushing it and killing htm in stantly. An old lady on the 'hill" at Alamance factory planted early in the season twelve cucumber seed which produced twelve vines Irom which she has gathered 661 cucumbers, besides those she left for seed, and the Tines arc still bearing, On last Wednes day, in company with two other mem bers of the legal fraternity. Capt. E- S. Parker and J. A. Long. Esq., we met a lady in her C5th year, ot sound mind and body, Mrs. Swalm. cf Morton's township, this county.. who has never seen a railroad, a court house, or a lawyer before that day, and never took an oath or heard, one administered. News and Observer : We are to have direct railroad communications with Louisburg. By direction of Col. Rob inson, Mr. Moncure, the ci?Hengineer, is about to make the survey, and before the Christmas holidays have come we hope to ride oehind the iron horse into Louisburg. ' . Kinston Journal: A rumor was fly ing through the air yesterday that some one or more of the colored people who went on the Elm City to Washington on Monday night had been crowned while out on a sailmgparty atthat place, but telegraphic information pronounc ed it not true. A correspondent who has been to Moore county says the crops of cotton and corn are very good. He further states that it is a notorious fact that most ot the Republicans in that county have declared for the Dem ocratic ticket both btate and National. Shel by Aurora: William Hamrick, the aged postmaster, only eighty-lour years old has, an aged white gander rejoicing in seventy-tour years. It has tor vears tollowed old Mr. iiamricK. like Man's lamb, everywhere he went and when he sneezed the gander gave a salute- William II. Sepaugh, who lives near Broad River, killed recently rattlesnake with thirty rattles, or thirty-one years old. and four-ana-a halt feet lrng. He was binding oats and caught up the sheat ot oats and snake in his arms. Horror seized him as he saw the snake, which ne aasnea. to me grouuu auu soon slew his enakeship. Cleveland is rich in mica, tin and other minerals. Every month, we bear of resh mica deposits, scattered in every portion of Cleveland. Air. j. riogue and T. G. Borders have mica deposits, while in No. 10 township there is much interest manifested in mica, and halt a dozen men have this month found val uable mines. John R. Iloylo is digging out of solid rock large blocks of beau- itul clear mica William Bumgardner - r j . is nnding mica near tne inaian grave yard, near Carpenter's Knob. In our office is a mica sheet 10xl3i inches. The Landers, of Lincolnton, are also digging mica in No. 10 on Knob Creek. Mothers. If you arc failing; broken worn out and nerycus, me "Wells' Health Re- newer." $1. Druggists. Every Farmer ought to get a "Boy Clipper Plow," greatest invention ol the age. Jacobi is the Agent- t MISCELLANEOUS. AYER'S Ague Cure contains an antidote for. all malarial dis orders which, so far as known, is used in no other remedy. It contains no Quinine, nor any mineral nor deleterious substance what ever, and consequently produces no injurious effect upon the constitution, but leaves the system as healthy as it was before the attack. WE WAEEAXT AYER'S AGUE CURE to 'cure every case of Fever and Ague, Inter mittent or Chill Fever, Remittent Fever, Dumb Ague, Bilious Fever, and Liver Com plaint caused by malaria. In ca of failure, After due trial, dealers are authorised, by our circular dated July 1st, 1382, to refund the money. - Dp, J.C. Ayer&Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold Jf all Druggists. may 123 d Aw nrm 1884 Harper's Bazar. ILLUSTRATED. Harp1 Bazar is at once the 11 and useful Household Journal 8 l It is tbo acknowledged arbiter of fashion! this country. Its fashion plates arc the new est and most stylish; and its pattern sheet supplements ana econamic suggestions aione are worm many times the cost or. subscription. Its illustrations of art needlework are from tbe best sources. Its literary and artistic merits are of the highest order. Its stories, poems, and essays are by the first American and Kuropcan authors. Its choice art plcturee would fill portfolio?, and its humorous cuts are the most amimlng to be found In any jour nal in America. A host of brilliant novelties are promised for 18S4; Harper's Periodicals. Per Year: HARPER'S BAZAR. $4 00 HARPER'S MAGAZINE 4 00 HARPER'S WEEKLY..... 4 00 HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE. .. 1 50 Harper's Franklix square LigBAKT, One Year C52 Numbers)..... ...........jo 00 Postage Fraa to all subscribers in the United States or Canada. -y. The Volumes of the Bazar Tic gin with the first Number for January of each year. When no time is mentioned; it wlU be understood that the subscriber wishes to commence with the Number next after the receipt of order. The last Four Annual Volumes of Harper's ir, u neat uuiu uuimng, wiu ne sent DJ maiL nostace nald. or bv emrpaa fro nr pense (provided the freight does not exceed one dollar per volume), for $7 00 per volume Cloth Cases for each volume, suitable for binding, will be sent by mall, postptld. on re ceipt of $1 00 each Remittances should be made by Post-Offlce aioney urueror urarc, to avoid ehanee of loss Newsoanera are not to crniv thia irtr.rH ma men t without the express order of n arpitr a UJtUTHKKS. Aaaress HABJKR A BROTAERS. wo New York At rlE WILMINGTON SHIRT FACTORY. No. 27, Market St. Nbzht Shirts, all sizes. 7c. Congress, the most popular and best w nite amrt on ine market, 75c Colored Shirts soa ana qpwaxas. oea&iae smrta at all prices Boy's yachting In great variety. Gent's Draw era S5n and upwards Wamsutta Jeans Draw era. reinforced, eoual to linen. aomethiiHr new T5c- Drawers ode to ortier. 75c Wamsutta cmru wiui ziuu unen Doeozn nx&$e to order at at. Orders front the country solicited aari promptly attended to. Give us a rail. . . ' , J. ELS BACH. THE BlAlXS, The fnalls elbee and arrive ofice aa follows : CliOSK. at the City Fott Northern through mails, fast... .7.30. M, .8.00 A. M. Northern through and wsy malls. . Raleigh ....6.45 P. M. and 8.00 A. M. Mails for the N. C. Railroad and routes supplied 'therefrom includ ing A- & X. C. Railroad, at 7.30 P. M. and 8.00 A. 11 Southern Halls for all points South. dally. .8.00 P. M. Weatern malls (C C. Railway) daily. (except Sunday) 6.45 P. M. All points between Hamlet and Ral eigh...... 6.45 P. Ji nan for Cheraw and Darllnsrton Rail road .....8.00 P.M. Malls for points between Florence and Charleston 8.00 P. M. Fayettevllle and offices on Cape Fear ' River, Tuesdays and Fridays- LOO P. M. Fayettevllle, via C C Railroad, dally, except Sundays 6.45 P. M. Onslow C H. and Intermediate offi ces, Tuesdays and Fridays 6.00 A. M. smiinvme mans, Dy steamboat, dally . (except Sundays)..... 8.30 A. M. Mails for Kasy Hill, Town Creek, S hallo tte and Little River. Tues days and Fridays 2.00 P. M. Wrights vllle, daily 8.30 A. M. OPEN FOR DELIVERY. Northern through and way malls 7.30 A. M. Southern Malls 7.30 A. 31 . Carolina Central Railroad 8.45 A. M. Malls collected from street boxes business portion of city at 5 A. M., 11.30 A.M. and 5.30 i'. si. ana from other point? of the city at 5 r. ol Stamp Office open from 7 A.M. to 6 P. M., Money Order and Register Department open from 8 A. M to 5 P. M , continuously. General delivery open from 7 A.M. to 6 P.M. and on Sundays from 8.30 to 9.30 A. M. Carrier' delivery open en Sunday from 8-30 to 9.30 A. M COMULEKCIAJL NEWS. WILMINGTON MARKET. August 224 P. M. SPIRITS TURPENTI NE Quote d firm at 28 cents bid. No sales re ported. ROSIN Quoted firm at 95 cents for Strained and $1.00 for Good Strained. TAR Quoted firm at $1.60 per bbl of 280 lbs. CRUDE TURPENTINE Quoted steady at $1.85 for Virgin and Yellow Dip and $1 for Hard. COTTON Quoted firm. The follow ing are the ouicial quotations: Ordinary...... 8 cents it u vou uramary ) Low Middling 10 Middling......... k)l wood Middling...-- 11 DAILY RECEIPTS. Spirits Turpentine 402 cask8 1331 bbP 167 bbl 234 bbis Kosm Tar ... Crude Turpentine. . . fa i MARINE NEWS. ARRIVED. Steamer Passport, Harper, Smith yille, Master- Steam yacht Louise, Wocdsid e Smithville. Master Steamer A P Hurt, Worth, Fayette Worth & Worth Steamer Bladen, Green, Tille, C S Love & Co. Fayette- CLEARED. Steamer Passport, Harper, Smith ville. Master Steamer John Dawson, Black. Point Caswell R P Paddison. Steamer Bladen, Green, Fayette ville, C S Love & Co. Steamer A. P Hurt, Worth, Fayette ville, Worth & Worth. Sohr Alice Hcarn, Pennewell, Balti more, Geo Harriss & Co, cargo by J W Taylor and Geo Harriss & Co Schr Belle Brown. Perry, Jeremic, Hnyti, Northrop & Cumming Exports. COASTWISE. Baltimore schr Alice Hearn 167, 829 ft lumber, 460,450 shingles FOREIGN. Jeremie, Hay ti schr Belle Brown 107,112 ft Miraber, 40.000 shingles WEEKLY STATEMENT. STOCKS ON HAND AUGUST 16, 1884. Cotton ashore, 682; afloat 18 ; total 700. -Spirits ashore, 4.642; afloat, 2,491; tc- tal, 7.133. Rosin ashore, 75,913 ; afloat, 4,456 ; to tal, 80,369. Tar ashore, : 637 ; afloat, 599 ; total , 1,236. Crude ashore, 1,812; afloat 121; total 1,933. RECEIPTS FROM AUG. 9 TO AUG. 16. Cotton, 34; spirits, 2,537; rosin, 5.000; tar, 664; crude, 1,197. EXPORTS FROM AUGUST 9 TO AUGUST 16 DOMESTIC. Spirits. 39 ; rosin, 151 ; tar, 853 ; crude, 1,238. . FOREIGN. Spirits 2,661; rosin 303. VESSELS IN THE POST OF WILMINGTON, N. C. AUGUST 16, 1884. No vessel under 60 tons reported In this list. BARQUES. . r . Nor Insula Capri, 335 tons, Danlelsc n. CP Mebine Ger August, 317 tons, Grabc, - E Peschau A Westermann Nor Frey, 2S1 tons, Ilatvorser , Heide A Co Nor Deodata, 372 ton's, Anderses, Helde A Co - t BRIGS. 1 ' Am. L. If. HerrUt. 367 tons. Bale, Geo Harriss & Co SCHOONEE8. Timothy Fields, If 6 tons, Adams, -B i Barker & Co S O Hart, 505 tons. Fountain. Master RS Graham, 341 tons, Avs, . .. Geo Harriss & Co Fannie R Williams, 366 tons, insley, Geo Harriss & Co Ea telle Day, tons, Williams , . Geo narrlss A Co Horace;?. Lanfalr, 238 tons, WoodUnd, Geo Harries A Co LIST OF VESSELS CLLiKEO FOR THIS PORT. G?r,K,xp.1TM' 276 tona, Fretwurst, at Liver pool July 17. Nor Fama, 403 tons. Taraldsen, at Para. July 7.. . Nor felbraJtar, 4S0 tons, lennesen, tailed from Rotterdam, June 4 Br. HataelL, 4-3 tons, Cochran, sailed from Hull, June S3 Ger Harmann Fcledrieh. 28S tons. Nlcrahr sailed trom Uverpool, Aug L ' Mnr Aust Lds, 633 tons. Kosher, sailed from Flame Jury 13. InSjtt0 MISCELLANEOUS. We have been- ,and are tuau uycr ouiui iu tuio xudinui auu u.ur J)ian Worj beautifully., Closing out this stock of Is the intention, and while a great are TO ARRIYE TO-DAY ! Acaseof the nicest and CHEAPEST BLACK CASHMERES Xv , to Bhowjtbem. You aug 21 Xetroit, Chesa Safes. Brush-i. tian.1 i v-rtaamg, nue ity IVir. larSend tor Catalogue. men. 13 d&w ly For the Campaign.! kTlHE POLITICAL CAMPAIGN UPON JL which the people of North Carolina are just preparing to enter will, beyond all ques tion, ne one oi great excitement as well as one of vital Importanco to them, lit will be no child' play. . . i - All that is reeded to Insure Democratic suc cess and continued prosperity to the State Is a plain, truthful statement of I what are now. the facts of history, or are dully becoming so. The reasons for Democratic victory, ana the even stronger reasons for Republican defeat. are abundant, and it is the purpose of THE REGISTER to do Its full part In layinsr them before! tha people. j I . A a (h( Vioat tnostio In fta nmrw in ttifa anil and In answer to appeals, the Register will be furnished at such low rates as to nut it In the reach of every ne during the present State and Presidential ampalsns. K i ' It we all do our full duty, victory will sure ly be with us; but that duty wQl leave u no idle time There must be early work, late work, work all the time. If! good govern ment and a people's prosperity are worth working for, let us all go to work, and at once. CAMPAIGN RATES. The Register will be furnished to Clubs. until November 15, at the following rates: oe copy, 5Cc; five copies, f 2, ten copies, $3 75; twenty copies, $7; fifty copies, $15; one hundred copies, $28. , X In every cse the paper win be sent until the returns of the election shall be received and published, and we invite the attention of Executive Committees of Counties and Town- ships, and of all others interested, to the Cam paign Begister as a sure and cheap mean 3 of furnishing Information to the people. i Aaare8s kaleigu register, Kaieigb, m.o. - . 1 ,. D OCUMENT NO 1 .1884. DEMOCRACY vs. REpUB.LTCANISM. 1 1 1 Handbook of North Caroliha Politics for Jfcst 1 1 The Platforms, The Parties, an Tbe la cues Thoroughly Dlscutsert. i i I 1 The influence of ''' ocument No. 1," issued by the Democratic Ptate Executive Committee in 1882, was generally recognized as decisive In that year'acarupalgn. .i A siiiil r Handb ek hs been f prepared for this year's use, and will be issued immediate ly after the session of the Chicago Democrat ic Convention. j fi The Handbook will be a well 'printed pam phlet of about 150 pages. 8ro , and will con tain the fullest information ion matters involv ed in this year's elections, j i Document No i, for 1884, will bid supplied at TEN DOLLARS PER HUMDRfcD, the actual cash Cv-st of type-setting, paper " press work. j !i i In order that the size of . the edition may ; determined, prompt orders are '"cquested. Address, KA LEIGH REGISTER , iuly 1 j Raleigh, N. TKB SXJ1ST. s n ! - r : NEW YORK, 184. About sixty million copies of The Sun have one out ol our establishment during the past welve months. If vou were to paste end to end all the col umns of all The Suns printed and sold last year you would get a continuous strip of I n teresting information, common sense wlsdpm, sound doctrine, and sane wit, long enough to reach from Printing House square to the top of Mount Copernicus In the moon, then back to Printing House square, and then three-quar ters of tbe way back to the moon again. But The Sun Is written for the inhabitants of the earth; this same strip of intelligence would girdle the globe twenty seven or twenty-eight times. ' 1 1 If every buyer of a copy of Thi 8un during the past year has spent only one hour over It, and if his wife or his grandfather has spent another hour, this newspaper lnlS83 has af forded the human race thirteen thousand years of steady reading, night and day. ij It is only by little calculations like these that you can form any idea of the circulation of the most popular of American newspapers, or of Its Influence on the opinions land actions "f American men and women. f . . The Suk is, and will continue to be, a news paper which tells the truth without fear of consequences, which gets at the facts no mat er how much the process costs, 1 which pre sents the news of all the world without waste of words and in the most readable shape, which is working with all Its heart for the cause of honest government, and which there fore believes that the Republican! party must go, and must go in this coming year of our Lord, 1884. f Ii you know The Sun, you like It already, and you will read it with accustomed diligence and profit during what is sure to be the most interestingyear in Its history. If you do not yet know The Sun, it Is high time to get Into the sunshine. j ' Terms to Mail Subscbihebs. The several editions of Thk 5un are sent by mall, postpaid, as follows: ! ( n . DA1LY-50 cents a month, $6 a year; with 8unday edition, $f. V SUNDAY Eight page. This edition furnish es the current news of the world, special articles of exceptional Interest to every "?? I nUtrary reviews of new books highest merit. $1 a year, WE3L7TfJ. pnt page of the best matter of the dally Issues, an Agricultural Department of unequal l&i value, special market reports, and literary, spVnttnc. and, domestic intelligence make ThS WEZjffcT sun the newspaper for the farm er's household. To ejnbs of $10, an extra copy free. Address I .... 'TOa, Notice,! J riBu or noLUNGswoftTn co. has been changed this day by the! retlrenna .1: 013. H. TRIUBLE and the admifsion of T. ' ... ' .... j . -ji F . 8TKE3. The buUneas will be oo'ndacte ocretofore.uader the name and iyle o jcJyti COLLIRGSTTOzi? 6 CO. mSCELLANEOTTs now selling Carpets cliea- many have been sold, SOME yet open. " . will decide for yourself. r. ill. Wciwtire; HANCrACTUaKBS OF Wire (loth. Wire Counter Fslhnes. Wire ltt. Col Screens, Wenthr Yunl Sthlw Jl- I.An 1 fil. - "Aiorf. i. es uon ric, iron Shutters. Counter sjr"S k , , v IOMc&Uon this Paner. - SCUPPEKN0AG WISR WE HAVE JU&T RECEIVED A FISKLoi OF . Red and WlilteScuppernone I that Is Rtinprh vi.i ... . ' . and it Is bWEET AND PALATABLE. gallon $1.5 ; In larger quanUtlcs bPcill FiGURKS. Tear s'dnd Grapes. We are receiving every day or twoionn very fine PEAKS AND GRAPES, that wi recommend you to buy. Tho PEARS tnt he celebrated SElKEL VABIETY, and m remarkable for their delicacy ot flavormj julcyness. They are picked a few daya befon ilpenicg, si that jou get them in excellent condition. If kept in the house a few dn they ripen fully, and are then better thu it allowed to ripen on the tree. P. L. BRIDGEKS & CO. HO North Front 8t. aug 18 1884. Harper's Weekly, ILLUSTRATED. Harper's Weekly stands at the head of Amet lean illustrated weekly journals. By lu Bi partisan position in politics, its admirable 1! lustrations, its carcfull chosen seriate, abort L t-torics. sketches, and poems, contributed by ine loremoat arusts and authors of the cy, U carries instruction and entertainment to thou sands of American homes. t will always be the aim. of the pnbllsben to make Harper's Weekly the most' popular and attractive family newspaper hi tbe world, and, in the pursuance of this design, to pre sent a constant Improvement in all these lec tures which have gamed for It the confident, sympathy, and support of Its large amy el readers. Harper'slPeriodicals. Per Year: HARPER'S WEEKLY... ................ W HARPER'S MAGAZINE.. " HARPER'S BAZAR HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE 1 Harper's Franklin square LiBKAsr, One Tear (52 Numcers Postage Free to all subscribers In the UsltN States or Canada. : ? ?T me volumes 01 me neeiuy vegia lirst Number for January of each year. Win no time is mentioned, it will be undentow that the subscriber wishes to commence wu, the Number next after the receipt of oro The last Four Annual Volumes of narptn Weekly, in reat cloth binding, will be seat W mall, postage paid, or by express, free ot a pease (provided the freight does not exeew one dollar per volume), for $7 CO per roluw Cloth Cases for each volume, suitable v binding, will be sent by mail, postpaid, os re ceipt of $1 00 each. . Remittances should be made by Poet-OS Money Order or Draft, to avoMchaaceolM Newspapers are not to copy this adverse ment wiinout me express oraer 01 Brothers., Address HARPER & BROTHERS. nov?3 NewToi North Carolina Resources "One of the most useful series ot tive books ever published about any bu Boston Post. , . Hale's Industrial Series. Two Volumes Now Ready. 1. The Woods and Tim bees o'siSi Carolina. CurUa's, Emmons', na jw Bounlcal Reports ; supplemented bf County Reports of Standing ForwU, WWBr trated by an excellent Map of the 1 Volume 12mo. Cloth, 273 PP-. IL In this Coal and Ibon OocjTin North Caroijna Emmons Kerr. 1 ley's, WUkesV and the Cenias Beport ptementcd by full andaccuratf "kptehy Fifty six Counties and Map of the 1 Volume Bmo. ClotS, 425 PKfWj, 8old by all Booksellers, or mailed pWQ- T" rj jc hale so, Publishers, Booksellers and Station . -. . . f. ' New "S. Or. P. M HALE, Publisher. RakliH. aeptsa. . - Monday ' :r lit pnw wBir VOU WILL large consignments of Apples. PSS Chickens, f gga and all other counry ftw JCheaasooda must bo so Id at .once. A W. BIVKIJBARK. The LlvelGrocer and Commission . 114 North Waiersi.. fr y 5 wtimingtoa. ZZ int. : . aa ' bjaffoneuo TJOR WBIGHT8 VILLE & OUXP, will boutherland's Stables DAttTatf F!f K5turnlBS,wlll-leaTe Sound at 7 I juseSStf T. J. EOrjTlDS3, . r. ii- HiNCKLfTrrr Natioiial Wire & Iron Cr

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