XT, 47, SaCX.YSr EDtTQQ r PMQFBIBTQ8 h &BT 27 Wmo Mtw Xo JfMars FOB Tbb Figbt, PEPXST. it so Pbh $.v.yvM iJtvBiBi,ri artxcM VOL. ; 65. DUEHAM, NORTH CAROLINA, ' WEDNESDAY, SEP. 17, L885. NO. 20, J. W. Gbaham. Thos. Suffix GRAHAM & ETJTFIN, ' . ,-' ATTORNEYS JIT IXW, " ' II1LLSBORO, N. C; . X - : - Practices in the counties of Alamance, (Caswell, Durham, Guilford, Rockingham, jPerson, and Orang .1 A. W.GRAHAM, . s. ATTORITBT AT , LAWi WLLSBOItOt SN. 0. PttACTICIC la the Court! of Oranee.Chat bam. Tenon, Wake an d Ui anvtlle. , Claitrn collected in all parts of tht State, 7 fJan 23 lj " Wfc,V. FULLER, t i . tif OT'TlliCOf ICE io Stat and Fed, rat Courts. -,' N &. G. RYAN. ATTORNEY AT UkXV, 7 rNoT.28-ly SAMC T. ASHE, Attorney-at-LaW , DURHAM, N. C. Special atuction given to Collection of claims. JuneH.ly. DR, G V COPP, . (Graduate of the UnWereity of JfaryUnd) Dentist, OFFICE OVER DIKE'S EOOKSJOKE, IK BIQOSBEE BUILDING, Durham, N. C- - J '- ' ' sept2 Johx Mankinu r J. S. Manning, Chapel IIU1.N. C. Durham. N. 6 MANNING MANNING. ' ; ATTORJtET AT LAW. DURHAM, N. a Practloa in State and Federa Courts. Office Plant building. 1 John Manning will be In his office on the 2nd and 4th Saturdays of each aonth. jan.f AoobA.Lono, -Eobibt C Stbctwick. LONG & STKUDWICK. - jMsmsp and Cnnsdlors at lav, DURHAM, N. C Practice In the Court of Durham, AW mance Chatham, Orange, Person and Caa veil and in the Federal Court at Green' "W. - .-r-ttprim uns.n. LiSmrn, . FEATHER, DYEING AND CLEANING Feathers sont by mail can be farnhshed is one weekr time. ' 08 NOBTU FIFTH STREET, anIMr BICUMOND, VJL RICHMOND 'STEAM DYEING, CLEANING AND CAB PET CLEANING WORKi MRS, A J-PYLE, No, 80S N. Fifth St., Richmond, Va Geutlemens and youths' clothing cleaned dred and repaired. Ladies dresses, shawls lnaka. vlnvea Ac cleaned and dred. Da Bunk and lace curtains made to look like new. Batiafaction guaranteed. Mentio this paper. ; ianl4-ly 7 DR. HARDEE, GsEmPracUlterDfMiiaiie, DURHAM, N. C. Office with Dr. Urr, orer Vaoghaa e Tennri Drug bwre, July 2X L 4 : Gypsy Secret. : Dckhau, N. C, 3rd, 188& ... v.. ; This Uto certify that I used last tl'gfU on mt mare which was ery sick, halfu tot tlfl ofCJmr Bncret bought at It Rlack all's DrogBwrt reliared bw in less than forty fir minutes, f haariil Moommend it. ' - V. I MORTON. ' . . ... . t v.... - v l V . 6ITT Boarttlsff nonsji ..... I A It.. igoOaUOtt. xxiceiy inninneu ruuua. ' MEALS AT ALL HOURS. Our taUe sumUed with the txut till snarket affords Prices libera . CAPFS ALLEN, Proprietor Railroad street, Durham, N. C. mar25-ly BIBBS FOB SALE. Just received a large lot of Talking Parrots la fine condition, just beginning to talk, the are 4 months old at $5.00 ttwh. Two eiiO cage for sale at 100, and I2.&0 each. Hard Moun lain Canaries at 12.50 each, rcry Dice singers, gin ' Brass Cages, from 1X0 to 13.00 ench, Japanned rjsges rrom oic y ? eaoo, Mocking Bird Food the best la the markot, Canary seeds, Ac. c, or '. ' 7 C.BELLENOT. No. 4 Sooth 14th Bt , Richmond, Va. Jan. 14 iy. THE 'CALL AGAIN CUSTOMER. Call again," he said to the butcher, , f .''Call again another day." ' ' ' And the butcher pocketed lis bill -, And sadly turned away. ' - 7 " The butcher took his wife that night To see a four-bit play ( ' 7 J But in a fifty-dollar box J. v . : Sat the man who couldn't pay. . . How many grocers could puplicate this piece of experience, in substance if not perhaps in the identical' parti culars ! The man in ' trade has his full share of the hardships of life, and, without wishing to draw a gloomy picture, it may be said that the tri bulations, and trials of temper to wVvio ithej grocer; is subjected would make a formidable ' list if they could le fully ' catalogued.'.. Slow sales, de preciated stocks, unlucky purchases, periods of dullness, reduced margins, heavy rents and taxation, perhaps dilatory help, are but few of the dif ficulties ot merchants as a class, to which of course must be added the mniy private anxieties . and worries belonging to every human being. One of the causes of trouble po pularly supposed to be most active in rendering the merchant's life not ahappp one, is the caprice of cus tomers. Some men who pride them selves on their diplomacy behind the counter say that every customer re quires some separate knaok of treat ment, and without unnecessary min cing and refining on the subject it is easy to see that observation of char acter coupled with tact will go a great way toward making a trades man popular and retaining custom. The world is full of people who think that the bestowal of their patronage buys the privilege of dropping cour tesy, indulging iu plain speaking to the verge of rudeness, of giving all sorts ot trouble' and Inflicting all manner of whims on the patient pro prietor or his clerks. However, the dealing with these manifestations of character is matter or business ana ivelihood the man of sense tides over such difficulties as adroity and successfully as be may, and they are not legitimately to be classed with the serious troubles of business life. The real and serious difficulty arises with the customer who, whether good or II tempered, easy or hard to suit, are unsatisfactory in the great re quisite, vis., payment This, where credit is giving is a matter ofexpe dency and necessity, ia the grocer's principal grievance, compared with which all others growing out of rela tions with customers are light, land are not likely to disturb his slumbers. It ia not uncharitable to say that the majority of a merchant's bad-pay customers belong to the 'class that the versifier above quoted had in his mind. Poor people, it is true, some times have! their income cut .off through bo fault of their own, and ioasmupb as eating and drinking can not be economised out of eight, in such case they unavoidably run be hind. Where the customer! are known and the distress Is recognlxcd as genuine, no doubt a good deal of leniency is shown for which the gro cer gets little credit wtb th.e world, bqt these cases, In toe aggregate, oc casion only a small part of the mer chant s anxieties, since no man makes a general practice of supplying goals to people who have no present or prospective means of support. A very large proportion of the un satisfactory class of customers are people who lvie bett;r, dress bWr and in all respects pass caste lives than many of their creditors do themselvee They go on the prln ciple that the world oves theui a living, giving a liberal interpretation to the term. They have probably an Income that should allow of their act ing justly by all, but to do so is not their principle. They indulge them selves with all that they can obtain on credit or for the money they hap pen to have at the moment. They must keep op aa appearance, live in a good neighborhood, dress well, entertain their friends and like wise enjoy themselves to what they consider a reasonable extent, which which .means an extent wholly be yond that warranted by their income. The result is, of course, that some one must bear the brunt, and among tradesmen the bearer is Invariably the one who supplies the necessaries of living. The spare cash, except upon compulsion, never goes to set tle a just claim while there are spring bonnets and new dresses to be bought, or the carpet in So ami So'e store would be each a splendid addition to the parlor. The tame principle. works in all matters, and if, once in awhile, the grocer should take bis wife to the theatre he is as likely not to recognize' among 'the occupants of the tront sefcts some of his debtors Who probacy bave been in the same places again and again while he has been toiling late at the counter. V - These wei the'customers that try men's soul. Mrs. A. ' may come and say that the last tea she was served with .was not : fit to drink; MrV. ; B. may complain that her twenty-five cents' worth of eggs were half rotten; 'another may talk of our charges and hint significantly at the new store just opened further down the street; people may be uncivil, "exacting, su percilious, inquisitoral, mean,7 pro vided they pay on the spot or at the time appointed, but the "call again"' customer not merely tiios the tem-1 per, but ia sapping the foundation of the business, Of course where the system of giv ing credit is found necessary the re gular presentation of accounts and payment of the same is equally need ful. Past due accounts, without ex ceptional reason given and satisfac tory arrangement made, should mean refusals of further supply of goods. The merchant who allows the accumulation of arrears has mainly himself to thank for the result. In many places associations have been formed of local traders for the pur pose of placing on list the names of persons unworthy of credit, and like wise of collecting their accounts, end many of these organizations are re ported to have been successful,, the failure of some having been due to the importation of objects foreign to the original purpose and calculated to give rise to dissension. It is clear ly possible for traders in different branches, in mutual defenoe, to re gister the names of customers of bad reputation, aud for each to be thus guided in future transactions. It is possible likewise for the individual merchant, without such society, in his relations with his customers by making ir wise rule and firmly ad hering to it, to avoid giving unprin cipled customers the opportunity of getting heavily on his bouks. With the active competition of the present day, it may go against the grain to refuse trade; but trade of the charac ter referred to, unless put upon a cash basis, is attended .with losses that swallow up its own and a good deal of other profit ? . - A Transformation. 'So this is the vessel you have been bragging so much about ?" "Yea, sir j there she Ilea. Beauty atn't she r "Beauty ? Yon don't call that unwicldly looking tub a yacht do you V r "Certainly, afie'a a yacht She wa'an't yesterday, I admit, but she's a yacht now."., " "How can she be a yacht now." "How can she be a yacht to-day if she was n A a yacht yesterday f . "Well, you see I had her washed out, and I've filled op her cabin with liquors and oigari, put seven cases of lager and a barrel of beer in the fo'ks'l and if that don't make her a yacht then I don t know what a yachtV It ain't the build of toe vessel that makes her a yacht t the liquors and cigars and the beer the ham sandwiches and the folks that's on board on her .that makea her a yacht Tut a erowd on board of her that can get tight aid play Billy an' all afore they get out of the harbor an' shell be such a yacht as no true gentleman need be asham er6n7 " Gitting at the FaU Losciusco Murphy recently passed bis examination, and Is now a mem ber of the Austin bar. His strong card is in getting the truth out of witnesses. The following is a sample of his system of examination: "Are you a married man ?, "No, sir; I am batohejor.'' "Will you please tell the court and jury how long you have been a bache lor, and what were the circumstances that Induced you to become one. Diicottraglng; a, Joker. "He might Bohoost at veil be deaf. I heard you ay dot Gilhooly vat over his eart in debt, and vendotvasso how till be hear mit dose ears r "Mishter Silverstone, I bays yon vagetto ten goitt, anu; vet) you comes dot funny plain ss. I docks our vages right avay. Mishter 'ookgecpcr,schotMt scharge Mishter Silverstone up tnlt five dollars his vages otr for run tecond-uand joae.' A woman at Pima. O.. owns a Par rot which uses cuss words. She had her choice between leaving the church or Retting rid of the birl, and the kept old Polly. ' ITEMS) OF INTEREST. ' A Wisconsin man was driven in sane because he' had to pay an old debt of seventy-five ceota. Men who pay old debts are always looked upon as insane. The Baptist Watchman says .that Robert Bonner ia the only man in this .country who can keep a fast horse and his reputation for morality at the same time. ',..".-- The Chicago Herald bemoans the fact that there is not enough civility in this country, 7 We boyen't heard any pretty women or rich men com plain of any tofurcityC ;;..' , Charles Swift, of Dubuque, attemp ted to burglarize his own house to secure (500 his wife had ; laid away, and sbe put two bullets into him with neatness' and dispatch. - The citizens of Pars.mi, Ks., sel dom question a stranger unless he is seen with a saddle and Iridic on his arm. , Then they simply ask him whether he ' prefers to bo hung ' or shot. - - . - A man at Lowell, Mass., offered his baby in exchange for a drink of whisky the other day, but the bar tender wanted three cents to boot The price of New Eogland .babies must be down. An Indiana farmer who wanted his neigbors to remember him after he was dead, grew aix acres of Canadian thistles and sent them flying through four counties. lie is remembered." 1 ' Stanley says that when you can't whip nor buy an Afrioan king you can scare him out of his boo is with a ghost story. It's a good deal cheap er than the other ways, and the effect lasts longer. "For fifty cents cash . I guarantee to make you dream that your lover has proposed marriage," is the sign which ha- brough a Chicago woman in a heap of money iu the last two years. . 7 A man who died in Cincinnati the other day owned up to naving six living wives, . He did'n 5 want . the afflicted widows to go to the expense of putting on mourning and they probably won't, , A chief of the Cheyenne tribe of Indiana declares that the agent of his reservation is aa honest man. - The declaration ought to be preserved in letters of brass. It's the first of the kind ever known. Henry Adams, of Vincenncs, Ind wanted his horse to drink a glass of whisky. The animal refused, and Henry pitchforked him and is in jail for six months. Temperance horses should be protected. Forepaugh Las aa elephant which hat to be prodded with a pitchfork regularly every Sunday morning or he can't half enjoy himself through the week. . An elephant has a nature a good deal like a hoodlum. . ' The circulation of The Detroit Weekly Free Prest In Europe it now close upon 100,000 copies. The idea that the people over the way can't appreciate a good thine from this tide of the water is all nonsense. A California squash broke - from the vine the other day and rolled down bill and smashed in the tide of a barn and killed a horse. There ought to be a law against a man growing such dangerous objects to life and limb, Philadelphia averages one divorce to every thirty-four marriages, which it not to very bad. The man who dosen't get bitten but once out of thirty-four timet on a Philadelphia girl may be considered lucky. A Vermont boy hat done pretty well in the last x weekc He hat caught four different huntert in the tame bear t'ap, and he aayt that all indications point to the capture of at least three more before winter sets in. A girl la Northern Indiana was out berrying whea a rattlesnake struck at her and caught hit fangs in her dress. Her lover, who had al ways wanted to die, made a tkip for home, and the dragged the reptile half a mile before a traveler came to her relief. A farmer in the Shenandoah Vat Icy gave a strange woman $500 to show hint where 130,000 in gold was burled on hit farm. If the hadn't been called away by a telegram as toon at the got hit cash the tnlgh have shown him the spot, but at it was he was left to dig over eighty acres. i;. A FACE. V Ptttorn OriiwoM. - JWs was a I xl knew it one. In days whan bope and I were younz That bad a snbtla spell of power That stmt to my life has clung. ' I somsttmes t it In ray dreams. r , RoW in Its witchcraft as of old, , And th. same subtle sorcery. ; v.a in dreams,, retains its hold. I thrill again beneath the glno : Not seen, in truth, for longeet yean ' '' ' And when it goes I sound again , The deepott daepa of oul-flt tasrs. ' I wake in troubled eottaey. , ",. And lent to close my eyes one. more. That face for one mors (Urapss I'd girt The sweetest dream I bare in store. What was the' charm within the facet 7 In vain you ak, I can not tall: . . . I only know it lured and lured, ' And thrilled me with a maelo spelL I only know the eyes were dark, . And know that they ware fathoms teen ' And that I followed where they led, . As I do now, eren in sleep. . Whsrs glows the fatal faoe to-day f Is it easting stul its subtle spell Oer fresh young lives, and making thtm Beneath its megie gloom to dwell) To count life precious only as - Tls paessd beneath the melting gase, To sun themselves thus for aspaoe ' And then to go their different waysl I know nobI do not wish to know; r But, if alive, I think the face -Is still the eeoter of the throng, Like an Uluminatad spas BtiU bow the silent worshippers, Btul It over near the devotees, And, were I there, tit vain to doubt My feet would stul be found with toes. THE NEW CLUB MEMBER. KSbeta f .Club Ut am aUaaen-AeV vantages of Military Training. ., (Brooklya East. uQosslp.") It Is always amusing to not. the ronnsr man who has Just been elected a member of a good elub and who starts In as a regular elub man. Take him at an immature age and confer upon bim the dignity of a elub nemoer, ana us either become, a load boor or the most proper and reserved of men. As a rule he picks out some time-worn and bias, elub man for a model and apes him t everything. He assumes a stolid and In different air, sits as his model aits, eats as us model eats, and emokes th. same brand of cigars that bis mold affecu lie is slow, languid, bat not key, and bis attire Is of the most fashionable out Another sort ot elub member is th. one who " make, vp hie mind to feel per fectly at home at aU haxards. He enltf. vatee aa easy and careless air. Be learn. tba Christian names ot all the members. Jokes with the porters, sprawl, over two or three chairs in the smoking-toom. converses ettaetopof his longs at dinner, and has bis elub printed on tie visiting card more prominently than his own name, r The effect 01 elub lies on ronnc men of all disposition b) good,-however. The rough edges are soon worn off by the sharp eocnments of the older club men, and a raw ronngster is turned into a polished man in lees time at a good club than any when sbe en earth, except at West Point t It has a way. astonisbed ms to observe the effect of military training upon the boy. whogenjs the river to lean to be soldiers. The n eoath. riamsy and stumbling loots who ad. ter the first class are tamed oat - models eif deportment at th. end of the term, of whom even a Torreydrop might be proud. . . Obnexloa. Katheelesns. . r rKatorwd. It drive, me wild to see grown up people. teensed of posssesing common sense, torch ing a subject with kid glove, whea they ought to roll ap their sleeve, and go in for bard work. This snpinensss bring, many good idea, to naught. They arena on promises and a o'clock tea. l dare not wait. poo' I would" . in a manner to make IMj uacbeui Use wort laaguag. than so. -did formerly. Want of sanestness hi the oauee of this te pidity. Society mean, chaff. Enthusiasm is as obnoxious as th. plague, To be poe. eseeed of an Maa which you are ready to da fend with blood and treasure is to be a nui sance, Von are worse than a criminal; yon are a bora To bors is to commit unpardona ble sin. Let Stanley arses Afrtoe sad Jsmse Gordon Bennet tie the American flag to the aorth pott, and both will be feted after they've aeeompllsbsd their self-appointed tasks, because society patronises enoeess ia any form bnt equator and north pole must not be mentioned la advance. . Colombo, may discover America, but be won't be in vlted to dine oat or to tit for his photograph until he M turns bom. alive. If be dostnt return it tervse bla right Why wasn't be contsnt wkb one hemisphere I Wby not let well enough alone! Ia my private opinion oootentment is a twtnUh sentiment To be satisfied Is to waUow la (tarnation, - But I keep this be lief to myself berauet I desire to live peaceably with my neighbors. Mind yea, this criticism Sffi'ss to what is called "so ciety. ; I The tadaetriee mt Japan. ' ' (Sdeatlft. America.) The Industries of Japan po asses a particu lar Interest to foreigners, en acoount of the niqne material, employed and th. dignity which old ag. bsstowi, At a time when Eaahad at a nation did not ex Int. when the progressiva peoples of modern Europe were to the polite world ae barbarians and strangers, ithsBsanolant people were patiently at work, by .low degrees perfecting the de. tails of their art, until now they produce ware, without a rival in the markets of th. world, and to a larg. etnt not opaU. ot Imitation slHWbsrs. The origin of most of the Industries, as has been men, can be traced Lack to China or to Corse, but they bav. been eo modified hi the bands of th. Japanese artisan that they now possess aa eminently national character. like the agriculture, the work I. Most entirely by hand. There are but few workshop, of any alas, most ot the ma.utactartng being done on a small soals or eves ia the homes ot the wnrkmsa. Ia a number of the Industrie however, the division of labor bat been earriei out to a large extent A peculiar feature of the so cial organisation of Japanese manufacture! It the descent of a trade from father to so la ta crystal factories tola Is particularly the ease, and men there are doing exactly What their grandfathers did, only doing It a tittle better. And It to quite possible lust their peculiar sklU It doe ia a large measure so heredity, .sea generation making some little pragma, and transmitting It. accu mulated acqultltloni to the next The fat raesaoeJs. (Mm Orleans Tim as-Democrat. Ten ears be. wbea 1 ate. a tent a eeeain laisesblm no then and there, fit beta older tat I kinder alows HP a bit IT belt young, or look. Ilk. there's plenty of run and Jump In aim, why I Just gose ahead, knowin1 he's bound to make the landing. But them fat una as lives blgb and ain't got no wind It the enteidest fat, Vuse I've got to eome to a fuU stop sad M Vat on, and what with makln' eh ante, a turnia' ot the brake and pullln' at a fool mala I gets eo hot and nta4 that by the time 1 get. to where nobody gate on, and I get out my tin bocket with my vltoals in it, blew self Ikla eat a bite." - A Honest Man. . - - ,. "I am going down town," said a citizen on ft Woodard avenue car yes terday, "to, return a lost wallet to its owner. ' Every man in the car pricked up his ears, and one of them moved up closer and inquired: - ; : "You found a wallet, eh ?" "Yes, sir." :-'On the street f" ' ' " " ""Yes." 4 --7-.V " ' "In the daytime ?',',.. " "No; at night." . ' - , f'Anybody see you pick it up I" "Not a soul." : - " . "And you have been perfectly safe la keeping it r Z ' "I would." "Well, sir, let me shake hands with you. I havo wanted to livelong enough to find an honest man, and I have found him."- ' They shook. Many of the passengers were visi bly aflected. "And how much was in the walletf queried the interrogator after wiping his eyes on a pink-bordered hand kerchief. "Not a blamed cent l" ( Then the curtain went down and the audience filled out. A Dull Outlook. "Have you been kept in again at school?" asked "an Austin . father of his son, who came slinking home just at dark." "Yes, sir, I didn't know my jozrafv lesson." "Good heavens alive boy, if you are kept in that way now. at a little one horse school, when you go to the university of Austin, vou won't ect homo once every two or three years." Arhmsaw Traveler. Js STQS? The largest stock in N. Carolina, AND THE BEST PLACE TO BUY." WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD . B T77"'J.. C .' f , m . . ... . , , sw utwjut opcemt vewutoywfl ana iermt.wt , x. - ' i . . J-L.STONE.; . - janl4 RALEIGH, N. C. PIANOS, ORGANS NEW HOM MaeMnea oewhig How he Waa Saved. rkins Snifkin failed 1 Well 1 I had a narrow escape yesterday,- He tried to borrow ten dollars from me." Posonby "You didn't lend it to him f "No, indeed. I suspected there was something wrong, and and" "Well r "The fact is, I didn't have the ten dollars.", .. . Far Fetched but Good. A Tenneaesee young man recently tent a fervent note to hit girl, asking her to elope. The old man, however, guarded her to carefully that the waa unable to do so. But the managed to send bim a nice muskmelon. The cantelope" told him just how mat ters stood. , ' Professional Consolatoin. Family Physician "Well. I con gratulate you. raucnt (.excitedly) "I will re- recover." : Familv Phvcian Sat at1 but well, after consultation a find that jour dinette Is entirely novel, anu ii tun autopsy anouia demon strate that fact we have decided to name it after you." uver tnree minion oiaoiitra in tin i ver were Daid out from the U. 8, 1 I IVfisn.ry one day last week. The Secret of Tobacco 0irinr Every farmer who lu iust com menced raisins tobacco: andeverv one who does not thoroughly under stand how to cure it should bave a copy. Six different receipet to cure by. Will cure tobacco on gray, sandy, or the fine Beaver Dam lands. fcvery farmer can cure his own to btcco equally as well aa the finest curcr in the State, simply by follow ing directions. The only book ever published bv which anv one can cure tobacco successfully. The reasons why you should have it. 1st. It costs less than yon can hire any one to cure for you. 2nd. It tells how vou can tell when you are going too fast or two slow. 3rd, It will, cure to bacco brieht and leave the leaf rich and waxy. 4tb. It tells you more than ! - I. 1.11 1 uj curvr is wining vu ten, ana more man you can learn in years or ex Ecnence. Farmert rights for tale yE. U. Hackney, Durham, N. C. Price, 5. Bend by P. O. Order or registered leuer, or by Bank check. The following have accepted the agency to sell the above 'receipt: C. C. Kin Durham, N. C; W. W. Ellington, Durham, N. C; Capt Thos. Stephens, Winttead; Col. John Asbley, Clinton, N. C; Ji G. Whit field Jr.. Raleieb. N. C: Frank Whitfield, LouUburg, K. C; George Hester, Hester's Store, N.C; R.F. DeVane, Farelteville, N. C: A. William, Apex. Dckham, N. C, Aug. 1, 1885. This ia to certify that I have told Mr. Rencber'e tobacco for several years, and can bear testimony to the tact that be makes fine tobacco and bandlee it well. Mr. Rencher It re Earded as a very successful corer. I ave told about at good tobacco for mm at ror any one. Yert respectfully. . J. PlARlslL Agents wanted In each township or county. Knowing the wants of neonle with very tender feet. I ask vonr atten. Uon to my line of OLD GENTS AND LADIES WIDE BOTTOM, FLAT , HEEL, FLEXIBLE, SOFT SOLE SHOES, . TIES, SLIPPERS AND ' BUSTINIS, NO CREAKING, ; NO RIPPING THE FINEST Line and best assorted stock of W. licet, Trunks, Sachcls, Railroad Bag! uierx caca atc ooutn or tue fotomac. PLEASE Call asiel Esanalae thesn at tba . .. asee-a ( . . PHOTOGRAPHS. Our business has steadily increased and has been built np by the tecommenda- ,. tion of those who have patronized us. We have sufficient belief in the practical common sense of the public to know that it . does not need much persuasion to induce them prefer the best clam of work. Those who have patronized nt have in all cases become firmlv nei-oniutivl of the advantage of getting (he best likeness. Sparkling Likeness, swift touch of the sun. liy n Instantaneous Process, splendidly MLutely and truly reflecting each grace, Noble brow, beaming eye. and beauty of face! tvhat a triutnphof skill, as wondrous as new ten the rival of Nrture. Appollo never drew - , More beautiful pictures or portraits as true. Dry Plates have nrodutttd a MS jim tn Photography. We now make all our sit tings by the Instantaneous Process. We now meet fretty babies with a smile, new. oat persons with an assurance of success. SHELBURN'S GALLERY, Main St., Durham, N. C. Opposite vauglian &Tanyi drn w w ... store. june 3tf J. A. Crigg ; Pace Block, Richmond, Va. Ml- ' - 7 Real Estate Agency. We have formed ft conartnershio for the s.le, leasing, and renting real estate of EFERY DEWIPIIOJ.. Those wuhlij to buy" or sell Town Lots, Dwellings and Farms should consult ns. ; Special attention elven to tale of lobacco tarms. lerms made known on application. J. T. CURBETT. E. C. IlArrsET. Real Ettato Agents. . J D WILBON, tfanufacturer of and dealer in HARNESS, SADDLES, COLLARS BRIDLES, COMBS, BRUSHES, WHIPS,., Repairing Neaty and Promptly done. PEALEB IW REFRIGERATORS. ICE CREAM FREEZERS, WATER COOLERS, .. , And Stands of the most IMPROVED PATCERN. Also a full Una nf Wi TV.I. ti Traps, Fruit Jars, China, Glass-Waw &i All at bottom prices. . ' . W. II. HUGHES, oa, Raleigh, N.C. jn20 Near the Yarboro House. Largest Stock in the State DOORS, SASH, BLINDS, TRAN .. SOMS, HOT BED SASH. Price Lists on reques WINDOW GLASS, PRE ABED COLORS, COACH AND t AR Varnisnev Ulue, c-nsnes and everything ' . in the Paint and Glass line, w! olesale and retail. BINSWANG&it A CO. . 1427 Main St. & 210 Broai Stm. ' nl4-6m Ricomond, Va. TliT Carringtpn Bar I offer now as I have been doing in the past thi . BEST, SAFEST LIQORS OF all descriptions. I will guarfcawj you satisfaction in every particular and.' give ft valuable miii pro quo for all outlays mde with me. I offer to sell THE FINEST 1D BEST LLE of Foreign and Wines, dears, die., either by retail or wholesale.' ' When yon come to Durham besure and see me the FIXED FACT in my line of business. The tobacco farmert are specially invited to call and take up some of the excellent , bargains. Respectfully, -feb25 . a R. CARRINGTON. NEW CITY BAKERY slaving just opened a New Bakery in the Barbee Building Sain St., Dnrltan, N O I am prepared to fill orders for aU kinds ' of Breads, Cakes, Pies &c., at low prices The services of a man of Thirteen yean ex perience in the largest Bakery in the State of Virginia, hu been secured. lean gnat ante, to my friends goods as 6n as the best made. In addition to the Bakery I will keep ft LARGE STOCK . of all kinds of Canned Goods, Pickles Fruit, and everything else kept in a Fancy Grocery Store. I ask my Durham friends for a si tare of their patronage believing that they will be well pleased witb verytbinf bought from me. . Very truly, JVC- Wilkerson dcc!7. Main tt Durham, N. C Tin . A YT!4'A'ei sWes a Shsti. shs.W.a UWAas B wr Ointment. Basement of Lea A Main street. Warren's Warehouse, DURHAM, N.C, All work warranted and as cheap as relia able good, can be sold. juno3-ly Cedar Grove Academy, llu ad Feils. 8es.iont.open the Second Mom'ay In January and July of each year. Terms per Session of five months I English Course, 1 12.50 to $15.00. Classical Course, $2.3.00. Music with useof Instrument, $15.00 Boaid per month, $8.00. Address a. C Palton, Principal, Cedar Grove, Orange Co., N. C (Joly I-ly. Cum Bone Felons, Risings, Bruises, Roils. Sprains, Dyptheria, Burnt, While Swelling, Tettei, I'lles, Inflamed breast, of Femalos, Chapped bands, Toothache, corns sad all similar deria.ee. It it highly re commended by Dm L. A. Ilatiks, J. B. Bumea, PitUbore, T. B. Lvon.J. T.Mal iory, J. B. Ilargores, Dr. W. M.Lowe, and many others of Durham. For sal. by all druggists. Propounded by J. 1L llaXToir, May 130m. Wilmington, N. C. V. E, Simons & Bra. BLKK-BOOK MTSITACTIR'S. FULL LINE OF BLANK' BOOKS and books of every kind made to 0 121 A 1203. Main Sl, Richmond. Vs. ct22Iy Ton Should Leave your orders with At water A ration for bay, corn meal, flour and everything eUe offered for tale by heavy and fancy grocery dealers. r .. . h : ; " ir? aaa l