Newspapers / The News & Observer … / June 12, 1886, edition 1 / Page 2
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3 tt! -'a W 1- -M . ;-' 5 1- TUESDAY JUNE 1 15; 188&V j PUBUBBD DilLT (KXOODt MpKBAV) Bt THE NEWS AND OBSERVER Oo. Dally one year, mall, postpaid,' I t 00 I m -su months," .(.; ' in ! ; three . n Weekly, one year. s a 00 six months , M" 00 No name entered without payment, and no paper aent alter the expiration of time paid for , 8ATUBPAT, JUNE 12. 1886. ; . Thxu if but one bachelor President in the oonntrj now Unolo Sammy Til den -and he is past matrimonial ; re demption, we fear. ! U Mt. JEm has at length stopped Spouting lava, but earthquakes of con siderable violence continue to be felt throughout the iEtua region.! ; It seems to be prettj; well agreed that there shall be a dissolution of Par lament and that Lord Hartington shall be asked to form a new ministry, '( m e ' Burn is free to saj that ahejdoes not sustain Canada in the 'matter of the fish bait.. It will be found thai no nation of these times will deliberately tread on the -eoat-tail of the United States. . . -. V- L : ! : Chicago now trots out some boodle aldermen men who 1 have j accepted bribes from' a street railway company The western metropolis doet not ;Jro pose to let New York get ahead of her even in the matter of official corruption. . II I IB , ; ' :' Tkb democrats of Ohio are making arrangements for their State convention ana xor a general eoniexenee. laey will endeavor to make it impossible or sueh a thing f as the recent legislative muddle to occur again. j Hxm-boisiko Mr. Ratherfraud ; Hayes is said to be seeking the'republi ean nomination for Congress in his dis trict; but as bis district happens to be Frank Hurd's also, and as this is Frank Hurd's year to be elected we do ' sot see that there is any chance for Mr. Hayes. . ' Tbb decision of the circuit court made yesterday in the case of James T. Mc Clelland vs. the North Carolina; rail road eompany et al. was important in that the suit involved some $700,000 or m ore. At we . printed, ; the ease Was dismissed,' the opinion in the oase hav ing eenled byXAief Justice Waitef Wn notios that the-4BOustie8; of ihl 8jtate are beginning to makepproprial tioni 61 pnblio funds in aid and or the eneouragement' of their military oom-; panics. This is a good ideal The mi- fit iaiaHhii last resbrt of the civil au ' thority, and as4 such should :be j main- ? , tained in ecienoy. ; "It Tu Rev. Dr. A. .W. Miller, in a loi ter to 4he Charlotte Hbme-Demoerat, nominates Joho Everett Brady to, tno- eeed Dr. Hooper, at Chapel Hilli He says of his nominee: ' 'Can any one sh9w a production equal to his 'Neugrieehis- chen Lautveranderungen?' i Measured by the high scholarship-standard of Germany, be is' able to teacli Greek,1 Latin, German, French, Italian :Ne jGreek, Saaskritj History,' Llteriture: A young tonokr, ha ' has alreidj, . is . Greeo altd 'Germany, attained to dis uoaon .apa .. oobierrea nonoru upon North Carolina. He is destined; we are persuaded, to be one of the brightest jewels in her coronet of gloty andre-i sown., febill hot Norih Carolina, equally' with Germany and Greece reoognizo me rare gu, tne ntgn amtitioii, the indomi&ble .energy, the unsullied, character, the marked success : 61 1 her ' Kbl jftb.hr' ; l I : FaoM the SUte papers we gather that all the crops, from the rioe of the east to the buckwheat of the mountains, are promising. The northeastern section of the Sate seems to le particularly fell favored in this regard. - The acreage b ' tobaeeo has bees reduced, but 'this will work no loss, since every planter has determined to make, a crop better in quality than usual to make up in. care for his product, in other words, what he may lack in acreage. It is gratifying to observe these facts, and the further fact that! agricultural methods are im proving rapidly throughout the State. 4 irannnw u beios more intelliirentlv done than heretofore and the brofits of the industry are being increasod accord- "fly- V . ; . - r : ' A j-: V . ! -e-i t : A ooutupoHncRT of the Baltimore Manufacturers' Record, writing froiiju Morehead eity under date of the 4th inst.,'hat thisto say of eastern North Carolina: '.Plums, peaches, nectarines and grapes "flourish in these jeastcrn counties, except where they are', too ei posed to the strong ocean winds. Plums, and grapes are (indigenous, and abund ant.' Peaches and nectarines must be cultivated. When they have been' will eared for, they produce large ereps iof fine fruit. I Both could be made j refita- . ble produots of this section, and increase considerably the volume of railroad freights. But the greatest single sou jc of increase in its outgoing freight the railroad will get from the cultivation o oystera in these waters. In time thin will become the leading industry of the sound.cotuities. Lieuteifant Winslow who is in charge of the oyster survey; says the present area, of oyster bods m the waters of this Bute is 6,000 acres, and the annual product is 'from 175,000 to 200,000 bushels. He estimates that in Bogue ' and Core soonds there are not less than 75, 000 acres that can be gardened suoecss fully. These oyster grounds extend east and west- from this harbor, which would nataraQ handle most of their. output, whioh, with all these grounds Well Cultivated, would bo 8,000,000 bushels annually. This State can event tally furnish 25,000,000 bushels ' of low. It will be a long time before all this j vast area beneath the waters is put un der cultivation, but in a small tentative way muoh has already been aeeonpliah- ed, and the general interest in the sub ject in all these coast counties indicates the anxiety of the people to pusn ahead this development as fast as possible." J BLAISE'S WEAK EX lib KIP. The Maine republicans in their State convention nominated for Governor the machine candidate, the wealthy Mr. Bo dwell, Blaine's man, but the result seems only to have been attained by the Overriding of the best sentiment in the republican party of the State and by the most unscrupulous operation of tho 31aine machinery. According to all stories, the' primaries, which were ma nipulated by Blaine's boss, were the inost farcical the republican party has ever been responsible for and than this no iaore can be said. The result is the greatest possible disgust on, the part of all decent republicans in the State with Blaine methods and ah unmistakable revolt against that leader. The better class of republicans desired the nomi nation of Dr. Hamlin, a nephew of the ex-Vice-President of his name, a veteran soldier and the head of the Grand Army organisation in the State. He however1 has a position and a following of his own and was therefore not suitable for the purposes of Blaine. He is not rich either and the machine proposed to have no candidate who would not be able to contribute liberally toward Blaine's nomination in 1888. He was therefore set aside and the soldier ele ment naturally feels that it has been snubbed. It protests therefore emphat ically against the. machine and the con sequence will in all probability be a considerable defeotion from the machine candidate. , Meanwhile the ; democrats have nominated a man who was a gallant soldier si their candidate and it is not impossible that the democrats will carry the 8tate. Some of the more enthusiastic of : our friends claim indeed that it is not only possible but probable. At all events, it is evident that Blaine has been seriously injured by the ignorable soil of his lieutenants and that he is losing his grip on what has hitherto been his pocket borough par excellence. The decay of his influence is simultaneous with the dissolution of his party which we see going on all about us daily with even astonishing rapidity. The latest evidence of this dissolution is discover ed in the result of the reoent election in Oregon to which reference is made elsewhere. t i OKXeOS AKJMMJKATIC. There lias been a political vpbeava in Oregon. The people of that State havejrepudiated republicanism. They hav4 elected a democratic governor by a majority of certainly 1,500 and pos sibly 1 2,000 votes, -whereas at tho last .gubernatorial election tho majority the republican candidate was 1,412 and Blaine's majority in 1884 was 988, his Jlurality being ,256. Moreover the emocrata , have elected their candidate for treasurer and probably their eandi date' for secretary of State. Th legis-, laturVtoo is democratio. In short' the overthrow of the enemy is almost com plete. ; The result is one of , the most remarkable instanees of the times of popular disgust with republican methods and turning, to the purer ways and sounder principles of democracy. The republican party is going to pieces in Its very strongholds. .- There will soon be none so poor to do it reverence. The new Governor, Mr. Pennoyer, is a man Of positive force land generally estima ble qualities, whose ability is conceded even bl those who opposed him. His' election will do much to strengthen and eneourage the demoeratio workers of the Pacific, ooast. i ' . N ' ' iLr a letter to the Baltimore Sun, Col. ttr v rt . . . rim. x uraignui, me engineer m oharge of government work in this de partment, suggests a change in the method of making appropriations for rivers aqd harbors. His idea is' that. instead of acting as now, Congress shall appoint a joint committee or create a commission whose duty it shall be to consider the whole subject of river and harbor;; improvements in toe United States, 'designate the rivers and harbors thai should be impro ved at the ex Dense of 'the Federal treasury in the order of their importance and indicate the proper way to, improve them; ascertain the total expense for each, and finally suar- gestj one for all, the sum that should be annually made available to carry on in proper order ! the improvements deemed advisable. .Perhaps such a bian l- i . - .... wouia conduce to eoonomv and if an it nouid be: adopted bv all means. There- is no reckoning how much of the people's money is annually squandered in the work of cleaning out ditches and tr vine w maxe naroors out oi aucx-ponds. I -', 1 rlalty Clls; COMMUICtMSNT IXIKCI8ES.TH1 SIRJIOH BT THX KXV. DB. ABDKXSS J. T. BAG WELL BT THS RV. W AlCKUAt THiLXTT. Staff Correspondence. Tuesday! was occupied chiefly bv speaking and declamation by the fresh men, sopnomorea and juniors. All the efforts of these young gentlemen were creditable in a high degree; vyednesday morning was ushered in with tdark, dull-gray clouds chasins- each Other gloomily through space, fleet greetings of sunshine and solemn. sombre shadows interspersed with driving rain. ofitt, ;ua u9 uuur tur uie exeroues SO eginr- eleven o clock, crept on apace, the ;jsgebjill which has a seating oapaoity of twentynve hundred,, was oomfortably occupied by a large and in telligent audience. ; After fervent nraver and thasinffinir of that.; good! old hymn, whioh always xi w a isaQiuauon lor me ana orings one nearer .to his Maker, to-wit, ."Jesus. Lovef gf my Soul," Dr. J. T. Bagwell came to the front and soon ohasea the olouds of care away. .;; V ITH1SUMOH. Hereadas htf text; Psalm 49, fiy.; Acts 4, 12v. ; Hebrews 10-26, 12, 25 and 27 verses. His theme was "Chris tianity a finished, and final syBtcm of truth, as distingushed from a progressive science fi 'Iatroimction : : The , arrogance and ippanoy'of scepticism in asserting the conflict between religion and science, and therefore ho doeadenee of religion and its final relegation to the category of exildded myths , of 'the past, arises from confounding .things that i are not the same. They fail to make a distinc tion between religion as an embodiment of, great and eternal principles and theology, which is the human conception and formulation of truth, or supposea truth. The one is fixed,- invariable and final ; the other is variable and transient in the ratio of embodied errors. The same distinction that is claimed for science as to the great : underlying and fixed principles and : the successive changes in creed-by new discoveries without invalidating true science, is also claimed for religion. Notice some of the leading truths of religion as a system that is settled and abiding, though accompanied by varie ties of conception and expression in some of our creeds. 1. The doctrine of atonement for sin. This haw three classes of facts as analo gies historical, governmental and philo sophic all eonfirming the theological and Scriptural 'The fact that each sue oeeding life is conditioned upon pre ceding vicarious death is a strong con hrmation of the position of Ubrist in his relation to the race as a sacrifice for sin. ; This central and substantial doctrine dm variety of conception. (1). As to its atoning or moral effect. (5). As to imputation and the quality and quantity of Christ's, suffering, (a) As to the universality or particularity of its pri mary application. (4) As to the uni versality or particularity of its final effect It has its heathen, Jewish and Christian aspects. "While some of these conceptions may be false, the centra? doctrine remains. ' ' .; 2. Revelation of Divine truth. While this was progressive up to a given point, it is finished, sealed to which nothing is to be added frdm which nothing is to be taken. 1 heologically we may differ in our views of it- as to the class r and value of the evidence of its genuine ness ; snd autnenticity its inspira tion-:-whether substantial or verbal plenary or partial, and therefore of our value of different parts, but substan tially we sgree upon tbfe eentral truth that God has spoken to man. 3. The gospel in some form. Gospel defined. Whatever brings Christ to tne ravoraDie apprenension of xaa whether in the Bible, literature, science, art, poetry, music anything that in corporates Christ into' the world thought and life. While there may be variety as to form and accident, there is unity as to substance and fact. It will continue through all time. 4. Faith in Christ. ! : This also has its analogy in that all associations and cor porstiona are united ; by faith. It has its heathen, Jewish and Christian pacts. Ait central truth of religion it is permanent because essential. 6. Conformity to religious conscious ness or righteousness. This includes moral ? perpendicularity ?ejf attitude, morai Balance, moral purity. This re sult is the legitimate work of Christian lty. To it no one osn obieoW It is the formation of fixed and permanent char acter. 6. Christianity opens to us and pre pares us ror immortality, in this it ap peals to the deepest .and tenderest in stincts Of our being as well as to the principles of right reason. "Light and immortality are brought to light through the gospel." So that religion begins With atonement for sin in which Christ is given for the life of tho world and culminates in the enthronement of glorified humanity in heaven forever. ubrist is the only sacrifice: no other name, no other salvation, no other hope. "He that belie veth shall, be saved; he that believeth not shall; be damned' The doctor is a deep thinker and he made an irresistible appeal 'to true man hood and. truthfulness, which caused him to be listened to with marked at tention. I Prayer by the Rev. Dr. Robey was then offered and a recess followed. ; At three o'clock' the Rev. Dr. Jones introduced the Rey. W. F. Tillett, pro fessor of systematic theology in Vander bilt university, Nashville, Tenn. The Rev. Mr. Tillett is the: son of Rev. John Tillett, of the M.' K.; confer ence, and was born in that portion of Granville oounty thai is ! now Vance. He graduated at Randolph-Maoon. UTSRAST AODRISS. i ! Prof. Tillett addressed his remarks to the young geitlemen of the literary so cieties, and took as his subject the worn-out : theme of The Ne South." While the subject ! is thread bare, though, it , was far j-from being barren of original ideas as presented uv we progressive proiesspr. tie is a clear, aggressive, clean-cut speaker and presented the "New South (in an en tirely new light to many. He admitted that it was an old theme. We oould not agree with him in many of the com- parisons he made between the old and the new South. He stated, however. that be did not come to preach the 4 1 .s il i n .' j . . lunerai or tne Old ooutn. or to nraise the new at the expense of the old. The old had given birth to many statesmen, out was sadly wanting in men of let ters. The old South, said the speaker, was ordained of God. and when its mis sion was accomplished God brought it to an end. He stated that it was an instru ment for the civilisation of the negroes and the price" paid for civilization was slavery. He made a few remarks on the negroes' future. He spoke of the new South, of the white man,'; and en larged on the freedom of the white man. who "was freed from indolence and brought to honest labor:' I Th rU Southerner war a gentleman c of leisure and not a laborer. The new South has no usef or the non-worker -nd tha bin. slugs accruing therefrom are many. 1 He stated'that the first ten years after the war were a deeade of monrainfr. HVtW Byan poetry and reconstruction. It took ten years to get to worlr. kiwfithA new South was born A. D. 1875. and legan to show itself in 1880. 1 There were. marked evidences of imDroVem'ont Ho pointed out how the white Inaonle had boon freed and set to work, and "We do hrebv certify that we ttroerrlM the i fytnir n tr twr'rit thr Munlfcl)" XDt XJtais ry CdlnKU&) anf in-Bersufnsage ana eon iW 'the liWihitl ttfen h'e. and that the ...... ti A . II 1 .In 111 In good faith toward all parttea, and we auUio rize Um ComMoy to uaa-tKia aistiScate with lalmiles oi bar sinat&fe attached, ia Its ad- vertisementa." We U?e nndentgned Buki and Baakera will pay all Trizes drawn In The Louisiana SUte Lotteries Which may be presented at our coun- teros Frmm. ijoutmlmom 9ltlnl w. mviajlKETif, rWl BAXJUWIM, RlUMkl Baiak. 1KPEECEDENTED ATTSACT10N1 y , Ovaa liar aiUiximr Distmbiticd. Loeigiui iiUle forcibly showed the dignity of labor and life's true mission. He gave evidence of tnnght and proof obtained rv"' u wiUu iuiu wi reading done exprrtIy, be. stated,. tor this occasion. He discussed what the new South is doing in material prosperity; education, fruit growing, truck fr';" itig, eto. In speaklngof eottoiThe aatd there waa 30 per cent' more aoitou raised than before the war, in ipltc of the alleged fact that cotTOn ciSW nolle raised without slave labor. This in crease means millions, He pointed the millions of increase of wealth', by tor bacco growing, the lumber business and manufaototies and showed that cotton factories could be run far more cheaply than at the North He referred to the iron and coal trade and stated that Bir minghsm. Ala., received for 363 days a eheck daily for $lU.uuv for iron, and that Pennsylvania oould not compete with Alabama, West Yir einia or North Carolina in either coa! or iron. The nail trade amottii ted to millions, and he showed by facts and figures taken from statistics an increase of millions and billions since 1880 from four sources alone, to-wit: Agricultural products, stock raising, manufactories and mining. All this provs that tue Southern man has gone to work, and on the grave of the old SoUth is building a name far s-rander than the old. The wealth of the South has increased forty one per cent, the white population fif teen per cent. XDCOAT10K Popular education is far ahead of anything ever known in the old South, and we are in full sight of tho day when illiteracy will no longer curse our land. The South is doing more for education than any other section of the Union. It is giving one third of its taxation. North Carolina in 1869 gave nothing In 1870 she gave $43,000. Today she gives XeoO.OUU. Xaw, be- Bid, is pretty good for a State mudc up of mummies. He read facts and figures highly complimentary to North Carolina from Col- AlcClure's book on the two Carolinas. He stated that North Caro lina lacked a metropolis of tradei Dr. Cunningham stated here that Raleigh was dry and therefore would soon he a trade centre. Dr. Tillett replied that Winston and every other dry . town would vie with each other m. til they would all be large trade centres PREPARATORY SCHOOLS. On this point he showed that the col leges were to blame for our not having such schools all over the South asBing- (and he might have said Davis , tool. 1 be want of such was an .evil He was opposed to boys being admitted to college who ought to be at preparatory schools. He said the colleges killed off preparatory schools by trying to; be a university, college and preparatory school a sort of omnium gatherum Each should have its distiosliv woti. The colleges should have a.high standard of admission and should stand bribe examination, If an applicant ia not fit to enter it should say so and let them go to a preparatory school; then pre paratory schools will flourish The remedy must come from the college. As 11 is me colleges are rivals ot the pre paratory schools. He stiitod that there were in the new South 22 rer cent more 1 tersry .writers tnauwio.tuc war audi WA5T1 men. women.r-d bora in! the most popular authors were from, the TV addition to my 44 Boarders, tq eat Clam soup tomorrow at is akkljsi'. YM & R S TUCKER & CL lottery tean. IncorporaUd la 1868 for tS yean by the Leg. ulature lor eaacanonai ana enantaoie poses-with a capiUl ot 11,000,000 to which a reserve fund of over 6W,000 has since beea added. By an overwhelming popular vote iU fran chise waa made a part of the present State con- titution adopted December 2d, A. D., 1879. ; The only Lottery- ever voted on and en dorsed I'V tne peeple of any mate. '. Ita - rBd tOnKl JtBinbor Ummmimm will take place monthly. It never scalca or boMtponea. Look at the following listrtbu- tion : 1D3k! timnd SfMbtx AND TUK Eitraoiiij Uuai Urlj Iti the AcUcmy of Mutic, New Tim sday, June 1 186, : Under the j rsonal miiKirvLsiuB and man agement ot t Gen. G-T. BEAUREGARD, of Louisiana, Gen. JUBAL A. tAKLY, of Virginia. : CAPITAL PRIZlr $150,000. sar Kotice Tkketa are Te Dollars only. Halves, f6.J(i h fa. Tentha fl. LOST OF FBI&C8. DrwiDf Urleun", WK INVITB ATTENTION . , TO 5BX RECENT ADDPIONS We hive made to our stock of OR ESQ GOODS :fOR EveniiMt Wear. IKCLUMSO White and Sera Etasataiea, White and Oreaa Canvaa, White, Cream, iTory Wbttv Ceil MUe, HeUotrope, Koae and Prelate At batraea and Triewtiaea. BUBAH8 AND SATIliV I la. Evening Shade, j CompJUte Lines of Colors and Shades Laoas is full-depth flounces, Alio vert ai Edge, tttaeiital, Egyptian and An ' tiqaa Valeneteanesa, Cream, Ivory White, eru and Betge. IPricea lower than any house in the tra.i VBi. H. 4R.8. T1KTK1CR fiiisins: la the wisdom In keeprng up aa ' equilibrium l trees frasa l beam tor whiter we hve Ukea th exatustv Rakigb el . um in t'saperature and rclievms; die. f n heat well aa eold, aad havtac lftBK-tlWfi f atww' ui.plytngtne i IDE From date, aad wa are now rtadvtai d. liver to aU who-wiah It, from our wagon, our tore on: fasetUryUle tHet and our ware- boute art)M entral iHpoC Tbow.hhJ4tHifclstroui the lee Coea exehaagf theas far wars of the same denoml. nation, oy prmtmng at eitrer piM. TO TILE Schools of IM. C EDWiRDS, BSOUfiHTON ft Et EALEIGLQ, N, (,. Have the Best Equipped ,1 Capital Prize of - 1 Grand Fiizeof : 1 Urand prize of .; 2 LargePa izes of ' 4 Large Prizes of 20 Prizes of 60 " too 200 600 " 1,000 " APPROIIHATlOH PRIZXS. 100 Approximat'a Prizes ot f 200 100 " 100 100 " " 78 tl 50,000 00,000 20,000 10,000 6,000 1,000 600 800 200 100 60 6C,tO SC.OO 21-,0 2(.0O 20,00 25 00 30 ,00 40,. 0 1',00 $20,000 10,000 700 9622,500 mould be 2,278 Prizes, amounting to ApDlication tor rate& to clubs made only to the office of the company in New Orleans. For farther information write clearly, givinc eU address. POSTAL NOTES, Express oney Orders, or New York Exchange Ut or dtaarr letter. Currency by Express (at our fixpense) addressed ' iSVA swatjwssjja, mm' mjua. Duarrm. Hake P. O. Money Orders payable and ad drwWftteetetered Letters to s mt oayujn MATwatAt saw, i -; CUw Orleans. La WANTED. , w Ortn, Lau Printing & Bindinr Establishment in North' Carolina tou wurr CATALOGUES INVITATIONS, CIRCULARS, ftc A Larre Lot of Nov Tvm and KrcS 1 Paper Just Arrived for tho 8ohi tirade.. I J Address, EDWABDS, BROUGHTON A (X I RaisuoB, N. C. IfillMTJlE! rjca of noapn a oluws : tObaarfea; 6 or ars-deUver4 at a time. W t9mMA1' " " anoM a.an& 1 lm aanvls lr sh4rtna caasfsflly packed, 7&c pss 1M ast brrS) and packing included. Sold for CiB UKLY. Orders respect fully solicited and promptly filed. JWttfelWLL, Sfc rlalith..N. fl. iiysssn'i ma arrrmcs amcrraLi v cuhkd HtsSh. Lavtaia Kreth. 11 1 VK Edeatoa stnatf RalsiKb. N. C-el ibmUsss .asd rencra- debtlity. Nothing elue would furnish any relief. GLUTS' FURNISHING EDDDS. The largest and most COMPLETE STOCK in th -city. NOVELTIES UAILT RECEIVED. SPECIALTIES in their South. Cause: Freedom of the negro and rising of genius. Moralifjr as greater now; society better: ten times better,. . More interest is shown .since the breaking uo of the ecclesiastical aristocracy. PXKaCHzaa or th saw sooth. lie stated mat the preachers were better educated and the cry arose all over the land: "Send us educated preachers of the three great educated workers Moses. Daniel and Paul.'' He showed that Faul, with his learn ing, (did more than all the twelve ; simple fishermen put to gether.! The old Methodist ministers' rule used to be, "If you "can't talk. holler. ? They hollered, and hollered until they hollered out. Their day Is past. He then gave the young men some good advice on decision and push, and an "arousal" on "big-head" and college conceit. Both tho latter indi cate failure before beginning lhe address was well delivered and was received with prolonged applause tnrougbout. u. a,. Walks. A CAPTAIN'S FOBTUKATK DISOOVKBY. Capt Coleman, schr. Weymouth, plylnr be tween Atlantic City and N. Y.. hid twn troubled with a eouxh setbat he was unable ta aieep, and wai Induced to try Or. King's Ww Discovery for Consumption. It not onlv gave nun issiani rener, duk auayeu lae ex- streme soreness in bs breast- Bis children were similar lv affectd and a einele dose ha. I the same happy effect. Dr. King's New Dis-j co very is now the standard remi dy in the 1 Coleman household and on board the schooner Free Trial Bottles of this Standard Uemedv at aii urag eooies. 'ANTED. Four or five brhrha. honest ' dots 10 ieu ail tne other bovs In town that JtacBae keeps the beet cigarettes. WANTED town a large stock Store. to place in every family id aae of Buffalo Lithfa water. Just received at ataeBaVa Drug U BOWK '8 1B0N BITTERS .CUBED HE. i M. G. Lovelace, Eeidsvillsv N. C Wheq troubled with liver and kidney affecUon, Ha expresses himself as much pleased with tta effect The Best of Eveiyth ng XOUNiQ Ladies Wanted.-To call and ex X amine the elegant line ot toilet art idea. Perfumeries,' &c. at J, T. MacBaea Dnu; r ANTED. The yeungmen of Baleiglto si tain I rAAArhAlAli UiutPaJa jmsusvw a4 -) P .w-: wysfivs ism , rwrssMiw w tviau smbi smose his nne els ANTXl.-: ry smoker m town to try icBae's Mikado cigars. Lvei onset J.T. Mac W ANTD.-Xvery body who s thirty all atMaeEaes and drink lee-cold Soda aad Mineral water; C LEBK8 WAN TED TO buy their cW. iand toilet artietes at MaeKae's, ouraer Wilmington, Martin and Market streets. - : ' XT ANTS in the drug line of ail descripi r V tions can be nlled at MacKae'a Dnur Store. ' , " ANTED E" IT know that Mu tion to mail orders. verjuody cae in gives tb State U special sttcn- I Look IIr! We will trada a good pair of mules for lum ber or a good buggy horse. 1. C BUEWSTER k CO. Conceit may puff a man up, but never prop him up. "OTANTED-Everybody to know that they TV can get their nfescriDtiona filled with care afad din patch at MacBae's Drug 4 tore. 7ANTKD.-Eery body suffering with T V torpid liver to come to J. Y. lfaeSaa and drink bis Limeade. ' 1 WANTiuD Men and women to atarTa hew business at their homes, eusilv learned in an hour. 10c to 60c an haur made aariuse or sveainir. Ind l e. for a naitkasw ot amplc and 24 working samples to com mence on. Address ALBANY ifiUPPl.Y tin... tr r -T ssay 18-dlia WT. K IfcV KPSWaw Sfl f" n ft 1 1 1 Ceres flheumstiim, Nearalata ror ra r SALESMEN WAKTKI) by John Wanamaker. Phnadelnhta. fnr Dry Goods, Uoeiery, Underwear and Notions. :Only elperienced men; with trade. Apply by tetter, confidential, of course. i ' June 6 d on Satftgun St. i j IS cuss & Carter. Sp ' ecial Bargains Ceres Hititfca, txtSiiSi, IItiI Wrwitti tit tim PBltK, rU'TT CKJiTS. 1 um uiuo at Toesua coarAsr, auraoaa, mm. In order to reduce stock, riming- this month wesjoffiar , j cial Bargains lliKS AND VELVETSJ OK fits. eass ii s Dress BARGAINS Uf r Goods, The best I everything Is what seniUs pen pie want; eseeiaOy; in provteiona; and. eape cUUly when econemy is swsesaary, fp thtre no economy In poor goods. The. best EWo and MeaLto make the best breadj the best Teas and Coffees, the bsst Meats, Spices, Soaps, Starches; th best and. moat reliable smew Goods, the best ot everything. Taka,farex ample, the essential article, Butter; I sek tba choice Butter from the dairy farms Dr, lUoham lAwi Mr. W. 6. Upchureh, Ml A. B. Green; and Mrs. IX W. Kerr and Mr. I B. Holt, of Alamance, besides occasion! sup ... : .. . . . pues irom other oauiea of established tt uta tion; also, at ail times, th finest NorU i . ' i - ' Creamery Butter that can be taught and good Northern Dairy Butter at a lower price. I i ; j ; The same in meats; always tie best Saohed Tanmiea and Haf. imnil h VatvU a rv. 5 i i best Hams, at prices ranging just new fjom U i i:-'v ; to We per lb; Breakfast Strips, Meats and Fish of every description. For Breakfast and Tea Tables, the Choicest Teas that care and experience ean stleet; Chocolates and Cocoas; fine Cofieeay green and roasted. ' wiuionc gooa Dread, nothing is good. X offer you the best brands ot rlour, the best I ! .!'. Corn, Meal and the best Lard to go wfcbthessi : 1 l i r - 1 There can be. no oomplaint ot priees. Xery tg m the JTlsJOnUnto eheaft WiVf 1 you the best of everything the krsest Summer Clothing UNDER WEAK, ETC. GRFAT BABOAINS IN HATS, to reduce stork. r R. B. ANDREWS & CO. 6. O. Winiiiia. Trustee.' ' BROW1P8IBON BITTEBS CURED MB. K.M.Terry, 817 S. Huntington stieet, BAleigh. N. C, when suferins; wih dysenury aad chills. Physicians prescriptions afforded no relief, but this medicine made him feel bet ter than fnr rears. Phil tt Andrews & Co CHANGE O'lf Headq uarters. IN HEAR OF igrieual Mu Halifax and Salisbury Sts. FIR8T SQUARE NORTH of CAPITOIi HaTtnir moved our wood and coal vtni fm the N. C. Depot (the extreme western twivHab el the city) to within ONE SQUARE OF THE! CAPITOL We are now. prepared to furnish fuel at short 1 notice. - HABD and soft LONG AND CUT th07 CCD dJfe 3ZDs Prices guaranteed. Telephone No. 108. Send ia your orders. Call and .. m will show how we do buaineaa. k t mtMim Airs tuuu. s a. imiusi earai..aAvta largaiasln 1 JJUUiSTfilM MINOS. Bargains in WHITE GOODS. BargaiM 4n ' ' ' 1 3 LACE3 AMDEMIHtOLDERIES. Bargains In ; I Ai-OaLKiiY; AND GLOVES. Bargains h AU qiasa of .WASH vFABBICS. prtoev proapUy delivered. Foy specia1 a aouBMSMKtatroa day today, see the loeal GRANITES AND 8ANP8TONE3. 3P.' Linohnn Co columns f this paper. E J. HARDHlf V sTaystatvSla BL, jUklgh, H. CL ArpaiWtoBiaaetnMtbeMoat. arable Tsnoa for uppirinf flmt. e.. atones of the Best Quality fa any QnanttZs deaiL .tuajTtesaJflsndmaad WsSS. horo. N. a Anrpls futilities tot Aaadltoa Tvasl "KfiSSf' attU la stir ntrt of tutfttai. KTrna xjatit ai-1 1 ft BROWN'S IRON BITTEES CUBED Ml3 Maud L. ErnuL New Berne. N. Col In digestion and invigorated her whole system. Me rewmmeadsitto ail troubtod mumwu, J -f "! BLACK CASHMraES iJ.RT.inr nnAno i HlOW S IOsT f i I A epaalaferrT 'T h? d iCraasy, Concord. Caawin NORRIS & CjLRTSR. i I ' m - J V w r. 1 rus eounty, N. O, when she took it for ner vous rraansnou It Mv IL KsahilV'' v4-m. -- - um. SSSTSSriL-. UmrpuAhly proatraud to other, ma 'Jpuu jwf uafbi
The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 12, 1886, edition 1
2
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