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r. The Daily Review; JOSH. T. JAMES, Ed. and Prop WIOHNGTON, N. C. WEDNESDAY MARCH 20. 1878. Z VIEWS AND REVIEWS. Mr. Henry Allsopp, M. T., has pur chased irom the Earl of Beclive the short horn cow Eighth Duchess of Oneida, calved in November, 18T2, and five heif ers for $55,000. A wealthy Newhuryport mau, fearful that his relatives may try to put him into a lunatic asylum, has provided himself with several physicians' certificates that he is sane. A Dutch company recently obtained from the Khedive of Egypt the right of draining Lake Marcotis, by which means some 75,000 acres may again he brought under cultivation. The sight of six men drinking in a row at a bar in Turner's Fall, Mass., each with a blue ribbon on his breast, was not pleas ant to the temperance agitator who had induced them to sign the pledge. Most of the women in Monson, Mass., have signed n total abstinence pledge of so sweeping a kiad that they must either break it or make mince pies without cider. They have sent to Murphy for advice. Chicago is almost bankrupt, but the Inter-Ocean suggests that the debt could be speedily paid by a tax of one cent on each drink sold in a barroom.- Itjia thought that public-spirited drinkers A would come nobly to, the rescue. The Rev. Samuel A. McCoskry, Pro testant Episcopal Bishop of the diocese of Mich i can. has resigned his charge. His letter of resignation says that old age and increasing bodily infirmity so far interfere with the proper discharge of his duties as to lead him to take this step. He was born in Pennsylvania in 1804. Moody tries to prevent the sale of his portraits, because he fears that people will regard him as a participant in the profits, and the dealers who follow him from place to place have been unable to get eood pictures. One cf tht m confesses that he has sold thousands of photo graphs of a man who looks like Moody. The title, Queen of Tramps,is given to the i woman who walked from Bangor to Kansas City and back. She was three years at it - and her route was far from direct, being varied by her wandering inclinations. She worked a little on her way, but generally lived by begging and stealing. A merchant in Jacksonville, Fla., offers to provide that city with efficient govern ment at two-thirds the cost of the present system. His idea i.3 to tlx the salaries of elected officials at reduced rates, and to hire policemen, liremen, and other em ployees on a sound business basis. The recently discovered account of an . unknown Spanish missionary who travel led in Africa bat ween 1320 and 1330 is now being printed in Madrid. He travelled much on the west coast, going as far south as Dahomey, and made a journey for a considerable distance into the interior from the mouth of the Sene gal On January 24. the Mikado opened the Agricultural College at Ivomaba, near Tokio. It is a very complete institution, standing on a farm of 150 aores. There is a chemical laboratory, and a veterinary hospital is to be added. The professors of agriculture, chemistry, and verternary anatomy are from the Iloyal Agricultural! College of England. That . astonishing pedestrian, Bertha Von Hillern. accomplished feat after feat in rapid succession, the latest being a walk in Cincinnati of eighty-nine miles in twenty-six hours. Several physicians in that city warned her that her health would surely give way under such abuse of her physical strength, but she declares that the walking does her good. On the death of George Grote, the Grecian historian, Summer telegraphed to his widow: "When the electric cable flashed across the Atlantic the news of this great loss, the whole of this vast continent vibrated with sympathy for you." On the other hand, the son of a very distinguished, Duke being at the time in a lajge company of fashionable New Yorkers, took up the paper and reading the telegram announcing the death, exclaimed, "Why, Grote's dead Not one in the company, he found, knew " who Grote was. The case of Miss MargArot Thomson, who had her pet horse shod with golden "hoes and - distributed showers of gold among the poor of various European towns, was heard before Lord Adam, in Edinburgh, on the 23d ult The hearing Xvas had on the petition of George Graham J Thomson and two otheribrothers of Miss Thomson. She is in the Koyal Lunatic Asylum, Gartnavel, near Glasgow, whither she was taken on her arrival in Scotland from Barcelona, Spain, having been taken charge of there by the British Consal She is about 40 years of age. On the testimony of Dr Tannahill she was de clared unable to manage her affairs. - i - i EDUCATIONNO. 6. In our last number we discussed a proposition before Congress for rais ing, from the publjo j lands and I other resources, an educational fund for dlstribntion in the States and ter- ritories to promote the can3e of popr nlar pdncation Jn this relation we V.!- I j referred to the great Southern move ment now on hand for aiding the pas- - j i sage of the best bill that can be passed for this purpose and to the proceed ings to thisend of. the Southern Educa tional Convention recently held at At lanta. The great drawback1 to public schools in the fSonth 13 the wantof means. " If Congress passea this meas ure of educational ' relief jtpe South will at onca talre a new start and rise, Phoenix like, from tlie ashes of educa tional prosperity. All these many years of the past twp orj three decades where these public lands have been given away and distributed for. the benefit of railroads and other internal improvement schemes in the States and territories i of !the ' Western and North-western sections of the i Union, the South, now empoveri&hed (and bleeding at every pore for the want of money and mental jnutrition, 'has re ceived none of "the (benefits of this vast publij domain,( that is as, much the property of the South a,s of the West and North. , If theip is ever to be a returning sense of justice in Cqn- gress and other -'departments of the government at Washington to this needy Southern land, there is' no bet ter time to show it' than now' by the passage of this great national measure of educating the children in all the State?. The grave importance of the subject i3 our apologjv for pressing it upon public attention and for falling upon our members of Congress to sus tain the measure (with ail their might and main. It waj a trvism ( a, century ago, and now known to . every school boy in tbe land, that education, is es sentiul to our form of government. More and more has it become the life blood and institutions. support of our free It guides : and directs men by the e principle and justice founded prejudices, ernal laws and not by i of u la cant, fcensiitional- ism, or bumbuggery. It has no svm- thy or fellowship with, trickery, or fraud, or aerna gpgueisnv ana aoes not sanction beastly violence or j any motives or actions tha,t are grovejling or mean. Ifc is only where ignorance reigns that these lojw motives, and low down ways succeed, j It is where ignor ance and vice have prevailed over in telligence and virtue that republics haye reeled, tottered "and! fallen. .Re publican governjijerlts fail when up held by vica and ignorance; their only means of success is. by, that general dinasion oi Knowledge' and virtue which is comtenplated by the provisions and aims )t measures now before Congress for universal educa t'ior.- Under ether fcrmk of govern ment education1 is optional! bu.t with U3 it i3 indispensable. .(Ignorant and bad men may b3 governed. but they cannot.govern, suouiu do; be trusteq with power. It is the intellectual and moral strength andj progress of m-m that contitutey the great; f ores to j bo used in holding in check bad men and to curb evil passions' and illeVitmate -; ; . . i i . . i powers. Ting lorca 13 as much heeded as a check upon popular 'government as in one that is arbitary or despotic. In this country thej majority rules and it may be upon such k high plane of in telligence and integrity as that upon which Washington and the early fathers of the Republic stood and governed, or it may bo upon tbat low down plane of a Boas Tweed add tub hundreds of thousands of wretches, thieves, and scoundrele like him, and reeking with corruption and every species of vL'JaDy and robery.have phvnderedjaad are now plundering the government Contem plating the millions pi ignorant . pe pie, vhite and black, in ,the Southern land, can any man who wishes to soo free Institutions upheld, ro3t easy un der the overwhelming (and appalling amount of ignorance everywhere to be seec, and cin any jaitrhk orj friend of education refuse 1 3 upport the meas- ures cf relief we ard nowi advocating? The standard of public taste, of pub lie morals, of education, in jnny com munity is always' known by f tl ie meas ure of its intelligence. , Ignorant com- : ? a . L A muniues are eatiitied witli poor teach ers, whether in the, Echodf house or in tha pulpit, an d in selecting the one or tho other always serect the cheapest. and they 'are always the) dearest and most 'objectionable and iacomDetent1. It is the same witli ftrrrnHn . candition and advancement depend entirely npon the grade of intellrgacce of any community, Wheri there are co scnools nor school hhnsa tuat.n will sed society at a staiid-3till dr going back,, and thero you will see tho low plane of public spirit, agriculture and the mechanic arts neglected, religion in a cold state, and cien jand women engaged in back-biting, n igossipping, neglecting duty to themselves and neighborF, selfish, and yielding lo temp tations, to vice and degradation. Both political parties p etend to ad vocate civil eervice reform in 'tho gov ernment, but it will never be obtained under any administration til til there is universal and thorough education, such an awakening of Jhe public mind to its importance and such reform in intelligence as will produce such a de- crree o! rride in everv spction as will " 1 j . refuse to sacrific honor to interest, and that will drive demagogues, now everywhere in the ascendancy, totheir hiding-places. Education teaches men to refuse to seek reputation on any other basis than doing right. Another reason why the general gov ernment should contribute liberally j to the support of , popular education throughout the States and territories, is the certainty that the population of the United States will become at no distant day much more dense than now. It is a moderate estimate to say that in less than thirty years the population of this country, now upwards of forty millions, will be one hundred millions. History shows that the more dense' a population the more debased, it be comes. Wc cannot hope to increase in the virtues of human life as we in- 11 i crease m numbers. It becomes us to be,wife and vigilant in preparing for the safety of tii3 present ond &till more careful iu our preparations for the l future cauduct of posterity. Our legislature, State and National, have a higher duty upon tiiem in tho.se im portant relations. No man is worthy of the . 1. tme rf a Statesman who does not-p.dc.re.YS himself io be task of pre parir,g tho Ship of Stato f 01' the quick sands uud breakers ahead. Many of the teming millions who come from other countries to reside here under the "flag of the free and the- home of the brnve" are not prepared by habit or training to ( discharge the duties of American citizenship. . It has not been shown by theory or experience that our millions of emancipated negroes in the South are competent to discharge these duties. The government throws its doors open, wide and free, to those across qceans and seas, -to come and partake of our liberties and of t he benefits of our free institutions. This imposes upon the same government the hih duty of protecting itself of rearing a suitable and effectual bulwark against ignorance, whether at home or coming fromj abroad This can only be done by the general infusion of intelligence and the i support everywhere of public schools. The South is too poor to sustain ah -adpquate system of public instruction, and hence the general up rising in these Southern States', as mani fested in Various ways, lor an increase of Southern educational facilities. The call and action of the Southern Educational Convention is hut one judication of this general and increabi;. demand. Formerly education was the distinction of the few. Now it has become the right of all and the distinction of theniuny. We live. in a new er: of thought ' i r i' 1. 1..A i- am; ui pro- gress tnat aoes not recognize ignorance. Learning advances with steady steps, rooting out old prejudices, antiquated customs and errors hoary with age. The highest function of a State or nation is to raise and educate those born in its limits, 1 1 and to protect them from jthe crackle to the grave. It should be the ambition of every State to multiply and hold its educated men. They constitute its J legislative, ju dicial and executive support and strength. They are prominent in every good word and work. -They adorn and dignify the professions and various avocations of life. In peace they are the life-blood of the State. If war must come then the power of an educated army, as in the late con fiict between Prussia and France, is far more effective and invincible than an equal number of uueducated men. It was said by the great Napoleon Bona parte that Providence was always oh the side of the heaviest cannon and the best managed military forces. It is; as true now as then that victory crowns the army that knows but how to make and how to use best the destructive engines of war. It is not the largest army that always succeeds, but the one" that is the most sa gacious and the best handled. - ' The Stinging Sensation. In khe gullet called "heartburnt" (why, it is impossible to conceive, since the heart has nothing to do with it,) is jcaused by the acetous fermentation in the stomach of the food contained in it, by an overplus of the gastric juice, whijeh is itself a powerful acid, or by the unnaturally acrid quality of that secretion. The ordinary way of treating this symptom, for it is nothiDg else. Is to ad minister bi-carbonate of soda, an alkali, to neutralize the acid. JJut sour stomach can not be cured by alkalis, which tend to weaken the digestive apparatus. A far bet ter remedy is Hostetter s; Stomach Bitters, which strengthens the cellular membrane, the seat of the difficulty, regulates the flow of the gastric secretion, improves the qual ity if vitiated, and I puts the stomach into good working order. Perfect digestion fol lows as a natural sequence, and there is no more trouble from heartburn or sour stomach. The liver and bowels are also thoroughly regulated by this sovereign al tera live. s UISJCKIUE TDITHE ! DAILY PEy IE W. Corrected EveryThursday by ' PETTEVAY a SCI1ULKEN, AND PRODUCE BROKERS, I ! WILMIXSTON, Jf. U. . ThB following quotationt represent the wholesale prices generally. In making up small orders higher prices hareitobe charged. xAA,uiiN tr liunny..... Double Anchor 13K .13K uouble Anchor "A" 13 S & 10 ! 15 1 Si 9 1 Q ' 28 UAUO North Carolina, bhoulders, y E..... Sides, y ft)-.... Western Smoked Hams.i...... Sides, y fi. Shoulders..., Dry Salted -Sides, V Jb.. Shoulders. lb..J. BEEF Live weight............ rSA4K,L,b bpirits Turpennne Second Hand, each 1 75 New York,each, new 3 00 j 2 00 & 26 10'00 14 OS 25 35 40 BfcJiSWAJL y lb 25 BRICKS Wilmington, y M 8 00 Northern .. 00 15 25 BUTTER North Carolina Jb Northern, y ft... CANDLES Sperm J ft 25 Tallow, y ft 00 00 14X I 15K 13 33 22 75 i G Adamantine, set.4 12 CHEESE 1 . Northern Factory, y ft... Dairy cream, y ft 14 00 btate, lb COFFEE Java, y ft 30 ttlO, ID J. 19 24 .Liaguyra, lb...: CORN. MEAL V bushel.... COTTON TIES--V ft DOMESTIC 4 Sheeting, 4-4 y yard. ...... 7 Yarn, y bunch 95 FISH 1 Mackerel, No. 1, y bbl...,16 CO No. 1, y Kbbl .....I. 8 75 Mackerel, No. 2, y bbl....l3' 50 No. 2, y bbl 7,50 Mackerel, No. 3 y bbl..... CO 00 Mullete, y bbl.... 3 50 NI. C. Herring, i bbl 5 00 -20 CI & 9 0C 00 C( e oc 10 5! 3 75 Q 8 00 Drv Cod. lb &1 0 FLOtJR Fine, y bbi . 0 00 6 00 Super, Northern, y bbl... 0 00 Extra do " y bbl... 0 00 Family ' y bbl... 8 00 City MillEx,.Super y bbl... 7 00 " , Family y bbli. 7 60 " Ex. Family bbl.L 8 00 FERTILIZERS I PeruFian Gaano, y 20001ba.58 00 Baugh's Phosphate kt " 00 00 Carolina Fertilizer " " 45 00 Ground Bone, i " " 00 00 Bone Meal I " ' 00 00 " Flour " 00 00 I Navassa Guano, " 50 00 Complete Manure " n 00 00 . Whann's Phosphate ' " 00 00 Wando Phosphate, " " 00 00 Berger&Bruta'sRos. " " 00 00 Wilcox, Gibb A Co., ma nipulated Guano ....48 00 GLUE y fi..... 9 7 W 7 50 9 50 7 25 7 75 8 25 60 00 00 00 51 00 40 00 45 00 47 00 55 00 67 00 70 00 70 00 00 00 1 G7 50 115 GRAIN Corn,store,m6flu 72 - o. 62 1 CO 1 00 L'orn, cargo, 56 lbs 60 I Corn, vel., y bushel None. I Uats, bushel.. 60 1 Peas, ccw, y bushel..- 95 mucis Green, y m 7 Dry, y lb 10 12ft HAY Eastern, y 100 lbs... 1 10 1 20 , North River, 100 lbs.... 95 1 05 HOOP IRON y 'ton. f..... 80 00- 85 00 LARD -Northern y Jb 10 11 i North Carolina y fi) 11 12 LilMtH DDI 1 25 LUMBER City steam sa'wd 1 !Sbipstuff,resawed,Mft.24 00 Rough edge plank, y M ft. 22 00 West India cargo, accord ing to quality, y M ft...l5 00 Dressed floorinfir,sea8oned.20 00 Scantling and boards, com- I mon, y M ft ; L...151 00 MOLASSES Cuba;hhdgl 35 j Cuba, bbls., y galj : 38 Sugar house, hhds. y gal. 25 " " bbls. y gal... 27 Orleans Choice bbls. y gal. 60 NAILS CuV,20dto4d,k'g 2 85 OILS Kerosene, y gal...... 16 Lard, y gal 1 10 Linseed, g? gal 1 00 Rosin, y gs.1. 30 PEANUTS ft? bushel 75 POTATOES - Sweet, y bus. 65 Irish, Northern, y bbl..... 2 50 0 00 27 00 25 00 18 00 35 00 i)23 00 37 40 20 65 3 75, 171 1 45 1 10 40 1 10 75 3 CO 15 00 jruK-a. iMortnern, city mess. 14 5U J.U1II, f? UU1...., Prime, y bbl (extra).... Rump, y bbl... ...U. ,.00 00 00 00 ,12 75 13 00 .00 00 00 00 RICE Carolina, y lb.. East India, y & Rough, y bushel BAGS Country, y ft1 City, La. ROPE SALT Alum, y sack Liverpool, y sack..J I American y sack 00 00 75 1 00 2 2 6 eo 80 80 22 00 85 00 1 Marshal's fine, y eackM.... 1 45 Cadiz y sack 75 00 10 00! 10! SUGAR Cuba, y fi Forto Rico, y fi). A Coffee, y 3b.. B " y Jh c " y a 9M 10K 00 , 9 9 x uy id 1 Crushed ? lb... 00 6 SOAP Northern, y Tb j 1H SHINGLES Contract, JM 4 00 6 00 Common, y M 2 25 3 00 Cypress saps y M 5 50 0 CO 3 Cypress hearte, y M 6 00 10 00 STAVES W. O. bbl. y M.15 00 25 00 R O hhd. y E 00 00 00 00 Cypress, y M 10 00, 18 00 TALLOW E 9 , 10 TlMiiKH Shipping y M ...12 00 SMill, prime per M. 8 50 13 00 10 00 Q f Mill, fair per M 7 50 8 50 6 Ot) 3 50 2 25 , 20 ' 30 Interior to Ordinary,perM 4 00 WHISKEY North's, per gl 1 25! North Caroina, per gal ... 1 50 WOOL Unwashed, per ft... 18 Washed, rer ft 28 The Old House Iteopened. THE 1 OLD AND EELIABLE Watchmaker's & Jeweller's ' - ; 1 : ' ' 1 . - v- Establishment, j llAs been reopened by one of its forrner employes. ! Mr. J. LT. AUeb, Practica Watchma- ker, and Mr. L. S. F. -Brown, Jeweller and Engraver, 'will be constantly in at tendance, and will give their personal at tention to work intrusted to them. Chronometers Bated and Nautical 1 - Instruments Bepaired ! Time taken by Transit Instrument. Watches, Clock8,".IewcIry, Silverware and Fancy Goods Call at the old' stand of THOS. W, BROWft & SONS, Z7o 37 niartet Street, jan 2S . JT. ZX. AMkBIJ. Miscellaneous. BEr PIERCE'S (' STAND AED REMEDIES Ave not advertised as "eure-alls but arej specifics ini the disctves for winch they are recommended. ! NATURAL SELECTION- Investigators of natural science have tlenion.st rated beyphd contro versy, that throughout the animal kingdom the "survival of the fittest" is the only,lav that vouchsafes thrift and perpetuity. Does not the same principle gbvern) the commercial' prosperity of man ? An inferioi- can not supersede a superior article! By reason of superior merit, Dr. Piercers Stanlard Medicines haVe outrivaled all oVJJersl Their sale in the United States alone exceeds 01W million dol lars per annuiii, while , the amount' exported foots up to several hundred thousamkmore. No business could upon any other liasis than that of merit. , ; DR. SAGK'S ' Catrrlx Remedy f Is Pleasant to Use. 1 1 I Oa.tsL2.rpl2 Remedy Its Cures extend ove,r a penjd f L'O years. 1 ,' Is sale constantlv increases' I) ti...' SAGFAS Cures by its Mild, Soothing Eflbct'. JTZ. SAGE'I Cures "Cold in Hedd" and Catarrh,1 orOzopna. A1" yOPEH LITTLE. : fEARS FO? ITSELF I. Rocxport, JJuss., April 2, T77. 31k. Editoii : Having' reacl in your paper reports of the remarkable cures ofleatarrh, I am induced to tell "what I 'know about catarrh," and I fancy the "snuff" and "inhaling itube" makers (mere dollar grabbers) would be glad If thoy could embla zon a similar cure in'the papers. For 20 years I suliered with catarrh. The nasal passages became completely closed. "Shuir," "dust," "ashes," "inhaling-tubes," 1 and "sticks," wouldn't work, though at intervals I would snifl'up the so-called catarrh snuffVuntil I became a valuable test er for such medicines. I gradually grew worse, and no one can know how much I suliered or what a mis erable being'Iiwas. iINIy head ached over my eyes so that I was .confined to my bed foi mjmy successive days, suffering the nlost intense, pain-, which at one time lasted continu ously for 16S j hours. ! All sense of smell and taste gone, sight and hear ing impaired, body shrunken and weakened, nervous system shattered and constitution broken, and l was hawking and spitting seven-eights ofthetime. I prayed for death to rel iek me of my suff eri ng. A (favor able notice in your paper of Dr. feage's Catarrh Ilemedy induced me to pur chase a package, and use it with Dr. Pierce's Iasal Douche; which ap plies ithe remedy by hydrostatic pressure, tlie only way compatible witn common sense.! Well, jSi Idi? tor it did not cure ivin in thm. fourtlis of a second, nor in onejhour ui mviiiLi, out in less man eigne min utes I was relieved, and in three months entirely cured,and have re mained so lor over sixteen; months. While using tjie Catarrh Remedy, I usee Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery to purify, mv blood land strengthen my stomach. I also kept myl liver active and bowels regular by the use of his Pleasant Purgative Pellets. If my experience will in- 1 auce otner sulterersto seek the same means, ot relief, this letter will have auswerea lis purpose. .1 r, I Yours truly, S. D. REMICKJ 1 A CLOUD OF VfTfiESSSS. lhe following named parties are among me mousanos who have been curep of CATARRH by tho use of Dr. feage's Catarrh Remedv : ! A F Downs, New Geneva, Pa: D J jiuv jj, dl josepn, iio; u lewis, Rutland, Vt; Levi Springer, Settle Lake, Ohio; Chas Noijcrop, Xorth Chesterfield, Me; Miitonl Joiies, Scri- x, j tinier, iinuger fetation, Wyo; J CMerriam, Logansport, Ind; M M Post, i Logansnort, Ind: J V Bailey, Tremort, Pa; H B Ayres, La Porte, Ind Jessie M . Sears, Fort J5rancn, ind; l, Williams i Canton, JJ.Y ATT1iaer 1 narga, HI; S B Jsichols, Jr, Galveston, Texas; Jonas F Reinert, Stonesville, Pa; S W Lusk, McFarland, Wis; Johnson Williams, 1 Helmic, Ohio; Mrs M A ' " -.vtu AilJ UbiP. VJTt B port, Ohio; C HChase, Elkhart,Ind Mrs Henry Haight, San Francisco Rice, Baltimore, Md; Jesse M Sears Carlisle, Ind; Dan'l B Miller, Fort Wayne, Ind; Mrs Minnie Arnaise 29(J Delancy Street, New York; h' AV Hall, Hastings, Mich; Wm F Mars- ton, Lowell, Mass; I W Koberts. Maricopa. Ariz; Uhas S Delaney Har risburg;Pa; M CCole, Lowell, Mass; Mrs C J Spurtin, Camden, Ala; Chas. F Kaw, Fredericktown, Ohio Mrs ville, N Y; W J Graham, Adeljowa A O Smith, Newnan, Ga: Chn v. liuuy nuuier, xanmngtOD, III; Capt E J Spauldin Camp Btambaugh, Wyo; I WlTraey, SteamlKat Rock. Wait tj- Y ecK, J unction CitM Henry Ebe, Ban tas, Cal-1 X'Ht mings Rantoul, 111; gVfW. brook, Chatham, IIP V r"l:z: .r"uVL " Warner, vl . acKson, n icn; miss Marv A i ' arien, AVis; John S IP""?8!.; James Tomntr!lls Golden MediVil nfcnlJ wery Is Alterative, or Hlood-IeaUin J Golden MedicalDiscry I is 1'ectoral. I t Golden Medical Discovery Is a Cholagogue, or Li vei Stimulant Golden Medical Discdvery I Is Tonic. , ' Golden Medical Discovery By reason of its. A Iterative nroir,- Vures Diseases of the lllo Z M otula, or King's Kvil TmTl M V-PertierrnX pyspeps W here the skin is sallow and llJv ered with blotches ;,n,l .llW 1 . i I ' o. T V 111 v scroruI(iis swbllint, and niivot inno o 1.41 r '"'M 1 J i'vo, vr ttles of Gold, will tiirAi. ' l .dAcal P?very will eflt ak debihtatdd, have sallow, ! color J, skin, or yellowish-briwi i8iota I of lace or oody trequent Iiealiache 0 dizziness, bad teste in mouth, jintor face or body frequent Iiealiache o iiiiuator cninsalterndted with lut lushes, low spirits and gloomy fQr bodmgs, irregular appetite,, ffi tongue coated, you aresutlbring fr0n rlonid Liver, or iBiliousnel I, many cases of "Lifer Comnllint ' , "iucu xueuici xo.w tly JltW MU equal, as it effects perfect cures, leaving, the liver 1' strengthened and healthy. , ") THE PEOPLE'S MEDICAL SERVANT Dr. R. V. PiekcI- is' the Lo'lo prL prietor and manufacturer of the forfe goingjremedies, all of which are'sbld by druggists. He is also the Aibr of the People's Common Sense Modi, cat Advi.ser, a .work of nearly, one- , thousand pages, with two lmntlrld and eighty-two wood-engravings and colored plates.1 He has already sold of this popular work j :f, Over 100,000 Copies Jiji PRICE (post-paid) $1.30. 1 J Address : , I eb 8 Pe"Sary' BuflUlQ' FOR LUMG DISEASES Rock Candy "arid Copper Distilled Corn Whiskey. 7-T ?f,NTS BOTTLE, cokkilnlJ) 'j to fall quirt For le only byi 7 i GEO, nJYERS'. i 500 Bbls 'Double Extra Flour from' S upwards. h , . . 50 Bbls Kefined Sugars, , 25 Firkins and Tuba Extr.-J Tint 1, 200 Bbls and Boxes Assorted Cakes' an Cr.irkprs ' i i l : 200 Bbls1 Potatoes, Apples1 and Colons. 1000 Caes Can Fruits, I Vegetabler ffi Preserves, , I- I'll r a Ff r St M1 ' Java Coffee, 1 50 Half Chests Choice Green and Black i 1 Teas, 50 cents. ' ' l I c B1GruSS Delmonico. Cinb House. Sweet Mash, Smoky Hollow, Gem and Bye Whiskey Old Sherry, Maderia, Scuppernong, Angelica Wines: inl Tact we ! have the , i " ! Largest and Best Ml OF GBOCERIES 0?! . I ' Any llmm In the1 State. Only compare quality and prices'. If We Always Lead I GEORGE MYERS, 9, 11 fob 23 cl 13 o. mouiixx f PURCELL HOUSE) r ormeriy jc Rational Hotel.) prOKOIJC VIBGIXIA, . . . I J. R. DAVIS, Pr'p. Sterling, pa; H H Kbon Street, PittsburgV h-J ? man, Samuel's Depot,' Kv- tf Zobnst, Geneva, X v. xn iHr Parrott, lontirnmA City, Iseb; Josepli T MillVv Ohio, S B Nicholas. a Jllk H E Laird, Upper Alton i Davis, PrescottJ Arizj Mrt M Graham, Forest Cove, Ore-J 1 1 a as feci uaeers, or UK I feores; BlotdiesTp 1? pies; and Eruptions. ' JIv vitt5 ' its.lVctoral prortie,, itcuSf dual, Throat, and Lnnir - 'ftoti r Incipient CousunnS ness; ToVpid LiverJ plaint;" and its tonic Wm.JSt V makeitiuallyehlLacims1 K. Indigestion. Loss-of a',, lU,rin? 51a. t. ... ; ""i 1 ' 1
The Daily Review (Wilmington, N.C.)
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March 20, 1878, edition 1
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