UK
(ffhaiham
ccord
TfiUKSDAY, JUNE 30, 1881
H. A. LONDON. Jr., Editor.
THE PRESS CONTENTION.
The ninth annual convention of
the N. C. Press Association was held
at Winston last w eek, and its pro
ceedings, were of. unusual interest.
The attendance, although not so large
aa at Asheville last year, yet was
larger than usual, and everything
passed off most pleasantly and har
moniously. Cue of the most interest
ing features of the convention was
the entertaining and instructive ad
dresses delivered by several of the
members. The annual oration, by
Capt S. A. Ashe, was a most valua
ble contribution to North Carolina
history, in which he particularized
the different stocks of our population
Ari1 c?V rww rwl lift r"n A i f i rr nf mi v
0. . . ., if 11. i
State in its eflrlv life, and, tracmsr its !
progress, compared the present with
xi L r : :ti: !
wie pabu xy muuuu:i t;i.-vrutiiuui
Holden delivered an address on the
" History of North Carolina Jour
nalism," which was full of instruction
and interest being a subject with
which he was most familiar. Col. J.
D. Cameron read an essay on the
"Material Interests of North Caro
lina " that abounded in useful infor
mation and valuable statistics, and
was written in the choicest language,
as is characteristic of the writings of
this cultured gentleman. Col. C. R.
Jones delivered an address upon the
"Mining Interests of North Carolina,"
which contained much interesting in
formation on a subject that is now
attracting much attention. Mr. C.
T. C. Deak's address on the "Forests
of North Carolina " was heard .with
much pleasure- and with much profit,
being a subject not familiar to many.
These addresses will b& published .
bu li-uil me j.-ctja j-kh Lv.iit j
Ht oi tneir perusal, ana mey wm j
dmihtlpRS he read with eoual rleasnre
i i i
and profit.
We will not trouble our readers I
with the dry details of the proceed- j
ings, but only allude to such matters j
as may be of general interest. The
subject of proper mail facilities was
called to the attention of the conven
tion, and a committee of three
Messrs. Jones, London and Ashe -
was appointed to look after this mat-i
ter,and whose duty it shall be to j of tlie larffcsfc tonnage can float. The
correspond with the postal authoritiesi toWn contains a population of bo
for the correction of any and all ir-! tween five and six hundred inhabi
regulaiities that may occur in the tants, and is n-imed ia conwlimont to
transportation of the mails. This is the late Hon. John M. Slorehcad
an important step in a matter that j This p'ace presents superior advan -will
no doubt be of much benefit to tages for an attractive seaside sum
the press and the people. Another mer resort, but until recently there
important move was the appointment j were not sufficient hotel accommoda
of a committee to memorialize the j Hons. To supply tlis deficiency a
Legislature to have the important j company of capitalists erected lost
Acts published in the newspapers im ;vear oue cf the largest and iW
mediately after their enactment, so j conveniently arranged hotels on the
that tne people of the State may
know what laws are passed for their j
government. At oresent the onlv i
pubU'opie
11,1
General Assembly are contained inJ
the bound volumes that are distribu-
ted to the magistrate? and other effi- j
cials, and which of course the people !
w i A ,. 1
have not the opportunity of readm-
wui.umuB was upuuiuteu:
to prepare an address urging a prop-
er celebration of the tri-centennial cf j
the first landing of Englishmen on
American soil at Roanoke Island on
July 4th, 1584. Surely such an im
portant event in our history should
be appropriately commemorated. It
undoubtedly would be if the event
had occurred in a Northern State.
So much pleased was the conven
tion with the addresses delivered (as
above mentioned) that a resolution
was adopted authorizing the Presi
dent to appoint members to prepare
addresses or espays on stated sub
jects and to compile statistics show
ing the annual progress made in each
department of our industries. Mr.
Julian S. Carr, with his characteristic
public spirit, made a proposition to
present a fine job press to that paper
which should, in the next year, do
the most for the material develop
ment of the State. The convention
declined the offer, but unanimously
adopted a resolution thanking Mr.
Carr for this proof of his desire to
aid in the development of our State.
The officers of the convention were
S. A. Ashe, President: Messrs. Creo
cy, Bradshaw and Goshn, Vice-Presidents:
Jordan Stone, Secret ary and
Treasurer: Kev. Dr. Bernheim, Chap
lain: and Messrs. Enniss, Cameron,
London, Jones and Deake were elec
ted the executive committee for the
ensuing year. Mi. E. L. C. Ward,
of Murfreesboro, was elected as
the Orator of the next convention,
and Miss L. C. Bernheim, of Wil
mington, was requested to write the
poem. The next convention will be
held at Elizabeth City, the time to be
hereafter designated by the execu
tive committee.
The towns of Salem and Winston
were profuse iu their attentions and
hospitality to the members of the
convention which were most grate
fully appreciated and will long be
remembered. A formal address of
welcome was most felicitously made
by J. C. Buxton, Esq., a talented
lawyer of Winston, and we found in
a substantial manner that they were
not mere empty words of welcome.
A hop at the old Salem hotel was
given and was greatly enjoyed, as it
afforded an opportunity of meeting
the ladies of the two towns, and this,
to many of the members of the con
vention, was the most attractive occa
sion of our visit.
But the grand event of the week
was the "Banquet," which was com
plete in every respect. It was given
by the manufacturers and citizens of
Salem and Winston in honor of the
convention, and was worthy of their
large hearts and full parses being
prepared by Pizzini, of Richmond, at
a cost of over a thousand dollars. We
shall not tantalize our readers with a
description of the dainties and delr
L . ...
cacics that were set before us. Nu-
mcrOUS
toasts were given and re
sponded to in appropriate speeches
by Messrs. Gorrell, Shaffner, Gray,
Fries and Brown in behalf of the :
citizens, and by Messrs. Ashe, Cree
cy, Stone, Goslin, Bryan, Monteiro,
Drake, Webster, Jones, Hunter and
London, in behalf of the press. Ever
fresh and green in our memories will
be the pleasant recollections of that i
delightful occasion, and loath were J
"u " 1
passed such happy moments.
had
A VISIT TO MOKEHEAD.
The jress convention accepted an
invitation from Dr. Blacknall to visit
his new hotel at Morehead City, and
on the morning of the 21th inst. we
left Winston in a special car kindly
placed at the disposal of the conven
tion by the authorities of the Iiich
niond & Danville Railroad Company,
aml arriveci at our destination that
jjjo'ij n time x.o emov
a most appe-1
, , , . i
: SI1nm. Tn .f hvnol-(W ot
iv - i . . u i i
ii;siuii iiiiu mi i hut in jioreiicau is
a decided chancre of venue.
and
sucu a tavs journey through the
centre of Xorth Carolina drives one a
gnG opportunity to note the neatness I
and extent of our State, with ils va-
n i a; -a i' i l
ned products and diversified interests. L
i 1-.- j
Morehead City is at the extreme eas-1
.tern end of the railroad that now5
traverscs our state from be vond the 1
- rip -r:,i0.p f :fa .l,.,.-.,; i
Atlantic coart, and have placed it in i
charge of Dr. G. W. Blacknall who
i,nu T v i i
a pioprietor ot the lar-
borough House at Raleigh This
siew ilotel is most convcnIontlv c.ituo.
ted both to the railroad and to the
water its fn-mf 1,., in e;v t,-4-
a4.ei, its nont being in ,siiy loi't of
the former and its rear as near the
1 - tter. There m-a all-in tfTrnluiTwiiWi
rooms, every room being comforta-
bly furnished, and provided with all
tne moacrn conveniences, such as
electric bells, water-pipes, &c. The
ball-room is grand, being over one
hundred feet square and so arranged
as to have full benefit of the sea
breeze, and is surrounded on every
side with commodious balconies that
afford a most pleasant and suitable
place for the gambols of children,
the resort of the invalid, and the
promenades of lovers. The table is
supplied with all the nice things that
land and sea afford, but we particu
larly enjoyed the fish, crabs (both
soft and hard) shrimps, &c, of which
there was the greatest "abundance:
Being a " land blubber " the sailing
was to us a great novelty and enjoy
ment, and although some of our par
ty paid the usual tribute to old Nep
tune, yet the riding on the waves was
greatly enjoyed. Lovers of aquatic
sports can here find ample field for
their amusement. The surf -bathing
was especially enjoyed, it being the
first time that many of our party had
ever played in the briny deep. There
were no flies or mosquitoes or other
insects that annoy us at other places,
so that their absence was a most pleas
ant relief, and is another of More
head's attractions.
We spent two days most delight
fully at this most enjoyable resort for
pleasure-seekers, and on Monday re
turned to the daily drudgery of an
editor's life. We sincerely hope that
North Carolinians will hereafter visit
this seaside resort iu our own State
instead cf annually spending their
money at Northern resorts which do
not afford as great and varied enjoy
ment. Let us aid in building up our
home enterprises, and especially when
we gain thereby, whether in pleas
ure or profit.
SALEM WINSTON.
Instead of saying Salem and Win
ston these two towns may be called
Salem-Winston,- because while each
has its own name and a separate, town
government, yet only an imaginary
line divides them and a visitor to
either does not know when he has
left one and entered the other, and
thoy really may be termed one town.
Salem represents the old; Winston
the now. Salem is full of old asso
ciations, and of recollections of the
olden times: while Winston is full of
hopes of the future and of modern
progressiveness. Salem can well
boast of her female academy, which
for more than three quarters of a
century has been the leading semi
nary for the instruction of the wo
men of North Carolina. The woollen
and cotton factories of the Messrs.
Fries have given Salem a wide and
justly deserved reputation, and show
what capital and enterprise can ac
complish, but while this is true, yet
when capital and enterprise are men
tioned we naturally think of in-
I ston. The growth of this town is
marvellous, and it is no mushroom
growth. The elegant, costly and
substantial buildings that have been
erected in Winston indicate perma
nency and stability. There are four
warehouses for the sale of tobacco:
the one just being completed is said
to be the largest in the world. There
arc eighteen factories for manufac
turing plug tobacco, some of them
employing 150 and 200 operatives.
These factories are usually large
brick buildings, and each is a little
world within itself. It is impossible !
for us in a brief article to give an
idea of the growth, the thrift, the en
ergy and the business of Winston,
and if wo wrote column after column
"the half would not be told." Any
North Carolinian visiting Winston
cannot fail to foci his State pride
aroused and gratified, and to realize j
11. V- ..f i 1.1 Tr.. I
,v. . , , , - :
iukle has awoke.
Puns on the Pros.
Our brother Robinson of the Win- :
stou Leader makes the following
Puus ou tue newspapers of the State:
ine JNort" Carolina Press spealw j
for iteelf. Like the voice of Nature;
i v i i i i 1 1
to the individual who ''holds eornmu-.
nion with her visible forms, it speaks !
in various Ian rrnnrrpa' For dlin-!
qnent subscribers it las a voice of I
frequent entreaty. It is the baro-
meter f public sonfiment ; the com-;
pa.s that h aurc-s a commniiity's !
enterprise, and the mirror of mind ;
nnd matter. The State 'Prees evtrj
full of Eiiterprie' and up w iLIi the
Times' to Chronicle' the 'News and
Observ'er' progress, has sent out its
'Messenger,' bearing the 'Torchlight' j
of intelligence, and its 'Courier,' arm I
ed with a 'Freo Lance' ken to give i
the 'Signal' in many a 'Sunny Hume' j
in the 'New Norlh State' that very !
j Pariot,' every Tarioer and Median-;
j ic,' every 'Advocate' of 'American' :
1 liberty, every 'Tobacconist' every 'Ob- j
! s.rver,' every Rf porter,' every 'lie- j
border every 'Examiner,' and ev-ry
! Z1111?1 uPn tlie 'Watch-Tower of
jjournaliKin 'At Home and Abroad" j
wo,d asSb,e i Win.tou to 1-
vance the 'Spirit of the South,' make i
Bricf Mention of the -Progress' of!
the 'People's Preps' and record it in j
! bc.Joarnal oi Itr with a OTal-!
.1 , ,
Our brethren will here find many
j an old 'Landmark' which every true j
Carolina UtUelitoau will readily tee
is an 'Index' to our prosperity. Here j
the 'Tobacco Plant' is sold and its
manufacture is the great 'Topic' of
conversation with eery 'Visitor' and
'North Carolinian' that has never
been here before. 'Aurora in her
rose-colored chariot, doesn't scatter
flawers around a happier 'Southern
Home where the 'Democrat' and the
'Republican' walk in peace over the
same 'Battle-Ground.' The 'Sun'
doesn't shine upon a more prospe
rous section ; therefore the 'Leader,'
with the spirit of a true 'Southerner'
and 'Citizen' of our good old com
monwealth welcomes to Winston,
'the queen city of the western hills,'
the North Carolina State Press Asso
ciation. The twin towns give its
members a cordial greeting, and bids
them partake of the manitold bless
ing which it has pleased a bounte
ous and lavish nature to bestow up
on us. May your stay in our midst
be a happy one and may you go bask
to your 'Post' of duty bearing the
Record' of pleasure and profit, and
may you 'Ink-quirers of paper un
der every 'Lamp Post,' in your 'Re
view of the twin towns."
Tanner's Rival.
On Sunday last, the 2Gth, at noon,
John H. Griscom courpleted four
weeks of his fast. He lost but 3
pounds during the fourth week. He
walked twelve miles in two days. His
face is ruddy with health. On the
2Gth he weighed 1G4 pounds, it be
ing 32 pounds less than when he
began. He says he will stop as soon
as abstinence from food begins to af
fect him injuriously. Wilmington
Star.
A Tillage Destroyed.
A despatch from Geneva, in Swit
zerland, saye:
'A village in Vallais, consisting of
about 300 houses, has been entirely
destroyed by a conflagration. One
of the houses was set on fire by light
ning, and the flames, under a high
wind, rapidly spread to the whole
village'
Evils of Intemperance.
Wo are requested to publish the
following extract from a sermon on
the evils of intemperance, preached
some years ago by the Rev. Dr.
Mansey:
"Let us examine the evils of In
temperance. It destroys man
Intern psrance destroj's his body.
Man's body is the most complete
chemical compound in existence It
is the magnificent and symmetric ag
gregation of material elements em
bodied in the most intricate and
complicate of all organisms. In its
parts, its structure, its form, and its
various phenomena, it' is the king of
the mammals, the highest order of
all animated and organized being.
It is indeed heaven's material mas
terpiece. God has adapted all sur
rounding nature to develop, sustain,
and prolong, its organized existence.
Nature is a grand labratory where
the pabulum for the eustentation
of its life is prepared and in which,
and for this purpose, the mighty
kingdoms of animals, vegetables, and
minerals, together with all elements,
substances, and gases pour their
contributions.
To promote the healthy action of
the organs and functions of the body,
naturo furnishes the necessary stimu
li. On the healthy and uniform ac
tion of these organs and functions,
the life of the body depends. Impair
their action, and disturb the equi
librium of the physical constitution,
by the introduction of an artificial
stimulus, and the beauty of the body
is marred, and it hastens to & pre
mature decay. Ardent spirit is the
greatest of all stimuli. The stimula
ting properties of healthy cereals and
fruits, proportioned by nature to the
strength, tone, and necessities of the
organic functions, are chemically
separated from all nutritious and
conservative elements by distillation,
and concreted into a fiery liquid called
alcohol from forty-tivo to fifty pf:r
cent, of which is contained in the
various kinds of brandy, rum, gin,
and whiskey. '
It is one of the most active and
destructive of poisons. It insinuates
itself into the whole physical organ
ism afieeting every nerve, every
muscle, every bone the brain, the
heart, the liver, the visoo a. the fin ids,
destroying their vitality by stimuli
tirg them too powerfully. From its
uaturo it strikes right id the life of
every function. It runs the machine
so rapidly that the slow process of
physical reproduction is impossible;
and the premature death of the body
is inevitable and th.it death fraught
with unspeakable horror.
All respectable physicians and
chemists pronounce ardent spirits
poisonous and detrimental to life.
"Intemperance," savs Addison, is the
"Prime Minister" cf "Death, the king
of Terrors." It produces disease;
hut it does more it remit-ra its vic
tims subject to every endemic :-nd
epidemic. Statistical tables revr ;
some startling fats. There are one
million drnnk:ird.s in theso ITnitd
States. One hundred and iifiy thous
and of these die annually. That
is one person every five minutes.
What a vast host to be driven an
nually from the land of churches to
perdition, for one cause. Thoy die
prematurely: they die in the prime
of liit: they die of intemperance: and
go to eternity self-murderers, and
no Kit-murderer hath eternal life.
Did you ever sea a drunk ird die?
I knew oue who died upon his chair.
I knew one who froze io death with
his bottle by his side.' I knew one who
was drowned. They die on the pave
ment, they die in the gutter, they die
ou their horses, they die along the
roadside, they die in the quagmire,
they die awav from home, and when
they die at homo their friendtt often
wish they had died awav.
fPiwMT a-u.
tut
thov
die wc-rmf, tLev me :rroanin.
die screaming, they die raving, th-jy
die cursing. But oh! when with Deli
rium Tremens he dies, the scene is one
of horror. No painter can paint the
terrors of that hour. If he at tempt
it, however, he must have background
of awful shades. If he pencils a few
arrowed gleams of red lightning upon
the margin it will be an im
provement. Then every character
he limns upon the canvass must have
a fiendish, fiery shape. And every
shape must be girted with, a band of
twisted and writhing serpents. The
painting must bo so natural that you
can see a sting in every tail, and a
crooked fang in every gaping mouth.
If he paints a scaly dragon with eyes
of rolling fire, and nostrils of wheez
ing flames, with enormous wings of
laminated bone fringed with jagged
barbs tipped with venom, with a
monstrous tail of hideous windings
and in whose sulphurous wake an
army of hobgoblins hover the pic
ture is but the truer. Then the
painter must have power to give his
characters life, and fiing them from
the canvass all over the room his
fiends hanging upon the ws.lls, drop
ping from the ceiling, and dancing
in air his serpents crawling upon
the floor and horridly hissing and
his dragon with its fearful train hang
ing over the dying drunkard's pillow.
Drunkards die, but who desires to be
the witness? We might fall into the
blushing funeral train, and follow
him to his burial; and stand around
his grave; and there hear the broken
hearted widow weep, and the ragged
children cry but let us now turn
away, and forget him if we can.
Intemperance destroys his mind.
It injures and destroys the powers
of the mind, because it injures and
destroys the power of the body which
are the organs of the mind,and in virtue
of its incarnation the instrument of its
manifestation. It injures aud des
troys the powers of the mind, because
of the intimate and sympathetic re
lations between the incarnated mind
and the powers cf the body; injury
to the body is per bo injury to the
mind. Mind is a generic word, and
includes intellect, sensibilities, and
will. It injures and destroys the
powers of the intellect. It manacles
every faculty, pollutes the fountains
of thought, overthrows the altar3 of
wisdom, extinguishes the fires of as
piration, dethrones the reason, cor
rupts the judgment, destroys the
memory, infuriates the imagina
tion, and man stalks forth a maniac.
Reliable computists say that of nine
tenths of the insane in our asylums
their insauity was caused by intem
perance. Does it produce insanity ?
Look at the haggard, marred, and
shameless drunkard is he sane?
Sane men in that condition would
hide from the public' eye, and hide
forever. Har him in his ravings
as he laughs, and sings, and curses,
and oh, tell me is he sane ? See him
lift the rugged club or cursed whip,
and lacerate and bruise the frail and
tender back of her whom he swore to
love and protect, and who is his no
blest, his best, his truest earthly
friend, and is he sane? See him
steal the earnings wrung from the
nerves of his weeping wife to buy the
accursed beverage, and turn his nak
ed children out to beg or die and
ia he sane? He is mad mania
a potu, madness from drinking. He
is miserably and wretchedly mada
self-made madness which can claim
no exemption from law or penalty
a madness which takes hold upon
the pit. Poor man ! better for him
if ho had not been born.
It works fearful ruin in the field of
the sensibilities. It subverts men's
propensities, destroys their individual
normal powers, and chains them to
the wheels of appetite. The desire
for knowledge, esteem, and happi
ness, in fact all the higher propensi
ties it destroys entirely. It corrupts
the affections. Iu its last stages it
utterly destroys the superior class of
the affections parental, filial, con
jugal, fraternal, social, tbeistical; and
engenders and develops their oppo-sik-s.
It duoranizeai the whole
system of the sensibilities, and arrays
them in antagonism to each other,
iii! man's mind is a Pandemonium of
conflicting powers, which finally de
stroy each other and leave a deso
lated waste inhabited only by coarse
ptbsions, detestable hates, frightful
monsters, and a few flitting shapes
and spectral shades which dolefully
howl among the ruins. It impairs
the power of tho will until finally
that power is destroyed and the man
innot. will to reform. His case is
thfii utterly hopeless, for r.ll schemes
of reformation mu?t begin in the will.
How often does the will of the
drunkard feebly assent to a reforma
ti n, iat wetkentu by intemperance,
his will succumbs to appetite in the
first following temptation. Let every
dram-drinker and drunkard turn
back while they can do it.
Intemperance damns tho soul.
This is a feature of tho subject not
usually discussed in Temperance
lectures; and was not the lecture of
thn hour in ended to be a grave ex
position of In' ? vort of subjects, its
d-sshn would :ioh bo attempted
r-.mv. The presentation of such, a
iVt ure ar-- a motive of reform is ap
proprUta now, baoaur.o tho speaker
is a minister; because this is God s
temple; because the subject is a moral
one? because it is a part of the Gos
pel ; because suc'i is the fact "Drunk
ards shall" not "inherit the kiugdom
of God," says the Bible. I believe
that the cause of Temperance has
been weakened and shorn of its
f-'frpngth in this country by t corpor
ate meeting i-ing converter! into ;
r rat-a-J1: of coirso and vulgar enter- j
t.'.ia;:it'nt : whi?h in consideration of!
the immense importance of the ques
tions involved vhich questions com
prehend principles of vital, social,
and eternal reform, embracing ia the
wide field of their discussion the
ruin and misery of thousands here
and hereafter have brought, thorn
' under the censure of the intelligent
and refined. S:trely it would he as
nppi'op iatc to jpsfc on the hold of
bafU, at tho expense of the dying
and the dead, as to m ike the chief
attractions of a meeting, organized
for the reformation of poor drunk
ards, and to the exercises of which a
thousand broken hearted wives and
hungry children look with awful in
terest, consist iu low jests at the ex
pense of the erring and suffering.
But to return to the proposition:
Intemperance involves the eternal
loss of the soul. It sends the soul to
hell because it vitiates the affections,
semi's and silences' the conscience,
and corrupts the character. Its nat
ural tendency is to produce sin.
Men are led by it to commit sins which
they scorn to do when they are not
under its influence. "Who are the
swearers? Who are the incendiaries?
Who are the robbers? "Who are the
murderers? "Who are the criminals
and inmates of our jails and peniten
tiaries? Had I time to exhibit the
record, I would show you that again
nine-tenths of them are drunkards.
It drowns the soul in perdition. It
destroys the man, body, mind and
soul."
Asheville Citizen: As much interest
has been shown by the public in the
case of William Gormon, from whom
Doctor Percy Norcop removed the
lower jaw, for disease which must
have proved fatal in a fow weeks, that
we give a few particulars of this re
markable surgical feat, in addition to
the mention we made of it last week.
Tho operation wa3 performed on
Wednetday last with success. On
Thursday afternoon the patient's con
dition being: rather low, Dr Norcop
obtained from two colored men twelve
ounces of blood, which was passed
into the veins of the patient. This
master piece of work revived him
greatly. On Friday the same pro
cess wps adopted with equally good
results. The patient is now doing
well, breathing calmly -thorough the
silver tube inserted into his windpipe,
and swallowincr his food through
'tubes passed into the stomach. YTei
hope soon to see him, with his new I
rubber jaw at work, promenading the j
streets.
OWN GINS,
Perfect Self-Mr ai CsMeier.
IVianufaetured by tho
BROWN -COTTON GIN 0.,
Agent for Central N. G.-,
REASONS WHY TUB BI'.OWN GINS, FEF.DEItF
AND CONDENSERS MEEIT THE PUB
LIC CONFIDENCE.
BThey are construct
known and long tried
BF"They are made
men, or the best
proved machinery.
struction and reason
BSTThe brush
pulley and belt at both end3.
Ky Their reputation as Ural-class Gins
established, as they have be u Uiorougrlily
r test
aud are used by many of the most prominent
plant ors, public ginners, and oil mills in tho cotton growing Stales
ijgrEvery machine is fully and legally guaranteed.
J6T Get your orders in early
23
. 5,
T4
Have been STTarded
Prize at Agricultural
it- a i J m. s i-.u--r ';f .
i J KM , "V -Ti I J
:&m
nited. Dr. 1 .doux, in ti3 report I
68 & 16), to li . C. State Afrr'I Board
eli's ChcEiiccIo r.u intrinsic- valuo ;
formula, when -h?y ?ro cr.id to til
i j.00, Tl.is is tic iai awning ever
mm
U IF- -
IScli The Best, Chcpeci 2nd
1 i By tUeirnss, hl-,-!j graSo fo:ifr. - -
Vm H ALSO MANUi
powrxji'B ruaa eose ksal,
ICTSLL'S F-TsS 353) KSS,
SCTrILl2
mm
to o
mm
g ri Si p
pCg jtj Ilazdscois Hlr-trated Catalone, giving, full description of
ZlZJisr 7 addrfrce, on application to M
-: - -i
m
A PERFECT STRENGTHENER . A SURE REVIVER.
IRQ? BITTERS ore highly recommended for all diseases re
quiring a certain and efficient tonic ; especially Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Inter
mittent Fevers, Want cf Appetite, Loss of Strength Lack cf Energy, etc. Enriches
the blood, strengthens the muscles, and gives new life to the nerves. They act
like a charm on the digestive organs, removing all dyspeptic symptoms, such
as Tasting the Food, Belching, Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn, etc. Tile only
Iron Preparation, tkat will not. tolaelcen t3io tcetli or give
licaclaehc. Sold by all druggists. Write for the A B C Book, 32 pp. of
useful and amusing reading sent free. t
BROWN CHEMICAL CO., Baltimore, Md.
J. E3. ROSERBAUM,
And Dealer in
mm imlUm Mm I
N. E. Cor. Fayetteville & XIargett Sts.
EALEIGH, N. C.
April 14, 1881.
EXPRESS STEAMBOAT GO.
Steamer Schedule.
On and after Aprif first an.l until further notice, !
tho Steamier I. lUuiilSOX, Capt. Jerry H. .
Ilvberts, v.'ill luavd FayottcviUo f.vuiy Tct-si:'.y
aud TtlCnv at 7 oV-cn a. m ilv.-i V.iiU5::).:ca
every VTeOnesjaay and fcaturtj.iy at 2 .j'ci.xk '.. rn. '.
Tho Steamer WAVE, Capt. v. 'm. A. P.of rsrj, vill '
leave Fayotieviiio Vo Jx-sJ.hj- m- Saturday at 7 j
"w" wMi uui2U.-a Sloaday ttud
Xiiursday at 2 o'clotii p. m.
J. 1). V.'LLLIArdS & CO., Agents,
al'14 u rayelleviUe, N. C;
FEEDER
Poseiii all Latest Ispis
,A
a
i
;.
od VrrI?C ZC:'fSf
and avoid possibility of delay.-
5u30-3m
a Geld Medal
Faira wherev
EuccassfL'i Cliomicd fixtures.
rc sre zaodo tit csc-third -usual eos
ACTTOERS OP
pcwell's ksixsz pctasEt
K'TSLL'S yiSlAa
PJTELL'S OIL THEBft,
rORTH CAROLINA ,
STATE LIFE
INSURANCE CO.,
BALHSH. S. CAR.
F. H. CAMESOX, President,
V7. E. ANDERSON, Vice Prcs,
THEO. H. HILL, Secy,
Tiia only Home Life Insnrance Co. !a
the State.'
Its funds loaned out AT II OWE, nd
ataorg our enm people. We do not sena
Nortii Cavol'na money abroad tobuiid upothef
Stares. It is one of the most saecessful com
pa:;ic3 of its pge in the United States. Its
8f;ts arc aw.y.lj sufficient. All losses Til
pro.r.ptiy. Eight thou.sand dollars paid in ?
lat-!, t v, o ywtrs io families in Chatham. It will
cost a t 1:11 aged thirty years only live cxtXB 4
djiy lo ir.smra'for one thousand dollars
Apply f-r furilior infe-raiation to
H. A. LONDON, Jr., Geo. Aflt.
PITTSBOltO', .V- C
Man
rs f &m&'g&& V
id First f I?VSA1
law. pp.
t.1
1