Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / Oct. 31, 1890, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE WILMINGTON MESSENGER. FRIDAY.-OCTOBER 31. 1890 2 NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. F T II I FAYETTEVIILE, N. C. tTllE MAMMOTll DRY : GOODS S-KSTA15LISIIMKNTI OP THE CAKOLINAS This Column for Housekeepers ! JI A K i: HOME ATTRACTIVE, : A well furnifehed house U the delight of every careful Housekeeper, and justly to. too. Money cannot be better in rested than in adorning and makinsr attractive the home. Leaving out of consideration the additional comforts . produced by a perfectly furnished home, you trill lead a happier life, and be bet ter satisfied, when surrounded by the attractive goods we now take pleasure ia presenting for your consideration. Firat we would direct your attention to the largest and most complete line of Kver shown in the State. We bought very heayily of Carpets at tbe opening of the .season, but the demand way so unprecedented, that we have been obliged, in order to meet It, te make three additional large pur uhae3. Every grade is now represent ed ia all the newest and latest designs, aid offered at popular prices. ' i - T VELVET BRUSSELS. Tapestry and Body Brussels, with Borders. THREE PLYS. INGRAINS. FANCY HEMPS, ' STAIR CARPETS, all kinds. BELFAST LINEN, for Stair Covering. CHURCH CARPETS, selected for the purpose. Floor Coverings for Halls and Offices. OIL CLOTHS, all widths. MATTINGS, all grades. A brilliant and complete array in all the latest designs of (q India, Smyrna, Brasselsarid Velvets. ART SQUARES. - In Felt with woven back, and Three Fly. Ingrain DOOR MATS. For in and out door, in Itubber, Steel-Wire, Hemp, ' Brussels and I'll. M -" Chonilo. An exceedingly large assortment of handsome and yvet Cretones, Canton Draperies. Japaaeae effects In Cretones, Notting ham Laces. Nottingham Lace Curtains in sets. Ia White, Cream and Eoru. French Canvas Curtains, with heavy Tor chon border. Portieres in Reps, Felt and Chenlle. PONGEE DRAPERIES. India Silks, Table, Chair, Mantle and Toilet Scarfs. TABLE DAMASK. In Turkey Red, Unhitched and Half bleached. BLEACHED TABLE CLOTHS. T With Napkins to match, breakfast, dinner and tea Napkins, with and without fringe white, red and fancy borders. SHEETINGS. Bleached and Unbleached, In widths. all TOWELS. Damask, bleached andunbleached, Iluck, French woven and Turkish Bath, plain and fancy Crash, Tur kish Wash Rags. Wo show something very hand somo In the yay of. Hand Woven Towels! With Drawn Work, Borders. and Fancy To parties diving at a distance we will cheerfully furnish samples, and have Carpets made up ready to be placed on the floor. The only Ladles Retiring Room in the city. Orders so licited and promptly attended to. PEAIIK THOEHTON FATETTGVIIiLE, N. O. clftt HOniTO MESSENGERS OF HOPE. CONTRIBUTIONS rOR WEEK EXMXO OCTOBER 22.VII, 1890. Messenger Xo. 281, Brooklyn, X. V., 53th offering $1.00 $1.00 Tot.il .. Amount required for endow ment fund. ........... Amount paid in Amount on hand. . . . . . Amount still to be raised . . Membership. 2,500.00 1,900.00 .2,35 597.C5 349 Dear Children: Theonly money this week came i l a letter from that most zealous and faithful' Messenger, Xo. 281. The letter was taken up with a plan for furthering the Cot work, which interests him very much. , I confess I am surprised and disappointed at the mcagrencss of the weekly receipts. So many of the entitled members never write at all, that it seems a mere figure of speech to call them Messengers, and with others a contribution once a year seems to satisfy their sense of obligation and duty. Now I do not presume to set any amount as the sum any one ought to give; or the number of times that they should contribute during a year, but I do say, most positivel, that even- individual child who has en rolled itself as a Me sender ought to give all that they honestly can, and as often as possible. It does not alter the obligation in the least that they ma)' work, and thing else, faithfully have grown tired of the are interested in some Their duty is to give until the endowment is completed. The enterinir into the work was voluntarily, but after hav- ing pledged 'themselves, it becomes no longer a matter of choice, but one of honesty and duty. I speak very seriously, my dear children, for it is a serious matter. You cjannot disre gard any sort of obligation withont suffering deterioration, without being less honest, less trusty worthy, less innocent in the sight of f Jod. In duty there is no great or, small, no more or less. One duty is as abso- lutclv bindiuir and important as an- other, for duty is laid upon us by I God, and obedience to His will is the whole fulfilng of the law. It does not ..signify whether, it is a little child playing . witu tne auy ior a little while becawse mama tells him to: or the the ruler of a great nation deciding -affairs of State. Each in its place is simply duty, and it is equal sin to neglect either. so my dear, little children you hi ust let me urge upon you all to re member 3'our duty in this matter, for it is a positive duty, and to be as faithful and. regular in your dis charge of it as you will wish you had been when you come to give an ac count of your .stewardship, and find yourselves denied the blessing that God promised to those "who prom iscd unto their neighbor and disap point them not, even though it be to their own hindrance. .The end of ur third 3'ear is only nve weeK on and we nave raised in all-that time only a little more than half of the sum we set out to raise in that time. Seven hundred, only, of the thirteen hundred that was needed to complete the endowment. Surelj, surely you will not let the work languish this two more years? You will not make me loath that you are genuine, full-blooded Tarheels who never break a promise or slrxk an obligation? . shall confidently look for better receipts each week, and hope I will never, never hare to say another word about negligence . and forgetfulness, for it hurts me more to write , suck things than it does any one of you to read them. Of course, what I have said does not apply to some of my dear children who have been as faith ful as I could desire, but in writing I cannot particularize; I must address ' . i t r ) uu as a wuoie ior otmous reas ons. I pray, daily, that you all may be blessed in your own lives: and be faithful and zealous in your Cot work. Ever your loving arid faithful Aunt Beckie All contributions for the Bishop Atkinson .Memorial Cot, in St John's YT iiospitai, uaicigh, should be sent to Miss Rebecca Cameron, care of Dr. AY iliiam Cameron, Hillsboro, X. C. I suffered for two weeks with neural gla of the face, and procured iminedi ate ralief by using Salvation Oil. MRS. WM. C. BALD, 433 N. Cary St., Balto., Md. A Boon to the Sick. Dr. King's Royal Germeteur is en- ,1 i i i r r rr . , uuibcu ujr itcv. i . i3. iiawiDorne, pas- A Tl W- - m. . L ior r irsi uapust c-.urcn, Atlanta, Ga., who says: 'It is a great remedy." Rev. Sam P. Jones says: -4,I wish every poor suffering wire had access to that medicine." Thousands of others attest its virtues. Fifty gallons are drank in Atlanta dally, where it is performing remarkable cures. It removes the cause of disease and builds nn fmm th. first dose. Send stamp for all partic ulars, ceruucaies oi wonderful cures, etc, to ivmg 8 uoy&i Germeteur Co.. Atlanta, ua. It. cures when all else faits. Price tl 60 per concen trated bottlo, which makes one ' gallon of medicine as per directions accom panying each bottle. Can be sent by express a O.D.Uf your druggist can not supply you. ie 3 tf THE DISTINGUISHED OH.ATOR GIVES III VIEWS OX . TARIFF ASV THE FOUCE BILL. V Carl Schurz made a speech as Bos ton a few nights ago that should be in the hands of every voter able to read or hear it read to him. The Chronicle makes as liberal extracts from it as its space will allow, and regrets that it is unable to print the speech entire: r THE TARIFF. History teaches us that the coun try was most generally and . harmoni ously prosperous, progressive and contented in all its interests, agricul tural, commercial and industrial, dur ing the periods when the tariff wzz lowest The first greeting this last tanff received was a loud announcement of the higher prices the people will have to pay for almost every article covered bv it. The voice of John Wanamaker, who is a large seller of goods of all kinds in Philadelphia, and also postmaster-general of the United States, resounds sonorouslj- in the chorus. '-Tin-ware is advanc in cost," says he to his customers in an advertisement; "and 'ery soon the manufacturers t will have their way and 3-ou and me will Intro to pay much more." True, every word of it, and vigorous!-expressed. , Tbe rich, of course, can manage, to' get on, but the poor will keenly feel how truly Mr. anamaker spoke when he said that the "manufacturers have their way and we shall Imvv to pay much more." " THE, FORCE RILL. What ever specious pretenses ma' have been put forth, the election bill, 1Y -a a- as cverj'oouy Knows, is designated mainly to effect the elections In the Southern States, in several districts of which we are told llepublican members of Congres would be elec ted if the negroes were permitted to vote. A free ballot and a fair eount, it is said, we must secure to them. By the sudden emancipation and enfranchisement of 4.000.000 of slaves a social revolution was thrust the upon South greater and more rapid perhaps, than any that history tell us of. Immediately after the close of the civil war in 18G5, I was sent by President Johnson into the Southern States to inquire imto their condition. The spectacle I beheld was frighful. Hordes of negroes wandering idly about to enjoy their new freedom. Bands of impoverished whites, not a few almost wild with the excitement of distress, seeking to force the ne groes back to work. The national government interposed to keep the peace and to regulate the relations between the former slaves and the former masters. The negroes were endowed with the right to vote. They exercised that right, plantation hands and all, the national govern ment holding its shield oyer them. The upshot was the carpet-bag gov ernment, many of them nothing but barbarians, led by rascality. Of the profligacy, rapacity and corruption of these, it is difficult now to form a conception. The war itself had hard ly been more destructive. "Negro supremacy" became the horror, the nightmare of the Southern people, and naturally, justly so. In 1877 the national troops were withdrawn,the carpet-bag government fell, govern ments controlled by Southern whites took their places. The South began to grow rapid in prosperity. In 2885, twenty years after my mission of inquiry, I visited those States again. I found a marvelous change. The people, white and black, were at work in earnest, with .astonishing results. I found the Union truly restored in a new patriotism. It was, indeed, a new South. I enquired carefully into the relations between the whites and blacks. I found them steadily grow ing in a friendship fruitful of "benefi cial results. Tbe usual treatment or catarrh is very unsatisfactory, as thousands of de spairing patients can testify. A trust worthy medical writer says: "Proper local treatment is positively necessary to success, but most of the remedies in general use by physicians afford but temporary benefit A cure cannot bo expected from snuffs, powders, douches and washes' Ely's Cream Balm is a remedy which combines the important requisites of quick action, specific cura tive power with perfect safety and p'.easantness to the patient. m An Iowa man named his boy Twice, so that ltghtning wouldn't strike him ia the same spot. I is Consumption incurable Read the following : Mr. C. H. Mor ria, Newark, Ark., says: 44 Was down with Abscess of filings, and friends and physicians pronounced me an Incurable Consumptive. Began taking Dr. King's Ne-r Discovery for Consumption, am now on my third bottle, and able to oversee the work on my farm. It is the finest medicine ever made." ' Jesse Middlewart, Decatur, Ohio says: "Had it not been for Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption I would have died of Lung Troubles. Was given up by doctors. Am now in best of health." Try it. Sample bottles free at Robert R. Bellamy's, wholesale and retail druggist. Economy is wealth; but it is & kind of wealth that the rich man finds it hard to transfer to bis son. JfnADEI ' ) IMARJL Jk HDUSEilOLD FAVORITE. A ma Striken bad ben scferir for 13 yean it& bkwd dbeaan wata she bad knt tb ttc bcr Embs aad w subject to tnxmj trvo Ues toddest to tl disease. Tbe pbyskiias declared ber case iscsratla aod predicted that bar tie vcmld cos to a speedy ead. After takicjS. S.S. she recsperaied so fast that It was plaia tbat sbe bad obtained a new lease oa ttfe,asd she has co&tiowed to grow better ustd ber permanent care Is assured. If aay other pa tiejits U oar hospital have obtaioed signal bene fit from H. S. S, and it has Nyorr quite a t vonte ia our hcue. Tm StJosifm HOSMTAU l!ibIaad.Ta. Trr?tie oa Blood aad Skia Diwases coifed free. . Swirr Specific Co, AUaata, Ga. irs3 writ ron trm i "JL- IHSUI til . hi-JVMH kgud. Cora TTmPlay (00 TUI1ES lbin. oom la cnr Coattty or Town fr nuh-i r!Ubt ppr oris (elthtr vt) h will tmnl to show it. ISBDEH MntfC 101 1". W. IMI MeniloD tbe Messenger wfcen you write. PARKER'S KAIR BALSAM Clrrme aad bcacufte th tuir. Proctut lasiu-iaiit growth. NtTfr Falls to Hector Ormy lltde to iu youthful Color. Cure aralp t.r4 tt hair tftUu. A. fcod a I L"i rjiil V e Farkcr! Oicr To&ie. It tTire tu wt 0ia, Weak Lun?, DebiiUT, InJigetim. Pain,Tk in time-iCrta, HINDERCORNS. Th rvr nTT enn-Titr Corm. Slay aa paj. Be tt Liuku, or liiSCOX OX, Si. Y. OCt25 4rd&w- " GRATEFUL COMFORTING, 681 BREAKFAST T . "By a thorough knowt of the natural laws which govern the opera; U -a of disiioo nd nutrition and by a careful Mpplicatioo of the fine properties of well selected Cocoa, Mr. pps has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately fi i von red be ver ape which may save us many heavy doctors' bills It is by the ju d; clous use of such artic.es of diet that a con stitution may be built up unUl btn.ntr enough to resist ev. rv tendencv to disease Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating arout d us ready to attact wherever there is a wf-ak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft bj keeping our selves well fortified with pure ble d and a properly nourished frame " Civil service Ga zette. Made simplv with b itlin water or milk. Sold only in half pound tine, bj Grocers, labled thus: JAMES t PPS & CO., Homoeo pathic Chemist. London. Kngland. ABE THE BEST POROUS PLASTERS IN THE WORLD. th 1 : ma n.t Backache, j Pleurisy and all lameness uej euro juiciuusuBiu. iii u. ir i iwio. m oroagai on dj exposure or over-zruon. u you wane Quick Relief from pain,msi8ton having urosvenor's UELL-CAl'-SIC l'LASTEK wrth a vieture of -a bell on the back-cloth, for there Is no plaster, liniment, or lotion that has such complete mastery over ALL ACHES AND PAINS. Dr. Grosvenor's Bell-Cap-sic Planters' are Purely Vegetable and Harmless. Itelieve instantly and never fail to core. SAFE, QUICK AND SURE Sold by druggists or mailed on receipt of 25c C5ROSVENOR & RICHARDS, Boston, Map. I A- S-WE EXPECT A Low : Tariff on FLOUR, ' SUGAR, FLOUR, SUGAR, MOLASSES. MOLASSES, MULLETS, CHEESE, MULLETS, CHEESE, GUNPOWDER, GUNPOWDER. COFFEE, NAILS, COFFEE, NAILS, CRACKERS, CRACKERS. RICE, RICE, LARD, LARD, SIDES, &c. SIDES, &c. FOR REVENUE ONLY Write to or call on HALL & PEARS ALI, For Groceries; BONITZ HOTEL! JTMlKold Carolina UwtcL l Market Sires 1 Umlaston. V. C. under new management It stai In tLe ilel '. It offers the oest accomiaodatlon to travelUnt pabUc at 11.50 per day. Special rales to rouctry BcercLasta Porters meet all trains. i. B. ftk. POMT2.Pro Contractors. SE A LZD proposals will be received until H o'clock noon Tnesday, n0t. litb, issa fcr erecting the buiWing ot the You r MrtiOn aa Aaoclation,NorUwest eonir ftottSd Mulberry street, Wllmiacton. N. C- Dimes. ?S8,.67JicUT50 'ourstorie. audio be bnilt ot brick and brown atone. Flans and spectficaUona are at tne rooms of ins Young Men's Christian Association Ln bnlidiiur of the bank of New Hanover and parties deirlnxto bid eaa see terse s and conoitions alonr with ?Ji5f mn5Ieflcatloiis byappljinsjtotnoM cersined. The eomnalttoe reserves taerlxnt to reject any and all b'ds. cawt Q. m. BUSET, Geal Sccy, . W5 1 ( bcllI wcap-sjj-xj illiams NOTE OUR Place of Business 122 fJatket St. - low Carpets. o iWIXDOW Moulding, nattresses Renovated ! We maker awning. The public arc conlUtllr in riled to call aadrxitatne our goods before bujlng clsewhe re. All our work guaranteed. S3T Genuine .-: $6.00 for $4.00 " GEO. R. FRENCH & SONS. 108 ISTorth Nothing So Delights the "Fair Sex AS HANDSOMK, STYLISH AND KXgl'lS TK BROWN & RODDICK, With their usual forethought and strong desire to have made special efforts and taken much care in the s-lotion of their stock this season, and claim the finest males' t newest effects, and the largest line yet shown. The ladies are specially inv?ted to inspect the bcwiMtnr array of Goods that we are now exhibiting in this depart;r.( r.t We. think we can please the fanciful fancy of the most us: dious. Don't forget that each' and every department in ) establishment is now full and complete and that we can lurn you jvith anything you desire. Special attractions each day. BROWN & RODDICK, SNo. 9 NORTH FRONT STREET -5 BERRY GLE1VES, P. fl. President and sanaget GLEAVES HARDWARE CO, -WHOLESALE DEALERS IN- Hardware, Cutlery, Guns,' Tinware, k, Nos. 220 to 1224 north Water Street, WILMINGTON, 1ST. C. We are Jobbers Only and STOVES. STOVES. We hare tbe largest and most complete tine of Cooking Stores and Stove Hollow&re '-o be found ia the State. Being Factory Agents can sell you same as cheap a you can buy them anywhere. ShlpNethjfrom: raetory or a lore as freight U most tageous to our customers. ' ; 13 aulOtf I & Robinson, Illtt rnicKs. MATTRESSES 1 Brass Goods, SHADES,! Wall Papers. Manufactured AND 1 :o:- Hand :: Sewed AT Front SirtHt. KEECHKEB, OWES F. LOVE, Treasurer SecrcU y - ;o:- f ell b Goods at I tc tall. ad ran .1 r -m. Self Priming Pumps No Bucking 01 wearing of leathers, always primed -aoi for use. See them and you will hare no otker- Sach, Doors. Paints & Class. Pocket and Table Cutlerr, Kazors, Shell and Heir fl ware of all kind, Ve guarantee price and quaJ.J of our goods. Cuts and prices of Stores cheer fully forwarded upon application. t ..... . SOUTH FKOXT STREET.
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 31, 1890, edition 1
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