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1 r T Mb rary. r. state -library JQiJL IB 'd fve wak ,,Pl and ,ear" fco be GettE;,0llt"f-- and Withadull business don't toil aud ButGra(,v"tisi,i V n tit'ii trails is very dull our merchants recognize Unit lin y, the crowds to pull, In The Gazette must advertise. 0 'THE OLD NORTH STATE FOREVER.'' 2n .. ( tat VOL. XIII. WASHINGTON, BEAD FORT 00., N. 0., THURSDAY, JUNE II, 1891. NO 52. K o THE WAS NfiTON GAZ Highest of all in Leavening Powei. s&s&gm ABSOLUTELY PURE THE ORTON, 1 Wilmington, N. O. i'.t -;si. appoiutei Hotel iu the State rjoTKL ALBERT. NEW liERNK. N. C. All the Modern- Conveniences , H OTKL HOW A ILL T.i:i;(')U(, X. : 1 11 Im-iiM'ss part of city. Polite and . W e cater to please. CALVKKT, l'rops. Ml H'llt I VI' XT Villi 14 I LI. I A.MS it: r!AY V I K' W ilOl'KL ED EN TON, N. .). Trims lteasonabl e. ll.ck meets every tr nil and boat, elire. o charge lor corves TDM UN D S 6 N'S Li K Y E U It 0 P E A N H 0 T E L, jOOLDSBOUO, N. C. A ui 'i'ican aud European Plan. Wait every inv ,.m,ius tree, .rollers meet ti .mi. Kaggagc h: udled free TEL, S WIN DELL HO' SWAN QUA I'.IMN'N UltOS, Proprietors', nished. l'et Hotel liei'itied and iff ur in II vuv coiiniy, -lauie wen suppueu. --! vants attentive. In every way l.ctl-T prepared t accommodate the i'iHilic than ever before. imty-3tf MUIK M( LUElt HOUSE, 1 .1. F McCL 6 te: IER, Pho'k.- IMS l l'EK DAY. ivati'd from top to bottom. .Sit-. I 111 business Hart ot' city. Kyery Ililhidolif for c uitoit ot traveling I'lllillt At the Adams olcHitArruV Dec. 18 tf. HE K1NTU O KEEN VI HOUSE, LLE, N. O. MliS. SHERIFF KING, PROP'TEES3 l'lea-autly situated in business parto the city. Large addition to building." hwry i-ointort the traveling i'tioiic c&j isli. I he best t ii'Jord. Stop at the King House, and imi will Stop 'Again H TKL XlCIlO -SON, WASHIXGT ON, X. C. PENCE II 15KO&., PUOl'IUETOKS. Now building, ne tri' Ur! Is, gas lights ,vly furnished, elec etc. Table sup he market affords'. .. plied s itli the best Hack meets all boa and trains. Sit- uated in the business pare of city i KO. Al Sl'ENCKU General Manager. Feb. 12. tf. JOT KL M KlUilAM, WASHINGTON, N. . ) l-irstehw accomiuodationa for. La dies. 'Cars leave Hit el Ha. m arrive p. tn. Through, to New York in 24 amers stop at the hours. L'p-river St! i-b-tel. j Headquarters for lluntei Ast shoot u. in North Carolina. Dogs and horses furnished. Ticket oillce said Express o'l'ue in the Hotel. T kdegram for rooms. 1. K. MKHK1 A M . rronnetnr WIMiEl.L HOI SE, W .15'. SW1ND ELL, Pko'r, N E W IiEUXE, N. C. Thi-i is ; uiitpiesti pnal'ly -the most I'lea-untly.lloeated ,N 1 w Hi i ne. ami is e elean t'eils and rotni boarding house in niipped with neat. . and the best food a; eaii be lni'i. Tlue proprietor has 1 ears experience in hoteluig and please Drummers KlKrWs just how to enth'tnen. Std p :tt the. Swindell 11oi;m w tu n in New rerue. and vod w :i! be eouifortable and happy.. C II cured in Uo minutes by Wool- fovdVSanitarv LO t ion, Never fails. o!,l ,y (iallaghers druggists, NVash- Oscar From AVest Washington, . 1 0 V ' ' 1' 1 - . to They Guarantee You Quick Sales, Top Market Prices and Speedy Returns HEFKUKNCES:C. M. Brown, M. T. Arehbell, E. K. Willisr 1. K. NNilhs, K. Peterson, A . Seott Frizzle A- Son, and the entire trade, of jishingun, all cf whom, we have done business with, i C, T. Cordon, their representative, will supply vou with sten cils, ami keep you posted as to prices. " -TJ. S. Gov't Report, Aug. 17, 1889. O- ii y;wyisir GAZETTE NOTES. Paruell is to we'd in June. Mrs. O'Shea Mr. Bynnm is still in lor Speakership. the race Ttie Prince of Wales is suffering from rheumatism. The State of Illinois approriates a million dollars to the World's Fair. Governor Tillman, of South Car olina, is opposed to Cleveland for President. The Jesuit order has a total membership ot 12,300, divided into twenty seven provinces. Senator Colquitt, of Geogia, has been discoursing witu Governor Hill, at Albany. - The Japanese word for farewell means "If it must be so," and the Chines 3 say, ''Go away slowly. Bishop Bowman, of St. Louis, deuouuees "progressive euchre?' as "progressive damnation." The English house of Commons favors settling the Be h ring Sea matter amicably by arbitration. Mr. liussell Harrison says that if his father- consulted his own wishes he would retire to 'private ife. Yle College has become residu ary legatee of one fourth of the large estate of Mrs, Miriam A. Osborne. Wade Hampton, in a speech at Columbia,'. S. C, the other day, declared that he was out of poli tics. Senators George and Walthal, of j ,S De ported by the prayers SAVE MONEY AND SUFFEB : : . n and siouey of the Christians IrG. lu-ishissippi, aie uorn uguiiug me e.,u r ., ouu iicusuij ncucuic wiiu an men might. Public iudiguatiou in - many, parts of the Old World is intense because of Russia's brutal treat meut of tin' Jews. The Exposition to be held at Montgomery, Ala., next Fall prom ises to surpass in attractiveness any exposition held in that State. The assets of the Baptist Uui versity of Chicago, founded by the society with 1,200,000, now amount to $2,250,000. Over one hundred new Protes taut missionries have reached Chi na and begun work since the Shanghai Missionary Conference in Mav 1S90. Legitime has again come foward in Hayti as the leader of a revolu tion., Fortv of the insurgents were executed and the revolution sun- pressed. In '.the. Presbyterian Assembly at Birmingham, resolutions have been passed against women speak in public, against church fairs and festivals, and opposed to dancing and card playing. ; me 1 & Bro.r - Market. New York. At Manchester, Tenn., A. V. Carder shot and killed E. W. Vil lers, in bed with Carder's wife. Villers had been boarding at the house. -.' The Baccarat scandal, action between persous in high aristo cratic circles, of London, is occupy ing attention in English Courts. The earth is gradually growing larger from the fall of meteoric matter. An astronomer estimates that the globe is annually pelted with 146,000,000 projectiles. Tin plate is coming in very fast. The McKinley bill on .that article goes, in to effect iu July. Still the Republicans say this country is producing oceans of tin plate. The Y. M. C. A.'s of the country now own property worth $12,250, 000. One thousand arnd eierhtv three persons are engaged as paid officials, and there arj 225,000 mem bers. The labor organization of Chica go have taken a radical stand stand against the World's Fair, be cause the managers propose to let out work Jo the lowest bidders, in stead of giving, regular minimum rates. There are souls, characters, lives often grown in the fields of suffer iug and woven in the looms of pain, and forged under the ham mer of faith aud love at the auvil In Italy there are 8487 religious brotherhoods, with a total wealth of $20,000,000. The bulk of the in terest is used for processions, fes tivities and the like, and only one fourth for charitable purposes. i.ev. j. a. uiaz. the "apostle ot uoa, reports seven churches with 1017 member baptized the past n . V M ., . . . . 1 year, 210 Sunday schools, 7; schol ars uav average attendance ot 69 , every Sunday. There are three j church buddings The native Christians of Kalim pong, India, are themselves un dertaking a "foreign" mission to Bhutan, within their country. It . , . " . witliiu the Guild Mission District The growth of the English Lu theran Church in this country is shown by the fact that the general synod iu 1807 numbered 579 minis ters, 914 churches and 8G,933 com municants at present 1002 min isters; 1450 congregations; 157,110 communicants. John S.Wise and Jason Brown, sou of old John, whom Governor Henry A. W ise assisted in hang iug at Harper's Ferry, were on the same train in New York the other day. Johu Wise delivered the ora tion at Grant's tomb and Jason Brown was there also to pay trib ute to the memory of the man who, he said, "finished what my father begun.'' Jason and John did not, so far as is recorded, renew the ac quaintances ot the Wise and Brown lamilies. They passed each other by. Laudmark. There is a strong impression on! the DJrt Of WPII lnfrrno1 nar-ac - i . . . . i '10"uo in omciai circles that while Secre ! tarv AOllIrt in Tint orninrr tn Unna b.fe w the public service they would not be (surprised it in a-i very short time would retire from the inten or I Department to accent a nromi . j uent place in the diplomatic ser vice. One story is to the effect that he will take Minister Smith's place at bt. Petersburg. Another aud more probable story is that if Secretary Proctor should be se lected to succeed Senator Ed munds. which now seems certain, Minister Lincoln will be made Sec retary of War and Secretary No ble will be sent to the Court of St. James. Secretary Noble is still ab sent, but it. a. i i LUeiti are laOSe III ni8 department who believe that he, wiil not much longer occupy his present position. Health is wealth. Take Simmons Liver Regulator for all sickness caused by a diseased liver. To enjoy life stimulate digestion anu regulate the Dowels lake Sim nious Liver Regulator. Do not waste your time in doctors wten your liver is diseased but take bimmons Liver .Regulator. With a record like Simmons Liver Regulator none shonld be afraid to use it for the liver. T1IIKTY-THREE HCNDKED. That is tlie Number of" 31 iles of ! Hail road in North Carolina. j The Chronicle was informed yes terday at ihe office of the Rail road Commission that there were 3,300 miles of railroad track in North Carolina. That there was a greater increase of building in this State last year than in any! other except one is an assurance ot ' the coming importance of this State as araiiroad centre. I The Chocicle also learned that the reduction of passenger rates aloue by tee Commission would save to the State $100,000 a year. Triplets and Twins. Bainbridge, Ga,, May 15. A. M. Thomas, a native of Decatur county, who lives just across the State line in Gadsden county, Fla., is thirty-five years old and th father of thirty-two children, all of whom are living. Mr. Thomas' wife, who is also a native of Decatur county, is three years younger than he. Fifteen 3' ears ago they .were mar ried. In twenty months they found themselves tne parents of four bright and beautiful children. With al most unvarying regularity ever since the family has been increased by the addition sometimes of triplets, until the number has reached thirty- 1 two. - Facts About Taxes The Washington 1'ost presents some interesting tax figures. For the next two years our govern meut will spend annually more than 500,000,000. To pay one year's expenses of the government it will take nearly the combined wheat aud oat crop. Our annual output of gold, silver, copper, iron. coai petroleum and lead would not tit our tax bill for twelve months. Nor can we do it with a . vear8 uroullct of cotton, wool. rve. barley, iue, potatoes and tobacco. The combined capitalization of our national banks is 8599,000,000. One year's taxes will nearly swal low it up. Xow all this is the Fed eraltax. We have also to pav city, county and State taxes. One feature of the thousand of testimonials that have been given in behalf of S. S. S. is remarkable In number of instances it is rela- ted that a great deal of time and money have been spent in vain ef- fort to secure relief from disease in the usual way. A knowledge of the virtues of Swift's Specific would have saved the time and the money, to say nothing of the prevention of the suffering. There need be no such mistakes made now. The great blood purifier is for 8a,e by druists everywhere, and the S. S. S. company in At lanta will send to any address their Treatise on Blood and Skin Disea ses free, aud a pamphlet contain ing a. few of the thousand of ; testi monials they have received! from those who have experienced the benefits of this wonderful medicine What is a Billion? According to German and En flish notation, a hillinn is a mil I inn Uillinna n ooo oon nno tha : 1 ' 7' i French and American notation, it unanA miinna ,1 nno nnnnnin ' ' ' The arguments ol ease in writing Ln(1 rftaHmr u fmrnr - v o French system, and it may be that they have won us to adopt j it; i they haven't, it is strange that we should prefer the French and Ital ian to the German and English system. Ex. . 1 : II am an old man and have been eonstant sufferer with catarrh for the last ten years. I am entirely cured by the use of i Ely's Cream Balm. It is strange that so simple a remedy! will cure such a stubborn disease. Henry Billings, U. S. Pension Att'y, Wash ington, D. C I suffered for more than ten years I n:4u Vv - : j -a u vu- tuat uicduiui uiaeaac, cataiiu, aEd used eveiT available meaicine to me. 1 cannot thank you enough for the relief which Ely's Cream Balm has afforded me. Emanuel Meyers, Winfield, Long Island, New York. Ben Tillman a Democrat. I am a Democrat, pure and sim pie. I believe in fighting for re forms inside of party lines. I be heve that any attempt to organ ize a third party in the South would be an absolute failure. Ben Tillman. THE BURNING OF WASHINGTON. .TAKEN FROM THE OFFICIAL RECOIID, VOL. XXX11I, OF THE. UNION AND CONFEDERATE ARMIES. Outrages," "Lawless and Wan ton Plunder." - CUARITAliLE INSTi UTi PILLAGED ABOUT AND JEWELS HAWKED THE STREETS. INVESTIGATION COMMITTEE. Headquarters District of N. C. New Berne, N. C.,May 31, 1864. General: My order, No. 5, cur rent series, concerning the outrages committed at Little Washington has been severely commented upon in hih plices; not by my military su periors , but by Senators of the Uni ted States and others. I am so in formed, at least. I inclose the opin ion of a board of officers appointed to investigate the matters treated of in that order. It may not have been good policy to issue that order, but there is no injustice in it. My only feeling in the matter is deep regret that there are men in our ar my who can perpetrate such out rages. ' I am, genersl, very respectfully, your obedient servant, I.N. PALMER, Brigadier-General. General L. Thomas, Adjutant-General TJ. S. Army. General Orders, No. 5. Headquarters District of N. C. New Berne, N. C, May 3, 1894. While tbe troops of this command may exult and take just pride in their many victories over the enemy, yet a portion of them have within a few days been guilt- of an outrage against humanity7, which brings the blush of shame to the cheek of every true man and soldier. It is well known that during the ate evacuation of Washington, N. C, that town was fired, and near- y, if not entirely, consumed, thus wantonly rendering houseless and homeless hundreds of poor women and children, many of them the families of soldiers in our own ar my, and destroying the last vestige of the once happy homes of those men who have now given up all to serve their country in her hour of peril. And this was done by men in the military service of the United States. i It is also well known that the ar my vandals did not even respect the charitable institutions, but burst ing open the doors of the Masonic and Odd Fellows' lodges, pillaged them both, and hawked about the streets the regalia and jewels. And this, too, by United States troops. It is well known, too,- that both public and private stores were en tered and plundered, and that de vastation and destruction ruled the hour. ' The commanding jgeneral had un til this time believed it impossible that any troops in; his command could have committed so disgrace ful an act as this which now black ens the fair fame of; the Army of North Carolina. He finds, how- ever, that lie was saaiy mistaken, and that the ranks are disgraced by men who are not so.diers, but thieves and scoundrels, dead to all sense of honor and humanity, for whom no punishment can be too se vere. j The commanding general is well aware what troops were in the town of Washington when ce flames first appeared. He know what troops last left that place; he knows that in the ranks of only two of the resriments in the District of North Carolina the culprits now stand. To save the reputation of the command it is hoped that the guilty partiet may be ferreted "out by the officers who were in Washington at the time , 0f tnese occurrences , Tin nrrlpr will hp read at the head of every regiment and detach ment in this command at dress pa rade on the day succeeding its re ceipt, and at the head of the Seven teenth Massachusetts Volunteers and the Fifteenth Connecticut Volun teers at dress parade every day for ten consecutive days, or until guilty parties are found. By command of Brig. Gen. I. Palmer: J. A. JUDSON, Assistant Adjutant-General. the N General Orders, No. 10. Headquarters District of N. C. New Berne, N. C, May 9, 1864. So much of the last paragraph of General Orders, No. 5, current se ries, from these headquarters, rela tive to the destruction and pillage of Washington, N. C, as directs that these orders be "read at the head of the Seventeenth Massachu setts Volunteers and Fifteenth Con necticut Volunteers at dress parade every uy for teL . consrutiy days'," --.a hereby revokid. By command of Brig. Gen. I. N. Palmer: J. A. JTJDSON, Assistant Adjutant-General. Circular Orders. Headquarters District of N. C. New Berne, N. C.,May 30, 1864. I. Before a board of investigation, of which Col. James W. Savage, Twelfth New York Volunteer Cav alry, is president, convened at New Berne, N. C, by virtue of Special Orders, No. 16, paragraph I, and Special Orders, No. 26, paragraph II, current series, from these head quarters, were summoned various persons, officars, soldiers and citi zens, bearing testimony relative to the facts and circumstances connect ed with the burning of certain por tions of the town of Washington, N. C, and the pillage of that place, alleged to have been commited by certain men in the military and na val service of the United States dur ing the late evacuation, from whose testimony the Board of Investiga tion deduce the following, viz. . At about 11 p. m. on the 26th of April, 1864, Brigadier-General Har land, in command at Washington, N. C, received orders to evacuate that place, and in persuance of his instructions the post was finally abandoned about 4 p. m. on the 30th. The intended evacuation seems to have become known, or to have been generally "suspected, on Wednesday, the 27th of April. Dur ing! the afternoon of that day there appears to have been instances of theft, and before morning of Thurs day pillaging commenced, at first in the quartermaster's store of the First North Carolina (Union) Vol unteers, which during the day be came general. Government stores, sutlers' establishments, dwelling houses, private shops, and stables, suffered alike. Gangs of men pa trolled the city, breaking into houses and wantonly destroying such goods as they could not carry away. The occupants and owners were insulted and defied in their feeble endeavors to protect their property. The in fluence and authority! of officers, though sufficient to restrain these excesses wdien they wer personally present, was forgottonj or set at naught as soon as they were out of sight, and the sack was checked on- y by the lack of material to pillage, and ceased only with the final aban donment of the town. It is claimed, and may be true, that some portion of these outrages arose from a gene ral impression that a large amount of stores and property would, upon the abandonment of the place, eith er be destroyed or left to fall into the hands of the enemy, but this is Drobablv not seriously regarded by any one as justification, or even palliation , of the utterly lawless and wanton character of the plunder- mg. The members of the Board, hav ing summoned and examined all those persons within their reach who it was supposed could give any ma terial testimony on the subject, re gret that they i have been able ; to identify so few of the individuals concerned in these violations of good order and dicipline, but they are of opinion that none of the troops in Washington on the 28th of April last can reasonably claim toi escape a share of the shame and odium which the history of those few days has justly caused. These were the Fifty-eighth Pennsylvania Volun teers, the Twenty -first Connecticut Volunteers, detachments of the Fif teenth Connecticut Volunteers and the Seventeenth Massachusetts Vol unceers, two companies of the Fifth Rhode Island Volunteer Artillery, Ransom's New York battery, two companies of the Twelfth New York Cavalry, and the cavalry company of the First North Carolina (Union) Volunteers. Nor were thesej alone i ! guilty. Sailors from the gun-boats, hands employed on the transports, negroes, and in some instances citi zens, joined in the work of plunder and devastation. The Board are glad, however, to be able to record their opinion that the officers present in Washington generally, perhaps without excep tion, not only discountenanced, but used their best endeavors to repress the disorder and pillage. At 10 o'clock on the morning of the 30th, and as the last troops were embarking, a fire broke out in some stables, which had for two days been unoccupied. The conflagration ex tended to accent buddings. d spread so rapidly as to defy all sMt terapts to extinguish' it. That this fire was designedly caused admits of little question, but the board are un able to come to any satisfactory con clusion as to the guilty parties. Some four hours later Colonel McChesney, at that time in com mand of the post, sent by one of his officers a verbal order to commander Renshaw, of the gun-boat Louisiana, then in the stream, in consequence of which that officer sent a boat's crew and set fire to the bridge across the Tar River. This fire also is sup posed to have spread through the town . So far as appears in evi dence, the fires which caused such serious destruction of property. orig inated at these two points alone. Other fires were kindled, but -extinguished in every instance before thev had caused any damage. The commander of the post de clares that he had no intention what ever of burning the bridge, but whether his instructions were .care lessly given, incorrectly transmitted, ' I or misapprehended, or willfully dis- regarded by the commander of the Louisiana, the board do not deem a matter of great importance. ii. l he hnaings of the Board of Investigation in this case are approv ed, and published for the information of those concerned. 111. The Board of Investigation, of which Col. James W. Savage. Twelfth New York Cavalry, is presi dent, is dissolved. By command of Brig. Gen. I. N Palmer: J. A. JUDSON, Assistant Adjutant-General. A prominent Railroad Superintend ent, living in Savaanah, was suffering for years from Malaria and General Debility, says, on having recovered his health by the use of P. P. P.. thinks that he .will live forever, if he can al ways gat r. P. P. (Prickly Ash, Poke Root and Potassium. This party's name will be given on npplication Cure Your Corns by Using Abbott's East Indian Corn Paint, for Corns, Bunions and Warts, it is great. How I was Cured of So-Called Cancer. LULATON, GA. Dear Sir: This is to certify that I was a sufferer with a place on my un derlip for fourteen years, and was un der treatment of different physicians, but they done me no good. 1 had lost hope of being cured by medical treat ment. I then went to a doctor living in Florida, who treated them by art. After going to him it gt well, appar antlv. for a while: but returned as bad oc.imr T thon ofinln,lorl tn trv P P P (Prickly Ash, Poke Roo and Potassi- um;, ana aner ulkuik ii. uuiue u""M bottles! was cured. I u w. . tinri it. tn hp a good medicine to give good appe tite and to give proper digestion. Yours truly, L.J.Strickland. Every one should use P. P. P., at this season nearly every one needs a good medicine to purity, vitalize and enrich the mood. For sale by Drs. S. T. and P. A- Nicholson Chinese Fashionable Lady. The great object of a fashionable j Chinese lady is said to be an artili cial bird, formed of gold or silver. intended to represent Fong-Whang a fabulous bird of which marvel ous tales are related. She wears this in her hair in such a manner that the win 28 stretch over the front of the head and the spread ing tale forms a kind of plume on the top. Ex. ' Guarantee Cure far La Grippe We authorize our advertised drug- gist to tell you Dr. King's New Dis- Sovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, upon this condition, if you are afflicted with Laurippe ana wui use this remedy according to di rec ti rma criviriflr it a fair trial, an ; experi ence no benefit, you may return the bottle and have your money reiunaeu. wmVi this offer, because Of the wnruieirfnl success of Dr. King's New Discovery during list season's epidem-1 1C TTav hrri of no case in which it failed. Try it. Trial bottles iree ai. D. N. Bogart's. "O, What Shall the Harvest Be." On last Thursday Mr. T. R Moore, an old bachelor about 65 years of age, and Miss N. Rogerson a girl of 14 years, were married at u..Lm.-m t t.0 hru1p' father iuc icomcuw; jm. " wk;i in 1-erquimans county. nm.p rnnt fnrthe. srroom'8 home they were followed by a lot or scnooi children singing, "U, wnai. suuu tu harvest be. "-Fisherman and Farm er. How's Your Liver? Is the Oriental salutation, knowing that good health ' cannot exist without a healthy Liver. When tho Liver is torpid the Bow- 1 .els are sluggish and con stipated, the food lies in the stomach undi- : c,c5;cd, r oi -wii the blood; frequent headaci ensues; a feeling of lassi tude, despondency, and nervousness indicate how,' tlie whole system is de r;tn;ef . Simmons Liver h'a.!!itor has been tho moans 'of restoring more people to health and happiness by giving them . a healthy Liver than any agency known on earth. It acts with extraor dinary power and efficacy. NEVER BEEN DISAPPOINTED, As a kc'K'mI f;.n)i!v romcdv for rtvspepsla. Torpid Li.er, ditipatkm, etc.. I hardly ever nee anything -!m ajul lme never been dii appninted in tli urtert produced; it seem to bo aiiuoftt a perfect -aru fur all dit)cue'"t th tiomach and Bowels. W. J. MElroy. Macon ci. rrotessional anil Business ('. glAMULL M. BLOUV., AT TO KN E Y - A T-L AV, . WASHINGTON'. I. gKYMOUK W. HAxN(J0( '7 " " ATTORN E V-AT -L-,1 W Washs' L'li.N,. c. p UK(,'K-vVIT!l O ' ATTORNii Y-AT-LAW, Washington, N. U. Feb. 6, '0. J II. SMALL, ATTO u M K Y - AT - LivVV, WASHINGTON, N. 0 Z. MORTON, JR., ATTORNEY- AT-LA.W, WASniNGT N. C. Will practice in the Courts of the District and in Martin county. Special attention given to the collec tion of claims aud conveyancing. 3" Office formerly occupied by thfe T,e O. L. Hill. JR. II. SXELL, DENTlriT, WAS 11 1 N GTOX, N. C. Rooms over Briilgiuans, Main St. April!,:bn. JJR. R O. SADLlili, . SURGEON DENTIST, WASHINGTON, N. C Office opposite Dr. Kugler's .Drug store. Main Street. D K. A. S, WELLS, SURGEON DENTIST, WASHINGTON, X. C. Otiice atjlotel Xicholson. D It. J. II. DAXIEL, Specialist in tlie treatUot' skin-. dis ea-ieS Dunn, Harnett county, S. C s,.vWvir.i.ir. V. (' Dec. lltli. isno I uuiu.uu.. -,... Dr. J. II. Daniel, Dunn, X. C.s? Dear Sir: The sore on my lace. which was pronounced Epetheial Can cer, is perfectly well, aud I do not hes itate to recoinineiul your mode of treat ment to any persons suuering iiu ..uicer.t ! KespectfuHy, j A. M. McKay, M. D. Msy 14"-m. A. 1$. PEXDER, TONSORIAL ARTIST, MAIN ST., wasuington, n. c. ! Dibble's Old Stand. g A a & 1 iN U H u u D J! . - , . rr i IT t'1 M ! 0. M. BROWN MAIN STREET, WASHINGTON, N. O. Collections solicited ani remittano wde promptly. , Exchange Douitm- J. B. ltOSS, TAILOR, WASHINGTON, K. I matint, cits in la Repairing an diking A test styiw. - y--;- ; w, run nc f ---i; Morton &iCo's. AprilOtf. J.R.Wynne, WASHINGTON, N. C. Wholesale and Retail j- FISH Dealer. Country Product t June 8. . t ::,i.nl removes nNGLI&ii0Pfvu"'" , T.nrnna i p. ii Hard SOtt Or lUiiuu" -r . I LJ an tiara, oo horses. Wood anu Biemisuea -- ning. Spavins, Curbs, bpn", 6wolieu Throat9, Coughs, etc. ; 'the most Save 850 by use "l0"Vful Blemish cine, ever Knovvu. - Galiagher drugg.st Wh- ington. i im
The Washington Gazette (Washington, N.C.)
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June 11, 1891, edition 1
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