Newspapers / The Daily Review (Wilmington, … / Nov. 16, 1877, edition 1 / Page 2
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The Daily Review. JOSH. T. JAMBS, Ed. and Prop WH-MINGTOPT. N. C. , FRIDAY. NO? EMBER 16, 1877. VIEWS AND REVIEWS. Something orer fourteen thousand bales of cotton left Savannah on Satur day last, valued at about $665,000. The cotton receipts up to Saturday night in Macon, Ga., were 25,444 bales against 43,363 for the same time last year, showing a decrease of 17,919 bales. Senator Jones, after considerable talk with his associates, says the silver bill will pass the Senate by from 4 to 10 majority, lie anticipates a veto from the Presi dent. c Krupp is a lucky man. No matter who goes fa-warring, they all come tu him. Essen is said to be supplying 350 cannon a month to the Czar, while filling large orders for the Pope. ; i Miss Clara Morris has forwarded her check for $1,798.50 the gross receipts of the Custer' memorial benefit to the New i'ork Herald, to be turned in to the Cus- tcr monument 'fund. . ' Railroad traveling in France is very safe, Between 1872-'5 but one person was kiEletl out ot 4o,o,u, ana one in jured in 1,024,350, while in England dur ing the same period one was killed in 12, 000 aud iujurod in 336,000. Charley Ross's fat hor.iu his vain search for the stolen boy, has spent $60,000, his entiro fortune, ami is now :i iravcling salesman for an Eastern nous.-. 11c has made 300 journeys in search of" his lost child, and says he shall persevere until it is found or he dies hinnolf. The value of the oro minced and mar keted in the Black Hills in 1877 is esti mated at $1,500,000, The yield of the placer claims has been less than last year, and wilt not probably exceed $1,000,000. This makes the total product of the Black Hills for 1877 about one-fourth as much as that of California. Schliemann's find of Agamemnon and the rest of the heroes in their tombs is rivalled. ..--.A. leaden coffin his heeii. un earthed between Bethany and the Mount of Olives, inscribed with Phoenician char acters, and on a large silver ring found within it have been deciphered the names of Samson and Manoah. Renewed-activity among the Pittsburg iron and steel works indicated, .a decided revival in the iron industrv, which has boen more depressed than perhaps any other since 1873. A demand for iron has come in from all quarters, and prices, though low, are quoted firm, for the first time since the panic. The total nominal capital invested in all the railways of Great Britain is nearly $3, 200,000,000. This is at the rate of $200,- 000 per mile of railway opened. More ,than $190,000,000 f capital pay no divi dend; $270,000,000 less than five per cent, and. only $25,000,000 more than ten per cent. Of late years political antagonisms have ceased to affect private intimacies in Eng land.. Disraeli can be seen chatting with Mr. Gladstone in the hitter's drawing- room, and a few days ago went iuto the Acry focus of intense Whigism, at Wood burn Abbey, as the guest of the t)uko of Bedford, the head of Earl Russet's family. The great "Whig families marry Tories, and vice versa. After three years' litigation the com pany organized to contract a tunnel un der the Hudson River from Jersey City to New York have effected a compromise with the opposing companies, and the WArtr hanin in 1ft74 in to bo immmliatolir resumed. When the tunnel is completed it is expected that passengers by rail will be ablo to go through it from Jersey City to New York in twu minutes. It was telegraphed from New York that John Morrissey's health had .become so infirm that he would be forced to take refuge in Florida. The World says : His zMr o immf Aj wlTiiAU was " - iiriiuLuio'1' 1 mrw wu mv . i whirls I about four weeks ago. The excitement of the catnpaigii has left him very weak, and his physician says that if he takes cold lie will assuredly have pncumouia. As soon as he is able, to travel, Mr. Morrissey will go to Florida for a month's rest and change of climate. The jury which convicted Smalls was composed of six white and six colored men. Smalls' attprnys did not deny that their client had .feceived tho check for $5,000 from Woodruff, nor yet that Smalls had voted for the swindling printing bill. They only contended that tho agreement has not been proven. In plain English that a Seuator might j receive 5,000 for voting for a corrupt measure and yet hot be guilty of having received a bribe un less the prosecution should prove that the briber had told him in plain terns that be would pay! him $5,000 for his vote on that particular measure. Smalls nut in no defense save this. : MONEYED ARISTOCRACY. . - When the great North: objects to the passage of any bill by Congress, they forthwith sqnoTon sTdegation of Bankers to memorialize the National Legislature I not to pass the aforesaid bill as it will be very detrimental to the large capitalists and moneyed interests of the bondholders who are now receiving the interest on their investment in gold, and they may lose something by the investment, if such and such a bill should pass. It seems as if the interests of the whole country must be made subservient to the interests of the bondholders. And Mr. Hayes no doubt inclines to the belief that the Bankers' interest must be listened to, before the masses. In other words, the comraercia interests of the whole country must suffer. failure after failure in the coramercia world may be reported every day, fac tory after factory may stop work,; hun dreds1 after hundreds of poor men and Women may be thrown out of employ ment with no earthly means of subsisting during the coming severe winter, busi ness may still continud paralyzed, but the pecuniary interests of the Bankers who have grown so rich off the neces sities of the people must be protected, and the Bondholders' investment must not be allowed to languish or suffer. This much we predict, that President Hayes, through the influence brought to bear upon -him by the New England capitalists, will veto the silver bill if it should pass the Senate, and likewise the bill for the repeal of the resumption act also. The only hope aud salvation for the country is -the passage of these two bills Money is growing scarcer and scarcer among the masses every day; it is all flowing into one channel the rich are getting richer and the poor poorer, and it will continue so unless some immediate relief is afforded by Congress. The re- peal of the resumption act, it is thought, will have a great tendency to relievo in a 1 measure the present strictures in com mercial circles and thisfTogether with the remonetization of silver, no less eminent a man than the Hon. Mr. Reagan, of'Texas, expresses it as his opinion, is the ouly source in the .present disturbed financial condition, of the countj-v in which relief can he found. If Congress and the administration still continue to close their eyes to these facts as stated above, we shall soon, -very soon, have in this country a more powerful moneyed aristocracy tl an any country was ever af flicted with before; and this sort of aristoc racy, we wish to remark Tight here, en jiassant, is the very worst aristocracy any country was ever afllicted with; it is worse, far Worse, than a titled nobility; for when we have to raise our chapeaux to Dukes and Duchesses, Lords and Ladies, ' i " Marquises aud Marchionesses, we at least know that we arc doing reverence to those of gentle birth, who by right of in heritance fill the places that they grace, and we know that they , have not been raised to position by oppression and un- scrupulousness. ' . Vc repeat that unless there is some re lief afforded the country by wise legisla tion, in1 regard to its finances, that a few years hence, probably a decade, it may be a quarter of a century but not longer we verily believe, the wealth of , this vast country will be owned by a comparative few, aud that few will be the men who are now trying to shape the legislation of Congress to serve their own pecuniary ends, t ' k THE SILVER BILL. Don Piatt, in the Washington Capita ot Sunday, says : The passage of the silver 'bill, at one stroke, wipes out the crime of 1873, and scotches the fo!lies of 1874. It makes resumption of specie payment, in the proper sense of the term,1 practicable It shuts the door of the paper mill and ends the empire of the syndicate. More over it males the resumption act of 1875 of so little consequence . that it doesn't matter whether ihat shame is repealed or not. It makes the outstanding bonds of the United States, including the 4, 4 and 6 per 'cent, funding loans, payable in the coin of the Americajojaapnle. resrn.rd- pean bond-tHAa, nd m contempt o those divine- rights with which John Sher rnnKA nivinr rrtrhra mth iirhmu I I, ti .1 T . ... man has so laboriously sought to endow the syndicated But this is not a great accomplishment It is sinaply the undoing of a great wrong. And, instead of having made progress, we have only succeeded in getting back where we were five years ago back to the possibility of ' honest resumption. Tho fact that We find the old stamping ground strewn with wrecks and reeking with bankruptcy; is due partly no the hired, thieves. who stole the silver dollar away from us, and partly to the gratui tous idiots who tried to replace what the thieves had stolen with waste-paper. Bii now that wo have found our good old sil ver dollar, we can jafford to let the re sumption act die of its own inanition. It is a matter oft utter indifference whether 1 T if I it is repealed or not. But it nrn'mWu will be repealed by Congress, and the President 'will probably veto tho repeal bill 1 The Berlin correspondent of the New York Herald intimates that no slight dis satisfaction is expressed ia the papers there at General Grant's having ?ff in me pian oi nis European tour f w ft- , , . t i- , elude a visit to Berlin, where ne might - , - -:. ? The ex-President is expected at the jGex- man autumn maneuvers on the Rhine for which he would certainly have received . r jicscuicu io iuo umpcrur. ooaio jk14- ton & weldon tuai Kou ttmpaoj ffilM parations had already been made respect- he.ld t the office i of the Company, Wil f . . t' T... , mmgton, on TUESDAY, the 20th of Novem- lug uis mirouuciiou iu jvaiser vviiueiui abi Ems, when he passed the Rhine en route for Switzerland, without paying his com pliments to the aged monarch. A local paper intimates that Grant must have some secret motive for not making a stay in Berlin. The German part of the Amer ican population would undoubtedly be also much offended if General Grant re turns to the States without having seen their former Emperor. The: Wisest Precautions. Of precautions, the wisest is that which is taken against disease. There is safety in timely medication; great peril in delay. One malady often begets others far more danger ous, ana if it does not, any abnormal condi tion has a tendency, if unremedied, to be come chronic and obstinate. Trifline dis orders of the stomach,' liver, bowels or uri nary organs may speedily develop into for midable maladies. Check them at the out set with Uostetter's Stomach Bitters, which. although it is wonderfully effective in over coming disorders of long standing, is, like any other medicinal preparation, more ad- vantageons m ine miancy 01 ine maiaaies to which it is adapted than after they have hftdomfi f.Virrni. Atnniw ttipp am flvsnrw sia, liver complaint, constipation, intermit- tent and remittent fevers, gout, rheuma tism, nervous and general debility aud url petor.inauci soana repo.e, and counted the effects of fatigi tigue and exposure. APPLETOW'S AMERICAS liYCLOfiEDIi ' NEW REVISED EDITION. Entirely rewritten by the ablest writers on evury subject. Printed from new type, ond illustrated with Several Thousand Jugravings ana Maps The work originally published under the title of THE NEW AMERICAN OYL.UOPE D1A was completed in 1873, siuce which time the wide circulation whieh it has at tained in all parts of the United States and the signal developments which have taken and art, have induced the editor and pub- lishar to submit it to an exact and thorough revision, and to issue a new edition entitled Within lhalaut.ton roopo tha n-rrrTM.n aiscovery in every uepanmeni ouuiowieage ' I v.u V U T VUA S3 UK1 CM III nas maae a new woik oi reierence an im perative want. The movement of political affairs have kept pace with the discoveries of science and their fruitful application to the industrial and useful arts and the convenience and re finement of social life. Great wars, and con sequent revolutions have occurred, involv The civil war of our country, which was at i?.?11 w.iientelat volume of the old ing nauonai cnanges oi peculiar moment. new course of commercial and industrial activity has bfien conimfinl. 1-iarge' accessions to our geographical knowledge have heen made by the indefati- ga oie explorer oi Sirica. Tne great political revolutions of the last decade, with the natural result of the lapse of time, have brought into public view- a multitude of new men, whose names are in every one's mouth, and of whose lives everv one is curious to know the particulars ureal Dames nave oeen lougnt and impor tant sieges maintained; of which the details are as yet preserved only in the newsmners or in the trasient publications of the day, and which ought now to take their place in permanent anu aumemic nisiory. illn preparing the present edition for the editors to bring down the information to the lowest possible rates, and to furnish an ac- curate account f the most recent discoveries in, science, of every frehs production, in meraure, ana oi tne newest inventions in the practical arts.as well as to give a succinct ana original recoru oi me progress political ani nistorica levants. ' Tho vnrlr .octWn Wnn o j ample resoures for carrying it on to a sue- ft.ssful temination. None of the original stereotype dates have been used, but every page has been nrinted on new type, forming. In fact, anew Cyclo-i its predesessor, but wi lii a far greater oecui-1 iary expenditure, and with such improve ment in its, composition as have been suggests euoy longer experiencea naemargea know- Tne illustrations which are introduced fori the first time in the present edition navel been added not for the sake of pictorial ef- f.int hnt tn fflvo crrottor lnlHtif on1 I They embrace Qtirl Hfk-rkin. 1 1 1 TttAsf fnfiiAiicon1 vs m 1--. 11 I . aural nistonr. I ftntlirf nf fiwnprv AnhHMtnranH a, well as the various Drocessesof mechanic I ana manuiaciuves. A.iuougu intended for I instruction rather than embellishment; no artistic excellence;the cost of their execution is enormous, and It is believed they will find a wplmmp ri'oont inn n an 1mirhl foatn- I m-r--M-r m.m w - AllLTul LI 1 fill I of the Cyclopcedia, and worthy of Its high. I This work s sold to subscribers onlv. rav- I able on deUvery of each volume. It will be ecrantarningaut trated with several thousand Wood liSigraT-1 lugs, and with numerous colored LUhograp- tr mcjuaps. rrr-ti crriTTTny exra Clotn. per voL fi 00 : In T.lhrarv ijruiuci, iJisi yui, o w; J-ii xitui xurKeyjjio- roco, per vol, (7 00; In Half ItHssia, extra gut, per voi, vi w; inr un Jioroco, antique, gilt edges, per vol, 810 OU; In Full Kussia! per voi, 10 uu. Thirteen volumes now ready. Su cceed volumes, uniu .completion, will be iss once in two monias. Specimen pages of the Akerihaw rv cixpkdia. showing type, illustrations etc will be sent gratis, on application. ;rS Agents Wanted. D. APPLETON & CO., 649 & 55 Bboadway. N. Y. COLD. Great chance to make money. If yon can' i, get gold you can get greenbacks. We need person in everv tsvnm r toi-a subscriptions for the largest, cheapest and best Illustrated family Dnblimtwi in th world. Any one can become a successful agent. The most elegant works of at t given free to subscribers. The price is so low that almost everybody subscribes. One agent re ports making over $150 in a week. A lady agent reports taking over 400 subscriberam ten days. All who engage make money last. You can devote all your time to the business oronly your spare time. You need not be away from borne over night. You. can do it as well as others. Full particulars, direc tions and terms tree. Elegant and expensive Outfit free. If you want profitable work send us your address at once, it costs noth ing to trv the business. No Xails to make great pay. AddifK ttvpTpU. pie's JonrnaV' Portland. Maine, Ug4 QUBSCUIBE TO THE D ULY BBVIEW. lliscellaaeous. Secretary's OOce, JILIJIXOTON A WELDON B. B. CO., ? j f f WitmirGTos, N. C.i Nov. 5, 1877. r; e . i ?i . if r- ' ' ' - " '''?' ' ' J1 . mHE FORTY-SECOND ANNUAL Meet- I ineof the Stockholders of the Wilming- oer 1577. j. v. THOMPSON, nor 6-tdm " SecreUry Secretary's Office, W1L. COL. A AUGUSTA R. R. CO. Wilkingtoh, N. C, Nor. 5, 1877. X the Stockholders of the WilmiocrtoD Columbia & Augusta Kail Road . Company will be held at the Office of the Company, in Wilmington, on TUtSUAI, the 20th of November, 1877. J. W. THOMPSON," !;. Secretary. nov 6-tdm FIRST OF THE SEASON I NEW RIVER OYSTERS Fat and sweet, now served up at the Centennial Saloon. The finest Wines, Ales, Lasers and Cicrare 1 always on hand. JU11JM UAKltUi-L, I sept21 4 Proprietor. I MX II ill fl L H J US6. O N AND AFTER THIS DATE TIIE Sf!Zf.""!j0!5f.,V?5!f! unn).v mnmin. nii i? .,.io Monday morninir until 12 o'clock Saturday night. Wines, Liquora and Cigars, the best 'and tne cheapest. New River O rat era famished manr style aesirea. ... " JOHN CARROLU, oct 1 Proprietor. OFFICE REGISTER OF DEEDS, NEW HANOVER CO., N. C, WILMINGTON. Oct. 30, 1877. EENEW AT ONCE. T ETAIL LIQUOR DEALERS, WHOSE Licenses expire on the 31st of October, are hereby notified that they must RENEW THE I Qllir AT nxmP . n til 'I n . . . . . 1 j JOS. E. SAMPSON, Register of Deeds. oet 31 New Desiarn. N INVOICE OF CLOCKS of entiioly, 1 new designs has just been received and are being sold at extremely low figures; also a assortmeD5. ,LAui :Al'llbb' aAij ana riiAli liUbU KllUb and I lia-viiud ana iiii,MJi.Ji'ir L UAiixa I Work left with me will be neatl v e neatlv exe- cuiea. All l ask ol the Fublic is io give me atrial. J. H. ALLEN. feb27 Watchmaker and Jeweller Street Cars, QN AND AFTER MONDAY NEXT the I STREET CARS will commence running at 6 o'clock in the morning, and run every 15 minuto piMi wn- fm t.o Xfol ti., minutt3' each wa ,rom the Market House, Q , , , , ' - , , nH ' clock except Saturdays, when ' they will run until 10.30 o'clock. I ) Th f!rfl will ' I . " -"v.uan, m ccu LUC I " urooaijn I ' I There will be a Car to the Cemeterv everv I i i 30 minutes, aleo one to Brooklyn every 30 mi There will be a sign on the rear of the Car Jst over the dash board, designating which ' ' " place the Car is going either Brooklvn or - V X'erSOnS WlSuinO" to take the Cftrs nn either of the three Railroad p.' will find the Rtreet uars tne neapest and most comfortable way of reaching them. Persons arriving in the of Front trp ITin mi fljl uI1i8Jreet nearUwoa Depot, which mil raKe "WO tO any Ot the Hotels for 5 Cent. or flTT Wl II m I IDA WT m Tl h A m mm a m J to nr other part of the Street Car Line. Cemeterv op Hilton, nniv fi nntn tv- near the three miles of road, and return for S ine Ter theUnited . eraona.ye requeited tojry- naoaiJUlUil A-lJNti, ancr 21 o . . . Superintendent. Keystone Printing Ink Co t MANUFACTUBEBS OF PRINTING INKS. iJUUlv AND NEWS BLACK A 17 north Fifth Street, Philadelphia, Pa, OfaliFS ARE, S.P A SUPERIOR dn2 1DfKInadefi"0I?the bestinirre uienia and under th iwnnn. " lT fiw from MitoVc DrJ'"' print are (ram 30 to SOMrmf l A trial of a smmnle V L Fat up in uZZL.tTT'f. P- Address, " - . w nu purchasers. KBY8TPONE PRINTING INK CO & is lT NJsS - --' - Philadelphia, Pa. GUB3CKIBE DAILY REYIEW; Bail Boad Linos, &c. Cen'l Sup'ts Office, WILiniTOTON, COLUMBIA AND AD- GUST A RAILROAD. ' Warninjtoii N..C, JTov. 10, 1877. v. CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. On and after Sunday, Nov. 11, the follow lug" schedule will be run on this road: DAT EXPRESS AND MAIL TRAlN,(daily , ? I- . except Sunday.) . f Leare Wilmington....... :.. 10 44 A M Arrive at Florence 3 17 P Ji Leave Florence 1 20 P II Arrive at Wilmington 6 40 P 11 NIGHT EXPRESS TRAIN (Daily). Leave Wilmington 7 25 PM Leave Florence 11 20 PM Arrive at Columbia ..... 2 60 A M Leave Colombia... .......12 50 A M Leave Florence............................ 4 18 AH Arrive at Wilmington.. , 8 45 A M This Train will only stop. at Flemington, Whiteville, Fair illuff, Marion, Florence, Timmonsville, Snmter and Acton between Wilmington and Columbia. THROUGH FREIGHT TRAIN (Daily, ex ' cept Sundays.) . Leave Wilmington...... 11 00 A M Leave Florence 7 00 P M Arrive at Columbia 3 10 A M Leave Columbia 12 16 A M Leave Florence... 8 00 AM Arrive at Wilmington 4 00 P M Passengers for Augusta and beyond should take Night Express Train frbm Wil mington. J9- Through, Sleeping Cars on night trains for Charleston and Macon. A. POPE, G r A JOHN F. DIVINE, General Supt. " nov 12 - . . WILMINGTON & WELDON BAILBOAD COMPANY. Officb op Gen'l Scpeuiktemdent V Wilmington, N. C, Nov. 10, 1877. j On and after Sunday, Nov. 11th, 1877, Passenger trains on the Wilmington A Wel don Railroad will run as follows : DAY MAIL AND EXPRESS TRAIN, daily. Leave Wilmington, Front St. Depot at y 10 A M Arrive at Weldcn at.. 3 2b P JJ Leave Weldon.. 11 45 P M Arrive at Wilmington, Front St. Depot at 705 P M NIGHT MAIL AND EXPRESS TRAIN. DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY. Leave Wilmington, Front St. Depot at... Arrive at Weldon at Leave Weldon, daily at Arrive at Wilmington, Front St. 7 05 PM 2 20 A M 3 35 A M Depot at , 10 25 AM The Day Train makes close connection at Weldon for all points North via Ray Line 1 .1 -: i r i uaujr, itcfiiouuunji j auu utiuy, via IV I C II mond and all rail routes. Night train makes close connections at W eldon for all points north via Richmond. Sleeping Cars attached to ail Night Trains. A. TOPE, (J. P. A. JOHN F. DIVINE, General Supt; nov 12 Soartanbura: & A, R- R- New Route to the Mountains of Western No. Ca. millS NEW ROUTE IS NOW OPSN X to the travelling public. Passenger trains leave daily the Depot of the G. A C. R. R. CHEAP FOR CASH. in Columbia at 12:4a p. m., and arrive at ter-I minus of S. A A. li. R. at 8 p. m., where r ; SOL BEAR A BROS. rJTr u ia ,WUT-ae octlS. 18 A 20 Market street wavuvs iv i jrittt Aut' iieiiutjrsun vine, will have choice to go through or lie over at I JtvxiulU V AJLi. ML Trron. where the fare ia excellent, and I uouiuiu auv. si a XJU ftO LA lUw iSJ 4 t&OOCllli JT B I - i . mm resume meir journey early next morning I iiiv uas removca uiiBirwr and thereby enjoy some of the finest moun- V - t i -w - tain scenery on the Howard Gap turnpike, to Shop on South Front Street "one door Kortb be found in Western North Carolina. ... .. - , . w. u. & A. K. K.t tor round trip tickets at tne ionowmg rates : ' From Wil. to Flat Rock and return $15. 85. " Asheville and return, $19.85. u tt a fa warm Springs and return, $25.85. 1 J ti u it t0 Henderson ville and return, $15,85. - ; Capt. S. S. Kirkland, of N. C. and for merly of the Air Line 11. R.. will be ; c resent on tne arrival ot trie trains at the terminus of the S. A A. It. R., to see that passengers are provided for and sent forward without de- li rfV " 1 4 1 . . . . ... . ' .. . lay. un arrival 01 trains passengers are re-1 mnn Kimmt nn ijm quested to ask for Capt Kirkland, Passenger 15, ;i U, . Ollliil IU1 J loii uiu iranipuruuon Ageou , 1 , Try this new route. D. R. DUNCAN, Prea't. julyl2 , SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT. rjlEETH INSERTED1 ON Silver Plate at the same rate as UTI I T T Rubber. It is far better than Rubber, more 1 1 r 1 -j . 1 -rjl durable and can be worn with much more I I 1 OJLCL" XXlO " -t? Ol h comfort to the patient as it occupies less 00m in tne moutn. we nave also reduced uie price 01 , uoia 1'iate worK. jj iumg and I tu V uutuiwu "ziZJi to tb A. m mrm T . onbintlr rri T00tn Fte Wtiiairworklefttainyeiirinlw con8tantIj on hand. 1 . 1 - - ' XUUQ. JO. iii,Jt&K CZ DUjN. apprence ro OocA up UWA, ' iii thflfntnra All work oct 20 Laree Consienmenta Wnnf I fLL.0.!. SVSS? mo SUrrLY demands ofa Large Trade m CnSSrVind S3j ??lhr?lF. v TaJlc! and Hides.. V, y 11 lU3 xeas, unions and Annies Potatoes. Ponltrv. , Z fpr AT-Kno 1n -1 --..ww. . I V; mhjmj prompt ana prontaDle lvtum. -. -ir Fish, Meats, Sugar, Coffee, lc. Lard, Butter, Molasses and Salt. Corn, Flour, Lye and Potash. Spirit Casks, Glue, Guano, &c. Soap, Tobacco, Cigars, tc Handle Cotton and Naval Stores. TETTEAVAY & SCHULIvEN, ! Brokers A flnm If Next North Princess and Water Streets! j I jou soon will be. - -rJC- cIh nov13 ' - ';oet30 ..y : - - SHAMP00AND BATHS gHAVE, 10 cents. Hair Cn 25 rents. 8hampooy 25 cents. Hot and cold Batls at all hours. Clean towels and sharp razor In abundance. All work done ia silence ami withdispatcb. ,1 'tnHL I. FDBilANSKl. - i oct A Cor. Front and Princess. $ A FulTUnT fancy and the beantifni, ' U CARho Full fifty varieties I 14 "'.-. -".u.i. .Call ,.;,.BookandJoyp seDt 26 prii nipt, iioiiw BrolceracyA u..: r" r . - . . exhibition, samples of CoflL I fc 15 Take orders for fieate, Lard S. is2 Butter, Cheese. Soap, Lve PouPS h We are tfenti forthe tahi GIBBS A-CO'S MANIPUUTM OW.IN STORK A LARGE AUD CAU fully selected stock of Staples Fancy Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats' Cloth'ing, nishing Goods, Ac, for tile Fall sad Vu Trade. " . r ' ;: ( These goods were selected by me tt.i,..i in the Northern markets and With the wants and rAnnlpamAnd AriL Jff 1 respectfully invite an examiniica; stock.. -V t . "oowbj IVVi j . ; . 5 C' w ' 1 U I ' .w holesale Dealers are notified Uutu. and will nfrDthh. v , Agent, ( o. 17, Market 8t I A.WEILL oct 17 , No, ALWAYS SOMETIIIIIG mi Exchange Corner. ... UaUCS. ,DU iue latest stries in Child ren a Fancy Hose, ShetUnd Wool ; sew Silk lies; line Black and Whit T. Ties; Kid Gloves; Hambwg Edginri tsd Insertings; Corsets, Ruching, UandkeTchiffi, Lace, Bibs, Spanish Net, and other Finer Articles. , You will find the best valno in i h rlt ..New Goods always being received jo the iuiwioery xepartment. A handsome line of Straw i&dTelt ClnnA FJowrer,Feather, Plush, Ac., tAwayiothtnl nov t . , ,-' osKVJflT. CARPETING, : CARPETLYG. LARGE AND Well Selected fifock of CARPETING New Styles, Bwt Goodi, ju. t. wtxwat, , ... ., -Z: nrm , 7 . I TniTM iir pnunn . .t..L. Arrangements have been made with th OI ni8 oia "and. , 4; z$ many oatroai sol friends he will now be pleased to tecsi 5a. 7, South Front street, (Cleapors ld ititfi) OCt la '.;' T - 'T .. t ..... FUniJITUnE AUD CflnPETS ! t- rl v i . - - u OR FALL AND 1 WINTER TBADL i large and complete stock now in Wareroo. forsalejow. Jr and examUie and send-Xpr.eUl(v5vl TCALL. THE ATTENTION or torn rena of Wilmington who have ..... .UL A T have fin irtnrlrmstn but mvttu. w. . nnnmiXKM In Knk u uiwl- I nmmitie tuA in the future all work entrusted towy oii.ii 1 1 . . 1 j.. rait xn v ir u It shall not only be promptly done, I - lMM XVfll WMT-Il " tending at present to keep mucn rrr honH mncannant Is nnr rhnl tnd TJ0ui ments repaired, v r -rxEf. nov 9 IH)7 lIS OTJE ' &02. - 1500 to be sold at Exclaims Cotoa 'TAx vards. . If voo are , K.-IL8F8D5T. n from the eCects of .ffJ Abases la arir .d remarkable refflw. C Books and drcalars Ia scaled enTelopes, 1 w -a w tlOWAXD JUSOCIATIM-. p rt-t. 0. V-T1ftnhLS. S. .0 r! An iMtltntlon hsviar a WJB onn ana pro dp""
The Daily Review (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 16, 1877, edition 1
2
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