Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / March 31, 1872, edition 1 / Page 2
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MORNING STAR. ;J Sunday:llarch;3l4 1872. i uaitor ana s-roprietor. - . ' ' ; ' TirKkra nv artnonoi dtimw . ..? i Dally one year, in advance. ... . .:...,". r0 - six monios, in aavauce...... ........ 3 ow " three months, In advance.,,.....!.. 0 one month, in advance.'.;........... 75 Weekly htar, per year, .....r.... .... 2 00 ekly Scar and Carolina Farm- r, S ' 0 Dally itar and Carolina Farmer, 8 00 THE QlRr.UhA TION OF THE MORN ryO STAR IS LARGERl THAN THAT OH AMY OTHER DAILY- NE WSJ 'A PER JllB LTSUISDIN NORTH CAROLINA. i s ose jioxTii iKon To-nounow. On the'first day of May will assemble the National Liberal Convention ' at Cin cinnati, -It will be the "most momentous political event that the country's history can show ; and results, if we are not a bad prophet, will, prove its conception the ' wisest find nrnnilpfc ntrnlrn n( wisdom and the highest development of patriotism in our politics for many years. It must absolutely shape the political destinies of the land. If jt bear the fruit we think and hope for, ; shape theni ad mirably well. If thero is a failure through confusion of counsels, through haste and blindness, or through fear and cowardice, which we do not apprehend shape tbem lameotably ill. The thing i3 wholly in the. hands of Republicans. They must muster the pa triotisra to initiate the Reform move ment. All depends upon the moral back bone of the prominent Republicans whose names have been. connected with the call and subsequent support of call for the Convention. Let j these; men have the firmness to make a platform and nominate candidates. 'Nothing more could they do ; nothing less will satisfy the conscr vative sentiment ot the country. Once thfe ball is started, Democrats will furnish the elan necessary to put it through in splendid style. We$ay in behalf of the free spokenj in dependent Democrats and Conservatives of North1 Carolina and the South, that their support . can I bo relied upon to any well organized, liberal arid prudent plan for national redemption and the conferva tion of popular liberty that the Cincinnati Convention may mature and set on foot. ' Knowing where the votes to defeat Grant are to come from, that Convention will not, we feel sure, I gratuitously insult or wound any class of voters in the proposed coalition. Only the general points of agreement the vital issues of the day siiould be incorporated in the platform The. candidates should be men recognized as eminent, fair-minded and popular citi zens; whom the suffragans of both the parties cao cheerfully support. Such action as this at Cincinnati ensures victory in November, and a new era in the history of the country an era of concord, peace and prosperity. Let the men who go to Cincinnati to speak for that senti ment in the Republican party outraged by the' excesses and corruption of Grant's Administration, go there with a firm, fixed and patriotic spirit to carry their high purposes into effect, and to this end to pay no heed to threats or blandishments and to look out for the snares set to en trap them by their unscrupulous foe. But there i3 another Convention to take place just one month from to morrow, in which Nort h Carolinians feel a lively in terest. The Democratic Conservative State Convention commences at Greens boro' on the firsts Wednesday in next month. Conservatives, are you all pre paring for this Convention ? If not, you ought to be. One month is not alone; while. Time rolls; rapidly. The first of May will soon be here. Let ua all be readv. and let there be a larcrn tnrn rmf full delegations from every county in the State and hearty enthusiasm in behalf of the cause. Remember, if it were possible you could forget what that cause is. Tiiat is tiie cause op Truth m, Falsehood, of Law v Crime, of Peace vs. Discord, of Hon esty . . Corruption, of the Good against the Bad, "and of CONSER VATISM AND RIGHT AGAINST RAD ICAL TYRANNY, STEALING AND OFFICIAL SHAME AND FLAGITIOUS NE3S1 Surely a . Conservative can never forget his and his party's status never nag in me perilous nour wnen ; nis-yoice and efforts are needed to defend his State and country. Surely the , high and holy incentives ,that have moved him in rthe past and which have been intensified by . the despotic, outrageous conduct of a Rad ical Governor, aided and abetted by his party, will have greater potency now than ever. The work of putting down the corruptionists was not fin ished . two ' yeafi '-ago.. It must be effected this summer.. When the Con servative' party; arises in its might and . majesty ;the people fully .arou;ed to the importance of faithful, strenuous exertion, we shall havV. effected what was commeuc ed so well in 1870. Let the glorious work oi progress oe started at liieensboro, and lei it not cease until thoun ot the first of August shall; shine as refulgently on a victorious Conservative . host, as it shone on Napoleon and the French at Austerlitz. One month from' f o"morf ow ''., Cincin nati and Greensboro t The State aid the . Pnnnlri t T i.a f A ' T j t f '. . . BennetUville has a mcn'g colored debating club. 7 yonng SCENE SPlRITUaLlSriO AKD GVB ERN iTUMlAL. ' ' Scene, Aba vc-.tber- Classic Fiilds'of Scuflletowri. frhe Slumberous Waters jof the Lumber rolling in the distance. "Witch iog hoar fjof Midnight. !Foar .Choice Spirits in Conclaye-Cald well, Settle, Logan and. Henry .Berry J Lowrey. Who shall be -Governor! Quadrangular Quandary turned Into a Tussle with Three. 'Which ? Berry's Blessing. J - ' Caldwell 1 claim it of right; and pre vious prestige won in service loyal. I must be Governor again. - Twas I who stood by the party through the fires of four years ao d more. I was loyal in Secession V time. Somo others were not. 2J. B. Lowrey .1 were,; too, Mister Caldwlet ' ; : Ggan. And I, I only, served the Con federates in Capacity Congressional, like my irieoa senator fool, to embarrass their qause. I was ever true blue. Gentle men,! claim the Governorship on better groundlhan either of you. T put down the murderous rebel Ku Klux and in this act alone deserve more than ye- all. Settle. Perul (under breath.) Caldwell. Hush, Capting Tom Settle ! Your Democratic secesh proclivities com port well with pretensions to advancement in tne union uspuoiican party i ireru should have contained your military, judi cial presence and abilities longer. Pity in the first place you broke the Judge for the-Minister Plenipotentiary, and a second pity when you broke the Minister for the Gubernatorial aspirant.- Brothers in the glorious cause, wiir Capting-Judge Settle answer for Governor with all his rebel sins hanging about his skirts ? : Chorus. No I No 11 No ! ! ! ' K 23. Lowrey. -Well, it shan't be Settle; that much ar1 settled. But Gub'ner, how now 'bout your sending the melish and Gen'ral Gormandy to hunt and sterminate our gang of lojal men ? ; uaiaweu. witn .a smile tnat was child like and bland,") My dear H, B., I look on my action' in this particular as being the principal feather in my politi cal cap. Why, bless your soul, those fel lows were not. at all dangerous. I had to do that much to pacify those villainous Conservatives, who kept clamoring and denouncing me for my inaction. You know there was no manner of harm in that gallant band of military patriots. Billy Smith during the war of the rebellion used to blow his, horn and set on bis dogs after deserters just for a blind. He says he always sent the deserters word when he was going out on a hunt. You see am a sort ot a Smith man. 7 JZ.B. 'owrej:WeV,' well. That's all right, I 'spose. .I'se been Heralded 'bout so much by these newspaper mea". thai I shall have to leave the track to you and Judge Loan. I call on you. Judge, to keep the-e Ku. Klux scamps straight. Don't let 'em persecute poor Lowrey. Let me hab a good chance to git away from these low grounds ob sorrow in Robeson counly. Good bye," friends. The light ob day am most here, and I mus' go back to my hole in de swamp.- All. Good bye, brother. Exit Lowrey. Settle. Governor and Jadge Lngin, we will sec about this business at Raleigh. Both. At Raleigh. Logan. A Jeffreys is greater than a stubborn j I'll KuKlux you 1 T Caldwell. Get you gone, you Confeder ate Congressman. They say you are poor Judge. any way. Penitentiary and Clark vs. Stanley, forever. !:V """" Exeunt all the Spirits. - . . Palmetto Leaves. - . .The Irish Rifle Clnb ot Chares ton will give a ball Monday night. . . The South Carolina Presbyte ry will meet at Abbeville on Wednesday, April lum, at r. ai. . ; A large number of military arrests have lately been made in Spartan burg couqty by tbe military authorities. " . The " Charleston News says f: The Indeper?dent Ord er of Odd Fellows will celebrate the 53d anniversary of the introduction of their order into America on the 26ih ot April next. 1 ,V The Court iniEdsefield conn ty adjourned o.n Thursday, the 21st inst. Rachel Stallworth.' a negro woman con victed ol murdrr; was sentenced to be hanged on the 19th of July next. . . . Mr. James Brewer has been arrested and released on bail in tbe-inat ter that transpired about two ra6nths ago in Gramteville, in which a negro girl shct the infant cuild.ot Mr. Brewer, was alter warus suoi uerseji, inu ivuicn lesniica in a 1 "'.! t. y the subsrqucht -shooting of. Mr. Albert Turner. Tbe Edgt-field Advertiser sajs tne evidence against Mr. Brewer waa as scribed, to personal motives. . . The verdict of the Coroner's inquest in the matter ot the fatal exDlo- Bion ai tne rnmnix iron works in Charles ton, is 4Vniat ; Frederick Barton came to his death, on tbe 22d day of March, A. D. 1872, at the Phoenix Iron Works. Pritch ard street, by the explosion of a boiler at said works, Irom come cause or causes to the jurors unknown; but the jury ezoner ate all parties connected with the said works from any neglect w hatever." . mm -. ... .' ... A tree whichj-vras cut down recehny in Kansas contained two bushels ot bees and three hundred pounds of ueauuiui transparent honey. t.?J According to Gibboni the population of ancient Home; in the heitrtit oi iia magnincence, was i,wu,Wj. r-JSTAB 1IEA3IS. i- SDain has nearly 3,1)00 ftuniP1?1 ' u Uu J I r- opain uas ucaiijr """i r Alabama..whereithe vdunff ladv take3 a l nener-. ,- j i w . V War-faro-Hardtack, and brit little of it;' ' ! Vs '. - r - . A water famine starca Gotham r' v in the face . TKg vHtlb ' trirn's Ont "16.000.1 nianos a vpur. -rr California ponnd-pears are go ing the paragraphic: rounds. - . Two million barrels of flonr will arrive in Boston this year. . One Paterson, N.' J"., brewery yields 150 barrels of ale daily. . V Several Baltimore finn3 are packing, fruit at Nassau, N. P. . , : ; Danielsville!, Ct., is frozen so deep they have to blast the graves. ; Rev. Amos Babcock, an 1812 relict, has just died in Mansfield,' Ct. A water boat ot 5,500 gallons capacity is to be launched at East Boston. Illinois produced 65,000 tons of pig metal last year five' years ago not a ton .Nearly two men, wDmen ana gins are empioyeu in the paper collar factories of Massachu setts It is said that the bill of ex ceptions in the Fisk Stokes case makes 700 pages, and that it will take a week to read it. Literary men are pretty well united in'the opinion that tbe first book printed on this continent whs by Uomb ever, in Mexico, in the jear 1544, Uems or Thought for the Sabbath. When once infidelity can pnr.Miade men that they shall die like beasts, they soon will be brought to live like beasts also. The burden of the gospel is love : but it is a love which speaks the commands of God with authority, and insists upon obe dience to Him as the only way of safety and life. A celebrated writer says that if one could read it, every human being carries his life in his face, and is good looking or the reverse, as that life has been good or evil. ! It matters not what a man loses if he saves his soul; but if he loses his soul, it matters not what he saves. ' Preserve your conscience always soft and sensitive. It but one sin forces its way into that tender part of the soul, and is suffered to dwell there, the road is paved for a thousand iniquities. 1 The great man is he who chooses the right with invincible resolution ; who re sists the secret temptations from without on1 trUhin tt K r Vina re f'Vtn lintitfinaf Vn dens cheerfully ; who is calmest in storms and most fearless under mcnances and frowns; and whose reliance on truth, vir tue, on God, is mst untalteringr The ruin of most men dates trom some vacant hour. Occupation is the arm5ur of the soul. There 13 a satinnal poem, in which the devil is represented as fishing or men, and fitting bis bait to the taste and business ot his prey: but: the idler, he said, gave him no trouble, as he bit the naked hook. " The most popular doctrine to preach in hese times, and the hardest one to prac tice, is the old fashioned apostolic doc trine of stlf-deniai. ; This is tbe jrrace that pinches. The daily battle xi Christians is with that artful subtle, greedy sinner, self. And the highest victory of our re ligion is to follow Jesus over the rugged pa'h ot sell-denial. This is' mainly to be done in the little every-day acts of life. The great occasions that demand sublime sacrifices are tew and rare. A Romantic Story- ' In South Carol na, lately,, has bean en acted another version of the " old, old story" ot mao's inconstancy and woman's constancy. A lady now no longer'young. after many years of waiting, has been married to her lovr, who was far from be ing true. She had supposed him dead killed in battle and for nine'long years bad mourned his loss, ret using, by. the score, admirers of her' beauty and her wit, pom oi wmen were ; more man, ordinary, tor sne came t a Huguenot 'stock, re- nowned for their good looks and gobd sense, and an ancestress of hers was one of the beauties at the court of Catberine.de Medicis and mistress to the King of Navarre. While she thus was mourning her. life, away, her recreant lover was alive and well, and the husband of a Northern woman. He had been left for dead on one of the fields ot battle, but under the skillful treatment ot the Fede ral surgeons and tender care of a brown eyed hospital nursej had Tegained his lease of life, but lost the heart which was not his to lose. Taking advantage of his death being reported, he came . to tbp North, and under a feigned, name married his hospital fairy. With her .he lived happily till.the tall of, 1870, when; death took her away. Then at his de serted hearthstone the lonely, msn thought of his Sonthern love, and his old possion returned. He yielded to the yearning to see her again, and with three children, the fruit of his marriage, went back to " Old Carolina," and shamed and trembling pre sented himself before her. She,' on her part, forgot and forgave him all, and has taken the vows which makes her a mother to his children. j ' A Horrible Crime. The Wilmington (Del.) papers report that William Dennis, a negro, committed a rape on the person ot, Mrs.' Jno. Thomp son, residing about two mile9 from that city, on the 27th inst. The victim was alone in the bouse with her two young children at the time," her husband a me chanic employed at the Harlan and Hol ling8worth shipyard being absent. Mrs. Thompson -made jadesperate resistance, the furniture in the room" being wrecked during the struggle.' j The negro drewa razor and threatened to kill her. She es caped from him" finally and ran to the house ot Joseph Lefevie, about a quarter of a mile mile distant, in nearly a -nude state, all her clothing haying been torn oil" in the strogglenearly; exhausted. Tbe negro, add tbepapera, bf pieces of flesh from Mrs.t Thompson'a-face "and., body, which. he' spit oat. upon .the flooriL Her A!f - . cooniuon is uFscrmea as precarioos. , lJen ms made His escape, although annmber pt citiz -ira, -together with the poUce.were soon looking for him. x - - 1 An Embarrassing: Situation. An exchange informs us that the old doub e.aimona in per leeiptttrcE ine young Hnnhl:almond in her teeth-sad! the voaosr man bftes it off." That sort ofhing,used to be popular in Daylt'stown, Pa. ; but it-f 13 Vfl;u U1W1C,BAUV'C painful accident which occurred AlPh1: J opena party last' winter.' i'Too flaayiwho-1 "v' tm r-Si--.l-:-i r held the almond between h'er eeth 'was J somewhat advanced in years and nqt. a little dilapidated. ;The almond was un commonly tough, and the man - who nib bled was in deadly earnest. He closed his teeth . on it and pulled. It would not give. He pulled harder, but made no impression. He clinched his jawsjupon it andi gave a desperate wrench. " It: is un pleasant to relate what followed ; but, as truth crushed to earth will certainly jise again p,ny how, whether we try to keep her dqwn or not, we may be pardoned for sayingj that as a consequence ot the violent efforts of the young man, he fpiind him- self standing up in that room holding in his mduth a nut in which were fixed , a tllfi fiftiri.sa;d maiden. It was embarras- 8jDy a certain sense for all parties ; the youngjman thought it would be soothing to the!ttelings ot the company n ne went home.1 Other and less perilous games are L. -a. t i i Vi: nn. A Cnrlons Belle Exnmed. Somie workmen digging in the rear of a building in "Sullivan street, NewTork, recently unearthed, about three feet below tbe surface, two square platforms made of heayy yellow pine logs, and on excava ting further, disclosed two log huts in a nearly! complete state of preservation. The ifijst hut uncovered stood about six feet from the street. It was eighteen feet high,wen'ty leet wide, twenty feet in length and was built ot heavy square logs ot yellow pine, with a flat root of the same material ; the other, which stood about five feet further back, was sinlilar in size, but buXlt in a ruder style of rounded logs. It was probably used for a cattle shed, as a kind; of trough sunk in the ground was found plose by its side. The house was not only a substantial, but tor those prim itive ilfeaes a very comfortable dwelling, the roof being so well laid as to be imper vious? to rain, and- the logs forming the walls fitting together in the closest and most workmanlike manner. Hardly was a well, f fom which the workmen fished up broken? pieces of pump. All inquiries as to the history. of these dwellings proved fruitless. : ! : : Lowrey or Not Lowrey T Tnat Is tne . Question., The ! Atlanta Sun, of yesterday, says: On Monday, two suspicious individuals were observed passing along Peters street, by Martin and Richards, and directly left the street and went across the commons border in sr the street at that point. One ?f tnf aPPeaTed be twenty-six or twenty-eight years old, rather slim and ... - - ' -r-. . . . -r T atntetic. uatn seemea xo nave xnaiao blood in them. Niw, is it not possible that these persons were H. B. Lowrey and oue ot his comrades ? It is known thai Lowrey has fled, and $10,000 have been offered for his arrest, as well as $5,000 tor each tf several others in his clanu Detec tives, vfe learn, have been quite vigilant in Virginia and North Carolina, and have failed to discover any trace of the fugitive. It is not at all unlikely that he has passed through Georgia in search of a refuge far ther West." t A New Writing? Fluid. The Dutehe Industrie Zeitung publishes the following process for manufacturing ink : f Bruised elderberries, after being kept ia, an earthen vessel for three days, are pressed and filtered. The juice is of an intense dark color, requiring about 200 parts of water to reduce it to the shade of m t . i a aarK rea wine. io- iz-j- quarts oi inis filtered juice add one ounce of sulphate of iron and one ounce of crude pyroligneous acid. The ink thus prepared has, when first used,. a violet color; but when dryr is an indigo-blue black. This ink is superior, in some respects, to that prepared from galls; it does notj become thick so soon : iki writing it flows easily from the pen, without gumming, and the letters formed by it do not spread on the paper and run into one another. I ; A Model riatform. smttnnrn n,nrA nnrmer n1 political orator 'of Lousiana, is about to take the stump for Reform, and announces the following as hisplatform of principles: 1. Love your neighbor as yourself. 2. Burglars are in our political House of Life let U3 arrest them. ' 3. Do unto others as you would that they should do unto you ; or in other words; stand by the people ot the State acd they will stand by us. 4. Thou shalt not worship false idols or graven Images. . 5. Au honest white man is as good as an honest negro, and better than a dishon est one; 6. Drive devils out of office, so that, in the languape of sacred writ, the lion and the lamb may lie down together. Restitution. A gentleman-of Richmond, says the Whig, received a letter last week from Mr. C. T. Brown, of Matthews county, Va., (whose farm was ravaged during the war. and bi3silver plate; library &c, earned off by federal soldiers,) to the effect that alter the interchange of several letters, he had "received from an ex-federal officer in the citylof New York neartyali the stoi. len silver plate which yyas quitevaiuanie together with a large number ot dooks. An English Clergyman, a high ehurch man, was preparing a number of: yonng womab ast month (February) for . confir mation, j Among theraMs one vho,. tells this 6tory : " i ou 11 doubtless Knowyny 1 , t 1 1 1 : iL gooqjgiris," saia ne, aaaressiognuem wim affectionate earnestness. what next Wed nesday is.?'? "Oh, yes, a;r," theyall-ex claimed j "it . is Valentine's Day.V .They were right enough. but it was also ; Ash Wednesday. . w La oil happened to fall oil the 14th this year, and, the coinpidencej Vfas rataB u! PretePslons The origin of the litle 4 The Thunderer" by which the London' Time ; is4 knQwp was iront a writer beginning a Reading ar ticle with the phrase, f. We thundered forth the other day," &c. Some of the Times co temporaries .in referring to this expression, called he 'l'imes ".The Thun- derer," and though nearly fifty years have I elapsed, the title still dinga'toit. ' -I SPiiOIALr NOTICES. -Tbls celebrated Medicine baa X. Attained a high reputation, as a reliable ,!;rMr pnrtfW th Biood. uestorinsc l.ihe Uvft andianeyg to a neaitny action, une uvr wmn uucjn a, gLSS?S5L ol thewom forms f-ScrofBlafyspepsia, Eheumatlsm, of thefiT. Nervous trostratidm &e., nas caused it to becomea standard re aow prescribed br pnjsioians: mended by our best citizens. remedy, It Is nq recem- dec 7-D w a riy-em MISCELLANEOUS. First National Bank o mi.iiixGTOx, WitmsaTOS, March 27tb, 187 i." CJUBSCKIBKRS to he Increased Capital trur nfihio linnVaTB taprebvnotlQea tnat thafnll .mnnnt.nf their SUb3CrlDtlOH3 wlllbe due and payable on the 1st dy of April next ...... A. K. WALKfcK, ' march 29-5t -uasnier. BUSINESS CA11DS. J. & H. SAMSOH, WHOLMALB AKD EKTAtL IN . Staple & Fancy Dry I Goods, Notions, BootB, Shoes, Hata, &c. 43 Market Street. OCt29-tf JOHN S. LBB. B. B. .WILLIAMS, JOHN S. LEE' B. r. W. LOPSB. &1 CO. DEALERS IN NAVAL STORES, No. 47 North Water St.. Philadelphia Liberal" Advances made on Consignments of Naval Stores and Southern Products. Reler to Messrsllaxriss & Howell, Wil mington, N. C. " -" v -' nov 12-ly THOS. C. LEWIS, DEALER IN Ship Stores, Groceries, ProTi aloiis, Fish and Fish Hoe. NO. 5, SOUTH WATER STM OCt22-tf WILMINGTON, N. C. " A. ADBIAH. H. VOJ-1.JSJ- ADRIAN S. VOLLERS . Cor. Front and Dock Sta., WILMINGTON , N. C. TrrnOLE&aLE GBOCEBS. IN AL1 its branches. COUNTEY MERCHANTS will do well b: calling on us and examining onv Stocfr. nov!9-4S-tf SIOFFHTT & CO., GENERAL COMMISSION Merchant .JfORTH WATEK 8TBELET, . Wilmington, N. C, V7ill-trive uromDt personal attention to fcht ale or shipment of Cotton, Naval Stores, General Produce, etc., etc. Also to receiving ana forwarding gooas. Orders solicited and promptly filled. sept23-l-U - . v S. NOKTHKOF. . W. It. NOKTHBOP Wic A. Cmcttiiro. - - Northrop & Cumming, COMMISSION MERCHANTS And Proprietor ' off . the Wllnalnsrton Stea&n Saw Hills, WilmiWgton,N, C. tABUOES f Yellow Pine Lumber for anj J market furnished. - Special attention given to the purchase or sale or corn ana peanuts. : oct -iy . J. . DWIKSB. I ' B. W. B.ALL. Edwards & Hall, Grocers and Commission HercMs deaX in all kinds or ; COUNTR1T ERODUCE, And keep constantly on hand a- full line ol Groccrices at lowest cosh prices. . Wilmington, February 14 D&Wtl ALSX. JOHHBOlf , JS. 8. E. BIBDBBT. JOHNSON & BIRDSEY, Commission Merchants. i Will give prompt and personal attention to the sale or shipment of Cotton and Nava. Stores. t WiLMrwaToir, N. C , Sept. 7th, 1871-tf ' B. F. MITGHELL & SOK, COMMISSION" MERCHANTS, : A.KD DBAXS&S IS . GRAIN, FLOUR, HAT, ana also Fresh Ground Meal, 1-earl . Hominy and Grits, Hot. 9 and 10 No. Water Stret, Wilmington, x. C, . Proprietora of the Mevchants'a Flouring Mills, nov 2-tf . A H . N E F F , . MAKxnrAOTtrasB ass Dsaueb vs HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS, No. 19 Front Street, Wilmington, N. C Guns, Stoves, Lanterns, Pumps, Kerosene OU, Tin and Sheet Iron Ware.' 43- HOOFING DONE at SHORT NOTICE.- Agknt tor Faiebakk's So axes; dec 13-tf v : ' ; ON, MARRIAGE. HAPPY RELIEF JorTOUNU MEN from the effects of Errors and Abuses in early life. Manhood restored. Nervous debility cured, impedimenta to Marriage removed. Mew mt i hod of treatment. Hew and remarkable remedies. . Books and Circulars sent lree, in sealed envelopes. Address, HOWARD ASSOCIATION, No? South Ninth street, dec 4-3m ent Philadelphia, Pa. ' For the Ladies ! i HAVE JUST RETURNED from the NORTH , - , WITH ALL J HE NEW STYLES OF SPRIXG U ATS and BONNETS. Collars, Cuffs, Handkerchiefs, v , . . Corsets, Hoopskirta,' Bustles, . Vietoria Lawns, Jaconet, Swiss, Nainsook and Mull Muslins in striped plaid and plain Hair Platts, French T wisu and Puffs-in imitattpn i : and real hair; " ' . NECK-TIES AND BOWS," And a splendid assortment of Millinery and MIlLIHERY G00DSST .Call and examine my stock before purchas- ing elsewhere. iropmcBrTERMa'cMait . '-vs Kt. if ,'. t;!l'l:. .n- .. r - .... OK, i D. BBOWH. mar S4-tf ' Exchange corner IISCELLANEOUS. CLIFFORD HOUSE, AND-ONLY SAMPIiE ROOM, ... : IN. THE CITX. r, . ERE SUPERIOR SEGARS AND Iinr TLKD LIQUORS canalwayibe han connectiOH with that J3uperior Brand of MICHIGAN CHEWING TOBACCO. J : aiso, Furnished Rooms, by Day, Week or Month. oct lCtf , . J. A. CLIFFORD. Prop'r Turpentine Men and Farmers THANKFUL FOR YOUR. PAST LIBERAL patronage and hoping: to merit a continu ation of tbe same tbe present v ear, I will still guaranteo to tumish my customers with that - - EXTRA-BOLTED : MEAL from Rail raid Corn, 63 pounds to the bushel, much cheaper than you can have it ground if the mills were at your door. That celebrated Extra Family Flour and Pearl Hominy on hand all the time. 4S- all bags returned in good order will bo ci edited at cost on the next bilL ALL GOODS SOLD DRAY ED FREE. feb 9 tf ALEX. OLDHAM, Proprietor. First National Bank Of Wilmington, ) Mrch 18, 1872. f IIILE THE OFFICE OF THIS BANK IS being repaired, the business will be transacted in tbe adjoining rooms, entrance on Pr bice ss street. march 19 tt A. K. WALKER, Cashier. GRAND CO HCEET FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE First Baptist - Sunday ' School, To 1)3 iiea li lli8 Oiera House. ON FRIDAY EVENING, APRIL fiTH, ON whicn cccasioa . M'LE. ORISTORIO DI Fit AM A Will sing THE GREAT " INFLAM ATU3 from Rossini's 8tabat Mater, TUB GRAND ARIA, from La Favorite, and the celebrated eong, - - Tbe Conquered Banner. ' ' Mr. J . F. Rneckert, Violin and Clarlonetta. Solo; Mr.J.Denck, Piano Solo; assisted by several of the highest Vocal and Instrument al i alents of the city. The mus to loving community may expect excellent music and a well arranged pro gramme. Tickets 75 cents; Children's tickets 23 cents to be had at Messrs. Green A Flanncr's, Mr. McKl benny's, and Mr. Llppltt'a Dreg Stores, and Mr. Love'd lttxk Store.- -march 30-WA ; : , ; Hoop Iron and Gluo. Q TONS HOOP IRON, ( 5Q BBLS DISTILLER'S GLUE, 4QQ SPIRIT BARRELS, For sale by WILLIAMS & MUBCHISON. . mar 24-tf FULL LINE Imported aid Domestic cigars; Pipes and Tobaccos, ON RAND ANJ? TO ARRIVE v .'..-;..:,.;. i " ..." By , . . PIGOTT. Sign of the Fascinatmg Indian GirL-ea mar 7-tf ' . ' . ' Medicines ! Medicines ! WE ARE RECEIVING PER STEAMER: Radway's Sarsaparilla, Badway's Relief and Pills, Simmon's Liver Begulator, Hollo way'e, FlenQming' and Bardotte's Worm Confections, Vermifuges, Ac, Ac, Ac. Also, a superb article of Bay Rum, Florida and Lavander Wafers, Genuine Ltibin's Et tractp, 4c., 4c., sold by " ' - McILHENNY & WRIGHT, Druggists and Pharmacists, mar23-tf . . . Lippitt's Corner. Limited Partnership, NOTICE is hereby given that the nnder slgaed, in accordance with the provision or an Act or the Legislature of 16 -6L entitled " an At to provide for Limited Partnership" and aa act to amend the said Act, rattffe i the 8tn,f,February; 1872. have renewed and con tinued tae limited Partnership heretofore existing between them under tbe provisions newed partnership. Js' to- eostmue. for five years, and is to data from January 'lt. 1872. an i is to terminate January 1st, . 8 7. The nature of tbe business to bo- tra no acted is a General Wholesale and Commission Business in the City of Wilmington. James A. Willard and Albert -A. Willard, of the City or Wll misston. Are the General PannAra. nniir thn style of Willard Brothers; William H. Wil lard,of the city of Raleigh, is the Special Partner, and as such has -contributed to tbe Capital Stock of the tame the sum of Seventy. Five Thousand Dol'ars (75,otO), the said sum having been actually paid in by him in cah n P00 (al h into the capital' stock of the Original Limited Partnership, of which this is a renewal, and the said sum of Seventy-live Thousand Dollars is represented oy Goods and Merchandise now on hand, and has not been impaired, in the course pf trade. JAMES A. WILLARD, I General . v 4 . ALBERT AT WILLARD, (Partners - . . w , WILLIAM II. WILLARD, mh 102m m ,j Special Partner. Pork and Bacon. 40 0 BABBLS cn?T MES? rosj: Hhds C. R. and Bib Bacon Sides, , , : jq Hhds Smoked Shoulders, . ' Boxes Bough Sides. ' - VT OR Boxes L..B. Middles . -s-;ixl ; w is": ;pr sale bT?.C-iA ? ' WILHAM5 A MURCHISON. march 24-tt
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 31, 1872, edition 1
2
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