Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Oct. 14, 1873, edition 1 / Page 2
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Witt. H. BERNARD. 1 -Editors. CICERO W. lIAHHIg, J , WILMING TON, N C: Tuesday Morning, Oct, 14, .1873. Messrs. Walker, Taylor & Co., Advertising ' Agents, Baltimore, are sole agents for Th Kobhiks BtaSIii that crtyr "Botff editions 'of our paper may" be found on file at, their office, 134 West Baltimore street. . - tHfi SOUTH CABOlttTA iNITER SITY UNDER THE RADICAL SHADOW. We. who hdve had a noble Univer sity of our oven- killed outright by Radical manipulations have a right to discuss the downfall of a State University in a neighboring common wealth caused by the same baleful agency. We feel deeply for our Southern friends in their shame at the humiliation of their first institu tion and the actual loss they sustain by the perversion of its management. With the resignation of the Chair man of the Faculty and two other professors in the Medical School the last of the "old and brilliant galaxy of instructors " take leave of the "place. Dr. Ia- Borde,' who resigned the trusVTgp'dsed'ift him because as a Southern man, of Southern principles lie conld- not preside over an institu tion "that admitted colored students, has been a member of the faculty of the 'South Carolina College at Co lumbia since 1842. . During thattirae he has frequently acted as its Pres dent. In addition to his professorial and managerial duties Dr. La Borde has used his pen with ability and vigor in. behalf i ojfr the institution of his ardent ""love. lie' wrote its his- tory, also other works of mter- - est. Bnt with' all his zeal iorihe Uni versity he conld not remain with it after, its humiliation. He left, and others of therold faculty who had pre . viously resigned. followed him; out. We presume the party of mongrelism will now mn the mafthine to suit themselves make a ragged primary sonooi oi : is, juss as mo same party ua witn our university at jnapei Hill smrt tinailv W Pnfti. , TSrowr at I Co., did).' break , down at even that I small business: The South Carolina - ' .- . ----- . : ' a i r f: , I TT . . , , A . . . i uiversuy , opeueu last wees wb i seven students, as wc mentioned in these columns at the tiirie. It takes Southern Radicalism to " lay out " . collegiate institutions. . . THE ELECTION TO-DAY IN PENN- : -cKpl SYIiVANIA, . VTHo'JetQC.tion in the . great State of PennsjlTariiaoTjight to result, in the signal efel!vh.e nefarious ring, but It wiUWt. l(e candidate on the Republl5ari ticket for Treasurer is one of the chief conspirators belonging to that notorious clique. Mr. Mackey was nominated for his ring influence, he ring controlling Pennsylvania Re publicanism. The law in that State permits any -citizen to examine the monthly reports of the Treasurer filed with the. Auditor. , But lately a re quest to see these reports made by three citizens belonging to one of the local, Democratic committees was re fused, and when the Supreme Court was asked for a mandamus, a Repub lican judge granted it as he was obliged tb7 but made it returnable three days after the election. The sleek scoundrels! They knew the figures would be their condemn a tion before the people, and they dared not at thejeril of their official pap let these figures be introduced in the i canvass. .And such iaf Republicanism, and such is Republican ring rule every where?rthe -bane arid curse of the country,' the civilization, the age: 2 But the ring is inaster ia; Pennsyl vania and the triumph of the ring fa vorites to-day will doubtless be corn- plete. NEWSPAPER' ClfTBRPniSE I N ' NOHTH CAROLINA. Robert M. Furman, Esq., editor of theAsheville Citizen, proposes ' for ! the-parpose of -encSffraging higher order of culture and farm,-home and mechamcdoimprovement'to-3get up the!CHfz(ln 'HomVAgricultural sSocie- ty ahcl Stock Exhibition, and to hold annual fairs in. Asheville, N. C." "No oaeexjep eitiaens of Cherokee, Claj, Graham, r Swain, . .Jackson, , Macon, Haywood, " Madis0n,M" Transylvania, Henderson, Polk, .Iutherfprd, Yan cey, ;MHchell, McDowell and Bun combe will be. alio wedJ to compete for prizes, and that on articles made or grown, or stock raised in said conn ; ties. The soeietv will merelxr b nr. ganWejfor the present, as it is late, but it is proposed to hold a fair next year; However, premiums are of? fered for a class of articles to be et libitedeniljeT. H($ T lL -This move of our o! t rausmontarie brother is in the .right direction, and , we hope he wiU meet witn great m ess. The extreme Western counties. Aeed An exhibition of their own. THE EMBARGOED COTTOS CROP A SOUTH CAROLINA DANKER LOOKING FOR : CURRENCY TO BfOVB IT. r-f y 111 na .National 5anl at jUoiumbJAs. Uj naa. Deen in tne city several days trying to raise currency fat Xho purpose, of mating the; cotton crop. His mission here has been an utter failure. He has also tried in Phila delphia and Boston -with the same result. He says the hankers in , Columbia and Charleston have pulled thrpogu a severe trial, but are solvent, and continue to pay theuTdeposifors TnTcuffehcyr Thelfeur rency is nearly al gone, and they Sent hiin nere to see wnai couia De aone aoout h. 2K Y. Jownat'of Commerce. ; , ....... ... We are glad to say that' It be Bank of New Hanover, of this city has been more fortunate; The President of that institution spent two davs of last week in New York and madd ar rangements to secure an ample sup ply of currency for the purchase of cotton and naval stores both for the parent bank and its several branches at Goldsboro, Tarboro and Wades boro. TIMELY TOPtfcS. A case of thief crying stop thief has just come within the purview of judicial inves tigation. One Hunter, of the publishing firm of Hunter & Co., of Hinsdale, N. H., wasirreated last week on a charge of cir cdlatin obscene"- tinblicatfons. This 'firm," we believe, published a weekly pa per with the ostensible purpose of exposing shams and swindles .in all parts of the country. It seems that while it was thus laudably engaged in warning the public; against the rascalities of others it was snug ly and covertly sowing the seeds of corrup tion itself, meantime plentifully lining its own purse with ducats. ' . The Alliance is a new eight-page paper published in Baltimore in the interests of the Young Men's Christian Association and religious interests generally not of a sec tarian character. It is edited with ability by Revs. H.-L.. SiagTetoa tmU.EV B. San ford. It is intended to bV the undenotni- national religious journal of the South. SOUTHERN MAIL. , .- A national bank is to be started at Jacksonville The Grand Council. . United Friends of Temperance met in Macon on Wednesday. A large number of dejegater,were present, f fx .r " "The gin "nouse of William B Francis, of Washington eountv. Ga. th fifteen baes of cotton.' was w burned last h ridav. . There is an effort being made in 'Atlanta to take thepOwer to Appoint poucemen out oi tne hands of the Mavor and fftace it in the hands of commissioners Bill Arp's new book, entitled "BillArp's Peace Papers," will be published in a few days, -with a large I number of humorous drawings byfa Qouiuern ariisi. j.i On Thursday, September 25, AddrewJ. Gill, aged eleven years; was caught in the gearing of a cotton gin on the plantation of his uncle, Mr., A. J. Gill, near Yaruesville, in Beaufort County, S. C. His head was crushed by striking the stirrup of the hand wheel. A DIABOLICAL. CRIME. The Murder of a Colored Girl by a Pardoned Convict. j '. : Cuarieston News. Walterboro, Oct. 9 Last Jilonday, the th, an atrocious murder was committed near Smoke's Cross Roads, in upper ColleWni . The victim was a mulatto girl about twen ty years of age, named Annie Black. The suspected murderer is a pardoned colored penitentiary convict, named Daniel DeSausure, who was convicted for rape upon a child March 25th, 18b9, and sentenced to ten years' hard labor in the State prison. ' But on the petition or fiat p potential county of ficials he was r pardoned on the 31st of October, 1870, and made the first public exhibition of his acquired vir tues by cutting the throat of Annie Black. It is only gathered from the declarations to her parents, that De saure had committed an outrage upon her a few davs aero, and aho tnlrl him , . ir , sne mtenaea on jjionday to go to- xi mi nuance vonnm ana nave mm arrested. -He offered; she said, twen J ty-five dollars if Bhe would not go ; dui, on. ner reiusai, toip: her he would " KILT. HER IF SHE DID. kju iuonuay sne siarteo. out was found on . the road with her head neatly severed from the body, a slice cut from her throat and several gash- ... .L. l Jj -'l? ; r ' f iel Desausure was , at o'tioe searched tor and found absent. When found he gave confused and contradictory tementsoi his whereabouts. He. ICiOTi l; Il'i '10 j . : statements had: BLOOD ON HIS SHIRT SLBBVkS, which had been partly cut off. The blood he said came from a pig's tail that he had cut, and he cut off his sleeves because his wife had made liremttop long, He ts now in jail -awaiting & trial "at the1 General Ses sions to commence on the, 20th inst.. wnen you will be informed of the re sult of a judicial investigation of this aiapoiicai crime. . - ..; U. ' , Oar Sandwich Island Cousins. The. last mail steamer at San Fran cisco. I front fthf 1 Sandwich Islands brought dispatches .from the U. S. uonsul at Honolulu to the State De partment. .The dispatches are said to have urged the necessity of a U. &. man-oi-warto be sent to the islands to look after .American interests in case complications arose from the deah of 1thekin&s whos was lying ill m a critical cuumuon. vraers were accordingly sent frpm Washington some days since to dispatch the Sara- wa h ar iana ia - tion, to ftono-talu. The Portsriiouth was at Honomltt at last; adyl6es. but i was expectedito leave., The Yelloxv Feve Heartrending De - lalls or Safierliis. There are as Vet no signs of a gmf era! abatement of the fever, ilthorigh -an mspectidn Of "Happy -Hollow, where it originated, shows that it has spent its strength in that locality, tor want of material to work on. ..Those now residinsr there, are convalescents. There was jaoixost ... last ..aightj -aL4 though the weather was quite cool; but the frosts of twd preceding wights have thus far produced -no "... marked effect Upon the epidemic, and there appears rio early prospect of a miti- rrntlnn nf t.Tifi nlarrno frnnr that. a ti' ' f """ - i o ; - . q. the limit between the river arid; Fifth street, and front .Washington street north to Chelsea, there is scarcely a house that has escaped the fever, and it continues to spread all over the city. ' Should it rage in like proportion in the remainder of the city as it did in . "Happy Hollow," there will not be enough people left hefe to bury the dead. Those in our midst who witnessed its work in JSew Orleans twenty years ago ... say that the situation here is far more horri ble than anvthinsr thev witnessed there. There is yet a pitiful lack of com petent nurses, and the Howard Asso ciation of New Orleans has been tel egraphed to for a further supply -r Some of our physicians appear to have given up in despair and fright at the fearful earnage, and have fled from the city." . Still the., majority remain and are . laboring day and 'night in the cause of humanity. : 1 he clergy of all denominations remain faithful to their. work, and are doing alt in their, power to alleviate the suffering. 'Sto ries of suffering and inhumanity that woniu toucn the stoutest heart are numerous. The little girl mentioned in these dispatches of Tuesday last, who ob tained a coffin, made a shroud for her dead mother, and nursed other sick ones in the family is now dying of the fever. One man while 1yw sick was robbed of all his money -by the brute who was nursing him. i One wealthy man fled from his son who was lying prostrated with the fever. Two nurses while, supposed to be at tending sick persons got beastly in toxicated,1 and were ' expelled from the house by the neighbors. At the La SfdetleT. Academv wTiereTFathers Casey arid Dailey died, five are now reported -sickr Father O'Brien, a Dominican J1, priest, k was taken on Tn UVQUU w V Vlllll". and died to-day. It is extremely difhcult to obtain a report of the number' of deaths daily. The four undertakers in the city are busily and constantly en gaged, and fanerahi have none of the order arid decorum usually consid ered as due tathfr-xweaflion. People die fastferih&ri'thevcan " be , buried.. Hxradreds haye jiieii unattended. It a knoyr t!t be have r;lain un cared ior autil partially decomposed, arid at one Urinal-place"'' the stench !.. : t i t-i. .. .V . . arising irum iub comos awaiung in terment ijrable.f'epple'tiot here can form no idea xt th"ldeplorable state of affairs from written descrip tions of the frightful condition of the city. It must be seen to be full v realized. Those who wish to place their monev where Suffering will certainlv be reached and the funds judiciously handled, can do no better than to send it direct to any of the clergy men here.- 'They are all trustworthv men and can be depended on. Some who have left the city to escape dis ease are sick in the country, among them Mr. Whitmore of the Evening Ledger, who went to Brownsville, 60 mues distant, where he is now pros trated. H. H. Littleton, a prominent insurance agent, died at Covington, 4u miies irom here, ihe steamer Clarksyille, which ! arrived to-night, lost three of her oflieers. Nine hun dred human beings have perished from fever "since it first appeared nere, and still the lever rages. Mr. Pendleton, of Ohio, on - the irt . nances. Hon. George IL Pendleton made his first speech in Ohio, in favor of the Democratic ticket, at Greenville, on luesday last. In regard to the , , " financial panrche is reported to have eaid : . -. ; . , , ; ; i ; " 1 , this. . catastrophe arises from the natural and inevitable reduction of values incident to a restoration of specie currency, then let me ask von whether it would not have been better to meet the crash with the public debt nearly all paid, and the taxes reduced more than r one hundred million dol Tars? ' This-was th greenback theorv of 1 867. " It prOnosed to ' nav the: ond8 were agreed tole paid. f Ifi tD ,in leSal teHr?at the rate of which they were conxraciea. -ltxiay ttrfr government does not pay them. It buys them It pays ten, twelve, fifteen per cent more than it ought. Perhaps the? law requires it. it so, it is Kepublican law." . The Cuban Hepnbllc. h ive years agv to-day the Cuban lnsotreetifrn began atYara. A few cuuiageuuB men inen commenced a struggle with. Spain' f Or the inde pendence. of their country. That struggle still continues, although Spain has sacrificed in it nearly 100, 000 of her regular army besides many thousands of mobilized militia recruit ed in! the island,4 arid has expended over $120,000,000. l he ultimate result is fee tain. All the other American colonies of Spain have" won" their independence, and tuba is sure to complete the list. Chili fought seven years: New Gra, nada nine yearsi-Yenesuela ten years; 'Mexico eleven -yearsrand Peru the last of all, fottr years, to achieve their ,;treedonv,. The Cubans havT no Tea son to be . discouraged because the end .oi the fifth; year find them still STAR BKAlttS. jyr rXilteS are arho'ryef oufj exports to IJThe fTanbiirv Neibi ntari has a nanaeomcpiace.: zi- I g A suppressed resolve will betray itself in the eyes. George Eliot. Where are " parts unknown ?" Orr.'a;bald oXeiesjtra player's hed. i. Jxhe secxetjMfashion..iS- tojsiirL, prise, never to disapppin. t, D ulwer. A New t York jury acquitted a vouth charged with, stealing a quan tity ox. cpmn plates. . . uonaiosou, tne. Daiioomst, is said to be a member of Charity Lodge, lvmghts of Jrythias, JSorfolk city. Mrs. Miriam Kirtland, a lady of some literary repute, was seriously in jured at Huntington, 1 L. oaThlirs day, in oonsequeoce of being thrown out of a buggy by an unnianagable horse. The New York' Times corres pondent says it is not true that "Presi dent Grant had in Jay Cooke's Wash ington bank a sum of money which was placed in a tin box and returned to bim betore the susponsion of the bank was made public. It is reported from Washington that Senator Couklincr has chosen Senator Cameron as a medium through which to inform the world that he would not accept the chair of Chief Justice, if -offered to him; that he has no ambition except to finish his term in the oenate and return to more con genial arid lucrative professional pur suits. EVICTIONS IN IRELAND. Extract from the Leetnre of Mr. Drad laush In New York Last Monday Nisht. In my checkered life I have been a private soldier, and between 1849, and 1850 I was in, the County Cork, stationed at Ballancholy. Those of you who are Irishmen will want no de scription of thatbeautif ul valley of the Lee which winds between the hills from Cork, and in Summer seems like a very Paradise, green grass growing to the water's side, and burnished With gold in the morning, and ruddy to very crimson in the evening sun set. 1 went there on a November day. was one of a troop to protect the law officers; who had come with the agent frdrii Dublin to make an evic tion a few miles from Inniscarra. where th river Bride loins the Lee. It was a miserable day rain freezing into sleet as it fell and the men beat down wretched dwelling after wretched dwelling some 50 or 40 perhaps. They, did not take much beating down; there was no flooring to take up; the walls were more mud than aught else, and there was but little trouble in the leveling of them to the ground. We had got our work about three parts done, when out of one of them a woman ran and herself on the ground, wet as it was, before the captain of the tfoop, and she asked that her house might be spared not for long, but for a little while, bhe said her husband had been born in it, he was ill of the fever, but couldn't live long, and she asked that he might be permitted to die in it in peace. Our captain had no power; the law agent from Dublin wanted. to get back to Dublin his time was of importance, and he would not wait, and that man was carried out while we were there in front of us, while the sleet was coming-down carried ont on a wretched thing you could not call it a bed and he died there while we were there, and three nights after ward, whileTwas sentry on the front gate atBallancholy barracks, we heard a cry, and when the guard turned out we found this poor woman there a rav ing maniac, with one dead babe in One arm, arid another in the other, cling ing to the cold nipple of her lifeless breast. And if you had been broth ers to such a woman, sons of such a womany -fathers 'of such a woman. would not rebellion have seemed the holiest; gospel you could hear preach ed? , Two hundred and fifty thousand evictions took place in : the twenty years preceding, ihbo. ;. 2SO,U00I Uan yonjuultipiy the-nusery of that 250. 000? Brother separated from sister, husband from wife,- .the Union work house taking one, and the other going Out. trying to find Jife if . he can; This system has gone ou until it has made a misery so vast that it will require not one act of Parliament in favor of Wisdom, not one statue; in favor of justice, not one .declaration iq favor of humanity, but generations and generations of generous and kindly treatment, not to build npbatin some , o h uegree 10 enace ine Diooay stain. 01 iniquity we have made on the page of that historv. : ' , j m -i ' ' MISCELLANEOUS. Oats, Hay, Corix, &c. 2500 BISBBI - BALES PRmE HAY, ' ' " 1Q 000 BTrSHffiC,S, MB .CORN, V flflffc SACKS UVERPOOL AMD AMERI- For sale low by ' wtlLiams mi: octlS-tf MTJRCHISON. For .Bent, DWELIa'BXYSE,TBL NINE ROOMS, very convenient, and pleasantly located, with a pjje. j well of water on .the premises., Ejitiryof . 'T. ; iT.,d BERVOSS:; roctisttt- j LuJ.lM.CityHalL- , ; SliU ip Molasses. 1 5 AAA SACKS AMERICAN) AND ,lUy pool 8ALT X) sacks, blown DbTs ana bhds Cabs Mousse, - SS9 bbls. 1 . H. Molaaaei, 10 bbta. N.iO j Syrtpj . s 1 . 1 Spirit BaxreWJ op Iron; &c,; ' ' ; -' ViV "'-.r i'f; - 1.5 SST? CONi HAND SPIRIT- I refagW Bjbls. Da Gkwy l,Wfl 1 Bundlet Hoop SPECIAL NOTICES. PBATT S ASTRAL OIL Abolutely gaffe: Perfectly odoriees. Akrayslu&t torra. . IUlftttfaiBtliiP dualities gnnerioi tosas. Bumf to buy "Janp without danger of exploding, or taltitig I 4re. Maottactored expressly to displace tjhe us of T laaiue iuu luugeroaB ouh. ua ajety Tmper eyacy. UDie iesc, aoa its penect bttrauig clBautiesJare red bV its conthined nae in otm fumfliMk Millions-of gallons nave been sold and no icttdent -directly or indirecUy-i-has .ever occurred from burning, etorine or handling it. Xhe immense yearly loss of life and property, re trnlttBe from the ue f cheaDtind daheerons oils In thellttwratatoB. ii appalling cra-thmnghnntfhflcoantry rarnmrnand tha ahTaAi. 1 . 'im xnHurance uomDuiieB bdq fire uommumon. as tne nest Baxestuaru wnen lamps are used. Bend for circular. r. r For sale at retail bv the trade eenerallv. and at wholesale by the proprietors, GHAS. PRATT & CO., 109 u ulton street, JNew xorlc aug aa-em u&w ITlotliers, Irlotliers Mothers, Don't fail to procure MRS. WINSLOW'S SOOTH ING SYRUP for all diseases incident to the period of teething in children. It relieves the child from pain, cure colic, regulates the bowels, and by giv ing relief and health to the child, gives rest to the motner. - - Be sure and call for "MRS. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP." For sale by all drugsi6ts. june24 eod-6m tu-thur-sat " a: aobiak. ,0. VOLU5R8. ADRIAN & V OLLERS, Corner Front and Dock Sts., WILMINGTON, N. C. WHOLESALE GROCERS IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. , Country merchants will do well by calling on us and examining our stock. nov l-tf IJ. F. MITCHELL SON, QOMMISSION MERCHANTS And Dealers in Grain, Flonr, Kay, and aj Fresb ironna iweai, jfoari uomiiiy and Grlt. Nos. 9 and 10 N. Water St., Wilmington, N. C. Proprietors of the Merchant's Flouring Mills. MISCELLANEOUS. UTERPIilSE The only Reliable Gift Distrjbuton in the country I $75,000 00 IN VALUABLE GIFTS! TO BE DISTRIBUTED IN L . D . SINE' S 164th REGULAR MONTHLY Gift Enterprise ! To be drawn Monday, November 24th, 1873. ONE GRAND CASH PRIZE OF $5,000 IN GOLD! ONE GRAND CASH PRIZE OF $5,000 IN SILVER! Two Prizes $1000 each in Greenbacks Six Prizes $500 each in Greenbacks Ten Prizes $100 each in Greenbacks 1000 Gold and Silver Lever Hnnttn worth from SS0 to $300 each. roe Watches (in all) Coin Silver Chains, Solid and Doable Plated Ware, Jewelry, Ac., Ac. ve est Silver Number of Gifts 10,000. Tickets Limited to 75,000. Agents wanted to sell tickets, to whom liberal premiums will De paid. Single Tickets $1; Six Tickets $5; Twelve Tickets $iu; Twenty-live $2U. Circulars containing a fnll list of nrizes. a rfpsrio. tion of the manner of drawine, and ether Informa tion in reference to the Distribution, will be sent to anvone order In 2 them. All letters ' mast be ad. dressed to . main office L. D. SINE. Box 86. 101 W. Fifth st - Cincinnati, O. sept 27-till Nov 17. Fire and Burglar Proof Safes, MARVIN & CO. Tfie Olflest & Lan&st Manufactory of Safes IN AMERICA ! rpHESE SAFES ARE MADE WITH THREE AND JL four flange? around the door, of refined wrought uvu wuiu, wuu augie corners, ana .Warranted Free from Dampness! From the Scientific American, May 3d, 1873. Since the Boston fire we have riven arrnia altctn. tion to the real merits of various safes, with a view of supplying onr own office with the best article to the market, and have accordingly made selection of a dry filled Alum and Plaster Safe, manufactured by juarviu u At., zoajiroaaway, jm. i. We will deliver these Safes In Wflmlnffton at same pnee as cnargea ojr manufacturers in JNew York. june7-tf WTLLARD BROS,, Agents. Bacon, Ld. Butter, CHEESE, &C 1 TVRY SALTED 'AND SMOKED WESTERN 4- esnouiaera ma bldeslaUogsaeadaand. Boxes. sugar-Cured Hams and Breakfast Btrlps. , N. C. IIOG-RoimD, CITY MISS PORK, RUMP PORK, PURE LARD IN. TtERCES ND TUBS, CHOICE TABLE BUTTER, BEST. FACTORY CHEESE, IN JLOXS TO SVIT. For sale by ADRIAN 3b VOLLERS, may ltf' -1 tjtKttvt A-n-n-n JUiilj AiN U Jli K, SOLE AGENT FOR 3IniO & Co.'s Pliiladelpliia X aiui Ale aud Porter; OObD IN tiUARTER AND HALFSBARRE1.S, ouu in nuiues hi a cents Der .lozr.n tn m nenvtrea to dealers, rumiiTes and shipping depots in the city free vf eharge. ; Also . arrangements made with Railroad and iSU.amboat Combanies to retnrn empty kegs and bottles free; of charee. For ihe country 8 jdua AJe, Soda, Sarsaparilla or Porter nack- ed tn a barrel; for the city, S! dozen in a box The XX mwtgj mo u 1 unw vqun ih - Mrwijd, Tjcxiy and a, c rum 01 uiwiuuna luo nce, 01 an ltn DOrted article. . . r . - i Larse Wainnt framed carda-fnr riit.rihniirTi r- f charge to dealers, subject to be tailed for at any . . .;. . . M- KQKDLANDEK, Fdtfrih and Hanover street, July t3 1y , . . ,,- WUmington, N. C. Koya Scotia Herring. r() BARRELS ? ' : - - PERKECTLY SOUND . For sale low hv jnnel5-lof -' WILLARD BR08. m h : 1 nff,s 1 'ii ... . J. P. BUECKERT, UJW ESbOK OF VQCAI ANJ INSTRUMENTAL MUSICt QINGING, PIANO, YIOLTNE. GUITAR. CLARTrt KJ net Comet; also Orchestral and Mllit&ry isetnt- iuuw uiunwei Bwituu - sept 30-tX reen & Planner, ittHOSALB AND & RETAa7Ds1&aoiSTS eliIjSi'fJJ'B 5Te. Aclda, OlS 11 ana dealers in iroreipn mm nuiun. ' I 9axifa' Weld andFlower Seed, &t, &c, - 1 vIFTE INSllAlTCE. IWSURAlMGe. 5 i ii ThoMas d PeRosset, GENERAL DaalK pf New HaaoTer Building REPRESENTS ' THE UNDERWRITER!! AGENOT Of New York, Assets $4,000,000. THE ETNA (FIRE) INSURANCE COMPANY OF HART FORDASSETS $6,000,000. THE METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF NEW YORK, ASSETS $3,60O,C0a OCt5-tf " " GENERAL Insurance Agency. Liverpool dc Krondon Sc Globe (Fire) Insurance Company: GROSS ASSETTS OYER $30,000,000 00 ASSETS IN THE UNITED STATES, 4,000,000 00 All lesses paid IMMEDIATELY upon receipt of satisfactory proof, WITHOUT DEDUCTION for interest. Va. Fire and Marine Insurance Company OF RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. ASSETS $300,000. An Old and Reliable Company, THOS. GBJEItlE, Klarpliy BnUatns PRINCESS STEEET, , Between Water and Front Sts, octltf PIEDMONT & AELINQT0N Life Insurance Company Richmond, Virginia. Over 15,000 Policies Issued. Annual Income Oyer $1,500,000 Proressiye ! Prosperous ! Prompt ! SMALL EXPENSES, SMALL LOSSES, SECURE I INVESTMENTS, AMPLE RESERVE, AND GOOD SURPLUS! Premiums Cash, Policies Liberal, Annual Division of Surplus. ATKINSON &MANNIM6, Gen'l Agents . Insurance Rooms. 5 N. Water st W. C. Carrington, President; John L. Edwards, Vice President;D. JT. Hartsook, Secretary; J. J. Hopkins, Assistant Secretary; Prof. E. B. Smith, Actuary; B. C. Hartsook. Cashier. mar28-tf Insurance Rooms. $27000,000 FIRE INSURANCE CAP ITA!. REPRESENTED AFTER PAYING BOSTON LOSSES. Queen Instrrance Ca, of Liverpool and London, CwitaL ... . . ., . . .$10,000,000 North British and Mercantile Insurance Company, CapitaL. .... ........... 10,000,000 Hartford Insurance Company, Capital. . . . 3,500,000 National Fire Insurance - Company, of Hartford. Capital 600,000 Continental Insurance Company, of New ' -York, Capital ..;....!!.... 2,500 000 Phoenix Insurance Company, of Brooklyn, ' - Capital. .... .. .!. i . 1,500,000 Vuginia Home Insuranoe Company, of " ' Richmond, Capital. :;.:' -" 500.000 YaNrThe old Xercaatile Mhtaai ofNew 1IFE The Connecticut Mutual of Hartford. ATKINSON MANNING; General Atrenta nov 22-tf ' IjNCOITRAGE ' ij - ifoirlE INSTITUTIONS, ;:. Security. a;Pire.r :.' TUE.NORTII. CAROLINA HOME INSURANCE COMPANY, RALEIGH, N. C. ' This Company "continnes to write Policies, at fair rates, en all classes of insurable property. X8S8re Promptly adjneted and paid. The HOME " is rapidly growlny in public ?avor, and appeals, with conftdenco, to usurers of property in North Carolina. 1 !i fT. Agents in all parts of the State, tet R. 1L BATTLE, Jr., President C. H. HOOT, Vice President. SKATON UALKS, Secretary, FUIS KI COWPEK, SnperYisor. f ' ATKINSON A MANNlN4. A. ang !-tf., Wiliniiimjin M r r MISCELLANEOUS. Molasses' and Sjrrup I 2,150 M 11 8 - - TIERCES AJfD BARRELS Or S. II. S Y- II U P! .-: AND West India Molasses, For sale vary tow ay octa-tf - yrLLARD BRO& . Ssdtl Salt! Salt! 32 900 -C AMERICAN AND : .;. UVSRPOOL GROUND ALUX And Worthington ITSX SALT,.' ; - -' -'r-- 'Far'aleto -' ;.;. . . "?- g iiSgu - - . - ' ..Coiiiees' J LEASE TAKE NOTIC1S -JTHAT. THlf BEB2 man THE "STAR" stjsau Job Printing House BOOK BINDERY AND BLANK BOOK MANUFACTOPY WILLIAM H. BERKARC, PROPRIETOR, I WILMINGTON, a: a THEQItLYESXABLISnMESTlIfJii ; ;. . . . 81 ATE HA VING ALL THESE FACILITIES COMBINED. THE BEST ASSORTMENT OF TY P E, PAPERS. Cards and Inks. SKILLBD W0EKHEN IN Every Department. NOT THE LOWEST PRICES, BUT AS LOW PRICES AS ANY OTHER ESTABLISHMENT. FOR THE BEST QUALITY OF WORE Printing, Ruling AND B I1T D I1T a, OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, Executed Promptly. AND S KILF ULLY. Improved Machinery OP SINCR ADDING STEArJ POWER, W are nMed to fill orders witli oct ;WUAMS,miCSON. ' oct9tf , , WArrr Oct
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 14, 1873, edition 1
2
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