Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Nov. 2, 1877, edition 1 / Page 2
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" ... .'. ' ,,- i - f :,.: ,i,fla I .n pvw h inflpntPrl to anvpaper or 1 mTE coiiTBBPOBAaiM. I L ....nunsMIIIIT plIBLMllB's""'' TIiaMORNIO STAR, the oldMtdw.nspa- w?km versi t citr subscribers at tne r8"ntaSkf 'iny period from one week to one year, -.; ' : .- TUB WEEKLY STAR la published morning at $1 50 per year, $T00 for six months 50 cants for three months. , - ADVERTISING BATKS(DAILYne squaw one day, l-0rtwo days, $1.75 thn day, $ 60, fanriavg 3 Odrflve days, $3.50; one wees, (to K'6 5brJ weVka, $8.50; one month, $W,00; two montii, $17 00; iLJ bix months, f 40.00; twelve months, $J-P, Ten lmesof solid Nonparea type make one square. r . ah announcements of Fairs, Festivals. Balls, atX "cKsocWy Meetinga, PoUttail Meet lng&&, wiute charged tegular advertising xatea. No advertisements inserted In Local Column at any price. - : Notices under Wad of 4 'City. Items" , 83 cents per. line for first Insertion, and 15 ee&ta per line fox each subsequent insertion. " (- Advertisements Inserted once a week inDafly will be charged $1 00 per square for each insertion. v ery other day, three fourths of daily rate. Twice a week, two thirdsof. daily ratei,jj s-- ' Notices of Marriage or Death, Tributes of Re spect, Resolutions of Thanka, &c re charged for . aa o r dinary advertisementa, but -onlr when paid for strictly in advance.- - At this rate 50 cents.will par fox a simple announcement of Mar riage or Death. ,. r Advertisementa to follow reading matter, or to occupy any special place, will be, charged extra ac cording to the position desired. W; ,v -" ' Advertisements on which no -specified number of - insertions Is marked will be continued "till forbid," at the option of the publisher, and charged up to ' the date of -discontinuance, s-v,- . Advertisements discontinued before the time con tracted for has expired, charged transient rates for the time actually published. v ? - a v-, - " AdTertiaements kept under the head of "New Ad vertisements" will be charged fifty per cent, extra. 'An extra charge will be made for double-column or triple column advertisements, j v; .- j AITannouncementa- and recommendations of can didates for office, whether in the shape of commu nications or otherwise, will be charged as advertise ments. :SJ'.-i'j . ... .''I' - Amusement, Auction and Official advertisementa ' one dollar sqire forearm tnsertioB. - CXmtraet advertisers will net be allowed to exceed fhuir space or advertise any thing foreign to their " regular business without extra charge at transient rales. I , ' 5 Payments for transient advertisementa muBt be made in advance. Known parties, or strangers with - proper reference, may pay monthly or quarterly, ac '" cording to contrafitr- s- , : . - L Adver&erfebctrtdalVays spibelfy the issue or Is sues they desire to advertise in. Where no issue is nj-mcd the advertisement twill be inserted in the Daily. Where an advertiser contracts for t ha paper to be sent to him during tne time his advertisement - is in, the proprietor will only be responsible for the mailing of, the paper to his address. Remittances must be made by Check, Draft, Pos tal Money Order, Express, or in Registered Letter. only such remittances will be at the risk of the publisher. se J CommonicatiOnsi unless the contain important news, or discuss briefly and properly subjects of real interest, are not wanted; and, if acceptable in every ULUCT WttT. UHDT Hill T W H-" VJW muv t tiie le of real name of the author ia withheld. 1 11.. . A 1m nUMinli) - Correspondents must write on only one side thepaper., .' .' - By WII.I.IABI a. BERNARD. WILMINGTON, IT. C.i Friday Morning, Nov. 2, 1877 YELLOW FEVER AND DISINFEC- ' "tants. ; ft In view, of the distressing and afflictive visitations upon the people of Port Royal and Fernandina, at this time 'and ., the " terrible scourge that enrsed Savannah and Brunswick - last year, added to the sickening and horrifying expfiriences of Wilming ton years ago, the question of quaran tining and disinfecting becomes es tremelv imDortant An ounce of preventive is worth a pound of cure. If it is possible to keep off forever from our town the yellow fever by the nse of means, is it not wise and humane to use those means? Is it not a thousand times better to take all necessary precautionary steps to prevent the introduction of so fatal and awf al . an. epidemic , than tp be careless, heedless, criminally, neglect- - New Orleans is more open to such visitations than any city or town on the Atlantic or Gulf coast, by reason . of the constknt traffic, the going and coming of vessels from those islands whence comes always the fatal seodrge. i And yet New Orleans prior to the war had no '. vellow . fever epidemic in many' years.' It has the most stringentf quarantine laws, aud the most rigid regulations as to ' the cleanliness of the city. "We avail ourselves of a condensed statement - in the Savannah News. First, as to cleanliness: - ?Thej prohibit, under severe penalties, the keeping of a hog- or 'hogs witbir the pound, limits of the city, or the running of such bog or hogs at large; require- that . all diseased animals ahAll'. be immediately re moved beyond th city limits; that all dead ' aoimals Bball be 'removed aud buried, or . jutberwisa properly disposed of, at least mile below tbe'-city1 HmHs; that no" un healtfcy matter of ariydesCription- sball be . thrown - into-nhe river; that no : business " prejudlciaTtff the health oT thecity shall be . engaged in, noc any article of com merewbicinitiyinanser'tends'to injure" or endanger health shall; be brought inl v Under this latter nead are included bones; filthy Mgs, unwholesome meat or. provis ions, adulterated food or drink prejudicial - " nd, in-short, everything of k addition to these, the - building lots, streets nlinesa are specially ' pro visions for the "s of contagious "ces Of every "movals of "i to b means of transmitting the disease are J infected4 ships. The Neves Bays: ' "Tnstnnces have freanentlv been known of persona takinyeUow ferer W.flescena. J inff into the eniDtv hold of a ship on wuicu j the disease had existed.; At we new Or leans quarantine, disinfection of all auspi cious vessels is performed va a most 'Iho rough manner, every chink and crevice be ing filled with the disinfectants substance, and to this as much as: anything else," Is due the long continued good tre&llb of that port'' j . - " ; . 1 . Withproper precantionWtlmtn" ton need never again be visited y the awf ui epidemic' . : ' - SldsiFICABIT FaCT1l.;'vA -i There are two facts derivable from the 8t atistics of Massachusetts, first : that the emigration from' that.State lias been large, over l,000,o5o,during the last hundred years; secondly,that! agriculture ;.; h as declined ; greatly, and there is a consequent change 0f business." According to statistics used by Dr. Nathan Allen, of Lowell, Mass.: before the Social Science As sociation, the following was the num ber of pursuits jn 1875: 1. Government and professionals 29,730 2. Domestic and personal service.,424,289 3. Trade and transportation . . . . . . 104,935 4. Agriculture, fisheries, etc....... 81,156 5. Manufactures "and mechanical - industries. ...... ...,,.,.r31tj4459 6. Non-productive : and - proper--: ? tied. . . .. i'i . . . .'. . .ii". '.V 65,480 7. Students of all grade4i".;l....283,784 8. Not given, including children, . ! etc.mr.T:T7Trr: . ."rrn73T.iS9 There is another fact that is calcu lated to arrest attenvioaf.rr The lirth rates of natives is less thanithe death rates. The main cause of the deteti- oration is well known, and one .Ehg- lish writer, given some significant informatida connecieu Luerewtui. , The jreal increase of populationac cording to Dr. Allen,' is owing to the innux ,01 loreigners, cnieny arisu aiiu German. Dr. Allen says that whilst the population Of New England but 20 per cent. Koman Uatbolic. that actually 75 per cent, of the birtns are of Roman Catholic parentage, No wonder the old New England .stock is fast dying out, when such figures as these can be drawn from actual statistics. . ' ; J "GBE1T nilNDS Wilt It RUN IN THE SAHIB CHANNEL." . "There is a very remarkable similarity be t ween the following, from the Stab of the 26th inst, and an article on the same sub ject in a recent number of the Hew York World. The language of this critique is to nearly identical with that of the other as to very strongly enforce the truth of the apho rism above. Fee Dee llercua. The animus of the above paragraph is plain enough. The Herald, from some cause, dislikes the Star, as its course shows from week 16 week, , "s. - V- - I and it would be extremely glad, no doubt, to damage it, but it can not do so fairly, and not in the manner above indicated. We believe we can truthfully, aver that no paper published in the South is more scrupulous in giving credit for such matter as it uses than is the Stab. Many of our best exchanges often use both the facts ' and ipsissima verba of other papers with out credit. In nearly every instance when we quote a paragraph of even four or five lines, we put it in smaller type. We have never favored the custom of freely using other men's labors or brains without acknowl$dg ment. But according to the Herald we have stolen a few lines that appeared in the New Tork .World. A very great crime, and one that will of course damage the Stab irretrievably. But what are the facts? , The attempt of pur amiable and friendly contemporary to fasten pla giarism upon us is quite gratnitons. We solemnly declare we wrote the paragraph copied by the Herald. - We wrote it without ha viae the eWorld before us, or without having seen the World in three months, as it does not coma to this-omoe. We wrote it wiiuou( uuvingrseen canyi,aingiiro the World concerning' the poems r ferred to, and if the JWofld cdnlairie the 1 languagew : of J our '.paragrapi then it stole i ti " ' We will now give tlie Jlerdldepme information. The first afiicld a Ion 2 one ratner -that appeared in nV p per, as tar as We now,;ftbot. the ;M chigan volume, was a criticism in th Chicago Inter' Ocean. The net, tim we saw a notice of it and, saw stanz opied from ifl, was inlhe Boston A iser. Then the1 Ccmrietoura i say, and so on. Our crime con extracting three out of many at; appeared ' in " the J?gr jntrodacmg them in oat f, That isbe height an4 5g. : . xne worm. ?'her. papers ha Af the Interl thought' can ever be indebted to any paper or book for anything that appears in its brilliant columns. ; Unfortunately, - ,, UDer are not edited' bvereat - . - --. - " - XT' original minds. It is a fact worth remembering that when. the ..Normans - entered France and settled there, they begs h to marry the women of that country, and, gave ; up t Jheir , Scandinavian tongue and adopted what was known as the-Romance, or corrupted LatinJ out of which has come the ' present French, spoken by Parisian. When these conquering, Normans entered England they , gradually, abandoned their French or Romance and adobted the Anglo-Saxon, . out of ..which - has J come our English language. When the English colonies got ? their inde pendence after, a seven years' war, there were, many extremists who were not content to speak - and write the language of the - English Bible, and the Book of- Common Prayer, and of Shakespeare and Milton, .but they attempted to' start what they called the "Federal Language" -a sort of American lingo. Noah Web ster'mnst' halve been early imbuejd with a-desire to break loose from the language of out English ah cestors, i we may judge Jy A pamphlet he pub lished in I8Q0 6r 18u7,' a copy of which we nave, anq py me nrst eujviuu o his pppplaf J)ctiphary;,i(c0;T i ' ttJ There is a rumpr in the papers that the House.,. Willi iperease . thes army, i We ara glad JLo learn from Washing ton that there is no 'prospect ef any 'such folly. u The 'necessary appVopri- ations win do niaue ior iuu suppuru 'of the present army, but at the rcgu lar session, it is believed, the army will be cut down to 15,000 meiu This is more than enough.- The exigen cie8 of the country in time of peace cannot sureiy require more man 10,000. The, Si present ;;Democrato House will do its duty to ,the coun try. We are glad to learn further, that no moneys will be voted :useless ly, and that appropriations will in no case be made 'without being fully satisfied that they are for the good of the people. The Democrats know they are before the country on trial, and they will not act blindly or un wisely. The party stands before the country and the world as the party of reform. The leaders know, there fore, that the people will not be satis fied unless economy and justice pre vail iff their legislation. According to the papers Secretary Evarts is quite a wit. We do not know how well ,he succeeds in epi grams and mots, but some of his po litical points are good." One of the latest is what he says of old Simon Cameron : ' "I have been compelled .to change my opinion of the Pennsylvania Republicab delegation in Congress. 1 was very much mistaken in them when I asked them to se lect a man from their State for the English mission.' I had no idea they would go into the graveyard and resurrect a man who was net only dead, but who had been dead so long that his heir was actually in posses sion and enjoyment of the estate. The President has issued the usual Thanksgiving Proclamation appoint ing Thursday, November 29th, as a day jof national thanksgiving and prayer. CURRENT COramBNX. - It is a great pity that we can't have our soiled linen washed out of public sight, " or at least in the back yard far from eyes polite. Dragging such petty kitchen gossip as Stanley Mathews" notcl bill before the public gaze, is a business that no gentleman should engage in, and only belongs tJLhe miserable Paul Prys and scai vengers of, the, press, who should. whenever discovered, be kicked.put ot decent compaoy inese sneaking meddlers and, scandal mongers dis- grace ,numaniiy, cana no reepectaDie paper should ; ever allo w 'itself to be made the vehicle of their vile rubbishy Richmond Stdtt; Bern. . 'firy . General JSjorrest , will go on historic record -8-sjae ot the very jgreafjest 'Hf th 'tJdfl federate ucoin inaMdersl'1 Perhab's' there was no man ra air me war,' otonewaii j ackson cot xceptedj ' who accomplished" v wore than .General Fcrrest' with a small force, and in h independent field, of commandJf There) was mora than One reason why ho should ; not attain the high popularity and -common fame that have crown"EIi career, of( thi sainted BQdu3r.9l the y alley j bu no critic has eyer; denied ;6r , can ever denv. withont" self-atnHifinAt.inn thd great giniuspr military: operations developed by 'Ueri, orresfc' A great vuaugo ia nam tw uaveuuiqe across Dliq daring his latter years;' the soldieri so ready to shoot ana; hang, having become onel heBiost". peaceably disposed oil ;meny. ovbose thonghts were stroncly directed to theconsidi eration of religious subjects." He ia said to ;hav0" been; a man4 of very pleasingdress 1 5aV alll times; very calm in his manner; though possessed olthinost dangerons spirit "when aronjJrVhen he goes to '- his rest he Will f-leave " behind ; him a namej ""irist which personal detraction will t ' little occasion to- exercise ita ' ud a military reputationnot "i1t-a. -e v i : ii ui ujr. tuau. wuu uure cause. Pe- ' "ne'al.- 4. GONTEnPOOAniKS. " This plan of Mr. Turner's is rather cum bersome and open to other objections, but would certainly express the popular choice belter than the present system of selecting candidates: As we now have it, we fre quently get the privilege of voting for the choice jf a clique who, by 4rickery, is forced into the field in opposition to the general sentiment In such cases the rem edy lies only In disorganizing the party,-an alternative to which its members are loth to resort. Washington North Bate. -; j t l )nr-WarldelMiaa-been -assigned to the responsible post of chairman or me com mittee on Postofflees and Postroads. We are particularly gratified that a Southern man and North Carolinian basbeen put at the head of the commiUee specially charged sbane to the legisla tion rormeirnlnir the mail service of the countrv. Cel. Waddell now has an oppor. tunity to do his Sate and his section gene rally very valuable service, and we doubt not be will make the most of it. Raleigh TWBiKLIMCs ' "He swore like a savings-bank depositor," says aOhicago newspaper. -- Our shoemaker remarked yes? terdayV "The awl does it. " iV. T.-'BaxdfL Courier-Journal: Horror on horror's head. The helmet hat is about to form a junction with the ulster overcoat A sieru on a Rochester street reads. "Josenh Amborn." We do not wish to deny the assertion, but we object to the grammar of it. Hociester JJemoerai. Yesterday's paper contained the account of a man beine whipped by his wife until he was -sick. This kind of .vivisection must-cease. N. T. Herald. -r Worcester It ess : It is said that Lydia Thompson is about to close out her Dailet business. mere win oe greaii competition among young -nien' to secure her wardrobe for a watch cuarm. ( Hawkeyei Distance has only a relative value.-;- When a man sits down on a carpet-tack onlv a quarter of an inch lone, it is hard for him to realize that the point of it didn't come out at the1 back' of bis neck-. ' t ' i " A tramp called - at a house on West Hill the other day and asked for something to eat. He was so thin, he said. that when he had a pain he .couldn't tell whether it was a touch of the Colic or the backache. Uawkeye. ' ' Over-production is the bane of the pig-iron business. It. W. Raymond, in the November ulttanuc, -shows that the 7oU furnaces in this couatry could produce 5,000,000 tons of the article, whilst only 2,000,000 tons are actually needed. , During the past year the con sumption of cotton raached the highest point ever attained in this country: while the value of i our cotton fabrics exported havdespijelow prices, increased $7,090,000 within two years, or from $3,000,000 for tne fiscal year ended June so, 1873, to f iu, 180,000 for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1877. ,. - We've often heard and often road About a conversation's thread r But now-a-days it may be seen, The one I saw to. day was green; It carried many a word and tone From telephone to telephone. Ah ! Science, gives us one more link. That we may hear our neighbors think. ' JProvidenee Journal. ' PERSONAL. ' -T- Some sixty Indians are still pri soners in the old fort at St. Augustine, Jno rida. ' Senator Gordon, of Georgia, is to have an article on civ service reform in the North American Review. Mr. Tilden announced himself, the other night, to be unalterably opposed to any increase of the U. a. army. ;s President Hayes was constrained to decline, very reluctantly, the dinner ten dered him at Richmond by the Westmore land U1QU. , : Five sisters, who are nuns in a Canadian convent, have turned into the convent treasury their combined fortunes, amuuDuug 10 $ouu,uuu. The reason why Mr. Morrison did not receive the hews that he was at the head of his old committee is that the no- iiucai wires were down. llerald. John Logan has turned "up in Washington, and declares "everything ia going 10 me aogs, sure." Then let John rejoice; his day has come. Chicago Times. Gen. Miles used to be a crockery store clerk. That's why he got Chief Jo seph in a jag, and that's why Howard didn't not by a jug-full. Detroit Free A Harvard student is pluckilv paying his way in college by working at ouu moments in a snavmg and hair cut ting saloon. In toapum signovinees. By the barber's, sign be will conquer. Pica yune. ' - - ,. - ' Lord George Hamilton, the Un der Secretary for India, baa made speech; in which, he admitted that the cost of the iamine to tne imperial Government would be $55,000,000, or double the original esti mates. ' i , Catlmof the New York Com mercial Advertiser, offers this simple tribute o me memory 01 me oeepiy-mourned . acf- iui . , ...;' . c ' j ; Ohf seldom mortal eye hath seen 1 A soul more pure or brave; -: h . Forever vmy the tor t be green v O'er poor Ned Adams' grave President 'Hayes doesn't 'find Washington life SO eXDensive an nnmn nf his predecessors have. He is reported s aaying.that ,dunag the first six months of his term he has SDent onlv i non nf!i nnn whlch he has drawn, and that he thinks of recommending Congress to reduce the ex ecutive's yearly salary from $50,000 to the old figure of $25,000. Springfield Bepublii tan. " --' f LITERAUGOSSII ThirtV editions nf Vio.i nr Vf rifin rLiBiorv oi a unme" hvf hppn oni Paris. v" ' t-" i in Wo are to have another book of travels round the" world bv Blshon ITurtlnJ of the Methodist Episcopal Cburch. , 1 "The Leisure Hour Series'1-of popular works of fiction,; in the familial brown coversJiave been reduced to CI H volume. - i Calcraf t, the retired Eofflish executioner, is eneaired nnnn an AntnJ biography of Hanging" that promises to'W of thrilling Merest. J ; - f A "History of Enrland in 1 tha Eighteenth Centurv." volumes I. and TT i 1700-1760), by W. . H. Lecky will, be puuiiaiieu i&iem iue winter., "The History of Ceramic Art in Great Britain, from the Earliest Period tti the Present Day," by Llewellyn Jewett, ia two volumes, with nearly 2000 illustrations.1 will soon be published, j, , - t . . i The new edition of De Quiocev1 is published by Messrs. Hotrtr. his former publishers.- , These," said he opium eater once, when irritated with them, "must surely be the very swine that the devil en POLITICAL, POINTS It was-Brother Stough ton who tried ' to answer Judge Black's scathing article on the electoral fraud. ? Hayes has given him the Russian mission -to console him for his failure. Baltimore Gazette, Dem . VVe do not believe that Presi dent Hayes will ; defy his party or decline to make the concessions which Senator Morton predicts with so much delicacy and kind feeling. In fact, Mr. Hayes is already beginning to recede. New York Herald, Ind.. .A . ' : : - The time is favorable to a gen uine and thorough 'reform in the expenses of the government, and to measures calcu lated to improve the' condition of working men, but it is sometimes easier to accom plish reforms than, to form and direct national parties. Philadelphia Chronicle, Dem. " m ' ' ' ' SOUTHERN ITEM Rev. J. M. Scott died in Shelby county, Ala., on the 10th, aged 101 years. - Nashville requires drummers to pay a license of $53. Five were arrested the other day, but released on the ground of their ignorance of the law. , .. , The Louisville Courier-Journal thus tells a Kentucky story; "Mr. Corwin of Bovd Station, disinherited two children for marrying againsthis wishes. They drove through the will with a coacu and iour as Falmouth last weet. -. In September 121 emigrants set tled in Tennessee under the auspices of the Immigration' Bureau. A large colony of .Quakers from Pennsylvania is settling in Blouni countyr In Coffee county land holders are donating fifty acres to actua settlers. , i . . How fpiln Propose to Strengthen ',.W,f---- Her.Hol on Cuba. ',' ' - M ADSJD, Oct. 30. ' 'A Royal decree has been issued granting to soldiers and volunteers who have completed their terms o service and: settled in Cuba, and to insurgents who have . submitted to the government, ar portion of the for ests. belonging to-the State or other land being national property. . The recipients are to be at first merely tenants for three years, wneu, it tne land is properly cultivated, they be come absolute owners. They will be exempt from taxation for nve years The decree gives great satisfaction in Madrid.; ! The Arm y to be Reduced. : Washington, Oct. 30. ': The House committee on Appro priations held a meeting to-day and it is understood will report the Army bill on Thursday or Friday, lhe ap propriation for the present fiscal year Win do maue on me uasia oi io,uuu men instead of 25,000. There will, however, be a much greater reduc tion made in the bill which will come pp at the regular session for the nex fiscal year, 15,000 haying already been virtually ; agreed upon by the committee. 1 T.10IIU T.1 EPJTS ; - . j AND Grave Stones. KIRST-CLASS WORK AT LOWEST NEW YORK PRICES DESIGNS SENT BY MAIL. WORK PACKED AND SHIPPED AT OUR RISK, TO ANY PART OP THE SOUTH. KICIliRD WATHiN & CO., 57 Lafayette Place, New Tork Wathan'a MonnmenUl Designs, in book form, for sue to we -rraoe. ir ra we : oct is eoaim For Sale or Lease. A VALUABLE RICE FARM, KNOWN AS POINT PETER PLANTATION, at the jono tlon of the Cape Fear and North East rivers. Four Hundred Acres ef cultivated Rice Land, in good or der, and Four Thousand Acres of Swamp and WootPLand, Dwelling House, Barn, and all neces sary uut-ttouajngs ior riny uanaa. auo, me nice Mills, and a Threshing Machine,: ran by a sixty horse power Engine, in good condition, and capa- oie or tarn aing ana Dealing rrom five to seven hundred bushels of rice per day. Also, the FAIRFIELD FABM. four miles from Wilmington, containing Six Hundred Acres, under rence, wun spienata new trn and Dwelling, be sides ten or twelve Tenant Houses in good ordes. Also, with the place, or separately, six Horses, two Mules, one Colt, twenty Ave or thirty flue Milch Cows and Calves, over one hundred head of Hogs, of all ages and good stock,- and all of the Farm Utensils, Wagons, Plows, Carta, Ac. This place ia well adapted to Small Fruit Culture and Trucking. ubo we uurr jjusuieaa ana clock xwismg on a large scale. Good land One Hundred and Fifty Acres cleared uo-land. Two Hundred and Sixtr Acres cleared Sice land, the "balance heavily tim- oerea. - , ,; Also, the PONTI TRACT, containing Three Hnn. dred Acres, three mUes from the city, part cleared and feneed, part Rlee Jane, the balance timbered. Possession given Immediately. ..... .. . No trouble about title. Sold because the party wuu hi ui Aureps. '. ' - Terms made easy on sale or long lease. .. . . AOC dressi W. F. POTTER. .Proorietor. octal eodtf W fBo Wilmington, N. C. The World's Standard! .'.'"SCALES RECEIVED HIGHEST MEDALS AT 1 World's Fair, London. . - 1851 1853 ,1867 ,1873 1875 1876 World's Fair, Hew York,' i - "World' Fair, Paris, - . -World'i Fair Vienna. ,-, . -World's Fair, Santiago, Chili, World's Fair, Philadelphia, . - World's Fair, Sidney, Australia, 1877 - Also Sole Agents for -' MILES ALARM MONET DRAWERS, .; HANCOCK'S INSPIRATORS,: .,. ;" (The Beet Feeder known for Stationery, Marine and locomotive eouere;, . ' " , 5 luo,: ' " ," 'i OSCILLATING' PUMP COMPANY'S-PUMP8V Fairbanks &; Co. i aog 14-taw4mDAW ' Ta&Fr ' , -' -. . 'County. ComMoners' Eooms, , ' .: ' OCTOBER 4tfa, 18TT . Parties holding county Indebted- ness, prior to January, 1877, which have passed the Special Board of Audit, can present the same to S. VAN AMEINGB, at the County Commissioners1 Room, to be funded into BONDS. .' ' ' 1 The said claims must be presented on or befere the 22d Instant. NO BONDS WILL BB ISSUED AFTER THAT DATE. 1 V JOHN.u. WAQNERy octUtf s-: ' Chairmw. . , , .. ,.v..ra-:.,,,;:! JBTjJL1T KETS; ! ; BLANKETS! : '' 200 PB" WHITB BLAJiU STS, j 200 PR 8ILVBR GUAY do. i , . CLOAKS, i ? . AI4j TIIE NKW and FASHION AJ5LE .SHAPES, i'-: Cloths and Casslmercs, . A COMPLETE STOCK, WHICH WLL BK SQLD AT POPULAR PRICES. j . v JULIUS SAMSON, t i . -octl4tf'- "' ' 48 Market Street! ' ' ' ; 1 -i Crockery. di CRATES ASSORTED CROCKEBY ' ' ' On Consignment anA for gale low. Also a full line of GLASSWARE, LAMPS; fcc - Examine before parcnasing eieewneie at J. STERN BBRUER A CO.'S . Auctioa Store. 11 Market St oct ll-3m ' JUST RECEIVED 150 Pieces . More of those 7-8 and 4-4 FOULORD CAMBRICS. TABLE DAMASK; White and Colored. : NAPKINS, TOWELS, andaFuU Line of WHITB GOODS, EMBROIDERIES, Italian ' . and Torchon LACES. . : A Full Line ef Silk, Galoon and Worsted Fringes JULIUS 'SAMSON,, ect 14 tf , - s ? 43 Market Street " Coal! Coal! 600 Tons EQG"QKATB 300 STOVE COAL, " 200' ENGLISH COAL. Very choice f cr quick flrea in grates. Try It and yon will want more. Oct 13-tf . WORTO WORTH. Bricks ! Bricks ! lOOOO6000581 " For sala by Je 17-tf WILLARD BttOS. Notice! u Notice! HAVINQ JUST RECEIVED. A FULL'' AND i ' COMPLETE LINE OF v v : " Hosiery & llnderwear, ; I INVITE THE ATTENTION I OF OUR PATRONS TO THE STOCK, AND ASK AN EXAMINATION BEFORE PUR CHASING ELSEWHERE. i DAILY RECEIVING NEW GOODS OF THE MOST SELECT STYLES - ! ' JULIUS SAHSON, sept 16-tf 43 MARKET 8T. They All Do It. . . Ail rereons who took for Style, Beauty of Finish, ; and Durability of Wear in their . ; BOOTS & SHOES purchase them ' Of '. GEO. R. FRENCH & SON, ; oct 21 tf 1 ; 39 N. Front at. I Candy! Candy! New 0;opEaisins and Citron BeVORB PURCHASING ELSEWHERE CALL and sample my STOCK OF CANDIES, Juat ia, ; -i -, ; FRESH from the Manufacturers, to be sold at pri ces LOWER than ever sold in this market before. AT RETAIL.' ' ... - , - j . - . CITRON, CURRANTS and RAISINS, new and fresh. Also, a full assortment of NUTS. APQLLINARIS WATER and HUNYADI JA- NOS BITTER WATER, recommended by the phy sicians of our city, for sale by - ! ' ) - I Jas. C. Stevenson OCt25tf yi. ;. SHOOTING ; GOATi ' A' STYLISHViUNDSOMB "COAT.' V-' , t o ' " 1 J ; ' First Class in every particular. .PJeaaant to wear, durable and id tha end the cheap est HADE OF BROWN VELVETEEN: 'V $ ' Pockets and1 Lininsr' made to taiia ooL ha tTiat It say per worn ior ariy xau ana winiet aaootlng. Horace Smith.- Eso.i savs 4t?'i mvidea of a shooting coat) I have wpin them for aeveral vears. ana wiu nave none otner." .Price for Coat. t35: Vest- 8.51 Also, the beat iiniwo curuuruy rwu), hi a iu per pair, i maae on ly tae one graae, as ine cneapesi goooa ao not turn briars and will notgiye aatiaiaction. s Also; in addition to .the abov. J n makinsr a Waterproof Canvass Suit cut same stvle as the Vel veteen: goods; hot stiff and hard, bat soft and plear eant to wear; guaranteed to turn water, .Sportsmen who have seen it say It Is The Pest Yet. Coat $0.60. For.fttU 8ult, $14,001. i: u- V- , I also make the Sleeveless Coaf : Vest with sleeves If, desired, ..f. vi , t. ' ,. " . ' Rules for meaeareirfentana samoles sent unon aDDlicatioir.i t rrr rr' 1 1 . rf t i t a a x i a SHELDON, ' oct 25 D&wtr RAHWAY, N.J. X IT. A. STEDIIMI, Jr:,; Attorney and Counsellor &t Law. i ELIZABBTHTON, ' BLADEN COUNTY, N. C. Offlce-UD (talra. in Brick Baildinr." occupied by Rinaldl&Co. -:.,- s? ; Soeeial attention to Claims. Col'ectlons on sums of $100 and ap wards made - foe Five , Per Cent . it without suit i Drawing Deeds, Mortgages, : Ac., a specialty. - - ;. - upo-uawu Just Received, f ASUPPLY OF FIRE-DOaS, ' v !! - SHOVEL and TONGS. COALt-houb, : SIFTERS and SHOVELS, ' v . For sale low by-- ' - - - GEO. A. PECK, oct98tf ' .: - "...No. 85 South Front St. Illotbera whs Doit thei- with draBOc purgatives incur a fearfnl rr,,eii ii. iw mc uiBuruere or cniioren. ' aaapu R tft VVd P a7 borne. wo iu iree. hi TIHSOK ?&Ss? Plays! Plavs! : Hays ! Plays . For Reading Clabs, for Amateur Thew , ' porancc Plays, Drawing RoomPla JSjSW Ethiopian J-lays. Guide Books, mimes. Tableaux LlghU, MagueaiaS11 ored Fire,; Burnt Cork. TheMncalFaci8 tions, Jarley's Wax Works, Wiga. BearS! taches at reduced prices. Costumes &!id rades. New catalogue sent free cSiSl description and prices. SAM'L PEKiSrn foil 12-2 Naaean Street. New York. VB. A soj C66ouWrely0nrOWntOWn- $5 H- HALLBTT A CO., PorUAnJ .SNYDER'S Curative Pads $3. We send them bymaUreeonreceiDtof;7t, Address K. F. SNYDER & CO.. GRACE'S SALTET WORK FOR ALlT LarcMt Paper in the W.Jld.wiuS moth Cmoa Free. Big Commiaaioaa to "aSSt Terms and Outtt Free. Addreaa P. o vine EttY. Aggn.U, Maine. v' VICK' - TRUE &CQ.1ABgn9taLMl8& . 4.0 H5.5 SP,D fJ?P?.' with um. 0&Q.f aN t Ir AGENTS WANTED I MedalaA Diplomas Awarded PEACH; APPLE, FLM ail PEAR . TREES, And Early Beat! Ice, Amesden and Alexander, Loa--ise, with other old and new kinds of Reaches Pimn Trees on Peach Stock, suited to Southern growth, and Apples of leading kindfor early market Indlaie keeping. Small Froit Plants in variety. TwcWe years experience at growing fruits for market Aodres D.U. KYEH, Bridgeville, Delaware. OCt D-4WD&W " ' ' . TtT A T'TPTI Tne advertisera would give , . i ooie agency oi tneir ce lebrated Old Stock Ales and Porter, in the wood only, to a good responsible Wholesale Grocery or Liquor House in Wilmington. We to consign to them and they to eell at a price to cover invoice have customers who deal in Ales and Porter. First class home and New Yerk City references required as to the responsibility of applicant. Our Ales have an excellent reputation at the North, and ;wiah to have them introduced South. Apply in person or by letter to T, C, LlfltlAN St CO; Brewers and Malsters, 518 to 532 West oct 81-lmIi AW 33d St. New York City. SHARP'S M ETALLIC CARTRIDGE. MILITAEy, HUNT; INO ANI) "f!RHRninnR MfiT.lt s 1 . , ? ; EXCEL ALL OTHERS IN ACCU- RACr, STRENGTH AND , ,-;.. .. SAFETY. No Premature Discharge Ever; Ocours Every Rifle warranted a good , shooter. Calibre 40, 44 and 50-100 of inch, and of any desired length, Charge ef powder from 50 to 105 grains. , Weight ef balls from 220 to 548 grains., Stock, plain; also .Pistol grip and checked. Sights: plain; Globe and .Peep Sights; Vernier with interchangeable from sights and Wind-gauge. Every vnritty of m munltien for above guns, constantly oa hand. ' Prices from $30 to $135. SHARP'S'RIFLB COMPANY, septai-DAWtf Bridgeport. Conn. SPORTING DOGS. Breeding kennel of a. g.waddkll. - (Formerly of New Jersey), . EDINA, KNOX COUNTY, MIS80TJBI. , . The Finest Strains of SETTERa.'POINTks", SPANIELS AHD OTBSR ' . J SPORTTNGJ BOGS. Bred from both Impbrtei and Native Stock, at mo derate prices, i ' ' . aPlOPAWtf SBOETSMEN'S Oil-Tamied Moccasins - BOOTiI()OCASINS, ; SHOE.PACKS, ' LADIES' MOCCASINS, ' CAMP SLIPPERS, made from carefully selected Btock, in the best mm ner, at prices to suit the times Send for CircuUr ndPrice Urfa TcBma3t - oct IT D&Wtf New HmP8hlre 1 THE'.SIEIDEH .BREECH-1DAT1IH J Shot-Gun. 1 Prices. $50 OO to -250 00. MUZZLE . LOADING GUNS , ALTERED TO BREECH 1X)ADINJ- " ' w - - - . prices,' $46 to $100. arAvfrACTURKUS, , 4Wt5wRi-. - Send for f atatogn$f eecg- PSICSCUI T7OR THE BPEAUi - "'.ergbroas" Jb ncsa.Lost xd. V.i fflfffe it? rnn- rpwaDV t - J . . a 9AfT1U on by indlscreaon or excels, m Qj., w the ingredients. Address Dr. QLj iyDff. cinnati. Ohio. -V High-BredDogs. English, lRisn and go'bdon Wtkbs. Of the Choicest BMca. with guaranteed For Bale by wals1' a -p. WAW"1' nov 7 D&Wtr -riR-IRlCORDS ESSENCE OF I I manhood and the vigor oi shattered constitution to fo wee, re vailnra imDOSSioie. "Li-tioEstfi' VwhofleFso-call are useless, aud Anally prove rm JJ f Whatever has merit muhere A5fforlu ease. Sent by express anywhere. xewj JOS. JACQUES, 7 UnlversHj gagv" Drutcsists supplied. -
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 2, 1877, edition 1
2
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