Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / July 1, 1881, edition 1 / Page 2
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-..nrwrntE'SAHNOONCBMBNT " - . A TfsTVnaV THBliqi?iT. except aer in 4 00 tor six month . ireek to one year. THK WEEKLY STAB is published every Friday per year, $100 for sermon ths, 50 seats for three month. ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY). One eqnaxe fmon $40. W: twel mnUu, TeB . ncTof solid Nonpareil type make one square. Alt announcements f Fairs, Festivals. Balls, tiooL Ke-Nics, Society Meetings, Political Meet Ac!, willbe charged regular advertising rates. Notices under head of "City Items- 30 cento per ice for first insertion, and 15 cents per line for each - a bseqnenftnsertlon. No advertisements inserted In Local Column at ny price. Advertisements inserted once a week in Daily will i.e charged $1 00 per square for each insertion. Ev ery other day , three fourths of daily rate. Twice a .o.k. two thirds of daily rate. Notices of Marriage or Death, Tributes of Re- spect.Kesoiuuonsoi inuua, -. w-&v asordinary advertisements, but only half rates when paid for strictly in advance. 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Bemittanees must be made by Check, Draft, Pos- ri jaauey vruer, AxpresB, ur ui ocgiBwuw ui Only such remittances will be at the risk of the oublisher. Communications, unless they contain important aews, or discuss briefly and properly subjects of real other way, they will invariably be rejected if the rwi name ui uuc auuiur xb wiuuiuu n.t-MA4 s4vAHaaM1l ho ftllriWAtl ti CTe4J their space, or advertise any thing foreign to their regular business without extra charge at transient rates. CAJJUCUIB ivn ubuwcui auvcf lamsiuciibe iuud, w made in advance. Known parties, or strangers with oraia to contract Advertisers should always specify the iaeue or is- aamod the adTertlBement will be inserted in the TT UOV m4i SUVCXUJ5CI WUUKW 1U1 ucpitn to be sent to him daring the time his adTertlBement l in, me Dropneiur win umy oe reepuxusiuiB lur mo lorning By WILLIAZTI a. BERNARD. WILMINGTON, N. C: Friday Morning, July 1, 1881. HAIrf.Il.TON, DILI. AND THE CON siirurioNi Senator Hill, of Georgia, in his published interview, is reported as saying that the war made the Union of States "a Federal Nation." But he is careful enough to guard his statement with this remark: "The sword has finally determined the cbaractex-ol this Government and the rela tion of the States to it. The national char acter of the United States is now as un questionable sod indissoluble as that of France or England. The war did not destroy the States, but nationalized the Union." The war could not "destroy the States" without destroying the Con stitution. Mr. Hill never was a State Rights Whig, and, therefore, his opinions are to b9 taken with many degrees of allowance. He is a disciple of Hamilton, Webster, Story and Curtis in bis interpretation of the Constitution. The great writers 00 the question of State Rights in the South Jefferson, Madison, Bledsoe, Calhoun, Stephens, Jeffer son Davis are not in accord with Mr. Hill's views generally. Of course Hill must hold the right theory and these great men must be in error. This is the way Mr. Hill talks: "Mr. Davis and I never did agree exactly s3 10 the character of our Government. He looked upon John C. Calhoun as the great light of tbe South Upon these problems. I was a Whig, and never bad any use for such doctrines as Calboan taught and Da vis adhered to then, and I have infinitely less now." Mr. Hill is possibly in full sympa thy with the illustrious Hamilton, who would have destroyed civil and religious liberty onjthis continent if he had not been checkmated by a greater genius for government than he waa. If you would see how in this hour Hamilton is held in the North by the enemies of the reserved rights of States as guaranteed by the Constitution read the following. A statue to Hamilton has been erected in Central Park, New York. The Philadelphia American, aft indepen dent Republican paper with strong leanings to a centralized government, has this to say: "Above all, he waa the first conscious representative of that tendency to nation al z it ion which has been the master im pulse in the later movements of our politi cal life. Every victory over State Rights baa been tbe victory of Alexander Hamilton. Every successful assertion of national right and authority has been the assertion of bis insight and foresight as a statesman. For a time H seemed as though hia aims in this regard had been defeated and -forgotten. Federalism perished, and the resolves of 1793 became omnipotent- Bat history has justified him, and, in tbe greatest city of a Nation more in harmony with him than with his great rival, bis statue is erected with all honor." A great fight will be waged yet before State Rights are buried. A struggle is inevitable between cen tralization and conservatism between- the sovereignty of States, according ta the Constitution, and the sovereignty of a grand Federal Naitonr3i8regarding at will all State Hoe -"-between tbe ideas and doc trines of Hamilton, tbe Destructive, and Jefferson, the Conservator. That is the real issue of the future. It may not come in 1884 or in 1888 but it will come. The ideas are hos tileantagontetn Btrenctb. the elorvyth inspiration of I " - . V 4". . .'J TT'' the Democratic party5, 01 the union is a reassertion and maintenance' of the doctrines of Thomas Jefferson that the States have rights that were never urrendered and that belong to themselves as sovereign common wealths. Why, so dangerous ib the tendency of the Republican, theory that as staunch and unwavering a Republi can paper as the New York JSvening Post is has this to say : "If we have arrived at a time in our his tory whea it is deemed 'hair-splitting over State rights to insist upon the maintenance of those provisions of the Constitution by which the States are permitted to act in their State capacity, then it is time to look about us and begin over again, for there is much to be undone in our system, if the States, as such, are worthy of no consideration, and tbe powers eecured to them 'by tbe Constitution may safely be set aside or over' ridden by the General Government." The erection of this statue at this late day is significant. It shows that in tbe North centralized ideas are growing in favor and that the great Corypheus of a consolidated Govern ment is the true exponent of pre vailing ideas in that quarter. In their insane war upon the rights of States they will lose in the end their own liberties, if they are not very careful, and New York will become to the Government, if they succeed, what a county is to a State only a part of the territory of a Nation. The New York News sees the danger and sounds the alarm. It says: "Tbe Republicans do not make any noisy proclamation of their Federalists ideas, but their movement ia lor that reason an me more dangerous; for they are stealthily ad vancing, step by step, toward their object ive Doint. and at every step are beta:; re enforced by securing a stronger bold on the resources that an unscrupulous command of Federal patronage offers to tbe uses of partisan warfare. Such views are to be commended. They show that now and then there is a Republican editor who has not forgotten the teachings of.the Con stitulion. But,j?er contra, the New York Tribune speaks of the rights of States as a mere "phantom to beig nored by its party; whilst the Chi cago Times holds that the TJpited States is a Nation just as France or Russia is a Nation. Such seems to be the opinion of Garfield and other Republican leaders. But Mr. Hill does not go thus far. He thinks we have a new sort of Government a Nation, and yet somehow with tbe States still preserved. How that is we will not undertake to explain. But whilst some Southern men may be for giving up the reserved rights of States, and the drift of things throughout the North is to a strong Government, it may be well to remind all concerned that the time was when the doctrine of State Rights was held as tenaciously in the North in New Eogland even as it is now spurned and scoffed. In the beginning New England led the South in zeal for the new theory of State Rights. Timothy - -mm- Pickering, of Massaonusetts, was successively Postmaster Genera1,See retary of War and Secretary of State in the Cabinet of Washington, and for many years United States Sena tor. In 1804 he wrote: "Tbe principals of our revolution point to tbe remedy a separation. That this can be accomplished, and without spilling one drop of blood, I have little doubt. I do not believe in the practicability of a long-con tinued Union. A. Northern confederacy would unite congenial characters and pre sent a fairer prospect of public happiness; while tbe Southern 8tates, having a simi larity of habits, mighv bo left to manage their own affairs in their own way. Tbe separation must begin in Massachusetts." In 1811 Josiah Quincy, of Massa chusetts, wrote, on tue admission of Louisiana into tbe Union : "If this bill passes it is my deliberate opinion that it is a virtual dissolution of tbe Union; that it will.free tue.j3tates from their moral obligation, and as it will be tbe right of all, so it will be tbe duty at some ded nitely.lo prepare for a separation amica bly if they csd, violently If they must" The Hartford Convention of 1814, composed of delegates from all of the New Eogland States, said: " Whenever HbAUappear that the causes are radical and permanent a separation by equitable arrangement wttl be preferable to an alliance by constraint among nominal friends, but real enemies." Neither Mr. Jefferson, nor Mr, Calhoun, nor Mr. Jefferson Davis have taken at any time anymore ad vanced State Rights doctrine "that these utterances show. Let South ern, men reflect long and well before they give up the mainstay and gis of their liberties. SCOTT. ;:' It is gratifying to -persons- wbo love the best literature to note that there is a steady reaction in favor of Walter Scott."" Sloce 1840 he has been read very ' much it is -trubat during: the last forty yearshVi?as been neglected by tens of thousands of novel readers who pore over the latest pi eductions of Ouida Rhoda Brongbtoo,' Wilkie '- Collins, Mrs Oliphant and tbe hundre4tf;Otbr writers who ttfrn out a novel every; three months, whilst remaining igno- rant of tbe purest and -greatest story l teller . otf ait toe wona. e ure chums of rScott were beings reoog- nized more and more, and have been glad to meet with criticisms kf the English - periodicals giving the au thor of "Waverly" his rightful place among the great writers of fiction. In . Good TForcZs a -leading -English. magazine there is a paper "On No vels and Novel-Makers",f rom the pen of an "Old Novelist." With the hope of doing service) in behalf of a great genius aud wholesome literature, we copy an opinion or two from this writer. He refers very properly to Soott as the Shakespeare of novelists. He is a great lover of Scott, and has a thorough appreciation of his purity, splendor, freshness, richness, creative power, humor, beauty and other high endowments. Hear him,and then get a good edition of Scott and read him whenever you are hungry for fiction, provided your hunger is not unrea sonable. Tbe "Old Novelist" says: "I think it is not too much to say that we might go through the Waverly Novels from beginning to end, without finding one page, perhaps not even one line, that we would hesitate to read aloud to any young people, old enough to understand that evil exists in the world, and that tbe truly virtuous are those who know bow to refuse the evil and to choose tbe good. And I -who having written novels all my life, know moie than most readers how to admire a great novelist should esteem it a good sign of any son or daughter of mine who would throw a whole cart load of modern fiction into the gutter, often its fittest place, in order to clasp a huge wholesome armful of Walter Scott." AN ILLUSTRATION FROM THK CLASSICS. It is strange how not only history but faets repeal themselves. In this 4 19th century the experience of many Southern farmers ia identical with that of the Greeks in the time of Solon. We are told by the historians that the great misery of the people was debt. "The farmers had bor rowed money at very high interest," and to do this they were forced "to give their farms in pledge for the navment of their debt. At "the A m boundaries of every farm so mort gaged, pillars were Bet up as a wit ness, with tbe amount of the debt and the name of the lender cut npon them. The debt grew greater and greater every year from the heavy interest; the farmer lost all hope of ever being able to pay, and was now a laborer on his farm which had been really once his own." This reads like a paragraph from a chapter in tbe history of cotton planting in some sections of North Carolina, and, in deed, of many portions of States farther South. Cotton will never be "king" untit the planter ceases to glut the market with tbe "great Southern staple," and learns to grow his own cereals and produce his own supplies. When "Cotton is King again the farmer will have no cause to mortgage his land and become the overseer of the commission merchant. Under the present system cotton is no longer a great monarch, but is orowaless; whilst his poor subjects are burdened and oppressed with ac cumulating debts. From I. K. Funk & Co., 10 and 12 Dey street, New York, we have re ceived The Persian Queen, by Rev. Edward Thwing. Price 10 cents, maoilla baoks. Also The Salon of Madame Necker. Vol. III. Trans lated from the French by Mary Stu art Smith. No. 64, Standard Series.: Quarto form. Price 15 cents. Ma dame Necker, as is well known, was the mother of Madame de Stael. In this volume we have most interesting reminiscences of the early life of the daughter, and much about the social life in France which preceded the bloody Reign of Terror. It is an ex oeedingly interesting book. Two remarkable oases were report ed in the Stab dispatches of yester day. In South Carolina a plea of in sanity failed in the case of a wife murderer, one B. W. Hilke. In Eng-i laud the Marquis of Townshend waa fined $2,500 and costs for horsewhip ping Lord Edward Thynne, who ran aVay with the wife of the former. In this country the. Marquis wp old have been congratulated warmly and feted, and very . properly.; But in England law is law, and if a Marquis even violates it he must abide the Consequences. So Conkling's friends were willing to compromise with the "Half Breeds," even though it resulted in throwing overboard "me too, Piatt.", ConkliDg's friends are worth having. They stand squarely by the great po litical machinist. With them Conk ling is all and in all. ' CDRBKtlT COnUBNT, " " -. - It is a good sign for the back bone of Gladstone- that- the high Tory, organs have strung themselvea up again to the ancient partisan &ey. He is now1 the unredeemed son .o darkness leading the nation ,,to the flesh-pots. His declaration that he didn't consider his 4ife-work com plete until he has readjusted thacon- rttioflwnirlisb-attafatturing. wotkins lahdt7arilnefelasias; ' has Mn i-paf 4eA 'WiGf a hnrflVf it rah tic laef-remisr is vuuuuuuibwui ub mildest purpose the destruction of the: British nation. . Jacobins js. the name, civen the Litoerai, party. ---enaOT-fieas4ons-drewver a,0o0 stfte 'day toftw-tf' BiwHey Rys he. paid him $2,000, and about tbe same time Mr. Tillinghaust, of the Central Railroad, drew $20,000. Ses sions stilt carries his about his clothes. Tillinghast carried his in hi pocket for a few days, and then took it to Buffalo, where he had prudently an ticipated "a soarcity of currency," and kept it in : his safe, until a bank officer turned up who -rwaoted it. What a strange mania it is! And how suddenly it has broken ont among the Albany lobbyists and Mr. Vanderbiit's railroad' officials. New York Sun, Ind. Dem. Tom Idariliill and the JadE Tom was engaged in the trial of a case somewhere in the interior of Kentucky, when a decision of tbe judge struck him so bad that be rose and said : "There never was such a ruling as that since Pontius, Pilate presided on the trial of tbe Saviour." "Mr. ClerK," responded the judge, "fine Mr. Marshall $10 for contempt of court. "I confess, your IIonor,"continued Tom, "that what I said was a little hard on Pontius Pilate; but it is the first time in the history of Kentucky jurisprudence that it is held to speak disrespectfully of Pontius Pilate is contempt of court. T t t B . M. "W.T. uierK mane tne nne ru tor a continuous-contempt," said the judge, solemnly. wen, judge, 10m added, "as you won all my money last night at poker lend me the twenty. "Mr. Clerk," cried the judge, hastily, "remit the fine. Tbe State can better afford to lose the money than I can. "I congratulate the Court upon its return to a sane condition," said Tom, resuming his seat amid roars of laughter. married One ana Sloped With Ad- , , otuer. Piltsourg, Penn., Commercial, June 25. Last Thursday Mr. W. C. Muse, late candidate for county surveyor of Westmoreland county, was married to Miss Douglass, daughter of Mr. William Douglass, who lives at that place. The wedding was a brilliant affair. There was a large number of guests, and the' presents were many and costly. The bride's wedding at tire was of unusual richness, having been 'bought in New lork. Mr. Muse remained with his bride but twenty-four hours, when he started, as he said, for West Newton, not, however, until after he had borrowed $100 from his wife and another simi lar sum from her brother. At West Newton Mr. Muse met Miss Maggie Paul, a respectable young lady, whom he had, previously engaged to marry, and proposed to bring her to Pittsburg to have the ceremony per formed. They started for this city accompanied by two brothers of Miss Paul. Arrived in the city they found that the train they intended to leave on to take their wedding trip was about to leave, and th ceremony Was again deferred. ' The-' brothers returned home and Mr. Muse and Miss Paul departed, nobody knows where. Popular Monthly Drawing of tbe Commouwealtti DisMMoii Company, At Macaaley Theatre, Lathe city of Louisville, op Saturday, Jr4y JOt, 1881. Tbefle drawings occur monthly (Sundays except ed) unaer pro-visions or an act or tne uenerai As sembly of .Kentucky, incorporating the Newport PriBtroK and Newspaper Co.. aDtrroved Anrtl 9. 1878. i'Hia 18 A Bf JCUlAi AUT. Al HAS NJS- V It BEEN BBP&AIiBD. The United States Circuit Coitrt en March Si ren dered tbe following decisions : Hfc THAT -THK COMMONWEALTH DISTRI BUTION COMPANY 1H LKQaU Jd. ITS DRAWINGS ARB PAIR. The Company has now en. hand a large reserve fund. Read the list of prizes for THK JULY DRAWING. 1 Prize $30,000 . 100 Prizes $100 each $10,000 1 Prize 10,000 S00 Prises 50 each' 10,000 1 Prize -M0i OOSrstaOB SOeach li.OOO 10 Prizes $1000 10,000 1,000 Prizes 10 each 10,000 SO Prizes 600 10,000 8 Prizes $880 each. Approximation Prizes, V700 B Prizes 300 each, " " i,800 9 Prizes tOO each, " 900 1,960 Prizes. $11S,40 -. Whole Tickets, $. Half Tickets, $1, Tickets, $80. W Tickets, $100. - Remit Money or Bank Draft in Letter, or send by Kxprees. DON'T 8BND BY RBQIfiTKRKD LB-f TBR OR FObTOFFICB ORDER. Orders of $5 and upward, by BxpreSsl'eati Tjs sent at our ex- se. Address auioraemw k. mbo&KB-MaN, Courier-Journal Buildinir. LOUIS VTLLK. Kv. . or. J. COMMKRPORD 809 Broadway, N. Y. jyteow . ta th aa SCHUtTE'S SEA-SIDE PAEE HOTEL. WrIffhtsrtltO"onnd, IS NOW OPBN FOR-THK RECEPTION OP GUESTS. The Table is supplied with the products of the Sound a id Sea; Transient and regular boarders taken at reasona ble rates. , . JeSU , F A. SOHDTTB, Proprietor. No Ddiibtc ifbdut It. GAEL AD SEE. jeMU FaBJKKS TAYLOR. -.a JV4BQK STOCK, ALL SIZES S U1TABLE Beceipt Letter and InvoWe'.Booksr Stauoaery, School Books,-Puncy Qoods; Scc Ac., ft o." Organ and Pianos on easjr terms. ' ' je 8itf t . W, YATES' BOOK STORE. MISCELLANEOUS. riXir! HI II, I1IIIH II ' UHJlll vv wir I II wi vx 11 f fin Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago; Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Threat Swellings and Sprains; Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache?, Frosted Feci and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. . No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacobs Oil as a sa fe, sure, simple and cJteap External Remedy. A trial entails but the comparatively t ifling outlay of 50 Cents, and every one suffering with pain can have cheap and positive proof of its claims. : Directions in Eleven Languages. 30LD BY ALL DEUGGISTS AUD DEALERS IH , MEDICINE. A.VOGELER 6c CO., Hiattimorc; 3Td., V. S. A. . JeJODJfcWly ' nrm Summer ints At this season, various diseases of the bowels are prevalent, and many lives are lost through lack of knowledge of a safe and sure remedy. Perry Davis' Pain Ktt.t.ttr is a sure cure for Diarrhoea, Dys entery, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Bummer Complaint, etc, and is perfectly safe. Bead the following : BATWBBnK,N.T March 22, 1881. Pekst Davis Pais never fails to afford tntiant relief for cramp and psin m the stomach. Joseph Bubditt. NhtboiiTtixh. n. Y..Feb. a, issi. The very best medicine I know of for dysentery, cholera morbua, and crwnpa In tbe stomach. Have ued it for yeaxs, aad itia tur ewe everytane. Jthots w. Des. WanraaKi, Iowa, March 12, 188L I have used your Paih Kxdij in eevere coses of cramp, coticand diolfira morbesna it gave almost matani relief. Ii. E Caldwkli. CABStXSYIIXX, OA., Feb. 28, 1881. For twenty years I hare used your Pain Ktt.t.kk - i yr tinwy TTavo naafl It miny timr "N""1 complaints, and It almayeenree. would not feel safe without a bottle ia toe haase. J.B,Ijtbb. Baoo, Mi, Jan. S2, 18SL Have nsod Pebut Davis' Pain Killkr for twelve years. It is safe, cure, and reliable. No mother should allow it to be out of thefamilg. jj.ATEgi Owxtoa, N. YFeU 19, 1881. We begun using it over thirtyyears ago, and It always nves immediate relief . Vould hardly dare to go to bed without a bottle in the house. W.O.SPKBBT. COWATBOBO, aCFeb. 22, 1881., Nearly every family in this section keeps a bottle) In the house. Du. E. Mobton. U, a COMUTJUTE, CBX7KU, KHENISH PBUBSlVFeb. 8, 1881. I have known Psbby Davis' Pats Kn.T.sTt almost from the day it was introduced, and after years of observation and use I regard Us presence in my household as an iitdiiveiuable necessity. X a Fotxeb, U. a ConsuL BuBTOir-OKTBKfrr, Eng. I had been several days suffering; severely from diarrhosa, acoompained with intense pain, when I tried your Earn r TT r nT"a nm almost instant relief. H. J. Noonk. 21 MOHTAGTTB BT.,IjOKDOK, KNO. During a residence of twenty-three years in India, I nave given it in many cases oi aiirgKia. oyw tery, ai relief, ery, ana cnojera, ana never Knew n w uu iu givo No family can safely be without this invaluable remedy. Its price brings it within the reach of alL For sale by all druggists at 25c., 50c and $1.00 per bottle. PERRY DAVIS & SON, Proprietors, Providence, R. I. jyl DfcW2m nrm The Richmond Iron Faint Company. JKASONSWHY WS HAVE THB BESTJ OF Testimonials in the State of Virginia for Good Workmanship and Honest Material, are, we use the Best of Mineral Paint, the Scqna Oxide or Iron, Which is the Double Oxidation of Iron, which proves to be the hnt. There are various grades of that material, the same as with other commodities in the market; the same way that oils and other material uxed in painting are adulterated to suit the prices for work. Now we uee the best, and make it a point to stop all leaks with our Cement, that elves the best of satisfaction to those we have done work for, where others, have failed. It is not the simple fact of daubing on a certain amount or ma terial, and that In mairy cases of inferior quality, that protects your roofing, but it is good material. put on with good judgment .and care which saves you mucn oi tne annoyacce or navmg your roonug tst soder up almost every month, and your cistern water not fit to use half the time. By care and attention to cauarework we have gained the best of testimonials, and hope to secure your patronage. Please send postal card to JAOK.SON A COLLBNS, Post Office Box No. 656, my 18 tf Wilmington , N. C. View Crop Cuba. The Finest Cargo this Season. 536 HHDS. SELECTED NEW CROP CUBA 50 TIERCES SELECTED NEW CROP CUBA, Just, received and now landing cx Schr sfaggie Dalling. v , For sale. low by Williams & Murchison. ' xnh IS tf ' ; ' " ' - Good New Butter, F RESH AND SWEET. MOUNTAIN BUTTEB, - In Kits and Boxes, r - - " Por sale iWby- ' 5 HALL & PEARSALL. Comoa jel6DWtf MISCELLAKEOUS. SUMMER QUILTS. Brown & Roddick 45 Market St. 9f 0 SDMMBB QUILTS AT $1 00. "25 150 do do do do AT AT 1 25. 1 59. Our patrons will find the above verv desirabla for Summear Wear. We can guarantee the prices to be as LOW as any In the country. They are easily washed when soiled, and the most Popular Brands of Bomestic Manufacture. 11-4 LINEN 8HEKTINQ, 1 do PILLOW CASINO, 9-4 COTTON SHEETING, Sic per yard. CORSETS. THE CORRUGATED CORSET very desirable for Summer wear. CHILDREN'S HOSE. A beautiful line of .the above in solkl Flue and Pink, Silk Clocked. Very desirable for this season. Brown & Roddick 45 Market Street. je 17 tf Lowell Machine Shop, Lowell, Mass. , MANUFACTURERS O EVERT DESCRIPTION . .OF COTTON MACHINERY Of most Approved Patterns and with Recent Improvements. Paper Machinery ALSO, TURBINE WHEELS, Shafting and 1 caring. Hydraulic Presses and Pumps. Elevator?, &c. PLANS FOR COTTON AND PAPER MIX.IA C. L. HILDRETH, Sup't. LOWELIi, MASS WM. A. BURKE, Treas., mh 3 tf 23 State Street, BoBton. O. K. Again. -IIY LOSSES BT THE FIRE TUESDAY NIGHT have been repaired, and I am prepared to deliver Gcods with Dispatch in any part of the city. I ehall lose no time grieving, but am prepared to offer BARGAINS to all who call on me. I buy for CASH whon any advantage is offered, and I can al most always offar inducements Have now a large lot of CANVASSED HAMS, small sizes, whic I can fell cheap. 10 Tierces best LARD just received. 20 Tubs BUTTER, all grades. A very chofce lot N. C. 8IDES, Small lot large N. C. HAMS at l?Xc. Store on Seeond Street, Carr Building. Jas. C.Stevenson je 23 tf NOW READY THE NEW EDITION OF WORCESTER'S Quarto Dictionary, WITH SUPPLEMENT, Library Sheep, $10. W rlters. Headers and Students of all classes will find it superior to any other Dictionary. 0 n questions of Orthography and Pronunciation it is unnvauea. TJkegarded by Scholars in both America and Eng JM. land as the Standard Authority. contains thousands of words not to be found in j any otner Dictionary. Xpxeels all other works in the completeness of Its i vocabulary. Supplementary to the general vocabulary are val uable Articles, Lists, Rules, Tables, etc . rnhe Pronunciation, Etymology and Definition of A over iio.uuu woraa are correctly given. TSmbrtcea 3058 royal quarto pages, with over 1100 Jji Illustrations and four Illuminated plates. T commended m the strongest terms by the most Xh oompetent .mages as the best Dictionary oi tne itngiisn Liaaguage. Students of all classes will find the special addi tional matter of great value and practical use. D ecidedly the most eatisfactory and reliable work oi its Eina. Illustrations are introduced liberally throughout the work. Challenges comparison with any work of like cha racter. The Supplement places it in advance or all other similar works. Is Independent of all sects, parties, and idiosyn crasies of everv kiad. ftmits nothing that is essential to a Standard Una Driagea Dictionary. N ew Words to the extent of thousands can be Hound explained only in its. pages. vocabulary of Synonymes of 85,030 words Is a feature of the new edition. A E e viewers have uniformly commended the new edition in the highest terms. You ere invited to examine and test the work at any Bookstore. FOR BALK BY ALL BOOKSELLERS. J. B. LIPPnrCOTT & CO., Publishers. ; PHILADELPHIA. HORSES BOARDED BT DAT WEEK' OR month, and for hire at reasonable rates. . . . . , . . - JAS. W. SOUTHERLAND CO., ; 3e 86 tf , n ... Opposite Opera House. X -arm nhOK O&BST NBWSPAl' mostMoBperous to theStata.ffaMi tMffarp-n,, and Wholesale Merchants and Manufacturer, and to those who li4v adopted, theWan : oFselliStt by sample; an exoelleEt medium of eominunlcatlon with a larp aiidinflutsitialelaa mercnacte, me- rb&nirj .nfi.r(tarfl nxtA navel v A ronagelsWorth TOUdtat vertiements and UUOUroDDVCKUO uicTOrvoU Oil HWTM Tr? TTlT W" ' ' ' a:;:Awn. h- n .jn THB8TAB, . . eptaatf nc ; as - Mrion ftC- SoutliernSramatiaC A WBBKLX SOUTHERN JOURNAL, DEVO ed to OramaUcand Sociclyjlw Send , Uon for a sample Copy.' Address ' ATltAMTA,' OA.. q A MISCKLIjAN KOUS R O Y S T E R'S CANDY ONLY A T P. L. Bridgers & Go MADE Wednesday, June 22d. CALL EARLY. P. L. Bridgers & Co. je25 If The Rockbridge (Va. ) Alum Springs, And the late "JORDAN A I.I 11 NOW CONSOLIDATED IN ONE PROPERTY AND UNDER ONE MANAGEMENT. A joint stock company having bought those two contiguous properties, to be known under the old title of "ROCKBRIDGE ALUM SPRINGS," will OPEN it to the pablic on JUWE 1ST, under ihe su pervision of MR. WILLIAM FKAZiKK. who wm before the war, and for four years arter the war, in charge of the original Alum Springs. We think I lio public will find him the right man in the right jilat . J. FRED BFFINGKK, President Rockbridge Alum fprings Co. After twelve years' absence I return to Ibis post of duty. It is harnly necessary to dilate to tbe mu thern public upon the virtues and value or this min eral water. It has in the. last half century made a record of cures in chronic cases which for variety and aggravation of the cases brought under its in -fluence is unapproached by any known mineral wa ter in this country. The professional testimouy lo this effect is distinguished and unimpeachable But it is of the preparations now being made by the new proprietors for the proper entertainment of the public 1 would cay a few words. A great work of expurgation and renovation ie now going on at the old Alum Springs, including a thorough system of drainage, a new and abundant water supply of pure freestone from the mountain, repainting and new sooting, a very large introduc tion of new furniture, and in general a thorough overhauling of the entire premises. Tbe elegance of the new ."JORDAN ALUM," its spacious and commodious "GRAND HOTEL" and COTTAGES, and the BEAUTY OF ITS GROUNDS, are widely known to the Spline's going public. My aim and earnest effort shall be to keep this now combined establishment in a manner to give satisfaction to all reasonable guests. AN EXCELLENT LIVERY, is engaged, under a contract imposing a reasonable tariff of charges. All the customary diversions are provided for, euch as BAND and BALL ROOM MUSIC, BOWLING and BILLIARDS, and all that; but I do not "bank" much on these things. My main efforts shall be di rected, with the aid of an efficient staff, to make the patrons ol the place COMFORTABLE and "AT HOME," and regam. if possible, for this attractive summer resort, its old popularity and prestige. Please send to Pubcku., Ladd & Co., Richmond, Vs., or the undersigned, for descriptive pamphlet, with rates of board, routes, and medical testimony. WILLIAM FRAZIER, my 27 eodlm f r su we Gen. Supt. SEED RICE. 1000 Bushels BEST LOWLAND, 500 do. WfllTE UPLAND, For sale by mh 18 tr WORTH A WORTH. The Biblical Recorder PUBLISHED BY Edwards, Broughton A. Co. RALEIGH, N. C. REV. C. T. BAILEY, Editor. REV. Q. HATCHETl, Associate Editor. Organ of Nortli Carolina 'Baptists In Us 44th Year. EVERY BAPTIST SHOULD TAKE IT Afi an Advertising Medium Unsurpassed Only 93.00 per Year. Address BIBLICAL RECORDER. dccS3-tf Raleigh. N.C, The Methodist Advance AN UNOFFICIAL METHODIST PAPER, Devoted to . RELIGION, TEMPERANCE AND GENERAL . , LITERATURE, Published Weekly at Goldsboro, N. C , FOR A JOINT STOCK COMPANY. Subscription, t90 Year: $t,00 for Six Months. On Trial, CO cents tor tnree montns, rayaoie in advance. A liberal patronage is respectfully solicited. Ad dress all communications to the Editor. W. M. ROBEY, Editor. F M. WOOD, M. V. SHERRILL, Corresponding Editors. Je 4 tf Chattel Mortgages AND Crop Liens , FOR BALE - At the STAR Office.
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 1, 1881, edition 1
2
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