Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Sept. 11, 1887, edition 1 / Page 2
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"V :HVplhll(baii' l ... A .i JTi. . i A 5-- ??poJ ta North CarolIna,ls published daur,exoep( Jri??f per year, 00 for sts monTha, ;W f ShfgF1 Delivered ;to city subscribers : ?jr?.?fJ! wt Per VMk fer any period 11 wmtT STAR is published everv Friday one da. Si an. iZTZZ JTSrA'T'"'L Ave days. M 50 : nnawaak. 4 f: IlOflTtSAMl-f&W; one month. uiBuuguiBnea Bnaaespearean scho- fZ-w.zr4f'w . "1" ?r. i re ; tnreeaaya, as so; ?JSL ?Vk Ball? ' . ' V- v-11 announcements of Fain, Festivals, ' J ' i j v , v - lnKs, &O..WU1 be charged regular advertising i sMf i52ta8l1"nd 15 oenta per line true that he had boi it wnniH - r. vwm v a lmll . lam and riticOT thistrvJ ntJJ.mh two greatest baye 4ied wijthm two or I iW-v..Kii- .it-i.u three yearg-Kichard - Qrant WhiW j8 Mr. Donnelly as well eda!ated and Henry Hudson. White did man as Mr. Loffb saya" Shakespeare lueorjr now worxea i was? We doubt it. , -' oat more elaborately by - Donnellv. r is rr but heiad evidently great contempt when twentyvthreeeJOtfi1 for in- urtoune last declared "that tMeet , ""iwier oead of "City Items' so oents per , JfSiff:SoaL5,,d oenta per line for r- " AdTorttoementa Inserted a b ir. n.n. 51" ?SarKd 1 00 Per square for inaerSoi 5SZ P5?r JZ? three fourths ofdaUy rata! Twice a week, two thlrda of daily rate. uommunloatlonB, nnleas they contain imnor. rsaDjeotf of realliterearannt irl; able tn i 2TIJii;v , Jtvuoy win invariably De (ejeoted U the real name of the anthni-1 thimut a .-x - An ATfM a)i.m. Mni v. . ot IriadTerSen eVZSHSSS. Dath- Tribute of Re spect, Resolutions of Thanks, Ac. are charred mnFf?L8?Jm.dla,M5e- At this rate ; Mai?&eS SSagr a I,nile ounoement of ASSto6m.ent" 'WWoh no specified number hUWft118 te ked wm be (jontinned "ffi Sl?Uahihf-optlo5.0' Publisher, and ohargei ;nP o tao date of disoontinnanoe. . 'nfa' ABon and Offloial advertlsement : one dollar per square for each Insertion. - Advertisements to f oUow readme matter, or tn Py'r be charged extra . . Advertisements kept nndar th ho Af mo. Igffi-mente'-jfUlbe charged fifty" wr oeiZ n??.emen dlsoontlnned before the time contracted for has expired, oharged transient rates for time actually pubuShedT .;jT- . ill aiBvou MivBiriBemenis must De made In advance. Known nartlaa. tr pk.; V T,,ip0I,erenoe' PaT monthly orqiar ."r" - eW7f aooordlng to contraot. 'fV---.ilffi?mm2lta 1111(1 recommendations of : SSJSLi0' office, whether in thehape of .- Sg- "otherwise, will be ehar&S $vfe wfll not be allowed to ex- 3 W ffiM". 'oreVto translVnir;; onarge at fj??1?3- P111 ca remittances will be at the . As ft" risk of the publisher. . i'A P?10?8 Jpeotty the issue or s Kmes they desire to advertise in. Where no Si .:m& ' fh1! vemnt wm brted i S r lhiSiJeTOrt oontraots for -.- b .. . 'he paper to be sent to him during the toe his :v.t.; advertfaementisln,the proprietor wUlSv b2 for it and did not think the fame worth the candle. So he did not ex amine at much length. Among living American Shakespeareans the ablest and best equipped is no doubt JMr. EC H. Farness. He has no credence for Donnelly Baconian theory of au thorship. He will not discuss the theory, however, until the book is published. Mr. James Parton is an able writer and explorer but not eminent as a Shakespearean scholar. He is very emphatic. He says: "If ShftbftBnpBrA AA nnt nrrito 'nn,nii Charles Dickens did not write 'David Cop perfleld,' nor Hawthorne 'The Scarlet Let ter,' nor am I writing this paragraph. If there was a man in Eneland who waa further than any other man from being able to write the plays of Bhakespeare' it was probably Lord Bacon." The last remark is true. The in temal evidence against the Baconian authorship is overwhelming. No man who has ever read Bacon's ac knowledged published works -could believe to save his own life that he ! could have written "The Midsummer Night's Dream," "The Tempest" the three plays in which Falstaff, fig. ures and the great tragedies that tpwer above all other human -compositions. Bacon had no noetrv m hia soul. He was a philosopher and a lawyer a man of great powers and a wit. 4wo great play erathenwercHei inge and Burbagef." -These became hia nill'onn.l('MJ. rnt - i Li-1 cal?F0 Shalpeaf Warwickshire, and were - born vervl near Stratford, where Shakespeare, was born. ; Were' they. igaorani 'of : his education and gifts ? n Did they" ever question his magnificent genius ? Only eighteen of his plays were pijb ) nshed m his life time. "Macbeth." "Merchant of Venice," "Julius C sar" and other famous plays were published for the first time in 16$3, by Beminge and Condell. , This.was about eight years after hirf death.' Heminge was his county manj pdr-. sonal friend and brother actor. ; The title page to theirs collected edition under jETeminge8 own supervision bore this title on the first page;' J ' "Mr. William Shakespeare's Comedies, , Histories and Traireriiea PitKUoT, - cb u uimiuvu a coraing to. ine true original Copies, 1633, Fol. Printed at the Charges of W. Jageard. Ed. Blount, J. Smithweeke, and W. Ans ley." - ( Then follows, j "The Dedication of the Players (Hem inge and Condejl), prefixed to the first folio. 1623." . . t The Morning Star Py WII.1.IAI11CB. BERNARD. Donnelly would have us belief e that Shakespeare had no friends arid associates in high life. We know hoF intimate he was with the Earl ofSoa thampton. The "Dedication" begins : The Boston Post says, and it fits tn mo" anaincompari- tr numose r.rJ ble Paire of Brethren, William Ear e WILMINGTON, N. C. Sukday Mornhtg, Sept. 11, 1887 THE SHAKESPEARE-BACON THE. OBI. The Stab has not had much to say of the Shakespeare-Bacon question that is being discussed in so many leadipg papers. We have not even had time to read the New York World's account of the Donnelly ci pher, by which the ingenious writer hopes to dethrone the greatest intel lect this world has seen and put the laurel upon another and less worthy head. Mr. Donnelly is a man of rather brilliant parts, and is given to surprises. His book "Ragnarok" was a genuine surprise to geologists. Even so competent a man of science as Prof. Alexander Winchell pro enounces it "a work of genius." The pith of the book is to prove that the superficial accumulation urhmii l'r- ogiets know as "Drift, was brought ino eartn Dy a comet." So Mr. CtS- Dnnelly is Siven to strange and in- :p.rBenioas speculation, and his wild to 'i-. theory that Francis Bacon wrote Lear flind. Macbeth, Othello and Hamlet, ad the other most wonderful works ;::Ain all literature, is in keeping with ,.-pgthe curious intellectual excursions to ;Shichhe is addicted. Prof. Win e11 intimatas that Mr. Donnelly can !l!make a square plug fit a round hole. ?We have not read the elaborate glggjabstract of his latest exploits in the 8Ieculative field. We purpose doing e do not mean now"to attempt . to examine his theory or to refute -jrJt a- - - .,'f - t- v . v, 5-Jr;'i'A.. our purpose precisely: "Mr. Albert R. Prv simple argument toward the demolition of Mr. Donnelly's theory by starting a rather awkward matter nf f&nt fnr fh or the cipher to consider. He says: xne copies or the folio of 1623, while wiejr mi oear me same dale, are different among themselves. Thus in some, 4All's Well That JSnda Well" mntftfna O no reef 237, and in others this is 233, while one Dlav. 'Troilns and Oojuia ia r.n a a oil. xi vaererore ioiiows that no c pher I hoDe that ftbv nnt i;v;nn. -could have been inserted in this book." ' 7 y out-llvinS him, and fie not navmg the fate, common with of Pembroke, &c, Lord Chamber lain, fcc, and Philip Earle of Mont- gviucj un;. j.u me dedication w read"But since yonr L. L. have been pleased to thinke these trifles something, heeretofore, and. have prosequuted both - them- and 1heir Authour, with so much favour w4 Vaa elected'and has"a'certificate'fr6m the Governor; - If he can. " be handi- " ' . .- " . ... V . capped it is hoped that the Demo rats wilrelect. BomeTProtectionist- '.v.-fji''i:'.' - V ,'4, -. -? aeiectaoie xtanaaii stance. - tThe Kew" York of Tuesday 'the testimony filed shows Carlisle's e fea I V-a "decid" -ai orit vr-aii d I that no man tfcpB IrTePf onndatiqif of Speaker of the House whose Uitlej to his seat WaslThallenffedf:bf a oCnteot,' Dytestiinopy takenaccording to law And wriinft ! nnAnfr.!if " S : Tbe game is thus "uncovered. Let ns make a fight over Carlisle's el eb tioni say his ene'toies, 'and that will prevent his nomination for the Speak ership. ,And ' there ( are meq.pro fessing, : to,f be Democrats who wiH sanctioa the. Kadical plot.. . Carlisle is the ablest man in the Housed He is a consistent, honest Tarilf Reform- erv He is m the way of the Proteo tionists of all shades and Parties ' Let us slaughte.biniis the cry, ! NO FREE A PPLE.J AC1C. j 1 It is given out as certain that .the Oak View conference gave flo en- ,?9ngeoBnt whateyer to the idea b(, ,epealing the tax on frniti.brand'v. Good v. Why should there be "free apple-1ack.M It baa been ascer tained from the Treasury Depart ment that the average revenue froin that Houroe, does not exceed f l.OOoU 000-1 A, , special concerning this to the N. Y. Times from Washington of date of 7lhmst., says: ( "It was stated, however, that the indi rect loss to the revenue would be very much greater and that, m fact, to exempt fruit brandv frnm ta-ratinn nit .1 cally Tender thfe collection of the tax on (Train soirlts Inmtn ffiatMta -vu There would: be nothinc to prevent the era in distillers fmm flawn.. .k. i.-i. With fruit extrarU nr nnfn 1 ' VtAV.LUK IL I Ml r;r commergi aec WILMIlT,GTON;M A RK KT - f STAR OFFICE. Sept. iaK5 T M. H SpiRiTS" TTJRPENTIlfEpTh?markf f opened firm at29J cents per-aUoiL wiftj saiesof receipts at quotations. " , ROSIK Market firm at 70 cents per tihtrf orStraiTied -andrTS nxntsr far Qacd -traiped. &es600barrels fine rosins at $l'20 for ;K,1 11 5 ot M. and $1 60 TAK Market quoted quiet -at XT 30 per odl ox JKJ IDS'.; - wlln sales of receipU at quotations. -i-V- j-ORUDUj: TTJRP-ENTINE--DtBtn iers quote. , at . ,f 1 . KL for - Virgin and , Yellow Dip and $1 00 for Hard. ! " ' (X)TTON--irarke was quoted steady at the bpenfog it-'Ol" oenta er-i pound for Middling. Sales of 800 bales. '' the following are ?;the loloeing -quotations at tlie Produce Exchange: .. Ordinary. . 6 cents tb. uooa UTainarj. 7 15-18 " Low MMdling-.i IU8f " Middling 9 . GocdMiddlirIz 9 CORN Quoted firm at 60 cenU for yel low in buik, and dS ' cents' in sacks: white is quoted at 64 cents in bulk and ' 66 Cents In sacks for carcoes. ' ' ! , : j j TIMBEE-Marketsteady.wimquoutions , asfoUows: Prime and Extra Shipping, firit claas heart,3 000 00 per M, feet j Exa 8 007 60; Good Common Mill $3 )0 5' OO;' Inferior to Ordinary '$3' 001 00. PEANTJTS--MaTxet firm Prime '55 60 cents; Extra Prime 75080 cents '; Fan 4y 90 cents per bushel of 2S lbs. ' ' ' 1 1 RICE .Market quiet;.J PairJ -quoted at 4i4fc; Pxime f5ic per pound. No sales of . Rough crop all marketed: - . ' 2 1 25c. Mess pork $15 23Q13 5a" Lirdrrier iuu iw. t o-t-- Doon no siaes (loose) $8 80; dry wlted iBhoulders (boxed) $5 25 k; iuon cteaciauiea tooxeai 2SO0 9 8Sr tWhiskey $1 10.- - - -: Thp IvMtrflrt- fntnrp rttiMwl fMI peoing, highest and doting: Wheat No. September ( 5. 69. 661: October 70. 7fU 70.-; Corn Na. 2 September 42. 42t. H; IiriODer 4ZS. AZ. I UU Nn 2 B.. tember 25, 25 K 25, : October 25j, 25,. 25,. Mess pork all the year $12 25, $12 30. r2SO;-Jiaory $13 75r$13 77. $13 77. Lard. Beptanxber $8.60f October $8 62.' ribt--8eirtempei $flL0; October $3 90, $995. $3 95. . . Rt Tv-rrrm Kpnt lO Tlnnf nnlot ebaoged, !jYbet weaVrand fc lower ; No. a red ea&h 69Jc; October 7070e Cottx lower f osMsy and rest Una ; cash 89 40c ; October. 3 88fcj. - Oatr steady ; cash 2424fc; October 24Ja Whiskey steady at $1 03.- ' Provisions strong. Pork irregular: new $15 25.- Lard $a 45. Dry salt meals boxed ahonldera $5 75; long clear $9 00; clear ribs $9 12 ; short clear $9 25. Bacon boxed shoulders $6 25; long clear and clear rib aides $9 75: short clear $10.-00&10 . 12,,. steady : at $12 OOOHQO., ri. f . . i BAXTMeaa, Bept.''jo. Flour, steady, firm and fairly active. Wheat southern firm; choice scarce; red 7981cj amber 81 83c; western easier and quiet; No.' 9 winter- red on., spot .771c Corn south ern firm and In active Inquiry; white 56 57cf yellow 5556e; western steady and dullu(!?i to l'' . -'"- ! CHAHLiSToa, Sept, 1Q. Spirit tuipexw tine quiet at ; 29 ic Rosin quiet; good strained 90c. . i SaVakhIh, Bept ld?-pirits turpentipe una ai xvc iuxw sxeaay at yuv7$c. nBCEIPT", Cotton, wi ;.. Spirits .Turpentine, . , Rosin. .;. ....... Tar. Crude Turpeatine. . .'j 1.273 bales 240 casks U32 bbls 503 bbls 114 bbls COTTON AND NAVAL 8TOUE WE8KIT STATBHENT. ' RECEIPTS' some, to be exequutor to his ovone writings) you will use the same in dulgence toward them,- you have done unto their parent." At the conclusion Heminge and Condejl say j "In the namfi thrfnrB v "1 UIUVI UUU1 bly consecrate to your H. H. these remain of your servant 8HAa:KffPKm!; that what delight is in them may be your Ti. L.JW reputation his, ii.ii.ws In "The Preface of the Players' intended for "The ereat varietv of Readers," these companions, friend and eo players of Shakespeare, sayj of him: I ..nr. . ! wno. as ne was a happie imitator ot SliSat !eSTL!?? expresser of " ft.1 .uuwm wens togemer ; and what, he thought, he uttered with that easinew that wee have scarce received from Aim a blot ! in his papers. But it is not our province ' who onely gather his works, and give them, you, to praise him. It is yours that reads! him. And there we hope, to your divers capacities, you will find enough, both to" draw, and to hold you : for his wit can nol more be hid. than it can be lost. Reade1 a mi,t,tfuerefore; d and againe:' And if then von do nnt iib hm you are in some manifest danger, not to' understand him." " . his ingenious attempt to unseat the great creative mind nf tho . WUW . 1(1 111. .1- -- o muni lew ana smay oeiore we "'&;?ifte ar task now is easier and v. ; y.J, simpler. - . vlt is known that t.b '(t w w vv v waa v b tupon which he relies for his cipher - tneory were never nnhlioV. "- fespeare's life time. Why not SPy the ciPher t0 Lear and Ham Vet?. Why take the most imperfect ;bf;his works, and tbat . Uf PSished after hia death, for the ex Mwnrcnt. Bacon was thorouhiv ,gMCrtpulottB: and corrupt. Pope' l -PWts anure thee, think how Bacon .. . . snin a, " 'v ::ekjndt' brighte8t meanest of man- He flurvived Shakespeare and had abundant opportunities to frame his I?4tPher and insert it into two plays fBi? then Published and not of a Very ; itraordinary merit when compared; rKith-the latest of the supreme ; Raster's acknowledged work. HiSfeS16 Pers?ns who shall undertake S0 plyrthoroughly4o Donnelly must ;:i;be experts The theorv is not alt. v f ether new. Several Americans have that Shake r; speare did not write hia own plays.' - fA Miss Bacon; of Missouri, began the work..-. Judge, Edmunds, a spiritist, ; wrote a book abont it JL Others have wntten, but Donnelly is tT mo8VJngenious no doubt who has undertaken theVotk Mr. Aldricb, the poet, novelist and critic, and editor of the Atlantic Monthly, says: "I have no faith in t.h Ttnnnnian une of the most conclusive proofs of Shakespeare's authenticity lies in the asso ciation with Ben Jonson. Such a man as Jonson is not readily humbugged. The fact thas nothing much is known of Shakes paare is not remarkable. You must re member that there was no New York World in those days, with its enterprising reporters. I think the new theory and the preposterous cinher ia worth hnt a noS,n glance. In fact, I think the World did the smartest thing in getting hold of it first and publishing just about all that was worth printing of it. With the World it is a money making sensation as it is no doubt with Mr. Donnelly. Now let us glance at a few well known facts in Shakespeare's life. We showed a few weeks ago where and how he was educated, giving the names of his two teachers and mentioning the fact that an able and scholarly English critic had shown that every Latin phrase in Shakes peare was to be found in tbe text books, now extant, that were used in the grammar schools in the drama tist's time, and which he studied. We mentioned the interesting fact that at one time Shakespeare was "a school teacher. Shakespeare's name is old and was honorably distinguished. Rowe says it was "of good figure and fashion" in the town of Stratford. Rowe ia an authority. Shakespeare died in 1616. Better ton, the actor, visited Stratford in 1635. Shakespeare's youngest daugh ter lived until 1662. His rand. "ePre8entive Carlisle to pre- daughter until 1670. Hia rnB . ni8.e,ectIon M Speaker. We and connections, the Harts and Hath- ? D d?Ubt that the Plicans aways, were living when Betterton visited Shakespeare's home. It was veneration of the dead poet that prompted his pilgrimage tb where he was buried. He went there "to col lect all the information respecting the object of his inthusiasm which remained among his townsmen." Betterton, a distinguished actor, never doubted the ;greatness of the i marxec irM or ifnhr - v brandy. Then, again, the exemption of one class of distilleries . from taxatioh would immensely increase the output of fruit brandies. At the present time the production of these article Is mainly limited iT ouumera larmere require for their home consumption and to the surplus age of their fruit crop which they are unP able to get to a profitable market. If the COUld DUt their Whola rnn intr fK k. aL without pay fng a tax on it they would un doubtediydoBo. and the result would be that an the small grain distilleries in the r0611 SJ8 would either be turned into f,r,ulL dirt"nea -or would make spirit illicitly and put them on the market as fruit brandies;" That looks to us as conclusive. Of course thoewbo are simply horri fied, arid all the year rounds at tax ing whiskey and brandv at alii will roll up their eyes in splendid disgus and heave a mighty sigh at man's stupidity and cold-heartedness. 'Ha Batltar. Eitob Stab: In your issne of, oepi. yen voucive th fnlinorin tract from the Boston Journal of "I had rather probablr eama frm r would rather through the abbreviation I'd r I would rather be' Is good En-' f . ' OI cour8e nad rather be is not. That it is rosihlA fn iV r?. 1 Solona to occasionally take unto! .uxiw womnca wisdom note iue loiiowmg adthbrity for had rather, be" : For the week ended Sspt. 10, 1887. , Tar. Crude. 4.671 227 9.668' 1,960 578 RECEIPTS I For the week ended Sept. 11. J88C, ! Spirits. Roetn: Tar. Crude JK 3.540 10.588 1,276 ' r.078 EXPORTS ' j Fortha week ended SepC 10. 1887. ! j Gotlon. Spirits. Rotin. Tar. Crude. Domestic 2, 054 . 1.093 304 2,845 841 Foreign. 000 2,191 5,084 000 000 ; it Cabls totlM kornlax Biar.V Lrrxarooii, Sept 10, 12.B0P.H-CoUAn steady and In fair demand xniddUng up lands 5 7-1 6d; mMiipg Orleans 5 7 164' sales of 8.000 bales; for tpeculaUon add' export '1,000 bales; receipU 8.000 bales, of which 2.900 bales were American. Fn lure steady; uplands, m c, Septembtr delivery 5 23-64d; September and Octobtr delivery 5 12-64d; October and November' delivery 5 7 64d; November and December ucuvwj o u-oa; January ana xebrusrv. delivery 5 5-64dr March and April debt ery 5 7-Md. .t, i .; Wheat quiet: demand poor;holdert offer freely. . Corn. firm; demand fair; sew mix ed western 43td. Bacon, long clear 44a ; short clear 43 6d. Lard, prime western .$4l 8d. ,.v ;; . i f i LivisnM Sont-in f T v - ' , mlfl riling nnlandi ti mrfW.mh..ii... 5 23-644. seller; September., and Qctober Z...T a onyer; uctooer ana HQ vemher and December delivery 5 0-64d. buyer; December, and January delivery & 5-64d. seller; Jinnar nA ViVm. ajl. ' . J " AWV, iUUT UI7" liverv 5 5-64d. aeJler! Mmm mnA Ir.v. delivery .5 5-64d. buyer; ilarcA and April wmjvij i u. Fame: April anajnavde livery 8 9-64d aeller. VntnrH quiet but steady, ' - , oaies or - oouon today laclndol 6,100 bales American. - , hoierMorbus olie n irrhoe p ummer "w Cured bra teaspoonfu( of in a little nKor Sugar and Morten Au-Druggists 5cllit feb 13 DA W6m we fr sn ye , , Jiff' MARINE, j. 84$ Total. 2.034 3,289 8.679 2,845 EXPORTS For tbe week ended Sept. 11, 1886. I CotUm. Bpvrits. Rosin. Tar. Crude Sf8110 2? 469 856 2,166 76$ Foreign. . 000 1,123 7.050 000 000 toiai.. 000 .1.597.7.406 2,166 763 STOCKS ; Ashore and Afloat, Sept. 10, 1887. I Afloat. ToUU a. Y37 SpWU 6.178 on 102,829 Tar ........... 3,479 Crude 731 STOCKS 505 1,010 39. 000 000 8.292 6.188 102.853 3.47d 731 Ashore and Afloat, Sept 11, 1886. Crude) l.OOd i "I vouon. ttyirits. Basin. Tar 403 7,672 89,703 1.145 QUOTATIONS. Sept 10, 1837. Sept. 11 1886 Cotton.. 9i . Q1888 SDints. 01 oein... 7075 ... 75 80 Tar..... Si 30 1125 . OOITIKSTIQ nABKmi lori Almuse--Sept. 11. Bun ' Rises. . .;. ': i . : f k sa a ni SnSets... .i4 PM Df length, I2h35m High Water at Smith ville 1.46 A M High Wajer atWlmilngton.... 3.38 A ABBIVED. " ' ' -8tmr- PasTOort. Hamer. fTamr'a TtmJi master. .: ' 8lem yacht Louise. Dozier. Soutbport.: a -n. w w . DULor u murcnison, Bmrm. FayetteviHe, WUlrarns & Marchison. i CLEARED. 1 SUnr. Passport, Harper, Harper's Pier j TT1 w.OTiI Steam yacht Louise, Dozier, South port, i&?M15a' 8mith,FayettevilJe- ly??D4W2m Charlotte Female iDstitute, SESSION BBGISS SSPT. TTU, 1SC. N0oiW'i'yTa TR TOXTSG LADIES TS i5 . M?slc- experienced and acoom lf?J.tcber" eDWfl Tbe boildlBt-1 llcnt d. with cas, warmed with tbe bet wrought iron rornaoea, haa hot and cold water batea. and tnt ciaas appolaunecu as a Board Ice School Id eTe ry rwpe-ct co school in the South has tuperlor. Ddnctlon for two cr more frota riip famih or neighborhood. For Catalogue, with full particulars, addre , KEV. W. R. ATKISSdN. 8 8m we fr wi Chark.u. C SELECT BOARDING & DAY S Stevens, the able Shakespearen critic Jjf the past, .thinks these pre- faces were all written by Ien ; 'ww u uurt) inau eXr hausted. At another time . we ;"will give some other facts and especially concerning the intimacy between Shakespeare and Jonson. r There, & no Baconian footholds all alohff the past. Is there any near the close of A. 1 .4 .. me nineteenth century ? CAKLISLE TO BE SACRIFICED. We are satisfied now that there is a preconcerted planro?tnake war Ti -' "- . i : understand this perfectly, that Ran- aanis m the secret, and that they 1 P. assisted j Sputhernineispi Pr8 runthe interest of monopoly and plutocracy. The fact that , Mr. Thoebe has at last determined to oon test Mr. Carlisle's seat shows . that there is a plan, when taken in conn: tion with the Bepnblicanfattack upon Carlisle, and the recent criticisms i departed dramatist. " Curious if ? e'same don in certain soalled Shakespeare were a fraud - w pfpers, .Mr. Tboebehad Everybody knows that Justice f wi;"uwn out now it is nedessary r-j , . .... . i " ' a KllCen and cry mew thaa oqe of these same metre ballad mon- Agalni father than forty shillinMl had' "I had rather speak firs words with mv- XIV, 19T . . ' BBiament, . i cor. Webster say . '.VS.'8 PWea 3 ad'rat7ierm,had ?M "IS ! be cxplainedas JWf form, the Vfilgn Zo SrSs In- S!. onJUted 6rfi th folio JSg BVwv"Jea xpressTons 'JoS Ste f JL2? ' Werred, lowsT : W WW Dr. Johnson .sayi . ",2V ratAery I think : barbarous expres- 1 - i ., r;. ;f .vrrr?fc4vr- ayB. Dtn forms aTBPP0?Hga; writers. ' He ada arlwQrild rather fis pre f erred. h by various grammarians." The authoritesquoted above.. -fAnrw? in the diotionarieB; go back too far, St'akesjeare ci$6 authonty what- have shoFD. fpr- . he disregarded aU m??a'at U'-The translators of tj)ft Wle wed f Jtbe phrasejpfevalerit .th.ejr:dajrrjLater wage, better no EXPORTS. COASTWISE. bates cotton, 645 bbls spirits turpentine. 10 bbls rjMnnlt KM. n ade. 10.000 ihiDfles. 188.650 fet lumber., I FOE Y0TJNO LADIES & LITTLE GIRLS. Illllsboro, 2V. C, Miaaea KASH aad MIes BOLLOCK. Pnad;tf. Tbe Fall Term commence September 2, its: Bprlair Term January 19. lss?. Circulars forwarded on application. au S DlmAWit we Jr sn Shallow was designed for Sir Thomas i.uey, who persecuted the poet in his wild youth and - had him .actually whipped and imprisoned. Bacon had no such grievances. Donnelly, we believp. . maW-' Shakespeare a. low down iaort'bf a to load Mr. Carlisle at the start with a contest forks' seat O'd That there is more than - fear pr BP?flJati9n. in this -fead :te folio wV g irom tne uostono of the'7t lUOb. hi., .nr.tr: fTi ir.r .T--ro f A?W .To t.'-. 11 U; Mscbri .and Savahnali are both comwaittltlir 'afralils n. . aii :-L i, SSS'L -'Match! and i. ; I "Theleadua the. protect! Mrlaine and this ignorant assumption we will ifftftoiS'ft of il place an old English Llm.- w": iJ2H2 Cr- fquote from the.'ntuth .voWe of , SWAm xCensura ZUteraria. Mr-' CkneU !?' opposition in K (Srfffnd LofffcW-. ' ' it was darkly TdnlHtbatSS?! T-.rwaau ioeneve" not Hawthorne had u5f ur ' . The , Macon i TeUgraph. wittily des.res to know what business T the Nnrtn inviting Jefferson Davis, ?distlBfehcd' V 'i:",:r sItlfi r"6 Charleston CoWadvise. rAHtaV-ThfPlLl0D At- going td eAtiantl reheat tidesiM IBt Talerraoh to the Xoriiln star.' Pinancial. Wbw York. Sept. 10. Noon Vfrm l 8 Per cent. Sterling exchange 4791480 anrf ixuaoa r.TTTZ'i0 dull bSeS7" Qoi If aw Xokx. Sept. 10,iTenlng--BterUng. JUb toU t 481 94 84. sEneyoet at 538 per cent, closing offered at 5 per ! cent Government eecuriUes dull but steady -four per centa: 125; three wr ZS' b Carolina CbtTMnaneiaz. aw ToBjc, Sept. 10. -1 Noori---rint of 229 bales ; middlmg cents; futures closed stead; sales at 12 following quotations: September 9 BOrv mour Arm aad qjuiet. " WhealSed lower. KXm a afialt ' a I truflueaac. Bosin 1105! uj( jfiS 'Sep-. 10, Evenmgl-CoVtoa qnletr sales ; to-d-r .1. 1777 . evening 'J.08 rr midl rnkp1andi Bolfdatednt7eT67.QS Great Britain nklS.' pVa - balesvta thacontinent bales- stoekr at an Vrts 136.659 r bales'uthfrn flour 25 :fcWhf-teady 1 b ' trading lffi l.T-.tn-rr1 ft; . ctooer. bO480i tuwmg asoufc uorn firm but auiet- JNo taSffSH? W; 0ctob ooiSdo?:' lag, at fiQtC : Dats-WwhiU ratberwW 85c; .No.. 2 September nominal at fiac-Tvr toper 82 tc, dosing St SsSpsweat' ibd dull 1 1 . HtMn : - ivro. . . l-i. iiTiLrT ,. rr ?a l-i-' ,i OCV14C. .rji' .v 'WTranoet-xi 40. Sugar firm and quiet; refined steady Mo, id steady.- - Or1a7CoUo Seed Ml nrirtLarl . . wu . ,ui Lrcuu iLB anil f TMla UUu pvt of XWiltm Imc in. vMVblOJlBST. rndshst does not mbzae vawcs4ar 00 tossf STEAMSHIPS. i?..?3' '' 1209 t011 Blacklaw, Heme d; Co.'"- vBABQUES. - Albatross (Gerf). 810 tons. Dale. B Petchau fc Westermann .... . - - BRIGg JSmma Ernest' (Br.), tons, GUI. Pater- son. Downing A Co. . . Max (Get.), 233 tons, Bmdigam, HeidsA . . SCHOONERS, . JanPder. 258 tons. Dyacb, GeoHar- r?,5 to0" K O Barker b Co. Ma Brooks. 850 tons, Blatchfort. AD i th Knott, Geo Ear- 1 Tits ct Co. " ' r r. . . aua'87 (Oer.) Wewald Bainbnrff Aug 7. , ua namcrnrr yEY GREAT BARGAINS IS SUP2P10B B0 BIXBT. Xxtra cheaft CHILD KSK'S FTSE AND EIBBBD HOSK, OK27TS' SUMKXR HALF BOfcX Eaadsome XMBR0IDKRED DRESS E1 Id tm aad Wnlta. OrKOHAMS. LAWKS and PRINTS. jso j. nopjex. ap 22 tf Corner r-rkct and Frmr. N. H. SMITH, REAL ESTATE AGENT PATETTEyiLLE X. C. Adoleh v. Ferdinand 416 (Gar.) BUemw-aWnw. a. - RPTQB ' - Oorreapondenco solicited from partle wlhim bey ;or sefl lands. Reliable attoraf r a Plored to tnvestUrate titles, etc. PxferB to bu bteas men of FaretterCle. OJPFICE AT SMITH S DEPOT, Oorrter Hnnlord and Donaldson ria.. iWhere a FULL STOCK of, BEST ICE, COAL. AXD WOOD Can be found at LOWEST PRICES. tar l.rwVtnnt tnr tK. rm 'Tr-a fV Wood." '.I ,a nTI.f A QVESTZOMJabOUT Brown s fron - aiiMMis 1lirW 1 B00fi litQsB s bsMst nMon f.lwfW boo li e ui r to Ua Iteof. Fsieaay. uut meata firm . IC t" 6 7-"for wffeVtti JoT 'nS' and t7 40a7 Bfrf?! ? V??"?"V i cqtton 5-8adi:.wb li Wa,rTuT ' L.HNet receipts 4,balea: L. SffT.W;. futiirts' closed t .TA1 k wlul auea 01 00.600 bales-'! J 11- - n A , . - J aviiuifulk: eROlVNIRninrTm?bl: , ta: riTan -X-iiiiitQi" as In- PS Cotton Bagging. CUBA MOLAiSLS, QQ Boxes TOBACCO. 2QQ Cases POTASH aid LTX. gQQ Barrels GOOD FLOUR. For sale low by HALL & PEARS A LI- ao 7 DAWtf 5,000 Bushels Peanuts, g Q BAQ5 COFPEE, 103 BAERXLS EUGAE. blo.SSa7. Spirit Caaka, Bajrrlnr. TV. fplaaaea, Cora, KeaL Ao for aale br asp S tf m maad 724 month Watt il7 UNDEVELOPED PARTS 'CfMiMMMMa TAKB NO OTZZXK r PFasfs 1 (be tody enlama aad troortljened. Fo:i pcf MM trea. XXIX KXD, CO BcCj. SBTlPAWly we fr w-l ftuefri Delaiej Eps Ceapaif i Blchmond, Ylrrlnla. Bmrjfe,t4bnbed 1305. Tbe most oonP1 ACBmx SHOPS tn U 60CTH- ? fiOILXHS, iAW-KIIJi! AND MACHISI KHT4 U'jilTAJND TKAKWAT LCKOM(rTVI8 v-x X ji. uTiv, "W. TU1? .mrr. . rai Cr-CorrwpoadeBoe soUclted. Send for -." v. ' . . ' .... h--- ' " ... - . " -
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 11, 1887, edition 1
2
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