Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / April 13, 1890, edition 1 / Page 3
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PUBLIC SAFETY DEMANDS - Tbat only honest and reliable medicines should be placed upon the market. It can not, therefore, be stated too emphatically, nor repeated too often, that all who ate in need or a genuine- Blood -puriflr Should be sure and ask for Ayer's Sarsaparilla- Your life, or that ot some one near and dear to you. may depend oo the use of this well-approved remedy in prefer ence to any other preparation of similar name It 13 compounded of Honduras sar saparilla (the variety most rich In curative nroDerties). stillingia. mandrake, yellow dock and the iodides. The process of man ufacture is original, skilful, scrupulously clean and such as to secure the very best medicinal qualities of each ingredient. This medicine is not boiled nor heated, and is, therefore not a decoction ; but it is a com pound extract, obtained by a method ex cluivelv our own. of the best and most powerful alteratives, tonics, and diuretics known to pharmacy. For the last forty years. Ayer's Sarsaparilla has been the standard blood-purifier of the world no other approaching it in popular confidence or universal demand. Its form ula is approved by the leading physicians and druggists. Being pure and highly con centrated, it is the most economical of any possible blood medicine. Every purchaser of Sarsaparilla should insist upon having this preparation and see that each bottle bears the well-known name of J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. In every quarter of the globe Ayer's Sar. sapanlla is proved to be the best remedy for all diseases of the blood. Lowell drag-gists unite iu testifying to the superior excellence of this medicine and to its great popularity la the city of it3 manufacture. Ayer's Sarsaparilla PaXTARXD BT r1 0. AYER & CO., Lowell, Mass- ....... t. r- . T ;-v -nrtb S3 a twtUa. PAW lv OTTERBURN LITHIA and MAGNESIA WATER! M l N1.Y CURLS CRIGHT'S DISEASE" I'.l'T ALSO DIABETES. M.UMBOIO, Va., April 7, ISiVS. y or a year I have been wffennj with a form of K.iJ av lhut which my physician (Dr. J. A. Hiltman) :Nuht was Diabetes, and advised the use of Ottcr 0'irn Lithva and Magnesia Water. The quantity of ur-.ne passed was greatly in excess of the natural se-,-rvtioo, and I loac forty pounds of flesh in a few .raooch.. The tn of the Otterbuurn Water corrected ht ejcemive flow entirely in six weeks, and I am ij:n a well man. 1 tried many medicines without avail, and I attribute .tv rure of this troublesome and dangerous disease en : i 'v to the use of the Otterburn Water. R. N. BUXTON. NS OFTEN ASK "WILL IT KEE! -Airsi I Coi-vtv. V., Feb. 2. ISS-i -!iy that two years ao I obtained v.mt t the Otterburn Lithia and .Mis-r.fs.a v wife, in a demiiohn. and recently. r rbv t' another home, I found that soire of en left in the demijohn. 1 poumi it ine of if, and found it to be as ru-e cr, lira taken from the Spring. G. E. CRADDOi K ..t it KKS RM El'MATIC GOUT. I - , of Johnstown, South Carolina, . ,;.'-.v of it : a : . atrc haj been entirely relieved of a severe . : khrureatic Gou. She found such i j-e -rLef r.e did not take any medicine or any riT-.-.-.-uy a- jU' and while on the sixth bottle sta .ie h-ij been entirely relieved and needed no ' : -r, vtr .ener: health being also greatly ira : E. E. JEFFERSON." Richmond. Va., April 8, ISjT. u.-e r er- ur -.nr.) for years with a complication r.T jm! k Jrey trouble, suffering great pain in n i,f the ici'dneys, aiid having my attention ! t.. :ne ( if.erburn lrthia and Magnesia Water I Tfun! lit je it, and never experienced such re- ir u isythins. The very first half-gallon in i Se f.-x of urine and cleared it up. My appe- .n fcxron resiored. and I feel that I cannot cotn a Wrrr :. highly. R. F. WALKER. Mann-roro. Va., March 17, 18S8. 1 mmenccd tne used ot tne unerouro Limu tr.a Mjes;a Water, on the 28th of January last, I -mu i:o ta.tii in any mineral water. I had been surTer f r o- er three years with a disease that was pro :ntej by a Dtonounced by a prominent physician of r. chmond to be an aSection of the Kidneys, after r.vjing; a scientific test. 1 hjd only used the Water one week when I was en ureiy relieved of pain, which before had been constant jnJ at times acute, and I have gained nineteen pounds n flesh, with a restoration of strength and energy. I (ivt the Water a fair test, usinz no other water and taking no medicine. H.C.GREGORY. Amelia C. H.. Va., December 15. 1888. I have been a Dyspeptic for the past fifteen years. and lately have suffered with Uerangement ot my L n nary Organs, evidenced by great difficulty in voiding the urine. About six months ago I commenced the use of the Otterburn Lithia and Magnesia Springs Water, and since that time there has been marked and rud-Lai improvement in m v entire condition and state f health. My digestion is better than it has been for five or six years, and the urinary trouble is entirely re- I.eved, and has been foe the past two months. J. A. WALLACE. Cashier Planters' Bank of Amelia. OTTERBURN LITHIA SPRINGS CO. It. II. BELL1.HY, Aeent, rO-DiWtf Wilmington, N. C. .THE Acme Manufacturing Co. MANUFACTURERS OF Fertilizers, Pine Fibre, AND PINE FIBRE MATTING, Ml Ml NGTON, NORTH CAfOLINA. 'Vrii REPU TATION OF OUR FERTILIZERS, -he ACM E and GEM. is now established, and the : t . f three years' use in the hands of the best Ur-rer, , ( tnis aaj otber States fully attest their a h:h grade manure. 'He MATTING, made from the leaves of our na ; - pine. i conceded to be equal to any woven carpet ; r.-nm:ojt and durability, and the demand for it is -aily increasing. It has virtues not found in any fabric. i ne KIBRE, or wool, is extensively used for uphol tenn purpuses, and as a filling lor Mattresse is Jimmt equal to hair, being light, elastic and proof Juinst insects. for nm mini n Tar LOST or TATXTSO JCAJTHOODl earaiaa4I(&AVUU0 uaaJoo-ia x lllat tmrur in Did ar Taosr. " n. HaJHOOB rally IhiiiI Hw taMtam "'iittiwm. cxviia)rttOfctsa paETaor oI. it.i7 nWlht IUtllT-lmln la a aa iwllttMWlMwtlwInCiMlrlii Writ I ERIE MK-OlCAi. CO BUFFALO. M. Va feb 11 D&Wlv to th sat CHICMCSTCR-8 CNGLliH ?feNKR0AL FILLS "5 C"OS3 DIAMOND BMANO. - F-.Vi''. .::. 'xn. niaj with MM; i J rV 4uinn oan't4Mi. a. 7 B -liellf for LdL,.,- h Uarr, I uupal for ixriloilin, lillllilll aa4 , by irtus I - v D ftWly THE TIDE IS INT SARAH K. BOLTON. The boats lay stranded on the beach, Tangled with seaweed, dank and green ; A desolate and dreary scene, Far as the eye could reach ; The tide was out. How changed the view when day was done ; The boats rode gayry on the deep, Their white sails nodding as in sleep, Kissed by the setting sun ; The tide was in. Thus many a life, in want or woe, Lies stranded on a barren shore ; But God is God for evermore ; Take courage, for we know The tide comes in. And lifted from the rocks and shoals, We sail upon a sunlit sea, Night opens on eternity Sweet rest for weary souls The tide is in. SUNDAY SELECTIONS. Of the pure in heart it is said they are blessed because they shall have a vision of God. I have lived to know that the secret of happiness is never to allow your energies to stagnate. We attract hearts by the quali ties we display; we retain them by the qualities we possess. Make yourself an honest man, and then you may be sure there is one rascal less in the world. Bad habits are thistles to the heart, and every indulgence of them is a seed from which will spring a new crop of weeds. There are forty-seven Protes tant Jewish missionary societies in the world, employing 377 missionaries among the Jews, and spending about SoOO.000 annually. The Japanese Government has removed the tax from Christian churches, placing them on the same basis as of Shinto and Buddhist temples. Slowly it may seem, but surely the bar riers are being removed. Provoking one another "unto love and to crood works" is one of the kinds of provocation to which the Bible refers. This is a very safe kind of pro vocation. The more of it the better. It stirs up no wrath, and leads only to good results.- The tender words and loving deeds which we scatter for the hearts which are nearest to us are immortal seed, that will spring up in everlasting beauty, not only in our own lives, but in the lives of those born after us. Spur- Let us never forget that God made home among the first things he created. Before commerce and trade, laws and statutes, thrones Vnd altars, there were men and women, fathers and mothers, brothers and sisters, lovers and friends, hearth-stones and homes. G. R. I 'an ; 11 'a.'cr. It is by a faith that unites us to a living Christ mat ,e are aoie to steer clear of the rocks of worldliness and the shoals of unbelief. If we abide in Him and are :niiied ?-iid strengthened by His Soirit we shall not rloat with the cur rent, but shall stem the tide, however vehement, and. mastering every obstacle, go tnrougn to victory. nrtsiian in quirer. Every one is steadily making a death march in the sense that every s:ep he takes in life brings him one step nearer to his tlyintr hour. This fact, whiie it should not make life gloomy. should make one of constant prepara tion lor thp.t aour. He who practically ves as if he were immortal on earth. makes a grave mistake. . . I. Inde pendent. Bishop Marvin said he could grade the preachers of a conference by I.xking over the mailing lists of the conference origan. The congregations that have reading members will not have any but successful preachers, and the successful preachers will not be sat- shed with their congregations until they have among them a good propor tion of patrons for the church paper. It is not a rule that will apply to every case witnout exceptions, dui tnere is enough in it to give it significance. Methodist Recorder. SPIRITS TURPENTINL Durham Globe : It is said that at least $90,000 will be expended on the buildings of Trinity College. Raleigh News 6r Observer : The State Convention of the W. C. T. U., of North Carolina, will be held at Concord July 16th, 17th. 18th and 19th. Miss Frances E. Willard, the noted temper ance advocate of Illinois, will be in at tendance. Some evidence of the number of visitors in Asheville during March may be found in the fact that 16,500 telegraphic messages were handled in the Western Union office here during that month. Only 6,000 were handled in March of last year. Raleigh Chronicle: The Chron icle has found by inquiring, that there is a strong sentiment and preference for locating the Baptist Female College somewhere near the centre of the city. The idea of having such institutions in the suburbs of a town is regarded by some as un progressive. Tarboro Southerner: Miss Julia Arrhibald. of Washington yesterday, ac cidentally shot herself through the head, the bullet coming out at the back. She died this morning from the effects of the wound. The accident was only made known by a neighbor hearing her screams, who ran in the house, finding the fair young victim lying prostrate on the floor. She was unable to talk when found. Durham Sun : In the case of William Killebrew and Martha Ann Woodard. chareed with being: implica ted in Saturday night's homicide, which was in progress yesterday as we went to press, the defendants were discharged, the evidence not being sufficient to con- vict, Mintus cnanaier is neia ior me killing. The Woodard woman was again put in jail. She is bound over to court under another warrant. Charlotte Chronicle: There are now thirty colored and twenty-one white paupers in the Mecklenburg county ' . a t r.. - poor nOUSe. tuiuiuiun: ui iuui has been selected by the Philharmonic Soriftv to visit the principal cities and towns of the State, in the interest of the june musical restivai. The committee consists ot Frof. Maclean, W. H.Powell, Jnb. Arrmgton and Dan Summey each vx nuuui wm utKe cunerent routes. Asheville 'Citizen. ' A . workman named Couch died yesterday at Mr. Pressly's, about six miles south of the Cty. He had been sick hrnt two vtrofk-a Yesterday morning he was supposed to - wwvvi, unu ii. lytlllli 3UU1 it Will III (lav. ventured out into the open air. Some time afterward, when the rain began to fall and he did not return, his friends in the house went oufc to look for him. He was found in a fence corner near the house dead. Fayetteville Observer: The Man chester mills, among the most important of the industries of Cumberland county and this section, have been purchased by Mr. F. W. Thornton, one of the most prominent business men of this city, and Mr. J. F. Clarke, no less well-known at Manchester, who will put fifty additional looms into the mill, equip the "plant" the most improved machinery, and gen erally devote to the enterprise their best energies and most judicious manage ment. Statesville Landmarrk: Mr. Jim Fisher, of Davidson township, and a boy, were riding along the road in a wagon Tuesday of last week, when they met a dog which jumped up and bit the horse on the dose. This made the horse frantic and he started on a furious runaway. The boy jumped out but Mr. Fisher, an old man, could do nothing but sit still until thrown out with the 1 1 . r ,. t- . . wagon ue,u on top oi mm. isiooa ran from his nose and ears, and though no bones were broken the old man was awfully shaken up and there is doubt about his ever getting over the accident Scotland Neck Democrat: Mr. John Whitehead narrowly escaped be ing killed in Halifax Tuesday. He at tempted to step upon a moving train and was thrown between the train and plat form. His head was cut and was miss ed very little by the car wheel. Died, at his residence near Dawson's X Roads, on the morning of the 27th of March, of a long, lingering disease, which he bore with Christian fortitude, Mr. McAdins in the 47th year of his age. About fifty negroes left this place yesterday for Louisiana. There was a little excitement at the depot over the agent who was taking them away. The people informed him that they did not wish labor disturbed at this season. He will probably not return. Kinston Free Press: Several of our farmers will plant tobacco. Mr. Al bert Rountree will plant about twenty acres; Mr. Shade Jackson, twelve acres; Mr. B. W. Canady, five or six acres; Mr. R. I. Sutton, one or two acres. So licitor Allen tells us that the most im portant case disposed of on the criminal docket at unsiow court last weex was a serious affray, in which the deadly wea pons used were a gun, knives, a pistol and a sapling about five feet long and the size of a man's leg, which resulted in the shooting of one man and badly in juring another, all of which originated from a controversy between neighbors as to whether one's dog had treed a 'possum or a cat up the other's gate-post. Four of the parties were convicted. OUR STATE CONTEMPORARIES. In the most extensively protected por tion of this country, the New England States, the farmers are abandoning their lands. Protection does not help the farmers. Roanoke News. A wild boom .has struck Morristown, Tenn., and property is being sold rapid ly at good prices. In Asheville the boom which struck real estate five or six years ago has never subsided. Prices are as good as they have ever been and bona fide sales for immediate improvement are continually taking place. Projected improvements in Asheville and Ashe ville township reach up toward $3,000,- 000. They have a new name in Guilford county for a Republican who cares noth ing for the party aud a great deal for himself. The North State has inter viewed Mr. Holton, of High Point, who says he is a Republican, stin as ever, but hereafter he stands squarely on the Duck Platform. He says "one never saw a duck swim for another. Every duck for herself." This is a good and a novel definition of political selfishness. Raleigh Chronicle. TWINKLINGS. "That's the fellow I'm laying for," remarked the hen, as her owner came out with a pan of cornmeal. Harvard Lampoon. A man can make himself de cidedly unpleasant by insisting on re minding us of what we thought last year. Milwaukee Journal. Young American Father, Mr. Silvertongue said that President Harri son was not the President of a party. What did he mean by that? Old Ameri can He probably meant that Harrison is only the president of a family. Puck. Briggs "Sometimes I wish I could be a hermit, and not have to asso ciate with my fellow-men." Braggs "You can eret practically the same effect by eating onions. lerra Haute Express. "How rapidly the hands get away when 12 o'clock strikes !" remark ed Mr. Bullion to his partner. "Yes," remarked his partner, "that is the ate-hour movement." Munsey's Weekly. Mrs. Wundah I did not know there were such things as artificial whales. Mr. Wundah Well, there are not. Mrs. Wundah But where do they get this artificial whalebone the papers speak of? Puck. In the Chicago vernaculur, so far as the World's Fair is concerned, that city has got there with all four feet. II what certain paragraphers say about Chicago feet be true, this is the most se rious thing that has happened to the World's Fair Life. Faithful domestic Please, mum, you'll have to git another dog or I won't stay. Mistress I mourn the loss of poor Fido as much as you do, but I don't think of leaving the house on that ac count. Faithful domestic But mum, you don't have to wash the plates. N. Y. Weekly. HELPING HIM. Giving a Man a Show to Cimb Up. A constable for one of our eastern wards was waited upon Dy a stran ger the other day, says the Free Press, who asked him Detroit how he got along, referred to the. weatherj hard times, etc, and finally skid: "The boys want to do something iv1 y -u. "Well, I'm glad to know that have such friends." "1 hey say you ought to have I show to climb up." I v-o "And that you could fill a much higher position than this." "I should try it if I had the show." "So they have talked it over and agreed to put you on your feet and in the way of a good thing, and I have been sent to tell you." "Thanks." "It's a lucky man you are." "Yes." "Not one in a hundred'falls into such a thing." "Thanks. What is it ?" "You are to come down to 's saloon at 7 o'clock this evening and referee a dog fight, and your deci sion is to be final !" A DARING VOYAGE. Adventures of a Walrus Hunter Who Beached the Hast Coast of Greenland. A very unusual feat of Arctic eav igation last summer is reported in Petermann's Mitteilungen. Capt. R. Knudsen, an enterprising Norwegian walrus hunter, while in pursuit of walrus pushed his little steamer Hekla into the ice along the coast of east Greenland, and landed at several points in King William's Land, the mos't northern part of the east coast which has been visited, and that only once by the German expedition under Capt. Koldeway in 1869-70. Capt. Knudsen first reach, ed the cost water in the middle of August, and, in spite of the danger of being hopelessly beset, he thought himself amply repaid by the great abundance of walrus, and it did not take him long to load up his vessel. He skirted the deeply indented coast in a northern direction, landing now and then. He was for some time beset in the ice and drifted north, and for some days he was fast in the pack on the north coast of Shannon Island. He finally, how ever, escaped and reached open wa ter in safety, This was a very daring, if not a fool-hardy enterprise. The Arctic ice packs itself against the coast, and for this reason, that part of Greenland was almost entirely unknown long after the western coast, in its general features, was very well mapped. In the Kolde wey expedition one of the vessels was crushed in the ice, and the crew, after terrible suffering and a long drift southward on the ice floes, reached succor on the southwest coast. In recent years, however, three successful attempts have been made to reach the east coast. The first was by Nordenskiold, who landed on Cape Dan in 1833; the second by Nansen, who readied Semalik fiord in 1888, and from that point made his overland journey to Godthaad; and the third by this daring walrus hunter, whose adventures occurred several hundred miles north of the points reached by the other two . travellers. LOOK AT HER GARTERS. if They are Jewelled, Says the Young Man's Mother, Don't Wed Her. The betrothed wife of an estima .ble young man was recently visiting his mother, says the Boston Herald. The members of both families were delighted. The chap's mother was dazzled by the beauty, the breeding and the elegance of her prospective daughter-in-law. Strange to say, however, on the day after the young girl had begun her visit the mother called her son to her and spoke gravely to him about his promised bride. "Harry," said she, "Alice in vited me into her room to-day, and oh, my son, she doesn t dress like a lady at all. I'm afraid, Harry, I really am' Harry smothered his indignation and begged his mother to explain herself. "Well, you see," said the latter, "instead of nice white linen, all her underwear is black silk. Every item is of that material, and when I spoke of it she showed we trunks full of clothes in every tint of silk imagina ble and no linen at all. This was bad enough, Harry; but her garters had jewelled clasps on them. Oh, my son, you never knew of a girl of real refinement to get herself up in that style. I feel certain that some thing that we do not know about in Alice's disposition will come out sooner or later," In a great rage at his mother's imputation Harry left the house. When he returned he did not recur to the subject, and his mother re frained from broaching it again, though her whole manner indicated her fears concerning her son's fiancee. A week later, however, the girl eloped with an adventurer. - "I should always," says Harry's mother, "doubt a young lady who could not take pride in fine linen, and am positive that no modest girl ever wore a jewelied garter. Such a thing could not be the gift of her father or mother, and she would cer tainly not buy it herself." Merit Wins. -We desire to say to our citizens, that for years we have been selling Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Dr. King's New Life Pills, Bucklen's Arnica Salve and Electric Bitters, and have never handled remedies that sell as well, or that have given such universal satis faction. We do not hesitate to guaran tee them every time, and we stand ready to refund the purchase price, if satisfac tory results do not follow their use. These remedies have won their great popularity purely on their merits. Robert R. Bellamy, t Wholesale and Retail Druggist. MARK TWAIN. He Had Head Some of Mr. Edmunds Essays. ' Wash. Cor. of the N. Y. Tribune. Sam'I L. Clemens "Mark Twain" visited the Capitol one day last week on business connected with the, passage of the international copy right bill. He called upon Secretary Anson McCook in the course of afternoon, and in the Secretary's office met Senator George E. Ed munds. "I have never met ' you before," said Mr. Edmunds, as he extended his hand, smiling grimly, "bufl have read a number- of your essays on constitutional questions and derived a great deal of benefit from them." "I have read a great many of your constitutional essays," said Mr. Clemens in reply, drawling out his words in that slow, tedious fashion which is peculiar to him; and then he added withan expressive look of pain, "and I am aware of it." Borrowed garments seldom fit well, nor do bogus remedies cure successfully. l ne real cure tor coughs and colds is Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup. Why sit doubled up like an old man, my boy! What's rheumatism! Take the good the gods provide thee, and send twenty-five cents around the corner for a bottle of Salvation Oil and you'll ride your Bicycle to-morrow." t Rnckleiv's Arnica Salve. The best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever, Sores, Tetters, Chapped Hands, hublains.Uorns, and all bkin eruptions, and positively cures Piles or no pay is equired. it is guaranteed to give per- satisfaction, or money refunded. Priee 25 eents per box. For sale by Robert R. Bellamy, Wholesale and Retail Drug gists. I Her Sweet Smile IlauulN Me Still. I had not seen her for twenty years. Now she was a well-preserved matron with the same sweet smile on her face, and a splendid set of teeth, thanks to SOZODONT. Her daughters call her blessed because she brought them up properly. t L McMillan bros., MANUFACTURERS OF TURPENTINE STILLS. HAVE ON HAND TWENTY-FIVE STILLS New and second hand, from 10 to 40 barrels capacity which we offer at close figures. Still bottoms al sizes. Parties wanting work in this line for prompt de livery should call on or address us. STILL DOORS, GRATE BARS. Repairing through the country a spec alty. fg Old Stills bought or taken in exchanSe for new ones. McMillan bbos., Fayetteville, N. C. su tu th or Savannah, Ga dec 29 tf Bank of New Hanover. Authorized Capital $1,000,000 Cash. Capital paid in 300,000 Surplus Fund - - 200,000 DIRECTORS: W. I. GORE, G. W. WILLIAMS, DONALD MacRAE, H. VOLLERS, -J. V. ATKINSON, C. M. STEDMAN, ISAAC BATES, JAMES A. LEAK, F. RHEINSTEIN, E. B. BORDEN. ISAAC BATES President G. W. WILLIAMS Vice President WM. L. SMITH Cashier ATKINSON & MANNING, AGENTS North Carolina Home Ins. Co. -yTE OFFER TO THOSE WANTING INSURANCE AGANIST FIRE Policies in this Old and Reliable Home Institution. All losses promptly paid. W. S. PRIMROSE, President. CHARLES ROOT, Secretary. PULASKI COWPER, Secretary. These tliiy C " nr.'c.t .rront in . 4-8 honr vltliCt nennve.-J fJOV'slbl .C'i tx. i fail. , 1 1 jwc i ins nov 1 6ra Y.'1 Wholesale Prices Current. f35r The following quotations represent wholesale prices generally. In making up small orders higher prices have to be charged. The quotations are always given as accurately as possible, bat the Star will not be responsible for any variations from the actual market price of the articles quoted. BAGGING 2-B Jute fOO 00 00 flVg Standard 00 Q00 10" BACON North Carolina Hams V lb lgia 00.15 Shoulders $ lb 8 Sides V lb 10 11 WESTERN SMOKED Hams 9 lb 14 15 Sides $ lb 8 Shoulders 0 6V DRY SALTED Sides lb 0 & Shoulders $ lb 64) BARRELS Spirits Turpentine Second Hand, each 00 00 & 188 New New York, each 1 40 1 75 New City, each 165 & 170 BEESWAX lb so & 22 BRICKS Wilmington, M 6 00 8 00 Northern 0 00 0 14 00 BUTTER North Carolina, lb 13 & 85 Northern 23 80 CANDLES, $ lb Sperm... 18 & 25 Adamantine 0 fo 10 CHEESE, lb Northern Factor)' 00 10 Dairy, Cream 11 Q 2lf State 00 10 COFFEE, lb Java 27 38 Laguyra , 17 10Vs Rio 17 30 CORN MEAL, bushel, in sacks.. 55 67H Virginia Meal 65 67Vi COTTON TIES, V bundle 1 85 1 40 DOMESTICS Sheeting, 44, $ yard 8 Yarns, per bunch 00 80 EGGS, $ dozen 10 11 FISH Mackerel, No. 1, $ barrel 22 00 80 00 Mackerel, No. 1, half-barrel. 11 00 15 00 Mackerel, No. 2, $ barrel 16 00 18 00 Mackerel, No. 2, half-barrel. 8 00 00 Mackerel, No. 3, $ barrel 13 00 14 00 Mullets, $ barrel 0 00 6 60 Mullets, 1$ pork barrel 0000 800 N. C. Roe Herring, keg 3 00 4 00 Dry Cod, $ lb 5 10 FLOUR, barrel Western low grade 3 50 4 00 Extra 4 00 450 Family 4 75 5 00 City Mills Super 4 00 4 10 Family 550 600 GLUE, f lb C 10 GRAIN, bushel Corn, from store, bagsWhite. 00 55 Corn, cargo, in bulk White. . . 00 52) Corn, cargo, in bags--Whitc. . . 00 54 Corn, Mixed, from store 06 524 Oats, from store 00 40 Oats, Rust Proof 00 45 Cow Peas 90 100 HIDES, $ tt Green 0 Ci 3 Dry.. 0 4Lj HAY, $ 100 lbs Eastern 00 1 10 Western 100 105 North River 90 100 HOOP IRON, lb 3 3 LARD, $ lb Northern 7 8 North Carolina 10 12 LIME, $ barrel 140 000 LUMBER (city sawed), $ M ft Ship Stuff, resawed 18 00 20 00 Rough Edge Piank 15 00 16 00 West India Cargoes, according to quality 13 00 18 00 Dressed Flooring, seasoned 18 00 23 00 Scantling and Board, com'n 14 00 15 00 MOLASSES, $ gallon New Crop Cuba, in hhds 00 .30 in bbls 30 32 Porto Rico, in hhds 00 83 in bbls 33 35 Sugar House, in hhds 00 15 in bbls 17 18 Syrup, in bbls 30 45 NAILS, $ keg. Cut, lOd basis 0 00 2 35 OILS, $ gallon. Kerosene 10L 14 Lard 00 68 Linseed 90 1 00 Rosin 15 18 Tar 00 20 Deck and Spar 00 25 POULTRY Chickens, live, grown 20 80 Spring 10 20 Turkeys 75 85 PEANUTS. bushel (28 lbs) 1 00 1 57U POTATOES, bushel Sweet CO 65 Irish, $ barrel 2 75 8 00 I PORK, W barrel City Mess 00 13 50 Prime 00 00 11 60 Rump 00 11 00 RICE Carolina, lb 4 6 Rough, bushel (Upland).... 50 70 " (Lowland)... 1 00 1 10 RAGS, lb Country 00 1 City 1 1 ROPE, lb 14U SALT, $ sack Alum 00 80 Liverpool UU HO Lisbon 00 00 American 00 80 In 125-lb sacks 55 60 SUGAR, lb Standard Gran'd.. 0 7W Standard A 0 7 White Ex. C 0 6U Extra C, Golden 0 TM C Yellow 0 6U SOAP, lb Northern 0 6 SHINGLES, 7-inch, $M 5 00 700 Common 2 00 2 50 Cypress Saps 4 50 500 Cypress Hearts 0 00 1 50 STAVES, MW. O. Barrel.... 8 00 14 00 R. O. Hogshead 0 Q0 10 00 TALLOW, lb 5 6 TIMBER, M feet Shipping.... 12 50 15 00 Mill Prime 0 00 10 60 Mill Fair 7 00 850 Common Mill 500 660 Inferior to Ordinary 8 00 400 WHISKEY, $ gallon Northern.. 1 00 2 58 North Carolina 1 00 2 10 WOOL, lb Washed 28 BUM Unwashed 20 21 Burrv 10 00 PALMETTO. RAILROAD C07 M ON AND AFTER WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5th, 1888, trains will run as follows, daily (Sunday excepted) : GOING SOUTH. N.o. 1 PASSENGER AND FREIGHT. Leave Hamlet, N. C 9.15 a. m " Osborn (Flag Station) 9.86 a. m " Kollock Station 10.06 a. m Arrive Cheraw, S. C 10.25 a. m GOING NORTH. No. 2 PASSENGER AND FREIGHT. Leave Cheraw, S. C 4.20 p. m " Kollock 4.40 p. m " Osborn (Flag Station) 5.10 p. m Arrive Hamlet, N. C 6.20 p. m dec!3-tf WM. MONCURE, Sup't. WILMINGTON SEACOAST R.R. Wilmington, February 15th, 1890. Leave Wilmington at 7:00 a. ra., daily, except Sun day. Leave Wilmington at 3:00 p. m., daily. Leave Hammocks at.8.00 a. m., daily, except Sunday. Leave Hammocks at 6.-00 p. m., daily. Leave Wilmington at 10:00 a. m., Saturday only. School Children and Teachers taken on this Train at 15 cents for the round trip. feb 16 tf J. R. NOLAN, Gen'l Manager. ATLANTIC COAST LINE. Vflmisftmi ft f elion E. B. uOBrancbcs COKDKNIBD MCIIRDDLR. TRAINS GOINO SOUTH. Dated J.n.18, 189.0 No ,s N IJ- ll M. mm' No Wi I No. 41 i!f as Daily. Daily. I Ifeil, Sunday. A M uo 7 10 PM 11 16 A M 1 19 M I It 80 i e . 45 . A M 10 . PM A 4)1 Leave Wcldon. Ait. Rocky Mount. Arrive Tarboro. . . . I .cave Tarboro. I PM l Arrive Wilsoa..... 11 47 I 7 Leave Wilson. .... . . t K) . Arrive Selma 1 8 4ft Arrive r'ayettrvillej 6 00 . Leave Goidsboro' . J 1 10 Iave Warsaw.... t SV 4 10 . Iave Magnolia. . . ' I 54 4 94 Arrive WiTmintotil 8 Mi ft 60 Of) 7 U 40 n m 9 M 9 4U II l ft W 6ft TRAINS GOING NOR7 II No 66 No 14 Daily !.!) No 7. Daily A M n lo U 10 M 11 4A ft 40 II III It 10 V M If ft? I 10 4A A M 10 HO V M t 4ft No I'SlIf SuBllSf 1 I M 4 (ft It M ft Ml I M A M II mi V M I ix aj "iri A M is n Leave Wilmingtepn. Ieave Magnolia... Leave Warsaw Arrive Croldshuro. . Leave Fayettevlllp Arrive Selma Arrive Wilson 8 1 A M f 59 V M 7 47 ft 1ft Leave Wilson A rr. Rocky Mount, Arrive Tarboro.... Leave Tarboro. . . . 9 SO! a nol. n 45 , A M I 10 W i l M .1 -7l Arrive Weldon.. 4 i 9 an Daily esrept Sunday. Train on Scotland Neck lltsmh 9 80 p m, arrives Scotland Nx k H4 lesvM llslifsi I 45 p m. Klv.n.pii 0 10 pm. Returning, leavra Kivrrum 7 D. n mm - land Neck 10 90 a m, daily riry Sunday Train leaves Tarboro, N . t, via A Itwrnstlr A fairish R. K., daily except Sunday, 4 00 p m ; Sunday I n arrive Williamstnn, N. C. 6 80 p m ami 4 WI jn m . fly mouth 8 00 p m, B40pra. Reluming, Irav Plynmin N. C, daily rsrept Sunday OWim, Sunday ft l a m Wilhamston 7 25 am, 9 50am. Arrlrr fatlxrn, N C, 9 60 a m and 11 SO a m. Train on Midland N C Itrsnch Iravr (nllam, N C, daily except Sunday, S (ft) a m ; amr SmiiM.Ul, N. C, 7.80 a m. Returning Iravr Snuihfirlrf, N t , 8 00. ra ; arrive (.oldilxrtn, N I , 9 art a m Train on Nashville Itratw h Irsvr Rmiy Mount si 8 pm, arrives Nashville 8 40 m. Smg ll 4 10 p m. Returning, leave Sitting lli 111 a m. Nasli ville 10 85 a m. Rocky Mount 11 K. m. risilr p Sunday. Train on Clinton Ilranrh Irsvr Wsrsaw i ( hnicm. daily except Sunday, at 8 p m and II 10 a m krinrn ing, leave Clinton at 8 90 a m and II in p m at Warsaw with Nos. 41, 40, Kl and 71 Southbound train on Wilson r'ayrtirt ill lltsmh is No. 51. Northbound is No Mi 'llsily x. Sunday. Train No. 27 South will stop ly si W ,mm. ,..M boro and Magnolia. Train No. 78 makes iliw ronnrc tion si W1nii ( all points North daily. All rail via Ruhmonri. ami daily except Sunday via Hay l.inr Trails make rlosr connn turn loi all point Ninth via Richmond and Washington All trains run solid brtwrrn Wilmington snd U sh ington, and have Pullman I'alacr S)rrM-t atiaihrri JOHN F IUVINK. .m l S.,,. t J. R. KF.NLV. Sup't Transportation T. M. K.MERSON, (ien'l I'aas'gr Agrnt (srtotf ATLANTIC COAST LINE. Wilmington. Colombia & Amjcsta R. R. OONDENRKD N lllinri.lt. TRAINS GOING SOU! H Dated Jan. 18, 1890 j N IPI No f 7 No II ! I ! P M I I M I A M Leave Wilmington ' 6 Ifi 10 10 4 1ft Leave Marion. 9 ft If 1 BY! A M I Arrive Florence. 10 , No 60 A M No 6ft A M 10 10 H Leave Florence 8 90 . Arrive Sumter 4 S5 . No 59 A M 4 HT. I0 Ml 0 16 II 6ft AM: ! Leave Sumter. . . Arrive Columbia. No. 63 runs through from C'harlrsfa via C rntisl Railroad. 1 -caving Ijinr 9 16 am, Manning 9 66 a m Train on C. i D. R R ininnli at I Utn No. 58. TRAINS GOINC; NOR! H No M No 6M N M r M io r. II 6ft r m ft K) as Leave Columbia. . Arrive Sumter. . . . Leave Sumter . . Arrive Florence. 11 6ft ' I 1ft A M No 7ft A M ftT . T Ml I' M No Oft Ni 14 AM I'M Leave Florence Leave Marion Arrive Wilmington. . . 4Sft7toft1ft 6 IK ft Mr, ft M. ft , 11 10 II 4ft A M I A M i I' M Daily. Dai'y exiept Sunday. No. 53 runs through to C hsrlcsum, tra R. R., arriving Manning 7 (H p m S ( . 1 .a tie via C en ' 43 p Charleston 9 SO p m. No. 59 connects at Florenrv with ( A I Cheraw and Wadesboro. Nos. 78 and 14 make close rnnim ikw ai I trsiti frtttn timing oi R . lor all point r Railnaid Uavrs IV h Train on Florence I rr Am 1. except Sunday, 4 40 pm, arnvr Rowland 7pm tt turning, leave Rowlend tllim, smvr I'm I r ft 60 a m. Train on Manchester A Augusta Railroad Iravr Sumter daily, except Sunday, 10 60 a m arrive Kuh ardaon 13 01 p m. Returning, Irsvr V m hatdsoa II 1ft p m, arrive Sumter I SO p m. JOHN F. PIVINK. (.rn lSi.p t J. R. KFNI.Y. Assistant On'l Manager T. M. KMF.RSON.Gen'irass'grr Agent rp11-i Carolina Central R. E. CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. WESTBOUND TRAINS No. 41 No. 61 No. ft March 13 1809. Daily esrpVDallyesr Daily ea Sunday. I Sunday. ! Sunday Leave Wilmington. 8 00 p. m 6 45 p. m.. Leave Hamlet 7. SO p. m. ton a m. Leave Wadesboro. 8.8H p. m 8 S9 a. m i Arrive Charlotte. .. 10.80 p. m. 7 10 a m Leave Charlotte... t 66 p. a. Leave Lincolnton.. T.H8 p. m Leave Shelby ft 11 p Arrive Rotherf'on I 9 4ft p m EASTBOUND TRAINS No. 88 I No. 64 I No. 9 March 28, 1890. Dailyexcpt. Daily esrpt Isi)y Sunday L've Rutheriordt'n Leave Shelby Leave Lincolnton. Arrive Charlotte.. Leave Charlotte... Leave Wadesboro.. Leave Hamlet Arrive Wilmington Trains Nos. 41 and 88 snake close rownwllna al Hamlet, between Charlotte and points North via Raleigh. Trains Noa. 61 and 64 snake couMrUoa at llaatlxt and from Raleigh. Through Slrrpinf Cars between Wilmingtae) and Charlotte and ilminrtoa and Raleigh. Local freight daily bet wee a WUmingtoa and Ca lotte, with passenger coarh attached, leave 4 a. . each day, Sunday excepted. T. W. WHISNANT. nprlr)tedw. F. W. CLARK, Gen'l rasseogrr Agrst (inrCHl tunday. Sunday. ft 46 a. a 9 69 a . ai II on a m 11 90 p n 6.00 a. ra ft 00 p m 6 59 a. m. 11.94 p m. ft. OA a. ra I SO a. as 13 15 p. wi. 9 00 a m
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 13, 1890, edition 1
3
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