Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / May 9, 1890, edition 1 / Page 1
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- .-. V ... - 1 -- ' i -- - The gff aruing tat WILLI AH II. BEBNiRO. ! t . l isHED DAILY EXCEPT MONDAYS. s vt ok st BSCKirnoo, m advamcx i ,t. far (by M-iil). Postage Paid $8 00 v. Months. " j4 M ............. 9 00 "i Months, ' 1 50 'Month. 80 I'o Citv Subscribers, delivered in any part of ,k .lv I'ws'ni Cents per week. Our City Agents . t aut honied to collect for more than three months K:..incr ,: the Post Office at Wthmagtoa, N. C, as Second Class Mail Matter. OUTLINES. The bill providing for the dassifica ,n worsted cloths as woollens was ;s .:s?cd in the Senate yesterday and is-oti. an agreement was made as to c order of business, after which the i: :,n appropriation was taken up, .:: .i vote disclosing the absence of a "TT-n the Senate adjourned; the tariff a as turtliei discussed in the House. . -her of members making speeches. Yhere are one hundred and forty- c lerical and one hundred and r:- in. lav delegates present at the M . vlist Episcopal Conference in ses ..: St. Louis; the quadrennial report Ii. urd of Missions was read yes ; u . w hich shows a large reduction in ,!.!:. a very interesting report was v relative to the operations of the , House at Nashville, and a was adopted by a large comdemning theatre-going. . i.ird playing and the like, which . :. ii,vd in by members of the The Episcopal Diocesan ;!. in session at Charleston, , ioti by a large majority to ex ; Til members from seats on but allowing the present ! member to retain his seat s privileges are lost by n or death; the settlement ; .x ;ro question is not final, how . the Convention retains the .'.limit colored delegates at any The lynching of the negro at Lexington, S. C. for com .'. rape on a white girl, has as- . I a new phase; it was on the sworn . .: o; a LTnited States Marshal, , : of Leaphart. that the Governor ,: the reprieve, and it is now said :;-.e statement was entirely false; the - a' has been arrested for perjury. - The Republican Senators held :.r caucus yesterday on the Silver - n. but no agreement could be ,.i; the Silver men refuse to ac and support a bill containing a which will permit the redemption h.ise notes by bullion, under any -i A woman has been ! at Bordentown. Nr. J., of ad-' rroton oil to her son. with . .; hirn, in order to secure the - - : ney on his life. The . : 1 insane asylum at Pres- V A-.-re destroyed by fire Wed the inmates were all safely . . :ii the exception of eleven :-. v.ere burned to death. t Kouhaix. France, is prac : e i. twenty thousand of the - , resumed work. New - . -v. irkets: Mtjnev easy at 4(6 per i middling uplands 11 ! . : iii ; Orleans 1 2 c ; south r'.r.n; wheat dull and 1,4' cents : closing firm; No. 3 red a elevator; corn more ac ..::.! .;::seitled; No. 2. 4243 ciecvator; rosin firm; spirits -s.M)t firm at 40 cents; to ar- ' .it rr.aav of the employers in k city have yielded to the ;r demand from their work er lias changed his mind , 4 hack to France and de- a trial. Jersey is small, concluded that it is big r h;m at present. ew York Times mentions :.o:i of a machine that in dicates shoal water. Tom his gang should possess lit one of these machines '. v e n I y i v. and e. :;: r Hawley when the Morrill '.: under consideration lm ; e ! !i;s Republican friends -'not ' 1 - stampeded by the pension a-er.ts ." Hut the pension agents 'heir work all the same. jay i lould's daily income is esti mated at $T.44; Cornelius Vander- - at ShVM!). J. D. Rockefellers a- SKTl.-.. W. V. Astors at $23,593. ;ch beggarly wages as this ' ev ought to strike for eight hours a dav. I he Adams Express Company celebrated its fiftieth anniversary : y a parade in Baltimore Monday. In lao two men, two boys and a beeibarrow ran it, now it employs people, 2,300 horses and 1.800 wagons. i he Norfolk Landmark pronounces Henry H'atterson "always brilliant, hut not always sound. His heart is r'Sht, but his head sometimes swims." I I Henry being a Kentuckian there is J I at least presumptive ground for "this 'er statement. It is said that Russell Harrison is the pay of the Louisiana Lottery 1 ajmpany, and some people regard as shocking. A man who would "dp to steal a State needn't have an- scruples about hiring himself to a lottery company. VOL. XLVL--NO. 41. The Taylor brothers of Tennessee are determined that the people of the United States shall not be with out candidates for the Presidency if it depends on them. Some time ago Alf, a Republican Congressman, slob bered all over Tom Reed, and told him that he would be called up higher some of these days, and now his De mocratic brother, the Governor, tells Mr. Cleveland to get ready, that the people need him. If the American farmer be not pros perous in the future it will be his own fault. Hasn't Uncle Jerry Rusk written an essay and told him what to raise to get rich, and don't the new tariff bill give him protec tion on wheat "and beans, and a bounty on cocoons, and with all this diamonds on the free list? He should complain no more but revel in antici pation of future wealth and seraphic bliss. A Republican contemporaryjyants to know why some Democrat don't object to that $9,000,000 surplus in money and securities in the treasury of Texas. Well, one reason is that that surplus is not there to furnish a fund to boost jobs for the benefit of thrifty gentlemen who can manipu late votes, and another that a very large part of that surplus is in "securities." Minneapolis wants the next Na tional Republican Convention. By all means let Minne have it. The further away from the centre of civ ilization that crowd gets the better. Let it go to the wild, wild West, even to the setting sun, or the jumping off place. They are going to prepare a grave yard for the g. o. p., and they can do it as well there as anywhere. It is the Westinghouse Electric Light Company which is making such exertions to prevent the execu tion of Kemmler, because they think the use of dynamos for killing crimi nals will make the machine an ob ject of dread, and interfere with the sale of them. So it is not sentiment but business that is at the bottom of it. The English insist that the fork in eating should be used with the left hand, the French say with the right. The only way we see to please both, will be to take the fork in both hands like a Chinaman does his chop sticks and shovel the edibles in. A well thirteen hundred feet deep is to be sunk in the suburbs of Lon don, furnished with stairs and illumi nated, to enable students to study the geological strata of the little island. With such facilities they ought to become well posted. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Notice Closing of banks. S. VanAmrixge For rent. Star Office Babbitt metal. W. J. Kirham & Co. Bargains. C. C. R. R. Co. Special meeting. Munson & Co. Ready-made cloth'g. EPISCOPAL CONVENTIONS. joint Meeting of the Two Dioceses of North Carolina at Tarboro. The Diocesan Council of East Caroli na will meet at Greenville on Wednes day. May 16th. A joint meeting of the two North Carolina Dioceses will be held at Tar boro on the 16th inst., commencing at 8 o. m.. in celebration of the centennial of the organization of the Diocese of North Carolina in 179Q. Round trip tickets from Wilmington to Tarboro and xeturn will be sold at $6.60, and from Wilmington to Green ville and return will be sold at$7.7o. and these will be good on a special train, for which arrangements have been made, to leave Greenville at 5 p. m. on the 16th. Carolina Central K. K. A special meeting of stockholders of the Carolina Central Railroad Company is called by the Board of Directors, to meet in New York city on the 21st inst., for the purpose of considering the question of creating 19,500 shares of preferred stock of the par value of $100 each, and of exchanging the said stock for the second and third mortgage in come bonds of the Company. Hew Tork Truck Market. G. S. Palmer, commission merchant, New York, reports : Rrints of Southern vegetables in larger supply and prices ruling lower, although all prime stock is in good de mand. A few Charleston peas arrived and sold for $3.50 per crate; Charleston cabbage $5 to $4, N. C. $2 to $3; peas from 75c to $1.25 N. C. halves $1.75 to $3.25, thirds $1.25 to $1.75; asparagus m heavy supply, selling irom fi.ao io strawberries 10c. to 16c. LOCAL DOTS. Items of- Interest Gathered Here and There and Briefly Noted. Col. E. D. Hall was reported as decidedly better yesterday. The Atlas dredge boat with lighter, in towT of the tug Alexander Jones, left yesterday morning for Balti more. The steam yacht Electra went down the river early vesterday morning and passed Southport about 9 o'clock on her way to Hampton, Va. Eleven miles of the track of the Wilmington, Onslow & East Caro lina railroad have been laid and the work is still going forward. The U. S. District Court ad journed for the term yesterday morn ing, after settlement of accounts of the Marshal and the Commissioner. Swedish barque Pepita cleared yesterday for Barbadoes, W; I., with 170,968 feet of lumber, and 377,900 shin gles, valued at $4,458 and shipped by E. Kidder's Son. Wilmington S. F. Engine Co., No. 1, have purchased the ten-pin alley run last summer at Ocean View and will remove it to their engine house, where they will put it up for exercise and en joyment of the members of the Com pany. Saturday being a legal holiday no business will be transacted on that day by the Bank of New Hanover and the First National Bank. Paper due on Saturday is therefore payable on Friday anrKthat due on Sunday is payable on Monday, A COOL SUMMER. Predictions of the Signal Service Men. The cool change yesterday was doubt less a surprise to nearly every one. The observer in charge of the Signal office here says it was the after-effect of the storm which moved across the country two days ago; as the area of highly rarified atmos phere of the storm centre created what might meteorologically speaking be termed a partial vacuum off the North Atlantic coast, into which the denser cool air of the northwest swept with a flank movement to the south. As will be seen from the cotton-belt reports the minimum temperature was very low in the Western part of the State and Charlotte reported frost. The Signal Service also predicts frost this morning for the Western part ot the State. The warmest weather of last year occurred on May 11th, when the maxi mum temperature was 97, but with sin gular variety, the average for the first eight days of last May was only 63, while the average for the same period this month is 70, though the average for yesterday alone was 10 below normal. The observer here claims that the average temperature and rainfall will in long cycles of time always balance up with their respective normals. For an illustration of this we have only to look back to last year's record. We had an unusually cool and wet spring and summer, and by October 31st the deficiency of temperature amounted to 431 and the excess of rainfall to four inches. Nature soon asserted itself and the warm dry weather that followed had by January 1st reduced the deficiency of temperature to 108 and the excess of rainfall had decreased to only 1 inches. Now a new start was made January 1st, from which time to this date, we have piled up an excess of 536 in tem perature and there is a deficiency of nearly 9 inches of rain to be accounted for. According to the theory advanced above, we are to have a cool and rainy summer. The result will be watched with interest, for if it proves true, the science of meteorology scores another victory. Cotton Region Bulletin. Frost was reported at Charlotte yes terday morning, with the minimum re corded temperature 42 degrees. The minimum at other stations in the dis trict was 44 at Raleigh, Wadesboro, Weldon and Cheraw, 46 at Lumberton and Goldsboro, 48 at Newbern, and 50 at Florence and Wilmington. Slight rainfall was reported at all stations ex cept Goldsboro and Wadesboro. Low temperature prevailed through out the cotton belt. The average mini imum for the districts was: Atlanta, Augusta and Memphis, 42 ; Mobile (with frost) and Montgomery, 44 , Charleston and Wilmington, 46 ; Vicks- burg, Little Rock and Savaanah, 48 ; New Orleans, 52, and Galveston, bi . "Weather Forecasts. The following are the forecasts for to day: For Virginia, warmer, fair weather, westerly winds. For North Carolina and bouth Caro- lina, warmer, fair weatner, vanaDie winds. For Georgia, fair weather, winds gen erally southerly, slightly warmer. WILMINGTON, N. C, FRIDAY, AN OLD-TIME DARKEY. Uncle Csesar The Representative of a Class Rapidly Passing Away. Just twenty-two years ago to-day I bought a plantation on a Southern river. I was on the point of saying that with this property I also bought an old negro named "Caesar," but the war was over and there was no more trade in slaves But old Caesar is and was my hero Perhaps sixty year sold, he limped along, aiaea by an oia nicKory stick with a bent handle, which had become slick and greasy with age. Always upon bis back he carried an old sack, with the ends tied with a leather band, enabling him to sling it across his shoulders In this bag or sack he carried part or an old saw, a hammer with one claw broken off, a jack-knife, a lump of assafcedita, a few peach kernels, some strings and a nsh hook or two He complained of rheumatism, that some "pusson" had put a spell on him, and that his legs were full of small snakes which if he could get clear of, he would be all right. Under the wil lows overhanging the river, he kept a small batteau, and near by fastened to a pole a nsh basket, shaped something like a cornucopia; it was baited with bread and assafcedita, and captured many a catfish and sucker. It was a horn of subsistance if not of plenty to my old friend. Caesar was, however, often pinched by hunger and for want of tobacco, but never complained of it; though "his breakfast was a crust, his dinner a ques tion and his supper a regret,'" he was never known to beg much less to steal. His house was a mile from the river, and daily he trudged to visit his fish trap, and if he found his batteau not tied exactly as he left it he thought his luck was gone. On the way he would stop to rest, and when seated on some convenient log or stump, if the weather was cloudy he gave a series of blows, something like those of the porpoise to blow up a rain, as he said, or to indi cate its approach. He was a sort of portable rice-beater, but he never "extortioned" on his cus tomers; a tea cup full of clean rice being his toll no more, no less and his work was always well done. In big jobs of work where many hands were employed it was bis delight to be called in to "boss" the work. He had excellent ideas of lever power, and his great name-sake never felt grander when ordering his tenth legion to clear the field than did my old Csesar as he would say, "get away men, let me rig my Sampson up thar, and that thing gwine to move; you hear me!" Go by the kitchen, old man, and tell the cook to give you some dinner, was an invitation oftener refused than accepted; and when it was, he always paid for it in some way. A new "broom-straw" broom, nicely made for the Missus, or an hour's work in the garden, he insisted upon giving in turn for this hospitality. A few sweet crackers put him always in good and talking humor, and many a day under their inspiration, he told the stories of his youth. and was full of braggadocia in spea k ing of his old owners. They were no "poor buckras," but "big quality peo ple." btrange to say, so laithiui a creature; one so just and self-denying, made no profession of religion, hie held that the person who "gophered him" must take off the spell before he could think of his eternal welfare. "Too much 'flict ed" he would say, when asked if he did not desire to make his peace with his Maker. He once had a wife, but "they took her out to Georgia" and he never heard of her, and he seemed entirely cal lous to Cupid's darts, though he had re gard for his personal appearance; his hair was plaited in as long pieces as the nature of the case would admit, and tied at the ends with white cotton strings. He was one darkey who did not claim ownership of a hog. His farming.oper- ations consisted in the cultivation of a small potatoe patch and some gourd vines, the soil farther from the shanty being the richer. He could always supply you with a lone-handled gourd, and in fruit season a nice peach, it being remarkable how fruit trees flourished for mm. in pon- . ft T X tics he was Kepublican usually, tie said to a gentleman who had been a can didate for legislative honors, who handed him a piece of tobacco. "Thank you, boss, but if you had offered me tobacco fore de election 1 should not have taken it." But the March winds, hard alike on poor old men and half-starved cattle, were too much for him and old uncle Caesar "hung up de fiddle and de bow" and went to the land "where all good darkeys go." This writer, early in that month, re ceived a letter from him. It was written apparently with the juice of polk berries on a leaf torn from a memorandum book. It read thus, being written fairly legible: Dear Sir : 1 am very bad on, please send me one bunch of raisins and a quart of good corn whiskey by the boat. Send bill to the merchant at the landing and I will pay him. "Yours till death, Cesar." Not long and the news came that mv hero had departed this life. Peace to his ashes to the rheumatic link that binds us to the past ! Soon all like him will have crossed the river, and a genera tion or two will mark other characters in their dav and time, and the old plan tation darkey must live in our southern songs only, and the little bit of history which will record the short and simple annals of these meek and lowly relics of the old South. Cupid. MEMORIAL DAY. Tuesday, the 13th. Instant Assistant Mar shals Appointed for the Occasion. The Ladies' Memorial Association have decided to have the observance of Memorial Day on Tuesday next, the 13th. The change from Wednesday to Tuesday was made because of an ex cursion to be given on the 14th inst , by the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. Gen. M. P. Taylor, Chief Marshal for Memorial Day, has named the follow ing gentlemen as the assistant marshals MAY 9, 1890. on that occasion: James H. Taylor, Jos H. Hanby, Geo. W. Huggins, Capt. S W. Nobles, A. B. Cook, T. A. Shepard, Chas. Schulken, R. S. Love, P. H Smith, L. H. Belden, J. G. Wright and R. Greenberg. Messrs. Belden and Wright will have charge of the Confed erate lot and the others will serve in the line with the Chief Marshal. The Executive Committee of the Festival Ladies of the Executive Committee of tfoe Wilmington Light Infantry Festival are requested by the chairman of the committee to meet at the company s armory, this morning at 11 o'clock. A full attendance is earnestly desired. Wilmington District Third Round Quarterly Meetings In Part. Southport, June 1. Rocky Point, at Herring's, June 7 and 8. Scott's Hill,'at Union, June 14 and 15. F. D. Swindell. . Presiding Elder. THE MAILS. The mails close and arrive at the City Post Office as follows: CLOSE. For North and way stations W & W R R. 8:15 a m for Mt. Airy and way stations C b & Y V Railroad 8:40 a m For Charlotte and way stations C C R R and West 2:00 pm For Southport 8:40 a m For Wrightsville 8:00 a m For Clinton, Magnolia and Goldsboro. Train 3:00 p m For points South W C&AR R 5:00 d m For Charlotte, Monroe, Maxton, Cronly, and for Train No. 38 coming East, next AM.. 5:45 p m For South W C&AR R Train No, 27. . 9:10 p m For North W & W R R Train No. 14 11:00 p m For Brunswick County and LittleJtiver, S. C Tuesdays and Fridays .CP? 6:00 a m For Cape River Tuesdays and Fridays 1:00 d m For Onslow County Mondays and Thursdays 7:00 a m MAILS READY FOR DELIVERY (WHEN THE TRAINS ARE ON TIME). Charlotte, Monroe, Maxton and Cronly 9:00 a m Clinton, Magnolia and Goldsboro 12:00 m Charlotte and way stations, also West 1.00pm from iNortn w E w K K 7:U0 pm From Southport 7:00 p m From Wrightsville .-. 7:00 p m From Mt. Airy and points C F & Y V R R 7:15 n m From North Train No. 27 11:00 p m From South Trrin No. 14 7,00 a m GEO. Z. FRENCH. Postmaster. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. W.J. Kirkham & Co., 2 ij MARKET STREET, HAS LARGE CON- singnments of all kinds of Goods and selling them very cheap. Give us a call for Bargains at the Racket Auction House. my 9 It Banks Closing. VJO BUSINESS WILL BE TRANSACTED BY LN the Banke of this city on Saturday, 10th of May, that day being a legal Holiday. Therefore commer cial paper dueSaturday is payable on Friday; that due on Sunday is payable on Monday. Bank of Wew Hanover, by WM. L. SMITH, Cashier. First National Bank by my 9 It H. M. BOWDEN, Cashier. For Rent, THE "OCEN HOUSE" AT Ocean View, formerly kept by Mrs. Mayo. S. VAN AMRINGE. IMJI my 9 It "VTOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT A i. i special meeting of Stockholders of the Carolina Central Railroad Company has been called by resolu tion of the Directors of said Company, passed May 7, 1890, to be held at the Florence House at the corner of 18th street and 4th Avenue, in the city of New York, on the 21st day of May. 1890, at 12 midday, for the purpose of considering the question of creating 19,500 Shares of preferred stock of the par value of one hun dred dollars each, and of exchanging the said stock for the second and third mortgage income bonds of the Company passed March 2, 1887, entitled "An act to authorize the Carolina Central Railroad Company to exchange stock for bonds," and upon the terms and conditions stated in a proposed agreement with the said income bondholders which will be submitted at said meeting of stockholders, and a copy of which can be obtained by application to the undersigned Secre tary of the Company. (Signed) JOHN H. SHARP, Secretary of the Carolina Central R. R. Co., my 9 5t Wilmington, N. C. Lost, AfONDAY AFTERNOON, 5TH INST.. ON Castle street car, one Gold Thimble, engraved Caroline E. Clark, 1837. Also on 5th or Walnut streets, one Morocco Needle Case and Scissors. A suitable re ward will be paid for their delivery at the Drug Store of MUNDS BROTHERS, my 8 tf 104 North Front St. WE CAN GIVE BETTER AND MORE SATIS FACTORY BARGAINS IN READY-MADE C l0"thinf THAN YOU CAN GET ELSEWHERE. We sell the NOBBY STYLE SUITS for young Men as well as the more sober kinds for older ones. MUNSON & CO., my 9 tf Clothiers and Merchant Tailors. 50 Oenn-iDS F OR BLACK LEGHORN FLATS, WITH very wide rim. Only a limited number. $1.19 For a Black or White, Plain and Fancy side rim, fine FLAT. Only a limited number. 69 Cents for a Fine Black or White Lace Chip, Lace Neapolitan or Fancy Straws in the most leading shapes, too numerous to mention the styles, worth double the price. Call and see Could only secure a limited number. Together with an immense stock of FLOWERS, just received in every imaginable style and color, at Taylor's Bazaar, 118 Market St., Wilmington, N. C. No connection with any other Store in the city. Orders by mail promptly filled at Wholesale and Re tail. ' my 4 tf 3D. O'Connor REAL ESTATE AGENT, "Wilmington, North. Carolina. REAL ESTATE BOUGHT and SOXD Loans Negotiated on City Prnperiy. Stores, Dwellings, Offices and Halls ::;:t for Rent. Rents collected. Taxes and Insurance-J promptly attended to. Houses and Lots for sale on the monthly instalment an. Cash advanced on city property. ap 19 tf TAR WHOLE NO. 7,366 NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Robert Portner Brewing COMPANY, BRANCH DEPOT WILMINGTON, N. 0. We Are Now Prepared, to Supply Our "Worthy Customers and Pa trons, City and Country, With the Best SODA WATER, SARSAPARILLA, BELFAST GINGER ALE, AND ALL KINDS OF Waters. These Goods will be manufactured by Experts in the trade. We also keep constantly on hand Yienna Cabinet. Tivoli. CULMBACHER, And EXPORT BEER of Unsur passed Quality. WE HAVE THIS DAY, MAY 61 H, REMOVED TO OUR New Steal Bottling Establishment, CORNER E'GHTH AND BRUNSWICK STS. Our Delivery Wagons will call twice a day on our customers In the city. Through the kindness of Messrs. Adrian & Vollers, any orders left at their place of business will be forwarded to us promptly. All orders from city or country customers will re ceive our personal attention. Respectfully, Robert Portner Brewing Co, per E. Kuhblank, Teleghone call 99. my 7 lw AGENT. Black Dress Goods ! w E HAVE PLACED ON THE COUNTER OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF BLACK GOODS, to be sold during the coming week. Large concession in prices will be made. A first-rate chance for those who desire Bargains. The stock comprises Priestly's Challis, Lupin's Silk-Warp Henrietta, light weight All-Wool Henrietta, Nn's Veiling, with many other kinds. HEDRICK. Invoice -OF- 60 Dozen dents' Ties IN 4-IN HAND AND NAUTICAL KNOT. All high class Novelties. Price 50 cents; sold in. every city in the Union at 75 cents. Said to be the hand somest line of TIES ever opened lu Wilmington. A full stock of GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS. J. J. HEDRICK, mv 4 tf 101 MARKET STREET. Blanfc Booh and Stationery, LARGE AND COMPLETE STOCK OF A Blank Books, Stationery, Office and School Supplies. Croquet Setts, Hammocks, Base Ball Goods, Japa nese Fans, &e., &c, &c. my4tf YATES' BOOK STORE. XjO a Prices SUGAR, FLOUR. CAKES, COFFEE, STARCH. SNUFF, SOAP, CRACKERS, TOBACCO. Consignments Cotton, Spirits Turpentine, Tar and Lumber carefully handled. marStf WOODY & CURRIE. Antimigraine, Ac1? NEVER FAILING CURE FOR HEADACHE every variety. Kopfaline, another fine remedy, cures all forma of Headache. Daisy Fly Killer will kill flies by the million. Napthaline, the best safe guard against moths, mildew and infection, much cheaper than camphor and far more effective. For sale by INO. H. HAKJJ1M, JJruggiat, ap27tf New Market. Putz Pomade. P UTZ POMADE IN LIQUID FORM. THE best Polish made. For sale by my 4 tf GEO. A. FECK. BATES OV ADTBrnillNO. One Sonar Oa Day $ 1 00 " Two Dty in " M Three Iter . ' " Foot Djr 00 " Fir Iy I M " Om Week " " Two Weeka M Three Week M " One Month 10 00 Two Moothe 1 00 " Thr Month. 4 00 Si Mootbe 0 00 One Yew 60 00 iff Contract AaVertiaetnenu taken pnfior(loav ately low rate. Ten tinea aolid Nonpareil type make one (quart. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. BROWN & RODDICK'S LOVELY DRAPERY NETS JJAVE ATTRACTED SO MtXH ATI F N! ION thil aeaaon that the demand (or thrm ha. ihh confined to the city alone, bul outwdf ordrr. list- an depleted their stock a. to neceutate the pun ha o( a second lot. Thry have arrivrd and an nrm t im . They are not one whit I-hi ml their first wtimrl in either beauty, style or rlrgawr BROWN & RODDICK, with their usual enterprise, have at last snurrrl a full and choice selection "I COLORED VKI Vt.'l K I It BON, Satin back, and nn now supply ihr ii'1r BROWN & RODDICK are recognized " Headquarter. ' for Iradmc iyl. in ALL-SILK RIRItONS A full an1 nmplrtr sin k now on hand. BROWN & RODDICK Intend to do in the r L'Tl'K F , ai in thr PAS I . W leading retail Dry (rwd. businrs. of ifti it) . and ask the attention. confilen r and tirari ysnpKtt - f th people of Wilmington BROWN & RODDICK Pledge their every rndravr to jlrM- ami gtt ti. faction in all purchaar. madr 't thrm ( ami them at No. 0 North Front Streot, my 4 tf BERRY CLEAVES Pre.idrnt and Managrf F. W. KERCH NEK 7ra.rt OWEN F. LOVE Sw-rrtarp The Gleaves Hardware Co WHOLES A F. OEAI Ns IN HAEDWARE, CUTLERY, GUNS, TINWAHE, &c., ILc. No. 3'20 to 224 North WILMINGTON. Water fclrert, N C. 'We are Jobber, only and aril no (jckhI. at rrtail my 4 tf , Liverpool and London and Globe INSVIIANCK COMPANV OF Liverpool, England. W1 rE HAVE NO SIXTY DAV Cl.Al'SK ON Policies. We pay ca.h without diarount a. amiti a. claim is adjusted. SMITH & BOATWRIGHT, Agt., my 4 tf Wilmington, N ( H. L. FEIMIMELL, THE HOUSE MILLINER, Harness, Saddlery, Trunks, Bags, c a it it i a kn, rii.:TON, BUGGIES AND ROAD-CARTS. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL my 4 tl 10 Sooth Front mi North Carolina's FaTortte ! 1768. OLD NICK 1800. QURES CHILLS, COLDS. COUGHS. I OSS OF appetite, and U by far the brat good, to I f had f weah lung, and conatumption, a. it ha. brra know for it. purity over lid year.. We eameatly rqurm all in need of Pure Rye or Corn Whiskey to write for price list, a. we keep fond. roriMaat r hand that are FOUR YEARS OLD and jadrP) rectified. We ship in any quantity derl. OLD NICK WlllSKKV COMPANY, Panther Creek, Yadkin Co., N. C. jan 88 Cm 1 Seed Peas! Seed Peas 1 1 200 BUIHELS SEFD rEAs ONE GOOD MULK. ONE GOOD PONY. For ale low. Apply to SAMUEL P.F.AR, S. . ap 87 tf l Market mrrri Babbitt Motal. LARGE QUANTITY Or OLD IVrt. A perfect substitute for Rabbit! Metal, for aale at the an30DlwWw STAR OfFlCE. STOP AT HOTEL MACON, OIIEENVILLE, Ft. C. rpHE HOUSE IS RUN UNDER NF.W MAN ageraent, and everything la firat claaa at, I. apSlm CHAS. SKINNER. 4 n ! u i 'i.t t ( 1! t V H T:. If-
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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May 9, 1890, edition 1
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