Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Sept. 26, 1890, edition 1 / Page 1
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5Thc piomiM0 JHae. " ". ,, "l, ... . . - -- n WILHAM H. BERNARD. rUHLISHED DAILY EXCEPT MONDAYS. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTIOO, IN ADVANCK One Year (by Mail), Postage Paid ...$s t 8 Six Monius, Three Months, ... 1 60 00, sr- ToC;ty Subscribers, delivered in any part of ,t,!ritv Twelve Cents per week. Our City Agents ,t authorized to collect for more than three months advance. c , red at the Post Office at Wilmington, N. C, as hutfreu ai i Moil Matter. 3CtVUU " OUTLINES. Conferees were appointed by the Senate on the deficiency bill; several unimportadtfbills on the calendar were rv,cd when the bill to establish a United States land court was discussed; in the House the comerence report on the land forfeiture bill was considered and adopted., together with conference report on the bill for the establishment of Rock Creek Park in the District of Columbia; a resolution was introduced charging the postmaster of the House with the improper receipt of moneys from mad contractors, which, after de bate, was referred to the committee on accounts; the committee appointed to investigate the Silcott defalcation, re ported a bill, which was passed, defining the duty of the Sergeant-at-Arms, and which requires a bond of $50,000 from that official; the bill appropriating one million dollars for the purchase of nickel was then reported and passed. . The conferees on the tariff bill have not yet reached an agreement, and it is possible that there may not he an agreement at all; it is further stated that the bill will be reported this morning, but upon what basis is still unknown. It is proposed to erect a monument to the memory of the f.iiien dead in the battle of Lexington, Mo., (both Federal and Confederate) ;:n i a circular has been issued to the survivors to forward their names and addresses; this is the first time in histo ry that the Blue and the Gray have joined hands to perpetuate the memory of those who vere4eft behind on the :ic;d of battle. The Nationalists of Du'oliu turned out in large num tvrs yesterday to attend the trial of the arrested parties at Tipperary; the crowd was so great that the doors of the o"Lirt-ioom were closed against them, an i a number of persons were severely beaten by the police; tfie doors were :"ni-a!iy opened, when the crowd surged in and filled the room to its utmost capacity. The attendance of ladies at the liirchall murder trial, at Wood stock, Ont.. was greater yesterday than o;i any previous day, and much inter n:piim was caused when entering-the court-room. A serious riot is re- po::ed from Butt county, Colorado, in which two men were killed and the c.Mrt-house burned to the ground. . telegram at a late hour last, night sut.es that an agreemeut has been reached on the tariff bill, and that it uiii be reported back to the House to- '!a. Two cadets of the Virginia Miiitary Institute engaged in a fist fight yesterday, which resulted in the death of one of them; the affair has cast a Ljlooin over the entire community. New York markets: Money easy at 2 J per cent.; cotton quiet, mid 'iiing uplands 10 cents; middling Or kans 10 0-1G cents; southern flour dull and weak; good to choice $i 005 75; wheat dull and barely steady; No. 2 rid $i OOggjl 01 ac elevator; corn str-mT. with light offerings and quiet; .No. J red Hi'rK cents at elevator; rosin quiet and steady; spirits turpen tine dull and steady at 4041 cents! We would like to hear Mr. Kenne dy's opinion of the rest of the Reed Sang as great expungers. No wife beater can vote in Missis sippi when the new law goes into eilt-ct. This will materially reduce the Republican vote. The opinion seems to be gaining ground that Census Superintendent Sorter is as great a fraud as the par ty of which he is a pliant member. Mr. Harrison is a cool man but it is said he does not entirely approve of Commissioner Raum running the Pension office on the refrigerator plan. We regret the retirement of Mr. 'B. Eldridge from the editorship of the Durham Globe. He was a clever writer, and made the Globe an excellent paper. The -.75 cents a ton as the cost of making steel by the basic process n Chattanooga, as published yester day, is an error. It should have been $21.75. Senator Farwell, of Illinois, attri butes his failing health to his bad surroundings in Washington. He should leave the Republican party and get into better surroundings. If the Reed gang is so anxious to have a quorum that they propose to compel members to vote, "by fine 0r otherwise," why don't they take some steps to enforce the attendance of Republican absentees and thus be sure of a quorum of their own? These absentees shouldn't be loafing about lle country hilars a day when the rest of the g neea them so badly. VOL. XLVII.-NO. 4. Prof. Hirsch, of Chicae-o. claim b tn have discovered , a process for ex tracting aluminum from clay at a cost oi a iew cents a pound, a pro cess entirely differenCfrom any here tofore known. Heretofore the cost of producing the aluminum has been so great that it could not be utilized save in a very limited way, but if Prof. Hirsch has got the cost down to what he says he has, anjd alumin um is one half that is claimed for it he has one of the biggest bonanzas on top of the ground. Some German authorities pro nounce stuttering contagious. There are now 80,000 stammerers in Ger many and the number is rapidly in creasing. -As an evidence that stut tering is contagious the fact is cited that the number of stutterers in creases as the children pass up to the higher classes in the schools. But then it ought to be remembered that there are some jaw trying words in the German language even for grown folks. Mr. Greenhut, president of the Peoria, 111., Whiskey Trust, is not sporting so many diamonds as he did a week or so ago, for the reason that he was green enough to let them lay around loose in his apart ments and a thief walked in and then walked out with a hand full of them and about $2,000 in cash. Some one has suggested that Con gress might save much of the time now given to delivering eulogies on deceased members by taking Sunday for it. If the eulogy business is to continue this is a level-headed sug gestion, although it may sometimes interfere with some interesting games of draw. Professor Wiggins, of Canada, has fallen out with the weather, with which he has never been on the most confidential terms, and says he is going to quit the prediction busi ness altogether, as he finds the weather entirely unreliable. Larceny and embezzlement are disfranchiseable offences under the new franchise law of Mississippi. The Reed gang will probably consider this more evidence of unjust dis crimination against the Southern Republicans. It is very annoying to Mr. Harri son to have Senator Quay referred to in Congress by a brother Repub- ican as a "branded criminal." Mr. Harrison's relations have been very close and intimate with men of Mr. Quay's brand. It is said that Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts, author of the Force bill, is getting alarmed at the opposition against him, and has ask ed Reed and McKinley to come and help him out. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. B. F. Keith,' Jr. For rent. Star Office Babbit metal. Munson & Co. Gent's furnishings. French & Sons Winter footwear. Meeting Carolina Insurance Co. J. D. Nutt First class drug store. Kirkham & Co. Trunks, lamps, etc. A GHASTLY FIND. The Dead Body of a Colored Man Found' Drifting Down the Biver. The dead body of a colored man was seen drifting down the river past the city yesterday afternoon. Joe McNeill and Fred Williams went out to it in a row-boat and towed the body into the dock at the foot of Nun street. It was in an advanced state of decomposition, and apparently the body of a young ne gro 18 or 19 years of age. JThe body was clothed in shirt and pants, but no thing was found that might lead to identification. In the absence of Coroner Jacobs, Mr. S. Van Amringe, Clerk of the Superior Court, appointed Thos. C. Miller special coroner to hold an in quest, and a jury was summoned and viewed the body, but the men who re covered it not being present the inquest was adjourned until this morning. The body was buried in Oak Grove Cemetery by order of the county authorities. RANGE OF THE THERMOMETER. The following is the range of the ther mometer yesterday at the Signal Office in this city, as compared with the same date last year: 12 o'clock noon,. . .. .... 71 73 ::::::::;:: ,w WILMINGTON, LOCAL DOTS. Items of Interest -Oathered Here and There ind Briefly Noted. Rev. Mr. Jones is is expected to arrive here to-day. -v Evangelist W: P. Fife was ex pected here last evening, from Fayette- ville, but telegraphed that he woud not come until to-day. : Some twenty or twenty-five visitors to the Sam Jones meetings came on the C. F, & Y. V. railroad yes terday evening. Isaac Murphy, colored, was fined $20 in the 'Mayor's Court yester day, for disorderly conduct, and Rhein hold Pershal, also disorderly, was fined $10. Stockholders of the Carolina Insurance Company will hold a special meeting, Tuesday, October 7th, in the directors room of the" Bank of New Hanover. The British steamship Camiola cleared yesterday for Bremen, Germany, with a cargo of 7,082 bales of cotton shipped by Messrs. Alex. Sprunt & Son, and valued at $361,050. The excursion train from Mount Airy next Saturday will arrive in the afternoon and the excursionists will re main"rn the city Sunday and Monday. A great manv are expected. At the meeting of the directoas of the Wilmington and Seacoast Building and Loan Association last Wednesday, Col. T. W. Strange was unanimously elected attorney of this association. The steamer Bessie started down to Southport yesterday morning at 9.30 o'clock. She got down about Big Is land, when the sea was so rough that Capt. Snell thought it advisable to re turn. She got back to her wharf about 1 o'clock p. m. Many ladies went to the Taber nacle through the pelting rain yesterday afternoon to secure seats for the meet ing last night. They commenced going about half-past 4 o'clock, and from that time until the hour for assembling the street cars' running in that direction were crowded. Official announcement has been received here of the appointment of Mr. T. C. Bryan as Assistant General Freight and Passenger Agent, with office at Portsmouth, Va., and Mr. H. W. B. Glover, as Division Freight and Passenger Agent, with office at Green wood, S. C, for the Seaboard Air Line. THE STORM. A Great Dwn-Pour Over Three Inche of Rainfall Heavy Bains at Other Points. Wilmington was yesterday on the ragged edge of a great storm of wind and rain that prevailed along the South Atlantic coast. The wind was from the east, and its maximum velocity here did not exceed twenty-four miles an hour, but rain fell in torrents the great er dart of the day and until after night set in, when the wind shifted to the south-west, the clouds broke away and a few glimmering stars appeared to give promise of clearing and possibly fair weather for to-day. The total rainfall for the day as reported at the Signal office was three and a half inches, the greater part of which fell in the afternoon. The rain flooded the streets and caused some slight damage in the way of washouts matters that will -require the attention of the city street force for several days, but beyond this no harm resulted. At Southport the maximum velocity of the wind was 45 miles an hour, and the rainfall was two inches. Heavy rains were reported along the line of the Carolina Central railroad, and the train from Charlotte last even ing was delayed an hour or so on this account, but no washouts occurred. On the C. F. & Y. V. railroad the train from Mount Airy encountered the storm some distance this side of Fayetteville, and from that point to Wilmington there was heavy rain. The storm seems to have been general throughout the South and heaviest along the coast; Savannah reporting 4.84 inches of rain and Charleston 5.82 inches, up to 8 a. m. yesterday. Weather Forecasts. The following are the weather fore casts for to-day. For Virginia, rain, cooler, followed by rising temperature, southeasterly winds. For North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia, rain, warmer, easterly, winds. For Florida, rain in the northern and fair in the southern portion, stationary temperature, easterly winds. Counterfeit Two Dollar Notes. Counterfeits of the new two dollar silver certificatesare reported to be in circulation. The counterfeit note has the name of "W. S. Rosecrans," instead of that of C. N. Jordan, enclosed in the small round pink seal, as Register of the Treasury. The paper contains no distributing fibre, nor are there any of the parallel silk threads running through it. N. C., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1890. THE TABERNACLE. FIRST MEETING OF THE SERIES TO BE HELD IN WILMINGTON. A Good Attendance Despite the Bain- Rev. Mr. Jones U"ot Present Sermon by Rev. Jlr. Stewart. Despite the rain which fell in torrents during the afternoon! and early morn irig, between five and six hundred peo ple gathered in the Tabernacle last night to inaugurate the series of meetings to be held by Rev. Sam.: P. Jones. As the rain ceased falling about eight o'clock, the crowd was augmented by some two hundred during the services. The choir was well represented, and to the accompaniment of two organs and two cornets,, rendered in most excel lent style several hymns. Mr. Jones, who was expected to be present, was unavoidably 'detained, but he was well represented by his able as sistant, Rev. George R. Stewart. Refer ence was made by Mr. Stewart to the expenses incurred in erecting the Taber nacle. He said that for the purpose of reimbursing those who had so generous ly and freely given to aid in the building, a collection would be taken up at each service. It was everyone's duty attend ing these meetings to contribute accord ing to his or her means. If he or she had nothing, nothing was expected, and they were none the less welcome because of their inability to contribute. "But if you have of this world's goods you should pay for the privilege of attending the meeting. Honest men would do so. If you have means and do not help on this work you are a rascal, and your presence is not desirable nor are you welcome. The brother in passing the hat, will see that each one gets his hand in it. It will do his conscience good." Prof. E. O. Excell sang in his inimita ble manner the solo, "There's a Great Day Coming," the full choir joining in the chorus. Rev. Mr. Stewart spoke for an hour from the text: "Finally, brethren, pray for us that the word of the Lord may have free course and be glorified." This was made the basis of an exposition of the methods by which meetings are made, in their results, to redound to the advantage of God in the saving of souls. There must be harmony between pulpit and pew; the united prayers of both will accomplish everything; but where there are conflicting opinions as to the advis ability of methods, no good results can follow for a house divided against it self must fall. "We desire no one to attend these meetisgs for the purpose solely of passing judgment upon the preacher, or for criticising or advising us as to the best method of obtaining the desired results. Come with prayer ful hearts; pray for us, and leave to God the rest. 'There may be something said in these meetings that you do not like; re member that those portions are intended for others lower, or higher, maybe, than you. Apply to yourself that which is applicable to you and leave the rest. "No preacher can suit every one. You should condemn no man because he fails to comply with your standard. Measure him by the only true standard what he accomplishes. Pray for him, Aid him all you can, and if he saves sinners, leave his methods alone; for God has set the seal of his approval on his acts. "Oratory does not accomplish what true fervency does. I was in a church once a very fashionable church, where a quartette was singing a crooked song that no brother here present could get in a mile of and yet there had been no conversion in that church in a year; while in a small mission station that I visited the nignt before God had abun dantly blessed the labors-of the pastor, because the congregation and the preacher were at unity." At the conclusion of the sermon a large number shook the Rev. Mr. Stewart's hand, and promised to pray for the success of t he meeting. There were seven professions of religion. It was announced that on account "of the fatigue incident to the long journey from Lynchburg, there would be- only two services to-morrow at 10.30 a. m. and at 8.00 p. nr PROGRAMME FOR TO-DAY. Song service at 10:30 and preaching at 11 a. m. Song service at 7:30, and preaching at 8 p. m. Agronn d in the Biver. Mr. Demain, the Signal Service ob server at Southport, telegraphed yester day evening at 6 o'clock, that the Brit ish steamship Etkelburga which arrived there during the forenoon, bound to Wilmington, grounded at high tide on the shoal at the upper end of Battery Island, at 5.10 p. m. She had just weighed anchor and was turning to go up the river, when she struck. The tug Blanche wept to offer assistance. The tide was higher than usual when the steamshipAvent on the shoal, and soon afterwards it' began to fall. The schooners Carrie Strong and James Ponder arrived at Southport yesterday afternoon. BY RIVER AND RAIL. Receipts of Naval Stores and Cotton Yesterday. Wilmington, Columbia & Augusta R. R.--l,305 bales cotton, . 18 casks spirits turpentine. - Wilmington & Weldon R. R. 126 bales cotton, 17 casks spirits turpen tine, 59 bbls. rosin, 25 bbls. tar, 6 bbls. crude turpentine. Carolina Central R. R. 518 bales cotton, 1 cask spirits turpentine, 189 bbls. rosin. 33 bbls. tar. Cape Fear & Yadkin Valley R. R. 142 bales cotton, 44 casks spirits tur pentine, 81 bbls. rosin. Steamer Cape Fear 190 bales cotton, 53 casks spirits turpentine, 2 bbls. tar. Steamer Acme 15 bales cotton, 34 bbls. tar, 19 bbls. crude turpentine. Williams' flat 5 bales cotton, 4 bbls. tar, 2 bbls. crude turpentine. McHenry's raft 501 bbls. rosin. Total receipts cotton, 2,301 bales; spirits turpentine, 13 casks; rosin, 830 bbls.; tar, 98 bbls; crude turpentine, 27 bbls. For the State Fair. Round trip tickets, from Wilmington to Raleigh at $3.20 (including one ad mission to the State Fair), will be on sale October 12th by the Atlantic Coast Line Articles intended for exhibition will be transported at regular tariff rates, and if returned by the party exhibiting:, (which fact should be established by cer tificate of the Secretary and by presen tation of the originarshipping receipt), will be billed free and the amount of freight paid thereon refunded by the agent at the station from which shipped, Wilmington District Fourth -Bound Quarterly Meetings in Part. Carver's Creek, Hebron, September 28. BladenAntioch, October 4th and 5th. Scott's Hill, Scott's Hill, October 11th and 12th. Bladen Street, October 12th at night. Clinton-, Keeness, October 18th and 19th. Sampson, McGee's Dedications, 25th and 26th. Magnolia, Centenary, November 1st and 2nd. Elizabeth, Elizabethtown, November 8th and 9th. Waccamaw, Shiloh, November 14th and 16th. Rocky Point, Burgaw Creek, 19th and 20th. Cokesburg, McNatt's, November 22nd and 23rd. Brunswick Mission, November 28th. Brunswick Circuit, November 28th and 30th. Kenansville, Charity, December 3rd and 4th. Grace Church, Dedication, December 7th. 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. 8:00 a m or Charlotte and way stations-t, U K K and West 8:30 am For Mt. Airy and way stations C F & Y V Railroad 8:00 a m ForWrightsville 8 00 am For Southport 8:30 a m For Clinton, Magnolia and Goldsboro 3:00 p m h or points South W C E A K K 0:UU p m For Charlotte and way stations 7:00 p m For South W C & A R 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 Little River, S. C Tuesdays and Fridavs.. 6:00 a m For Cape Fear River Tuesdays and Fridays 1:00 p m t or Onslow County Mondays ana fnaays o:au a m MAILS READY FOR DELIVERY (WHEN THE TRAINS ARE ON TIME). Charlotte, Monroe, Maxton and Cronly.... 8:00am All Points South, Train No. 78 9:15 a m from boutnport :uupm From Clinton, Magnolia and Goldsboro 11:45 a m From Wrightsville 7:00 p m From Mt. Airy and points C F&YVRR 7:00 p m From North Train No. 23 7:00 pm From Charlotte and way stations 8.00 p m From North W & W R R 11:00 p m From? South 2,00 am From Little River, S. C. and Brunswick co., Mondays and Thursdays 7:00 p m FrotnLandings Cape Fear river, Tues. & Fri 8:00 a m 1' rom Unslow county, i :ou p m tiJSO. Z. K.JJNJil postmaster. DIED.! SWANN. In this citv. yesterday afternoon, at 3W o'clock, KATIE ELIZABETH, infant daughter of James G. and Mary H. Swann, aged two months and httnen daye. The funeral will take place this morning, at 10 o'clock, from residence, No. 9 Blount's Alley, thence to Bellevue Cemetery. Friends and acquaintances afC respectfully invited to attend. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Store for Bent, A T COLLY MILLS. A FINE OPPORTUNITY for one wishim? to do a Mercantile business in the country. Also one Store and Dwelling at Point Cas well, N . C Apply at once to B. F. KEITH, Jr., sep 26 D&W tf Wilmington, JN. e Stockholders' Meeting THE STOCKHOLDERS OF THE CAROLINA Insurance Company are notified to attend a special meeting to be held in the Directors' room of the Bank of New Hanover, on Tuesday, October 7th. By order ot Board ot directors. G. W. WILLIAMS, President. M. S. WfLLARD, Secretary. sep262t . oct7 Telephone No. 95. REMEMBER THIS. MY DRUG STORE IS first class in all its appointments. That you can get anything you want in the Drug line there, at prices that will tell, I sleep over my Store, aud the Night Bell works. Telephone No. 95. JAMES D. NUTT, sep 26 tf The Druggist. When in Want QF TRUNKS, PICTURES, LAMPS, CROCK- ery, Tinware, Window Curtains, Looking Glasses, Silver-Plated Knives, Forks and Spoon's, Watches, &c, call at W. J. KIRKHAM & CO'S, sep 26 tf - 27 Market street. Notice. ALL PERSONS ARE HEREBY FORE warned not td credit any of the crew of Br. Barque Belgium. Any debt contracted by them will not be paid by the' masters. G. LOURO or GEO: HARRISS, SONS & CO., sep35 3t Consignees. TAR. WHOLE NO. 7.485 NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Visitors IN THE CITY SHOULD TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE OPPORTUNITY TO BUY THEIR WINTER FOOTWEAR. We respectfully invite all to examine our stock, which is complete. Prices right. Come and see. Geo. E. French & Sons, 108 NORTH FRONT STREET. sep 26 tf Gents' Furnishings. THE CELEBRATED Monarch Shirt. LARGEST STOCK OF COLLARS AND CUFFS IN THE CITY. UNDERWEAR in great variety. NECKWEAR AH the newest styles. Kid, Caster, Calf, White, Black and Knights Templar GLOVES. Rflunson & Co., GENTS' FURNISHERS, &c. sep 26 tf.' SAM JONES Som-g IBooIkzs AT Yates' Book Store. sep 25 tf OFFICE OF TREASURER, Wilmington & Weldon Railroad Co., Wilmington, N. C, Sept. 20th, 1890. rpHE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE WIL mijgton & Weldon Railroad Co. have authorized the payment of three and a half per cent, interest on the certificates of indebtedness of this Company. The in terest on said certificates is due and payable at the office of the Treasurer on and after October 1st, 1890. Transfer Books will stand closed until October 1st, 1890. JAS. F.- POST, Jr., sep 21 tf Secretary and Treasurer. New Crop ",yy7"HITE AND YELLOW ONION SETS. Also Lettuce and Spiaach Seed on hand. JNO. H. HARDIN, Druggist and Seedsman, seg 23 tf New Market. ROOFING Gum-Elastic Roofing Felt QOSTS ONLY $2.00 PER 109 SQUARE FEET. Makes a good roof for years and any one can put it on. Send stamp for sample and full particulars. GUM-ELASTIC ROOFING CO., 39 &-41 West Broadway, New York. Local Agents Wanted. sep 14 D&W 4t The Best Business Opportunity YET OPPEBED. rpHE WINSTON WEST END LAND COM pany offers for Sale a limited number of its lots in Northwest Winston. They are within tsix minutes walk of the best line'Jof Street Cars in the South, con venient to schools, churches, and stores, shaded, mountain views. Population in 1880, four thousand (4,000); in 1899, twelve thousand (12,000). A million and three-quarters of outside money in vested in Winston-Salem in 1890. Three hundred and twenty-six thousand dollars put into factories and home buildings in 1890, to September. Three rail roads building into country tributary to Winston. This is the best time to buy. Maps, prices and terms given on application to P. M. WILSON, Sec'y. sap!4 4t su WINSTON, N. C. Coal and Wood! -yY"E HAVE NOW ON HAND LARGE LOT OF FOUNDRY COAL, BROKEN COAL, EGG COAL, STOVE COAL, CHESTNUT COAL. Georgia Creek Cumberland COAL, Pocahonta COAL, Tennessee COAL, English COAL, CHAR COAL. WOOD of all kinds and SHINGLES of all grades and sizes, which we are prepared to sellas low as the lowest. Those desiring Car lots of COAL will do well to see us before purchasing. FOWLER & MORRISON, jan 19 tf Wilmington, N. C. Open Day and Night! 3VHy- Saloon, QORNER OF NORTH WATER AND MUL berry etreets, is open from 1 o'clock a. m. Monday until 11.45 p. m. Saturday. CHAS. F. BROWN, Agent, ""mar 9 DAW tf Wilmington, N. C. Babbitt Metal. LARGE QUANTITY OF OLD TYPE. A perfect substitute for Babbitt Metal, for sale at the jan 30 Dlw W2w STAR OFFICE. Wrapping Paper. TO CLOSE OUT AN ACCUMULATION OF OLD NEWSPAPERS They will be sold for TWENTY CENTS PER HUN DRED. Apply at th- v STAR OFFICE. : RATES OF ADVERTISING. One Square One Day. t 1 00 " " Two Day...". ....... Wi . .. . 1 75 gwDays.....; S 00 " " FivoDay. 8 50 " " One Week .M. . 4 00 " " Two Weeks S 50 ; " Three Waek. "I""" 8 60 One Month 10 00 " " Two Months .....18 00 " Three Months. MOO " Six Months..... 40 00 " " One Year CO 00 3T Contract Advertisements taken at proportion ately low rates. Ten lines solid Nonpareil type make one square. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. 3fc 3t "X jjtjgt No. 9 North Front Street, SHOWS THE LARGEST LINE OF Carpets ! Displayed in North Carolina. Department, on Second Floor. STOCK EMBRACES Moquettes, Body Brussels, Velyets. Tapestrys. Three-Plys AND Extra Super Ingrains. ELEGANT LINE OF Rugs, Mats and Art Squares. Oil Cloths, Mattings and a perfectly beautiful line of UPHOLSTERY DAMjfcKS. We show over one hundred styles of Carpets. Cloak Parlor on same floor. Over twenty-five styles of WRAPS shown. Those who have seen this Department say it is the handsomest thing of the kind in this section, i Very truly, Brown & Roddick sep 25 tf At the Unlucky Corner ELEGANT N. C. APPLES BY THE BAR REL CHEAP. Fresh Lot of Caies aufl Crackers Butter, Pure and Sweet. OUR A No. 1 FLOUR IS THE BEST. Complete stock of Fancy Groceries, sep 7 tf S. W. SANDERS & CO. Notice. I TAKE THIS METHOD OF INFORMING the friends and patrons of the late H. C, Prempert, that the business will be carried on by myself at the Old Stand, No. 7 South Front street, and it will be my aim to merit a continuance of the liberal patronage given to my father in the past. Very respectfully, sep 21 tf ARTHUR PREMPERT, Manager. Bird Dog Wanted. ANTED, A THOROUGHLY TRAINED Setter, not over four years old. Must be a good re triever. Address. "NIMROD," sept 18 D&W tf ' Star Office, Wilmington, N. C. North Carolina's Favorite ! 1768. OLD NICK 1890. QURES CHILLS, COLDS, COUGHS, LOSS OF appetite, and is by far the best goods to be had for weah lungs and constumption, as it has been knon for its purity over 122 years. We earnestly request in need of Pure Rye or Cora Whiskey to write for price list, as we keep goods constant y hand that are FOUR YEARS OLD and quadrnpi rectified. We ship in any quantity desired. OLD NICK WHISKEY COMPANY, Panther Creek, Yadkin Co., N. C jan 23 ly Id For Rent, rjpHE CASTLE HALL OF STONEWALL AND Clarendon Lodges will be rented three nights in the week. For particulars and terms apply to ti. w. COLLINS. sep 21 lw Chairman Joint Hall Committee. English anil Classical School, JY REV. DANIEL MORRELLE, A. M. 1HE Thiny-second Annual Session will begin (D. V.) Wednesday, the first of October. For any information apply at No. 420 Orange St. corner of Fifth. sep 16 tf Fall Stock Hardware, Tinware, Complete For sale by je 29 tf GILES & MURCHISO N. Apprentice Wanted. rpiIERE WILL BE A POSITION IN THE STAR office, October 1, for a young man who has worked as compositor two or three "years, and who wishes to complete his trade. Must be able to tackle successfully all kinds of manuscript, "good, bad .and indifferent." Apply at or address the aug 81 tf nac STAR OFFICE. Art Pupils TXTILL FIND IN THE ART AMATEUR, ART T T Interchange, ana otner similar Magazines, ac signs and suggestions for Painting and Fancy Work. Subscribers are permitted to borrow the colored plates for copying for a limited period. WILMINGTON LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, sep 14 tf 123 Market street. - 'S S1 6 1 ;---,"V " - '.- . -
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 26, 1890, edition 1
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