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5 -v-t".4. Bj "W1XMABI H, BEBNARD. - ' ' . . ...... - J' PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT MONDAYS. -v BATES OF SUBSOttPTlOO, IH AOTAKCX ; ' S " One Year (by Mail), Postage Paid. . ..... ..-6 00 Six Months, " " ,.. 8 00 Three Months, " - " ..."I 60 OneMontn, " , 60 ff TaCity Subscribers; delivered in any part of the City, Xwklvk Cknts per week. Our City Agent are not authorized to collect for more than three months advance. . .. . . . Entered at the Post Office at Wilmington. N. C. aa Second Class Mail m3T5 1! t One Sqaare-Ooe Dav.7:i-.i - i Tiro &&,;;'. : Three Days...... " VFam Daysa.".-.. w ::i live Hays " " One Week.-.-;:.-.-: Two Weeks..... " .- Three Waeks... - " .. ; On Month...;. '""- " . Two Months. . - Three Months... :V. Six Months 4 " One Year....... .4 I i 09 1 76 2 60 3 00 3 60 ; ; 4 30 . 6 U : - 9 acl - ...... 13 W ,..,,V 00 ....... 00 1 40 CC ' 60 Of VOL. XLIX.--NO. 6. WILMINGTON, N; C., TUESDAY v SEPTEMBER 29,: 1891. WHOLE NO. 7,717 Contract Advertisements taken at prcfitertioc ately low rates. ' . : : - ' '' K Ten lines solid Nonpareil type make one square. OUTLINES. President Harrison was in consulta tion yesterday with representatives of the State and Navy4 Departments over affairs in Chili, which are said to be se rious, but particulars : have not been made public. Henrietta Murre! colored, was hanged yesterday in Char lotte county, Va., tor, murdering her 3-year old child. Five white men in jail at Gadsden, Ala., for robbery, overpowered a deputy sheriff and were in the act of hanging him, when a po liceman rescued the officer, shooting two of the robbers. Severe earth quake shocks were felt Saturday night in St. Louis, Mo., and at towns -in Illi nois; no damage resulted. -In the trial of a county treasurer in Texas for misapplying $14,000 of county funds, the Judge ordered an acquittal, holding that under the present State law no of ficial could be indicted - for : embezzle ment unless he steals the actual cash! In a fight between white and colored laborers in Chicago one man was killed and several- were wounded. New York markets: Money easy at 27per cent.; cotton steady; middling uplands 8 centsf middling Orleans 9 1-16 cents; Southern flour dull and -heavy; common to fair extra $3 65 to 6 35; wheat weaker and moderately ac tive, No. 2 red $1 021 03j in store and at elevator; corn firm and active for export; No. 2, 60 cents at elevator; spirits turpentine quiet and steady at 87J38 cents; -rosin steady and quiet; strained common to good, $1 37J 1 40. ; - ! , Mr. Mike de Young, a Republican luminary on the Pacific coast, rises to remark , that "ninety-eight per cent, of the President's time is devo ted to distributing offices." This shows what a hungry set-Mr. Harri son has to deal with when, he can't find more than 2 per cent, of his time For sleeping, eating, junketing, wir ing for a second term, surf-dipping fishing, . crab-catching, ' reed-bird shooting, &c. If he can crowd all this into the two per cent, he-jnust be a hustler. ' - -" ; " ' - - PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS Pertment Paragraphs Pertaining Princi- ; pally to People and Pointedly Printed. The last charge that editor , Shep- ard of the New York Mail-Express makes against candidate Flower is that he is a " plutocrat." Such a charge comings from the man who gets his chief recognition from hav ing marriednto the Vanderbilt fami ly proves him to be all the kinds of a fool his father-in-law, with some familiar qualifying American pre fixes, said he was. Roswell Pettibone Flower is the full name of the next Governor of New York. But there is nothing petty about the man. - " The crazy King of Bavaria spends most of his time skinning potatoes. It would be a good thing for Europe if more of her crowned heads wpre crazy enough to spend their time in as harmless occupations. If some of the numerous land grabbers, white and colored, who have been disappointed in. staking out claims in the East Oklahoma set tlement will go to Massachusetts they might select some of the 865 abandoned farms soon to be "adver tised for sale. If they can't be suited there they might try their luck in Vermont or New Hampshire. "Praise From Bir Hubert." - Baltimore Sun. The Wilmington (N. C.) Star on last Wednesday entered the twenty fifth year of its publication. The Star is the oldest daily newspaper in North Carolina, and one of the best published South of the Potomac river. It is a credit to the Old North State, and its circulation and advertising business is steadily increasing. The free booting industry must be prospering in Missouri when they organize in companies sufficiently strong to walk in and tote off the goods and wares of a whole town, as they did when they struck San An tone the other day. - Any amount of those tin buttons, "American tm," with which the Mc Kinley people are tagging their dupes in Ohio, can be bought over in Wales, where they are" made. An En glishman landed in New York a few days ago with a very nice one hook ed on to his coat. Neat, Clean and Ably Edited. Winston Sentinel. Yesterday the Wilmington Star be gan its forty-ninth semi-annual volume having closed its twenty-fourth year Tuesday. The Star has always been a neat, clean, ably edited daily Demo cratic to the core and has stood by North Carolina and her laboring classes with unwavering fidelity.- In this long period of vears it has never changed nronrietors or missed a single issue and this is a record, certainly, in. North Carolina journalism. We wish it con tinued prosperity. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Munson & Co. Additions weekly. E.B.ROBINSON & Co-Drug clerk wan'd Brown & RoDDiCK-Silks and velvets locaiTdots. - The Governor has appointed Mr. L. S, F. Brown, of this city, a notary public ' ' '-'--"10 X-"-ft " ":: t C-;--'; X-r Miss Cannie Chasten has re turned from a pleasant visit to-friends in Boston, Mass. ; : . : Mr. G." M. Serpell, General Man ager of the Norfolk and Carolina Rail road, is registered at The Orto'n Mr A. J. Marshall returned last evening from a business trip up the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley railroad. Mr H. C. Twinning, Baggage Agent for the A. C. L., has returned with his family from an extended South ern tour. Mr. Oliver H. Allen, of Kins ton, Solicitor for the Sixth Judicial Dis trict, was among the arrivals in the city yesterday. "N Mr. Frank H. Russell left on the midnight train for Charlottesville, Va., to enter the medical department of the University of Virginia. Capt. George Shannonhouse, for fifteen years conductor on the Caro lina Central, has resigned and will open a furniture house in Monroe. Mr. J. H. Biggerstaff, of Wel don. has taken charge of the Atlantic Coast Line restaurant in place of Mr. Parker who is off for a few weeks. J. F. Murray, Augusta; D. R. White, Grand Rapids; h. J. bimon. New York; J. F. Butler,, Richmond, were among the visitors in the city yes terday. Mr. A. B. Nichols, of Nichols, S. C, and Messrs. A. F. Powell, A. C. Thompson, of Vineland all subscribers to the Daily Star were in the city yesterday, registered at The Orton. Messrs. J. B. Barlow, D. Shul hafel, New York; R. L. Brown, Chas. Bernar, Atlanta; G. P. Anderson, Man ager "Buna lom company, were among the arrivals at the Purcell yes The Star congratulates its young friends J. D. Bellamy, Tr., Jr., Albert S. Williams and L. A. Blue on the privilege of appending to their re spective names the familiar words "Eter nally at Law." Let . an alias capias issue, Mr. Clerk. The following were among the arrivals in the city yesterday: J. M Hines, New Berne; R. Gordon, South port; W. B. Goodwyne, Jacksonville; F. Gibson, McColl; J. B. Edgerton Gofdsboro; W. B. Yeung and wife, W, L. Harlow, North Carolina. BRICK PAVEMENTS. Acting Secretary of State Whar ton denies that Senator Blair, of New Hampshire, would take the 'place, of Mr. P. Egan as Minister to Chili. The Chilians do not warm much to Egan, but it will be a re lief to them to learn that the gf eat Bore in not going down their way. Tne Republican, State committee of Massachusetts is level-headed-It has declined an invitation sent by the Democratic committee for, a joint debate on State issues, between Gov. Russell and Mr. Allen, the Re publican candidate for Governor. Russell is an athlete, not only in body but in brain. Dr. Peters, the German African explorer in Africa, wlw has been killed several times by the natives, has found a garden spot in East Africa, with a delightful tempera: ture, healthy and fertile,- where the natives are so docile and well behaved that he easily maintains or der with forty soldiers. "Burn this affcer reading it," is a caloric expression which is repro duced twenty-two times, here and there, on the editorial page of the Philadelphia Times. . It is the p. s. of a letter written by Auditor Gene ral McCamant to ex-Treasurer Bardsley, of Philadelphia, who is now sojourning in the penitentiary. Mr. Bardsley forgot to "burn it." A Republican contemporary in forms us that sheets : of paper pass for money in Corea. ' One Sheet buys a quart of rice, and: twenty sheets a piece of hemp cloth. In this country sheets of paper pass for money, too. The only difference is they have the Government stamp on them. The Corean paper does not seem to be thus ornamented, but it seems to answer the purpose of buying rice, &c, which is about all any money does when you get down to the bottom of it. Items of Interest Gathered Here and There and Briefly Noted. Tar sold yesterday at 1.50 per barrel. The U. S revenue steamer Galveston was in port yesterday, but steamed down the river to Southport in the afternoon. - - Mr. Hans A. Kure, of this city, has opened a first class store at Orton plantation. He has a full stock of goods suitable to the trade. . y On and after October 1st the triins on the Wilmington Seacoast rail road ieaving Wilmington at 7.10 a. m. and Ocean View at 9.00 p. m., will be discontinued. Mary Oldham, colored, charg ed with larceny, gave bond in Justice R. H. Bunting's Court yesterday in the sum of $100 for her appearance at the Criminal Court. Passengers on the C. F. & Y. V. R. R. report that a white man, name unknown, was struck and killed by a tram on that road near .Greensboro, Saturday night last. - ,. A social hop will be given to-mor row night at Hibernian Hall. The com mittee" on arrangements consists of the following young gentlemen: D. Morgan Davi W. M. Collins and George Gan ger. - ' . : - We regret to learn that James, the little son of Mr.' James F. Post, Jr., fell from a shed in rear of the Jacobs' house on Princess between Fourth and Fifth streets yesterday, and broke one of his arms. Mr. Jas. F. .. Post, Jr., 'Mayor pro tern, presided at the City Court yes terday. There were three cases of drunk and down and one case of dis orderly conduct. The fines amounted to $21.00. ' . , - The rare opportunity of hear ing one of America's most talented pul pit orators is offered to our citizens at the Opera House to-night. Rev. Thos. Dixon has few equals as an orator, and probably none of his own age. : -" Thiiteen persons were baptiz ed Sunday afternoon at the First Bap tist Church by Rev. Mr. Peele, ; pastor of the Brooklyn Baptist Church. Others will be baptized Thursday evening, just after the prayer meeting services. . Tne Cost Pe Square Yard in Memphis How the Pavement is Laid. The experiment of brick pavements in MemDhis seems to be meeting with success. Some of these were laid in April, 1889, and have served well under heavy traffic. The figures show that the cost ot the pavement, per square yard, ranged between $2,328 and $2,916 the average gross cost, as obtained from six different sections, being $2,621. All the sections were laid on concrete foun dations, averaging 9 inches m depth. On the sub-grade is spread this con crete, composed of hard limestone, clean sand, mixed with fine gravel and fresh cement. Into this is put the macadam. This is spread and rammed with heavy cast iron rammers. On this concrete a bed of clean, sharp sand, 2 inches deep. is laid. Upon this bed of sand the pav inor bricks are to be laid on edge, at o - right angles to the line of curbs, in par allel lines, tn as close contact as pos sible on sides and ends the joints broken one witn another by starting at curb lines with half bricks in alternate rows. No half or broken bnck shall be laid except at the curb lines in order to make, closures. When the bricks have been rammed to a solid bearing and brought to a perfect surface, the inter stices shall be thoroughly and com pletely filled, lrom bottom to top, with distilled .coal tar pitch. Then sand is thrown oyer the pitch the aim being to'make the pavement one solid mass, which shall be permanent and water tight. The bricks must be thoroughly burned throughout to vitrifaction. Cotton Begion Bulletin. : Rain was general in the cotton region yesterday, but heaviest in the New Or leans, ; Galveston,, Charleston and Au gusta districts. In the Wilmington dis trict Florence reported 1.10 inches, Wil mington, .92; GoldsDoro, .so; neraw, .10: the average for the district be ing .16.- ". ' : , ;.. .. ' COTTON fOtoTS AND FIGURES. . . Cotton receipts at Mobile are about the same as last year, . . Receipts of cotton here yesterday 2,415 bales; the corresponding date last year, 1,748 bales. '': '.;,"; '' ' : ' Futures closed steady in New York; sales 84,300 hales; September 8.41 8.44; October 8.408, 41; January 8.89 8.90. ' ' v-- -"!; Spot cotton closed in New York yesterday at S for middling uplands. Net receipts at all ports yesterday 50,635 balaes. Leaves are reported falling "three weeks earlier than usual in Oglethorpe county, Georgia. This is said to be an intallible sign of an early frost. r.' New York ; Journal of Commerce'. Orders for replenishments in cot ton goods were more moderate in size thBn two weeks ago, and buying is on a hand to mouth basis. It is not to be inferred from this, however, that trade is light. On the contrary, in popular staples and specialities, demand is greater than the supply. Al though jobbers are covering only im mediate wants, the movement amounts to a good business in the directions referred to, and customers are constant ly pressing agents for the goods bought. New York Bulletin'. The market is still evidently inclined to respond to ball ish sentiment. , Crop advices are cer tainly no worse, yet it is doubtful if any improvement is shown that would tend to increase the magnitude of the yield, and there is lessjpressure to sell from the South, while the very large receipts are attributed in part to marketing the re mainder of the old crop, and in part to dry weather hastening maturity and affording easy facilities for hauling from plantations and snipping. Late advices to the Commercial and Financial Chronicle are as follows: Shreveport, Louisiana Cotton cannot be benefitted by rain; the top crop has been badly injured by the dry spell. The week's rainfall has been " seven hun dredths of an inch, on one day. Mont gomery, Alabama, The weather has been hot and dry all the week, and cot ton is being picked and marketed rap idly. The crop, however, is reported- short. No rain has fallen the past twelve days. AuburnyAlabama Cotton is practically made, and the yield will be small compared with last year. All other crops are doing well. There has been rain ' all the week. Augusta, Ga Accounts continue un favorable. Present conditions point to a falling off of from twenty-five to thir ty per cent, from the prospects ot three weeks ago. mere nas Deen no ram. Picking is making good progress and cotton is coming in freely. Helena, Ar kansas. There has not been enough rain to lay the dust since the 22d of August, and none at all the past two weeks. Hill crops are drying up. Cot ton is opening rapidly, and except in low lands is nearly all open. Memphis, Tenn. The weather has been hot and dry all the week; no rain since Septem ber 10. The drought has caused cotton to open rapidly and to shed forms and small bolls on uplands. The outlook in bottoms and for late cotton has improved Dallas, Texas. The weather has been dry all the week. Many sections of the btate have had equinoctial rains, Weatner Forecasts. V Thft following are the weather fore casts tor to-day: " - For North Carolina; Local showers, variable winds, stationary; temperature except in extreme southern portion warmer. -; . - '..r .- r For South Carolina, Georgia, Eastern Florida, local showers, easterly winds, stationary temperature. which seem to have done no harm ex cept interrupting picking. Despite the increased acreage ot six to seven per cent., I adhere to my estimate of the cotton crop ot the state ot lexas, at fifteen to twenty per cent, less than that of last year inclining towards the lat ter figure. In many spots throughout the State, not confined to any particular districts, the corn crop is a very poor one amounting to not more than one half of an average yield. In precisely these identical spots, the cotton crop is likewise very poor both resulting from the same cause deficient moisture, and consequent stunted growth and lmper iect development. Blind Tom. . Notwithstanding the inclemency of the weather a large audience gathered at the Opera House last evening to see and hear the renowned and wonderful Blind Tom" and his perjprmance. The evening's entertainment was opened by his announcement and ren dition of several selections from some of the most noted composers, and fol lowed by descriptions, recitations, ori ginal songs - and many imitations The most wonderful part of the enter tainment was the exhibit of his powers of reproducing or imitating any piano music that he hears, which was shown by Installing on some person in the au dience to play a piece of music that he had never heard. This call was respond ed to by Prof. I ML Greenewald, and. "Tom" reproduced it almost perfectly. Tom was heartily applauded and encored several times, which showed well that the entertainment was much appreciated and enjoyed by the audience. . yesterday's "Weatner. The - records of - the Weather Bu reau give the following report of the range of temperature, etcV yesterday. At 8 a. m., 70; 8 p. m 71; maximum temperature, 73; minimum, 66; pre vailing wind, south. Total rainfall .93.' V Mr. J; T. Gilbert, employed in this State and South Carolina in the interest of theYoung Men's Christian Associa tion's National paper, the Young Men's Era, is visiting our city. , We trust the friends of the Association work will give him a hearty welcome as ;, he presents the claims of this worthy object. - ; . !U GREAT IS CHARLOTTE. An Artillery Company Organised to Form i '7 '- Part of the Naval Beserve of the United States. .- . . ' :- The citizens of Charlotte have taken the ! initiative for North Carolina Jn a matter that some of the seaport . towns of the State might just as well have un dertaken months ago, and has organized an artillery company that will form part of the naval militia of the States, as au thorized by act of the last Congress, for the purpose of ; training men in the handling of heavy guns now used on war-ships of the U. S. Navy. Such companies have, been formed in some of the coast towns of New England and there was some talk last winter of the formation of a company at Newberff" and one at Southport in this State; but nothing came of it in either-instance, and the city of Charlotte now bears the distinguished honor of haying the only artillery company in the State and can besides brag of being the only inland town in the country from Maine to the Rio Grande that can boast of a naval militia. Under the act of Congress referred to, one or more vessels of the Navy will be fitted as training ships, and for a few weeks each summer will be stationed at towns where such companies have been formed, receive them on board, and give the men careful instruction in all the duties of the service. How they will manage to get one of these war-ships to Charlotte is hard to conceive; but this is a problem for -the Navy Department to struggle with, and it will doubtless be readily solved, and in a manner' satisfactory to all concerned. It was, perhaps, never contemplated by the framers of " the law that inland towns would furnish companies for the naval reserve, but the fact that Char lotte, hundreds of miles from the ocean, has done so, is suggestive. It is the country boy, who has never seen a sheet of water broader than his neighbor's mill-pond whose mind is filled with the "poetry of the sea" its grandeur and beauty; whose first declamatory ex ercise was "The Boy Stood on the Burning Deck," and who can tell you all about Nelson at Trafalgar and Perrys victory on Lake Champlain, who would make almost any reasonable sacrifice of time and money to have it to say that he had trodden the deck of a real war ship and helped to load and fire the big guns, besides being initiated into the art of "splicing the main brace," and sundry. other tricks and devices peculiar to life on ship-board. And af ter all a modern war-ship with its pon derous breech-loaders, its dynamite guns, its intricate machinery, would be as great an object of wonder and amaze ment to an ordinary salt-water sailor, as to the greenest country boy living. At all events, Charlotte has "taken the cake," and a newspaper paragraph intorms the public that Adjutant Gen eral Glenn, of the N. C State Guard, has returned to Raleigh from Washing ton, D. C where he made arrangements for the equipment ot the Charlotte ar tillery as a company of the naval re serve. It will be armed with Gatling guns, and the small arms will be the Hdtchkiss rifle as used in the navy. The company will have seventy-five officers and enlisted men. It is commanded by Stuart W. Cramer, a graduate of the Naval Academy. SUPERIOR COURT. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Judge Soykin Presiding Cases Tried Yes- -?;'y;:"r,.: - terday. .: - -7 . Superior Court for New Hanover County, Judge Boykin presiding, con vened yesterday for the trial of civil cases only. . ';-v'-.;:r ;' - The following cases were, disposed of viz: 'C:'-"--r'- ' . Bank of New Hanover vs. A. A. Wil lardand M. H. Willard. Decree. W. P. Oldham & Co. vs. George Bell. Non-suit. " - Irwin Wafker vs. New Hanover Transit Co. Non-suit. Appeal r to Supreme Court. : Iredell Meares counsel for plaintiff; Junius Davisfor defendant. Cases set for to-day are the following: State vs. Jos. Bolton. O. H. Allen, solicitor; M. Bellamy for defendant. Jas. W. Tufts vs. A. F.Lucas. Strange and Rotmtree for plaintiff; J. D. Bella my, Jr., tor defendant. ,. Amanda Everett vs. the Wilmington Savings and Trust Co. Manning and Russell for plaintiff; Martin and J. Davis for defendant. BY RIVER AND RAIL. Beoeipta of Naval Stores - and Cotton Yesterday. Wilmington, Columbia & Augusta R. R. 680 bales cotton. Cape Fear & Yadkin Valley R. R. 864 bales cotton, 52 casks spirits tur pentine, 62 bbls. rosin, 53 bbls. tar. Wilmington & Weldon R. R 314 bales cotton, 3 casks spirits turpen tine, 52 bbls tar, 20 bbls. crude tur pentine. Carolina Central R.R. 527 bales cotton, 3 casks spirits turpentine, 59 bbls. rosin. . - " Steamer Cape Fear 30 bales' cotton, 60 casks spirits turpentine, .77 bbls. rosin, 41 bbls. tar, 9 bbls crude turpen tine. Total receipts Cotton, 2,415 bales; spirits turpentine, 108 casks; rosin, 198 bbls.; tar, 146 bbls; crude turpentine, 32 bbls. "We have sole control in this city of Gents' and Youths' Clothing, Manu factured by Strouse & Bros., of Hew York and Baltimore, acknowledged to he the best in the world. We have sole control of N. J. Schloss &Co., of Hew York, Boys' and Chil dren's Clothing. Received the Gold Medal at the Paris Exposition, We have sole control of R. TJnnlap & Co.'s Hats. Received the Gold Medal at the Paris Exposition for the best Hat in the world. We - have sole control of the Pearl Shirt, best $1.00 Shirt in the world. We keep the Best Goods only. Look at our line of Gents' Furnish ings and compare Prices with other houses. SUITS MALE TO 0EDEE. Take our goods to your homes and compare with other dealers. You will take ours every time. Assignment of Mr. Will Hunter. The Goldsboro Argus makes an nouncement of the failure of Mr. Will Hunter, proprietor of the Hotel Gre--ory in that place, and late of the Island Beach Hotel at the Hammocks. The Argus adds: He has made an assignment to Mr. John F. Southerland for the benefit of his creditors. For two vears Mr. Hun ter has been more or less dissatisfied with the hotel incumbrances he had en tailed upon himself here by the merging of the Arlington-Gregory, but his con tracts were such that he could not re lieve himself until finally he made the above transfer in order to get to a basis of certainty. He hopes to pay his en tire indebtedness in full. DIED, LOVE In this city, yesterday afternoon, at four o'clock, SALLIE C LOVE, only daughter of Dr. and Mrs. W. J. Love. Funeral -Wednesday morning at half-past ten o'clock, from St. James' Church, thence to Oakdale Cemetery. Friends and acquaintances are invited to attend. (Review copy.) NEW ADVERTISTEMENT Rev. Thos. Dixon. S. H. Fishlilak sep272t Zing ClotMer. IF YOU ARE LOOKING For a Safe and Sellable Place to Trade go to Brown & Roddick Lecture on "Fools." CHAMPIONS OF THE DIAMOND. Probable Pennant Winners in the Great Base Ball Associations. The end of this week will decide the hardly fought championship in the two great base ball associations. All indi cations point to Chicago as the winner of the pennant in the National League, although Boston is pushing her closely for the honor. In the American Asso ciation Boston will win m all probability, and St. Louis, hitherto the invincible champions, will have to content herself with second place. The record given below will likely remain unchanged in the important positions : NATIONAL LEAGUE. Won. Lost, Played. PerCt. Chicago 81 48 129 .628 Boston 80 50 130 .615 New York. ..70 54 124 .565 Philadelphia. 67 63 130 .515 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Won. Lost. Played. Per Ct. Boston. .....89 St. Louis. . . .82 Baltimore. ..68 Athletic 69 39 48: 60 63 128 ISO 128 132 .695 .631 .531 .523 The Peanut Crop. : A leading commission house of Nor folk has issued a circular, based on in formation received; from its jcorrespon- dehts, from which the following extract is made: ''"". .J;'" -;v -r. "The Deanut situation, as - to the growing crop, can be briefly summed up in the following statement: that with no disaster to happen to it from now, it will be about half as large as last year's,. which we will also consider putting it at three-auarters of an average crop, lnis, we believe, warrants us in hoping for better prices than we have been having. .We do not expect these higher prices, though, tux the nrst smpments oi aamp and inferior stock are over, nor till the distributing merchants throughout the country can be brought to realize the crop is a short one. These causes may for a time lower prices, but we do not think they will remain down long." OPERA HOUSE, TUESDAY, SEPT. 29TH. Tickets at Yaws' and Y. M. C A. Rooms. sepS4 3t ... thsattn - DBTJG CLERK "WANTED. WANTED, A REGISTERED DRUG CLERK. Must be sober, competent and steady. M. E. ROBINSON & BRO., Goldsboro, N. C sep29 4t - " - - Additions Weekly TO OUR FINE STOCK OF READY-MADE oXiOTsnnsfG- Make it desirable for those wishing the latest styles. Our line of ' J . SUITINGS and PANTS S1UFFS frsm the Manufacturers of England and Scotland is unsurpassed. ; . - - lYIunson Co., Merchant Tailors and Outfitters, sep 29 tf Illat $2.50 Will Bay. THE BEST Our buyer is now in N ew York and NEW GOODS are constantly ar riving. . Black and Colored SILKS AND VELVETS. Dress Fabrics of every description-in all the new shades. Woolen Dress Goods IN- Checks, Stripes, Plaids, AND'OTHER NOVEL DESIGNS. We confidently assert that we have never before shown a stock of goods superior to this Fall's offer ings. ' : IN CARPETS we show the most complete line in this section. Our stock comprises over 200 patterns. - . BROWN & RODDICK. ' sep20 tf - "''J: , Dongola Button Boot IN THE STATE For Toadies' Wear, AT- Geo. R. French & Sons. aep 87 tf -J, ... j ''T-r 't . '. l it ; . J just jairiveu. A a. nu. TTTTTTT T : !WTrWT 2UU September MULLETS. C SSUW ID. rSDIS septemDer noueo, uugc uh lU fat. sep 26 tf Finest of the season, SAM'L BEAR, Ss lS Market St. B. F. Krupp AS : TAKEN CHARGE OF PETEKsUW BROS'. PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY, over Hnsie & Drapers, and will devote his best efforts to making An. Pirtnmi fiw llil rHtnmttl. . T Konr rooms over the Uallery lor rent at a dotus. H Water rent fiee. sep 23 tf
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 29, 1891, edition 1
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