By WILLIAM H. BERNARD. PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT MONDAYS . ATS OF StmsCKirpoO, M AOTAMCX ' s5eJMpd" " Three Months, ' "" f S One Month, " " ; H"; . 0 T" ijcity subscriber, delivered in fiy SfSs re not authorized to collect for more than three Entered at the Post Office at Wilmington. N C ii ncr OUTLINES. There was no truth 'in the reported loss of the steamer City of Rome. The Treasury Department at Wash ington calls attention to complaints of representatives ot the British ' Govern ment in regard to fires on cotton-laden ships, and suggests measures to lessen the evil. In Lexington county," S. C., an escaped convict went to the house of a woman who had been a- witness againt him at the trial, and cut her ears off. r A fly-wheel burst at a cotton mill in Manchester, N. H, wrecking the building; eleven girls were badly in jured, the engineer war killed; lone of the girls died that was injured, and other deaths are expected. - A con ference of the leading members of the Demcratic party in North. Carolina was held in Raleigh last night; Allian ce speakers disclaimed the Third party movement and great unanimity pre vailed; it was urged that the State Com mittee recommend adoption of the platform of the last campaign. Gen. W. H. F. Lee, second son of Gen. R. E. Lee, died yesterday aged 54 years. Count Arco-Valley, Minister to the United States from Germany, died. under a surgical operation at Berlin. Vessels arriving at New York from coastwise ports encountered awful gales. - New York markets: Money easy at 34 per cent., dosing offered at 3 per cent.; cotton quiet; middling up lands cents;': middling Orleans 3 15-16 cents: Southern flour auiet and steady; wheatnrmer and -moderately 'ac tive; No. a red $1 05 V in store and at elevator; corn '., weaker and moderately active; No, 2, 61J62c at elevator and 62 afloat; rosin easy; strained, common to good $1 32 1 37K; spirits turpentine auiet and easy at 3Y3 cents. It is said that Gen. B. F. Butler devotes five days of the week to hard work on. his autobiography. This looks like making a desperate attempt at his life. . . The assessed valuation of proper ty in the State of Florida, has in creased, according to the census, from $30,938,309 in 1880, to $76,- 936,928. ' . There are in the British army 2,050 Generals, active and honorary, but when it comes to real and hon orary Colonels Kentucky can get away with several British armies. California seems to have the shakes yet judging from the way those earthquakes are meandering around; but she hasn't got 'embalf as bad as the Iowa, Ohio and New York Republicans. ; A postoffice clerk in New York arrested for robbing the mails, at tributes his downfall to betting :sm , T-r t. - i norse races, ne wasn t a goou judge of horseflesh and put up his cash too often on the wrong-horse. A Boston man triedto steal George Washington's tomb, but as it was too" heavy to carry he had to content himself with knocking off a hunk which is now on exhibition in a Bos ton museum. He didn't find George's hatchet lying around :or he would have gotten that, too. And now the Democrats of Ohio ought to get up and "holler." Jom Reed, the ex-Czar, is going to help slaughter McKinley by making speeches for him. We don't write this in a czarcastic vein but as a matter of deliberate judgment. He will not tell the Buckeye people how many books he bought and brought back with him from Europe, duty tree by courtesy. In Chicago the blood of the cattle slaughtered in the abattoirs is util ized in the manufacture of buttons. The idea was introduced some years ago by a Hebrew named Hirsch, who has become rich by it, and don't care a button how much tariff , Mr. McKinley; puts on pearl buttons. Earrings, belt clasps, . combs, and numerous other things are also made out of it. v. Texas has an alien landJaw under which aliens cannot become the owners of land in ' that State. In a recent case where the State brought suit to escheat the lands of an alien named Mallison. without malice on his 'part, Judge Goodrich decided that the law was void and ofTno effect, because of errors in "the cap tion of the bill, and because it is in violation of - existing treaties and conventions with other powers. The case was appealed to the" Supreme Court. jl JtlJIli TOL. XLIX.-NO. 21. Some 'of the McKinley organs "have discovered that thre aire more sheep in Ohio now than at any time since 1885, which is somewhat re markable considering that under the McKinley tariff Ohio wool is from two to three cents a pound lower than it was last year. Alas, we fear the sheep liar is coming into, the campaign as an auxiliary to the tin plate liar. " Mr. Ingalls, "the statesman out of a job," is of the opinion that "Mr. Blaine is not among the Presidential possibilities." But the anxious Re publicans would be under more ob ligations to him if he-would inform them what Republican t's "among the Presidential possibilities," for that's the man they are hunting for and the man they are very anxious to find. ' Carl Schurz says more than 185,- 000 men born in Germany served in the Union armies in the war between the States. This is doubtless true. If it had not been for the foreign soldiers which filled the ranks of the Union army, that "discussion" might have ended differently. Mr. John D. Rockefeller, who makes annually more clear cash than" any man in America and is worth a. couple - hundred millions, has a farm in Ohio where he worked all last summer like any other farm hand, in the hopesto subjugate his rebellious liver. - Much apprehension is felt lor the safety of Lieut. Russell and party, who were sent out by the bmithsonian In stitute to explore Mount St. Ehas. Russell and his men were to have met the revenue-cutter Corwin at Yakett, Sept. tst, but when the Corwin went th,re Russell did not appear and a searching party sent out 'failed to find any trace of him. . Always Clean and Newsy. Elizabeth City Carolinian. The Wilmington Star closed its 48th semi-annual volume and twenty-fourth year on the 22nd ult. It is the oldest daily newspaper in the State; and always clean and newsy. It is one of the ex changes we never fail to open and glance over. ' As Good aa Any Brer Published. Hillsboro Observer. . The Wilmington Star was twenty- four years old Sept. 22d. The Star is not only the oldest daily and as good - ill a -1 as any paper ever puousnea in me State, but it is the only morning paper, we suppose, that has been a financial success. Long may it prosper. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. iUNSON & Co. Opening to-day. H. W. Maybaum & Co. Pocket lamp Brown & RoDDicK-Fine dress goods. PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS Pertinent Paragraphs Pertaining Princi pally to People and Pointedly Printed. Mr. D. L. Farnor- of Kenans- ville, Duplin county, is fn the city. - Mrs. J. W. Hudler, of White- ville, is wisiting friends in the city. Messrs. H. S. McCollum and WMcCollum,were in our city yester day, at The Orton. ' Mr. L. Herman and Mr. C. T. Wilson, of the Wilson Advance, are in the city; registered at The Orton. Mr. A. P. Cardwell and his daughters. Misses Bettie, Fannie and Chattie, of Lumberton, N. C., were among the arrivals yesterday. Messrs. J. W. Clark, R. M. Nimocks, H. I. McDuffie and G. M. Rose, all of Fayetteville, were in the city yesterday, registered at The Orton. Dr. Carmichael, of the U. S. Marine Hospital Service, returned yes terday with his wife from a summer so journ in the Northern States and Canada. Messrs. R. A. Simmons, G. W. Etter, H. . J. Simmons, C. L. ,Breiden- stein, Philadelphia; T. A. Redder, Balti more, F. Y. Cbiyerous, were among the arrivals at The Purcell yesterday. Mr. Charles W. Williams, the .clever and efficient clerk at the Purcell leaves this, morning for Cleveland Springs and other Western North Carolina Summer resorts for a three weeks vacation. ;. .' . . -Miss .K. K. Pemberton, Louisa, Va.; Messrs. J." D, Wair, North State, Neb.; J. J. Phillips, Cincinnati; G. M, Howell, C. C Rabbs, M. B. Ruggles, W H. Farmer, New York; J. W. Heard, J. H. Sturnger; Baltimore, were among the arrivals at The Orton yesterday; The following were among the arrivals in our city yesterday: A. P. Edwards, Gaddy; F.' J. Powers, E. M Johnson, Willardr W. B. Murrill, Jack sonville; J. F. , Foy. Scott's Hill; M. w, Teachey, Teachey; F: M.. Smith, Fair Bluff; W. F. P6llen Wallace; J, M.' Smith, Smith's Mills; T. B. Galloway, Goldsbdro; Miss J. Scott, Oxford; M, E. Hobbs, Lumberton; Miss Hamer, Miss Kate Hamer, G. W. Habel, Raleigh. WILMINGTON, LOCAL DOTS. Items of Interest Gathered Here and. There md Briefly Note'd. - No City CoTirt yesterday. v , No cases for, trial in" the City Court yesterday. '- The Norwegian barque Agatha arrived at South port quarantine station yesterday. The . British steamship JRi Tinto is discharging cargo of kainite at the foot of Ann street. - - A new electric light pole to replace the old one was. put up yester day at the foot of Princess street. , - The . fire in the hold of the British steamship Virginia last Mon day was it seems in the lower tier of bales. Only some 75 or 80 of these were burned. Mr. Sol. Bear is adding very much to the appearance cf his stores on Market street by a liberal application of paint and a display of good taste in the selection of colors. The steamer D. Murchson has been chartered for an excursion from Fayetteville to Wilmington, leaving Fay etteville Saturday at 8 o'clock in the evening and Wilmington at 10 o'clock Sunday night. Nothing was done yesterday at the meeting of the Board of County Commissioners, in regard to awarding contracts for the construction of the new court house, The meeting ad journed subject to the call of the chair man of the Board. "The Defects, and Evil Effects of the Modern So-called Evangelistic System," will be the subject of the ser mon on next Sunday at 11 a. m., in the English services in the Lutheran Church. The sermon will be preached by; the pastor, Rev. F. WV E. ' Peschau. D. D. The C. F. & Y. V. R. R. will sell round-trip tickets on account of the land sale at Greensboro of the Steel and Iron Company. Tickets on sale No vember 3rd and 4th. with extreme limit to November 7th. The rate from Wil mington is $7.55; Fayetteville, $5.00; Maxton, $6.30; Sanford, $3.40; Winston Salem. $1.65. Yesterday was the first day since the beginning of the Rev. Sam Jones' meetings at the Tabernacle that there has been any noticeable increase in the number of strangers on the streets. Quite a crowd came on an excursion from Onslow county and there were many visitors from along the line of the Wilmington & Weldon Railroad. 'An Actor's Good. Fortune. R. D. MacLean, who played in Wil mington with Marie Prescott, left his company last week in Topeka to go to his home near Shepherdstown, W. Va., where his father had just died. Mac Lean was the maiden name of the tragedian's mother, which be adopted for the stage. His real name is R. D. Shepherd. His father, Henry Shepherd, was one of the social lights of New Or leans, a man worth several millions, the owner of the finest block on Canal street of that -city, thelargest cotton press in the South, estimated at a quar ter of a million, and the inheritor of an old estate of the Shepherd family in Jefferson county, W. Va. He was acknowledged to be one of the most shrewd and brainy men known in New Orleans. He leaves his superb estate in Virginia and a million of dollars to his son, R. D. MacLean, whose friends ex pect he will leave the stage alter a few months, as the care of such a property will be incompatible with stage lite. ' COTTON FACTS AND FIGURES. Net receipts of cotton at all U. S. ports yesterday 48,459 bales. Spot cotton quiet at New York; sales of middling"uplands at b cents. Middling cotton quoted here at 8c per pound; the same date last year9c, Cotton receipts yesterday at Wil mington, 1,980 bales; the same date last year, 2,159 bales. , ' ( Futures in New York yesterday closed quiet; October 8.168.20; No- vember 8.338.34; January 8.688.69. Cotton Begion Bulletin. " s ' , The rainfall in the cotton region was principally in the Charleston and Wil mington districts. In the Wilmington district Goldsboro reported 1.42 inches, Florence .90, Weldon .60, Wilmington .S6,'Newbern,".35, Raleigh '.32, Cheraw .25 arid Wadesboro .08. There was no rain at Charlotte or Lumberton. The temperature was higher the maximum averaging for the district 70 degrees and the minimum 56. Weather Forecasts. . ' The following are the forecasts for to day:.'. " - ;" For Virginia. North Carolina ; and South Carolina, fair till Sunday, slightly cooler except stationary temperature on South Carolina coast ; northwesterly winds. ''r " ' " ' ' v ' ' -- For Georgia, fair till Saturday; slight ly cooler in the North, stationary temp erature in the South; northerly winds. NB N. C, FRIDAY, OGTQBER 16, 1891. .THEJABERNACLE MEETINGS INTEREST CONTINUES TO INCREASE WITH LARGE ATTENDANCE.' Rev. Sam Jones' Sermon on Waiting Christians" Pungent Points Made by the Preacher in His Discourse. : Interest in the meetings at the Taber nacle eems to be increasing and yester day morning a very large and attentive audience assembled, and, Mr. Jones seemed to get right hold of them and sway them at bis will. His sermon was a powerful appeal to Christians to come up to the full measure . ot their duty. He poured hot shot into the ranks and few there were who did not feel the j sting, and when at the close of the ser mon he gave an invitation . to church memberswho felt that they had failed to do all they as Christians should have j done, and were resolved that from that hour they would be be better church members and Christians to give him their hand, hundreds responded. Mr. Jones said: "In the absence of a Bible I will quote an expression which seems to be in the form of a question, followed by a declaration made by David the Psalmist: 'What wait I for? My hope is in God." "What wait for?' It seems like David had taken his eye off of his fami ly, his nation, his governmental affairs, and all mankind, and had been looking at himself. Did you ever try to look at yourself? It's a very-good thing to do sometimes. I believe the best sermon you ever heard was when there was . no body present but yourself .and the: preacher. . Have . you , ever been i.to church when you forgot that there was, anybody else listening, and the preacher was talking to nobody but you ? A man can be lost in a crowd. The' raost lonesome feeling I ever experienced was walking on . Broadway 'with the thous ands of people hurrying to and fro. . To get the best results from a sermon you must be by yourself must lose sight of the fact that anybody is touching you' on the right or the left, and as you .- lis ten look at' yourself. People in this world want everything else good that is going right now but religion they'll get that later. They 'are willing 'f hear the best ' Sermon in the world and give it away to somebody else. When they get as liberal with' their money as they are with their . religion. Christians and poor people will float on a sea of financial prosperity; but they hold on to the kelter and give away the gospel. What wait I for? There are two classes I want to ask that question, deep'down in your souls; one is church members who know they ought to1 do better, and know they could do better, but haven't done' as good as they could have done, and those who are hot church members who know they ought to do better, know -they could, do better and don't do as good a.s they know they could do. I think these two classes will take in everybody,- here I expect it might take some of these preachers off the stand here; don't you, Bro. Creasy? "Now in all kindness and love, for I have no malice in my heart toward any body, I tell you Christians that you know you could do better; but you haven't. The question is, what are you waiting for? In the business world folks sometimes settle down and wait for something to turn up; they wait for the iron to get hot and it's getting colder all the time; they wait on the banks of the river because they don't see a good safe place to wade throifgh. L like the fellow who says, I'm tired waiting for something to turn up,' and gets under things and turns 'em up; who says, 'I'm tired waiting for the iron to heat; I'll, pound on it until it is hot; I'm tired looking for a safe place to cross the stream,' and leaping into the current strikes out and swims to the other side. Let me tell you, the cause of your fail ure to be where God wants you to be is directly, traceable deep down in your hearts and lives to a want of faith, un belief in God's word. . We preachers sometimes break down at this same point; but'with an omnipotent, abiding, aggressive ' faith in God there is no ocean of trial we cannot cross and ho difficulties we cannot meet and conquer. "What wait I for?' Sister, brother, can you be better? You"' answer, "yes, Then when are you going to dp better? Pharaoh said, 'to-morrow,' and the last we heard of him he was at the bottom of the sea. The reasons given by sin ners for : procrastination, are exactly the same that church members give. There is not an old sinner in town but what intends to repenti' but when? ; ; Don't know.- If they ever intend to why don't they start now? - I believe-, everything in the universe . has a' beginning but God, and. I never try. to understand the beginning of infinity. I just don't think about h; because I know I" can't understand it. ts 5 a prof und . mystery to me to look at the lives of some of the church members; ; I can't' understand some folks. You are just as good to day as you proposeto Se. If I am living ten-one . hundred . years from r now,: I -rdon't know of a thing I'd be doing, ot a sin I be giving up then that I ain't do ing or giving up nowj A preachet-who ain't doing his best ain't doing anything Star to get to heaven. If I had a- dozen men hired and half of them shirked the work and tried to, shove . it off on the other sixn'd say look heie, I've got work for twelve men, and if you ' ain't going to do your part and want to dead-, beat yoa way arid get youf money, you get out and I'll get men who will do it and in every church you preachers know that half the members are doing all the work and the rest are dead-beats. If you don't look out some of you preach ers are going to4 get discharged too! Methodist preachers I. mean. . What wait . I for ?' What hinders -me, what fearful delusion of the devil keeps me asleep to' the great issues of life and death? You hear the little preacher on a country circuit say, just wait till-1 get a big city church and then I. am going to boom!" Henry Johnston of Montgomery, he's a sine qua non E pluribus unum anything you might call him he said to me 'I like your style of preaching Bro. Jones; I'm glad you don't preach like I 'do. If you did it would land you right down on Pine Level Circuit where it's landed mev A preacher's preaching lands him where he belongs, and a Christian's lands him where he belongs. A little fellow says, 'When I get Grace Church, Wilmington, I'm goin'- to lum ber !' Bless your soul, you've got to lumber before you get it ! Hear a man say "I'm goin' to be good when I get to heaven.' -You've got to be good before you get there, and the fact that you are there is proof that you was good before you went there... If a man owes a debt and says he intends to pay it and don't pay it, he. goes down in public credit ; if a man's roof .leaks he don't sit still and let the-rain pour in on 'him but goes to work and fixes it; if a man comes hqme and sees wife and children shivering around an empty grate, he don't sit down and expect them to get warm, he goes and orders coal. You've got sense enough about everything else but - religion, and our hopes leak, our zeal has grown cold, and our fidelity to God: has been protested at every bank of heaven,, and we are going along say ing 'we are going to do better.' "Did you ever try to get to an under standing with yourself? I attended the golden wedding of an old couple in Georgia who were known to have been singularly happy 'in their wedded life. I said to the old "man, tell me the secret of your happy, married life that I may give it to the world. He said, the morning after, the night we were married I said to my wife before we got up, there are two chairs and two sets of clothes; you get up and put on theones you want to wear the rest of our lives, and I'll put on the others. She put on the dress and I put on the pants and I've worn them ever since.' There's nothing, like a good understand ing. The best thing a man can do in religion is to come to an understanding with himself. Did you .ever ask -yourself . the question, can I do better? Oh, my countrymen! its this dilly-dally that's ruining us. If a man owes fifty, dollars, and thinks he's going to pay it, is able to pay it and don't pay it, he thinks he is honest but he ain't. I can shake some of these Methodist over a coffin and they'll hit the ground going a mile a minute! They're going to do better. You can do more with a few cases of typhoid fever in your congregation than you can with your preaching. Bro. . Creasy, haven't you been to see some of -your members when they were sick and they'd say, "Brer-r-r Creasy" got a sort of pious twist to it 'Brer-r-r Creasy if the good Lord ever lets me get up I'l do better;' and then, when they get up they say, 'a body will promise most any thing when they are sick as I was.' By and by! "What wait I for?' Bro. Creasy, ain't yoar biggest job to worry your mem bers into heaven? You have to tap 'em up-, toll 'em along; prod 'em just like a drove of fattened hogs going- to market. They want to wallow in every mud hole "In the road. You have to prod them by the theatre and 'suade them by the card table; they want to wallow in every Tiole of sin. They are like the old darkey whose mule refused to go; he tried every means and could not move him so he built a fire under him and J he just moved up four feet and burnt the buggy- up ! You. prod your members and they won't go ; when you build fire , under them they jiist move up a little and let the prayer meeting and family altar burn up.. ; "Whatever keeps a man-from doing what he ought .. to do , will keep him - out. of .heaven.; if it's greed iot: gold, : chasing ; after the world or anything elsesome say it's: timidity. hear a sister say she is too timid, she can't "testify ;for Christ in a meeting, But let her go down town to the dry goods stores, her eyes and hands and tongue are too busy to be timid. - A man will give money to everything else, but when the " church to which he. has plighted his vows wants any he hasn't got it. . . . . , . , "Men are more liberal than women If you ask a man worth $50,000.00 for a contribution he will giye you a hundred occasionally, but an rich! ; woman a widows-worth that much will give you WHOLE NO. 7,732 five dollars and call it the widow's m-i-t-e! And then you see-some old iron-gray whiskered devil come along, and they strike a trade, and she turns it all over to him and says, 'husband just manage my business for me and he manages it, too! t "I say airwomen are not stingy, but men are as a rule more liberal than women. But you say men have more money than ' women. That's true, but I'm only talking about what they have got, -. They always give the widow's mite well a-1 mite means moity; and moity means half, and she gave two halves which was all she had. "I hear you men out there say, 'you're giving it to "em right, Bro. Jones. But how about you, Bud ? Everything that applies to them applies to you. 'Come unto me all ye that labor;' d8n't that mean you? Have you done it? You are doing the same thing these people you've been criticizing have been doing all their lives procrastinating. And now the declaration 'My hope is in God David had as many difficul-, ties as we had, he halted - where we do, and stepped over the same ground we are waiking over, and he came to a time in his life where he said, 'nothing shall keep me back any longer, what wait I for ? My trust is in God.' And now going back on my own ex perience, I have been just where you are had the same temptations and trials; but my hope is in God. If it had been in . a preacher, or my wife, or children, or angels all these might have failed me; but with my , hope in God, He has never forsaken me. ' "A man is as strong as that to which he commits himself. If he starts across the ocean in a paper box he will soon go to the bottom; but if he commits himself to a grand old Cunarder he is as strong, and though the storms roll he can rest secure in the possession of the thought that he will never go down iin til the ship does. God help you to say 'The time past sufficeth to have wrought the will of the flesh,' and this morning I'll commit myself to God." Pungent Kits by the Preacher. "A church member who. is making his preacher .do what he ought to do is putting in a substitute, and I never did like that in the war. If I didn't have patriotism enough to fight for the love of my country, you could'nt pay me to do it." "If there's anything makes one mad, it's to see a whole church in the wagon with a little old preacher in the shafts trying to pull them to glory, and tap him up every few minutes, expecting him to make it in 2.10, and feeding him on wheat straw." ' "A brother too timid to hold fa"mily prayer! He can call hogs so as to be heard a mile; but he can't speak to God in a whisper. Affinities control a man sometimes." ' - "Most of us give not according to our means, but according to our meanness. If the Jews m the twilight of their privi leges gave one-tenth, by the grace of God I'll give one-half." "See a woman get in a six hundred dollar turn-out in a $100.50 silk dress and say, "children I'm going, to Mis sionary Society. I want the poor-heathen saved, and I'm going to carry my dime, I always pay my dues!" 0 BY RIVER AND RAIL. Beceipts of Naval Stores and Cottibn Yesterday. Wilmington. Columbia & Augusta R.R. 1,240 bales cotton, 12 casks spirits turpentine, 34 bbls. rosin, 30 bbls. tar. Wilmington & Weldon R. R. 106 bales cotton. 5 casks spirits turpen tine, 75 bbls. rosin, 22 bbls. tar, 3 bbls. crude turpentine. -. Carolina Central R. R. 350 bales cotton, 16 casks spirits turpentine, 101 bbls. rosin, 2 bb's. tar. , C. F. & Y. V. R. R. 236 bales cotton, 34 casks, spirits turpentine, 1 bbl. tar. Steamer Cape Fear 29 bales cotton, 54 casks spirits turpentine, 179 bbls. rosin, 24 bbls. tar. - - Steamer Maggie 9 bales cotton, 4 bbls. tar, 9 bbls. crude turpentine. ' ' Steamer Acme-5 , . bales cotton, 15 bbls. tar, 49 bbls. crude turpentine. . , . Sharpie Nancy. Ann 5 balers ,cotton, 39 bbls. tar. : ,t Total receipts Cotton, 1.980 bales; spirits turpentine, 121 casks; rosin, 389 bbls.; tar, 137 bbls.; crude turpentine, 61 bbis. ' ' A i oi n t m e m s WI 1 mlittoii DI M rlct .Founlt flnarierly Meeting. -.'Bruasw-ck mission, at.. New Hope Oru 17 and tg.' ' '' ' .Scott's HUI c'rcu't, at Union, Oct. 21 and -11. : . ., CUatoa circuit, at Jo'unson, Oct. 24 ant? 2j. "" ' . '' ' ' . Bden CTCU;:. at Wiodso- 0tt. 29 Co'iesburv' circuit, at Cokesbu.-y. Oct. SI a'od Nov.4. . ' Simpson Cicuu.'tLHaU's Nov. 2 and 3. Suuin liorl.'NoM. 5". . . ; E' us'w'ck circu't, at Z oo, Nov. 7 and S - . :-' ' . ' B'idea Street Stntoa.. Nov. 8, a n:;ir.. . - , , .. . . - VViiuevil'e rircuk, at Cerro Gorc'o Nov. 12 and TG. - Waora:naw c'-coit- at O d Dock. Nov. 14 and 15. 'Loca'. o -eocoe-s and trustees 'c.-eeps. pec:ed i have ti!e!-r'eportse(i .".'.''-i t . . F. P. SWIXDKLLr P; E. J - ttAllt W AUVfUtTISmG.; One Square One Day....... ti. ........... 1 00 , 1 wo UayS...... -. 179. Three Waek-. ..... 860 " ; One. Month....: 10 00 " M, Two Months 18 00 " " 'Three Months.... 94 00 Six Months ... 40 00 One Year.. . 60 00 ' tar Contract,. Advertisementa taken at proportion ately low rates. .:. , 's . .Ten lines'solid Nonpareil type make one square. " ' A ppointnifiiiK by (be BNltop of East - fjro.linJ, ICO I. Ort. IS. Si'inl.-v, Sis? -sfter Yriuiip; Ki'-i.b-;ii IChv. - Cb.:'.,i Cliur h Oct. IS. SiHiay. ?U- a Tri:t-.'WccHr3!e. -S. loan's. " - . . Oct. 20. Tcriav. South Mills, S. Join's. Oct. SI, Wed esilny. CurriiRcL Con t Hone. Oct. 3S. Friday. WckkI vilfo. Pcrtri?!saws Co: r.' 0-:t. Sund y. S'M nftrrTri ir.-jC; U-s. ouot?, .S. . ' - i'r-er .. Oct. 95 Su-fia-. 'i-M after Tri;tv. -Ha CriVc. S. Mirvs. Oct. S?. S-p-ci.-7. "oao-i.S-.,Mi-Vs. Nov. 1, Sunciy. ::r6 f. . T i ' ' . w.:odvi ;e, Eer- Coua"'". - .ce "a.-j ci " New -8, Tuesday. .foV--. ThojB2.'. Nov; h. "' ik' ?o.r v. A? t. Hot I a 'crts:. Nov. ?, ?w-o'2y, Jso xahoiv. Kov 8, fnidiv.' -4. a af e.- ')':'?.': :v, F.reaton, S 1 Pz-- ' Nov. 8. Ru-d.,v. 0.! t -r T-.:j::v. ! den rem, S. John Cvanffe'ta:. Nov. 10. Ti.r,d ,v-, H . ' ru. Ho'y THu:: y. Nov. 1'?. Tm'c;2--. P v ooo; j. vce f;w.-ii. Nov. Fr -day. Vi '-iis.o.i. Ciin-. H of u Advent. Fov. IS. So-o. ' .V'.i ai:?r ' rairv. !i j-iii-ion, S. M . Nov. 17. 'n-i;. . I tv'l. Nov. JO. T;i-r-t:y. Wa,--1 ;on Couiry, S. Luke's. Nov. 10r Tli (: Wii-h l-io . Coney. Roper's. Nov, SaH' da . ' o!i';mi;i. . Andrew's. Nov. 2-2, if.id:" v. nr r Ik-lore Advenr, cuppernong, S. D.iv; .'s Nov. 25, Wedne.suav. Pantego. Nov. -6, Thursday, Beau fa t County. S. James'. Nov. 29, Sunday, 1 in Advent, Hyde County, S. . George's. Nov. 30, Monday, Fairfie! f. Dec. 1, Tuesdav, Swan Quarter. Dec. 2, Wednesday, Wakelyville, S. John's. Dec 4, Friday, Stonewall. Dec 6, Sundav.idin Advent, Aurora, Chapel of the Cross. Dec. 9, Wednesdav. Durham's Creek, S. John's Dec. 11. Fnday. H.w Branch. Dec. 1-2. Saiurday. Vanceborn, S. Paul's. The Hoiy Communion atall morning services. Caiec'ni.-injj whenever prac icab'e. 1 lie oae-:ng 10 b- for Diocesan Missions unless otherwise announced. Vesrries wiit please be pre oared to meet the Bishop. DIED, DIVINE In this city, October 15th, HINTON G., son of John S. and Vina Divine, gged 4 years 8 months and 15 days. Funeral will take place from St. John's Church, Friday 10 a o. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. AGENTS CAN MAKK BIG MONEY. THE Seliabte Pocket Lamp, entirely new, sells at sight. Send for price list nd circular. rf W. MAYBAUM U(J., oct 16 It ,V 6th& Arch St. PhiIa..Pa. Opening To-day " AN INVOICE OF THE MONARCH SHIRTS, THE MOST POPULAR SHIRT IN MARKET. " A PERFECT FIT.-- THOSE DIAGONAL DRESS SUITS . . ARE. BEAUTIES. Patent; Elastic ; Seam Drawers. - BLACK STAINLESS HALF-HOSE. - CHILDREN'SSUITS AND EXTRA PANTS AT Wlunson $c Co.'s, GENTS' OUTFITTERS. -oct 16 tl 1-3 YOUR LIFE IS SPENT IN BED. 2. O f4 bX) W 3 O 24 t a C 525 if) CO o O 5 HEALTH. JS WELL AS COMFORT, DEMANDS A GOOD BED. : 4 The Unlucky Corner - OFFERS- . . : . HOLLAND HERRING, PINEAPPLE CHEESES, ' ' SWEITZER CHEESE, and an elegant . . .. . - . . :- . . -' . s n-DTi A HTLl U-r DTrmriiL' U un-rinmrin. X ' JL KJ X J. XUJLVf SOKICE,! : :' SO SWEET. S. W . SANDERS & CO. oct 15 tf ' " - ' - " . " ''' "-.fr ' ' ' ml TT. jIjl lj"r- namme, xne xiaixer. I I AS 1 1. S I KCLILl V B.1J A Pi ILK IAT K. Nil r B HATS. Youman's Block , Broadway Black Silk Hats. f-,-;..v.f. . ' - oct7tf - : - ' 86 North Front Street. " Choice Cecil County. Hay, Q.RAIN, MEAL, FLOUR. PEARL HQM1NY, and all kinds of Mixed Feed. Prompt Delivery. . . . , . JOHN S. McEAqHEKNi . ' ' ' " 211 Market street. '. Telephone No. S2. 1 oc!t8Sw " " ; Three Days 60 Foer Day.......... S 00 u "- Five Days... .i. r0 -One Week,.. 4 00 " Two Weeks....................... $60 M w - T"i - nr.-i a m o .1 t. O s I CD -

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