Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Oct. 30, 1891, edition 1 / Page 1
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. - - . f f ' ' " ' i ; : V fji: By WILLUn H. HEKWARB. . Fli BUSHED DAILY EXCEPT MONDA YS RATKS OP SWBSCBJPTIOO, IN ADVANCR One Year (by Mail), Postaife paid Six Months, " ' 8 5 Three Months, " ; , " . v a no 1 so , 50 unc Montn, ... r:. c..i n.1 . .... . " " ""kudcis, oeuyered in any part of the City, Twelve CsKTS-per week. Our City Agents reade t0 CUeCt -OT more tUan mfnth" Entered at the Post Office" at Wilmington. N C Second Class Mail Mattel. OUTLINES. Representatives of Southern colleges met in Charleston, S, C. yesterday to organize the Southern Monumental College Association to erect a monu ment to President Davis. Bill Fife, known as the Drummer Evangelist, has inaugurated a crusade against liquor sa loons in Danville, Va. The Chil ian government in its .reply to the de mand of the U. S. government for ex planation and reparation for the Valpa raiso outrage, refuses to accept the de mands and recognizes only the jurisdic tion and authority of the Chilian gov ernment to judge and punish the guilty. - Col. L- L. Polk made a speech at a farmers' meeting at Elizabeth City, N. C, favoring ahe third party scheme. Forest fires in Southern Indiana are assuming alarming dimensions. - -Dry weather in Alabama is causing all the streams to disappear, and there is much trouble in finding water. A monument to Gen. Wickham. was un veiled at Richmond, Va yesterdays A Farmers Alliance meeting at Buckport, Ark., broke up in a fight; nine men were killed and a number wounded. Advices from Japan re port great damage done by earthquakes all along the coast, with many fatalities. John Dillon was mobbed in Cork, Ireland, while driving to an anti-Par-nell meeting; during the fracas he re ceived a severe blow on the knee, The steamer Bierne was burned on the Mississippi river near Vicksburg : twelve -lives wqre lost,J New York markets: J jSConey easy at 3g 3 per cent., closing offered at 3; cotton quiet; middling uplands 8 cents; middling Orleans: 8 13-16 cents; South ern flour dull; wheat unsettled; clos ing easier and fairly active; No. 2 red $1 031 04 in store and at elevator; corn dull and weak; No. 2, 703 cents at elevator; rosin quiet and steady; strained, common to good, $1 32 1 33; spirits turpentine", quiet and steady at 3637 cents. The Republicans in Ohio say that Gov. Campbell uses too much brass band in his campaign. Perhaps he is offsetting McKinley's tin horns with brass horns. Ignatius Donnelly, of St. Paul, who sued somebody for $100,000 damages for-libel got a verdict for 1. He wasn't half as mad at the loss of 99,999 as Jie was at the esti mate the jury put upon his good name. A spontaneous combustion fire came pretty near doing serious dam age in the Pension offlce in Washing ton the other day. It started in a mass of waste. Raum should have more of his refrigerators around there to stuff his waste into. The rainfalls in England during the past month have been the heavi est and accompanied by the heaviest floods since 1875.. If some of those rain-persuaders in this country had made their experiments over there what a grand success they might have achieved. A contemporary asks, "are we a nation of liars ?" We wouldn't like to believe we are, but we very much fear that the stranger who formed his opinions from reading the speeches of Republican campaign orators and protection editors would come to the conclusion that we are. The "Lmpire btate Express on the New York Central road is said to be the fastest in the world. Its schedule time between New York city and Buffalo, four hundred and forty miles, is eight hours and forty minutes, its average speed being more than fifty-two miles an hour and as high for stretches as seventy miles. We never see announcements of balloon ascensions now that we don't expect to read of some one getting his bones all mashed up The last comes from Raleigh where a negro pot tansrled in the ropes and was carried some sixty feet and fell to the earth, receiving fatal injuries. That dangerous tom-foolery ought - to be prohibited by law. T.he registration of voters closed in the city of New York Saturday night. The lists show 261,917 names, only 16,753 more than were regis tered last year, and 24,653 less than in the Presidential election in 1888. The Advertiser, Ind., says the Re publicans concede Mr. Flower 50,000 majority ia New York city and 15, 000 in Brooklyn and other tvovns ad jacent, and these 65,000 they must overcome west of Harlem River to elect their man, Fassett. 1 HE VOL. XXIX. NO . 33. The wife of "Capt. .Lewis .A. York, ex-paymaster of the U." S. army, was very much surprised the other lay to see the announcement of her hus band's marria'ge to the New York w,idow of a Russian nobleman. This looked like rushin' matters to her, but she was. even more . surprised to hear that she herself was now a single woman, her husband having gotten a divorce on the sly out in Dakota last summer while she was recuperating and trying to keep-cool at a New Jersey summer resort. The United States authorities at Sioux Falls, South Dakota, have se cured a lot of indictments against the "officers and Managers of the Louisiana lottery for sending circu lars &c, into that section, and have sent a deputy marshal to arrest them, and among them, Gen. Beau- regard. Beauregard has nothing to do with sending circulars. His bus inesses simply to inspect the wheel and the drawings to see that there isn't any gouging in it. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS Munson & Co. To-day. Brown &RoDDiCK-Just received. Masonic Meeting St. John's Lodge. PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS Pertinent FaraRraplis Pertaining Princi pally to Peopla and Pointedly Printed. We regret to learn that Mr. H. A. Kure is sick and confined to his room. , Mr. W. M. Crookshank, of Greenville, S. C, was in the city yester day. Mr. A. M. Williams, of Phoenix, was busy with the wholesale dealers yesterday, Police officer Dickson Poisson, who has been threatened with fever, is improving. Mr. J. D. Currie, of Claikton, was replenishing his stock in the whole sale stores yesterday. Mr. L. R, Parson, a prominent peanut merchant of Onslow county, was in the city yesterday. Mr. J. R. Nolan, general mana ger ot tna seacoast Kanroaa, is m New York city on business. Messrs. O. B. Wightman, of Fay- etteville. and C. H. bmith, cf South- port, arrived in the city yesterday. Mr. Godfrey Hart, while open ing a box of tobacco yesterday at his store on Front street, got his hand bad ly rcashed. Mr. Louis H. Meares, formerly of this city, but now of Baltimore, M1., is in the city visiting his mother, Mrs. Gaston Meares. Messrs. F. S. Seeley, New York; M. Sish man, Atlanta; J. N. Roberts, Bal timore; h.. M. VVooten. .New Jersey, were among the .arrivals at the Purcell. Capt. John B. Hussey, well- known in North Carolina editorial cir cles, now staff correspondent of the Na tional Democrat, received a hearty wel come in the Star office last night. J. Sanbourn, Philadelphia; J.' W. Leary, M. J. O'Brien, J. W. Cone. H. Sandus, J no.- Pnillips, New York; R. Moore, Mbbile; C. H. Pierce, Louisville, were among the arrivals at The Orton yesterday. CottonBegion Bulletin. ' Frost was general throughout the cotton belt yesterday. No rain was re- . ported in any of the districts. The average minimeri temperature ranged from 32 degrees for the Wilmington district to 48 degrees for the district of Galveston. Local temperatures reported in the Wilmington district were 23 at Cheraw, Luraberton and Newbern, 30 at Wadesboro, 32 at Florence, Greensboro and Raleigh, 36 at Wilmington and 38 at Charlotte Weatlier Forecast. The following are the forecasts for to day: v " . For Virginia, North Carolina and i Smith Carolina, fair and warmer till Saturday; southerly winds. For Georgia, Alabama and Western Florida, fair till Saturday ; . slightly warmer, winds becoming easterly. Por Eastern Florida, generally fair ; stationary temperature, northeasterly winds. ' A Model Daily- Newbern Journal. That model daily, the Wilmington Morning Star, has entered, upon its twenty-fifth year. All through the past it has occuDied the front rank in -jour nalism, and to-day it appears without a -spot or blemish.. AlwayB Excellent. Norfolk. Va., Ledger. The Wilmington, N. C, STAR, which has alwavs been an excellent paper, en tered uDon the twentv-fifth year of its existence vesterdav. It is the oldest daily paper in North Carolina, and im proves in quality as it advances m years, WILMINGTON, N. C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1891. LOCAL DOTS.' Items of Interest" Gathered Here and There id -Briefly Noted. The Ladies Auxiliary of the . M. C. A., at their meeting -.held yesterday, resolved to open their bazaar the first week in December. Messrs. Williams & Murchison cl ieared yesterday the Norwegian barque Agatha for London, Eng., with 3,185 barrels of rosin, valued at $4,600. There was a killing frost in and arouTTd Wilmington yesterday, ac cording to the Weather Bureau, but" vegetation did not appear to be hard hit. The Giblem Lodge building, it is said, will not be rented hereafter or public balls and festivals, on ac-' count of complaints of residents in the neighborhood. If this delightful weather is reproduced during, the first week in December, then the Chairete-pantes will stand forth as a white stone in the annals of Wilmington's glories. All ladies interested in the suc cess of the festival lor the Second Regiment Band, next Tuesday evening, are requested to meet at Atlantic Engine Hall this afternoon at 3:30 o'clock, as business of great importance will be discussed by the executive com mittee. A fire alarm was sent in from box 49 yesterday afternoon about 3 o'clock. The roof of a frame dwelling on Sixth 'street between Nun and Church, owned by Mr. Alex. Sholar and occupied bv Mr. Wm. Walker, had caught from a spark, but was extin guished by Rev. R. C. Beaman with a bucket of water before the fire depart ment reached the spot. The damage was nominal. BY RIVER AND RAIL. Receipts ot Naval Stores and Cotton Yesterday. Wilmington, Columbia h Augusta RR. 723 bales cotton, 18 casks spirits turpentine, 39 bbls. rosin. Wilmington & Weldon R. R. 518 bales cotton, 5 casks spirits turpentine, 112 bbls. rosin, 34 bbls. tar. Carolina Central R. R. 153 bales cotton, 38 casks spirits turpentine, 92 bbls rosin, 35 bbls. tar, a C. F. & Y. V. R. R. 301 bales cotton, 42 casks spirits turpentine, 78 bbls. rosin. Steamer Cape Fear 12 bales cotton, 32 casks spirits turpentine. 128 bbls. rosin, 121 bbls. tar, . 25 bbls crude turpentine. Steamer Maggie 16 bales cotton. Stesmer Lisbon 5 bbls. rosin. Total receipts Cotton, 1,723 bales; spirits turpentine, 135 casks; rosin, 587 bbls.; tar, 190 bbls.; crude turpentine, 25 bbls. Most Ingenious Handiwork. J. W. Boskins, a greaser at the Caro lina Central depot, has constructed with his pocketknife, out of wood, a perfect fac simile of a Baldwin engine, with the tender, employed on that road. It is beautifully symmetrical in all its propor tions and contains every part, including all the wheels, trucks, drivers, air-brakes, bell, bell-cord, throttle, lever in short complete in every detail. It has been painted so as to make the semblance perfect of brass and iron and wood wherever thse ought to be. Even the oil can and all the tools usual in the engineer's cab are in place. This marvellous, piece of handiwork ought, by all means, to be sent to the Raleigh Exposition with its wooden track, cross ties and all. A ppolntiivcnts Wilmington District Fourth Quarterly meeting. Bladen Circuit, at Windsor, Oct. 29 and 30. Cokesbury circuit, at Cokesbury, Oct 31 and Nov. 1. Sampson circuit, at Hall's Nov. 2 and 3. South port, Nov. 5. . Brunswick circuit, at Zion, Nov. 7 and 8. Bladen Street Station, Nov. 8, a night. Whiteville circuit, at Cerro Gordo, Nov. 12 and 13. Waccamaw circuit, at Old Dock, Nov 14 and 15. - Market Streft, Nov. 18. Kenansville circuit, at Charity, Nov 19 and 20. Magnolia circuit, at Trinity, Nov. 21 and 22. Local preachers and trustees are ex pected to have their reports ready. F. D. Swindell, P. E. A Case to be Tried in the TJ. S. Court Next "Week. The Fayetteville Observer of yesterday says: United States Deputy Marshal E. P, Powers was here this week summoning other witnesses in the case of Mr. h.. t Moore and the defunct Peoples' Nation al Bank, which comes off in the Feder al Court at Wilmington next week. Ad ditional counsel has been employed,, so we are told, and new developments in this matter may be looked for in the near future. Fasten on the.euilty man or men" the cause of the failure of the People's Bank and make him or them pay the full penalty ot the law, is the Observer s motto. . IT X THE CHAIRETE-PANTES. The Great Boom Boometh With. Marvel lous Virility, and a Great Success Will Cap the Occasion. Everybody is catching on and the thing is as catching as kissing. Every business of any importance will be rep resented in the parade, and it wiU'he a remarkable showing of Wilmins:- on's various and varied " indus tries. It will be a wonderful revelation to the citizens themselves and well calculated to imbrue them with a more exalted pride of their city. The parade alone will ba well worth coming miles to behold, not to speak of the numerous attractions otherwise pro vided. All the committees have gone earn estly to work in their special lines Of duty. The Finance Committee was not idle yesterday and report favorable pro gress, l he various chairmen of com mittees met yesterday in the office of Capt. J. H. Sharp.and appointed several sub-committees as follows: Invitation Benj. Bell, R. J. Jones, Walker Taylor, C. H. Robinson, T. D. Meares, H. W. Collins, J. C. Chase, . J. Fowler. Lights and Transportation Thos. C. James. D. MacRae, Jr., H. A. Whiting, W. H. Green, J. R. Turrentine, F. W. Kerchncr, O. Hicks, M. J. Corbett, O. M. Fillyaw, W. R. Kenan. Speaking T. D. Meares, J. H. bharp, H. M. Emerson, Benjamin Bell, Roger Moore. Firemen's Parade M. Newman, H. L. Fennell, E. G. Parmele. Ed. Daniels. J. G. Oldenbuttle. W. C. VonGlahn. The selection of men for the commit tees has been made with an eye to the peculiar appropriateness of the individ ual for the place assigned him. There are no dead-heads, or block-heads in the play. Visitors may be assured of the biggest spectacle ever attempted within the confines of the Old North State, and every visitor will have frittered much of his life away fruitlessly unless he brings his wife and children and induces bis uncles, cousins, aunts and neighbors to convoy theirs thither. As the various spectacular glories are put in ship-shape, the Star wili impart the secret in the strictest confidence to its thousands of readers. Just wait for the Chairete-pantes. RIVER AND MARINE. A Bchooner's Encounter With a Gale OS Hatteras. A telegram from the Weather Bureau observer at South port, N. C, reported the arrival at that place yesterday after noon of the schooner Martin L. Smith, Capt. Robt. Marshall, from Charleston, S. C, bound to Baltimore, Maryland, loaded with phosphate rock. The captain reports that he encountered a severe northerly gale off Hatteras, last Tuesday morning, during which his ves sel sprung a leak and he was compell ed to turn back for a harbor. Capt. Marshall came up to the city in the evening and was seen at the office of Messrs. Geo. Harriss, Son & Co. The schooner will probably be brought up to the city to be recaulked. Steam Yacht Silver King, from New York for Jacksonville, Fla., put in here yesterday for water and coal. She is 60 feet long and 11 beam, and belongs to Mr. Hughes, of New York. She is commanded by Capt. E. H. Lewis, with Mr. N, B. Ezzell as chief engineer. 1 HIRD PARTY SCHEMtRS. Col.Folk's Political' Speech at a Farmer's Meeting at Elizabeth City, N. C. Norfolk. Va., October 29. Col. L L. Polk, President of the Farmers' Alliance, in speaking at Elizabeth City to-day, said in part: i "I have known farmers to leave their crops knee-high in grass to go to the court house and for hours sit in a hot room to hear a pot-house politician speak and tell them to stick to the party. They stick and the dance of death goes on. After election day," the speaker said, "all is darkness down here. What ot the night? The answer comes, 'all is well, plow on.' They talk about failures; the Alliance is as full of politics as an egg is full of meat. Yes, sir, we are into politics and- in there to stay. They talk about party. What is party ? It is a nice little collar with a chain. L don't care who is nominated I will vote as I please. Who has a pat ent right on politics ? It depended on whether either party recoenized the far mers as the balance of power whether there would be a third party. The people have arisen in their might and assert that they have the right to help rule this country, and they are going to do it Mr. Polk then advocated the sub-trea sury bill, and when he called lor pledges to support it nearly every hand went up, He said eighteen States were pledged to his scheme Mayor's Court. Officer J. L. White, before the Mayor's Court yesterday, charged' Abram Han kins, colored, with being drunk and very much down. It was calculated by the Court that. $5 and $2.35 costs was the proper amount of penance Larry Lane, a colored boy, arrested by the same officer and charged with disor derly conduct and fiahting. His sen tence was $5 fine and $3.15 costs, Net receipts of cotton at all the U, S. ports yesterday 53,815 bales Stair Or tWESTERN. NORTH CAROLINA- Baptist. Convention Beauty of the Coun try Bapid Growth of Asheville. Star Correspondence Thirty-five years ago the Baptists West of the Blue Ridge became tired of the difficulty presented by the mountains m meeting their brethren in the East, and formed the Western Baptist Conven tion. From feeble beginnings it- has. grown to be a body of considerable mag nitude, controlling twenty counties and numbering about 35,000 members. It had a spirited session this year in Waynesville, Haywood county, and dis cussed the usual topics of Missions, Ed ucation, Sunday Schools, &c. One whole day was given to Judson College, lo cated at Hendersonville, a mixed school, presided over by Dr. R. Hi Lewis, and prosperous but unfortunately in debt, like many other colleges iu their early history. It is an almost universal expres sion that the people of the South have to be taught that a college cannot live with out an endowment, They start a col- ege, erect buildings at heavy expense and expect the school to make money enough to pay the instructors and wipe out the debt contracted fot the build ings, which is a most unreasonable ex pectation as history has shown. Jud son College owes about $8.000 after a hard struggle it friends thought enough had been secured to pay it out of debt. Another enterprise that claimed the attention of the convention was the Asheville Baptist, edited by the Rev. J, A. Speight. The brethren rallied to the support of the paper and it is now believed that it will prosper. A very enterprising and successful school is one at Mars Hill, conducted Mr. T. M. Hufham, son of Dr. J. D. Huf ham, Still a third is taught by the Rev. Mr. Hoard, at Hamburg; I think in Transylvania county. All are doing well. Haywood is one of the most fertile counties in the State. I don't think I ever saw finer corn grown than now stands in the fields of its rich valleys, and this part of the State is certainly a magnificent country, while they tell me that the land and scenery is even finer as you go west. The land boom through this section has lulled somewhat, but the old proverb 'dirt cheap, must apply anywhere in this country, for land is worth from fifty to a hundred dollars an acre anywhere within four or five miles from the towns and villages of this section. About Asheville lots bring fabulous prices, and houses rent for a third more, if not twice as much as they do in Wilming ton. Asheville used to be a cheap place to live in, but the great influx of rich Northern people and the immense num her nf visitors winter and summer. especially in winter, make all food sup plies high. 1 was in Asheville a year ago, andean see marked improvement in many di rections. I should judge that there are at least a hundred fine residences going up there at this time they are building a fine City Hall and Market House ; the Baptists are building the largest church in the State, and the city has appropria ted $600,000 for street improvements that looks a little like progress. Th Kenilwotrh. said to be more magnificent than the Battery Park Hotel, is in full blast, and Mr. George Vanderbilt is spending several millions of dollars in the erection of his massive and superb palace, the like ot which is hardly to be seen in the whole country. Maior Ringbow s school has started off well, and the Female college is full to overflowing. Judging from the style of buildings they have erected for their public schools, and the character of their school commissioners, one of the most active ot whom is Dr. Millard, a native ot Sampson county, one might suppose that they have an excel lent system of public instruction in this the most progressive city of North Car olina. Asheville was a revelation to me. Years ago I knew it, but I had no con ception of the extent and splendor of its development. It is next to Bir mingham, Ala., of all the cities 1 have seen making the most rapid progress. DIDYMUS. How It Takes. ' Chairete-pantes ! Why, what does it mean ? was the great and momentous question that agitated the city from cen tre to circumference yesterday. One fellow. wanted to know if it had any thing to do with charity pants. Another observed that it had given him decided symptoms of lockjaw. But; the best yet comes from the wharf. A well known business man had ordered a somnolent colored man, who was loading a vessel for him, to "wake up and get a move on him," all in vain. His snail-like locomotion was not accelerated. Finally, losing patience, he caught the colored man by the scuff of the neck and stormed into his ear, "Why don't you move but, you blanked chairete-pantes, you?" The darkey moved and hadn't stopped at this writing last night. Chairete-pantes moves things; and please permit that to. linger in memo ries. Section 20, Revenue Law. The case of Perry C. Murray, charged with violating Section 20, Revenue Law ot 1891, in that Murray was soliciting "likenesses of the human face to be en larged," without obtaining license. Herbert McClammy, Esq., rep resented the defendant, and moved on the- usual affidavit being filed before Justice Bunting that the case be removed, who sent it to J ho. J. Fowler, Esq., for trial. Jus tice Fowler, after hearing the evidence, dismissed the case on -the grou-nd that defendant had not completed the of fence, as it was not shown that any likeness had been actually enlarged. WHOLE NO. 7,744 THE RICE MARKET. a. Promising Outlook for Factors and Farmers. Dan Talmage's Sons, in their circular of October 26, say of the rice market . Domestic During past two weeks there has been a marked enlargement of demand and fractional advances are being obtained on all styles. The as sortment is much improved. ' Relative values between the different grades are now fairly established and qualities can be had at prices to suit the wants of any class of trade from common to fancy. Reports from producing sections South are not as favorable as at the opening of the crop. The late of June plantings are yielding at the thresher and the pounder much less than the earlier cuttings, and although the crop will be a large one, yet it will lall far jshort of the amount required for consumption from now until the new crop is reached (September, 1892). Planters are in good shape financially, and have not been obliged to force sales and thus crowd and depress the market Un the contrary, appreciating somewhat the value of their product, they have adopted the wise policy of feeding the demand, without unduly pressing sales. Foreign Ail kinds are in active re quest, with Japan in the lead. Prices are reasonable and quality excellent. which accounts ror the large inquiry ,at the present time in the face of the new crop domestic. Advices from abroad uniformly point to a hardening of al ures in the near future, as repleted stocks can only be replenished at much higher cost. We would call attention to the fact that after the 1st of January the market al most invariably advances and planters who are able to hold until that time will secure prices which will undoubted ly more than recompense them for the cost of carrying. The market this year is under the planters control and by iu- diciously feeding the demand thev will be able, to get full value for their product until it is all marketed, which should be done at good prices. COTTON FACTS AND FIGURES. Cotton receipts yesterday 1,723 bales ; same date last year 2,338 bales. Spot -cotton quiet in New York, with middling quoted at 8 cents per pound. Sales of cotton yesterday in this market on a basis of 1c. for middling ; sales same date last year at 9Jc. Futures closed in New York yes terday quiet and steady. October 8.16 8.18; November 8.188.19; January 8.408.41. The Aiken county, S. C, Farmer's Alliance decided to reduce the acreage planted in cotton next yeat and to plant more grain, corn. pea3 and grasses and also to raise more meat. They will await the action of the Cotton Growers' Convention which meets in Atlanta soon to determine the acreage of cotton to the plough, The farmers were ad vised to hold back all the cotton they could to bring better prices. Yesterday's "W earner. The records of the Weather Bu reau give the following report of the range of temperature, etc., yesterday: At 8 a. m., 42"; 8 p. m., 51"; maximum temperature, 59; minimum, 36; aver age 48. Prevailing wind, east. Total rainfall .00. Killing frost this morning. The Fall term of the Superior Court of Bladen county is in session at Elizabethtown this week his Honor Judge Mclver on the bench and Mr. Frank McNeill solicitor. 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 Charlotte and way stations C C R R and West 7:20 am For Mt. Airy and way stations C F & Y V Railroad 10:00 a m For Wrightsville 9-15 a m For Southoort 8:lam For Clinton, Magnolia and Goldsboro 3:30 p m For points South W C & A R R 5:20 p m For Charlotte and wav stations 5:45 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 Fridays 6:00 am For Cape Fear River Tuesdays and Fridays 1:00 p m For Onslow County Mondays and Fridays 6.30 a m MAILS READY FOR DELIVERY (WHEN THE TRAINS ARE ON TIME). Charlotte, Monroe, Maxton and Cronly. . . . 8:30 a m All Points South, Train No. 78 9:30 a m From Southport , 6:00 p m From Clinton, Magnolia and Goldsboro. .,...11:45 a m From Wrightsville 7:00 pm From Mt. Airy and points C F & Y V R R 7:30 p m From North Train No. 23 7:30 pm From Charlotte and way stations 8.30 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 From Landings Cape Fear river, Tues. & Fri 8:00 a m From Onslow county, " - " 7:dO p m NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. OPERA HOUSE, Friday and Saturday, Oct. 30 & 31. MRS. GEN. TOM, THUMB. THE LILUPUTIA1T8, "THE RIVALS," THE ROYAL JAPS, IN THE MIKADO'S FETE DAL GRAND FAMILY MATINEE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31. Look out for the smallest and handsomest Coach and Pnnies in existence. Prices as usual. oct 25 4t su th fr sat . St. Join's Lotte No. 1, A. F. & A. M AN EMERGENT COMMUNICATION FOR work in the S cond Iiegree, will be held this E: J a A sOnisusl- V!t!nfr hmrhrn arc coraiauy luviicu iu kilcuu, - WM. M. POISSON, . oct 80.lt . Secretary. For Sale. - BUSINESS IN THE CITY REQUIRING MY personal attention, I will sell the stock of goods contained in my Store at Orton Plantation at cost. The rent o the Store is only twelve and a half dollars i -1 t . n nf nnfvla f mm Hi per montn, wiu ircc iibusiwiwuvuwi " - wharf to store. Tr is is a first cla.s opoortnnity for a aftM(4 frit if- " w t 29 2t HANS A. KURE. HATES OF ADVKKT1SIN&. One Square One Day.. . " Two Days " ' Three Days... " " Four Days " " Five Days " " One Week " " Two Weeks.. Three Waeks " " One Moati! " - Two Months " " Three Months. " Six Months ' " One Year t 1 oc 1 78 "2 M 8 00 8 M 4 00 6 60 5 50 10 OG 18 00 24 00 40 0C 60 Of 9Stf Contract Advertisements taken at prnportkit. ately tow rates. Ten lines solid Nonpareil type make one square. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. JUST RECEIVED AT- BROWN A RODDICK'S, SEC0UD FLOOR, A BEAUTIFUL LINE OF Chenille Portiere Curtains, y TABLE COVERS, &c, AN IMMENSE SACRIFICE SALE IN Drapery Silks during the remainder of this week' BROWH & RODDICK. 3fo. 9 Uorth Front Street. oct 29 tf ANOTABLE SACRIFICE THAT THE PEOPLE WILL LONG BEMBMB1B THAT IMMENSE STOCK OF DRY GOODS AT HEDHICK'S CORNER mast be so!d and suld quickly, hence a great sacrifice sale must occur. Wholesole and retail buyers should take advantage of th s o portunity right away, as it will not last long. This stock must no in the shortest possible time. The chance of a life. DRESS GOODS, PANTS CLOTHS, FANCY DRY GOODb, GENTS' FURNISHINGS, NOVELTIES, LACES, RIBBONS, Ac, . , most all go in this great sale for a positive sacrifice. Country Merchants shocld take advantage, of this sale. City shoppers should not mi-s it. A. D. BROWN, oct29tf Assignee for 1. J. Hedrick. TO-DAY WE OPEN NEW INVOICE OF OVERCOATS. CHILDBEK'S 5 TO 12 YEABS. MEN'S FROM 10.50 TO $25.00. HANDSOME BUSINESS SUITS. . -, ALL PRICES. Extra Pants, Assorted Sizes, New and Fashionable. NECKWEAR, DEESS SUITS. unson & Co., GENTS' OUTFITTERS. oct30tl - R. L. HARRIS, Undertaker and Cabinet Mafcer, : Corner Second and Princess Street. ' FURNITURE REPAIRED, CLEANED ; AND FARNISHED. Undertaking a Specialty.; j Orders from Country promptly attended to. Satisfaction guaranteed, is esidence over btore. oct 11 tf. : J. A. SPRINGER SELLS . COAL AND WOOD . AT Wholesale and Eetail. SEE HIM BEFORE BUYING. Old Stand 121 North Water St. f oct 22 tf A Good Situation JS OFFERED TO A MIDDLE-AGED MAN who has soiBe knowledge of Book-keeping, and is com petent to direct workmen. Apply, . ' " . , oct29 2t P. O. BOX No. 145. j ffl n3 v - il W VI r. if-, i; I 'if i It. Si V i - -i - -ft vt-t m n A - i I 4; -tr m i i lit J, - . "pit! tm n J v- U4 iil t m Hi- f v.-' . .'
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 30, 1891, edition 1
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