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By WILLIAM 11. BERNARD. PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT MONDAYS. SATKS OF SUBSCRIPTION), Dt ADVANCE Je"fu(by M.iU)' Poste Pid. .......... Six Months. u .$5 00 . 8 00 . 1 50 Three Months, " One Month, " . 60 urT-:... J uu"ra, aeuvered in any ev Ta c..i !i . part of Agents Ste Entered at the Post Office at Wilmington, N. C, as Second Class Mail Matter. - OUTLINES. The Southern Associated Press was organized yesterday at a meeting held in ew xortc city; h. p. Howell, of At- lanta, Ua., was elected President. t . i . . . i in me motz murder trial at Shelby, N. 1 r : . ... I v. .uucaus strongly m tavor 01 lucpriboncnmnecase will probably go the jury Thursday or Friday. Miners in the Tennessee mountains lib erated over three hundred convicts, des troying the stockades and disarming the guards at the camps. The barque Liberia sailed from New York yester day with 66 negro colonists for Liberia.. - An epedimic ot influenza has brok en out at Bucharest, where the disease is accompanied by a skin eruption. The cotton crop in sight is 2,771,853bales. Qrover Cleveland spoke to a large Democratic meeting in Boston, Mass., last night. Venzuela has renewed the import duty on corn, etc, that was" suspended April 20th last. The American legation at Valparaiso is again subjected to police espionage; the American colony is expecting an ulti matum from the United States finvprn." ment; the Chilians are discussing the probability of forming an alliance with Great Britiaain the event of hostilities with the United States. New York markets : Money easy with out loan; closing at 3, per cent.; cotton dull; middling upland cents; uneans o m-m cents; Southern flour ; dull and heavy; wheat dull and firmer; No. 2 red $1 03Wai 0ZU in store and at elevator; corn dull and nominal; No. z, 7U cents at elevator; rosin quiet; strained, common to good, $1 32g 1 37i-; spirits turpentine dull and" easy at 3637 cents. It is said that the friends of Presi dent Harrison and Judge Gresham, in Indiana, have compt, the latter agreeing to support Harrison this time if the former will back Gresham in 189G. l nere is a movement on toot m Memphis to erect a monument to Gen. N. B. Forrest, a powerful fight er, but a remarkably diffident man, who would at any time rather face a park of blazing artillery than half a dozen ladies. Five hundred parrots were import ed at New York last week. There have been in the political campaigns more than five hundred Republican parrots going around repeating "tin, tin,' American tin,", which they learn ed from Bill McKinley. As a campaigner Gov. Campbell, of Ohio, is a hustler. One day last week he made seven speeches at seven different points: slept two hours and started out next day and made ten in as many different places. A man who has that much lightning in him is no slouch. Fifteen of the Welsh tin-dippers whom Niedringhaus, of St. Louis, imported, have struck'' for higher wages. They must be very high- priced fellows if Niedringhaus was telling the truth when he said he was paying his tin-makers from six to eight dollars a day. A Philadelphia man blew out his brains the other day because his girl refused to marry him. While we do not commend his action, he showed a considerate regard for the girl in blowing his own and not her brains, as other fellows under similar cir cumstances have done. An Atlanta paper remarks that Brayer Shepard, of the New York Mail and Express, "made a fool of himself about the unveiling of the Grady monument." No he didn't. Nature did that for him. His blunt. old father-in-law discovered that he was more kinds of a fool than any other fool he ever saw. The Teutonic is a swift one. She beat all the records a short time ago by crossing the Atlantic in five days, twenty-one hours and twenty-two minutes, but in her next trip she capped the climax by making it in five days, twenty-one hours and three minutes, beating , her own best Jime ninetppn minutes and-scoring the fastest time on record. - - Gov. Boies, of Iowa, is a hustling campaigner. Since the canvass open ened in that State he has canvassed every congressional- district-in the State, and made more than a hun dred speeches. They were telling speeches which the Republicans didn't like to hear, because he be longed to. that party once, and knows something about the machine. r VOL. XLIX.-NO. 35. If Andrew Cargenie wanted do the right thing he should have- paid the tariff tax on that Scotch whiskey he sent to President Harrison, and not have sent it to Mr. Erhardt whom he supposed to be the collector of customs for New York, exner.tino- thus to P-et it thrnnrh Hnt fr h s. e ' " therein Clunie Castle he does not keeD oosted or hp wnnM Vnnvr hn the collector is. The blunder cost the President 54, for Mr. Erhardt paid the tax like .a man, and then sent the Scotch spirits on to Ben jamin, who of course had to refund the tax. Texas makes it hot for murderers sometimes. In Queen City last week they captured a negro, who confessed to the murder of a whole family, and instead of punishing hrm by the ordinary method of Judge Lynch, they tied him to a tree, piled wood around him, set fire to it and let him burn to death. The crime -was atrocious but the punishment was savasrelv so NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Hamme Crush hats. B. F. Keith Where to buy. T. C. Craft Fine furniture. W. O. E. C. R. R. Schedule. T. A. Springer Coal and wood. as. D. Nutt Press the button. M. M. Katz & Son Reductions. Brown & Roddick Cheap silk sale. N. Y. & W. S. S. Line Sailing days. Masonic Meeting Concord Chapter PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS Pertinent Paragraphs Pertaining Princi pally to People and Pointedly Printed. Mr. S. A. Craig, having ' com pleted his work on th Fayetteville and Florence R. R., has returned to the city. Hon. W. H. Kitchen, .farmer, manufacturer, orator and statesman, was in the city yesterday. Capt. Deems Pugh, of the A. C. L., who was brought from Charleston quite sick some time ago, was on the streets yesterday. Dr. Frank B. Ullery, President of the Brunswick, Western & Southern R. R., and Capt, H. H. Dougherty, General Manager, went down to Southv port yesterday morning. The appointment of Mr. E. D. Kyle as General Freight and Passenger Agent of the Charleston, Sumter and Northern Road is announced. Mr. Kyle is a brother of Mr. W. E. Kyle, of the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Road. The position of General Freight and Passenger Agent of the Charleston, Sumter and Northern Road was filled by the late Col. S. B. Pickens up to the time ot his death. COTTON FACTS AND FIG URES. Spot cotton dull in New York yes terday at 8c for middling. Net receipts of cotton at all the U, S. ports yesterday 65,366 bales. Futures closed easy in New York; November 8.16 8.18; December 8.25 8.26; January 8.35 8.36. Receipts of cotton yesterday at Wilmington were 1,568 bales; against 1,480 at same date last year. Spartanburg, S. C, item:.'The late cotton bolls are irozen and will not open. In the upper half of the county one-third of the bolls will be lost. No one puts the crep at more than half of last year's crop." Special Services at St. Paul's Lutheran Church. ' Services in St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran Church to-day at 11 a. m. and 7.30 p. m. will both be in English. Dur ing the services both morning and night Prof. Miller's Orchestra will assist the choir with instrumental music. In the morning service the Misses Annie and Kate Stoker will also assist the choir with vocal music. In the night service Miss Minnie Schwarz will sing. The church will be decorated for the occa sion. Chamber of Commerce. The annual meeting of the Wilming- ton Chamber oi commerce was neia yesterday at noon. Nothing but routine business was transacted. The old officers of the Chamber were re elected, viz: Col. F. W. Kerchner, President; Mr. Edward Peschau, First Vice. President; Mr. D. MacRae, Second Vice President, and Col. Jno. L. Cant well Secretary. . . Weather Forocasxs. The following are the forecasts for to day: For Virginia and North Carolina, fair, stationary temperature in the east, colder by Sunday night in the west, westerly winds. tor South Carolina and Georgia, gen erally fair, stationary temperature, ex cept cooler in the. extreme north, varia ble winds. ' i v M-OMN hi j WILMINGTON; N. C SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1891. LOCAL DOTS. Items of Interest Gathered Here T and There snd Briefly Noted. Don't forget the mass meeting of citizens to-morrow night at the City Hall. One white and two colored couples obtained marriage licenses last week. One white adult was interred in Oadvale and a white child in Bellevue last week. T. H. Batson,"6f Stump Sound, had a fine deer at Front street Market yesterday. Cape Fear and Orion Lodges, I. O, O. F., will attend the funeral of Mr. Aaron T. Hewlett this afternoon. The City Board of Audit and Finance will meet Monday night at 8 o'clock, instead ot in the afternoon as has been usual. Through an oversight the name of Mr. Wm. Sheehan was omitted from the list of the Committee on Firemen's Parade for the Welcome Week. Rev. A. D. McClure will preach in bt. Andrew's Presbyterian Church this evening on The Lily Work on the Pillars of King Solomon's Temple, not this morning as the papers had it. Clerk of Front street Market C. D. Jacobs hauled up Frank Davis, colored, before Alderman Post, acting mayor, yesterday, for disorderly con duct, and he was fined $5 and $3.35 costs. A new schedule goes into effect on the Wilmington, Onslow & East Carolina Railroad to-day, trains leaving Wilmington for Jacksonville at 9 a. m. and 3 p. m., except on Saturday and Sunday, when trains leave as1 per pub lished schedule. j Collector Dancy, in a note to tKe Star, admits his conservatism, avers he wants no clash between the races, and insists he only asks political recognition for his race in the propor tion that merit and fitness entitle them. He makes no fight, he says, against white Republicans. The Committee on Advertising of "Wilmington's Welcome Week" re quest the announcement made that every merchant and business man can send his envelopes to any printing office in the city and have them printed with a design prepared by the committee, free of charge, for the "chairete-pantcs'' SUNDAY SERVICES. The services this afternoon at Sea men's Bethel will be conducted by Rev. Alexander Sprunt. The public is in vited, but a special invitation is extend ed to all sea faring man to be present. The services will commence at 3.30 o'clock promptly. "Brooklyn Baptist Church, Rev. R. E. Peele pastor. Preaching to-day at 11 a. m. and 7.30 p. m. Public cordially in vited. Suuday School at 3 p. m. Services in St. John's Church to-day, the Feast of all Saints, as follows: Morning Prayer, Sermon and Holy Communion at 11 o'clock. Evenir Prayer at 5 o'clock. Sunday School at 4 p. m. St. James'. All Saint's Day. At 11 a. m., Morning Prayer, Sermon and Holy Communion; at 5 p. m.v Evening prayer; Sunday School at 3.30 p. m. Ser vice at St. James' Home at 8 o'clock. Rev. F. W. E. Reschau, D. D., pastor of St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran Church, returned to the city last night from a trip up the Carolina Central Rail load, and will hold English services both at 11 a. m.. and 7.30 p. m. to-day. He will also hold Scandinavian services at ;.30 p. m. St. Matthews Evangelical Lutheran Mis sion. Everything pertaining to the Luth eran Church to-day will be crimson, it being the celebration of the 374th anni versary of the great Reformation Oct. 31, 1891 the birthday of civil and reli gious liberty. The Mission Sunday School in Brook lyn will meet in their beautiful new chapel at 9.30 a. m. to-day. The chapel has been handsomely decorated by the deft hands of fair Lutheran ladies and friends. The music will be of a high order. The new organ will be present ed bv Rev. Dr. F. W. E. Peschau. The Dublic is invited. All are welcome. Seats free. m tm Beduced Bates to Southern Exposition. Cheap excursion tickets to Raleigh, N. C, on account of the Southern Expo sition, are on sale at all stations on the Atlantic Coast Line in North Carolina. These tickets are limited to December 3rd, 1891. On Tuesday, Wednesday and Thuisday of each week, until No vember 26th, round trip tickets -limited to seven days will be on sale at the rate of one cent per mile traveled. For information call on your station aeent or write to H. M. Emerson, A. G. P. A., Wilmington, N. C. Cotton steady on a basis of 7c for middling. W. W. W. Wilmington's Welcome Week Captures tne City and Extends its Conquest all Over This State and Down in South Carolina. The time has now arrived for anglocizing the big week , Wilming ton is going to offer her friends near and far away. Her motto will remain the same, Chairete-pantes, which interpreted signifies, "welcome all with joy," and that is exactly what will be done during Wilmington's Wel come Week. Everybody will be wel come to come and behold the grand spectacles that will be displayed" for the delight and edification of visitots to the city during the first week of December. Think of it! More than a hundred gorgeous floats in a kaledioscopic pro cession, reaching nearly two miles and exhibiting the multifarious industries and business of this metropolitan city by the sea. This alone will well repay a visit. Then there will be music, ga lore, pyrotechnics of dazzling splen dor, delightful sails down the river, and what not. Every one who comes will rejoice over it to the end of a length ened existence; and every one who suf fers the privation of absence will have missed a glorious oasis in the Opportuni ties of a life time, and will never cease to repine over the lost chance never to be regained. - There has been no diminution of ardor in home' workers, and each indi vidual of every committee works with an enthusiasm born of already con quered success. That's right. "Faint heart never won fair lady," or any thing else worth going in quest of. Work, work, during the short time be tween now and the first week in De cember, and it will tell with a thousand tongues the joyous story of white- winged success. The Finance Committee will meet at the City Hall Monday night, and every member is earnestly besoueht to be present to transact important business, And all the committees are expected to meet up-stairs in City Hall Monday night. SECOND REGIMENT BAND- The Benefit Entertainment to be Given Tuesday Night. The committee in charge of the festi val to be given next Tuesday night at the City Hall, for the benefit of the Second Regiment Band asks that every citizen who has an "owl," either alive or stuffed, will please send it to the City Hall to Mrs. Bum Tuesday morning, and that the public who have not bekn waited upon will please send any contributions to the City Hall, as the donations thus far are somewhat limited. Ladies will please meet at the Atlan- iic Engine Hall to-morrow afternoon at 3.30 o'clock. A full attendance is de sired. Committees will please report promptly. From all appearances, this festival will be a- grand success, and should be. as it is lor a good cause. Professor Miller's Orches tra has kindly offered to assist in this festival, and Mr. Henry Newman, commonly called "Our own Comedian," will amuse with some of his witty say ings and a few of his funny songs, Besides all kinds ot refreshments a regular supper will be served by the young ladies, most exquisitely. Lto, one and all, and take your friends with you. The doors will open at 6:30 o'clock. BY RIVER AND RAIL. Receipts of Naval Stores and Cotton '' Yesterday. Wilmington, Columbia & Augusta R.R. 789 bales cotton, 58 casks spirits turpentine, 68 bbls. rosin. Wilmington & Weldon R. R. 374 bales cotton, 3 casks spirits turpentine, 85 bbls. rosin, 41 bbls. tar. Carolina Central R. R. 227 bales cotton. 14 casks spirits turpentine, 38 bbls rosin, C. F. V. R. R. 142 bales cotton, 34 casks spirits turpentine, 58 bbls. rosin. W. O. & E. C. R. R. 23 bales cotton, 14 casks spirits turpentine, 65 bbls. rosin. Steamer Lisbon 194 bbls. rosin. Steamer Acme 13 bales cotton, 50 bbls. crude oil. Total receipts Cotton, 1,568 bales; spirits turpentine, 120 casks; rosin, 508 bbls.; tar, 79 bbls; crude oil, 50 bbls. St. James' Choir. This choir is now one of the best in the city. It has about twenty-five choir- ester boys who are under the personal training of the assistant rector, Rev. C. H. Weaver. It also has several choirei- ter ladies, and the following named ladies and gentlemen who are favorites in mu sical circles and need no comment: Miss Minnie Schwarz, soprano soloist; Mrs. M. F; Manning and Miss Gabrielle DeRosseir altos; Mr. M. F. Manning, basso; Mr. Soverel, tenor; Mr. A. S. Hol den, baritone. The full choir numbers about thirty-five. Mr. E, P. Boatwright is the organist. St. James' Home and City Mission. Rev. John G. Fawcett . arrived last night and win at once take charge of the city mission work of St. James church. Rev. Mr. Fawcett is an Englishman by birth and has a most excellent record in connection with the mission work among the poor of New York city, where he experienced the finest advantages for becoming thoroughly acquainted with every phase and detail of the work. He will begin actively on his duties, holding services at St. James' Home this morning at 8 o'clock. For twenty years this work has been most success fully carried on by Sister Cecilia with three assistants. There has been established a Sunday and day school, and in the latter cocking and sewing has been taught. The average atten dance in the Sunday school has been 150, and 100 for the day school. The good sisters have not neglected a very important branch of Christian endea vor, visiting and relieving the sick and the poor, reading to them and providing them with wholesome Church litera ture. But the calling of Rev. Mr, Fawcett to this duty works a new era in the ben evolent determination on the part of St. James, to prosecute this important church work with greater vigor than ever. How the Old. Darkey Killed the Buck. There were two fane bucks adorning a stall in the Front street market yester day. One of them had four prongs to his antlers and was truly lovely in his graceful and symmetrical proportions. His skin will be stuffed and will be a unique and distinguishing feature in the grand parade during "Wrlmington Welcome Week." An old colored man of Scott's Hill brought these deer down with his old muzzle-loader and he related the partic ulars of his hunt to a Star reporter after this fashion: "Yer see I wuz er standin' out dere sorter 'hine er little clump uv bushes er waitm', when de fust thing I knowed I he-eard de dogs er trailin Dutiful, an I cocked my ears an' my gun kase I seed dey wuz er comin to'rds me. Pretty soon de music of de dogs got sweeter an' sweeter, an' closer an' closer, an' my heart got ter jumpin, then I he-eard sumfin er tearin' thro' de bushes ker- jump, ker-jump. Then-(let me have your stick) I laid my ole gun, as never failed me, up ter my shoulder an' skunt my eye down the barrel. Well, when I seed dat buck he were my meat. When I fired, he was goin' so fast he rolled twenty-five yards. I allways fetches 'em, boss." Then he smole a wide, deep smile with high skinned teeth. Was the Child Strangled. A white child, evidently just born, was found in a candle box burried in Hilton Grove, by officers C. E. Woods and J. C. Borneman yesterday at 10 o'clock1." A little boy, Theodore Schrader, in formed the officers that a box contain ing some offensive matter was burried there, and upon digging the slight covering of earth from the box the astounding discovery was made that it contained the body of newly born babe, with no clothing ex cepting a piece ot white clotn pinned around it. Decomposition was consid erably advanced, but marks of some thing like a string were plainly discern- able on the neck, as if the child had been strangled. Coroner J, C Walton was at once no tified and held an inquest, but no clue leading to the criminality of any one was discovered ; nor indeed, was the birth, death or burial of any child in the neighborhood unaccounted for. So lar the whole affair is an impenetrable mys tery. The Child Whose Wind-Pipe was Cut K"o Better. Little Robert, the two-year old son of Mr. G. B. Lee, of Rocky Point, whose wind-pipe was cut into by Dr. Thos. F. Wood tor the purpose of extricating a coffee-bean that the child had swal lowed, an account of which was given in the Star, was no better last night. The child was lying on its back when the reporter visited it, with the ghastly wound in its throat, into which a rubber tube had been inserted, through which it was breathing with a splutter ing sound that was exceedingly affect ing to hear. The child swallowed a little coffee yesterday mornig which seemed to revive it somewhat, but it soon relapsed into an almost death-like stupor. Recovery appeared doubtful last night. The mother was summoned by telegraph and arrived in the morning at the Sutton House where the father and child are staying. The bean has not yet been found. Opera House. Mrs. Gen. Tom Thumb again held the boards, down at the Opera House last night. She was greeted by a small audience, and gave a short performance. Tie little folks acted their parts well, and the violinist-was much admired. The Japanese jugglers and contortionists did well ' WHOLE NO: T, 746 Criminal Court Jurors. The Board of County Commissioners have drawn the following jurors for the Criminal Court to begin the 16th No vember: W. B. Canady, ArS. Holden, Jos. S. Mitaheli, W. M. Hohn, Seth Walton, A. C. Penton, J. W. Costin. Jas. D. McClammy, Hiram Southerland, W. F, Alexander, Jesse Craig, Jr., W. Cromwell, John A. Hewlett, J. B. Wil- iams, J. C. Stewart, Jas. E. Willson, R. L Strickland. Thomas Starkey. J. S. Bordeaux, Cornelius Boney, Thomas J, Burnett, James Nolan, John Entee. G. G. R. Holt, Andrew lair, G. W. Yopp, H. H. Woebse, C. F. W. Bissenger, J. P. Chapman, D. F. Klein, G. A. War ren, h.. W. Cooper, J. 1. Combs, A. K. Padrick. Theatrical. Mr. J. Duke Murray, manager for Milton Nobles, arrived in the city last night. The company will appear at the Opera House here Friday evening, November 6th, in a "Son of Thespis" Mr. Nobles' latest offering to the masses a comedy in four acts. Yesterday's Weatner. The records of the Weather Bu reau give the following report ol the range of temperature, etc., yesterday: At 8 a. m., 46: 8 p. m., 58": maximum temperature, 75 ; minimum, 44 ; aver age 60. Prevailing wind, southwest. Total rainfall .00. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. This Advertisement A Beflection of the Beduotions we Have Made in Our TO FULLY APPRECIATE THEM WE WOULD RECOMMEND A CALL. I. II. Katz & Son, 116 Market St., "Wilmington, N. C. Children's Merino Vests, small sizes 15c; large sizes 25c. Reduction in half-wool and all wool Vests Children's. Infant Wrappers, all-wool, 60c. Children's Scarlet Vests 35c; up ward according to size. Ladies' Vests 50 dozen, (slightly damaged,) Merino, worth 50c tor 30c. 40 dozen Ladies' Vests, worth 60c for 43c each, 2.50 per half-dozen. Fine make Ribbed Vests, jvorth 75c for 49c each; $2.85 per half dozen. Ladies' Ribbed Vests, worth 50 for 35c. Ladies' all-wool Ribbed Vests $1.00. Sold at half their value, 50c each, $2.90 per half dozen. Complete assortment of Ladies' fine Cashmere. Sanitary and medi cated Flannel Underwear. Gents' Flannels White Merino 25c. Colored and White Vacune yarn, only 49c each. All-wool Shirts and Drawers $1.00 each. Finest and best sanitary Camel's Underwear worth $2.50 per garment. Our price this week only $1.98. We are Agents for the celebrated Medlicot Flannel Underwear, $1.98 per garment sold elsewhere. Great bargains in Hosiery Depart ment. . nov 1 tt FURNITURE! THE LARGEST AND FINEST STOCK ITU THE CITY. OUR CARGELY INCREASED SALES ATTEST THE POPULARITY OF THE Low Prices WE ARE OFFERING ON OUR MapitaLaiii Variei Stoct of One prime reason why housekeepers and others should buv their FURNITURE and BEDDING from CRAFT is that he is the only Furniture dealer in Wilmington NOT DOING AN INSTALLMENT BUSINESS, hence his (roods are all new and clean. Try us when you purpose buying anything in the Urmture Hue, WC will umKC iruua uiu uiivca ui ugui. Something new in SCOlCii HOLLAND WIN DOW SHADES. Finelv ea mooed Beddine Department and making fine' Mattresses a specialty. We lead in every depart ment of the trade. Try a bottle of Mazolene, tha finest Furniture Polish in the world. Price 25 cents. THOS. C. CRAFT, nov 1 It Leading Furniture Dealer. St John's Hall, Wilmington, N. C, Nov. 1st, 1891. COMPANIONS A special convocation of Concord Chanter. No. 1. will be held to-morrow (Monday) evening, at 8 o'clock, for work in the Royal Arch De gree. By order of be H. r. noy 1 It J. DICKSON MUNDS, Secretary. TJ Press the Button. rLL DO THE BEST. JAMES D. NUTT, noTltf THE DRUGGIST. BATES OF ADTBRTH1M6. One Square One Day... '. , " 14 Two Days " " Three Days " " Four Days.... " " Five Days " " One Week " " Two Weeks ' " Three Waeks " One Month.. " " Two Months " Three Months ' " Six Months " One Year ... I Of! . 1 76" . 2 60 : . 3 50 . , . 4 00: ' s so ; . ; . 1 vu . 13 00 40 ! -' - . 60 CC: W Contract Advertisements takes at proportion i ately low rates. " -j Ten lines solid Nonpareil type make one squart. NEW, ADVERTISEMENTS. ONLY ONE DAY! THAT DAY WILL BE i' i Tuesday, November 3dj - - AT BROWN & RODDICK'S. The Cheapest Silk Sale Ever Known in Wilmington. Every yard of SILK in our house will be offered at Manufacturer's prices. Below we giTe you our regular price and price for Tuesday. , This offer is positively good for ONE D AY ONLY, November 3rd. Black Bengaline Silk.regular price $1.65f Tuesd'y $1.15 Black Gros Grain Silk ' ' 1.75 " 138 ; " 1.50 " 1.19 i " 1.30 " 105 I " 1.05 " 61 1 " 90 ' " 74 j " 75 " 63 1 " 1.20 ' " 1.C4 ; " 1.10 89 ; " 1.33 " 1J3 " 1.80 99 - " 87$ 73 " 75 " 63! 60 " 49 " ' 50 " 4 "75 " 62 50 39 " " 37 " 28' " 1.00 " 81 " 1.23 " 99 Black Armure Silk " U U li t. u Black Satin Duchf ss Silk " it it i, tt Black Surah Silk " i i it Color'd Surah Silk" It il t M Color'd Faille Silk" Color'd Rhadome " One lot of Plaid Striped and Brccade Silk, worth $1.00 to $'.25 at 75c. 32-inch Crepe de Chene and China Silk $1.00, at75c 32-inch Drapery Silks on SEC01TD FLOOR. BROWN & RODDICK. mo. 9 Horth. Front Street. nov 1 tf MANUFACTURED BY Strouse & Bros., FEW YORK AND BALTIMORE, f Every garment sewed with silk and Patent Square Shoulder, to be had only at S. H. FISHBLATE CHILDREN'S SUITS, CLERICAL SUITS, FULL DRESS SUITS, SMOKING JACKETS DOUBLE BREASTED SILK VESTS. Suits Made to Order. - j WILjl, SAVE YOU $10 TO $15. DUIMLAP HATS. Best Hat in the World. S, H. Fishblate, -King Clothier. oct25 2t Hamme, The Hatter, ;v JJAS JUST RECEIVED A NICE LINE OF Crush Hats. Will receive the Celebrated English Hat, made by Lincoln Bennet & Co., London, Eng land, on Tuesday'sJsteamer. nov 1 tf 26 North Front Street. Where to Buy c HOICE BALDWIN'S APPLES, ONIONS, Nats, loose and in boxes. Candies, Stick; mixed. Crackers of all kinds, Coffee, Syrnp, Case Goods, Mul lets in white barrels. Cider, c. &c. Also 100,000 Cypress Shingles. All at the lowest prices at B F ICJtlTH Jr. I nov 1 D&W 8m - isO North Water St. TT
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Nov. 1, 1891, edition 1
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