Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / June 20, 1899, edition 1 / Page 2
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1 -- . ' POTLISHER'S ATOOTOCEMEKT. , tne oldest daily news- "arateof nte per montH-or 1 1 111 suavn. C" two weeks. $0.60: three weeKS, ns.ar. one )M-to months, $17.00; three months, $200; Stx'nwntfS $S).00; twelve month, $60.00. Ten ltaesoIsoUdnparlel type make one square. 1 THE WiEKLYSTABls published -every Fri day morntaK at $1.00 per year, 60 cents xor months, 80 cents ror tnr six 'Ailannouncements ol Fairs. Festivals. Balls, Hops Picnics, Society Meetings, t-ouu lnirs, &c, wffl be charged regular advertising ertlsements dlsconunued before toe time contracted ror nas expirou-. rates for time actual: No aaverusemeuus mihf AUanSouncements and recommendattons ol nandidabea Tfor office, whether In the shape of ctmWonsorotherwlse, wlU be charged M advertlmente. 0flrt1sfimnnta must Wltn prviwr trie power from the streams to some desirable point where the badroad difficulty would no longer dq . dread. As we see it this transmis sion of power is going to have a great effect in the establishment 01 uw mills in the Piedmont section. Another factor is the instalment plan, to which reference is made in the extract we quote, which, by the way, was inaugurateckin this otate, and first put into practice in nar lo'tte, where it has met with such success that it will doubtless be-ioi-lowed up in other localities and in other States. There is notmngw would take a long time, wmcn logically means that a good many lives must be - sacrificed and much treasure, expended. v ,(. Admiral Dewey - concedes tbe bravery and fighting qualities of the Filipinos, but says they lack mili tary Bkill, and denies that they were ever our "allies." But yet- it is a. fact that the leaders of the insurrec tionlagainst Spain roturnedto the Philippines after conferences and understanding with American repre sentatives, and went from Hong Kong to the i Philippines in - an American ship. And - it is a fact, TWINKLINGS. Freddie- reference, may or pay '. i ? i.T prevent mills from being established too, that they were lypuw r .. . : I ommnmfinn hv our reDre- flftuon-ffrowiutt i anus ouu. -j -; - Pa Lei Srdhly KWKSaJSei -will be at the Ilakof toepubiuner- ftnt newfi or discuss briefly and properly sub-. - ably be eected If the real name of the author Notices of Marriage or Death. Tributes of Re ipect, Resolutions of Thanks, &c, are charged forasonlluary! advertisements,. but only bait rates when paid for strictly In advance. Atnls rate 50 wnts will pay for a simple announce ment of Marriage or Death. b,r.fLnv Advertisements inserted once a week in DaUy will be cu.--.rged $1.00 per square for each lnser- I Won. Every other day, three-fourths of dally rate Twice a week, two-thirds of dally rate.1 Contract advertisers wlU not b6 allowed to exceed their space or advertise anything foreign i to toelr riiular business withant extra charge at transutit rates. . f ra-, i Advertvments kept underihe head of "New jAavertis-.:nts",wmDechacd fifty per cent Advertisements to foUow'readingr matter, or to occupy any special place, will be charged extra accord tne to the position desired. BT WliililAM H. BERNARD. WILMINGTON. N. ?uese(a-x Mobnihg, June 20, 1899. VIEWED iptOM A NORTHERN STANDPOINT, j' j Several days ago we published ! some extracts from an editorial in i the NewjYork Journal of Commerce and Commercial Bulletin on the re markable, or, as it called it, "aston ishing, V jnjerease in the number of cotton milfa in the South, especially frithin the past few years, and more specially within the past six months, t-regards! this subject of so much important! e that it devoted another leading ditorial to it a few days ago. After calling attention to the increase in the number of mills, the .number of spindles and the millions invested, lit notices the fact that whereas the average increase of Bpindles for the past eight years was 245,000, thp increase in the past five months is nearly five times that, or 1,100,000. i It! then comments as follows: .-' ... on this nlan in any fhfirA are Deople of anything like progressive spirit or reasonable thrift. Thus mills can Kft established with a small amount of ready money which, established in. the ordinary way, would require a considerable amount of money. There is another advantage in mills established on this plan, where the operatives become stockholders. They thus become profit-snarers, take more personal interest in the success of the business and trades unions would have little influence if the effort were made to introduce them. It may be incidentally re marked that one of the causes looked to to eventually lessen the power of Southern mills to under sell Northern mills is the trades anions, through whose . instru mentality it has been predicted, and doubtless hoped, wage agitations wmild : be started and Southern mills would be confronted with strikes, &c, as Northern mills have been. So far the trades unions have not met with much encouragement, several attempts have been made to introduce them. The only cotton mill strike of any importance so far as we know of, caused through their agency, was some time ago at Au gusta, Ga., where it failed after the strikers had remained idle for sev eral weeks. But the cotton manufacturing' in dustry in the South is not likely to suffer much from that cause until the milk are more Central than they are likely to be for some years to come. The advantages which our mills possess, some of which are enumerated in the above extract, they will in all probability continue to hold for many years. v -"Sav. dad. why are there no marriages in heaven?" Hen peck "Because itra heaven." Town loptc8. s Judge 'Did you knock this man downt" Prisoner "No, judge, I didn't; I tried to ; nolo ; mm up. Yonjeers-iitatesman. - , , " Stranger "Mr. - Conductor, will I have time torrid my wife good bye?" i Conductor "I don't know. How long have you been married?" Town Tomes. : "Henry says your husband is a bear in Wall street, said Mrs. Jones. "Wall am inner aa he is a lamb at home I don't much care," said Mrs.N Smith. Haroer'8 Bazar. Bacon "I suppose,' like most women, your wife wants the earth?" Esbert " WelLyes ; but I have learned that she doesn't want it on her parlor carpet." YorikersStatesman. Hicks "Does your wife ever ask you for money?" Wicks "JNeyer.v Hicks "She must be a wonder." Wicks "But she frequently tells m to give her some." Boston Trans- crvpt. " -- " . 'i - . That was a queer dying re quest inade by the famous Mr. Bur kins.": "What was it?" "He said if K.Ar7o cfatiiA was ever made of him, he wanted his tailor to model the trousers." Chicago Record. Then the Robber Ran: Foot pad' "Money or your life I" Book Agent "Sorry I haveu'J; a copy , of mr life. sir. but let me show you the 'Life of Georare Washington7 m full morocco." Chicago News. Mrs. Crimsonbeak "Has Mr. SIZE OF THE BKAIN. tOME POPULAR ERRORS ON THIS SUB ! ' JECT CC-r.RECTED. tbe sentatives,; and acted in concert witn the American commanders, i which concert lasted up to the breaking out of hostilities between our troops and A guinaldo'sj followers. Tech nically they may not have been our "al'ifta " tiracticallv they were,1 and j x- - - so regarded themselves. ) President Schurman, of the Peace Commission, speaks rather fox him self than fat . the Commission, but he is presumed to voice the senti ments of the Commission. He would be willing to grant the islands auto nomy, under an .flncau pivucu torate, and that, from all that has t.hn Filininos would be willing to accept. But why 5'" tnougnt i neara mm uuwx j "Sure, that was the dog , you heard growlin', mum." Yonkers States- BnmAUiincr like this said to the "in surgents? Irthe administration is willing to grant this much why not so declare and cease the hide and seek game it- has been playing so long, the Commission pursuing one course and Gen. Otis directly the opposite? j . As the representative of the Phil ippine committee says, Aguinaldo may be laboring under the delusion that he will have the backing of other powers, which is possible, of course, but not very probable, at least for a good while, when; possi bly there might be soma excuse for interference on the- ground of "hu manity," one" of the principal grounds on which we justified in terference in the case of Cuba. Take the interview as a whole, it gives some idea of the tangled mess over there, and confirms the opinion fixnreaafid bv General Lawton and -W , others since that it will take a large army and a long time to establish our supremacy and bring" peace to the Philippines. I man. CURRENT COMMENT. 'The increase in the average capa- i ity of Southern cotton mills is quite as remarkable as the increase of their number. Only a few years ago it wad found that in North Carolina and Tennessee the average for each mill did not greatly exceed 4,000 spindles; that in, Georgia it was a little over 8,000, ind that in South Carolina alone it exceeded 10,000. It was noted as a .remarkable fact, that in one or two of the mills then building in South Carolina there was a capacity of 50, 000) spindles. From the tabula tion recently made in our news col umns, it jwill be perceived that there are single mills building in Alabama .'with a capacity of 200,000 spindles and in South Carolina of 104,000 spindles. The building of small mills has by no means ceased, especially in JNortn Carolina, where it has become a habit' in the Piedmont district for communities numbering less than 1,000 inhabitants to build mills on the - installment plan. That is to say, the stock Is subscribed for in $100 shares, 10 percent or 20 per cent down, and at the rate of $2 or $3 a month. It is , now! several years since the Southern capitalist, large and small, gained con fidence in mill investments, and there has .been a fixed disposition in that section to keep the development of the industry in the hands of the natives. Relatively cheap fuel and easily acces sible j Water power have contributed as mucn as proximity to the cotton fields to make manufacturing more profit ! able in the South than in New England. - Electrical appliances for the conver-. sion and transmitted of power have given anew value to the resources of I the rapids or "shoals" of the Southern rivers. I This power is already being Spplied f in the Piedmont belt, n both sides of the border between North and South Carolina, at distances of two! I or threen miles from the stream. 1 1 But possibly the greatest ad vantagehich the South has enjoyed in the competition of the cotton in dustry is in the possession of an abun dance of cheap, docile and fairly in telligent native white labor. The la bor problem has not ye been compli cated by the intervention of the trades union, and, so far as we can ascertain, an eleven-hour law is the nearest ap proach that has been made to legisla tive restriction. The supply of labor -is very far from being exhausted, be cause work in the mills is so much more profitable than work on the farm : but even at rates not exceeding 70c a day there are usually more applica tions for places than there are places to fill. The South, in short, is enjoy ing the advantage of conditions similar to those)! which prevailed in the early days of the industry of New Euglaud, when mill labor carried with it no sense of social degradation, and before it became necessary to utilize the for eign immigrant as a mill operative." - There are several points in this worthy -of ndte, because they will J have no small influence on cotton manufacturing in the South espe cially in the Piedmont belt, now the great cotton manufacturing section of the South, but destined to become much greater. The transmission of power by electricity from the toss ing stream makes it possible to util ize the stream, which , would other wise be found impracticable because of the rugged nature of the country and ! the difficulty ot wagoning to and from the mills, especially in wet seasons when the roads be come impassible. , We have seen the roads sometimes become so bad for week that it was practically impos , Biblei to move empty wagons , over I theity much less loaded ones. This is a contingency-to which all mills 'at any distance from railroads are subjected. ' It may be said that bet ter roads might be provided, -which is true, but it is about as diffi cult to i provide good roads in this .country as it. is to build mills; and more difficult than to ar range for the transmission of elec- CANNED GOODS. We clip the following in reference to the exports of canned goods from the Baltimore Hero Id: "Statistics of goods from the SPIRITS TURPENTINE. exports of canned United States shows that during the first nine months of the present Government nscai year, up up to April 1, there was shipped out of this country a total valuation of $9, 209038, as compared with $7,649,645 during the corresponding months of the next preceding fiscal year, or an increase of $1,559,293. "Such testimony as this shows that the popularity of American canned goods is growing in other countries, notwithstanding the endeavors made to exclude them in various places by means of severe restrictions. The in crease in the nine months was more than 20 per cent, a gain which would have been really remarkable even if accomplished without opposition, but it is exceedingly surprising when the antagonism displayed in certain coun tries toward our products is consid ered. It is a record to be proud of, par ticular! v in Baltimore, which is so ex tensively interested in the packing trade. . "No doubt the market for our canned f;oods will widen rapidly in foreign ands as their excellent qualities be comes more generally known. - The walls of prejudice and self-interest are hard to break down, but little by little inroads have been made upon them with highly encouraging consequences. Our packers need entertain no doubt that they will eventually enjoy a lib eral share of the world's trade in all kinds of canned goods. This is a gratifying exhibit as far as.it goes, but the South- does not figure in it, for wedonbt if there is a pound of canned goods exported from any point south of Baltimore. Notwithstanding the fact that we raise in abundance every thing that is canned food, we not only do not can anything for export, but we do not can enough to meet our own home demands, but depend upon Northern canners to supply us in the Fall and Winder with the fruits and vegetables that we let go,;, to waste and rot in the Summer. . We grow small fruits and Vegeta bles for the early Northern markets and when the price falls too low to justify picking and shipping, we let the crops rot in the fields, and what might, if taken care of and pre served, bring in many thousands of dollars to our fruit and truck-grow ers, yields notning. The peach-growers of -Georgia pursued this course until experience taught them the folly of it, and they established canneries in some sec tions to perserve the surplus for which profitable markets could not be found. ' The South should and could, with ordinary thrift, furnish the,bulk of these exported canned goods in addition to supplying her own needs. Danbury Reporter: ' Farmers are complaining a great deal of insects destroying their young tobacco. Some of them say they have replanted their entire crop three or four times. Plants are getting scarce and many farmers" say they have replanted their last time. Columbus News: Deputy Sheriff W. H. Thompson received Thursday morning the painful news of the death of his father, Mr. Henry Thompson, which occurred at his home about three and a half miles southeast of Whiteville. He had been in feeble health for about two years. He was one of Columbus county's oldest and best citizens. Albemarle Enterprise: A sheaf of bearded wheat is to be seen in the store of Morrow Bros, and Heath Co. that ought to take the premium at any fair. It weighs 29 pounds, and every head is full of large and well rounded grains. The sheaf is not a selected one, but, on tne otner nana, is a very small part of a 35 acre field of the same kind, grown by Mr. Ira B. Miller, of our town. I States ville Mascot: During a thunder storm last Thursday after noon James King, colored, who lived on Mr. Jason Sherrill's farm, two miles from Monbo, in Catawba county, was killed by lightning. The negro was sitting m his door when the fatal bolt came. The other members of his family were shocked, but not seriously hurt. The building was not injured. Warrenton Record: A colored man named, . Joe Brown, who lives near Warrenton, has been playing Suite a smart trick on Mr. W. N. lllia, the shuttle block saw mill man. He sold a small load of wood to Mr. Ellis nearly every day, so Mr. Ellis suspected something wrong and set a watch Friday night in his yard, which had a good deal of timber on it. He was caught in his trick of getting wood from the yard at night and then driv back in the morning and selling to Mr. Ellis the wood he had stolen. He is now in jail awaiting the criminal court. . . 1 Lincoln Journal: John F. Gibbs. -of Rutherford county, ac cording to the Rutherford Vindi cator, is the owner of a 3-year-old heifer which has never given birth to a calf, but which gives six quarts of milk a day. - John Pack, aged 17 years, was instantly killed at Bowling Green, just below Gastonia, Saturday evening, lie nad gone on an excur sion to Chester that day, and was on his return, when, as the train was running rapidly by Bowling Green, he jumped off. His head, struck a crosss-tie and his skull was crushed. John McDaniel, a Haywood county counterfeiter, was arrested Sunday and is now in jail at Waynes ville. He had a pint of pewter nickels of his own make on hand, also a pair of moulds made very much like an ordinary wooden lemon squeezer, quite a supply of glass, babbitt,' pew ter, lead, etc. . All this paraphernalia of a regular counterfeiter was found in this man's humble domicile. The corps of engineers engaged in surveying the railroad between this place and Morganton is now in . the neignoornooa oi mr. a. a. sain, ua Wednesday the corps surveyed eight miles and in that whole distance they say there will not have to a fill two feet high nor a cut two feet deep. The corps will reach Lincolnton within tne next lew aays. -i With 1,300 Filipinos disa bled in one battle the work of "bene volent assimilation may be said to be foing on nicely. Richmond Times, )em. - r The latest report of the gold outputin the Transvaal will make England all the more determined to insist upon managing affairs. It shows the production for March to have been the largest on record. Baltimore Herald, Ind. -i - Manufacturers, merchants and ship Owners ok Glasgow held a meeting on Thursday to express alarm at the rapid ; inroads which foreign competition ! is making on British home and ' colonial trade. Less formal expressions of the same sentiment have been heard for some time, and it is becoming evident that British trade is in a very bad way. Philadelphia Ledger, Ind. ; The people have never denied the prosperity of millionaires, nor the plenty of the purveyors who handle the fruits of the earth. It is no secret that millers' hogs are al wava fat. The complaint of the people is that prosperity isva monop oly from which they and competi tion are excluded, and that plenty is a provision for those only who have upper-seats at the table, where every seat is reserved. The full man says hunger is a lie, and want a sheer delusion. Norfolk -Virginia-Pilot, Dem. I j , a H- APPOINTMENTS. 1 Com., Chapel of M. P., vS. E. P., States- j By the Bishop of East Carolina. June 20, Tuesday, Long Acre. June 21, Wednesday, ordination, S. Thomas', Bath. June 25, Sunday, " fourth after Trinity, M. P., S. John's, Durham's Creek. 1 . "J June - 25, Sunday, fourth after Trinity, E. P., Chapel of the Cross, Aurora i June 26, Monday, the Cross. Aurora. June 28, Wednesday, John's, Wakely vine. June 29, Thursday, ville. ' June 30, Friday, Swan Quarter. July 2, Sunday, fifth after Trinity, M. P., S. George's, Hyde county. July 3, Monday, E. P., Fairfield. 'July 6, Thursday, E. P., Belhaven. July 9, Sunday, sixth after Trinity, M. P., S. Luke's, Washington county. Julv 9, Sunday, sixth after Trinity, E. P. , Advent, Roper. I! : July 12, Wednesday, M. P., S. An drew's, Columbia, i ll . July 14, Friday, consecration of church, CreswelL ! i July 16, Sunday, 7th after Trinity, M. P., S. Ionds, Scuppernong. QUARTERLY MEETINGS. .j M. E. Church, South, Wilmington District. I Souttaport, (District Conference). June 21-35. I Bladen Circuit, French's Creek, June 80. ' Carver's Creek, Hebron; July 1-2. v ! Brunswick. Shallotte. July 8-9 n I Waccamaw. Zlon, July 15-1. 1 Whiteville. Fair Bluff, Jul 18. i wilmlnirfcnm ftrann. Jtilv Elizabeth, Bladen Springs, July S9-S0. . Scott's Hill, Acorn Branch, Augnst ft-7. Jacksonville ana Rlchlands, Jacksonville, August 12-13. " ' ! - : -" Onslow, Queen's Creek, August 15. - : Kenansvlile. Warsaw, Antrost 19-80. Clinton, Goshen, August p BTJMPA8, ; " . I I. ! Presiding Elder. int A FRENCH VIEW OF IT. That was an interesting interview "Kelly "Ivery J Oirishmon should foieht for his riehts." O'Brien "Yis, be the hivins 1 And whin they I I Clearly -Defined. The class in' ancient history filed the seats at the front i ' !i The professor on the rostrum, opened a book. "Mr. TerwiUiger," he said, turn ing, so that he faced the young man three seats from the middle aisle, 'will you tell : us something about the system of mar riage that prevailed among' the early : Greeks?" i - i i H - The young man rose. "In Greece," he began, "a man was allowed to take unto himself but one wife." !r - . "Quite right," : nodded the professor, "and now, Mr. Terwilliger, will you tell us how the Greeks: defined their marriage system, what they! called it?" The brow of the young man contracted. Then his face lighted up and he replied, with gusto, "They called it let me think ah, yes-they called It monotony, sir." Detroit Free Press. R.lltf In mtw Hitnn. distressing Kidney and Bladder dis eases relieved, in six hours by "New Great South American Kidney Cure." it is a great surprise on account or its exceeding promptness in relieving pain in bladder, kidneys andhack, in male or female. Relieves retension of water almost immediatelv. If you -want quick relief and cure this is the remedy. The Intellect Kct Indicated' by ivolirlif. Convolutions or ; Amount of Gray Matter TJm-t la Held In Blan'a Cranium. The fact has been pretty well established that an important relation exists between a man's brain and tho quality and quan tity of his mental work. But it looks very much-as If a number of erroneous theories had been current In regard to the purely physical evidence of one's intellectual ca pacity. In The Popular Science Monthly Dr. Joseph- Simms discredits several such notions. i "' -, v. , PwKahlv the most orevalent of these oe-i lusions Is the belief that ability and force of character are proportional to weight of brain matter. r On this, poitft Dr. Simms has collected a groat deal of interesting dataJ The heaviest brain belonging to a talented person of which he has been able to obtain any definite information is that of the novelist Turgeneff. - This weighed. 71 ounces at tho time of his death. The Scottish physician Abercrombio had 63 ounces of brain,the Scottish General Aber cromby 63 and General iB. F. Butler tbe same. Another group of nine, eminent men; including Thackeray, Uuvter , ana the infamous Jeffreys, had brains weighing between 64 and 68.6 ounces. The author of "Vanity Fair," then, was blessed with 15 ounces less than the man who wrote "Dimitrl Roudlne.' The first Napoleony Daniel Webster, Agassiz and Chalmers are among 21 famous persons whose brains weighed from 50 to 63. 6 ounces. It is in structive to compare tho endowments of the hero of Jena and Austerlitz with those of the leader Of the expedition against Fort Fisher and then to recall that the latter hurt ahont ten ounces more pulp inside his cranium than the greatest general ofmod ern times. ' f . - '-'! In another group of 25 men having from 40 tr 40.9 ounces of brain one finds Grote. Babbage; Bertillon, Liebig, Bishop (the mind reader) and Gambetta. The figures given for the last named fere 40.9. Now, the averago weight of the brains of several hundred boys between the ages of 7 and 14 was found hjJPr- Boyd to be 45.9 ounces, and for boys ranging from 4 to 7 years 40.2. Gambetta steered the French repub lic through; one of its most dangerous crises. His! death was pronounced "the sudden extinction of a powerful Individual force, one of tho most powerful indeed of such forces hitherto operating in Europe; " Yet in tho scales his brain counted for less than that of tho averago boy of 71 Tho Impossibility of estimating the quality of a man's mind fromrthe weight of tho organ In which it resides is further illustrated by tho following statements: An idiot boy of 14, whooarly killed his sister, had a brain weighing 67.5 ounces. Another idiot, who was older, possessed 59.5 ounces, an amount equaled by only five of the famous men in Dr. Simms' llstr and yet exceeded by at least 11 persons who were distinctively idiotic. Dr. Ireland cites an Imbecile, for instance, with 70.5 ounces of brain, and there is a record of an illiterate and weak minded man with 71.3 ounces. The Army Medical museum in Washington contains the brain of a dwarfed T"rin squaw, which weighed 73.6 ounces, and even these figures are ex ceeded in the case cited by Bischoff of an ignorant workman, Rustan, who is credit ed with 78.8 ounces, j hi Dr. Austin Flint of New York in his "Physiology" makes tho average brain weight for men 50. 2 ounces. ; Foreign au thorities give other figures, and these are higher than Dr. Flint's in most cases. Dr. Simms strikes an average and adopts 52.2 as a standard. The mean for his 60 famous men is only 61.3 ounces, making them, on the whole, below the average;of ordinary men in the quantity of their brains. But the mean for Dr. Simms' idiots and imbeciles is 59.4 ounces I -Tho folly of attempting to judge of a man by his cranial "bumps" was exposed many years ago by Oliver Wendell Holmes. He made the professor at the breakfast ta ble say : ' The walls of the head are double, with a great chamber of air between them, over the smallest and. most crowded or gans. Can ypu tell mo how much money there Is in the safe, which also has thick walls, by kneading the knobs with your fingers? So, when a man fumbles about my forehead and talks about the organs of Individuality and size, I trust him as much as I should if he felt over the outside of my strong box and told me that there was a $5 or a $10 bill under this or that rivet Perhaps thero is, only he doesn't know anything about it." j I Not only is it impossible to judge of the brain by external appearanco and bulk, -but even when tho size of the cavity within affords littlo clew to tho amount of mat ter therein. Except in rare cases of dis ease, savs Dr. Simms, the j brain does not fit the skulL It is j surrounded by three membranes and a watery fluid. i If the weight of a man's brain indicates anything at all, it is more likely to tell his nationality and birthplace than how gifted he is. It has been noted in tables of brain weights that cold northern countries pro duce bigger brains than warm, tropical ones do. s The largest averago Is attained in Scotland. I I t Another popular error is thesupposithm that large convolutions and deep and tor tuous passages between the subdivisions of a brain betray superior power. Certain rodents, like the beaver, evince a high or der of intelligence and engineering skill, and yet their brains are devoid of convolu tions. Again, the whale has a larger brain, which Is divided by deep fissures, but the creature's mental power is insig nificant compared with" man's. Even the elephant, intelligent as it is, cannot be ranked above man, and yet its brain Is larger than the human brain, and the fissures in it are much more complicated. i A theory that has been received with considerable favor relates to the coating of gray matter that overlies 'the brain and dips down into the fissures. This- sub stance, also known as the "cortex," has been supposed to be the seat or the mgnesc order of mental action, and mental capac ity has therefore been measured by the thickness of the cortical layer. , That such estimates are unwarranted is the positive conviction ot Dr. I Simms. He presents only a little evidence on this point, but that little is of a striking character. The average thickness of the' gray matter is one-fifth of an inch. But in Daniel Web ster there was only ono-sirteenth of an inch, less than one-third of the normal amount. In many of tihe lower animals and in persons below the average in Intel ligence a thicker cortex has been found than in Webster's brain. - The writer in I The Popular Science Monthly is thus led to remark, "None of the suppositions about certain qualities of mind Inhering, in particular portions of the brain have been proved, nor have they stood the tests of science." L - LONDONr- ttatmted by all the historic smiles and tear , "of many a great soul vanished intq space, Tomb of prides, aims and passions, pjxre or ..base, - - ... - Tet theater where life loudly domineers, - T From fabulous epochs through; a thousand years U0 ELD0V7 GREASE NEEDED Of battle and dear bought peace your annals trace, .. . -Tin now (on earth man's mightiest meeting place). ' --.-!., ' Your vastness this columnar fame uprearsJ - .... j - In fogs of noonday nignt, in rains and In yellow ana silver misisor bilus uuiuu Or violet alps of cloud, deep charm I see, For always through your monstrous maze of streets, . - ; - , . , -With steps tin echoing, walk ytiur deathless j&ad, .... - O city of ghosts, that can so ghostly bel - . Edgar Fawoett in Literature. "Elbow Grease" is a slang term, denotino It is fast falling into disuse lota, of rubbing, because of the almost ( universal use of mm WashingfPowder For greatest economy buy our FOREIGN LANGUAGES. KLnovr Them Until We We Keer , Dream la Them. y . Professor Leon Wiener of Harvard col lege has discovered an infallible test to prove when a student of languages has mastered a foreign tongue. Hf s observations are based entlrelyon dreams. If an, American is- studying French there is tio definite way to indicate just when he begins to speak and think In French without mentally - retranslating his thoughts back to English.- . Many students learn several languages, but a very considerable part of their think ing is carried out in their mother tongue. This is not a -detriment byanymeans, w. if. nmvRci that the stadent has not completely mastered the tongue he happens to be studying. If, however, he finds himself dreaming in French or German or Latin or even Spanish, he can rest assured that he has entirely grasped a forejgj. tongue and is a master of it. Some men who Bf gooAJrench scholars, to of English birth, are able to entirely dismiss their native tongue and think and speak entirely in French, seldom, if ever, resorting to the slightest thought in Eng. llsh except in so far as intelligent men think of all things. Among Professor Wiener's pupils there i - X. are many young men wno nave come wj him with joy in their hearts because they have had dreams In foreign tongues. The professor himself is master of 28 distinct languages and dreams in them all when ever his mind happens to be occupied with researches in any of them. : This condition proves that the brain has absorbed all tho elements of the language, under study and is in such absolute con trol that it plays tricks with it. The English student considers himself blessed indeed who can ijream of a trip through Paris, with French people, French customs and the French language running through his head. . When these things be gin to occur he can get up the next morn ing and say to himself, "I am a finished French scholar. " New Yerk Journal. vpiw Mease-is needed with Gold Dust. It makes house work easy, a-real pleasure instead of a hated drudgery, it saves your wont easy, --mnr. vour money. It is better and I1TT1P. VULli aiACUKV"! J - ' ' . cheaper than soap for altcleaning. large package. : The N. K. Fairbank Company frlCAGO . . ST. LOUIS ' NEW YORK BOSTON irnrirnT rT AT " - flnSfr held ? winter patents $3 904 10 COMMJiiKOlAX. Wheat Spot steady; No. 2 red 833c WILMINGTON MARKET. StAR OFFICE, June 19. . SPIRITS TURPENTINE. Held higher at 36 cents per gallon for ma,-1 chine-made casks and 36 cents per gallon for country casks. Sales in the afternoon at 3736c". ROSIN Market steady at 90 cents per bbl for strained and 95 ceMs for good strained. TAR. Market firm at $1.30 per KM nf 9.R0 lbs. . ' CRUDE TURPENTINE.- Market firm at $1.35 per barrel for hard, $2.10 for dip and $2.20 .for virgin. J Quotations same day last yea& Spirits turpentine Steady at 2423c;. wvsin firm at tl.00(ai.05: tar firm at $1,300; crude turpentine firm at $1.00, $1.601.70. , :', i : RECEIPTS. ,- ! Spirits turpentine. .' - r 83 Rosin ' t , 139 Tar ........ .... - 53 Crude turpentine 35 Receipts same day last year. 117 casks spirits turpentine, 556 bbls 'rosin, 38 bbls tar, 51 bbls crude, tur--pentine. ' : COTTON. . 1 " Market steady on a basis of 5c per " St. George's Lake. St. George's lake, in : Liberty, is Baid to be one of the; handsomest sheets of water in Maine. It is fed almost entirely by springs, and its waters are so clear that objects on its bottom can be seen plainly when the water is many feet deep. The water at the outlet of the lake passes down a descent, and the fall in three quarters of a mile is estimated to be Nasal CATARRH In all its stages there ehoqM be cleanliness. Ely's Cream Balm cleanses, sootlies acl h cCs the ai-:oi.ed menil-rir.-. It enres catarrh an 1 Civcj nway a coid la the hecA. Cream BalJn j p'.aced Into the nostrils, spreads over the racuil'ifcna and is absorbed. Belief is im mediate and a cure follow. It is not drying-does nptprodacesneezlns. Large Size, 60 cents at Drug gists or by mail ; Trial Size, 10 cents by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 60 Warren Street, New York. WHOLESALE PRICES CURREHT. following quotations Wholesale prices generally, m Tbe represent ly. in maKing up mill orders blither prices nave to be charged. Tne quotations are aiwaye given an Biuwij 13 a - -1H il2X 8 5 1 85 1 40 1 40 " 88 5 00 9 00 & 7 00 14 00 BAGGING 8 D Jute Standard. WESTERN SMOKED Hams V S.i ........ Sides ..;. Shonlaera V ' DRY SALTED Bides .... Shoulders BAERELS Spirits Turpentine Second-band, each 1 New New York, each....... New City, each BEESWAX 9 ................ BRICKS Wilmington 9 M. ........... Northern BUTTER - ; i North Carolina 9 D... ...... Northern CORN MEAL f Per bushel. In sacks Virginia Meal... COTTON TIEu 9 Bundle...... CANDLES S ; Sperm.. Adamantine ...... ......... CHEE8E 9 - i Northern Factory - Dairy uream state COFFEE 9 Xjaguyra..., Bio DOMESIICS Bheetinz. 4-4. 9 vard. yarns, y nnncn or 5 ids . EGG8 9 dozen FI8H Mackerel. No. 1. 9 barrel Mackerel. No. 1. half-bbl. 11 00 Mackerel, No. 8, barrel... 16 00 BiacKerei, mo. ss v nau-DDi.. Mackerel' No. 8, 9 barrel... Mullets, V barrel ........... Mullets, pork barrel. . . . . . N. O. Roe Herring, 9 keg.. Dry Cod, JS ft " Extra... FLOUR lb Low grade uuutoo ..-,. m&b 15 80 83 51 55 51 55 -9J IS 85 8 11 10H . 10 18 16 7M 10 5J 70 10 rvrvii-nr! frw middlino-. Quotations Good Ordinary. . . . . , 3 7-16 cts V H Good Ordinary. ... .. 4 13-16 " Low Middling,....- 5 7-16 Middling 5i " ' 4 Good Middling...... 6tf Same day last year middling 6 jav Receipts 0 bales; safne day last year, 14. V: COUNTRY PRODUCE. . PEANUTS North Cawina Extra prime, 75 to 80c per bushel of 28pounds; fancy, 80 to 85c. Virginia Extra prime, 55 to 60c; fancy, 60c; Spanish, 82 to 85c. UUKJN Jlrm; ou to ozyz cents per hush ft I ROUGH RICE Lowland (tide water) 90c$L10; upland 6580c. Quotations on a basis ot 45 pounds to the bushel N. C. BACON Steady ; hams 10 to 11c per pound; shoulders, 7 to 8c; sides, 7 to 8c. V ' SHINGLES Per thousand, five inch hearts and saps, $2.25 to 3.25 ; six-inch, $4.00 to 5.00; seven-inch, $5.50 to 6.50. I TIMBER Market steady at $2.50 to 6.50 per M. FINANCIAL MARKETS. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. j New York. June 19. Money on call steady at 22Ji per cent., the last loan, being at 2 per cent. Prime mercantile paper 33M per cent. Sterling exchana firm, with actual business in bankers' dills at kko 488 for demand and 485 486 for sixty days. Posted rates 486V487 and 489. Commercial bills 485485jj Silver certificates quoted 61J462. Bat Kilver Mexican dollars 4854'. ! Gov ernment bonds irregular. State honds irregular. Railroad bonds easier. U. S. 2's, registered, 100 U. . 3's, registered, 109; do. coupon, 108M; U.S. new 4's, registered, 130 ; do. X5ou pon, 13Q4; U. S. old 4's, registered, 112M ; do.coupon, 114; U. S. 5's, regis tered,112X ; do. coupon, 112; N-C. 6's 127; do. 4's, 104; Southern Kaiiway 5's 111. Stocks: Baltimore & unio 67; Chesapeake & Ohio 24K '.Manhat tan ex div. L 111K ; N. Y.Central 131 H ; Reading 20M ; do. lstipref erred 60 H ; St. Paul 125 ; do. preferred 172 ; South ern Railway 10 do. preferred 49 ; American Tobacco 95U ; do. J pre ferred 140; People's Gas 118 ; Sugar 151 ; do. preferred 117H ; T. C. & Iron 64 ; U. S. Leather 5 ; do. preferred 69; Western Union 90X- T - j ; NAVAL STORES MARKETS. Wheat Spot steady ; No. 2 red 83 s,. ! options opened weak under bearish Liverpool cables,! reported rains in ' South Russia; a subsequent rally on the small visible supply increase was followed by unloading and a "decline the close was steady on a late deniai of the Russian news;prices Jijc lower No. 2 red July closed 82c; September closed 83c; December closed .845'c Corn Spot firm; No. 2, 42c; options opened weak with : wheat arid large receipts, but recoverf d on. a big export the markt t clcsinj2: nun at a partial c net advance: July closed '40c ; Sep. tember closed 40c. Oats Spot .hij -No.2 31c; options dull Lard 'firm refined steady. Pork firm. Butter tirm' Western creamery 1515c; State dairy 1318c. Cheese strong; large white 8Xc. Cotton seed oil sady; Petroleum steady. Rice firm. Potatoes quiet; Jersey sweets $1 001 50. Cab bage steady at $1 002 25 per tarrel crate. Freights to Liverpool cotton by steam 12. Coffee Spot Rio dull and nominal. Sugar Raw about steady; fair refining 4Je;- reBned quiet. CHICAGO, June 19. Reports of rain in Russia broke wheat lie to-day, but gopd support resulted in a recovei v of all but c of the decline. Corn VgS but slightly affected, closing un changed. Oats declined lc. Pro visions were irregular, but closed 2i(& 10c higher. Chicago, June 19. Cash quotation!, Flour firm. Wheat No. 2 spring 75 76 ; No. 3 spring 73 6 : No 2 feu 7778c. Corn No. 2 35Xc. Oats-' No. 2,f. o. b. 2627c: No. 2 white. 29 29Mc; No. 3 white, 2830c. Pork per bbh $7 52K8 30. Lard, per iur. lbs, $5 5 05. Short rib sides, loose $4 554 85. Dry salted shoulders,, $4 624 87. Shoi-i clear sides boxed, $4 955 00. Wiiiskey-Distil!-ers' finished goods, per gallon; $1 26. The leading futures ranged as fol lows opening, l highest, lowest and closing: Wheat No. 2, July 77 76'A, 77,76, 76; September 77 77, 78, 77 X, 78c; December 79& 8079. 79 tic Corn July U 34M, 35i, 34, 35c; September 313l, 35. 343. 35c; December 34, 34 34,34c. Oats No. 2 July 24?8-, 24', 24, 24c; September 22 Vt, 22 22i, 2y, Z24c; May 'Wi,'ly, 23, 24M. Pork, per bbl July 8 17; 8 3254, 8 17, 8 32; . September $8 37, 8 50, 8 8 50. Lard per 100 2s- July $4 97, 5 02, 4 97K, 5 02; September 5 10, 5 17,510, 17. Kibs, per 100 lbs July fl 67, 4 72, 4 67J, 4 72; September $4 82, 4 87K. 4 82. 4 87. Baltimore, Jane 19. Flour, firaj and unchanged. Wheat quiet Spot 7878Xj; month 7878c; July 78 79c ; August 79 c. eouthern wheat by sample 7278c. Corn strong Spot 39c bid; month 3939Kc; Jnlv- 39a3954c: August 39!i'c bid. Soutbern white corn 4141Kc Oats firm No. 2 white 3232c. Lettuce dull at 1520c per basket. J FOREIGN MARKET, 1 23 00 8 00 18 00 8 00 5 00 S 00 S 4 36 SO 00 & 15 00 & 18 00 & 9 00 14 00 4 00 & 8 00 & 8 85 10 4 50 Straieht... First PStent . GLUE 9 4 00 & 4 50 8)4 I .... J ... ... . ... I MVAIDJIDIUIU Ijurn U11B IDUiQAOluvwjl with that TrencH editor, on the war Kit tneur rpights! , why tnin-wny, m goid by R R Bkllamt, Druggist, in the Philippines, published in the !Uho lght to' WUmington,. N. C., comer Front ana Star of Sunday. It ia 'interesting not bo much on account of the opinions he express as an account of his conversations with Gen. .Otis, Admiral Dewey, Commissioner Schurman and the President of the Philippine Committee' of Manila. ' " Gen. OtiB after expressing his gatisfacfion with the results of his military operations asserted confi- dence in his ability to crush the "in surgents" but confessed that it more roights." Puck. WORD TO THE WISE IS SUFFICIENT. Ely's Cream Balm has completely- cured me of catarrh when everytning else failed. Alfred W. Stevens, Cald well, Ohio, i ft Ely's Cream Balm works like a charm : it has cured me Of the most obstinate case of cold in tne neaa; vi would not be without it Fred Fries, 283 Hart street, Brooklyn, N. Y. : , &, iuc. trial size or tne ouc. size oi Ely's Cream Balm will be . mailed. Kept by druggists. Ely Brothers, 56 Warren street. New York. t Market streets. trot over FlftT Tar. . j Mrs. Winslow' Soothing Syrup has been used for over fifty years by mil lions of mothers for their children while teething, with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain; cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. Iv will relieve the poor little sufferer imme diately. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for "Mrs. : Winslow's Soothing Syrup," and, take no other. , - ' t Saltcst Lake In tlie World. This ia Lake Urumla, in Persia, situated more than 4.000 feet above the level of tho sea. It cpntaiBS 22 per cent of. salt as against 8.5 per car t lis the Read sea. The lake ia 84 miles 1:;:;? :md 2-1 miles broad and its northern cocs ts are Incmsted with aborderof salt glitfcilngwhito in the sun. tfo living tiling can survive in it except a epecies of very small jellyfish. j j Ttoe IniUnn Fnmlly. , i In the family relation the Indian shows a side which ia attractive. Ho loves hia wife and family as we love ourg. andhe thinks of them before thinking cr.liimself. Bnt besides the natural affection that any animal has for its young the Indian cares for his children for another reason. He ia intensely patriotic His prido in his tribe and its achievements is very strong. He glories in the prowess of its braves and the wisdom of its chiefs; his soul thrills as he hears told over and over again the stories of the victories which his people have won over their enemies; ho rejoices at tho re turn of a successful war party. j i , Inthe children growing up in the camp, in the boys shooting their blunt headed arrows at the blackbirds and i ground squirrels, or yelling and shouting with ex citement in the mimic warfares which con stitute a part of their sport, in the girla whom he sees nursing their 'puppies or helping their mothers afc their work, he recognizes those who a few years hence must bear the responsibilities of the tribe, uphold its past glories or protect it from danger, as he and his ancestors hftva HrYia No wonder he loves them.' Indians .seldom punish their children, yet usually these are well trained, though chiefly by advice and counsel. George Bird Grinnell in At lantic. . V . : ... . ' . GRAIN 9 bushel Corn, from store, bas White Car-load, In bgs White... oats, rrom store Oata, Rustproof cow reas Black Eye Peas HIDES 9 Green salted.... Dry flint..; . Drvsalt - HAT V 100 Ss - i . Clover Hay.................. Rice Straw - Eastern Western ... North River HOOP IRON, 9 B. ......... LAUD, 9 1 Northern North Carolina LIME, 9 barrel LUMBER (city sawed) V M ft Ship Stuff, resawea... ....... Kough edge Plank... ....... west inaia cargoes, accora lngto quality .'. 13 00 Dressed Flooring, seasoned. 18 00 Scantling and Board, coni'n 14 00 Common mill ............... 5 00 Fair mill.... . 8 so Prime mill ...... a so Extra mill '. 10 00 MOLA88ES gallon t Barbadoes, In hegshead.. . Barbadoes. in barrels Porto Rico, in hogsheads. . . . Porto Rico, in barrels; ...... - - Sugar House, In hogsheads. - Sugar Homse, In barrels. . . . Syrup, in barrels............ NAILS, S keg. Cut, 60d basis. . . PORK, 9 barrel .. ; CitvMess ..tJ..... Rtunn ; ........ Prime... ROPE. "to.. SALT, 9 sack. Alum, 40 C5 oo s 6 1 15 18 00 15 00 & & & S 50 S 75 4 85 5 00 10 65 68 45 45 80 1 10 - 9 90 E0 85 . 85 85 7 25 3S 88 IS 14 15 00 9 50 20 00 & 16 00 18 00 & 23 00 & 15100 & o 50 & 8 00 10 00 & 10 50 & 25 28. & 30 83 14 15 25 3 10 10 Liverpool , American On 125 Sacks SHINGLES, 7-inch, per M ..... . Common Cypress Saps. 8T7GAR. Standard Gran'd Standard A White Extra C ...i Extra C, Golden C, Yellow.. SOAP, 9 Northern....;....; STAVES, "B MW. O. barrel.... B. o. Hogshead... TIUBERjrM Ieet-Shlpplng Mut Fair..'"".'.".'.'"!!"! . Common Mill.v..i......,... Inferior to oralnary........ SHINGLES, N.O. Cypress sawed 9 U 6x84 heart.... " Sap ....C... 5x24 Heart.............. " Sap...... ......... 6x24 Heart Sap.... TALLOW, 9 t WHISKEY, 9 gallon, Northern 75 70 5 00 1 60 8 50 & 10 00 9 SO !9 00 & US I 10 80 6 5 u UU 75 47H 6 60 225 8 SO 6J4 450 8 09 7 60 6 00 460 400 6 00 6 00 S 14 09 10 00 9 00 7 00 6 50 6100 4 00 8 50 6(09 5100 635 tS Piw T ft nurmern lioo & a UVtlUVWUUlMi,!,,,,,,.,,,. llUU ffa OL per Unwashed...... w a ool CM 50 6 00 00 If By Telegraph to the Morning Star. - New York, June 19. -Rosin steady; Spirits turpentine firm. i Charleston, June i9.--Spirits tur- I .pontine firm at 36c ;sales SO cases Rosin firm and unchanged; no sales, f C0TT0W MARKETS. L By Telegraph to the Mornini Star ' New York, June 19. On light Liverpool buying the cotton market opened steady in tone-with. prices un changed to one point lower. As the session progressed it narrowed down to the options of scalpers and an effort on the part of a prominent Wall street house to dispose of July holdins for reinvesting in J anuary, " With the weather in the South favorable, the crop was said to be doing famously though au occasional complaint of damage by insects, slow growth and a superabundance of rain came to hand. After a flurry of activity during which trices broke under liquidation, the ocal market for futures closed barejy steady, two to four points net lower. i . New York, June 19. Cotton steady; middling uplands 6 5 16c. I Cotton futures closed barely steadv ; June 5.82c, July 5.84c, August 5.87c, September 5.82c, October 5.86c, No' vember 5. 88c, December 5. 92d, January 5.99c, February 5.97c, March 6.01c; April 6.01c, May 6.07c. i j - - Spot cotton closed quiet; middling uplands 6 6 -16c; middling gulf 6 916c; saies iza Daies. v ; Net receipts 315 bales;' gross re ceipts .1,037 bales; sales 125 baleS; exports to Great Britain 827 bales; exports to the Continent 1,509 bales; stock 175,446 bales. , i " Total to-day Net receipts- 3,307 bales; exports to Great. Britam 3,327 bales; exports to France 1,709 bales; siiuca. no report.- . f I Consolidated Net receipts 8,253 bales; exports to Great ! Britain 5,937; exports to the JContinent 7,793 bales. Total since September 1st: Net re ceipts 8,202,041 bales; exports to Great Britain 3,390,725 bales; exports to France 745,846 bales? exports to the Continent 2,658, 479 bales. ' - i 1 June 19-Galveston, steady at 5 15-16, net receipts 144 bales ; Norfolk, steady at 6Jc, net receipts 107 bales; Balti more, nominal at 6J4, net receipts -p-bales; Boston, holiday,! no sales, net receipts , bales; Wilmington, quiet at 5, net receipts 257 bales; Phil adelphia, steady at 6 9-16c, net receipts 75 bales; Savannah, steady at 5c, net receipts 175 bales; New Or leans, easy at ec, net receipts 875 bales; Mobile, steady at 5 U-16c, net receipts 12 bales ;Memphis quiet at 5M, net receipts 400 bales; Augusta, steady at 6Hc, net receipts 2 bales ;! Charles ton, quiet, net receipts bales. ; j." PRODUCE MARKETS. By Cable to the Morning Star. i Liverpool, June 19, 4 V- M ton Spot firm ; prices unchanged. American middling 3 13-32d. The sales of the day were 10.000 bales, of which 1,000 were for speculation and export and included 9,000 bale- Ameri can. Receipts 2,000 bales American. I' Futures opened quiet with a poor demand, and closed quiet , and steady. American middling (1. m. c ) June 3 22 64d seller: Jane and July 3 22 64 3 23-64d seller; July and August 3 22-643 23 64d seller: August and September 3 22-64d seller; Septeaibw' and October 3 21 643 za-o4d oujet ; October and November 3 19-613 90RArl callav'. VnvAtnll' anr Tlpf PTTlber 3 19-643 20-64d seller; December'and January 3 21-64a322-64d seller; Janu ary and February 3 19-643 20-6W seller; Februaryand March 3 20-643 91-R41 a11" Mnw.h nnd- April 3 21-64d buyer;April and May 3 22 64d : seller. ' . M AKIN I: .. ARRIVED. Schr Wm F Green, 217 tons, Jotis sen. New York, Geo Harriss, Son & Co. Schr B I Hazard, 373 tons, Blaich ford, New York, Geo Harris?, son & Co. : Schr Lizzie S James, 173 tons, ard, New &Co. York, Geo Harriss, low EXPORTS. Geo W. 601 casks COASTWIH New York Steamship P.l-irA a9.9 Kalps p.ntton. spirits, 75 bbls rosin, 264 bbls tar, 316,- 798Jeet lumber, 40 cases cotion 68, pkgs mdse, 350 bags shuttle blocks, 80 bales warps. ; MARINE DIRUCT0RV. List tt Veel lu the ror' of Wl" mlnston, Ji. C. June ao. RCHOONEItS. Wm F Green, 217 tons, Jonss&n, Geo Harriss, Son & Co. n'n B I Hazard, 373 tons, Blatchford, Of Harriss, Son & Co. n Lizzie S James, 173 tons, Howard, ue Harriss, Son & Co. ... Helen M Atwood, 654 tons, Watts, Geo Harriss, Son & Co. !1 BARQUES. ' ; Hancock; 348 tons, Parker, Geo Har; riss, Son & Co. ' , TOBACCO TWINE. - lO bbls Tobacco Twine. 8,000 lbs Smoked Shoulders. 5,000 )bs Butt Meat. 950 Second-hand Machine 60,000 lbs Hoop Iron. yaw Kegsnau. - rr 2,000 bushels Good Milling co l,40O barrels Flour. Get myPrlc( GORE- Car-loafls of other Groceries. je 17 tf WHOLESALE GEOCEB, Wilmington. By TelegraDb to the Horning Btar. New York, June 19. Flour was D.iO'CONNOR- Real Estate Agent, Wilmington, DWELLINGS, STO OFFICES FOB KENT. t Honaeaanate forf'e fgnce on lmiroTd J"" I n
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 20, 1899, edition 1
2
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