Newspapers / The Weekly Star (Wilmington, … / Oct. 30, 1885, edition 1 / Page 4
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-1 The Weekly Star. - libation. -j PAUL HAMILTON HAYNE. Oft at Tils board an Eastern host felt bound To pour one full libation on the ground, "This to refresh, "he said, In cordial trust, ""Some poor wine worshipper who sleeps - indust." -Thus the rich wine of -generous speech j r ' should flow, -Yea, even above the ashes of your foe; v Ah, who can tell, some fragrant drops may greet Hia thirsting heart, to make its rest more sweet. ' Copbb Hill, Ga. A IiEGAL ADDRESS Noble Sentiment from the Retiring: :.. .i. President...,. Extracts from the Address of Hon. Joseph J. Davis before the N. C. Bar Ass'n. From an enlightened, virtuous and able bar must come en lightened, virtuous and able courts, and these are the 6Uspensera.of jus tice, protecting the good and punish ing the bad purifying the masses and protecting their rights "and liber- ties. . ' ; v'' Again: if the people are enlight ened, virtuous and industrious, their active brains will be constantly in venting and devising sources of wealth, prosperity, comforts and pleasures, requiring busy and skilled hands to execute, and this will in duce active and generous competi tion and consequent conflicts of in terest that will demand and com mand the counsel and services of able lawyers and the arbitrament of wise and discrimating judges. These judges and lawyers, if upright, hon est and faithful, will command the respect and esteem of the people in - turn, elevate the tone of public and private life, and thus it is ' that the bench and the bar constitute a stand ard by which the character and con dition of the people may be accu rately measured. -; It is, I think, a great though a very common mistake, to suppose that lawyers do most thrive where are the most law-breakers, and the most law lessness. In an idle, thriftless and vicious community there may be will be more crimes, more disputes j and more litigation, counted by num bers, but these like the people will be of a mean, petty character, fur nishing a .mean support to a petty class of lawyers who can neither ele vate themselves nor the people, and ' then they too become a standard by which the character of such a people may be judged so it may well be said whether good or bad like law yers like people. - f For good men for good people there can be no such safe refuge found as in good laws, well and faithfully ad ministered,and it is the highest praise of the profession to. which we belong that, with rare exceptions, its leading members in all conflicts between des potism and civil liberty have been found on the Bide of the latter. The victories of Nelson and Wellington, while' giving renown to the navy and army of England, would have been of little -worth to her people but for her civil magistrates, her Hales and her Mansfields. And England far- ( nishes an admirable illustration of the correctness of the assertion that a people may be judged by their lawyers, for in no country have laws . and lawyers been more respected and in no country except this has there been a higher degree of civil liberty than in England. : 1 . . - t " - The years since I came to the bar have wrought many changes, and the habits and lives of the legal pro fession have not been free from the effects of these changes. Mr. Ken- ; nedy, in his admirable life of Wirt, a book full of sparkling gems of wit, worthy of the subject and the author, gives so delightful a picture of the happlimes spent by the law yers in riding circuits as to almost cause us to regret the inventions of railroads, and wish to return to the old stage coach, sulky and stick gigs. . But the labor and . fatigue and discomforts of the cir cuit were not without their advan tages and blessings, for besides the joyous social features of judge and lawyers travelling the country from court to court, with attio wit and sparkling jest arid laughter pro voking joke, the healthful exercise gave strength and vigor to the body, making strong, the casket which , held the bright intellectual gems, gathered from : books and their own reflections. From this city law yers used - to travel in private con veyances, or by stage or hack, not only to the adjoining counties, but to Halifax, Edgecombe, Pitt, Bertie, Craven . and other counties which they included in their regular cir cuits, and the abler and more dis tinguished members of the bar, who did not care for the practice of the county courts, would begin the cir-i cuit with the Judge and attend all or most of the courts of the judicial district. The venerable Gavin Hogg, before my day, would leave Raleigh the day before, and be in Windsor, 110 miles away, at the opening of court on. Monday mornings. I I have said that Raleigh, Oxford and Hillsboro were distinguished for the learning and ability of their lawyers. . I never knew why, ; but there seems to have been a fascina- ( tion about Oxford for the prof ession, and Mangum, Ruffin, Nash, Graham and Waddell and others from Hijls boroiReade from Roxboro; Iredell, Badger, Hay wood, Saunders, Bryan, Miller, Busbee, McRae and others from Raleigh; Eaton from Warren; W. H. Battle, then from Franklin; and John Kerr, of Caswell, attended that bar. , ' Besides these there was a local bar of high repute. It was the home of Mr. Gilliam, the urbane gentlemen. T, 1 : 1. -1 "a . , , . . ' vHCMu equwiar, me a Die legisla tor, the accomplished presiding offi cer, the fatherly guide, protctor and counsellor : of the young members of the bar ever ready with kind word and kind ' act to help . the strug gling, to heal the breaches between his fellowmen, and promote brother ly love among members of the bar. Unselfish and warm in 'his friend ships, he did much to form the high character of , the Oxford bar. It was the home of A. W. Veri able, the gifted orator, the brilliant conversationalist, the genial compan . ion, the classic wit, the accomplished gentleman of the od school. Wadesbord Times: We had the pleasure of attending the State Pair last week, and while we cannot say the Pair was a succes the reunion of old friends is - ample compensation. The crowds were very small except Thursday, and then much smaller than usuaL AJFFAI&9 VJt THE BAIZay : noAbsi ' , . XT. T. Herald. 1 - Mr. Benjamin F, Long) Of States viUe, N. C, receiver of the western division of the Western North Caro lina Railroad Companyj appointed by the Superior Court ?f McDowell county, N, C., in. a j suit by Mark Young and others, stockholders and creditors - of the company, and Col. Michael L. Woods, of j Washington,' D. C, counsel for the J stockholders and creditors,.4 have been engaged since Wednesday last m taking tes timony in the suit. - t " " " They have examined William H. Guion, Sr., William H. Guion, Jr., Herman R. Boltzer, Alfred Iiichten stein, bankers; James ( M. (Donald, cashier of i the U Hanover National Bank, and T. B. Coddmgton, the metal1 importers The object of the suit is to recover the value of ninety four bonds ' of $1,000 f ach of the Florida Central Railroad Company and 4,370 shares of thejcapital stock of the company, besides other assets. Mr. Long, as receiver, baa a suit pend ing in the Superior Court of Iredell countv, N. C, against jthe! present Western North Carolina Railroad Company, William P. Clyde, of this city; A. S. Buford, of Richmond, Va.; T. M. Logan and others, in which he is seeking to Recover $50, 000 paid to the late Western North Carolina Railroad Company by the attorneys of what were known as the "Dutch bondholders,' in a recent suit with respect to the Florida Cen tral and other railroads in Florida; also the value of the right of way aud road bed of the Western Divis ion Company, from Asheville, N. C, to Paint Rook and from Asheville to Ducktown, valued at . more than $400,000, which, it is alleged, the Western North Carolina Railroad Company has used without making compensation therefor. '(-!' ; - The Western North-Carolina Railroad, it is well known, is a part of the Richmond & Danville sys tem. In the latter ' suit the! defend ants, Clyde, Buford & Logan, being non-residents of North Carolina, re cently sought to remove the case, so far as they are concerned,.t6 the Fed eral Court, but upon a motion by the plaintiff before Judge Dick, of -the Western District of North Carolina, the case was ' remanded to the State Court. "V'-i".:.4 :-v;' ; . ;; ' The interest in these j suits is increased by the fact that it is ati effort to recover -'what is left of the proceeds of over $6,000, 000 of the special tax bonds of the State of North Carolina, which, it is alleged, were fraudulently obtained and disposed of by the late George W. Swepson. The main suit has al ready been to the Supreme Court of North Carolina three times. THE SORT OF A DEMOCRAT ME IS. , N.-Y. World. - ' Albany, October 14 President Cleveland is very certain to go home to vote. He never failed to do so when Governor. One of his friends here, Mr. Charles A. Earle, who is in a position under Gov. Hill, and was appointed by Gov. Cleveland, said to-day: t fMr. Cleveland always votes in the Ninth Ward of Buffalo. When he was running against Folger for Governor there was some interest among the boys to see if he would vote for himself. There was a gen eral idea that he might cast a com plimentary vote for his opponent. When he got to the polls, however, and put in a full ticket, one of his friends said: 1 "'You don't mean to vote for yourself, Mr. Cleveland? ' "'Yes, I do, he answered. 'I al ways vote the full Democratic tick et, because it is the party, more than the man, I vote for;' and, he added, with considerable significance, 'I ex pect every Democrat to do the same.' " THE "OLD" DEPRECIATED IN THE SOUTH. . Paul H. Hayne in The Southern Bivouac. It has grown into . a habit among too many , of the periodical writers of our day to elevate "the New South" at the expense of the "Old" in all matters pertaining to literary and in tellectual enlightenment. V They are not content to represent this section as undergoing, in their opinion, a sort of esthetic "renais sance" but declare that for the first time may we really claim to have any genuine culture whatsoever. Let me say to them, in the words of the bluff old English lexicograph er "Free your minds, gentlemen, from cant." ""'I ; It is in truth demonstrable that during the slavery regime the high highest classes of our planters and professional men were possessed of a wide, elegant,' and "of ten pro found culture. ; '' i : i . ; - ' There may have been compara tively few professional authors, but what then? Is there no other litera ture than that which "wreak? itself upon expression" between the covers of published books no other culture than that embodied in, "MSS." and printers' ''copy?" .... The Uterateurs and scholars of the Old South bestowed y, lavishly the wealth of their talents and ; acquire mentsthe latter,", as I have intima ted, being often of the highest order, as the result of laborious Btudy at Gottingen, Heidelberg, Edinboro', and various other centres of Euro pean education, upon the society which they led, molded and, adorned. The entire mental and, moral at mopbere about them was penetrated and made genial by the noble influ ence of their disciplined intellectuali ty, as the material atmosphere is warmed and irradiated by the sun."' That a considerable number of vigorous and brilliant authors some of genius, even have arisen among us since the close of the civil war is a subject for cordial congratulation; but surely it is not necessary to the establishment or increase ; of their fame that a class of servile 'para graphists, who occupy toward cer tain so-called Northern "authorities" (?) the same cringing attitude once held by the Roman "umbra", to ward hia patron, ' ; should i profess ; to find the whole department of South ern ante beUum literature a desert of antiquated rubbish, with nothing of permanent beautyi or power; from dismal Dan to barren Beersheba. Sarah ' AltheaT ' Hill t. Sharon is studying for the stage, and. will soonan pear as Portia, in "The Merchant of Ven ice.'? She is to receive $4,000 tot a week's engagement in San Prancisco. - r FOREIQNt -J ' . ' . - -' .' e Sdl&leid Government raaklBX . Aetlve Preparation i t Prevent a British Aavance Death 'At the Bleh- op of naneheater. CBr Cable to the Xornlns Star.I ' : " Calcutta, October. St2. CkmtingenU of the Indian army from Madras and thia city are being rapidly transported to Rangoon, where ' an expeditionary force is being assembled : for the invasion of Burmab. The Burmese government is actively pre paring to . resist aa. advance of British troops. Engineers are busily engaged erecting earthworks, planting torpedoes, building fire : rafts loading hulks with stones and sinking them at : convenient points in the Irrawaddy river, and placing chains across the river to obstruct naviga tion. -1 Kyuyyung-Atwin-Won1 has been appointed to command the forces on the frontier, and he has been ordered to pre vent the passage of the British at all cost King Thebaw is disappointed because a majority of the Council held to. consider the situation favored a peace policy.: After the Council the principle peace advocate, Keuwon, telegraphed the Burmese dele gate at Paris the details of the discussion of the Council. Notwithstanding the active preparatlons 01 me Burmese iorces, criusu officer expect that the campaign will be a short one. - - , . v ' V Maschsstss,' October 22. The Bight Hev. James Frazier, D. D. , Bishop of Manchester, died suddenly to-day; the result of overwork. : - -; ' s v London, Oct. 23. The Privy Council has dismissed the appeal of Louis Riel, the leader of the half-breed insurrection in Canada, against the sence of death , passed upon him by the Canadian Courts. ; ConstantdtOplb, Oct 22. The Porte has issued a circular inviting the Powers to a conference at Constantinople, i for the exclusive objsct of settling the Roumelian difficulty. ? : ; CoNSTANTiNOPiB, Oct 23. Herr Van Bodowitz, German Ambassador, has in formed the Porte that Prince Alexander has guaranteed that Bulgaria shall not dis turb the present order of things. The Prince has ordered his troops to avoid pro voking a conflict in any quarter, but does not hold himself answerable for his neigh bors. " . ' J' ' . ' -:i r -i. ' London, Oct. 23. The trial of Mr. Stead, editor of the Pall Mall QatetU Rebecca Jarre tt, Mr.: Bromwell Booth, of the Salvation Army, Mrs. Couribe, Mr. Sampson Jacques and Louise Maury, - de fendants in the Eliza Armstrong abduction case, . began to-day before Mr. Justice. Loopes, at the Central Criminal Court The Court room was crowded. Many representatives of the Salvation Army were present A large crowd had assembled in front of the building . previous to the opening of the court, but a heavy rain set in and they scattered to places of shelter. The prisoners pleaded "not guilty." Sir Rich ard E. Webster, Attorney General, opened the Cise for the Crown. His address cov ered the same ground as that of Mr. Po land, at the magistrate '8 examination. Justice Loopes says no motives, no matter how worthy their object, were sufficient to justify the taking of tue child without her parents' consent, and if consent had been obtained in a fraudulent manner, it was no consent in the eyes of the law. The wit nesses, testimony so far is merely a repeti tion of : the evidence at the preliminary examination Eliza Armstrong testified freely and clearly. The trial will probably last a week. , j r: Pabis, Oct 23. The Brissou Ministry is now uncertain about its ability to hold a majority of the new Chamber of Deputies, as a serious split in the Republican ranks is threatened. The Republicans were uni ted to carry those districts which required a second ballot in the recent elections, but now each faction insists on the adoption of its own programme. Paris, Oct. 23. The Journal Des De bate, commenting on the British expedition against King : Thebaw, urges the French government to protest against any sort of British annexation of Burmah. Manchester, Oct 23. Private tele grams from Mandalay say King Thebaw is desirous of settling the dispute with the Indian government without resorting to army.. .--- Calcutta, October 23. The Indian Government has chartered eight of the British India Company's steamers for the transportation of troops and munitions of war for the British expedition against Bur mah. ... "1 ; : ;. Copenhagen, Oct 23. The Upper House of Parliament has unanimously indorsed the policy of Estruff, President of the Council, and denounce the recent at tempt to assassinate him. London. October 23. The defendants in the Armstrong case are charged with mis demeanor, instead of felony, so as to enable them to testify in their own behalf, and be liberated on bait during the progress of the trial. : . I -v- - . ' Madrid, October 23. The populace are becoming incensed at the reticence of the government respecting the negotiations on the Carolines question, -and fears of an outbreak are entertained. ; The German legation is strongly guarded to prevent a repetition of the recen outrage. . . London, Oct "-24.iit'''is now evident that the ParliamentaryTcampaign will not pass off without serious rioting in many quarters, as the party feeling, . which al ready runs high, daily grows more bitter. The Marquis of Lome, Liberal candidate for Hampstead, went down to Brentford, a town seven miles west of London, to deliver a campaign speech. While addressing the eleetors a mob assaulted him with rotten eggs, andjBome of them, gaining the plat form, smashed his hat over his head. The supporters of the Marquis rushed to his rescue, and a fight ensued. The noble Lord now became so thoroughly fright ened that he hastily departed from the scene, ran through the streets in a drench ing rain to the railway station, and imme diately left for London. Meanwhile the row continued, the supporters of the Marquis being severely handled, and be coming discouraged at their desertion by their champion - they finally - retreated, leaving their contestants the masters of the field. The latter then seized the platform . and passed resolutions - denouncing the policy of jthe Liberals. When the Queen's son in-law made his appearance as the Liberal candidate for Hampstead, it occasioned considerable sur prise, and when he put forward in his ad dress advanced radical opinions, the sur prise was greatly increased. . He adopted Mr. Chamberlain's programme of free edu cation, and advocated immediate disestab lishmont in Scotland. He championed the principles of the Free Land Leauge, and with a view to the . encouragement of the subdivision of land, suggested that the sales of large estates en bloc, should be subject to heavy taxation; while the sales of land, to be divided into smaller lots, should be left duty free. As to the House of Lords, he hardlyjwent so far as the Hampstead Radi calsdesired, being of the opinion that the venerable institution might be amended by thejinfusionof elected members. He favored the extension of local eelf-government to Ireland. - - , - : He Paid for the Beer. Detroit Free Press. . i' fc . "I notice by the papers," ho said, as he waited : for the - froth on his beer to settle; "that a man in a Chi cago saloon fell, dead just as he had finished drinking a glass. of beer." : "I see dot same thing in der pa pers, too," replied the saloonist. , , "Curious, wasn't it?" - . . "Vhell, I don't think so. Yon see he drank oop dot beer , und said : ' "Sharge it to me ?" and der par tender he pring8 oudt his -club und taps him on der headt. It vhae:- al; most eafery; day somebody - drops deadt here 1" '".He laid a hickory club on the bar and looked the man full in the eye, and the beer was hardly down before it was paid for. vW'o : i?vv - - Charlotte Democrat; The Fair of the Carolinas will attract a large crowd here on the 27th, 28th and 29th inst if the weather is favorable. One of the negro burglars, Nelson Stewart, who was convicted of robbing. Capt Strickland's residence, and sentenced to be hanged, met the Captain on the court house steps and asked him for a ".chaw-tobacco," which was handed to him, -when the negro re marked to the Captain by way at thanks) that he hoped he would meet him in heaven. Poor fools, many of them think that the road to heaven is by way of the gallows. - A Prophet Without Honor. . W. J. Florence in the Philadelphia Times. . Sothern and I made a tour, of Soot land once. We were not playing, and one night we stopped at a place called Preston. .-I. proposed that we go to the: theatre, and when' we got to the box office I wanted, to buy the seats. They wre only 2s. or 3s.. bat Sothern- said: '.'No, we will go in free," :At that time he was known all over Great Britain. Walking up to the window of,, the box-office win dow, the- following Bcene took place between Sothern and the man insider "I'm Mr. Sothern." "Who's Mr. Sothern?" ? "Don't yon know Mr. Sothern?" -. No,I don't." . , . - : : "Good heavens, Billy, here's a man doesn't inow me." ' "What of Mr.' Sothern?" inquired the man at the- box office, i "He's Lord Dundreary," replied Sothern. : . - , L "Oh 1. Well, that don't make any difference. ..Lords pay here: just the same as common folk. What kind of tickets do yon want?" ;'Go to - the devil," said Sothern, ern, whipping . out - a half crown. "Giye us two seats.".. The Administration' Hard Work. . ' Norfolk Landmark, Dem. - The admlnibtration of .Mr. Cleve land has had a prodigious amount of up-hill work to do, and has been em barrassed in many ways. It has had exterior and interior forces of an ad verse character ..to eon tend . against, and has been compelled by common prudence to move with great delibe ration in many matters of detail. On the larger field of , operations it has made a splend id record,- and the peo ple, recognize the fact. In the Colon affair, for example, the, action taken reflected great' credit on the country! and the eame may be said of the man ner in which the Indians and the Cat tle Kings have been managed. In fact, there has been no hitch or vi bration in the machinery outside of the disposition of the public patron age. .The civil , service law, as we have said a score of times, is one thing, and the rules provided there; under is another. , .We would respect the,; law, but we would abrogate a great numberof the regulations; but it must? be remembered that these matters of detail require great care, and time, and that as "Borne wasn't built in a day," wholesale reform cannot be brought about by the mere word of command, as one might order an evolution of disciplined troops. - . Another Naval Dlacraee. 1 Washington Star, ; Nothing could be more mortifying than the report of the behavior of the new war ship Mohican on her first sea voyage. Here is a vessel, which to all intents and purposes is a new ship, on which an enormous sum . of money has been expended, and yet the best she could do was to steam at nine and a half knots, and that wan only for a short time, without break ing down. The report of Commander Day ia a record of accumlated disas ter which ojught to paint with shame the cheeks of all who are in any, way responsible for the ship's perfor mance. .... ' A Tariff Need Lopping. Boston Transcript Mr. Joh L. Hayes, for some time president . of a tariff commmission, remarked the other day that "a tariff is like a tree. -. It grows np out of the necessities , ot the country, with its ; roots, trunks and branches.:' It has its little "sprouts" that require lopping off from time to time to per mit the ; healthy branches - to bear fruit.".;. Very true, and we trust that Mr. Hayes will not become uneasy when the "lopping off" is begun, albeit that the process will not be re stricted to the "little sprouts.", - Asheville Advance: - Last Fri', day night a colored brakeman, named Geo? Best, on the Western North Carolina Rail road, met with a very sad and tragic death. A freight train coming toward Asheville was crossing a bridge a short distance this side Old Fort, and Best was standing on the tender of the engine. As the train ran up on the bridge, a beam of the bridge f raming struck him in the back part of the head; knocking him off the tender, , over the bridge and into the water some distance below. - He was taken up and brought to Asheville where he died Saturday night ; IMPORTANT ! . a; hew and: valuable device ff ; A PATIENT " Water Closet Seat ! ' TOB TEX ' : CURB Of HBMOEKHOU) 8, (Oommonlv called I "PILES,") Internal or External, and PBOLAPtlOS ANI, for Catl drea of Adalte. "' i i - . .. - ....... . . NO MXDICIKB OB SOBQICAX, OPJCRAT10H -; '.: ' - :V XBCSSSXBT. '. ".. ' 'I have Invented a SIHPUC WATER CLOSBT SBATrfor the cure of the above tronblesome and paltifnl malady, whioh I ooafldently place before the public a ; SURE RE1IF AJD CURE ! lit has been endorsed by the leading resident Physicians in North Carolina. Ia now being test ed In the Hospitals of Mew York, Philadelphia and Baltimore, and we are satisfied the result will be satisfactory, as It has never failed else where. You can write to any of the Physicians orprominent citizens In Bdjcecombe Co., N. C. These Seats will be famished at the following WA.LKUT, PoUahed, $0.00 1 Disooant to Physt CHBESY, -j , 6.00 y , cloians and to the POPLAB,- - - - S00) Trade. -Directions for nsin)? will aocompany each Seal - W trouble yon wiQi no certificates. We leave the Seat to be its own advertiser. Address . r- - LEWIS CBAHBBRLAIN Patentee, " " FIRST OF THE SEASON. . . soe psr dozek. - ; -' ' MAPLE f STRUP, TAHILLA SYRDP1 NEUF0HATEL: CHEESE, - .j 1 ........ FHSsH BY BACH STEAMER. Peacli, Pear, Piflm, PifieapBle & ctiefri . ; PrSirres ifT Bnlifl, : , , ALSO. APPLB BtJTTiB AHD JELLY. ELEsmOTiiiiijMffi ' : IS BULK. tOePBB tJABT, . P.; L; Bridgets & Co., . iii ajTortJi Front St. '4SDAVtf j ...... .J:.r.lY WIFE ! My wie has been a great sufferer from Ca tarrh. Several physlolans and various, pa tent medicines were resorted to, yet the disease con tinued unabated, nothing appearing; to make any Impression upon it. Her constitution Anally be came Implicated, the poison being In her blood. 1 secured a bottle of B. B. B. and placed her upon Us u se, and to our surprise the improve ment began at once, and her reoovery was rapid and complete. No other preparation ever pro daoed snoh a wonderful change, and for all forms of Blood Disease I cheerfully recommend B. B. &. as a superior 'Blood Purifier - R. P. BODGE, -! v 0 Yard master Georgia Railroad, . v : '.. ; Atlanta, Ga, . GREAT GRIEF. j: : From the Athens (Ga ) Banner-Watchman. ; Uncle Blck Saulter says: . Fifty years ago I had a running ulcer on my leg which refused to- heal . - ...... j - under any treatment. In 1863 1 went to California and remained eighteen months, and in 18731 visited not Springs Ark.,remamiog three months bat was not cured. Amputation was discussed, but I eonolnded to make one more effort. I com monoed taking the B. B. B abont six weeks ago. The fifty-year-old sore on my leg Is healing rip idly, and yesterday I walked abont fifteen miles fishing and bunting without any pain, and before using the B. B. B. I could net. walk exceeding half a mile. 1 sleep soundly at night for the first time in many years. : To think that six bottles have done me more good ! than Hot Springs, eighteen - months In California, besides an Im mense amount of medicines and eight or ten flrst-olass phvsiolans, will convince any man on earth that it Is a woDderf ul blood medtolne. l it has also cured me of catarrh. - JStOUTH! There Is a ady living here, Krs. - , who has had catarrh for many, many years. Ihavekcowu she had It (or fifteen or twenty years, and my father onoa doctored her, as the was then a fen -ant on our place. For the, last two and a half years she has been bedridden, the catarrh or can cer (the numerous physlolans have never decided which), during her two and a half years in the bed, had eaten all the roof . of her month out. She was so offensive no one ooold stay In the room; she could not eat anything, but could swallow soup If tt was strained. She gave up to die, and came so near perishing all thought she would die. Her son bought the B. B. B., and she used several bottles, whioh effected an entire, cure. She is n?w well and hearty. I have not exaggerated one partktle. LTJC1 8TBONG. MEDICAL HEIT. flat Two Prominent Plijsiciaiis Say a Mel Remedy. , Crawfordsvule, Ga., Democrat. i B D. B. la without doubt one of the most valu able and popular mediclces known to the medi cal science, and has relieved nm suffering hu manity than any other medicine since It came Into uf. It has never failed In a single Instance to produce the most favorable results where tt has been properly used. Physicians everywhere recommend It as doing all it is claimed to do. The following certificates are from two promi nent physlolans, who have done a large and sno eessful practice for many years, and upon whose Juafiment the public can safely rely: ' fi- duwronsenu.-, Ga, July 15, 1885. ; " Eilltor Democrat: For the cast ten years I have eben saffaringwlth rheomatlsm 1c the muscles of my rlghthonlder and neck. During this time I have Medftolous remedies, both patent medl- cloecaiul Qiose Dresotibed bv Dhvslolan-. Last v Muxene 1 fiammenced using B.B.B., and could -- - .----j - - see an Improvement by the time I had taken one bottle. I have been taking It at intervals since last summer, and can say It Is the best medicine for rheumatism I have ever tried.' I take plea sura In recommending uj to the public V : J. W. BHODES, A. -L, X. D. Cb irro-oevnx-, Ga, July 15, 1885. Editor Democrats About November of last year I had what I supposed to be a cauliflower excrescence on right side of neck. I used local applications, which effected,- no perceptible good. I commenced the use of B.B.B. and took it regularly twelve bottles, and In due time the sore healed over, and I now consider it well. I cheerfully recommend tt as a fine tonic and alter ative medicine. .' , 8. J. FARMER, X. D. "Meal Has ob a Bean Pole. Xumcbtov, G., June 1, 1885. Xy brother has a son that was afflicted with rheumatism in one of his legs until the knee was so badly contracted that he could not touch the ground with his heel, and bad scrofula. He took only two bottles of B B. B .and scrofula and 'rheumatism are both gone. r; "y A Mrs. X. A. El rod came to my house the past summer almost covered with carbuncles and bolls. I got two bottles of B. B. B., and before she had got through with the second bottle she was entirely welL She was also troubled with swollen feet and ankles,and had been for twenty years. - All gone no trouble with swollen feet now. .. '- ". - . ' : I was troubled with bleeding piles since 1858. I used one bottle, and have felt nothing of the kind since taking, the medicine. The clothing that I was wearing when I left Atlanta fitted me abont the sameas a meal sack would a bean pole. I have on the same clothing now.and they are a tight fit. . ,; , ; : Yon can do as yon like with this; as for me and my household we think three B's Is folly ortho dox, and will do to rwear by. i - Respectfully yours, ' ' . ,' .mm - J. X.BARFIELD. Jviap&Wly , nPttl sa . (.lanhopj Rdstorcd Remedy Fkxx. A i oiyoatMul imprndeno fiemni Debuibr, Lost eansmg Fnmato re r noire AAiinm, J.H.RKKVEfl, 3 Ohtm Skjitw Ysc. nov 99 DAWly tu til sat -nov SO R3cl Rust Proof sed!c - FOR SALE IN LOTS SUTT. "t,' - ' ONE HCTNDBED BOXES Factory & Crtaam Geeese ; " AT LOW PEACES BY - HALL & PEARS ALL. 'Dg-lDAWJf' " :"- ' ' - GIVB BUS 10 hiZB. H. H. KEWBCAIiL. As rising toward the distant bine -r - -' -The swan in mortal anguish flies," . And pours from out his throbbing breast Melodious notes athwart'the skies, ." Nor song,' nor wings avail him naught, For soon he wavers, droops, and dies: J So Jesljr.let'iMi On. wings of doubt that curb my flight, Yet ever atrivinjr to mount higher, : ... .- : As oft involved in darkest night; . O raj divine! if such there be, . v -&i&;v Dispense the clouds! illume my sight 1 Give me to see as one"of old,- r - On sea gir Patmos' sacred shore, With vision never equalled since : A it had never haid been before, . - - The healing leaves; the living stream, :v Where sorrow ceases evermore, And night is banished, day supreme- A A glimpse through ieaven'r wide open' MELIOIOtra 'TMISCELANlir. i-i TfaeVO ls'ft good-filster iQrNorth Danville-who give to;ther,bilcine of the Danville church- until her: last dollar was expended, and when it eemed impossible to carry through the great undertaking she came forward and said: 'My money is all gone, but here is my horse and buggy-1 I give them to the church. "Richmond (Va.) Religion Herald. '-. -v v: 4 Ton .picture tooxireeif "ibe beauty of bravery and steadfastness. "You let ' your' imagination ' wander in delight over the memory ol martyrs who have died for truth V1 And then some little' wretched, disagreeable duty comes, which is your martyrdom, the lamp for jour oil and if Jou will not doit- bow- your oil is spilt ow flat and:lhin a4:niluranated your sentiment about the martyrs ruos out over your self-indulgent life. PMUivt Brook Paul exhorted his son Timothy to give attendance to reading (L Tim. iv., 13.) iBat-' be probably-did not :have any books to read except the Jewish Scriptures. The trouble now a days is too much read ing. We cram Into our brains bound vol umes, msjT4ioes and newspapers at a fear ful rate. 4 IS en. when the reading is unob jectionable in quality the erbeas in quantity leads to menial dyspepsia, gout and paraly sis. Too much bread and beef will ki.l a man as surely as poison, though not so fast But when you see how unwholesome is the stuff that our. boys and girls are devouring at such a fearful rate, we are tempted to execate the memories of Faust and Gut tchburg, and to wish that, printing had re mained an unknown - art We wish that somebody would get up an anti-reading society -Iaterior - . - i Unless we are wedded to Jesus Christ by the simple - act of trust in His mercy and ilia power, Christ is nothing to us. - Do not let us, my friends, blink that deciding (est of . the .whole matter. We may set forth aspects of : Bis -work great and glorious. : He may be to us- much that is very precious; but the one question, the question of questions, on which everything else depends, is. Am I trusting to Him as my Divine Redeemer f Am 1 trusting in Him as the Son of God 1 .- Ceremonies . are nothing, notions are nothing;', beliefs are nothing, formal participation in worship is nothing. Christ is everything to him that trusts him. Christ is nothing but a judge and a condemnation to him that trusts Him not.. And here is the turning point: Am I resting upon the Lord for my salvation ? Rev. Dr. A. McClaren. . .!. : No I won't. I won't Ho or sup press the truth, to carry my end, because it is laudable. 1 won t take up a man s quar rel because he . is my." friend, when I be lieve him in the wrong. I won't . abuse a man when I believe, he : ought - net to be. abused, merely because some friend wants me to doit. I won't say a "book is a good one, nor a sermon a grand one, merely be cause it is written or preached by some body I like. I won't minify a man, because I don't like him. I won't allow myself to strike a man merely because he ia elevated. I won't strike him merely because he is down. . I won't condemn In a sinner that which I condone in a saint. I won't pre tend to be moved by . pious motives when I know I am simply malignant : I won't pretend to have no ax to grind when I can feel the helve hidden' under my coat I won't pretend that I am not willing to preach . when I am anxious to dor it. r I won't suppose that because a man has one flaw he is all flaws. I wont do these things if I can help It Geo. G. Smith, in Rich mond Advocate. y - - ! POLlTICAli JFOlirTS. - John Sherman isn't exactly the biggest kind of a statesman, but he is about as big as the Republican party appears to have handy. PhO. Timet, Ind. Rep. - -In our own judgment, it is be- E'. question. that the pardon of Mullen resident Cleveland operated as a great t encouragement to election frauds. Boston Advertiser, Mug. , s i:, Nothing worse to our farmers could happen than ; foreign prohibitory duties on their products, and yet foreigners are merely carrying protective theories into practice. Washington Pott, Dem. t If Spain should decline to re ceive Curry, as Italy and Austria rejected Keiley, Mr. Bayard will be forced to the conclusion that Richmond is not a good place to choose diplomatists. PhiL Times, 2nd. Rep. : . ( " A Philadelphia paper remarks that John Sherman knows his own - busi ness. - There was a Senate investigation in 1883, which proved conclusively that he did not, for he made .the Treasury's con tingent expenses dependent upon his own needs. 2fao York Star,, Dem. -j- Perhaps the -South might be willing to take up arms to restore peace, law, and decency in Ohio. Ohio by its re cent election having righted matters in the South, it is nothing but fair that the South should in turn right matters in Ohio. Louisville Courisr-Jbumal Dem. - TWINKLINGS. ; ... -rSo faint is the vanishing star in Andromeda that it can barely be seen. ' ; '. Chewing gum Is still a standard article of female diet (Tafoesfon Nines. . ' What is ease f asks a philoso-' pher.-- Ease Is a thousand-dollar salary and a hundred-dollar -Job. Puck. .. Whoever yearns to see arightV Because his heart is tender, " . Shall catch a glimpse of heavenly light ' " In every earthly splendor. . ! . .'. Unknown Poet. ; . "I am a martyr,f said a boarder at a poorly kept boarding house. VWhy?" asked the new. arrival. - Ohr ' because J suffer aVthersteak,"; was 't the rejoinder. EvansviUe Argus. : f.'C- "fe So contrite am I grown I scarcely dare ," ' Myself with any other to compare; - r V-F; Lest finding all so proud, myself so humble, I should be left to boast and so to stumble. Bradford Torrey in Life. ?-' If Canon Farar is right, a ma jority of readers must be - wrong. The Archdeacon denies that Browning's poetry is obscure. It certainly is not luminous un less you put it in the fire. -Veto York Star, . Vot ? - Soar madder rants me to give her den stents to buy some meat mitt - She voe jsrazy. ',' Go and teh your mudder dat meat-eating; toa unnatural. . I haf no money for such onnecessary tings. Poor people should' not be oxtravagant" "But I didn't say meat I said beer." "Oh,; peer voait J .Here, sonny, is deden zents. Run along to . your mudder." Chicago ' BJsrald.liyi!-,i:: 'fif-yLj ffja;, . - - 1 - ' . i 0 ea' - - . .-.i.7 ' Z Payetteville - Suni We noticed the Echo last week a few names remarkable for oddity, and one of our prominent phy sicians was also attracted by it and he has furnished us with a few names from his books of people for whom ; he has ' prac ticed, and if you don't believe what weaay we will introduce yon to the: Doctor, and be will - introduce you to them: Black White, Bharpless Cutler,' John Aman, Jim Yank, Wright Also and Good Also, Han som Aatt Boney Carr and Carr Boney, Boney .WeU and - Well Boney.1; Boney Teachy and .Teachy Boney, Moses Judge, Jacob Judge,, Solomon Jadge, Abraham Judge, Justice Judge. ' Phoebe s Picket, Frank Pucket EU . Padget 8: E. North, Waxell .. Sunderlin, Lincoln : Shuffle, Eli Shiyer, -Job ;Thigpen, Holly Thigpen, Founula Brook, Jacob James, Josh James. Mr. j KlUitt Wade Pigtord and - SaQie Leatherhgad. ' ; j " V ' - ::,r 7, One rxperience cf Ilany, . -: Having ex;erienced a great deal of. v-"Trouble!"' from ingestion, so that I bame near losing my - V"- " ' I Life A - " f ; ! : My trouble always catne after eating any food ' . - ;t '. ' : However light- . X. I r-- ' And inaiKeaUbl. - ; - Fof two or three hours at a time I had to jjo through Ibe most - " J - " - : : Excruciating pains," . " ; ; ' ''. : : . ', . . ; -: - "And the only way I got" -'--"- ' ; "Relief I" - " t Was by throwing up all my stomach contained 1 1 - No one can conceive the pains that I had to go through, until -1 -i "At laatT . - i - I was taken 1 "So that for three weeks I Jay in bed and - j ' Could eat nothing I ! 1 - - - I ;My.sufferinga .were so . that I called two doctors to give me something that would stop the pain.T i " - i ' Their efforts were no good to me. -v"At last I heard I good deal J "About your Hop Bitters I . -: . ' And determined to try them." ; - I : . Got a bottle7-in four hours I took the contents of j : One ! II , ". ' f ; Next day I was out of bed, and have not seen a J i "Sick !" - . - ,- - f . Hour, from the same cause, since. i : r I have recommended it to hundreds of others. -You have no such J "Advocate as I am." s j Geo. Kdtdai-l, AIlsloD, Boston, Ma's. - - : : t : : Downright Cruelty. ' ' ; To permit yourself and family to "Suffer!" - ' - With sickness when it can and cured s easily . be prevented . With Hop Bitters III., . ' Mf Wono irennlne wifhont a bunch of sreen Hops on the whit label. Shan all the vile, poi sonous staff with "Hop" or "Hops" In their name, oct 8 DAWlm - --. tn tb sat oh m tooAnrm - i 2S YEARS IN USE. The flreatest Medical Triumph of the Agst SYMPTOMS OF A ' . TORPID LIVER.! Iaoaa ofagpetfte Bawela coative, Pais la tka heaa, with m doll aensatioa to tk 1 kack-art, Pala ander the ahomlder klaae, Folia esa after eating;, wltk adla Ib eliaa tioa to exertion of body or mind, Irritability of temper lVow spirits, with afeeliasrof havlaa; neglected same dotr Weariness, Dlzziaesa, Flattering- at the Bean, Data before the eyes, Headache over the richt eye. Restlessness, with . tfal dreana, JJIehly colored Urine, and CONSTIPATION.; l Terr's FJXXS are especially adapted to soeb eases, one dose effects such a than jre of feeling aa to astonish the sufferer. Tney Enur tm an the AppetUend eaxue the : body to Take en deshuthus Uio system Is : nourished, and by their Tonie Action on . the isstiyOra-tfBeralar Stools are groanoeaj2yJ2222i TUTT'S EXTRACT SARSAPARILti Beaor&tea the body, makes healthy, flesh, Btzeogthena the weak, repairs the wastes xt -the system with pure blood and hard musc!: tones the nervoua system, invigorates the brain, and imparts the vigor or manhood. 1. Sold by drutrgists. ' -OFriCB44aiarrmyStMNew'-ork. Jan 80 DAW ly ' i- sa we fr jan S iCONTACIOUS Diseases are Prevalent all over the World. I am a native of Bnnrland, aid while I was in that country I contracted a terrible blood poi son, and for two years was under treatment as an oat-door patient at Nottingham Hospital, En gland, bat was not cored.- I suffered the most ajronizlng pains in my bones, and was covered with sores all over my body and limbs. I had vertigo and deafness, with partial loss of sight, severe pains In my head and eyes, etc., which nearly ran me crazy. I lost all hope in that coun try and sailed for America, and was treated at Boosevelt in this city, as well as by a prominent physician in New York having no connection with the hospitals. - I saw the advertisement of Swift's Specific, and I determined to give It a trial as a last re sort. I had given np ail hope of being cared, as I bad gone through the hands of the best medi cal men In Nottingham and New York. I took Blx bottles of 8. s. a, and I can say with great Joy that they have cored me entirely. I am as sonna and well as I ever was in my life. ; HewYorkdty.Jnne mfc fHALFOBD. BLOOI) .Is the life, and he is wise who remembers it SSJ? March of but year ie84, I contracted blood .poison, and being In Savannah, Ga., at the time, I went Into the hospital there for treat ment. I suffered very much from rheumatism at the same time. I did not get well under the treatment there, nor was I cored by any of the nsoal means Ihaye now taken seven bottles of Swift's Speclflo and am sound and welL It drove the poison oat through boils on the skin. . Dajs Lbabt. Jersey City, N. J , Aug;. 7,1885. , Two years ago I contracted blood poison. Af ter taking prescriptions from the best phystoians here and at Dallas, I concluded to visit Hot Springs, and on reaching Texarkana a doctor re oommended me to try Swift's Specific, assuring me that it would benefit me more than Hot Springs.-Although the POISON had prodooed great holes in my back and chest, and had removed all the hair off my head, yet I began to improve in a week's time, and the sores began to heal, and were entirely gone inside of eight weeks. ... Wnx Jonas, - - - . . , Porter Union Pass. Depot. - Cisco, Texas, July is, 1885. , Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed Gar.SY7SwrMC8 ; i,aWer Aanta' janao DAWlv , fr suwe nrm - eh w Men Think they know all about Mustang Lin iment. : Few do". Not to know is not to have. feblDAW sututh ohm Many a r is beautiful, all but her skin ; and nobody has ever told lier hows; easy it is to put beauty on the skin. Beauty on the skin is Magnolia Balm. feblD&W sntnth nrm ohm Tery Talnable Plantation and Mill Site For Sale. ABOUT 4B0 ACRES OF THE BEST LAND IN Brunswick Uonntv,atBook Creek, N.C , about thirteen miles from Wilmington. One of the most valuable and convenient Plantations in the State. One of the best locations for a Store and Turpen tine Distillery. About lorty acres under cultiva tion, and adapted for Ground-Peas, Cotton and Corn. - The tract contains a small new Grist Hill, an excellent site for a large mill or factory on a -ever-falling stream of great force and power, sufficient to run the largest mill or factory. The tract is underlaid with rock and marl, and the property offers one of the finest sites for a large plantation, milling and mercantile business. Por further particulars apply to A. J. POTTER, on the premises, or by mail to Town Creek, N. a se85W4w,,s , - ITotice. , Notice. T BIG LBAVB TO CALL THE ATTENTION OV JL Country Merchants and farmers to the fact that I have purchased an interest tn the Commis sion and Mercantile Business of B. F. Keith, Jr., and that hereafter the firm will be known as KEITH HOLLCNGS WORTH. Strict attention given to orders and consignments. Respectfully, OC88W8t - O R. HOLLING8 WORTH. - D. O'Connor. BBAL ESTATE AGENT, - ' ' ! iilii t ' WILMTNGTON, N. O IMfl L "Beal Estate Bought and Sold,:: In- snranoe, Taxes and Bents promt is prompuv janfWly abyeiuieq to. illll lfl IUZX7 ADV-CF.TISI-IIENTS. rpo travel and sell the trade the staple and cele- t. X brated Clears, Tobaccos and Clearettes of the NEW YORK I iHAVAJtauiu-it vault any. Ldberal arrangements. Salakt or comoaBios paid to the ngiiiman. r orvsriiiiurj uuaijiiennontnV ,- &7 Broadway, New York. ' oolD&W'm. , ., . WANTED Tonng Ladies In city or country to work for us at their homes; fascinating em ploymeBt; no instructions to buy; work can be sent by mail (distance no objection); 16 to $9 ptr week can be made. No canvassing; particoUtr free, or sample of work mailed for four cents in stamps Please address, Hons Makutactuktsg Co , Boson. Mass. P. O. Box 1818. 8 TTTANTKO An active Han or Woman in everv V V county to sell ear goods. P alary $75 ru.1 morth and, expenses, or commisfion Bxpensea in advance. Outfit free. For full particulars ri . dress STANDARD SILYXB WAKE CO.. Bo sel6D4W8m CARPETIIMCS - ' , ' AND , Upholstery Goods 17. J. SLOAtME NVUK ATTENTION TO THE ATTRACTIVE PRICES AT WHICH THEIR ENTIRE ' FALL STOCK IS BEING OFFERED. AXITIINSTERS from $2.25 per yd. npw'd WAlTOSs - . from - S.OO per vd. npw'd llIOQlIBTTEa from 1 .SO per yd. upw'd BODV BRCSICLSfiom : 1.1 5 per jd. upw'd T4 PE8TBT from . .60 per yd. upw d INGRAINS ; from" .50 per yd. npw'd WIttS A.ACE CTTEU A1N8 from $5.00 per palrupwa-d n A DBAS LACE COKT4IN8 from f4.00 per pair upward ANTIQUE and FRENCH L.ACE CUR. TAINS from $3.50 per pair upwara NOTTINGRABI LACK CURTAINS from 9 1 . OO per pair upward TURCOM AW CURTAINS - rrom $6.00 per pair upward TAPESTRY COVERINGS from $1. SO per yd. upward CRETONNE COVERINGS -. from - 30 per yd. upward WINDOW SHADES MADE ON SHORT NOTICE OH MATERIALS FURNISHED. SAMPLES 8ERT WHEN DESIRED and PROMPT ATTENTION PAID TO ALL MAIL ORDERS. - C0B8KSP0NDENCB INVITED. and 19th St. TiEW lORK CITT. : oc 6 DaWlm , I Wakt ACEMTS TO SELL MISSOURI STEAM BJ Men and Women of good character and intelligence. Exclusive Territory Gnn-anteed. A weeks' trial of sample Washer to be returned at my expense if not satisfactory. A thousand sr csnt-tha hestWanherl the world, and puy9c;;i2hlc nents BIG money. Tn. trinslo merit mskoii it j r-henominal snocesi every where. For Hlnstrnf'- r'nnlar nd terms of agencr address. . ). WORTH, St. Loula(Mo.. RAINBOW RUPTURE RELIEF A CURE Simple, safe, reliable sad a perfect retainer. It Is not a Truss. Worn Day and Night and its presence forgotten. Send for circular withtesti M txmi& Is from sratefal. afferen cured by this ap. pli nee. Address Central Medical and Sureical Institute 930 Locust 6, St. IxiuiB, Ho. - SUilfnl treatment given all kinds of surgical and medical cases. Oonsultation free and invited. KESVOOSOEBtUTY Oa o nowa A-nsa Decay .andnomerona otcnraduea. haC Bins the skilled oh. siciaxis. lemilt from yoathfal indiacratina. BXUS tan fre indnisenoa. . n fiMrfandnan. AioirE toe impwuoaoi pre a ; to oas PTBsniiw nt (ness IDOaOKS. Cimlari a- Oct oar Ilea - tr -ni 1 i 1 suvwnsi nwli raaa xrui nca- 1SXRVOTJS ra, od learn Important MttM besns takinf treat- , DlbtlJTrJ - 1 merit elaewhere. Take a STJRE Rmroythatnn TvtCCKED thomwnrti, does ' Snot lnterfersvith sneo- tion to twineM, or eauia pain or bonvenience in . SFSTSlOAXe i zxec-ly; TEBT-D KM 8EVCM Iai a o nBrd to the test of d apffijlo fimt 11 cs is 1 w ithna deatv. Tfwn nrsl functi ODSofthe ho nsllonth. - CSXlry - ltba. 3wo Months, 8.0C ,T falandrapkUyftainabotix Xtto i .ath.nrtJS.m. HARRIS REM EDY CO -TFaCHnBSTl :.- oezr.utBt.8X. -Zcrs.-ca. ang I8DAWI7 ; ' . -' IB0 rJATSS.. . Oao. W. Wn.i,ias,. 8. D.W-i.c... . rresiHfci t .......Vice President OashiT Bank of Hew Hanover. CAPITAL PAH) JS - - - S350.CGO AUTH0EIZED CAPITAL- S 1.000.0) ;j DIRECTORS: W. I. Gore, 6. W. Williams, of Wfl- liams A Marchison -Hon. R. R. Bridgers, Pres ' W. A W. fia A. H. Toilers, of Adrian A Toilers. - Jno. W. AUdnsoa,. F. Rhelnsteln, of Aaron A RheinBtein, C.-LStedman, Jae. A. Leak, of Wart. -1 boro. . E. -B. Borden, oF dnldr- W nmn XT D. McRae. Isaac caies, ., . Isaac Bates. PresidenL 6ol-s.oro BrancL ffir DIRECTORS: E. B. Borden, W. T. Faircloth, W. F. Kornee.-iy BUBdmnndson, Herman WoilL pd"cn? f aieslioro Bmu"c&"'J,l DIBJECTOBS:' 3. A. Leak,R. T. Bennett,G. W. Little, J. C. Marsha . Idsaes Certificates of Deposit bearing interost ' Is authorised by Charter to receive on deposit moneys held In trust by Exocntors, Administrators, Guardians, Ac, c, Ac . Strict attention given to the orders and requests of our country friends by mail or otherwise. noy 16-wtf- ... THE DAILY STAR. OLDEST DAILY PAPER IN NORTH CAROLINA! rjTHK DAIX.T 3 KO-tBINS 8TAK, A FIBST-CXiASS DEMOCRATIC NEWSPAPEB, pnblisbed at tie following low , J- ' RATES OF SUBSCKIPXIOH One Tear, postage paid,'.. 8ix Months, " ". .. Three " " .. One " .. 7 00 4 00 3 00 75 THE DAILY STAR Contains full Reports of the Wilmington Mar kreta, Telejrraphlci Reports of the Northern and European Market, and the Latest ' General News, by Telegraph and Man, from an parts of the 1 -. . World. '. Largest DAILY CIRCULATION in the STATE WL. H. BEEJSAB.D, ..... . i - Bono- A Pi oprixtor. 'Wilmington. N. C CARLTON HOUSE, farsaf , tinlk Conntj H. C. ; -;. .... ' ' '' . - . QN LINE OF WILMINGTON AND WELDO ' Railroad, 86 miles from Wllmingtcm. Table always well -applied with the best the eon-try affords. Ratetv of Board very nasona ble, H. 1. CARLTON, - deeM DAWtf Proprietor. - Real Estate tor Sale. ; A NUMBER OF GRANTILLB COUNTY FARMS . Three Store Houses tn the" arowlnK town of Oxford, N. O. A nnmber of DweUingii in the fTOWmjr town of Oxford, N. C. A number of vacant Lots in the frrowmg town of Oxford, . C Bracing atmosphere, healthfolnees of loca' tion, irood schools. Good society. Prices tendr ing upward. Address promptly. " -: aTOHNA. WILLIAMS. Dealer m Beat Estate, ool8D3tWJ Qxford.NTC. Broadway i e&ckem nri ii m T - m. a
The Weekly Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 30, 1885, edition 1
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