: - - I AAlt I r TW1 r "V - - , . I . . . . . . .... ,.....- . t . ... I . : . ii. ' . a a 7 - . I . . k h ' Rin ice -Y-x , , . . - . . Mm'" vt I ,1 t!,. .1-1 lit' V.,...,l It si v fvi-ho ba" on twrj fds.lBU Keen lor piay, hU do not - UBhtl It scarce wouia away ;or: , , . :it i--s Rid crows, : k kecjiinp, - . k no music knows : lt.il". Ii! v t '-jit wncn meyiB-s i-.4f tl l r'it. ' , t ii 'f .'v?.. ,lat".1f(.- ' Zt. I How rich hn8v!lOQIld health: ith pnw, Bait Blfeam wtoSI?-. &r?old . - . .. '-""A'iyoar, It lii.'bt. nv r rnpws- t i -iff ay "1 the bank;, l-inxious toi i.,v tinilvr in t n-ns a ratp affair- for. nf I'd'? I u- I (our troos. ! tnro of llifilargP4!1"' ' -er9 cann1 ;v .y to lock to buy. m . fied, for tlij 1 wortblofs. r (TPt n ' I Vfliibanitoii1' into town. :YearO !. thougbf lu : liisuiifprt1 j his arrival i tofindtHul in tlio T'i: cH flume nig. '-A3 -1 on wbat w lisKment tie bird. I ., just iHt-pintc, 'jtivflH-taljHl iose. !ov hero-I've iouna isiire now- 1s lhat cutsior rcuna lio. K ana orow.. rti l I" n snnic, wr' to ncr nuuo rfimir. ,, i,i "The yununar Yoar sleep nervea will be Btrong, and your sound. NMt find VAii.t Thaf L wf f111 ke Pre blood. That U JJ ifc oure8 - many disease to""Jf many thouaandB take It L disease, retain good health, wre vent Bicknesf and Bufler&g. Eeniembe? BM.M nrh Found Ills MtU. .i - a i: 1 4 in int? Aim uiiuoum, iui Mjiiorva, a few years; nian of the name of , h. Mr. L.yncn uvea lumber district and on r i . Uiii- j . t !i nice iixnu Bixtjain. make money and turn to bash, he built a mill. uTiqueeriy coneiruciea instead of a frame, he r posts for his building f Xan began themanufao-; luihil'tT and had it piled tip Jintities nil around. ; Buy-i un all parts of the coun-4 at his stock, intending' all went away dissatis-j hoards were uneven and M tor trying in vain toi ilfcirs out of his venture il the place and moved - - r- I the One True Blood Purlfler. $1 per bottled Hood's Pi li fT Uy91i 11,1,5 '"y to a iisvru 'fUlS take, easy to operate, aso. 8TOM EWALL JACK60IV. Issed, and one day Dari DedlMtlon cf Mimoriai hU st theVIy SlnU Military loatitute.r Br Telegraph to the Morning Stsr. ' ' Lkxinqton, Va, Juae 23 The dedi catlon ol tha -Stonewall Jackson Me morial Hall, the moat interesting "feat ure, of the commencement of the Vir- glaia Military Institute, took place to dar In the main hall of the building. The hall was packed to Overflowing throughout the exerciser, a large num ber of the audience being compelled to stand in the lobby and doors. Many people from the countrv were in attenri. ' i - i ' z would visit the scenes of f" ui J cicnrnoo irom Lynch- uuiic utiu 10 sweii ine crowd The nat speculations, but on at ttio spot was surprised Lis mill had gone. There) . of the stream was the dud wheels, but no build j 6tood gazing in wonder; i left of his old estabj nnething perhaps a litj Attracted his attention np in one of the trees, and imagine his emprise on looking up, for about 12 10 air aoove mm was ma hiW absence the four trees I used as corner posts had taken the mill up toward ytiea Press. , ' 1 fa't m t mill. In that heL; grown am heaven. .' Cilve Is Superstitious. i ' One Satin Ja.V afternoon, just aft -i er ilme. alvej had sung the jewel Vgong-jn. 'Faust' and divinely she I hrwight ' ut the dramatic value as 1 vell Vs 1 be musical beauty of it!- 'l i - I "Mile.; Bauernieister, as jaanna, in squeezing between Mme. Calve and the table an which the jewel casket lay.-l'ru? led" off the niirror. It fell with a crash to the floor, and Mar guerite ciitl Martha's faces fell in stantly. 1 "alve !ran at once and pick ed up "the mirror. Closely she exam ined it tii ?jee if it were cracked, and her face Woke into a radiant smile when sli 1 discovered that the mir ror was ititact. Sho- -paessed the hit of glass joy fully to her- hodom and then ,re placed it on the table. Edouard de Eeszke, who wnjs also on the stage, andhis f jirj:;-sociates, some specta- r, -voutly crossed them- oVeover,' when the mirror fliih milue.kier than to ttnirror is known to the su- s and -operatic folk be-verr-omen and rxrtent un un. Chicago Chronicle. exercises were ooenrd with prayer by the Rev. C. IR. Hemphill, D p., ol Louisville.. Mr. Houston S, Lecher, president of the Board of Visi tors, then gave a brief history of the efforts to get funds for the construction of the hall, saying that the first contri bution was made by Prerident Jefferson Davis, and that a large proportion of the contributions came from Pennsylvania. Mr. .Letcher then introduced the first orator of the day. Dr. Hunter McGmre, of Richmond, medical director of Jack son's corps, who opened his address by relating that be had been recently told by eminent British officers, that the greatest English speaking Generals in the last hundred years were Marl borough, Wellington, Washington, Lee and Jackson. They declared that the campaign of Jackson in the Valley of Virginia was the first of which the world had known no blunders. The confidence of the people in Hood's Sarsaparilla is iue to its une qualled record of wonderful cares, t tors ave selves, if fell. X. 'smash a persQlitr lieve in & der (he HOMIliY ON NERVOUSNESS. The . nm'ns ' ofl fart tldt fcutly a. Bicn, arf by Some Prak'tiral Idea That Are Draw a Thinking Lsymu. : . . .. moss carnal glance at tne coi- t!ie newspapers betrays the urrvous complaints, as re nt' l by the medical profes- Kr;atly on the increase. Com parison fill (lcnionstrate that we Amer- .leans ai',- bt-coming, if we are not al ready, tl t; tanit highly strung and nerv ous ptot lu in the world. : !-.'' But ii .rvojisinoss,' as expressed by va- Hons well liki iimna citizens, seems to :ain t?s ntmcut'against noise. I be a cer1 am con-id( ring the point from the vau staseor disudvantage of a layman. Is eto nu.-fj tlie cause or simply the evi dence (f lurvonsness? That's what I 'taiit to kiinTvi, To be clearer, is' mere pfiisj f io. emitor of nervousness, or is the uui ,( :ryji complaint of these noises merely tli. f yidc nee of growing nerv-. ousni:.; : .Mf,U of the errors of reason ins, I lj li vt are from, the confusion of . cac and ciT-VHif-irji 1. unexpr-t dlv .1. "B np VIM' io start, it i.s aiaiies Siie ; tatod. draiii 1 station, can :. aii'l shriik. i uiiorrHTS. "was hi rvous . . lira's shrill it,au( if 1 hi siniph have ""Dd NvhatfA rotd to tht agaiufit" all shonl ditioi la: t. ' - ' .' t r Carrier suddenly and birxs his thin, shrill whis- jut liallway and causes me asy and natural to say he ii' f vous. And when an ele- raktiS down, Approaches a ipig every wheel to scream sots inv teeth on edge." andjlib rhi.it; ;r: is instantly filed against the ra: lrrurt 'ompithy of creating nerv- hereas, the facts are I iready, and the letter car- H liistle only demonstrated id not been a sufferer from tho elevated noises would hud no effect upon my or. And if I sat down and newspapers complaining these manifold noises I A TRIUMPH FOR HAN N A la tne Flabt-for Cmtrcl ol the Bepublioan - lltate Central Committee of Obis , ' By Telegraph to the Morning Sue. .Toledo, O., Jone 23. The Republi can State Convention completed its work to-day in a session of less than four hours. While there bad been a hard fight for two days for the control of the State Central Committee, there was every appearance of harmony and enthusiasm to day. The two contested districts were decided in favor of the Dick candidates and this showed t the State committee stood 17 for Dx and fcur for Kurtz, Senator Hanna was not only congratulated on the result but all the delegates were seeking admit tance to bis apartments, for conferee ce. Governor Boshnell not only accepted the situation comp'acently before the convention assembled by having friendly consultations with Senator Hanna, but he also made a strong speech of accep tance tn the convention. When Gov ernor Boshnell declared "in spite of the statements of the Democratic prets, I accept,", there was a loud demonstratioc. In the organization of the State Cen tral Committee in the afternoon Gov ernor Boshnell. named the vice chair- r If 1 . J . 1 man, wane senator nanna sciccica mc chairman and the secretary. , Senator Hanna returned to Cleveland this afternoon and will soon be back in Washington. Governor Bushnell re mains here till to-morrow. The two leaders bad a friendly meeting before separating, and it is understood that they have reached an agreement in the organization of the' State Executive Committee. . The feature of the convention was the speech of Senator Hanna. Governor Boshnell, Lieutenant Governor Jones, General Grosvenor and others who spoke had been frequently beard, but Senator Hanna was not known before in bis' own State as an orator, although he bad for years been recognized as a leader In management and organization. His delivery was eloquent and forcible, and . be captured the convention by bis commanding oratory. He was enthusi astically cheered and congratulated more on his effort to-day than on bis triumph of yesterday. m Bubjeet of the King of Belgraat flayed It. is a curious reflonHnn tVo who will face death with impunity are yet absolutely aghast with fear when brought- into vthe presence of the great ones of the earth. "Such great divinity doth hedge a king" that few men would venture to assert their independence or the right of their manhood if a sover eign's view were opposed to theirs. J?is is no dtmH &n inheritance from the days of feudalism, when the monarch was indeed the liege lord of all the people. Among the few, how ever, whose names have come down to an admiring posterity because they bad the stamina to rely on their, own rights and assert their own desires must he mentioned the name of M. Vanden driesohe, a subject of the king of Bel gium. v ; .- -; .-; .. ome tune ago he saw a piece of ground at Ostend the position of which pleased him. As luck had it, it chanced to be directly in front of the king's vil la. ' This fact, we may be sure, did not make it less desirable in the gentleman's eyes. ,He oalled in the" aid of architects and builders and proceeded to erect a house on it after his own heart. Unfor tunately, however, his majesty looked out of the windows of his villa one day and found that his subject's home, if it had not emulated Aladdin's and (sprang up in a night,, at all events interfered with his. view, as did that miraculous structure with the view of the other sovereign. ' .' - - ' " The king .'naturally remonstrated -at this want of consideration in a subject, ana, no aouDt, expected that the remon strance would have good effect So, in deed, it seemed,' for M. Vandendriesche engaged a number of workmen, who proceeded to pull down the edifice, which had only recently been finished. Alas for the credulity of the human mind, even when that mind belongs to a potentate of the earth 1 As soon as the foundations of the building had been razed to the ground, and the king, no doubt, congratulated himself on that uninterrupted view of the country which he had had before, he was startled to find that an increased army of builders arrived to augment the number of those who had been employed. Oddly enough also, a huge quantity of bricks and mortar appeared on the scene. These bricks the masons began to use in the most unaccountable man ner possible, piling them one on top of the other with mortar between. It look ed as if they were building a wall. They were. Slowly, as is the manner of masons in every country of the world, the wall grew by inches. Instead of a villa a '12 story fireproof building was erected, which effectually prevented his majesty from seeing the country which lies oil the other side of the property of his recalcitrant subject San Francisco Chronicle. Old Cannon. . If the various Grand Army posts of the country were disposed to take ad vantage of an offer made at the last ses sion of congress, they might materially increase the warlike spirit supposed to pervade every, patriotic family, says the Washington Post. The offer was to sup ply warlike implements, which, if they have outlived their usefulness, will Serve as ornaments for poet headquar ters and might inspire the rising gener , ation with much patriotio fervor. This could be accomplished by accepting the tender of several hundred abandoned cannon and shot and shell which con gress has decided to give to any Grand Army post that may apply for them and which are now lying useless and neglected at the navy yards. These cannon are mostly old style models of engines of war, whioh might have been considered just the proper thing 80 years or more ago, but which, with the march of progress and the ad vance of invention, have been placed upon the retired list Their places have been filled by guns and munitions of war of a more improved type, and as the abandoned articles are valuable only as old metal the government decided that it could put them to no better purpose than to give them to the veterans of the late war, who fought on the Union side with these same guns. . . But it is surprising to count up just how few posts of the immense Grand Army have taken advantage of this of fer. Since the passage of the joint reso lution last winter the records in the of fice of the secretary of the navy, where such applications have to be filed, show less than 100 from the entire country. There are still guns on hand for about 700 more posts, yet, strangely enough,- the Grand Army has made no effort to provide itself with an armament which, although it would be of little service in time of war, is valuable from an artistic standpoint in, time of peace. THE WHITE HOUSE. ARRANGEMENT OF THE t OFFICIAL QUARTERS OF THE EXECUTIVE. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. Thsnw timils Bigs tort ' M only advertise- my nervous con- dai to tlx; v. holo conimnnitv. awaii: 'thiit. T' KViall, Win mnniBT ti e popvikr theory when I assert t"at noises have-Nothing whatever to I ' . . . i . r,i. AJJO UCITUUD ?ill jump higher and quicker when "lentlv arjTirnnr.V.r.l fw. V. .oof tuinir t(.'dly confronted silently in the oeiug suddenlv'temcTied bv some cine 1 ill that moment unseen or unheard, en prove inore nervous under con fluii ns of absolute s'ilenco. It can be 7 demonstrated that " a man who sleep liko a'babo on the line of the ated road will bo awakened at the Ztv cllKkcs in the country, and '".V.W no uu DUUUUD C.V wan who. is disturbed bv the of the city ia a nervous man who a-' Tho i in k t0SH 1111 ni8ht on a sleepless couch flo dead quiet of the country. The reason there is more nervousness ii S?nfi0,1i? mode of life creates nervous f-, Wu drink more, smoke more, eai thin i81 80 pace generally anc Her W U- t0 noise8' New Yori . lUfl T ! jaa old Lancashire miller, noted for ni,0 . uaGr m matters financial, was 0rosa tu """" "J-i" ma west vo tno,stream which drove bis milL AW: Strennr , . . . WARM WIRELETb j James F. Wry; has been appointed postmaster at Reidiville, N. C. Yale won the freshman nee at Pough keepsie; Harvard was sscond, Cornell third. f ' The New York Cotton Exchange will close on Saturday July 8rd and Mon day July 5th. v.iioe tht trame of ball with Hat- narA trraterdav bv a score of 7 to5. be fore the largest crowd which has assem bled in yeais. At the eightieth anoualrcommence- flmnmmtn-arn TTniversitV VCSter- day. President McKinley presented the diplomas to the graduates. 1 The following fourth class postmast ers were appointed to-day for North Carolina: Dunn, A. R. WHson: Kings Mountain, J. W. Brown; Thomasville. C M. Hpover. v ' . At Canaioharie. JN. x., , yesieiu-y, Clarence Ireland. 17 years ofage; Jatnes Christian and James Pattoi. years old, were drowned tn the Mohawk river while bathing. Ex-President Cleveland and h fam ily are spending a few davs w4tb ti. t. X AiX t the latter's Indian Harbor residence before taking up their Summer residence at Bozzuds . Bay James T. Fields as Editor. In 1859 The Atlantic Monthly passed into the hands of Ticknot & Fields, the, junior publisher becoming finally its editor. It was a change of much impor tance to all its contributors and greatly affected my own literary life. Lowell had been, of course, an appreciative and a sympathetid editor, yet Fields had the advantage over Lowell of being both editor and publisher, so that he had a free hand as to paying for articles. The prices then paid were lower than now, but were raised steadily, and he first in troduced the practice of paying for each manuscript on acceptance, fle had a virfnA which I have never known in any other editor or publisher that of volunteering to advance money on pro spective articles, yet to be written, and be did this more than once to me. I have also known him to increase the amount paid on finding- that an author particularly needed the money, especial lv if it were the case of a woman. His sympathy with struggling women was always very great, and I think he was the only one in the early Atlantio oircle, except Whittier and myself with Emr erson also, latterly who favored wom an suffrage. With all his desire to create a staff Fields was always eagerly looking out for new talent and was ever prompt tp counsel and encourage. He liked, of course, to know eminent men, and his geese were apt to be swans, yet he was able to discriminate. He organized Dick ens' readings, for instance, and went to every one of them, yet confessed frank ly that their pathos was a failure; that Little Nell was unreal, and Paul Dom bey a tiresome creature whose death was a relief Fields was really a keen judge of character and' had his' own fearless standards. I once asked him -nhinh he liked the better personally,. Thackeray or Dickens, and he replied, after a moment's reflection, "Dickens, Thackeray enjoyed telling ques tionable stories, a thing whieh Dickens nflver did. " Colonel T.W. Higginson in Atlantic. Views From the Windows of the East Boom The "Hall of the Disappointed." . Telephone Is Almost the Only Modern ',. Improvement In the BiUIdlng-.L : .!'. -.-'f: :r-j J I - T:'v'. " Mr. C. C Buel writes a paper for The Century on "Our Follow Citizen of the White House," devoted toi the official cares and duties of the president, in the course; cf which he says: ; j-f ;! At 10 o'clock a hardly discernible sign against the glass of the barrier an nounces to the citizen who j has arrived under the grand portal that the execu tive mansion is "open" to visitors. - At 2 o'clock the sign is changed Ito "clotK ed. " The doorkeepers swing jthe doors open to everybody. Within the large vestibule nothing is seen! which indi cates the arrangement and purposes of the different parts of the .mansion. It was not always so, for originally the now concealed corridor, or middle halh with the staircase on the i right, was a part of the entrance hall. Now the spaces between the middle- columns are closed with colored glass partitions, and the vestibule is simply a -large, square room pleasant to get out of. ' M No way appears to open to the state apartments in the center or to the west wing, which is devoted to the private apartments. Yet glass doors are there, though as imperceptible to the stranger as a swinging panel. To the left there is a door which is always open. It ad mits to a small halL across whioh a sim ilar door is the side entrance to--the great east room. About this splendid room, comprising the whole east end of the mansion, the visitor may wander at will before the portraits or enjoy from the windows the beauty of the treasury building to the east or the impressive landscape to the south, including the towering shaft of the Washington mon ument and beyond the ever! charming Potomac, spreading with enlarging curves toward Mount Vernon, and in the private garden under! the windows he may chance to see a merry band of little ones. j From the small hall between the ves tibule and the east room a stairway as cends toward the medial line of the building to a wide middle hall, on each side of which are the offices of the pres ident The arrangement is simple, and in tne noor plan covers tne- space occu pied below by the east oom and the green room, the latter being the coun terpart of the small hall with the public stairway just mentioned, j At the head of these stairs, over the greenroom, is the -cabinet room, which is the first apartment in the south side of the hall, a jog of two steps, at the; private door into the president's room! marking the; The president reaches his office through tne cabinet room, entering I the latter from the library, which corresponds on the second floor with the blue , room of the state apartments. President Arthur indeed used the library as his office and the cabinet chamber for Tan anteroom, while his private secretary was domi ciled in the traditional office of the pres ident During his first term Mr. Cleve land preserved the same : arrangement. But General Harrison, went 1 back to the office hallowed by Lincoln's occupancy, and Mr. Cleveland,' on his return, found the arrangement so satisfactory that he continued it j Beyond the president's large, square office is the corner room where Private Secretary Thurber is ;i always either wrestling, with the details of executive business or standing with his shoulder braced against the crowd struggling to see tne president It is a narrow apart ment and might be called appropriately the ' hall of the disappointed, " the sug gestion being emphasized by portraits of the greatest of presidential aspirants, Clay and Webster, to which Mr, Thurber added, as his private property, an en graving of the closest contestant for the office, Governor Tilden. j ! On the north side oft the hall there are two rooms which correspond to those on the south side just j described, the small one being occupied by Mr. O. L. Pruden, the assistant secretary since Gen eral Grant's time and the custodian of the office books as well as of the tradi tions which "govern the! public social routine of the executive mansion. In his room sits the telegraph clerk at his instrument and by the window is a tel ephone, which saves ia great amount of messenger service between the president and the departments. Occasionally congressman, with less' ceremony than discretion, attempts to get an appoint ment with the ear of the president over the telephone, and there is a record of a stage earthquake produced in the private secretary's room by. a furious congressr man who found the 'telephone ineffect ive and his Olympian tstyle even less so. Notwithstanding that it is almost the sole modern improvement in the White House, President Cleveland , was seen at the telephone but once, and then, needless to say, not on pall. ETniur'Pn of invpn Happy and Fruitful Marriage: Btwy MAN who wooM snow Oto GRAND ixuiJit). tne fiain Fads, tk Old Secrets and tho New Siseovaries ol Madieal SdanceasappBed to Married Life, who , un tnu a ruia ranire pu. I falls, should write for our ' wonderful little book, k called "Complete Man hood and How to Attain io any uraeat man w win mail poo copy ntoely Previa plain sealed eorer.' - ERIE MEDICAL COuIIa5?: T tOJ)W tf . thro to . COMMERCIAL, WILMINGTON MARKET. KICXIPTS. Spirits Turpentine. . . . . Rosin : Tar Crude Turpentine Keceipts - same - day last 176 627 85 28 year 95 mm. cts lb r STAR OFFICE, June 17. SPIRITS TURPENTINE Market steady at 3& . cents per gallon for machine-made i casks, and 24Jrf cents for country casks. :. :- t : : t ROSIN Market steady at tl 25 per bbl for Strained and $1.80 for Good Strained.;'-" v-"' " "'"'.; .i -': i TAR. Market auiet and stead V at $1 00 per bbl of 280 9ts. - - - CRUDE TURPENTINE Market firm: $180 per barrel for Hard. 180 for Yellow Dip and 1.90 for Virgin. y notations same day last year Spirits turpentine steady, 23, 22c; rosin firm, $1.82& 187)Ttar firm. $1.10; crude turpentine steady, $1.80, 1.70, 1.80. . rkckipts. ' '., . Spirits Tnrpentine. ............. 289 KOSia . ;.: . . . ..... 489 Tar ............... 188 Crude Turpentine. . .a ......... . 68 Keceipts same day last vear 149 casks spirits turpentine, 670 bbls rosin, 87 bbls tar. 15 bbls crude turpentine,. COTTON. :. .'- .; Market steady on a basis of 75c for middling. Qadtations: Ordinary. . . . .. 6J cts y lb Good Ordinary... 6f " Low Middling.. 7 Middling ............ 1A " Good Middling..,. 7 18-16 " " Same day last year, middling 1c Receipts 0 . bales; same day last year 0. - COUNTRY PRODUCK. PEANUTS North Carolina Prime, 6065c per bushel of 28 pounds; Extra fnme, 70c; fancy, 80c. Virginia Extra Prime. 4550c; Fancy, 50c. ; CORN Firm; 4547j cents per bushel. ROUGH RICE 65 70 cents per bushel. N. C. BACON Steady; Hams, 8 to 9c per pound; Shoulders, 6 to 7c; Sides, 7 to 8c. : SHINGLES Per thousand, five inch, hearts and saps, $1.60 to 2.25; six inch, $2.85 to 8.25; seven inch, $5.60 to 6.50. TIMBER Market steady at $5.00 to 8 50 per M. STAR OFFICE, June 18. SPIRITS TURPENTINE Market steady at 24jH cents per gallon for machine-made casks, and 24& cents for countrv casks. r ROSIN Market steady at $1.25 per bbl for Strained and $1.80 tor Good Strained. - TAR. Market quiet aad steady at $1.00 per bbl of 280 lbs. CRUDE TURPENTINE. Market steady; $1.80 per barrel for Hard, 1 80 tor Yellow Dip and 1.90 for Virgin. Quotations same day last year Spirits turpentine steady, 23, 22Uc, rosin steady, $1.82). 1.37 & tar steaav. $1.15; crude turpentine steady, $180, 1 70, 1.80. V RECEIPTS. Spirits Turpentine... 195 Kosin -,..w..... 847 Tar ............ .. 24 Crude Turpentine 88 Receipts same day last year 110 casks spirits turpentine, 871 bbls rosin, 84 bbls tar, 44 bbls crude turpentine. cotton. Market steady on a basis of 7)lc for middling. Ordinary........ 5 cts lb Good Ordinary.-... 8 " Low Middling 1 v - Middling. .... . ... IX - - " Good Middling. 7 18-16 " "i Same day last year, middling ?Kc ! Receipts 25, bales; same day last year 6. COUNTRY PRODUCE. PEANUTS North Carolina Prime 6065c. per bushel of 28 pounds; Extra Prime, 70c; Fancy, 80c. Virginia Extra Prime. 4550c; Fancy, 50c. CORN. Firm; 45&47X cents per bushel. . ROUGH RICE 65&70 cents per bushel. N. C BACON Steady; Hams, 8 to 9c per pound; shoulders, 6 to 7c; Sides. 7 to 8c SHINGLES Per thousand, five Inch, hearts and saps, $1.60 to 2.25; six inch, $2.25 to 8.25; seven inch, $5.50 to 6.50. TIM Bit K Market steady at fs.oo to 8.50 per M. : ' casks spirits turpentine, 139 bbls rosin, 18 bbls tar, 89 bbls crude turpentine. - COTTON Market steady on a basis of 7Kc for middling, j; Quotations: " Ordinary i. 5 Good Ordinary. ...... tX, uom Middling 7 . ; . Middling : 1 Good Middling..:.... 7 18-16 " ' Same day last year, middling IXc Receipts 1 bale; ; same day last year 1. ii: - .-. . - COUNTRY PRODUCE. , 1 PEANUTS North Carolina Prime. 6065c per: bushel of 28 pounds; Extra Prime, 70c; Fancy, 80c. Virginia Extra Prime, 4550c; Fancy, 50c. CORN Firm; 425 cents per bUSbel.' ' ' ' -:-V.;' . ROUGH RICE 6570 cents per bushel. - N. . C BACON Steady; Hams, 8 to 9c per pound; Shoulders, 6 to 7c; Sides, 7 to 8c. SHINGLES Per thousand, five inch. hearts and saps, $1.60 to 2.25; six inch, $2.25 to 8.26; seven inch, $5.50 to 6.50, . TIMBER Market steady at $5.00 to 8.50 per M. : ! "STAR OFFICE. June 82. SPIRITS TURPENTINE Market steady at 24 cents per gallon for machine-made casks, and 24 cents for country casks. .- ROSIN. Market steady at $1 25 per bbl' for Strained ( and . $1 80 for Good Strained. - 1 TAR Market steady at $1.05 per bbl of 280 lbs. CRUDE TURPENTINE. Market firm; $1 80 per -barrel for Hard, 180 for Yellow Dip and 1 90 for Virgin. Quotations same day last year Spirits turpentine firm. 23. 22)c; rosin firm, $1 83H. 1 37X; tar, firm. $1.15; crude turpentine quiet, $1 80. 1 70, 1 80. i receipts. - - Spirits Turpentine .... . . . Rosin4-..... T&l" 4 a a, m-4 a m.m m m Crude Turpentine. . . . . Receipts same day last year 131 casks spirits turpentine, 630 bbls rosin, 75 bbls tar, 26 bbls crude turpentine. '.":' COTTON. Market steady on a basis of 7c for middling. Quotations; Ordinary...... 5J cts ft Good Ordinary...... t . " i Low Middling 7 . Middling '. 1 " u Good Middling...... 7 15-16 " " Same day last year, middling JtXc. Receipts 1 bale;! same day last year 4. , . COUNTRY PRODUCE. PEANUTS North Carolina Prime. 6065c per bushel of 28 pounds; Extra Prime. 70c; Fancy, 80c Virginia Extra Prime, 4550c; Fancy, 50c , CORN Firm; 4245 cents per bushel. 1 ROUGH RICE 6570 cents per bushel. ; r . N. C. BACON Steady; Hams, 8 to 9c per pound; Shoulders, 6 to 7c; Sides. 7 to 8c. 11 SHINGLES Per thousand, five inch, hearts and saps. $1 60 to 2.25; six inch, $3 25 to 8.35; seven inch, $5.50 to 6.50. TIMBER Market steady at $5.00 to 8.50 per M. ' .WilnilMl ' ll IblriSTl ill . AVegetahlePreparalionforAs- similating tbeTood and Regula ting thEStonuvchs andBowels c PromotesTHgcsfeivCaTceTful ness andRest.Coatains ndther Opium,Morpuine norHiiEraL IJotNarcotic. ' - Anile See fi CartonaJai WrmSeed- 1 Aoerfecf Remedy for Cons tioa- tion. Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea. Worms .Convulsions Jevensh oess and Loss OF SLEEP. HHanaMMfanaaaaia - - ac Simile Signature of 1TEW "YORK. Ulf SMlJi- JJU' ii-mm ftp EXACT COPyUFWAPFEB. 157 811 21 83 Tne mna aon uav Always Bought, Bears the Tao-simile Signature - ON THE WRAPPER OF jEVEET BOTTLE THE KIND YOU HAYE ALWAYS BOUGHT. j TMI CINTAUR eOMMNT) HCW YORK CiTt. IN SEARCH OF A WIFE. Xbo Peaioay George Peabody's gift of fa.fiuu.uw ueorge ts" ' , hnnopD has Tendon WOrKiK"D" Z aaa aaa in t.hfl 24 years I??, Tvear Oe trustees SKETITfirf 11.367 rooms, be- Bides batnrooms, SJh rate Tttoe average for London. ''", - - ' ' Cautions Suitor States His Bequlrements i In a letter of Inquiry. A nrominent attorney preserves the following document as one of the chief, curios of his office. It bears a recent date and was written from one of the Iis80uri river towns, j The young wom an referred to is the presiding genius of the kitchen in the lawyer's home: j "Dear Sib I got acqiiaihted with Miss -r through; our corresponding with each other. She wants to marry me. Should she suit X will not marry her for three or four months yet Please find out through your iwife and let me know by return mail if she is worthy of a good husband. j . f ' "Is her character gooar tiow arxras, her honesty j and - integrity,? TJoes -she seem to like children? I Ia she. heat and clean? Is she tasty abciut. her dress? Is she gay or frivolous, or what you call sullen? Is she wasteful in her cooking? 1 j 1 Hon aha hani IB SiiU BbTUIlg UUU UCA1U1J . and talk eood? Is she homely or pretty? Is she smart? To make, it short, would she make a good man ai good 'Wjfef "I am a cooper by tradea widower with five children, tod, I need a woman that's a good cook andjto look after my children. She has-been working for your wife three weeksi You ought to know her pretty good by this time. Anything ypd may say, she won't know if it isn good, unless you tell her your self. I , " ",1a- she stvKsh? Has she begun to iak or show edge? IS she steady ana she know howl to nlease? ? You can do me a great favor if you take five minutes of your valuable time to an- these few Questions. Please write of nnnn T want tn know Quicks YOUT obedient servant " St Louis Republic uuanr was flooded, and he was tni 7 point at wbich he want sffllf whilo farther on, misfortune that ft v. overtok him, to the extent Wh. got upsct Hia wife, real tcallv 1 dauer fao was in, ran fran- it. ff,T T"i K. 6 81deof the stream, cry- 1 i a pitiful voice, when,- to frmhT azemcnt Bhe was suddenly klW ' rtandstill by her ' husband fnnant ' 11 1 m downed, Mouy, E rgct that flo' gone up 2 xjuuuuu U'looe. nsfat- Mails slgutnrs ilmll SlfMtttTS tat ' STSTf VrsppM, Tisfw Ball Slgutort 'Vlctuns of ths Tuel. ' Critic The hero and the villain had duel last night on the stage. . Friend Who got the worst of ! it? Critic The audience. Twinkles. . The Shirt Watat Collar. It would be interesting to trace many of the so called caprices of fashion to their real source. Many, as is well huiwn. are of historic orisin and re ceived their inspiration in, the whim of snme roval or other distingoisnea per The introduction of the sepa rate collar shirt waist.vhioh has and is oTi-invinflr a creat votrue'. was, it is said, the first nlace ; to tho laziness of a cuttei in one of tho fashionable tailor cimTui -where ladies' waists- are luauo. He suggested and advocated the style to- save workr it was: cuscreeuy iaeu uV hv the head saleswomen, who received tho customers, and the thing was done- well done, too, most women win teswiy. STAR OFFICE. June 19. SPIRITS TURPENTINE Market steady at 24 cents per gallon for machine-made casks and H& cents for country casks. ROSIN Market steady at $1 25 per bbl for Strained and $1 80 for Good Strained. 1 TAR. Market steady at $1.05 per bbl of 280 lbs. CRUDE TURPENTINE. Market firm; $1.80 per barrel for Hard, $1.80 for Yellow Dip and 1.90 for Virgin. quotations same aay last year spirits turpentine nrm. o$. J4c; rosin nrm. $1 82 K, 1 87X; tar firm. $1 15; crud turpentine quiet, $1 30, 1 70, 1 80. 1 receipts. Spirits Turpentine... 168 Rosin U557 Tar yT.. ...... 80 Crude Turpentine .. .vC. 12 Receipts same day la8tsyear 25B casks spirits turpentine, 1,171 bbls rosin, 166 bbls tar, 48 bbls crude turpentine. COTTON. Markefsteady on a basis of IXc for middling. Quotations: 4 . Ordinary. . ....... .... 5 X cM V lb Good Ordinary X . " . t - Itijji:-- m ' uiw jaiuuiing .... . . . n Middling ........-7X " " Good Middling...... 7 15-16 " " Same day last year, middling 7c . Receipts 0 bales; same day last year, 7. , country produce. , PEANUTS North Carolina Prime, 6065c per bushel of 28 pounds; Extra Prime, 70c; Fancy, 80c Virginia Extra Prime. 4550c; Fancy, 50c. CORN Firm; 42$5 cents per bushel. ROUGH RICE 6570 cents per bushel. -1 , N. C. BACON Steady; Hams, 8 to 9c per pound; Shoulders, 6 to 7c; Sides, 7 to 8c SHINGLES Per thousand, five inch, hearts and saps, $1.60 to 2.25; six inch, $2.25 to 3.25; seven inch; $5.50 to 6.50. TIMBER Market steady at ga.uu 10 8.50 per M. r f STAR OFFICE. June 21. .. 1 SPIRITS TURPENTINE Market steady at 2451$ cents per gallon for machine-made casks and 24 cents for country casks. ROSIN. Market steady at $1 25 per bbl for Strained and $1 80 for Good Strained. " TAR. Market steady at $1.05 per bbl of 280 lbs. I ' CRUDE TURPENTINE. Market firm; $1.80 pet barrel for Hard, 1.80 for Yellow Dip and 1.90 for Virgin-. Quotations same day last year Spirits turpentine firm, 23H- SSc; rosin firm. $1 82K. 1 87 X; tar firm, $115: crude turpentine quiet, $1 80. 1 70, 1 80. STAR OFFICE, June 23. SPIRITS TURPENTINE Market steady at - 24 cents per gallon' for machine-made casks, and 24 cents for country casks. I ROSIN Market firm at $1 25 per bbl for Strained and $1 80 for Good Strained. . TAR. Market firm at $1.05 per bbl of 280 lbs. CRUDE TURPENTINE. Market firm: $1.30 per barrel for Hard, 1.80 for Dip and 1.90 for Virgin. ' Quotations same day last year Spirits turpentine, firm. 2S&. Hc bid; rosin firm, $1.82, $1 SIX: tar firm, $1.15; crude turpentine quiet, $1.80, 1.70,1.80. . RECEIPTS. Spirits Turpentine . . . . 84 Rosin.. 353 Taf 18 Crude Turpentine. 27 Receipts same day last year 146 casks spirits turpentine. 612 bbls rosin, 41 bbls tar, 27 bbls crude turpentine. COTTON. Market steady on a basis of 7c for middling. Quotations: Ordinary 5J cts $ lb Good Ordinary....... 6 " " Low Middling... 7Jf " " Middling. ... .4- . 1 Good Middling.....: 7 15-16 "..' Same day last year, middling 7Hc Receipts 0 bale; same day last year, 0. - COUNTRY PRODUCE. PEANUTS North Carolina Prime. 6065c per bushel of 28 pounds; Extra Prime, 70c; Fancy, 80c. Virginia Extra Prime, 4550c; Fancy, 50c. CORN Firm; 42Xt5 cents per bushel. " ROUGH RICE-T6570 cents per bushel. ! ;v'- N. C. BACON Steadyj Hams. 8 to 9c per pound; Shoulders, 6 to 7cj Sides. 7 to 8c . SHINGLES Per thousand, five inch, hearts and saps, $1.60 to 2.25; six inch, $2.25 to 8.25; seven inch, $5.50 to 6.50, TIMBER Market steady at $5.00 to 8.60 perM. L COTTON MARKETS. By Telegraih to the Morning Staf. New York. June 23; The cotton market, discouraged by the failure of the Liverpool matket to reopen after an English holiday since Saturday at an ad vance to conform to the improvement here, opened quiet and steady at a de cline of 1 to 8 points and , gradually sold eff until the net loss was increased to 7 9 points. In addition to the disap pointing cables, the average of crop news was quite bearish. At the same time ad vices from Fall River indicated a very active market for print cloths at well sustained prices and reported sales of 4O.C00 pieces yesterday. The market made a number of small rallies during the day, but the undertone was wet k in the absence of.- speculation, notwith standing the talk of a revival of business throughout the country at large. . The market closed q iiet and steady at a net (decline of 79 points. . - New YORK, June 23 Evening. Cotton quiet; middling 7 8-1 6c. Cotton tutures closed quiet and steady: sales 74.203 bales; Jan'y 6 84. Feb'y 6 87. March 6 91. May ,j June 7 28. July 7 29. August 7 28. September 7 02. October 6 83. November 6 78, December 6 81. . Spot cotton closed quiet; middling uplands 7 13 16c; middling gulf 8 l-16c; sales of 1,271 bales. Cotton net receipts bales; gross 65 bales; i exports j to Great Britain 1,511 bales; to France bales; to the Continent. - bales; forwarded kola. aolpa 1 901 halS' laala tn spinners 711 baleS; stock (actual) 108,- 170 bales. Short rib sides, loose. $4 804 55. Dry salted shoulders, boxed, $4 755 00. Short clear sides; boxed, $4 62H4 75. Whiskey $119. 1 , Baltimore, June 28. Flour dull and unchanged. . Wheat very dull; spot and month 73c; July 7070Jic; August 6868c; September 68K68&c; Southern wheat by sample. 67&7c Corn easy; spot, and month 28285tfc; July 2888Mc: August 2929d September 29429c; steamer mixed 27M27Kc; Soutbetn white 81K82c; do yellow 83c. Oats stcadv; No. 2 white 25K26:; No 2 mixed 2323ic NAVAL STORES MARKETS. By Tttearaph to Us Moraiat Stai. New York, June 28. Rosin firm; strained common to good $1 721 75. : Spirits turpentine steady at 2727ic. Savannah, June 23. Spirits turpen tine quiet at 25c. sales of 255 Casks; receipts 1,857 casks. Rosin firm and un changed; sales barrels; receipts 8.937 barrels. .' Charleston, June 23. Spirits tur pentine firm a( 24:sales 100 bales. Rosin firm; sales barrels: B, C, D $1 25 bid; E F$l 80. G 1 85, H $1 CO, I $1 55, K $1, 65. M $1 70, N $1 85. W G $2 00, WW$2?5 j ; 4, I Wholesale Prices Current Total to-day-4-Nct bales; exports to bales; to France CW The toUowUiC quounont reprosent Wholetals Ptioei generally. Ia making op small orders higher be 1 prices generi have 1 1 charged. COTTON AND NAVAL STORES. WEEKLY BTATiaDEHT. . RECEIPTS. For week ended Jane 18, 1897. (Mi. Stiritt. Rtti. Tar. Crud in 1,286 471 ( 846 28S j RECEIPTS. For week ended June 19, 1896. CtJQ Siiriti. MiJ Tar. : Crud. . 18 1,240 1,33? j ' m . 239 exports: "WTot week ended Jone 18, 1897. " I Cttu. Sjiriit. ttttin. Tr. Crud. DomesuJi ! 009 365 180 631 , 816 foreign... ! wu i,uu 04 vm wiu V COO "sBS 8,4(M 531 8ltf . EXPORTS. For week ended Jane 19, 1898. CftU. Spirit. Ruin. Tmr. Crud. Domestic.. 800 1,7:0 818 869 286 foreign... (KM S.78S wo 000 630 . 1.756 6,531 869 886 . ;stocks. Ashore and Afloat, June 18. 1897. ;: Atkor. AftU TtUi. Cotton. , I 8.893 97 8,489 Spirita 1,265 10 1,275 Rosin............ f 86,221 19 26,240 Tar........ ...I 4,427 00 4,427 Crade.................. i 4U - 00 411 STOCKS. i AtboM and Afloat, June 19, 1896. CMm. StiriU. JUsiu. Tar. . Crude. 4,998 ' 988 1749 6.708 ' ' 611 MARINE. i ARRIVED. Ital barque La Marinccia, 582 tons, Imba, Birbadoes. E Pescbau & Co. Schr Rebecca R Douglass, 899 tons, Perry. Wilmington, Del, Geo Hariiss, Son & Co. 1 4 Schr James Bry.ce. Jr, 693 tons, Tilton, Punu Gorda, Geo Harriss, Son & Co. Schr Maoie Sanders. 265 tons, Steel man, New York, Geo Harriss, Son & Co. Steamship Pawnee, 859 tons, Hale, New York. H G Smallbones. Schr John I Snow, 188 tons, Norton, Baltimore, Geo Harriss, Son & Co. CLEARED. Schr Eva A Danenhower, 217 tons, Johnson, Georgetown. Steamship Pawnee, 859 tons, Hale, Georgetown. H G Smallbones. ... j Schr Jas W uigeiow, oo tons,'. Bira, Porta Piata, San Domingo, Geo Harriss; Son & Co. i Schr Jno H Tingue, 525 tons, Burdge, Jacksonville, Geo Harriss, Son & Co. receipts 1.100 Great Britain 1:511 bales; to the Con tlnent 750 bales; siock 211.643 bales. Total so far this week Net receipts 5.856 bales; exports to Great Britain 8,692 bales; to France 435 bales; to the Continent 9.257 bales. Total since September 1 Net receipts 6 589.632 bales; exports to" Great Britain7 2,980,076Ybales; exports to France 692 597 bales; exports to the Continent 2.098.684 bales; to the Channel 5.481 bales. June 23. Galveston, firm at net receipts 396 bales; Norfolk, steady at 1. net. receipts ,222 balesBaltimore, nominal at 1, net receipts bales; Boston, steady at 7, net receipts bales; Wilmington, steady at 1, set re ceipts bales; Philadelphia, quiet at 8, bet receipts 1 7 bales: Savannah, steady at IX. net receipts 52 bales; New Orleans, stead y at 7 9-16.net receipts 171 bales: Mobile, nominal at 7J6.net receipts 5 bales; Memphis, firm at7).net receipts. 28 bales; Augusta, steady at 7, net re ceipts 5 bales; Charleston, steady at 7jtf, net receipts. 254 bales. PRODUCE MARKETS. : By Telegraph to the Hornlni Star. New York, June 23 Evening. Flour was dull and easy on winter brands again to day but fairly steady on springs. Wheat spot opened easy; No. 1 North ern New York 76c;No. 1 Northern Da luth 77 ci options opened steady and advanced, led by Continned nervousness among July shorts, owing to manipula tion rumors and wet weather complaints, lost the advance' under realizing, small clearances, and closed Xc higher to Mc net lower; No. 2 red June closed at 751 July 74H74X- closed 74$c;September 69 ll-1670Kc. closed 69 c; December 71H715i. closed 71Xc. Corn spot eas;No.3 29XC at elevator and afloat; options opened steady with wheat, but was influenced by promising crop pros pects and late heavy selling; closed Xc net lower; June, closed at 29c; July 29X29Xci closed 29c; Angust September 80K&30Wc. closed 80K& Oats spot lower: on; white; No. 2 22c; options dull and easy with corn, closing unchanged; July closed at 22c Potk steady. Lard stronger; Western steam $410. nominal: July $4 20, nominal; re fined firm;Continent $4 40; South Ameri can $4 65. Butter quiet: Western creamery ll15c; do. factory 7XQ10Xc: Elgins l6c;imitation creamery 9H12ci State dairy 1014c: do. Creamery 1115; Cheese steady :Sute large 88i: small fancy 7X8; Western, part skims 4Q6KS full skims aQSc Eggs were quiet; State and Pennsylvania ll12ct West ern fresh 10KHc. Cptton seed oil steady; prime crude 20c; do. yellow 28 2S3ic Molasses steady. Rice steady; domestic fair to extra 4U6c; Japan 4Jf4c. Peanuts firm. Petroleum dull; United closed no-marxet; renaeo New York $6 15; Philadelphia and Bal timore $8 10; do. in bulk $6 35. Tallow quiet; city ($2 00 per package) 8 1-16 8iil country (packages free) 8 8-16 SXc, as to quality. Cabbage! per crate or barrel $1 10t 12. Tomatoes per carrier $1 001 75. Potatoes steady; Southern $3 C03 25 (new). Coffee Spot Rio dull; Cordova ll17Jic. Sugar raw firm; sales of 7.000 bags cen trifugal 96 test at ZXc; 1,655 bags Mus covado 89 test 8c; 423 bags molasees 89 test 2c, refined firm. Chicago, June 23. Wheat was' ner vous to-day and closed unsettled at jc advance. The fear of July manipula tion was very marked, and was really the only feature to the market. Corn and oats were weak sisters to-day, each closing at a slight decline. Provisions on the contrary were very strong, and scored advances ranging from 1 to 20c i : ; - ' Chicago. June 23. Cash quotations; Flour quiet. Wheat, No. 2 spring 70 ?03c; No. 8 spring 6370c; No. 2 red 74X79Jfc Corn No. 2. 24$$244;c. Oats -No 218; No. 8 white free 6n board 21K23&No.3,white free on board 20K 22M& 'Mess pork per-barrel. $7 60 65, Lard, pet 100 lbs $3 80O8 W,. 18 6 6 v . i " 14 7 ex 496 7 00 O 14 00 O 16 15 BAGGING, ; . v i S Jute.. Standard.. WESTERN SMOKED . Hamstt S ......... Mdes l t ' Shoulden W IV.. ............. DRY SALTED Sides t Shoulders f) t BARRELS Spirits Turpentine - secona-nana, eacn... .a....... j New New York, each..... .... New City, each,. BEESWAX W , ,. BRICKS i j Wilmington M, .,,....,.. Northern ....... ...... ....... BUTTER i j North Carolina B. Nrrthern . CORN MEAL - . : Per Bushel, in sacks ......... ; Virginia Meal COTTON TIES W bundle...... CANDLES W ft Sperm Adamantine.,,..,,,,.... ... CHEESE -S Northern Factory , ....... Dairy, Cream. ............... state ... . . COFFEE .Laguvra. ....... Rio , DOMESTICS Sheeting, 4-4, W yard.,.,,.,.. Yarns, bunch,... ....... ... EGGS W dozen .............. ... FIS& -. Mackerel, No 1, W barrel.,,,. Mackerel, No 1, W naif-barrel j Mackerel, No 9, W barrel..,. , 1 Mackerel, No 8, W naif-barrel ' , Mackerel. No 8, barrel Mullets, W barrel i Mullets, f) pork barrel.,,,,... N C. Roe Herring, keg.. Dry Cod, Wl " Extra., FaOUR-W barrel-' Low trade. Choice .. Straight First Patent .................. GLUE lb .....j... GRAIN lb bushel-' Corn, from store, bags White, Utf ioaa, in Dags nun,, . ' Oats, from ore.. ......... , ; Oats, Rust Ptoof.,,. ......... I Cow Peas HIDES, ft , Green ...... ......M.Vt. Dry t...... HAY, 100 t)t Clover Hay...... ................. Rice Straw..... Eastern ......... ........... Western North River.... ......... HOOP IRON, ft.... LAKD.W ID-Northern North Uarouna LIME. W barrel LUMBKR(ay sawed). M feet Ship Stuff, resa wed. 18 00 Rough-edge Plank............ 15 00 West India cargoes, according - to quality 18 00 Dressed Flooring, seasoned... 18 00. Scantlnzand Board j common. 14 00. MOLASSES, gallon 7 Barbados. in Jkhdl...... " - i in DDIS...... ' Rico, in hhds,, tn DDIS .., Sugar-House, in hhds, oil r 8 60 4 60 5 85 Q400 6 4 60, 6 4 75' a 5 so 48 a 42 80 O 48Mg to p. ft ' 1 16 IF 1 oo - 6 E 86 60 100 96 86 8 10 CI 86 O 8000 O 16 08 O 18 09 828 00 16 00 Portol di'.!!!!.'."!l in bbto Syrup, In bbls ,,, NAILS, f) keg. Cut. 60d basis..,. PORK, ff barrel , City Mess......... Rump. ... Prime .. ROPE, ill SALT. j sack Alum .... . Liverpool., ,,..... .,.,., Lisbon. ..... .,, ....... ....... American ...... ............. ' On 125 ft Sacks...,.....,..,.. SHINGLES, 7-inch, M ' Common ........ ...... . .. .... Cypress Saps ... ..,,..... SUGAR, W ft Standard Grsnn? Standard A White Ex.C ' Extra C, Golden....,,.,.., . C, YeUow ....... .. SOAP, W ft Northern STAVES, M W. O. barrel.... R. O. Hogshead... TIMBIR, & feet Shipping. Mill, Prime................... Mill, Fair CommohMiU .......... Inferior to Ordinary SHINGLES, N. C. Cyress sawed . M 6x24 heart. 6x84 Heart...... " Sap 6x80 Heart............. TALLUW, S wtiiaswax, v Nona Carol 150 ei eo 10 -v.. ........ ..... nw w sw KanosNortacrn! 1 00 A 8 08 iimm ..... I IW Cb 9 SO BICYCLES Ladies and Gents, -Boys and Girls, Send or Bicycle Catalogue. E. C. KEACHAM ARMS CO 1ST. LOOS, HO. mum jna was si. I r w f m