Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / June 25, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE WILMINGTON MESSENGER. THURSDAY, JUNE, 25 1 89,1 . 1 1 r'abltahed ErMf Morning Except Moinlj at 31 North Front StrMt. ESTABLISHED IN 1867 BY J. A. BONITZ. JACKSON & BELL, Proprietors. ! T. B. KINGSBURY, Editor. ANNOUNCEMENT. Thb Dailt M88K!okr, by mall, one year, 17.00; six months, HfiO; three month a, 11.75; one nonth. AO oents. Served In the city at AO cents a month; one week 16 cents; 11.75 for three mobtna, or 17.00 a year. ! RATES FOR ADVERTISING: . I Ordinary advertisements, per H'juare, one in aertlon, tl ; two Insertions 11.7 ; one week $4.00; one month 89; one year 100. Amusements II per square each lnsertioa. Official advertise ments, II per square each Inseitlon. Special contract rates furnished on application. , Advertisements discontinue"! before the time contracted for has expired, are charged tran sient rates for time actually pub) ished j , OUR WEEKLY EDITIONS. jThe "Wilmington Weekly Messenger" is pub llshed every Thursday at tl.U' per year. A 1 arge 8 page paper. 'The "Goldsboro Transcript Messenger" is printed every Thursday, at 11.00 a year. A large 8 page paper. WEEKLY ADVERTISING RaTES; i One square, one Insertion, f I ; two insertions, 1.75; one month, S3. Special rates to larger advertisers. Advertisements may be contract ed for to go in both our weekly editions. i NOTICE TO MAIL SUBSCRIBERS: The date printed on the wrappers of each paper denotes the time when the subscription expires. No attention will be given anonymous com munications and no responsibility will be as sumed for the views of correspondents. Money Orders, Check, or Diafts should be made payable to j JACKSON ft BELL. ! WILMINGTON,' N. C. THURSDAY. JUNK :!5. 1891. j - COMPARISONS. Our esteemed contemporary, the Raleigh Chronicle, is a good, newsy, , pushing paper. It has changed its yform, as we have already announced, from a four to an eight page. We do not know that it increased its actual reading matter as we have made no search, and Instituted no comparison being busy with our own columns. We do not know that in a week's issue six dailies it actually gives its readers more read ing matter, markets included, or ex 'eluded, than the Messenger gives. We suspect much that an accurate measurement would reveal the conn trary. But what of it T In its issue of Tuesday it is in high glee o,er its exhibit of press dispatch items print' ed in its Sunday morning's issue. It finds, it eays, that the Messenger printed but IS, while the Chronicle printed 31 items. This may be true. But what of it? The seryice of the one is not the service of the othr. The items of one oanar mav ha miifih shorter than those of another paper. Then the new advertising of one paper may tax its resources far more than sueh advertising taxes the re sources of the other paper, and by reason of the scantiness of the latter. Then one paper on Sunday may be short of hands, as was the case in the Messenger office on last Satur day; and then again, it may not choose to, make a tpecialty of its Sunday issue, as many other papers are pleased to do. Then consider farther. Every paper has a face of its own gets up an issue alter its own preference The. Messenger publishes, for in stance, a Raleigu letter every day. It is much read and quoted from. A few 'days ago one of our old and prominent citizens said tons: "A month' ago I quit the Messenger. I am coming back. I cannot do with out it. Your Raleigh letter is worth the price of the paper." Then the Messenger has two competent local editors, and it prints each week quite twice as much local, wo dare say, as the Chronicle prints. So after all the Messenger may be giving more ac ceptable news and in greater quan titk 8 to its readers than our clever contemporary gives to its own cou stituency. The Chronicle is pleased to count press dispatches exclusive of market reports. Well, it costs money and takes space to print a full service i f marhep reportt, and we take it that the Messenger publishes very much more of such reports daily than the Chronicle publishes. The! Chronicle says it issued on 2h-t of th- daily June 1891, 2,800 copie edition. We are gratified to know (hat it has really attained to such a circulation. Is is full of encourage- ment and we congratulate it. The Messenger is quietly "pegging away," doing what it can for North Carolina and itself, for Wilmingtorj aud the East, for civilization and humanity. It is very hot weather for active editorial or a oy other work, and the Messenger has not yet half as many subscribers as it would be willing to supply daily, giving' them, as "Greasy Sam" Watts said, "the best we have got in the shop," but we hope to press, on, and if we do not equal in the newt line our young and virile Raleigh competitor, that we will not be left so far out of sight as to be forgotten by a discerning - and appreciative public. N. B.- The Messenger issued last Sunday more than 3,000 copies. , "How's'thisl" i P. B.j-By actual count the Chronic cle had 22 telegraphic news items, exclusive of market reports, jn its Tuesday's issue the issue in which it made its comparison with the Mess ( .singer and the Messenger had 25 sncb items. '"Haw's this t" As Mods. siener Tonson would say Urn affaire flambee. OF HOME AND FOREIGN NEWS PAPERS. The Ohnton Caucasian copied, what the Messenger said : about taking papers abroad to the exclasum of home papers. It seems to think it all wrong to complain of this. It says: "This is all wrong. The people are nor to be blamed for reading what they like tsn-l trying to get the worth of their money. The fault lies with one State papers. We will quit the newspaper ; business when we can't keep a larger circu lation in our territory than au out side paper, State or otherwise, can get," . , ,., We are of the opinion that the people of Raleigh or Charlotte or Wilmington will do a very bad, day's work for themselves .when . they "to get the worth of their money" abandon the papers' published in their midst and close them out and look to the mammoth editions of the New York HorM, with its 36 pages; to the equally large editions of the Chicago limes or Inter Ocean or Cin cinnati Gazette or indeed to any great sheet. Northern or Southern. Then again, we are quite disposed to believe that the Messenger gives its subscribers a full equivalent How much reading matter will & daily: subscriber receive in a year for his $7? Let us make a rough estimate. Take the Thistle edition of Scott's novels for comparison. , We suppose that matter equal at the least to thirty-six pages of it are contained daily in the Messenger. We believe it is much more. For a week it will be 19G pages. For year 311 issues it will be 11,296 pages. That is equal to twenty eight volumes of 400 pages each yearly. That is twenty-five cents a volume for nes furnished every day from the world oyer. But it would be nearer the mark, we believe, to put the figures at forty-fiye pages daily, 270 pages weekly, and 13,295 yearly and thirty four volumes at twenty cents a vol ume. So the subscriber gets fall value received, and he gets it from a paper owned and edited by North Caro linians, and who are every way iden tified with all that concerns the glory, honor and prosperity of the State. We would not think the people of Sampson appreciative of its use full faithful and intelligently edited county paper, the Caucasian, if they were to turn from it to subscribe to the Atlanta Weekly Constitution, or to one of the huge weeklies in theNorth because they would get six or ten times more reading matter for a dol lar and thus get "the worth of their money." We would think them a very unwise people. We find flings and misrepresentations of the South and -'of North Carolina in papers abroad. The defence the truth comes from the loyal and faithful houu! papers. It is no fault of the State papers, "as is alleged by the Caucasian," that they are not the equal of the great papers. It would cost more money, we believe, to get up one weekly issue of one of the great Northern papers than the Caucasian can make in a year. It costs more money perhaps to get up the Sunday issue of the New York World or the Chicago Times than any daily paper in North Carolina can possibly make in a year. It is not the "fault" of the Raleigh or Wilmington papers that they do not print as large and costly papers as the New York or London papers are. There is no field for such a venture, and no cupital to be thus used. A gentleman once asked us why a certain paper wa? not like the New York papers in size, etc! fie was a merchant. Our reply was Why do you not keep a stock of goods as large as Clafiin'sin New York, who employed a thousand men, or why has not Wilmington as great a hotel as the biggest in the Northern cities. The fact is the best North Carolina papers are giving as good papers as the patronage allows. The owners push their efforts to the extreme verge of safety in their anxiety to supply their patrons with the best possible under the circumstances. The Messenger is pablished in a town of but 8,500 whites. Its expenses are as heavy as only a much larger white population would justify. We hold that North Carolina newspapeis are absolutely essential, and that no enlightened people can afford to be without exponents of thought and perveyors of news. We hold that Uiejirst duty of citizenship in the matter of the public prints is to sustain their home papers. We hold that patriotism, self-interest, public policy, social requirements, busi ness necessities, and above all true religion and piety, all demand the printing of daily and weekly news papers, and that it is the duty of a free, intelligent, widenawake, pro gressive people to discriminate in favor of papers printed at-home. The point really is not the ability of a paper to keep and cover its own territory. There is a paper in an other State with 9,000 weekly sub scribers in North Carolina. How are they got? By canvassing, and through the postmasters. But mark you, it offers for $1 a ,yeir a huge weekly. It gets its. subscribers from eyery community and postoffice in the State. Its 9.000 are taken from not one paper at home, but from 150 or 200 home papers. It weakens these papers that much. It narrows the field necessarily. A town or county without a news paper now would be a very dead af fair, and ready for the auctioneer. Let North Carolinians stand, by North Carolina, its newspapers in cluded. So thinks the Messenger. The Messenger in a sense coyers its field, for it has more subscribers in Wilmington than perhaps all the daily papers pat wgewer puDiiscea elsewhere, f Bat it might have more even' here possibly if fewer foreign papeis'were taken and borrowed. It cfcrtatnly VouldT'get J more w ekly subscribers in North Carolina if the people were more appreciative of home papers. AN OPINION According to a brief interview of "Representative-elect Alexander, of this District, that gentleman does not think the Third Party witr make much impression in North Carolina. Be does not think Mr. Cleveland can carry VirginiafNortb Car&lina and Georgia.- He thinks 1 Hiill the man. Every man is entitled to aq opinion, even an elected member of Congress. But Congressmen do not necessarily know any more about whiat is best, or who is the most available, &c , than other men of equal brain power, range of information and opportu nities for knowing publicj sentiment. We sincerely believe that if a vote were taken to-day as between Cleve land and Hill that the people of North Carolina wouM, give 95 per cent of their votes for Cleveland, We believe they woald dp this if the office holders and scheming politic cians did not try to manipulate and control. ' And it is just secause the people do not always assert their choice that we haye som fears that Mr. Cleveland . may not receive the entire vote of North Caroiiua,. If the tariff is to be laid on the shelf and silver is to be farced as the is-'ue, then we doubt much if Mr. Cleveland should be nominated, and it may be then that the man who stands by free silver wi I "get left" when the votes of a dozen important States are counted. t Hill is nnques ionably a very shrewd politician. He is ja decidedly able man. But in some particulars he is not to be named with Grover Cleveland in the same century. A prominent Southern j gentleman living in New York an px-Confed-erate Colonel tells us that the people of New York are for Cleveland, but Hill has great controlling influence and it is hard to tell what he will do. Je says that Cleveland is: the great" est living American statesman. It looks that way to ns. Hej is beyond all question the bravest and 1 truest. Senator Carlisle is the onp man we would put with him in levelheaded ness, in real wisdom and in states manlike ability. ; EDITORIAL ENTREES. The WLemphiaAppealf Avalanche says Tennessee is for Cleveland. Gov. Buc hannan, on the other hand says he cannot carry it. How tbe office holders do talk. As Sam Jones would say, "my-my!" The AppeataAvalanche does not think Buchannan knows much about it, and says: "His opinions are his pritate prop erty, he elaims, and if this ebullition is a sample of the entire stock there need be no hurry in pitting them on the market. The truth is) that at any time since the last campaign today, tomorrow, six months hence, or in '92 Grover Cleveland can car, ry Tennessee if he receives i he demo cratio nomination, and by a larger majority than any man li ving, not excepting our excellent governor himself. . Some statesman has been inter esting himself by studying the stock ing business of New York pity. He puts it that it'takes 6,000,000 pairs of stockings and socks to meet the de mand each year. This pauses the expenditure ot $2,000,000 annually or enough to feed a city, jjike Wil mington, for instance, a jhole year. He says that the 'stockings warn by the women in Nejw York, if fastened together, would! make a row about z.uuu miles long, a row longer than the Atlantic cable. To keep these 2 000 miles of stockings in place it requires 400 miles of gar ters." The European news is igain tak ing on th6 hue of war. Frince is re ported as preparing for j an early conflict. Of course Germany, is the antagonist she is anxious jto grapple with. It is said that France will make an urgent attempt io form an alliance with Russia. In case of war France wants the Bear to keep its srreat paw out of tht conflict But Russia does not appear to be particularly favorable atj this time to such an arrangement Why is not perhaps known. ' At ; any rate, according to news from Paris, an alliance will be asked for during the visit of tbe French squadron to Cronstadt. If a war comes, and all the powers stand off and let permany and France fight it out alone we do uot think it will be Germany that will be the first to ask for peace. - We neglected to note the death of ex-Senator Joseph Erving McDonald, of Indiana, one of the ablest and truest of the Democrats of that State. It occurred at Indianapolis, his home, on 21st inst. It was kno wn for days that he was ill, but his death was not looked for. He was perfectly resigned to death and conscious to the last. He was born in 1819 in Ohio,' on 29th August, and was, therefore, in his 72nd year. le was a man of superior mental powers and was very popular in his own State. He had a commanding position when in the Senate. The death scene is thus described in a dispatch in the New York Eermld: "During the afternoon ithe Rev. Mr. Milburn , was sent fori and ad ministered the sacrament, t'hen Mr. McDonald called his family and some intimate ' - friends- about "him and calmly, serenely', as if the ioccasion were one of the most ordinary kind, he gave directions for his j funeral arrangements and .the disposition of inmA nf nio nariAntl rvff i ra V V A W III. & W.. .M. "In thm rjreranne of all. he said, he wished to give testimony to his faith in God's saving grace, men ne grasped each by the hand and bade him goodby. : i H091E FOLKS. The Baltimore Manufacturers Record approves of a suggestion we made some weeks ago relative to North Carolina at Chicago'. It says: "An excellent suggestion has been made by the Wilmington (N. C.) Messenger. It is that a cottage of attractive design sluuld be.. built by that State as a part of its exhibit at the Columbian Exposition; that the finest native woods should be nsed in its construction,) and tbatitll the fur niture should be made of thesTMnd-trd timber of the State. We second ibe motion of the Wilmington Messen ger." ' We still hold that it will wise if the State adopts' the suggestion and carries it out thorough! It will be a splendid advertisement of North Carolina. Some few of the State papers have indorsed the idea. nr. The Durham and Lynchburg rail road is 114 miles long. Thus far its business is, very satisfactory and much better than was thought pos sible by the projectors of it. The other day the stockholders jnet and considered the question of extending it to connect with the Raleierh and Gaston railroad. j SHARPS AND FLATS. The Yosemite is said to have a rival in the Gieai King's River canon. Th re are lofty peaks, bold cliffs and great tiees and Roaring River Falls 100 feet high. ' ' i Bishop Westeott i$ now thought in England, since the death of Bishop Lightfoot to be the most learned theologian in the Established Church. He is not opposed to theatre going, but never goes himslef and does not desire to go. The rush to Europe from this country is great at present. From New York 3,000 sail weekly. Mil lions are spent abroad. THE BRITISH ARISTOCRACY. English society, like New York society, is a strange medley and mixing of the incongruous. Belle Bilton is a very pretty woman who has literally kicked! her way into a coronet. She was nothing but a music hall dancer, with fine form and was born thirty years ago. She is now the Countess of Clancarty. Then there is Dolly Teater, a very handsome bar maid and ballet-girl, who is now Marchioness of Ailes bury, and wife of the Marquis of Ailesbury, He has) just sold his property for $4,000,001, to Lord Iveagh, and now Dolly can caper and cater as she neyer did before. The barmaid and dabcer are proba bly as good in morals as Lady Brooke, and Wales paid great court to her. So after all the aristocratic eircles are being enriched from the nns and music halls with an infu sion of new blood. How much im proved, if any, they will be, remains to be seen. Dolly was not thought to be as trood as she should be, but she will at least do to keep company with Lady Brooke and her friends and some others. i i. is. SotE .SESrS IN THE U. 3. 36 For sale by ROBT R. 8ELLAMY WUmingto N Is Tour Horse Sick? If TOUr hornn la Binlr n. . ... . . the trouble U, bnn I'to w" arhTe biS . . , - - -- " uuoto wuat to no ior him. I hve been studying the deseaaci a( inary Surgeons and school otctotnparatlVe M"?; T?3e opened " Office and atom ' "rr r. - - dm ook, oeiween second and Third, where I can be found, and will be ' " - miWUUUUALlL VeterlnarT Surgeon. HpNllHIff : Mil facaijcmai. , LJII For constipation, dyspepsia, Headache Dyspepsia Liver troubles Rheumatism Costlveness Heartburn needs of travelers, and, as a favorites, everywhere recommended by the profession. " I regard Ayer's Pills as one of the most reliable general remedies of our times. They bare been In use in my family for various affections requiring a purgative medicine, and have given unvarying satisfaction. We have found them an excellent remedy for ' colds and liglrt fevers." W. R. Woodson, Fort Worth, Texas. "Ayer's Pills are the best cathartic I ever used in my practice." J. T. Sparks, M. D., Yeddo, Ind. j ' " I have used Ayer's Pills in my family for several years, and have always found them Most Effectual in the relief of ailments arising from a dis ordered stomach, torpid liver, and consti pated bowels." Charles J. Booth, Olive wood, Pasadena, P. O., Cal. "I have now used Ayer's Pills in my fam ily for seven or eight year. Whenever I have an attack of headache, to which I am very subject, I take a dose of Ayer's Pills and am always promptly relieved. I find them equally beneficial in colds ; and, in my family, they are used for bilious complaints and other disturbances with such good ef fect that we rarely, if ever, have to call in a physician." H. Voullieme, Hotel Voulliemf, Saratoga Springs, N. Y. " I consider Ayer's Pills the most evenly balanced in their ingredients, of any 1 know of.' Dr. J. W. Haynes, Palouse, Wash. Ter. Ayer's Cathartic Pills Prepared bj Dr. J. C. AVER & CO., Lowell, Mass. Sold bj all Druggists and Dealers In Medicine. "IMIS ylf Vf TH EPOSI T I V E CU R E Mi ?j ':f ELY BROTHERS. 66 Warren Bt, flew York. Price CO cteLJSSL CHlCrlC'-iT'.-iS f-HU'JSH. THE ORIGINAL NO GCNUINC. buxeaealrd with blue r!l'o. Tukr nn 11 ptllx in pAKlehoard boxea, piok wrapper. Mt Tit rua ru:tfrf.i:. c lrutfi-. or ra4 ft 4c. tn stamp for particnlar. tumouiada. atid "'telicf liir l.ttrflcfc.' i-rt irri-r. i.t r-mnl M all lO.OO TeatirooniaU. Unrnu Pmptr. CHICHCSrCM ChlmiC-. Co., l:.l NlDar. Hold b sll Local Urrl.ta I'll'' lf ; ... QticultxixvLl GRAIN - CRADLES GRASS SCYTHES, LAWN MOWERS FOR BALE BY G I LES & M CULTIVATORS AND CULTIVATING : IIARKOWS. At bottom Prices for sale by j WM. E SPRINGE & CO. WINDOW : -MZad-s-to We Sell Shades Cheaper Than Any House la The City. LARGE STtfRE SHADES A SPECIALTY. PLAIN, ORNAMENTED OR LETTERED. W l l .LT V M - & BO BT NR01Sr LEARN : SHORT-HAM) WE ARE PRA CTICAL " To Save Time U TYPEWRITER UEADilUARTTRS, 120 PKIXCES STREET The biggest Bargain EVER SEEN AT -ef Brown & Roddick's In a piece of Dress Goods is an all Wool Mohair 40 inch wide, price 75c, offered this week at 25c. Just received a new lot of Ladies Muslins 1 yard wide' white ground colored figures at 15c. Beautiful American Challies 36 inches wide 12 l-2c. Sweet and lovely patterns shown in printed colored China Silks. Silk Grenadines are still popular and .are shown in the loveliest styles at ! BROWN & RODDICK, No, 9 North Front Street. bUious attacks, sick headache. natuiency, nausea, pues, wiu an u.ctvuo znents of the stomach, liver, and bowels, is . Ayer's Pills. They are sugar-coated, composed of the essential virtues of well known vegetable aperients, and without any mineral drug whatever. Though gentle in action, they are thorough in ef fect, and cleanse the stomach and intes tines of all effete or irritating substances. Aver's Pills are admirably adapted to the family medicine, are universal By the use of Ayer's Pills alone, I once cured myself permanently of a case of rheu matism which had troubled me several months. No medicine could have served me in better stead. These pills are at once harmless and effectual, and, I believe, would prove a specific in all cases of incipient rheumatism." Charles C. Rock, Corner, Avoyelles Parish, La. " When I feel the need of a cathartic, I take Ayer's Pills, and find them to be more effective than any other pill I ever took." Mrs. B. C. Grubb, Burwellville, Va. " I can recommend Ayer's Pills above all others, having long proved their value as a cathartic for myself and family." J. T. Hess, Leithsville, Pa. "After the .use of Ayer's Pills for many years in my practice and family, I am Justi fied in saying that they are an excellent cathartic and liver medicine amply sus taining all the claims made for them." W. A. Westfall, M. P., V. P. Austin & N. W. Ry. Co., Burnet, Texas. "Ayer's Pills are the best I have ever used for headaches, and they act like a charm in relieving any disagreeable sensation in the stomach after eating." Mrs. M. J. Ferguson, Pullens, Va. "Ayer's Pills cured me of liver complaint." T. W. Cluck, Jefferson, Tenn. Hit) CROSS Tti- oul NaiV. Sure. :'!! bii.i' Till for na other I Intl. 7vt.r .- l itn'iimt- 'gnxplimznts. URC H I SO N - : SHADES Oiderl : AND : TYPEWRITING I TEACHERS OF BOTH. to Lengthen JAfeJ V IS . It's easy enough the Ball corset That's be cause it has coils of fine wire springs in the sides. (They clasp the figure closely!, but yield to every motion. They "give", but they come back. So does your money if youVe worn a Ball cor set two or three weeks, and find that you don't like it. For al ljr K. XI Slclntl'o THE PATTERSON MINERAL SPRINGS. Buililiuen nd an onucU very mncli ioiproued 'lia'-tee Ic'sh than any firt-o!f prinfirs in the Souiii. Iu fall view of the l'Jne Ridife Moun tains, Four miles Sooth of .-vx-lov, N.. U., on O . a U1I1IUWI UUOlin'Up ii . ii .j i u wui- c(torailrod. Patternon Htatiori, out half mile of Spring. To the Afflicted Physicians will icli von that tbe iiiKredi' nU in tliece water are in tlirir effect A.perieut. )inrtio and Ai t.Tativr, making Naiure' Iieni'-d for Indiges tion, Dynp.-pia, JJieesiAt-H ol the Kidneys, Liver, Bladder andt all cases of Debility and Went Uoiintitutions whi Jh need a stininlau'', and in Rheumati and Scroff ul afft-otiouit. T vhe pmlic We are so Vnnated owuing the Spring with faiin attached, from which e tiet most of onr sm'i!:f d jing a, great pirt of the necg-ary worK daring the Heaous tne 8pr:ugs are open, i-an froronr pttrona with the leMt miner.u wate- the moat whole somo food and first cU-n a .-ooinodations at the following txtrt-oitiy low print-. Bord per Day tYliru one person ccnpr8i foin, $1.59. Pr wrik Wiihu one prison oc.'"pir loom f 8.50. 'V-r Week Vhn two r m rr oc:uoy rxj. 7.00. Per uinuh -f 28 tUys hen one p i son occupies room, 28,00 wheu two or more occupy room $ 25.00. Children under twelve years old half price, Servants, special rates in accordance to service rendered in caring for room or family or per son they are with. Where there are a family of five or more, or a party of friends from the same town or section, and will occupy one large room, a reduction of tn per cent, will be made. Care of stock -Hordes -Dr day, 60 oents, per week t3; per month tlO. Amusements and Recreation Bowling Al ley, Lawn Tennis, Croquet, Foot-ball and in door games of all kinds, conveyance at all tjains. Address -W. O. PATTERSON. Swang's Postoffice, Cleveland Co. N. C $5,000 Insurance! $5 "PERSONS TRAVELING daily over the same lios of Railroad or Steamboats should provide themselves with au Accident Insurance Policy for $5,000. This amount of insurance will only cost S5 for one year. M.S.WILLARD 210 North Water St WILMINGTON, N. C. Telephone No. 5. ANNOUNCEMENT. JJAVING PURCHASED the Drug Business on the corner of Eighth and Market streets, we beg to announce to our friends and the publlo generally that we are prepared to furnish the best and purest Drups, and to fill all presorip tions with accuracy. We respectfully invite your patronage, L. B. SASSER & CO., je 31 lm Eighth and Market streets. dTo'connor. tf Keal Estate Agent, WILMINGTON, N. 0. REAL ESTATK BOUliHT AND Xj sold. Loans Negotiated on City Prop- rt. o n, Ovjilino, ) nae t an 1 Halls f0 Rent. Rents collected Taxes and Insuranc promptly attended to. t'o lines and Lots for sale oo tbe monthly in staiment pUn. iih aUrincfld on city proo erty. ; ! A NEW DISCOVERY. VJPlRIT riNE BALSAM and Persian fnhalent CJ the reat family medicine pure extract of the Pine and Cedar Tree Public Safety, de mands that omy honest and reliable meaicinefl should be piac-sU upon the market, cures Rneu maU-m. Neuralgia. Catarrh, Astnma and La Grippe, hundreds of testimonials can be pro auced to show where the spirittlne Balsam and Persian Inhalent have maoe astonishing cures, when ev r, thing else falls, 'i ry it ; guaranteed to give satisfaction it properly used o money relundeO. old by all Uiugglsts; preparea by bpirltUne Chemical Company. o. .. ANbEN & SMITH, Managers, m?2" vvumlngion, N. 0. Fishing Tackle. (HOICE Selection JoUted Rod Canes, Uooke Lines, Sinkers Corks, Ac r Also everything you want in Galvanised Boat Goods, Tackle Blocks, Hope, c Try us. my84tf ALDERMAN & FLANNRR moucy refinUea. SEND YOUR ADDRESS FOR SAMPLES i And Instructions for Ssll-Meaturtmsnt PIEDMONT PANTS COVNY WlNSTOr N.f 00 for a Pair cm fi VRifv Q (Custcm-Kadc) M It VA Z riom JInnr.rrs' Rrn inanlt. I nil 1 M 8otUfiCNinn aniaianlttMl dr I MIS til jib mnll&tv's BXaUvial. IIEA1QUAUTERS FOR No. 1 Rook Lime. ROSINDALE AND PORTLAND CEMENT. Plaster Paris, Hair, Marble Dust. Building and Fire Brick and Fire Clay. m94tf 1TOTICB ' rTK CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS:- Proposals will be received at my office. No i North Water street. Wilmington. North Caro Una. for the purchase ot builder' supplies, consisting 4,0 barreU fresh "Hofflman- JSj CemeDt' 880 barrela Portland Ce prai Steamers and Factories a?tt1hW!tl1 V00" short notice and at wholesale prices. . THOS. F. BAG LEY, 19 U . Wilmington, N. a W.IH. & rTs: - V TUCKER&CO' RALEIGH, N. C. j Tourist's Supplies, W" iu call rHy attention oil iur iiinn, ., I 1 TIT" hPCiI) u North Carolina, ,o t. ii,,, I ib i, a ouppiieb mat we have r" fully provided this soiiM.n Wlr6 Tlie number of xHvxAe ym lrHV . tbe K'-'1s and wares l.rtho.e porarily mak- their hom.., '. ?" -Kali" or -oBmer" we h "ve T tht withf,llknowl..e of the nia, tii'trencie.- to U- met. vVhtn J terial or wib, is bouffbl. to "J; r. " . "ui' S-. hiiu than, li ram', ne mini . leasing i0 ihe . and possess Ihe ui. titof practical w!1' ao wen. -FOU- TOtTJaiSTS. BEDFORD COKDS, ENGLISH UOM'BSPUSa T-V'EEDS, SKUiiES, AND CHEVIOTS In Blue, Grey and Urown inijtturM Ill . .i I .S dots, checks (aintlv outlined, and medium small plaids. Steamer :: Woolens, B steamer wolena we mean those fabrics, peculiarly adapted for seiUhort wearoroceao viyages, being of such nature to withstand the ravages ol 4ialt air" as they neither spot nor circle. India and China Sfe Another class of d jlihtful wearing and very durable dress fabrics, are the Printed India and. China Silks, In To bacco Brown, Navy Blue, Olive Green, Grey, and Black Grounds, in detachel figures, and flower desigus, two. and three toned colorings. Coats and Reefers An unusual variety of Ladies' Coau and Reefer, in Grey, Tao, Cream aod Navy Blue, small striped and checki Tailor maae garments .at very moderate prices. SHOE -:- DEPARTMENT. Ladies' Common Sense and Opera Lasts, Plain Toes and Patent Leather Tip, Walking Shoes. TIBS In bright dongola, Black Snede, Ac, both Common Sense and. Opera LtPSlS. Rubber Garments, Circular, Peasant and Raglan Shapes in. Rubber and Cloth Surface. Trunk and j Bag DeDartmeiit j . i Ladies' Leather Canvas and Zinc Trunks, Steamer Trunks, Gladstone Bags, English Grips, and Canvas Telescopes. AU orders for samples and letteri o' muuiry snail receive prompt atianuvu vVheu writing lor sampled kindly uiaifi uu wrmnjf ior samples kiuuij wv your wants known as clearly as possi ble as we can then give your orderi more Intelligent attention. 1 i ' Goods Delivered Free. I On all cash orders of 15 and over,' deliver goods free to he nearest press office or railroad station. HALE 1G II, IV. C Mortgage ale. JY VXKTtJa AND IS PURSUANCK Of A yowtr of sale contained In a oertaln inurtga' deed bearing date August S8t a, 1S89, executed by Monroe Byrd and KlUa Urd, his wile, to "The Mllmlnirtnn Hnmat... .. I un AMO- ti fcvuw,av. muA uv. elation," and registered In tbe reoords of Ne 888. tbe undersigned will eeu, for cash, t tW wan nouse aoor or said county, at 12 m . da Jnlw irtv. toot .k. j ..,- ni IUUUB1UJ uuu- - . lot: Beginning In the eat tern line of McR street, it leet norlh of Miller hireet, fronn" Si feet on MeRae street, and runnine bk distance of 163 feet.: JNO. D BELLAMY. Jr.. P. B. j10, 90t, ex. Sun.: MANNING, Attorney bargains Hiall paper THR LAIiGKST and Il-vr sl l.H I I It NTO k ot WU Ppe (a PbiUuelpUU. wbioh iM Wj" oonaumer at wbolaaala ino. Sub- E?IaTC T Ptaaaant o all parti th Unltml SUtM "nCfc M8M for aamplaa and compara ear roods and pno awnara. viinwi ni ill aibuni riLABi.rai. ' UKa SA- -steamer BelUvue, (pmuw, " C cently overt) aa led and tboroaehlv renueu. length, 187 fet: oreadth of beam, 81 iet; UP of bold, 8 feet; tonnage, SU8 Sl-ioa 9e" engine; d am iter ot cylinder, SI Incbeo; tro ejspejd I i miles an hour. Lately ru clng between Savannah and Beaufort, s-1 za minen. Apply to u. w. viauum, a Afflanm. "I v
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 25, 1891, edition 1
2
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