Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / April 28, 1893, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE $ntm&Olt tlESSENGEK, Fill DAY, APRIL 28, 1893. ' - 1 III I iftc gjResseitjcr. JACKSON & BELL, Pbopbhctors. T. B. KINGSBURY, Editor. ANNOUNCEMENT' Thi Daily Mkbbnobkj maU, one year $7- lx months, $3.60; three months, f 1.15; one month 60 cents. " in the citT at en cents a month; one week, 15 cents; $LT for three months or $1.60 a Tear. - - WILMINGTON. N. a PRiDAY, APRIL 28. 1893. IMPORTANT CHOLERA NOTES. Experts throw cold-water on all plans to nhut ont cholera by quarantine regu- iDf;nno Tint tin recent meeting held in Denmark to consider the cholera question agreed to adopt most stringent regulations looking'to that very end to exclude the fell disease. England, Denmark and several other- European nations were represented and agreed to this plan of exclusion. ' ; But-all experts agree as to the great importance and advantage of sanitation. As the Washington Evening News terse ly puts it "Cleanliness and cholera are never seen walking arm in arm." Re member that when you neglect your persons, your households, your back lots and when the streets and alleys are left filthy. The best disinfectant known is milk nf lime; Dr. William II. Welch, of Johns Hopkins great hospital in Balti more, in a lecture the other day in Washington, said that it was "the most efficacious and the cheapest." . This is quicklime treated and dissolved in water by well known methods, Dr. Welch said this, and it is well to read and un- . dersland and remember it: "Since the cholera bacilli are only thrown off in the discharges, and can only be taken into another's system through the mouth, under any sort of decent conditions it is almost impossi " ble to contract the disease directly from a patient. et in crowded tenements, and in extremely unsanitary surround incrs. it isnBo contracted by means of food, drink or dirty hands. It is ac cordingly interesting to see how it hap pens that locnlities become infected. This depends, in the first place, upon the possibility of bacilli entering the soil and then reaching the drinking wa ter. Through the water, more than by any other means, are the germs spread. That is surely worthy of attention by all. No one ought to drink a spoonful of water or milk that has not been boiled. ' Now let us give two practical illus . trations of the importance of cleanliness of absolutely thorough, scientific san itation. Look at Hamburg last year. Thou sands died of cholera and other thou sands suffered from the awful disease and. recovered. What produced the cholera at Hamburg and fed it and kept it going? Let Dr. Welch speak "In future times the recent epidemic ..' at Hamburg will be a classic instance of how cholera is spread in this way, ' Hamburg on one side of the river Elbe, into which the sewerage of the city found its way, suffered fearfully. Al tona, on the other side, had filtered water and not a case of cholera." vo you rase it mr two cities are on opposite sides of the river. One has cholera most fearfully and destructive ly. The other has none. Why this difference? One drank polluted water; the other had only water that was well purified by filtration. But one more case. Dr. Shakespeare, the greatest Ameri can authority as to cholera, as he has made a specialstudy of it in Orienta' lands having been sent out by the Uni ted estates Government years ago to do 'so, in a capital paper he published last yeai, and upon which the Messenger drew more than once for instruction for its readers, told of a most wonderful exemption. The' city of Ispahan in Persia lies directly on the line which cholera invariably travels when it moves Westward, This occurs every few years. Cholera attacks every city on the route .until it reaches Ispahan. This it skips ana attacks the first city or town be- i . . - yonu, ana so on it goe3 musing none but Ispahan in its way. Why this ? Dr. Shakespeare says it has never at tacked Ispahan, and the reason is its extreme cleanliness and good water. These are two objective lessons of great value. Learn how to do and then do it. Clean up. NOT OSTRACISM BUT PRINCIPLE. - The political peddling in Washing ton is not so vigorous. The President and his Cabinet are doing a good deal of independent selection of officials 4es pite the Congrensional bosses and ' dis pensers of promises. Some mistakes will be madej inevitably, but they will be fewer under the new than under the old system. We hope all the most de serving will get good places, and that the choice of the people will come to the front every time. While we do not be lieve that a general system of ostracism should be applied that men should fail 2 of selection just lecause they were Hill men, it will be quite natural, as all must admit, if all other things bein equal Air. Cleveland should remember a warm political friend who stood faithfully by him year by year, than to turn from him to the other applicant who belittled him, fought him and tried to slay him as did the machine manip ulators at Chicago. But if the Hill ap .puuaut is we Detter man of the two then he should get the place upon the principle that a public office is a public trust. - we nave no Knowledge that Mr. Cleveland is making such discrimina tion. To the contrary it has "been given out that he would not refuse to appoint Miu supporters because of such support. But there is a point that might be men tioned in this connection. It is that genuine Democrats should be named for office men against whose political integrity "nothing can be" urged. The able Baltimore Sun has this to say in its issue, of the 25th inst.: "One thing would seem to be indis putably clear, viz: that there is no gain to the party or to the administration that can result from removing an avowed Republican, to make room for an insincere or doubtful Democrat. In u luamcere or aouDttui Democrat. In I politics, as m war, an open enemy i - , , olarotra in ha nrfiferTed to a secret On6, i .or to a deceitful and treacherous friend. It is impossible to see, therefore, ; now Mr. uieveiana s aamuusvrauu" ""vv to be strengthened by the appointment to office, in the place of Republicans who may resign, be removea, or wuudo term may expire, oi uemocrais wuvaio known to be inimical to. or, at least, not in sympathy with, the declared policy of the party and the broad and patriotic purposes of the President. No man, of course, should be ostra cised or put to disadvantage even, by the fact, that before the Chicago con before the nomination of Mr. Cleveland, he may have preferred another candidate. That is a matter upon which, necessarily, every Demo crat was entitled to have his own opin ion." No men really opposed to true -reform reform m policy,; m expendi tures, in tariff tax, in pensions, etc., should "be favored with office. We be lieve an efficient army depends upon drill, natural courage, fidelity to duty, submission to authority and loyalty to conviction. There must be a common union of purpose and principles. We must have true reformers in office under Reform Administration. It is not ostracism that is needed but devotion to principle. t I SHARPS AND FLATS. Secretary Gresham is very Democrat ic now, it is said, and his methods are strictly in accord with the methods of the party that honors him with a most important and responsible place. He gives everybody who wishes to talk with him an onnortunitv to do SO. We hope he will render faithful and impor tant service and when he leaves omce will remain true to the doctrines of the old Democratic party. . On 23d at Stratford-on-Avon, Eng land, Shakespeare's birthday was cele brated. The grammar school, in which the exercises were held, was decorated with flowers, flags and Shakespeare's portaits. The masters and pupils marched to Shakespeare's tomb in the afternoon and covered it with lilies. After all other ceremonies the Mayor of the town delivered a memorial address. At its close the audience remained per fectly silent for ten minutes and then dispersed. It is well to thus annually do honor to the memory of the greatest genius of all the world who was born at that little village in 1558 and died at fifty-two years of age. . . !i , Why should Democratic papers and politicians talk at this day of the need of tariff reform ? That has been settled at the polls. The Democratic National Convention laid down this law that is to govern : '" l- ' "We declare it to be a fundamental principle of the Democratic party that the Federal Government has no consti tutional power to impose and collect tariff duties except for the purpose of revenue only." ' . Two things are therein settled in so far as the Democracy are concerned. First, that there is to be a sharp tariff tax reduction. Second, ' that this re duction shall be enough to make a tariff one purely and simply for revenue. What is to pay with the preachers "up North?" A Roman Catholic priest, Charles Flaherty, at Genesee, New York, is sentenced to seven and a half years in Auburn prison for assaulting a girl 16 years old. Rev. T. P. Sawin, in the Troy, (N. Y.) Presbytery, made a bitter attack on John Calvin, calling him "a murderer and scoundrel," but granting that he "said many good things." The! there is Rev. Mr. Broughtoh, at Winston, shooting into the newspaper men with his mouth calling them bad names. . Rev. Dr. James W. Lee, author of "The Making of a Man," has been en gaged "to deliver four ; of his superb lectures at the Chatau qua .to be con ducted" in Chicago, during the World's Fair, says the Atlanta Constitution. It adds: "Our distinguished orator will hold his own against any who are named for mat piattorm and the thoucands who attend the exercises will be charmed by his lucidity of thought, his grace of diction ana tne earnest piety which mark all his deliverances." THE KIIjIjINQ OP THE WRONG man: A few days since we gave an account or the nearness to lynching of one Henry Williams, a negro, for commit ting rape upon a Miss Mamie Baxter, of Denmark, S. C, aged but 15. An alibi was proved, that he was twenty miles away and he escaped the awful doom. It seems that j twenty negroes were suspected and arrested, but all were discharged but John Peterson. He now lies in the grave, first hanged and then his body perforated with bul lets. It wa the work of 500 infuriated men. Peterson was not identified by the girl as her assailant. He had sur rendered himself to the Governor when he found he was under suspicion, who sent him back to Denmark where he was shot to death by a mob. An ac count in the Charlotte Observer of Wed nesday says: ., . - "There is every reason to believe that Peterson was innocent and that the mob in its fury wreaked vengeance on the wrong person. Miss Baxter, as stated above, failed to identify Peterson as her assaulter; in fact she stated positively that he was not the man. After her father came to town and declared his daughter could not recognize the man who , assaulted her fire was added to the flame. Some bodhad to die and somebody has It is indeed a most detestable crime if they have murdered the wrong man. A dispatch from Columbia to the At lanta Constitution, says: ' ' 'Governor's Tillman's action in allow- cretauu w go ueiore we moDm its irenziea condition to be tried by Judge Lynch's court is meeting with the se verest condemnation here. His Affirm is regarded as having been an invitation to the mob to take the negro and pass tvu. uxa oumo m us own way. . ihe poor fellow was tied to a bent sapling, his body was shot into the air and filled with scores of bullets. The njob kept on firing at the victim of its cruelty. A very sad, disgraceful affair" There are Saraaparillas and Saraanjiriilari bnt if you are not careful in vour rjnrfh the disease you wish to cure .will nnW fco intensified. Be sure you get Ayer's Sarsa parillaand no other. It - is commnnH from the Honduras root and othor kumZ concentrated alterative?. " hlgbIy HEATH OF AN EMINENT OP LETTERS. John Addlngton Symonds, a very eminent English man of letters, is dead at Rome, Italy. He was born in 1840. He was an author of extraordinary abil ity, learning and accomplishments, and wrote with j great elegance and fif ten with beauty and - eloquence. Some of his works will live for generations we may not doubt. His charming "Studies in the Greek Poets,1 which : we read with great' satisfaction several years since, and "The Renaissance m Italy," which beyond doubt is the very best work of its kind and must remain for years the favorite among literary read ers and students, will keep his name alive for a long time. He wrote other works of excellent ability and scholar ship, among them the "Introduction to the Study of Dante," "Shakespeare's Predecessors" and many volumes of Ital ian sketches, etc. He was a poet of much skill, writing melodiously and with the inspiration of a true singer.He published several volumes of verse that are pro nounced by a competent critic "mature in thought and graceful in form." He says Symonds had "a powerful intel D CT lect" He was in a high sense a critic, with rare resources of intellect, and learning, and ; with marked acuteness and warm sympathy. The same able critic, of New York Tribune, says "There is thought in Symond's books, and there is no pedantry, 'lhey are among the stimulating agencies in the i -Anx i ix i- v : nsmf. spnere oi mujiiecium iiun, wmtu auju to increase our knowledge of the pres ent by a clearer understanding of the past. Their themes have been chosen from some of the most interesting sources of literature. And for these reasons it is a misfortune for literature that the activity of their author has ceased." - EDUCATIONAL TEST SALOONS. AND THE It will be remembered that Mis sissippi a year or two ago adopted a new; constitution. In the North it was vio-1 lently assailed "because of its educa tional qualification for electors that none shall vote who cannot both read and write. Northern Republicans denounced it as a vile attempt to prive the negroes of the right to vote and it would thus deprive them of sup port in that State. They denouncec Mississippi for introducing ' a qualifica tion of franchise that actually obtains in some part of the North. Latterly we have seen a commenda tion of the Mississippi test in a Northern paper, but it was not a Republican or gan you may be sure. The new qualir fication to vote of course deprived a great many whites of the right to votej But the effect was much wider among the hegrOes. The law is working ben efit in an unexpected way. It is aiding the Prohibitionists and others in the counties in closing up the saloons. The element, constantly growing, of edu cated people who are not favorable to licensing grog shops and saloons, have been able to get control in seven coun ties m Mississippi, and the prospect is that in a year or two the whole State will be revolutionized on the liquor question and the traffic will be prac tically abolished. ' - it is noticeable that this work so deadly to the liquor business is not ex clusively the work of Prohibitionists. They cooperate of course in the work cf closing out, but the Democrats gener ally of the more intelligent class are moving in the matter. In fact, it is stated that those who are moving most actively are not Prohibitionists at all. They are working through local option as the best method, the one most agree able to free institutions and the party to which they belong, and in this they are right. The Savannah News takes the correct view; no doubt, in saying that a "general prohibition law cannot be enforced in localities in which the majority is against it. The dispensary system has not yet been tried sufficient ly to determine its merits. Local op tion is satisfactory and effective. It depends for its success upon public sen timent. Wherever public sentiment is against saloons there the law prohibit ing the sale of intoxicating liquor can be enforced. This is demonstrated clearly in many j counties in this and other States." ... For Malaria, Liver. Trou ble, orlrtdigest ion, use BROWN'S IRON BITTERS itaieigh JSews and Observer: TTnn . T?.' T. Bennett, of Wadesboro, will deliver an aaaress m June aZ Chapel Hill on we me ana character of Col. W. LL &teeie. 5 cod b resvef j h Te. I 1 " -1 I m pa$J0 but V$ rrfacfi Vfs delicate. ( fo coof;; but wsks he. bought CoitoUnz Vi niwsnorreriirta) arxcf mo re th a n c vk r . h & Cause ma(o better koJ j tid he cou Id est it vvfifiout ahy lirtjjleasant aftei- effect. NonrT tSin$ found "fta BESIV and nost healthful Srrorf--hihfl ever hio . Made oniv fcv " N. K. FAIRBANK & CO., CHICAGO and ST. LOOTS, I LITERARY GOSSIP. Percy Fitzgerald, a well known Eng lish literatus, is to write review of , the actor Irving through twenty years upon the stage. . , : A hard little word to spell with most people is set. It is most generally written ; setts, by people writing ad vertisements or charging goods. . You will find educated people writ ing its in this way it's. W e once read the proof to a novel by ne of the cleverest , of Southern novelists and all the way through the beautiful man uscript it's occurred. m . Ireland is to have . a. very valuable i collection of literary vorks published and arranged by Sir Charles -Gavan Duffy, well qualified. It is so be pub lished by the new Irish Literary Society. All prominent Irish authors have prom ised to contribute works for the most part biographical and historical. -. . - ' It will gratify many readers of Lord Macaulay's poems to Jearn that some , in i Ji j r i. . l mweixo nnpuuiisneu poems oi wis reai poe he might have attained to greater fame as a poet if he had given his nights i to that kind of composition instead of to his splendid essays and his- magnifi cent historical torso will soon be 'pub lished by his neice Lady Knutsford. . - : A new novel by the distinguished William Black is to appear in Harper's Magazine. By the way, "The Refu gees" by Conan Doyle, now appearing in Harper's, is a most charming i ro mance. If you do not read it you will miss one f the most entertaining novels of the last decade. The May number of this best of all illustrated magazines is exceptionally excellent. STATE PRESS. A progressive people must necessari ly be an educated people. Let our young men and women be educated and ithe waste places of the South wilibe built up. Educate their hands as well as .their hearts and heads. Educate the young men for the plow and the work-shop as well as for the different professions. Teach the young women to love i do mestic affairs as well , as the different arts. Sanord Expess, , j It was an absurdity, as the law stood before, that three or five country com missioners, some or au of whom may have lived outside of the municipal cor poration, should have had the powder to step in and override the" expressed will of the people as to the license question and negative the action of a board of al dermen or of town commissioners, a ma jority or all of whom accurately repre sented the sentiments of their constitu ents. Charlotte Observer. j when a man of ordinary sense obuses the newspapers, we imagine that he is merely seetang a little free adver tising and hopes to gain notoriety by having the papers discuss him and his imeasure. buch, persons far da graitfica- tionin being talked about without caring particularly what is said of them, so that their names are in people s mouths. The newspapers of North Carolina are with very rare exceptions of a high order, and deserve commendation from the pulpit rather than animadversion. Ral- tegh News and Observer. Marian Butler, one' of the most contemptible characters in the State, is sneaking around making speeches again. It is stated that he donounces bom parties, and especially the Dem ocratic party and' its leaders. His object seems to De to create defection mthe Dem ocratic ranks. He is an astute, vindic tive fellow, and as we said last summer. is as little to be trusted as Herr Most the incendiary and anarchist. Now, there is no room for such firebrands in this con try, and they have no moral or politi cal right to perampulate the State to de- nouce the Democratic party sow the seed of discontent and sedition among the people and abuse and rid cule the best government the world ever saw. iSalisburg Truth. . IT'S HIGH TIME something was done, if your blood is impure. You cant mistake th symptoms. Blotches and pimples, or a f eelinar of languor and depres sion, are some of them. If you " let it go," you're an easy prey .to all sorts of serious ailments. Now, the best blood-purifier in the world is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. Take that, and It will certainly rid you of every blood-taint and disorder. It starts every organ into healthful action, assists all the bodily functions, and cleanses, builds up, and invigorates the whole system. G. M. D. far surpasses nasty Cod Liver Oil and au its nitny compounds as a nesn builder and strencth-restorer. ; mr j. every disease caused by a torpid liver or impure blood, Dyspepsia, " liver Complaint," the most stubborn Skin, Scalp, or Bcrofulous affections even Consumption, or Lung-scrofula, in its earlier stages it's the only remedy so sure and effective that it can be guaranteed. If it doesn't benefit or core, you have your money back. , i Can anything else be "just as good" tor yon w tniy - Parole Floltr : JUST KECE1VED, - CAR LOAD OF PAROLE FLOTJB. PARTIES DESIR ING THE BEST ARTICLE IN The" MARKET CALL AND EXAMINE. ' ' REMEMBER WE GUARANTEE .THIS FLOTJR TQ BE THE BEST JIN THE CITT. HOUSE KEEPERS NEED ONLY CALL AND INSPECT OUR- GOODS AND THEY CAN'T HELP BUT BE PLEASED. PURE CREAMERY BUTTER FROM DAIRY FARM IN NEW YORR. ; TRY IT. TRY OUR PAROLE 'FLOUR AND BE HAPPY The John L. Boatwflght Cc Dr. Ulmer's Liver :: Corrector Vep aWenD6ri6nt IT POSSESSES GENUINE MERIT. A TRIED AND TRUSTED FAMILY MEDICINE. EN : DORSED BY PHYSICIANS, DRUG GISTS AND BUSINESS MEN. - For years this preparation of tae ' late Dr. B F. Ulraer OAS defied comnetitinn ni n and diMomas over to "Liver Rm.i.tA.c.t. other similar -compounds.- As a core for Dys pepsia, Liver Complaint, Blood Diseases. euT as a remedy for Headache, Female WeatnpsB Kidney or Bladder ComDlainta. n-i touio or alterative it is nnrivaUed. . , TO . FOR BAIJI BT ROBT. R. BELLAMY. WILMINGTON P? f BOTTLE. THE SPECIALTY CO., SOLE PROPRIETORS, SAVANNAH, Ga. aachl ' , Infants Castoria is so well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me." . H. A. Ascaxa, M. D., Ill So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. Y. "The use of 'Castoria is so universal and its merits so well known that it seems a work of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the intelligent families who do not keep Castoria within easy reach." t Carlos Mabttn, D. D., New York City. Thk Centaur Co FISHING COMPLETE LINE, HOOK.S, BOBS; POLES, FREEZERS. THE MOST ECONOMICAL Zee JUST THE THING FOR FAMILY USE. WIRE : ' PUMPS. COMPLETE LINE for Ni Jacob i Hardware Co. !--.- . t ( TO C1LL AND INSPECT OUR NEW LINE OF GOODS IN "1 - CHALLIES, SATTEENS, GINGHAMS, PERCALES, WHITE GOODS, CALICOES, FANCY AND PLAIN TUCKINGS, TORCHON AND VAL LACES, UMBRELLAS AND PARASOLS, GLOVES AND HOSIERY. A COMPLETE LINE IN EVERY RESPECT, BUREAU SCARFS, SPLASHERS, TURKISH TOWELS, LINEN SHEETING, SHEETS AND PILLOW CASES. '. BLACK AND BLUE SERGES, AND FANCY UPSTAIRS DEPARTMENT. NEW MATTINGS, UPHOLSTERY. GOODS, AND MANY OTHER NEW THINGS. BROWN & No. 9 North. Front St. Don't Whitewash LUT 1-A1-JUC YOUR WALLS. IT COSTS VERY LONG. We have tne largest and most complete In the State, and prices ntarted down to ROCK BOTTOM, Cornice Poles, Room Moulding, Ptotu Framesj Picture Hooks, Wire, Cord and Nails, Window Shades, Ac Wilmington, N, C. ALWAYS AT 09 a o n a CO a -r I We Want Your Trade, D IF BY GIVING YOU FULL VALUE FOR YOUR MONEY WE CAN GET IT' THE QUESTION IS SETTLED. " WE HAVE NO "ELE-" Sl'i'.SSaS1714 hands in old styles but all are of the VifixlY ijrVT!SF. EXAMINE OUR GOODS LEARN The Horse HHliner, ". 114 North Front Street. Trunks, Valises Wash Silks Just Received, oniu 756, Empire Waists, Ladies, AS lowas hm, lk. - -Sateen Waists, EW STLSS- Dress Goods, variety. EUITS FOR LDIES TO ORDER. ONLY THE BEST TALENT " , . - MANNER CF STAMPING DONE. 1T) JUL a I and Children. Castoria cures Colic, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhcea, Eructation, Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di - gestion, . Without injurious medication "For several years I have recommended your 'Castoria,1 and shall always continue to do so as it has Invariably produced beneficial results." . Knwni F. Pa&dkb, M. D., 135th Street and 7th Ave, New York City. hp ant, 77 Mc&rat Street, New York Citt. The Best and Cheapest Ever offered to tne people oi iWilmlngton., . RUBBER HOSE CHEAP. BEAUTIFY YOUR GARDEN AND LAWNS AND SAVE MONEY BY BUYING OF Wm, E. Springer & Co Purcell Building. I) WILMINGTON, N. C. TACKLE. REELS AND LEADS. "GEM" ICE CREAM AND RAPID FREEZER IN THE MARKET. Sliaves. NETTINO FOR FENCES. BARB WIRE OF SEASONABLE GOODS. NVITED CLOTHS FROM 75c TO $1.60 PER YARD. RODDICK LITTLE MORE ANDLASTS TEN TIMES AS stock of , ; THE FRONT- CD CO CQ 11 OUR PRICES AND FO.LLOW SB CO and Satchels. EMPLOYED. ALL TheBta.e MT. AIRY, N. C. Among the Blue Ridge Mountains, I,5oo feet Above the Sea. pHIS IS AN ATTRACTIVE ALL THE YEAR RESORT. COMNANDS EXCELLENT VIEffg OF PILOT AND OTHER FAMOUS MOUNTAINS." LARGE AIRY ROOMS. ELECTRIC bells AND ELEVATOR. THE INN IS 8UPPLIED THROUGHOUT WITH PURE MOUNTAIN WATER TABLE UNSURPASSED. ' FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, ADDRESS, S. W. i860. 33 Years. .1893 Washington Life Ins.Co - Of NEW YOI1K. W; ft. Brewer, Jr., President. Condensed Statement January 1st; 1893, Assets.... $12,061,466 03 Reserved for Policies, N. Y. Stan r' dard 4 per cent, and all Llabill- I ties.... 11,611,311 9S New Insurance, 1892........... 11355,563 00 Outstanding Insurance..............' 51,661,932 01 Paid PoUcy-Holders In 1892. ......... 1,542,042 16 raid Policy-Holdere sinc Organiza- j tion ...,..: 22,17797 11 Income, 1892 .'. 2,760,C33 4S THE WASHINGTON I INSURES ALL FORMS OF LIFE AND EN DOWMENT POLICIES WITH i Guaranteed Gasli Values i AND SURVrvOESHIP DISTRIBUTIONS. THESE POLICIES ARE EASILY DEFINED J THEY THEY THEY THEY THEY THEY THEY THEY THEY THEY ARE Non-forfeitable, ARE-Unrestricted as to roiJence and travel after two years. r ' ) ARE Incontestable after two years. ARE Secured by an Invested Rti erve. ARE Solidly backed by Bonds and Mort gages, first liens cn Real Estate. I ARE Safer than Railroad feeurities. ARE Not affected by the Stock Market! ARE Better paying uivebtinenta than U. S. Bonds, t j ARE Less expensive than Assessment ! Certificates. ! ARE More liberal than the law requLrea! ARE Definite Contracts. JTHEY FOR FULL PARTICULARS, ADDRESS, . T. L ALFRIEND, Manager, RICHMOND, VA. Or D. H. CR0W Special Agent, i RALEIGH, N. C. Wait! Wait! JJNTIL YOU SEE THE WAVIBXY. THE ONLY 82-LB HIGH GRADE WHEEL IN AMERICA THAT IS SOLD FOB $100. ' JAMES LYOif.flot WILMINOTON, N. C. Does Your House Need PAINTINQ? TP SO, THE PLACE TO BUY YOUR PAINTS IS At ' . GflflS. Al. WHITLOCK'S, 80S N. FRQNT ST., WILMINGTON, N. C. New and popular colors are ont this rprtng and a aiworiment ta always on hand. These paints are of the- highest anteea to be Btrictlr with address for Bample card of colors. Produce I Produce I r .. GOTO . ... .. R. E. WARD. 213 Market Street,' WILMINGTON, N. C, For your Eggs, Chickens, Potato. Cabbage Apples, Oranges, . c. Ham., etc . M Ridgeln - n U WESTBROOK, PROPRIETOR. THE LATEST 5TYLES AND THE ." Lowest Prices -IN- Wing and Summer Suits WB tted? "SSf 8tock of toPrted goods ia WE GUARANTEE a perfect fit in everv nar tlcnlar, if not don't take the suit. 7 P WE CAN save you at least 25 per cent, in the pi Ice of your suit. e WECvat!?S yon the Handsomest line nf Pants Goods and for Dress Bnits in the city. AND WE suit you in every particular. F. ft. KRflfiNKE & GO, 113 PRINCESS STREET. FOR RENT. j gTORE, 113 NORTH FRONT STREET, '.FOE- MEHT.Y OCCUPIED BY R. L. WILLIA3IS. Safe and Desk For Sale, APPLY TO ' lis north; front street. Summer Art Glass- C. H. HANKINSi, INSTRUCTOR. TERMS For Sketching and Painting $C 0f per month ; Drawing. $4,00. HOURS For instruction from 8 to 12 m , on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Specimen of work at C. W. Yates' Book Store or at 203 No. Front street. Special trips will be made to the Beach for those that wish to sketch frdin nature. Portraits painted from Life or Photograph. ' SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. ap 23 lw i . - t National Gold Cure Institute FOIlI9B CURE OF INEBRIATES IS NOW OPE Jf AND READY TO KKCEIVE I"TTENT. a POSITIVK CURE UaRANTEED. - AMPLE ACCOMMODATIONS FOR FIFTY PATIENTS. Apply to ! Dr. WrlQUt flail, President, i21 SOUTH FROUT STREET, J Wilmingrion, N. C. aprl4-tf i 50 Dozen BOYS' stow mis, IN ALL SIZES AND LATEST STYLES, TO GETHER WITH A NEW LOT OF . - . Ladies' Straw Dunfap flats. TRIMMED AND UNTRIMMED. Pafifipn I MR Hats UVVU1 11 IwVIVfV 1 IV vv JUST RECEIVED ANOTHER LOT OF THOSE ' ADMIRABLE LACS HATS. A NEW . LOT OF BABIES' CAPS AND CLOAKS. FASHIONABLE GOODS AND LOW PRICED ARE TWO OF THE MANY INDUCEMENTS OFFERED TO ALL PURCHASERS AT Taoior's Bazaar, 118 MarKet Street, WILMINGTON, N. C. WILL OPEN MONDAY AND DURING THE ENTIRE WEEK A FINE LOT OF LADIES AND CHILDREN'S Parasols and Sunshades ORDERS BY MAIL PROMPTLY FILLED. TAYLOR'S BAZAAR.
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 28, 1893, edition 1
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