Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / June 20, 1897, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
1 z3 J. Or" sjl 4 ' JACKSON & IELL COMPANY. TEEUS OP SUDSCIUPTIOII, The Dally Lleaaeaset. by mall, ou fear, 78; stz nwJnths. 2.W; three sumtfcs, SL.75; one month, CO cents. Served In the city at CO cents a sonfh; erne week: ,13 cents; $L75 to .three months or $3.0 a year. The Seed-Weekly Uraarnger (two S - page papers), 1st mr.II. cna year, J1.CD; fx months, W cents. la advance.- WILMIHGTOa, H. C. SUNDAY, JUNE 23, OBSERVANDA. ' There are many novelists who write in English who hare adopted French . ideas, and try In their hooks to see how far they can so without abandoning every, principle of morality and openly favoring: every description that can awaken depraved desires and ignoble impulses. Many of them are utterly coarse, shameless, and. prostituting. ; Hardy, possibly greatest living English novelist.unless Meredith be his rival rha a. great sin to answer for in debauch- - ing his fine genius, and lending him self to the creating of two of the most vulgar, obscene, and lascivious novels : in all English literature. We believe that the coarse, the suggestive of evil, the obsecene, whether books axe replete - with power and in the main clean or no, should be repudiated,tabooed,damn ed by a safe,, sound public opinion.. Do . nOt compromise with badness. There - are writers who wish readers not to dis card novels altogether that are not bad - save in parts. If there is poison on one page.give it the go-by and let the devil have his own. AH uncleanness should ! be despised, spit upon. Do not listen to plausible essayists like Cable,, who writes in Current literature, that "a page is not necessarily unclean because it deals with unclean things." But why stir a muck-heap, why touch "unclean j ntraf "Rut U ia -iiicr tn Viirn tn orlri v ln omnatin f genuinely unclean page a page wnicn however subtly, gives ugliness the vic tory over beauty in our own souls should not blind us to the moral base ness which, after all, makes it, in its last analysis, bad art, no matter how noble the book, as a whole, in which it may be found." A sentence may con tain the loss of a soul, the blasting of a life. The rift in the lute however tiny robs 'the instrument of its music. A poem may be the most consummate in the perfection of its technique, in the melody of its numbers, and it may rise high in "the heaven of invention" but let there be the suggestion of lust, the hint of grossness, the injection of sew er gas, and it is false to art, false to morality, false to humanity. The fol lowing from The New York Evening Post is too germane and forceful to be overlooked: "What we want of him (the artist) is, not an inventory, but an artistic ren dering and impression of certain, se lected facts. To us the idea is absurd that there is such a thing as a floating artistic talent, perfectly indifferent to its material land able to wreak itself upon the beastly and the blackguardly, as well as upon the beautiful. It is sometimes said that anything handled in an artistic way becomes beautiful in the process. But how can handling make the hideous attractive? If it does, or seems to do so, what becomes of our severe love of 'the truth?" We were reading not very long ago that pleasant, half -critical, half -biographical paper on Christina Rossetfti by Edmund Gosse in which ; he said, that woman "has nevet taken a very prominentj position In the history of poetry." He points to the fact . that Shakespeare has had no female rival. Has he in fact ever had any male rival?1 If so whom shall we name shall It be Aeschylus or likuripedes,' Sophocles or any other poet of antiquity? We think not. No French poet ot Moliere or Racine can be called his rival. Not one of the Elizabethan dramatists can.: be jiamed as a rival, clerer as several were Ben Jonson, Chapanaa, Marston and " Dekker, and possibly "Webster and Mid ' dleton, full of excellence but not equal :to the four named. So if there has been no female rival of the greatest of poets It is no reason for their depreciation. But it is a fact, none the less, that but few women have ranked high as poets. Thev have written even in times of, . dearth as in times of Hterary revival.' . Mr. Gosse mentions that seventy lines iby Sulpicia remain to testify as to her' i genius in the very time when Juvenal and Persius flourished and so bitterly; satirized their times. He also mentions ' that among the feree women but two had so asserted their genius as to ; be included by Meleager in "that delicious garland of the poets which was woven", by him "to he hung outside the gate of the Gardens of the Hesperides." - They were Sappho and Erinna. The poetic remains of these two most gift-.' ed of Greek women of genius are scant and would scarcely fill two columns pf 'The Messenger, If so much. Of Sap pho there is at least enough, to insure her immortality as the: greatest poet among all women. She lives, so Mr. Gosse says, .''not by reason of the va Tiety or volume of her work, but by vir tue of its intensity. Its individuality, . its artistic perfection."' Erinna was praised by the, Greeks . ; and five hundred years taller. speaks of still hearing the swan-note of Erinna clear above the jangling chatter of the iays, and of still think ing those three hundred hexameter verses sung by a girl of nineteen as lovely as the loveliest of Homer's,' Possibly something strained is this praise of three , hundred lines of , so young so gifted a poet. Of the. "waifs and strays" of Sappho scholars an critics are agreed as to their beauty and charm. They bewail the loss of the greater part of her productions, and think that if all had been preserved they would have::ebnsUtuted' a'-'great- glory among-1 Greek masterpieces. : J. A. Sy monds says "we must he thankful for any two words of Sappho that survive in authentic Juxtaposition"so precious is the porcelain of her ruisite verse. Mr. Symonds was a learned, discriminating and eloquent critic in Greek poetry. Ho says that "the world has suffered no greater literary loss than the loss of Sappho's poems. So perfect are the smallest fragments preserved in Bergk's collection, that we muse in sad rapture of astonishment to think what the complete poems must have been." She ranked immensely high evidently with the greatest of her countrymen. Mr. Symonds says she was spoken of as "The Poetess" just as Homer was called "The Poet." He says Aristotle placed her "in the same rank with Homer and Archilochus," and Plato mentioned her "as the tenth Muse." Take other evidences of estimate: "So lon, hearing one of her poems, prayed that he might not see death till he had learned it. Strabo speaks of her genius with religious awe. Longinus cites her love-ode as a specimen of poetical sub lunary." Others praised her in exalted strains. "Nowhere is a hint whispered that her poetry was aught but .perfect." In her art she was unerring holds Sy monds, who says also that "beside her, Aicaeus pales." Those who were most competent were her greatest admirers and spoke in most marked emphasis of her glories, her beauties, her marvel lous art. Among, her chief lovers was the Roman Horace. Her style must have been indeed wonderful to have been so praised. She could not be ' translated into Latin successfully even by so fine-a poet as Catullus. Symonds pays her this touching homage: "Of all the poets of the world, of all the illus trious artists of all literature, Sappho is the one whose every word has a pe- culiar and unmistakable perfume, a seal of. absolute perfection and inimi table grave.' He says great poets were common-place beside her. Horace said of her "dazzling fragments:" "Which still, like sparkles of Greek fire, Burn on through time and ne'er ex pire." The Sapphic stanza has come down to us, and is' finely handled by Swin burne, as Symonds mentions, in his "Sapphics." Horace tried his hand also. Ben Jonson translated one of her lines, "the dear glad angel of the spring, the nightengale." She was a Lisbian. Lord Byron wrote of her in "The Isles of Greece." Of all woman she is by far the foremost. She has left enough to show something of her ex quisite art, her profound emotions, her marvellous expression, her voluptuous verse, her luxuriant and beautiful im agination. "All is so rythmically 'and sublimely ordered in the poems of Sap pho that supreme art lends solemnity land grandeur to the expression of un mitigated passion." There is one poet referred to above in association with Homer Archilochus to whom we may refer at another time. In modern times the two greatest poets among women are doubtless Christina Rossetti , and Elizabeth Barrett Browning. But there has been none to take rank on Par nassus with the dozen or more greatest English poets. Byron used - a great deal of hair dressing, tnxt was very particular to have only the best to be found in the market. If Ayer's Hair Vigor had been obtainable then, doubtless he would have tested its merits, as so many distinguished and fashionable people are doing now-a-days. RKLIGIOUS EDITORIALS FOB SUNDAY. What it is our duty to do we must do because it is right, not because , any one can demand it of us. Whewell. , - r '- ; ..' What though on peril's front you stand, - What though through lone and lonely ways, With dusty, feet, with horny hand, Don toil unfriendfy all the days, And die at last with man's dispraise? Would you have chosen ease, and so Have shunned the fight? God hon ored you With trust of weighty work. And O! The Captain of the heaven knew His trusted soldier would prove true. v . Joaquin Miller. The parable of "The Sower" Is One of the most suggestive and important perhaps of the many the Saviour gave to the disciples through all the ages. "Behold a Sower went forth to sow." AH "men are sowers. They are either sowing tares or wheat bad seed or good seed. The harvest will be like the seed. "Be not deceived; - God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth. that shall he also reap." To make a good crop there must be toil, tact, cul tivation. You must first plant 'and then diligently cultivate - the crop. If you neglect there will be a poor crop for , weeds, briers, " thorns, thistles, brambles will spring up and choke the good seed. The farmer understands this well. Xt is . no new condition to him that he must sow good seed and attend actively, persistently upon it. The primal curse laid upon man for disobedience was " labor in the sweat "brow" ss& sot many preachers quota it), man was? to earn his bread. He was to be ai breadHvin ner "through assiduous, unbroken toIL That is the. law in the natural, world as ; to planting sowing, reaping. The price eff success, of g)ood frultago, of ahrtmdazLoe, offthirty, fifty ran hundred fold, is faithfulness. Is labors. When we turn ti the spiritual world the same law obtains It is so too in the moral world. If ycra read vicious 'books or keep bad company you -are sowing bad jseedyare preparing to reap as you sow. ii you "Have sown the wind;- you "shall" inevitably " reaj the " whirl wind." "A ; sower went forth to sow." He sowed the seeds ot Jdeah--th things that choke and ruin,J!f thorns are planted you need not iooJs for anything better than, : thorns. JBVil . dominates the world to a very great' extent. Ev ery man is a sower. " If you would reap truth, honor, purity, virtue,: yon must sow the seed that bring forth after its kind. Many a man leaving, home sows good seed, but the tares come, and he wanders. The -explanation of the iwon-j derful preacher is that an enemy hath done this." The eowers of, evil: are every way as mdnistriotis as the' sowers of good. The devil is always active, energetic, at hand, ready to dis-: poll and deceive the. sower, lest he should reap well. It is very essential that those who essay to cultivate the moral and spiritual fields should be very watchful, very industrious, very determined. : Sow the good seed, and pray and work for" God's blessing that the harvest fall not. So many men and' women begin the religious life with a promise and a resolution, (but they neglect to cultivate, to be assiduous and firm, and sicon fall away. They 'are either without "root" or they are chok ed "by the thorns" and they soon "wither away. We may never com prehend in either the natural or spir itual the principle of. growth, bat iwe can observe and behold results. The fact remains, exists, if the process is not known. The man who lives a pa tient life lof fa'ith, of prayer, off fidelity to God, observing diligently His com mands "and striving daily, hourly to be conformed in all things to the exalted Divine standard and to be ever seek ing to !be like Christ, will know results in his own life. The fruitage will be there. He has absolute knowledge "of growth, of development in Christian graces. He realizes daily that his life is "hid with Christ in God." He is filled with 'humility because of the "growth in grace." "He is not puffed up, does not behave unseemly." While the process o'f germination in the soul and the gnavvth that follows imay not be understood it is realized, it is felt. "It is as thoug'h a man cast. seed into the earth, and it springeth up he knoweth not how." Man can do much God helping him. Said a preacher some years ago with true insight and fe licity: " We will plant, we will plow, we will harrow, and we will enrich' the soil with every fertilizer adjunct "at our command. And, while we cannot or der the process of germination, we will 'sleep and rise night and day,' believ ing that God works for us and by us Nor Will we 'be impatient for the full harvest. There are. stages of develop ment. 'First the blade, then the ear, then the full corn in the ear.' We Can not tell when one of these-- stages passes intlo the other, but we recognize each when we see it. One little seed will produce a -whole handful of grain." "Let us not weary in well doing." Det us oe raitnTut in tne use or everjr means of grace. Lret us not sow to cor ruption. Let us toil faithfully knowing that it is God who can "give the in crease." We shall all prosper doing God's will. 'If ye continue in the faith grounded and settled, 'and be not mov ed away from the hope of the Gospel." The backsliders never toil with success never ' reap a good harvest. They .grtow horns - and cockles and 'briars lonly. "For whatsoever fs not of faith is sin." "Watch ye, stand -fast in the faith." ... Latterly we have been impressed with the many discussions in northern and southern religious newspapers as to the need of a , genuine, .'old-f ash ioned," heart-moving, soul-kindling life -con trolling revival of, religion. The modern revival system is superficial to a great extent. Men are shaken hands with and received into the chfurch as if the church of Christ were a'i hos pital for the reception of the diseased to be cured. The church is a body of believers, of the cured, of the saved ; through the Great Physician of souls and by the -blood. of Christ as the rem eay. rne . nana-snaKing' 'Dusiness ' isa very poor substitute for deep sorrow, hearty compunction, ' pungent convic tion. A thousand shake hands and in a year you cannot find twenty who are living "godly, righteous and . sober lives." The papers of many denomina tions are urging a deeper, profounder work o'f grace in the soul. The New- York Outlook says that "the .ancient type of religious revival is the type we now need." That is patent. It Is -too plain to be denied by any one who be lieves in genuine regeneration in the new life. The whole life f needs to be changed. The truly . converted. Chris tian man does not deal in compromises.' He i3 faithful to God's' standard of moral rectitude and has no tolerance for or . connivance with "'undermining of the social fabric by political immor- ality, by venal legislation, by tolerating public plunderers," or fraternizing -witSbr or offering the incense of adulation 'to men who violate the Ten Command4 mehts openly and . continually and do evil that good may come. The Outlook1 sharply, but truthfully says that "'the revrralist'fc exhortation Come to Jesus, needs to' be more, broadly.' and, practi- cally. applied. There is no real coming I 1 i : I miJ j are- a thousaird.i v cJ good reasons whUiAij J J should use . 5 F3 IILMII jj i h ! i lr "I h 1 a 1 1 : a m m s i m m m m 1 TEcre- bp1 cone win.-youi S j-n snoma use laaU,. fa ?m&V i., Zrr Company; " mm to. JTesHia apart from comBig:totria mind at Jesus.;. He reads -tlaa , GospeJ with smadi: Intelligence who thinksstifcat the -church in. bur country. withy all her power; of moulding public opinion, stands -" toward acknowledged! abuses and3 wrongs according to . the Master's mind; or deals as ha?dealt with the covetQui -siammon-spt whk& is the curse off sasodern as oft ancien L civiliza tion. This, the reviraiist-js.; opjjortuni ty, . i's also" every pastor's . oppjorrunity ta; beaome a rev1valist.of the Scriptural type, speaking for Christiac citizenship. exposing and reprovtng the. moral an archy which the spirit : of greed has in troduced. Nothing i&sof rreligSeus worth that is not of ethical iWofthA" NO CURE NO PATT. That , is the way all; druggists sell GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC for Chills and "Malaria." . IX is simply Iron and Quinine in a tasteless form. Children love it. Adults prefer it to bitter, nauseating Tonics. Price, 50c Equivocal Signs (From -The Boston Budget.) 'I distrust that man ojt sight," saidj Jones meaningly Jones is one of the- men who still show the effect of the life and doings ofi the late Mr. Sherlock Holmes. "Yes, sir! I wouldn't trust that man with a plugged Canadian? Quarter." "' 'Hum," said Bobinson, who happened? to know -the. man in question and heitt very , different opinion. "And why not, may I ask?' . JIn the first place do you notice th stooping, insinuating way in which he carries his shoulders? That's craft!' . , "Oh." . . "In the secend plaxse you observe; that he clutches his fists 'as though he had a grip upon- sometmng tnat nothing would persuade him to loosen. Thats cupidity!!"- "Ah." ; ... "In the third "place, do you se how furtively he glances from side to- side. That's gailty!!!" There was a pause. Then . "I happen to know that man said Robinson. "And I am right?" demanded Jones triumphantly. ' - "No, you are wrong. He has just be come proficient enough to go on the street with his bicycle." Take JOHNSON'S CHILL & FEVER TONIC. That it is only a thin varnish, after all, between civilization and savagery, h.a& come to be regarded as a platitude; tout still it does seem strange in these days of X-rays and grace that superstitution should still be so prevalent as it is in this great metropolis. Only yesterday a woman took her little hump-backed child up to Central Park, and - by permission of the superintendent of the menagerie, passed the little one under the belly of an ass, with the conviction that a cure or spinal disease would be affected in that way, ana superintendent ssmitn says tnat requests of that nature are frequent. New York Letter in Houston Post. Fifty Years Ago. Who could Imagine that this should b' The place where, in eighteen ninety-three ' That white world-wonder of area and; p- l dome ' . '' l' ' ; ,r;;,'" ' ' ' l Should shadow the nations, polychrome . , . Here at the Pair was the prize conferred v On Ayer's Pills, by the world preferred. '. Chicagorlike, they a record show, lince they sUrted 50 years Ayer's Cathartic Pills have, from the time of their preparation, been a continuous success with the public And . that', means that Ayer's 'Pilla accomplish, what is promised for. them ; they core " where others faiL It was fitting, therefore, that the world-wide popularity' of these pills should be recognized, by the World's Fair medal of 1893 a fact which emphasizes the record: 50 Years of Cures. ; For Sole, Mac&ine Made Spif Barrels Made from the best thoroughly seasoned and selected - ' " t WHITE OAiSL TI3IBER Our, experience of 31 years in manufac turing' Cooperage for the trade enables; us to turn .out barrels of correct gauge and guaranteed first class In every, parti cular. Tour patronage solicited. ' ; ' ' IDE GEO. L. nORTOII CO. AWJ t . . 1 T2b-late Tuke of MarlbooGagJi, In alluding to the size of Blenheim palace, use to say by way of.. a joke,, that it was the only residence In..., Iurope which., required J 800 worth ;bf putty year , to keep " the; window - panes in orders -?f " . fly, I Money went a good .deal further In the last century than ttdoea nowj Consequently, when the house ol com mons voted 300,000 to build .the first duke ca-r:residence:..there : presently; sprang,, up. an edifice 3iS. feet Jong and with an interior so vast tha'ti when a government -- messenger once. came -posthaste there to the. late Lorrl Ran dolph.. Churchill, during one ' of his visitswith a despatch, it was over half an. hour before. his loxdshS who for exercise had been " exploring the placet,. with its 15 staircases was found The last time IU. was .repaired the latei?duke was obliged to apply to par liament, for permission-to seLk the pic tures and library to pay the bills which, amounted ; ta more t than a mil lion., and. a half., It is therefore not sucp.rlsing that, although, thfe " estate yielded' 40,000 a year, thei expenses of keeping' up this prepostenous resi dence kept the duke a poor man. Al together everything about : Blenheim isigrotesquely laiare. Some of the pic tures; axe 70 feetv square. The stature oC f the great duke, near the big lake of 260. acres is 132 feet - higtu and cost ii'SO.OOO Pearson Weekly. SaUsStury Sun : Sam Jones is to begin att meeting at Mt. .Mourne Friday. . Cramps; CoagksX ; ache, Colic, Colds, IIARRHa?A DYSEXTJSMY, A Sure, Sale, Quick Ctu&fCtrthese 1" troubles is mm ' i i. (PIEKT UVE8)j Used Internally and Externally. 3 Two BiStes, 25c, imd$0c.fcottles. Two Diseases That Cause Their Victims to Be Shunned by "- Their- Fellow-Man. SpRiNerncLD, Mo. Gentlemen : I commenced taking P. P. P.t Lippman's Great Remedy, last) Fall, for Erysipelas. My face was com pletely covered with the disease ; I tok t, short course of P. P. P., and it soon disappeared. Thia Spring I beczjne much debilitated aad again took an other course, and I am now in good condition. I consider P. P. P. one of the best blood preparations on the market, and for those who need a gen eral tonic to build up the system and improve the appetite I consider that it has no equal. Will say, anyone who cares to try. P. P. P. will not be disap pointed in its. results, and I therefore cheerfully recommend it- - . ARTHUR WOOD, Springfield, Mow Erysipelas and Scrofula cured by P. P. P., Lippman's Great Remedy, surely and without fail, Springfield, Mo. Gentlemen: Last June I had a scrofulous sore which, broke out on my .ankle. It grew rapidly, and soon ex tended from my ankle to my knee. I Igot one bottle o your P. P. P., Lipp noan's Great: Remedy, and was agree ably surprised at the result. The entire sore healed at once. 4 I think I have taken almost every medicine. recom mended for scrofula and catarrh, and your ; P. P 1 P. is th -best I ; have ever tried. It cannot be recommended too WgWy. for blood poison etc s; ' ' 1 , Yours yery truly, ; ;wfi hunter.- , ' P. P. P. cures all blood and skin dis-, . ase4 both in men and women. s Rheumatism, which makes man's life! a hell upon earth; can . To relieved " at! once by P. P. P.; Lippman's Great Rem-j dv It makes a PERMANENT cure. ' ; P. P. P. is the great and only remedy! for advanced cases of, catarrh. Stop- , va fret rf t-.TiA nrw'fla nv4 A i ffi nnlin t breathing when lying down, P. P. P. ' relieves at once, w , ...- r i P. P. P. cures blood poisonlnsr in all ; its various stages, old ulcers, sores and; money cuiupiaxnts. - f . . : Sold by aU draszbtsl . '.V' : j ' UTPMAtf BROSl. ApotharIe. SoU.Prop'ra,' Uppmsa's Block, Smvmanab, CUu , For Sale by R. H. BBIXAMY. 1 (La ii . k Cures CORNS. EUXICNS bad WARTS : SPEEDILY and WITHOUT PAIN. : FOR SALE P"; ALL DRUGGISTS;. . Uppman's Clock. SAVAKMAH. 6A. - (P I F bum Mctlsat.' dancers lurk, VM lorrxna cneca takinqk ptecat thzX: tha - final v bosruis rotted off aft Dasssr. . Itsi ese . iasure fjtv trtt-. Cfecf bcthtdet&er and' cadtes&es chnj-tlrtlr easy and recovery morrept&? MotberH Friend is" the createsli. reracdy ever pot on thfc aiarket,- aod et A ox customers praise ititErf:h." . YilG &Cp.,teAvricTe Senkby Mailon receipt ofprice, SI PEK BOTTIXi. , Book rTn Expectant Mothers" mailed tree. THaBRAOF7CU REGULATOR CO.", Atiaht A, QMZ.' WE . HA SOMETHING FOB EVERY DISEASE THAT FLESH IS HEIB TO, SWAIM'S PANACEA. aWAIM'S VERMIFX7VJ1!. ; SWAIM'S ELIXIR. ' SWAIM'S PILLS. SWAIM'S OINTMENT. SPIRRITTINE BALSAM. SPIRRITINE SAjLVE. ( SPIRRITINE INSECT DESTROYRIfc. I PERSIAN INHALENT. j SCOTT'S NEURALGIALINE. ; HARPER'S CEPHALGINE. ( ANTICEPHALALGINE. ! MORGAN'S CHILL TONIC". ' - GROVE'S CHILL TONIC. . ' l. JOHNSON'S CHILL TONIC. SCOTT'S CHILL .TONIC. COLLIN'S CHILL TONIC J FROG PONI CHILL TONIC. AYER'S AGUE MIXTURE;. HARTER'S BV & A. MIXTURES:. indian chalagague. nolandinc jayne's Ague mixture. sloan's chill tonic. wintersmith's chill tojs3c. klutz's chill tonic. green's ague conques.or. FLANDER'S DIFFUSIBLE TONIC SHALLENBERGERTS PILLS VINEGAR BITTERS. ; If We haven't what, you wish we will get it. for you. j.mGEaBMTnii wholesale and Reiou Dmaatst. Y. H. C. A. BUILDING m Fourmana Biaaen wis, WILMINGTON, N. C mi " 1 i i ii WXLIi GO OF ma -THE.. - OF li-VLT'-MCRE. 5 . :jiucss ever Cm Sill'icn "Cellars.. ' ; Easiness Z&M ft surety Ece';.. AEEHiSWAHTEB- THnSUGflOUT THU fiATS. , Reasonable Rates.. APSty TO R B. RANEY, GEN'L AJSENT, W. a If m mm m. y K a Lt.su n, rs. AGEI1TS 17ITED For one at the best Beneficiary an&Insurance organizations in the coun try , Good contracts to good people. Mention ex perience. Address. P. O. S Box 726, Bahimorc, Md. Hall & Pear sail, WHOXSALE DEALERS IN Groceries 1 and Provisions, Farmers and Dlt'.Uers' Supplies SAUPLES ADD PRICES OH BEQUEST Nutt and Mulberrv Sts. TO II nil 'kTRUTH, 99 Only 10 Cents Per Annum. 1 To any Non-Catholic In North Carolina, we "will send for only 10 cents per annum, "TRUTH" A Catholic Magazine devoted to giving TRCfi explanations of the Catholic Church that Is or -the Catholic Church as It is, not as caricatured nd misrepresented. Address - -"-TRUTH," Ekv. Thos. P. Pkicie. Man. RALEIGH, N.C i'IS GO-dO .fl If you want a Plana There is too much money invested in the purchase of an in strument to. take any. risks. We carry tld" largest stock in jthestate and every in strument is properly; and correctly clas sified. We tell every purchaser the exact grade of Piano i he is j buying from the cheapest to the highest grades. CABINET ORGANS can be bought lower than' ever before. Call and see us ; and you will find that we resort to no fictitious advertising - in order to 'make sales. . " " 'i- I i Pianos properly v tuned by Professor J. G. Russell. 4 , - ' : JJ1 : ST I. . finy Ii GQtuOUG ID HO no I iioDie HOE , JTct fc7. XL R BEL&3UJT. 5 3 and 404 N. Fourth Street. 4 . 1 . . 1 . i-. ' ......... V .
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 20, 1897, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75