Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / Jan. 9, 1898, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE WILMINGTON MESSENGER: H SCNDAY, JANUARY" 9, 1898 JACKSON &BELL COMPANY. 'ZSzCered at the Postoffice at "Wilmington, 4.1 Ot-WWAAVl, .J-ChOV Ul(lrbti4.' V April 13, 1837. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. POSTAGE PREPAID. . j mall, three THE DAIXi MESSENGER byj .e jrar, ?v.oo; six. months, L5o; ! months, $1.75; one month, 60 cents. i Served In the city at 60 cents a month; week, 13 cents; $1.75 for three months $7jQ0 a year; . A THE SEMI-WEEKLY , MESSENGER jtwa 8 page papers), by mall; one year, six months, 50 cents, in advance. "WILMINGTON. N. C. SUNDlAY JANUARY 1898. OCSEUVANDA We "have received a volume of 173 oc tavo pages entitled "Addresses, and Ar ticles" by Judge Walter Clark, Rich- jmand, "r James E. ; Goode Printing I Company. A fine likeness of the author jta the frontispiece. .There are o$r ad dresses and. six articles and all pro duced last year. The supplement, cori taiS'S seven .productions. All of the con, i tents have 'been printed in some form, Jin anagazines or law reviews, dt the newspapers. They; - show industry, istudyj - thought, acquisition, and are dear -in statement. As literature they i . "i i" ' v" - i do not amount to much, f or, the themes do not belong to 'that rich and elegant domain. .They concern government, th ! . f - ' - j rights of the people, the abuses ol! pow der.1 the corruption of govemmert-po-litlcal and eceonomic questions. They Jare replete .with information, with yfacts, with arguments, and Whether you '-accept the author's conclusions or no, I you must xxmcede the plauslhility and i forceful n ess and sincerety of the pre- are' sceptical as to the slavish Indebted ness of really great poets to -writers be fore them. All poets may be, and proba bly are, under obligations to the poets rwhb preceded, them, and doubtless re produce Ideas and even phrases from older poets, 'but -men of high genius when they appropriate do It With splen did courage, and passing the foorrowed metal into their own mental mint- and subjecting It to the alembic of their own lofty ! genius, bring it forth pure gold "rich In beauty and stamped with the power of immortality. Shakespeare thus "borrowed" largely. Dante, read two or three of the (Latins and used It heart as genius uses other creations of Ithel Intellect, i Tennyson, supreme in art jand rich in thought, thus was indebted Itb trheocritusJ; !And so !scores of other noble poets have foeen more or less in debted to the ancient and some of the more recent poets.,' But how beautified, ; enriched, transfigured . are those crea tions with the touch of the masters who use! them! - So Milton, .(high arai inspired .and massive as he was, may have taken freely from Vondel in his greatest epic, 'The Paradise! Xt," so rich and virile' and 'beautiful and eloquent, and mas terful and majestic and sublime. But vjlthout stopping, to consider the ques tion of his indebtedness to the Dutch : poet, it is a, very! interesting event that tat ast we aref to have Vondel's ''Liuci ffer",in a scholarly and accurate and f admirable ' rendering '. (into j English. any eminent scholars, poets and crit- of the ; 'Netherlands;' ;amoiig them i efentation-. i Judge ittbly a. gentleman IHark is unqustion of much ability. HeV 1ms done well to print the volume, for as an intellectual friend in Raleigh j recently said in aj letter to us concern-' ring' our praise' of General Oingman's volume of Addresses, Speeches, etc, ; that it was very well that he-pu'blished his own productions, for' 'North Carolina i bad but few of such volumes. Where are the - speecth e s and ad dresses pf the. great men of file pasli in our ! state? "Where wilt you find them? There is 1 tout little gathered. 'Have you a speech i Off Badger or Mangum or Bragg or Gas ton or H. W. Miller? Have you the i Bpeeches that are in pamphlets cf Gra I tiam, Davis, MacRae, Venable ? Have ; jrou copies- of .the many - pupllsihed J Bpeeches" and addresses of Vance?. It -.is tb'be regretted that iNorth Carolin ians have not printed of tener' and done :as General Clingman did and justice ', Clark has- just done. 'London in Shakespeare's day had : much Balti-I ahput 175,000 inhabitantsnot i it i more than one third the size of more now; It is well to remOTWberl i that in studying his writings and ."times. I There is - an interesting v61ume out: - - : i . 1.- v : , i entitled "Shakespeare's London.' I, It is j j. gardens filled all j a'bout London then, t stocked with fruit trees and adorned . I with flower "beds, and 'birds sang alii lover the city. "Nature was calling to i Shakespeare '.while; he lived and kvork--l ed in London.". This book is well illu-i f trated. j Another timely and instructive jlyook is "The Age of Milton'' by J. H: B. Mas term an, M. A.- IA11 that concerns i lhds very great - man next to Shakes-! i i - ..' . ' i - - - :i . - s peare in genius of all Englishmen is of great interest.! Professor iMasson's several massive volumes of "John Mil-; rton; and His Times," -are of highest; revalue but not accessible to- many Mr.! i !. j " - -r i Masterman's compact volume, price iL will give, much information. The rtatle shows that the book takes a Wide I range for it is on "The 4Age," and! not ; confined to Milton. Other famous men --are written of. Here are two wise max-! rims from' Sir Thomas Brown: "Mea-i sure not thyself by the morning shadi j.ows 'but by the extent of thy grave.'l "The vices we scoff at in others, laugh rat us in ourselvjes 3 . i. iC3 FrpfessorKalff, of the . University of tretht, Professor Jan . Ten Brink of University of Leyden, s Dr.' Frederic (have written. In the war he served 'oni Cfenieral Jackson's staff, wtthi ithe rank of major, unftil falling health compJelieSd him to Tfetire, (Dr. Dalbney and Rev. Dr. Aaher:t Taylor Bledsoe, aitothier 5ra'tfve of . Virginia, we heUieve to have laeeii tlhetj fcwoi ablest mien am!d mcsst dangerous dfeputanits to tadkle otN affl VirgiinJans of (the -Lataf ' baSf , ctury. .They were, maste-rs of reaaaning - and dectics senserailly. -They had capa caous, extremely strong, acute, meta physical, sytiitlhetlca and .Jagocal oxnd.er standhtgs. Ufa has isome1!imjes occurreld .to us that Dr. Dabney and Dr.. Thorn- well, of outh Carolina,1, were, taike them all in all the greatest dlMnes of southern "Presfoyterianism 5n. all of its (histJory. Of rtflrese two singularly abOe anien we know not wfhioh -was the greats er or the jfmiore leJamidd; hut both wiere great and most admaraMy j eqiuipped.! jWe are n!t do'gnratizfing in bpdnson, be cause we j wrote i rrom too narrow a vrewV from too jLittTejanj atequ'ainitanice wftlh their .profound, scholarly aaid even rnoh-ujnienital works. The eCoquen't and elegant Rev. Dr. Moses D. 'Hoge, ; he almost ocrtogeriariah, so (full of gotold; deeds ' and' prdtnactdd services ' and rich results of his memorable ministry, knew JOr. jDalbniey initlmtaltely: and long. Jiej recien'tily- said of. ihiimr ; r "He was iChe -miost versa'tile :and aiccu rate "scjboiar tin thie, south. ' As a tiheo logioall teacher he had "no isuper'ior an ith'ej tlnlbed ItlaJtes.: : MiisLlfei of Stonle- wall Jackson' tis Iknowtn to all fine read ers of history .. 'His pu'bliished workis on philosophllcal,' '. secular, . and r TelJgious subjects make several volumes, and will! . giVe p&m enidurih'g -fame." '.';;ly oyrlooked at any itinW. "ffn th'elbe'giiin- in&i of a mejw year it is appropriate to call 'attention! to a volume of 1S97, so reri;ete' with: high thinking "and. .pro-foifrjd- learning and an of southern pro- duc& '!:' --:- - t-- - - HOME FOLKS. Hilssell's departure on the sly rjeminda on&ht the Ara!b who folded his tent and skapped away, siicit "old coon ?" s. Is not Russell a very What a cheerful sight it is at Raleigh 1 to 'see iKussell s crowd guarding the doors that were forcibly entered! by hJis raihadoommissioners. The Tsar fears retaliation, j It is the guilty . conscience thaf smites. i 'Thrice is he armd who hattt his quarrel just.'" In a ian of pecb for a governor to 'fix guards over a site 'building to prevent thej ousted by Molencej from "turning the taibles." is gmethingf redicuious, and almost a cirs:v The row "waxjfiercer Lnd the displace becomes thicker and ibiacker. 'f I-' ; ; ' " . ' ' 1 . ' ' jjfri at not be forgotten that the War Re&ds show that iNTorth Caroltna lost rteal 41,000 men in the great war. It ':'senL25,000 at least into the service as , thepu'blished Roster in .three large voliies show. , onlyjifurnish'ed more as V Diseases long standing well as theordinary ills of life are effectu ally cured by iJrowns- Iron Bitters. ' If your systeiM only requires a sen A . tie tome Browns' Iron ters will meet the demana your liver or kidneys are in a dangerous state, iron uiiiers wiia iecury uie rxouDie.! vvnen yo in ! general ill health, or jpain tortures your Browns' Iron Sitters will curei you. ' To the worked man, i the worn-out woman, the sickly, Sold everywhere i With every bottle of Browns' Iron Bitters you receive tree or cnarge a pacKage or puis lnv&i- i uable in the wort or restoring good nealth. Xt in any case Browns' iron Bitters ta- , Jtea as curectea, rau to oeneut any . A person suffering with Dyspepsia, JUaiaria, Chills and Fever, Kid sey and Xdver Tronblea, Bili ousness, Female Infirmities, impure ttlood, weaaness, Nervous troobles. Head ache or rearalgia,mon ry will m refunded. Bramu' Irra Blur C. hew the Van Eden, of Bussum, Holland, a f am- OUS: could 'taiow -bim (better or makie a;m'ore just appraiisem'enit of Wis powers and acqusi't'i'on.-- We never saw this . greait man1 one of ! . the century novelist and poet, and others "whose indorsements are (before jus praise the excellence and felicity of the transla tion. A.nd now it is gratifying to state that this remarkably cieverjtransla- tion is by. Mr. Leonard Charles Van h-R. - TwUirfL.' Noppen, an American native or Luxcn descent, le is a son of North Carolina, N orth Carolina hot troops than" any othfeE southern state, "but lost more. Herlss would perhaps surpass ,that of $ouff Carolina and Alabama xnlined. CN'or& Carolina did her full duty, 'and all np demands is that, what she did- for Je southern confederacy should ibe recoiized: by. historians, ibyii; public journalists and her southern sisters. . Funny things .happen in and ahout Ralegh under the radicail regime. One fCaldivell. chairman of Russell's ang of orJenv It would have -been ..an exceteldiin'g , anea ' railroad commissibne-rs,! ds re-'j preos we op nave sai umaer injjs lecraires or minis!trationls from the pulp St. The edited iby a capli'tial writer, says this:1 ' ! and ihis translation .of , the suhlimest .te-nectual a)bi!lrty, loigical, active, ln- dependetnt, hoWesti coniseryaitiVe. In ail Ms life h'e was observant, tniquisitive, versatile, i: inidcnita,ble. tHe 1 jwais ime ohanlc, farmer, manufaaturer, lawyer, statesman, patrliot, philo's'opheT, stu dent and j more t han "al l, . theologian an ihuimbile, doyal studtent.'of the IBiible. 3,n the seminairy we Inltou'gihit ; ihis force was 'in the. Hebrew lantgiuiajge, un til he t aught us GreeK i exegesis ; , we thought ' his igreatest ' an Chiurch HHIsn 'tory until we heard ' him ' teach Thleolo-' 'gy ; aimd 'tinen We d!iid not .know the half until, we Philosophy, . His decent lectures at .'.Davidson .Col lege IN. C, an!d a'f tierwardts at Co'lum- cnaster piece in. Dutch is possibly the greatest attempt hitherto made by any son or tne uia iM ortn taie. rj.-nis s.'inpie statement alone should attract atten- tiori, arouse the genuine; interest of all scholarly . and ' cultivated i people throughout our state. -It will Ibe sure, we may suppose, to excite the interest of European and 'American scholars and mehof letters generally. The. transla tor, every way; so capable and i accom plished; is a brother of Mr.. Charles i. Van Noppen,! educated at our nolble uni- fjreensboro. , ; portei wrathy because Otho Wdison madftkh inept comparison Otho i'kened the'ciduct of said Caldwell andlhiis co conspator 'onia Pearson, to a! fellow who)irea!ks in somewhere -a hicken coopp)r Instance "like a thief.'j That was not handsome in Otho to thus write of i .RTiissell's chosen. 1 CHow much more agre;ible and fitting and even elegant it woMd have; been to have feaid-fk'They ' 'broke'.; into I Jthe comm'issibner'p office like lentlemen."' That wouldihave j1brusrH away j all supposed insiniations and ftve allowed kid, gloves with which to handle the crowbar and tools, Otho STATE PRESS. . . "North Carolina is an agricultural state, and the land is : productive in 'all sectioais and yields under proper cultiva tion a generous return to labof The crop products have a. wide range and com prise all " the! cereals, grasses, . vegetables and fruits of the higher latitude as well as many of those of the subtropical re gion. Tp the general farmer "all the ad vantages of the west for grain raising' are even better than in what has some times been ! called the 'granary of' - the world,' because the seasons V are much longer iri which' to mature the crops and specially because of the average rainf ail wmcri is aDnaani'i anaftnere u no ueea of irrigation; North Carolina- is not noted for an ' enormous yield of , any par ticular, agricultural product ; except xo- baccO),! but it known for the diversity of her crops. If the wheat and corn' crop of the western) states is ' al failure those states are badly .. cripples, but with our soil we are not dependent on any one crop for " a. living. North Carolina Com missioner ofliLaborfStatistics.l? : i J. 'D. 'Murnhy. Esq.. isl'' at Sidme from the eastern .part of tne .stateif where he went on a I holiday visit. The holiday travel gave Mr. Murphy, exceijent oppor- tuni'ty to4earn of the conditioji or things political andi otherwise in! the east,' as re flected in the opinions of prominent east ern Carolinians. "i met several, popu lists,"?. Mr. ' Murphy said to The ! Citien, in speaking pf -the trip, "among them two of considerable prominence. -They tcld me' that' the next election would see North Carolina go democratic' by 15,000 to 25,CKX if Ithe democrats are prudent. They said that Russell and .-his incompe tents' were disgusting the honest and pa triotic citieris of the state "of all parties. versity, who resides at TO CliKJB A COLD IN ON DAY :' Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggests refund the jnoney if it fails to cure! 25c. ,The genuine has L. B. Q. on each tablet , J. RKL1GIOUS EDITORIALS FOR , l SUNDAY . "4:-'-' !' It ds gratifying to us to call attention to a work of unusual interest that will be published np long hence, by thje Conl Hinental Publishing Company of 'New "York City. It is an. English transla- - i - . i i i - Hon of a poem that cannot fail to in terest all who "really love pure or great literature. To very many the name, of ! the poet will be new. It i3 .Vondel, the I greatest poet whojever employed the j Dutch language as a vehicle of expres- ! Eton, iriis cniei ipoem. only ranks high among j and literati 'of his jown land, ibut ; iraised by the critical minds, of other i countries. It Is from his grea,lj, poem S that the supremest' and sublhnteist'epc i poet of , modern: literature has been enlarged with borrowing liberally. Ed- fWWen we saw it announced that the venerable Rev.Rciberlt Li D,abney,, XSD. LL.i D., was 'dead att 'Knoxtville.vTenn., whre hie was visiting his jdtetitoigu'isih ed kon, Professor Charlies W. Dabney, we I were moVe'd, although he hiald. rea'qhe'd ne, iy i his 78tJh year, anidt we . S' ! ' 'r -L I i 1 - 1 knew had been in rather teee healltlh for sOmia -yeirs. 'It was only a few weeks ago t)hat he delivereid a sexlies of lectures 'before Davidso n ; College, N. C. , ftha'c iwere of profound! . initierest. . , Dr. Dabn'sy was born in Louisa county, Va.,!-5th of iMaroh, 1820. 'He was grad uiaJtied, at Ham pd'an Sidney College, went to 'the University otf ; Virgm4a, re ceiving 'the degree of 'A. CVI., and was theologteail'ly. ieiducated atfTin'ionf eimi ttiery, Prince fEdvvard county, Va.. He was professor for some fifteen years in tihfat fine shool, and thenbe removed to Texas, being! professor of., niorall ? pM losophy'iini its xi'n'iverslity. He 'became entirely ibliiin'd after seven years cf Ser vice and was compelled! toy thle great affi'ictll'pn tto T'esign. ..He was a Valumliin ous author, writing 'booke, magazine papers, essays, addresses, sermons, eltte. Among hils publica'fioins, in .book formv are a "Life of Rev. Dr. F S. Sampson,": '"Life of Oeneral T'.'J. (JStdnewaTl) Jadk tsOnr" '4Sacred IRhetoric,' IA! Delf enice of Vifrfe!inbai andteheJSout!h,Y "Senisualis'tic 'Philosophy of the "Ninetieen'tih Ocnitury kns'Mered," J '.Course of Systemialfcic Tihe, onlly "De- 'bia, IS. C, were on the' great tfbunida tidhsdf: 'teal vat ion tihe great central truth of the C'ospel-Hthe .vMpiha- and th'e Omega of all 'the BibLe ithe Aton'e- . i .i . - '! i t .' - . r -i .-..''.-. r m'ent of the Lord Jesuls Ohrtst, pierfecit : ed, finished' on the Cross, upooi Calvary. This 'great scholar and thinker and1 ftoeolOgdia'nv-.as tif led 'by G'Qd as We was ! so ntear to 'tihe close of life's" journey, brought -hlls noibTe faJoulties !cf mind and heart a'nld soul land gathered and cen tared them upon the "highest . of all truths, the greiait'est Of all .faats 'Khe saar-Ific'ia'i offering of the oil of Gtdd upon .th'e tnagic Cross to save' m :Jost i world, and, to open up a iway ofh!oili me'ss f or : thle ' sinner - iredeem'eicl) 1f grace itovthe portals of everlasting;ijoy, and felicity. ' twihen' such- a1 man', after ; liv ting such a no'bte, ' exaltJed, ! r laboriiouis lilfe, palslsias from dearth into1 the e'ternity beyond, tt.is rig'ht th'ajt; iinien elhiould stop, and jaynttemplliajte thilsj life, ulse-. ful, isio.pure, so mastictrful, and yeit so hum'ble and adoring (before Ataiighty G-oid. (Dr. .iDalbney's remaJinlsi . rest ait J Hampden -!Si d ney , where! he toil'ed anld taug'ht, wlhile" his 'immorital part' h'ais gone tto the alboldle of itthe 'biessed.. -k tXti eupheism. wttllibe in order. 'No'iude in- sinuattons Mr. ! Hayseeder. Me SNAPS. musti learn to treat honorable and off! iread papers and fcodkte; on S'Sff sugShS prudent in .the conduct of their cam paign. jne or tnem saia tnat a great many cf the rank and tile of -j the popu list Darty wanted to return to the demo cratic party, .but they desired! that the democrats snouia permit tnem to come in at the front door.as he expressed it They said the course of theRussell ad ministration is such as to humiliate -ev ciy patriotic iNorth - Carormiarf . of what ever, shade pf political opinion; that the credit of the state- is being j rapidly im paired, and! that all North Carolinians ought to unite in placing the 'friends of the -state' charge of her affairs. , The traveling salesmen in the-east,. of whom I zvr Quite a number, report the trade as extremely dull, and that .4 and 5 cent cctton" was jproducing widespread unres-t and dicccntent; that the people regarded the republican promises of prosperity as made to the ear to be broken to the hope. Asheville Citizen. It fuld 'be safe to bet on Hanna's' ' moneMt bags if letting were not a sin. , i. r. - j - 'So fiiere are two regularly organized repu'b!Mjan parties in N-ewiTotk'j;'; There ; is a deriocratic party and a "refawm" A I.OCAL Disease A Climatic Affection Nothing but a local remedyror change of climate will cure it. Get a' i well-known , pharmaceutical ; . remedy, . , - ELY'S 'GHEM BA1M It is quickly Ab sorbed.. i ' ' v Gives relief at once. In opens and cleanses the at Allays mnammation iieais Membrane. Restores he Heni Smell, j Full size 50c; Trian prists or by mail. - ' r ELY BROTHERS, 58 Warrei r i COLD m EcaF Estate Pu' I koLD iHD EXCHil mm I -J- ,' i , - . i ... ' HAVE TOTJ. PROPERTY , DO YOU. WISH TO 1 LOANS NEGOTiflTEffl : i IEV v Correspondence j5o S001HERN Rill Goldsboro, 1 party so on. ! . . 4 iPrbn&: Ohio comes the report ' now .to Let uis "Lucifer" . not the sttholars is well iij snund.Oosse, the very gifted English I -critic, arid others, have asserted that I Milton "fborrowed . industriously from I 'HChe drama of Vondel." Mr. George Ed-. jnundson," after 'a profound study' ir i liis wori entitled Milton 'and Vondel" -b&s brought a similar charge "citing a i multitude of parallelisms' in phrases and imagery." .- We are told that'"1 Dutch rialtics generations ago fbrought this ac ! cosation, and the English poet Beddoes r triaose own poetry we are persuaded ;-fs;Tnuch overrated by his special ad- ff znirers, as far back as 1825 made a sim-Ni-ZSar contention. It may -be so for we -i JSiave not read .Vondel as yet. - But we a'nd 'Poliemid Theology," and dhristian. . iSalbbath."; (W4 have - readi.hiis life of Jaclcson an'd his fQnce ! of Virginia," toothl excellently done, and th'e latter ery vigorous. We have," through the last ithirtv or forty years, reald an occasiorial article from his pen ini religious of BecuQar news papers. We are not acquainted with h'is four volunnes of "Discuisslions," his 'Deu-res- bniiR2t!dTic, ! or j his two works on "Philosoiphy." We have had for jdiecad'eia an f mpressiion as to : -talis brave, honest, tamest, consecrated, abe jservant of tji'e Moa High .which may not 'be jwel txased. He ihas Sm pre'ssed us! for at least ' three; decades as perhaps as vigorous a mind as wtas i the'whole south, and, for aught we know, in the entire country.. We felt that he was endowed not'; ohiy wrth a very high understanding, 'but ' thait' aill his powers were in excellent ; halance and under great j command. !be expected, iv Hahnaf s fellows Cused t!Sf i'Dety and corruption -sihall ist dtspute the justice Charge , .-ji ,- , ,: - :UV-v.Mx,.-- ! . ' "L ;. : lairie ac- We jof the that is vi Durrant "died game." And the Wayiwith most viliians whose moral nature completely stunted anl whose brutaly dominates th? sense pf fear. Canylepong ago referred to- the! game cocks' Sin the gibbet.! m - tt -.lews to us that killings, irriurders, cmmesTH increase every month. The sblumri; of 'a large daily a, record of murderi crimes, misfortunes ire very gioomyl and unsatisfactory , ...Jstuff to read. JCv'hat a tragedy life isl cherished the- opinion that if he toad given his time to St, tlha't with. wri briefly of, a notable fechoMr and d'iyiirie ' who . dUedi isoirie year or two ago, w'e think It was, who, like LDr. Dalbney, we .itlhitalc, was also a native of Virginia. Both wifere extra ordmary men, tout Dr. Dabney was the more impx-esisive personalSty a'nd prob-. aMy the igneatier rmind. We refer ito the late Rev.-Dr. PecQc, who Was -for a long itimfeeperhaps more than a quartier of 'a centitryp-a learn!ed and most efficienit man th Uriiiion Th'eblogicaJl JSemliinary ait Hampden fdney, Va., the ifinie "sdruool of jthei prophets to whiJclh (Dr.: Dabney Served ' so ; faithfully for many years. Dr. Peek was a schoiar of hi'gh merit and was endowed wiith a mimd of great capacity, breadth, acutieness.' and! j dis- ori'msnation. ; We never heard him preach tout once,, and it. W"a!s . pTobably thirty years' a'go. We recall tlhie an teres't and Measure which (his strikihg discussion afforded, us.' The? serrnoh was remaraMly clear, simple dn style, .d'elivertd' in a , passive tmanner, 1 ' tout meaty and massivie iih 'nought, tit -!was aibout ithe least ornate, and had the least display of effort of any dis course we "ever heiard frorft a truly able and "eminent mtoister of the Oospel. Its clarity of statement and .simplicity weie as "charming as uncommon. "" We are remi'nd'ed of this great nanl Iby an ' announcement f fae iulbh'tian( of h'is 'TMiseellantles," followiing two othef Volumes cf his : -more elabora:te works, (A l writer yterianj It is Iftow ! contended and, fperhaps I . provedllthat the, late, ex-sena: secrdtag'y of state, and - great (FSaET DJLVXS.) A Snreand Safe Remedy in" evjrr ease . and every land or Bowel UcmpixOntia Fairi-lCsIlirn This li a Irae statement and It. can't be made too strong or too empb&tlc It Is a simple, safe aad quick ore for g Cramps ' Cough, Khouittatiam, Colic, ,-. Cold, Neuralgia,' Dlarrn.csa( Croapf Tootliacli. TWO SIZES, 25c. and COc. S. :.i P. McK -I-"5 ii'-:'Vii. i .WHOLESALE GEOCE Commission jlj N. I Water St,..Wllta!nstv 5 k P 1,1 - ' 1 ', :.' .; rt' Offers to the Tr FEED OATS. FLOUR. NAILS., SUGAR, CANDIES. CRACKEE CENTRATED LYE BUTTER. SES, ! VINEGAR ; PEANUTS. FISH, ; BAKING POWDER, 1LA CANNED GOODS. COFFF AND RICE- ' " : l on end see fie er wirinr r lu am- ' '-. ; or, ex- lawyer, Judah IP. in I the West Indies. Jt Is also jlnsisted Benjamin, a Jew, was born that hpl never ; livedir m Wilminjgton or went W school at 'Fayetteville. But more oiKithat another day. ' j BE i. . i - v i -.' AS, YOQ WHEEL THE0UQH LIFE - - - ..i i BY HHE VIG We very much hope the effort to try to unifM the two great wings o!f Meth odism 1 this country will f&il. The split Mth force upjon . the "sjouth 54 : il ." - ! ,.-. - " years igg'o "by the Intolerant, wir-mak- ing noirsh, and hoth (have greatly flour ished el-er since. ' We believe it would oe caiaHiitous xo unite. PARENTS, IS YOUR LITTLE BOY OR GIRL LOW nx A RAND? IT IS BECAUSE TB Y CANNOT RESIST THE TEMI TION TO STOP, ADMIRE AND LONG FOR ONE OF THOSE JUVEN CRESCENTS AT I ... lA series of ar- Also full line of Bicycle Sundries always on hand, de23 jlTO- 19 NORTH SECOND STREET ticles this line would show that. . : ' .. . r-L- ; ;Tha pependitures of the igovi for Brnmient aast six months were $4,364,999 ahove treceipts. (Rece'ip'ts, $157,850,751. . - 'i .. : r - s . Expenditures, 1 $202,215,751. Bu8 there .'Was lriro vement in Decenber, when the T'ebpits were $27,931,494, I against expenures of .$26,195,000, leaving a eurplulS Thfs is the first montnly sur- I "T. plus siee thelDingley law took effect. It is d5ie chiefly to the absence of the Stem ofjlarffe 'interest payments, which will ary. duce a deficit agaiin in Janu- K !.v,.: ! ' A- '".. l "f -;. ;:' - ' ' ' ' ' ;' - . 't- 4 " i.V' CANNOT; BE EQUALED FOR1 .NKNT ALIGNMENT, MANI1 SFEED OR DURABILITY, SUfKiyK INS ANY , CHINE. WE TAKE f SECOX MACHINES IN PARf PASMPl A WILLIAMS. . - 'I r MYEES'&iEW 8 6 NORTHEAST COR Front and Mar his ex-attiain- in The RichnTOnd CV says of the new volume:' ; . "tEvery word is munrnated by his touch. The hest fideas of all these great dodders of Bheology . are f used fas his own brorning brain, and .brought to hiear Ifke la powerful search light on the passage or tthte word of Greek. . have been everihielminig .fa contusion profound ! 10dnkimg for a l'Jfeitime it traordinary powers and wide menfts and grat ltygica1! fbrce, 'he could not only have written a' defence of the south that would have 'been of j super- and forever unanswerable!. You teee somethdng, of his; sled ana vieor What of the an j'bis Uefenice of ; Virginia.' & -ndble, masculinef; history 'War ' Between 'the State1s,, Ihtei ooufld presewrs a me or material ifor . the; Tcnwugnurui stuorent rrom afll the fields in which toe gleaned." ? - tDr. Peck was too emmhti southern theologian and preacher, afcd too ad- miralAe & fCShrSstSaBi' edxtcalr fo 'tis . ' ;: p . Fre Pills : . SendeyouT address to H. ,E. E'Jcklen & .,iChicago, and get a freel sample box oCSDr. i King's New Life Pills. A trial wgl conVrhce you of their- merits; These galls are easy in action und are particoarly effective Sn; the ?ure of Constimtjon and Sick TLeadaohe. For Malari and. Liver troufbles they have teen prpved Invaluable. They aye guar anteedSo he perfectly free from every deleterious supstance and to b purely vegeitaiae. They do not weafeen hy their hpUmt hut try givfasg tone to stomajh and bowels, greatly Invigorate She syjpemv Regular size 25c. fper ISox. sola ,b K. .. Bellamy druggiat. '. Oxford Ledger: Will Royster. I colored. of Oxford, so far takes the cake as to raising large porKer. tie KUied one a few datSfS ago that tipped the scales at a fractioldBover 700 pounds.. Colocsel J. A. Amis, ifho had ,a slight stroke of paral ysis sotae days ago. fa improving; we are more than glad to state, as. lie oae of our best cftiens. $ . -M-- -'.. -i. - ' er--&"';: : h.. - : yv j'- --iv: -j .v , . North Carolina 1 and T . SEZE3ID O ATS e have seen in years we , aire offer for sale at low prices.V Only ;the B pays for Seed. Orders promptly fill WOKTH &. ;WOM WHOLESALE GROCERS. ' ' ' - i--:.- ' V.Vi';.:- ' ' . ;- ' .:; '. v
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 9, 1898, edition 1
2
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