Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / April 19, 1898, edition 1 / Page 1
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THEliWILMINGTON MESSENGER: TUESDAY, 4PRIL 19, 1898. IF r i .Hi s JACKSON & BELL COMPANY. JE2sSared at the Postofflce at Wilmington, K. C, as second class matter, April 13, 1837. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. s ; D AIL MESSENGER by mll, a jar. 7.00; six months, , $3.50; three araatha, $1.75; one month, 60 cents, c Served in the city at 60 cents a month; apys week, 13 cents i $L75 for three months er 5TJ a year.i j: THB SEMI-WEEKLY MESSENGER - Ok 8 page papers), by mall, one year, "ZLSQ- six months, 50 cents, in advance. . " WILMINGTON, N. C. TUESDAY, LAPRIL, 19, 189S. T 1AZ WJI I CI WAITING ) "T5M5 Jope 5s stall looked 'to by Spain! tta snake a fresh effort dn behalf of ppaxsR, Ileinaycsy "Peace, iFeace, but there wII be no" i peace," j '' Just as we predicted, as to Cuba's in J; ilependenoe.if sect red, would be thejtalk of annexation to 'this country, thrdblyl txriirgtaS1 In 200,0CKi Chinese and over. 500,000 negroes. ' "he5 Loyal -Soldier's UxiFon of Indiana olis favors the war movement on Cuibla, and says that af ier ie3ce prafctioallly reigns - that ""an election to be held 'then, tender the iVustraliaii. eysteiii, to detoide whether CuJba be annexed to the United States or become an independent republic, this giiwrriment ttofajng th'e island until Gaily reSmiwrsed; Icompel Spaiin to. pay us a sufffcient amount for the' murder, of .our- seamen and the destruction of, tire Maine, and allpw no foreign, media- or inteference with titet Toregdins plan anld . whether the Cnban Junta or 'the insurgents consent not ibe two years af- ter Cuba, was free; before the northern repaid Scans (and. perhaps, sotme of the Ha-sraM democrats) would ibe moving e annex Culba as a bigihly patriotic, meritorious 1 and necessary act. The rE3 porpose wouM ibe 'to get more re- pcyBf jean negro v otes arid erjha ps a tnajorfty of the.w hites. ! CSeneral Jo Wh eeler is a southron ; . cavalry nigh t er, .but a jQrpose to yet the 4atl ,TPas a gal I an :lre? is wronig in h 'Chited States gov ernnfen't to rely up Dn tnesootn for troops to -be sent to Cuba trpon the score oft yellow fever. South die as soom'dn Cuba ern waiftes- would northeri whites. Outside of two or .viliree cities there eoorld hope to have are no whites who immunity from yel Let the north do its Ieylack,s2attac-ks Fan share of Invasion if there fis to be any mrd let General Wheeler "step . his 'Montgomery Aidy er4 M&er ' overhauls the general and says tSiat 'he dotPbtless jdid. not intenid it, 'but fI& statements to are eqnrivalent to the. secretary of war the declaration that the south is just as much of a hot bed ' of fevers as Cniba .This as ridiculous, of course, but it is rather a common i-dea north anyhow and our eager AM-j- bam warrior 'has not done this section a. service in helping to confirrri or ' Negro troops Kread that fimpreRsion. can stand a hot tlinlate, infected tod, irke Culba -better t 109,000 blacks to han any other. Send tu'ba to whip out the horrsd Spaniards They : would be by Cubans, Span The south has noth-. T.rarmly welcomed i arsis and c lima't e. ssff to gam in aw ar wlth Spaan except siifTfVlng, wounds and death and some will -suffer' in all ?iToryerhaps. It oilier "respects. !T' e south did the main -wars. It is time to fiSTttSing .in severa real.--'It should be ton-tent, to !dO its part manfully and datriotaally, but hot Do not be in "a" hurry to rush tf Cuba just as 'the fateful yellow iefevt?r season is at nana.; rrne most lament physician in Havana wro te an Xaljrate essay a few years ago upon yellow f e'er. andfehe'late Dr. rrhecnas Fr published it in full In his med'ical mohthly. The bpamari aM ilia't tie 'had flleen oracticing medi- sratie in Havana Mt twenty years, and tJiat in all that i-me ; there had not L?en a single day in which he had not attended 'a yellow fever pa'tient. IXL.OWINC1 I'P OF THE MAINE "There, has been a most . noticeable ?nange in the north latterly as to the place of the Mairie in the controversy r"ilb: Spain. The destruction of that' Jknterican cruiser and its 258. seamen is Zvxt first now in the count of grievan- -es. McKinley and Company, tooters in congress and' press backers, all es ?ay.ed to shove it aside, but )ike Ban juos ghost, "it vill not down." : We lately gave some Edifying extracts rel- iitive to this devilish deed of destruc- ." tion. and copied th at particularly point . vigorous pleai of The 1 New- York Tribune, one of McKinley's inveterate rrsjsers and defehders, to "Remember .th? Maine," what teji or neglected. ever else was forgot The able, influential, -afiii Brooklyn Eagle, said but recently -ajTsi with intense vigor' and point: -T1ic Maine wa s w illingly and delib- iraJi-ly destroyed Every one lost on was murdered. 'It was not an act TSir in time o war. It was an act fiendishness in f time of peace. The ship tvas placed where she was in or-r 1T to insure heri destruction. "Spain can Fen der no atonement for t.!jxiC crime excep the execution of the - ;fcfuHty and full apology,, and apology . c?v-n' of remorse, hnd full .reparation to stSae survivbrs and to the heirs of the sJuin. That refused or not done, repa . mil oh in fullmea sure, must be enforc- ed, with a clear understanding of the cruel character of the; culprit nation and of the warrant froin God and man to render that culprit nation powerless forever at least on this side of the earth." J . . The New York Times, one , of the best of northern newspapers, has an editorial of almost equal sweep and - i ' ' ' ' - i 1 i spirit. We copy this: j "If it were as he evidently believed it to be, not only was th -Case outside the sphere of negotiation, but the na tion which had rendered itself respon sible for such a crime jwas beyond the pall of civilization. The destruction of the national vessel ofj 'a power with which Spain was at peace and the mas sacre of her crew would be an act ,of treachery and cruelty! ! unprecedented in the hristory of any civilized nation, but only the latest inf the long series; of acts of treachery and cruelty : which made the name of Spain infamous dur ing the days of her power, and mingle contempt with the pity' that her pres ent weakness might . inspire. y ) "It is the Maine wfhich has made acute the present crisis. It is the de struction of the Maine which is the true cause of war." f - -. ; ; - ; : Our readersj kn6w that the conten tion of The Messenger has been all along that the real, the great, the im perious issue; jinniniteljy above all oth ers, was the damning afet.of the treach erous Spaniards in assassinating 268 men under the American flag and send ing to the pottom of tjhe Spanish har bor an American vessel of war. The Union League Club, "of New ; York city, a very extreme ahti-war body or dinarily, has recently ideclared "that the government of Spain ? be required to answer for the destruction of - the Maine and for the Amjerican lives sac rificed witri lier" It twill be recalled that even Senator Hoar, of Massa chusetts, last week in tjhe United States senate, ventured upon jwordS' that kin dled with something of genuine patri otic afdor. He wanted Spain expelled from Cuba, but he failed to say aught ot the Mainej villainy. Senator Fair banks, republican, of Indiana, reluc tantly favored war, but gave no sigh' that he had heard of the Maine, in so far as the extracts of his speech we have seeri indicate. They are standing by. McKinley, who snubbed 'the Maine question, j . : . f ' -" ' ' : When General Lee gave his -testimony and showed how easy it was to destroy the Maine jby the Spaniards, it- mus have opened the eyes Of J the committee Arid so 'with' Captain? Sigsbee's testi- mony, jwhich1 was to jthe very same effect. And so Rearj - Admiral Irwin testified. Captain Sigsbee said: . . r j ; , .- i i . . . ; "A ship , moored in. a harbor would swing around to a given point where a mine might be located, and when it should reach;, that point, the mine would be exploded. He thought the mine could I have been' planted from a scow between decks. jThere, were, he said, a lot of idle army officers in Ha vana, and, -while he would not charge them .wi th anything," He ! thought it not out of place to speak of the possibili ties of the; case. f I r 'That.' said Captain Sigsbee, j'if the real rea son I asked to have the Montgomery taken away, j - If they! were going to do anything to' blow us up, I wanted to nave it done with a smaller vessel. They had ho j vigilance Swhatever, and no guard oyer us or our vessels. Their vigilance was great where their own vessels were concerned.1 Their boats were coming j and , going all the time, and-they generally refused to answer when we hailed- themi When they did reply Is was "generally in an impu dent mannenh J I "i J I f- - ,. SHERMANS 'WAY IN! WAGING AVAR FOR "HlCTMiTY" The truth about the curse of" curses of the war between the north and soutli will be ackno'wle'dged after awhile even oy tne victorious sec ion, UJiat waged four years, de- an inhuman war for straying and! deyas'tltihg at wiJI, and au to tree the negroes.! It was not a war for principle, -for ife-vy, tfor right, but a war f or' sentiment-Han! intermeddring, unholy passion, 4n the face of the plain fact that it was the right of the south to withdraw peaceably rom a violated and often 1 outraged I compact. The fcpnngneia n (Mass.) s Itepuiblican wall have to be rebuked. !by! the1 fanatics. It comes out plainly, I directly and says that "to all 'intents knd purposes the civil war," was begun to preserve the integrity of the natjioii. ' IMn - (Lincoln maintained that slavery 'd'id . not enter into thequestion except incidentily; that the war was! being fought to presence the nndon, '-iand If th& Innlbn could be kn'a-init alned without ettnancipatio n, si av - ery would remain uhdistunbed. Never. theless, 'the1 great initial influence sup- pox ting a resort to arms in the north was humanitarian and not political.'' That tcllsj the truth, anil the Repub lican is to be congratulated for it is the only papr, so far as we know, in all Xenr Englandhat has ever told the truth as to genuine, Ibasic cause .of the cruel war that raged against the south Devasting, I burning, idestroying, kill ing southern jivhfltes, jdid not appeal to noble sentiments of Qiumanity then Kill the damn rebels" was the wrongful slogan, and 'make isvarhell" was Sherman theory and f practice. We will give some evidence presently- as to this statement. But: it is a highly sen timental war; now that is-urged to pun- ish Spain fot committing cruelties no worse than the north perpretated against the south. j j " The north waged a hypocritical war against the south, and is npw:. coddling no little of hypocritical sentiment as to Cuba. The Richmond 'Dispatch dis cusses Thej Republican's admission put it something;, euplleumistic terms. We quote the following: 'Turned into at little ' more rugged ingnsn. tnat pbnfession amounts to this: The north fouerhti the War in or der to rob the sduth of millions' of dol-( ixis w ui til ui property. as negroes were unquestionably property, the Re publican cannot get around the fact that ours is the unvarnished statement of tne case makes against the north. 'Humanitarianism is a mighty fine word for 'robbery.' " S: Now for Sherman's idea of war of war uponr the white . people in the south of war upbn their brethren of -the same blood and nationality. His theory 1s to make war "a hell" and he tried to make it so. We find in. The Charleston, Neis and Courier some ex- tracts taken from a work by, John, C. Rope's, ofj Boston, about the fairest, most judical writer of history to be found in bur country or in any other country. He has a work entitled "Critical Sketches of Some of the Fed eral and Confederate Commanders." It is a Boston" book, published by ' the leading publishers of that city. He says that! "it' would not be right to close a review, of General ! Sherman's character and services, without referr ing to his often-announced policy of devastation." Mark, "policy of devas tation." And the scoundrel carried out that policy in so far as his; black heart would let him. He burned Atlanta, he burned Columbia, he made a wide swathe of Jdestruction all through Geor- gia, twenty miles5 wide, hardly leaving a residence, marking his vandal march with burned houses, the chimneys alone standing, as solitary . sentinels. (See General Bradley Johnson's , work on General Jo r Johnston ; and see in Draper (a northern book) his order creating aj, corps of thieves and plun derers andj rapists and murderous now 'called "bummers," Now j for some extracts Ropes gives in his book: To General Grant he telegraphed on. October 9, 1864: "Until we can repopulate Georgia, it is useless to occupy it; but; the utter destruction of its roads, houses and people will cripple their military re sources. and make Georgia howl." To General Schofield, he telegraphed on October 17: i i "I will Tnake the interior of Georgia feel the weight of the war." - To General Beckwith on October 19: "I propose to abandon Atlanta and the railroad back to Chattanooga, and sally forth to ruin Georgia and bring Up on the! seashore." j. r To General Hardee, the ! confederate commander at Savannah, he; wrote;. "Should i be forced to; resort to as sault, j and the slower and surer, pro cess of starvation, I shall then feel justified- in resorting to the harshest measures,' and shall make j little eff ort to restrain my army burning to. avenge a national wrong they attach to savannan and other large cities, which have been so prominent in drag ging our country into civil war." To General Grant on December 18, he wrote: . ; "With Savannah in our possession at some future time, if not now, we can punish South Carolina as she deserves, and as thousands of people in Georgia noped we would do. I do sincerely be lieve that! the whole United States, north and south, would rejoice' to have this army turned' loose on South Caro-. lina to deyastate that state, in the mariner wie have drnip 'in Onrenn nnr! it would have a direct ;a,nd immediate bearing ori your campaign in Virgiriiai" There are other sweet morsels of the same poisoned kind, but the above wrill answer. A more conscienceless villain, a more brutal devil was never turned, loose upon a civilized people! than this modern Vandal of the north, who has been canonized , and put in the Pan theon of northern gods, j When did any northern soldier, or newspaper, or high official, or pulpit ever denounce the ruin wrought,, the inf ernal deeds performed of the moral monster? Gen. .Sherman's bwn estimate, is that he de stroyed $100,000,000 of propety in Geor gia and $20,000,000 of this "enured to our ovv n advantage," the thief and de stroyer complacently adds, j The south ern man who can read of this devilish work and khen put trust in the blow- fJng of McKinley and Company of the high'humanities is not of our sort. "Let the sensationalists do their own fight- ing in their own way. The Charleston News and Courier says: i i "Mr. Roper says, and it is worth es pecial emphasis here, that Sherman's 'hold on his I army was perfect ; there was nothing that the men Would not do at his bidding." He destroy ed, $100,000, 000 worth j of property in Geofgia; he left a track of desolation in South Car olina; he made 'old and young, rich and poor, feel the hard hand of war:' he turned his army loose ori South Car-S olma to devastate that state, in the manner we have done in Georgia;" he trembled for the ; fate of . South Caro lina, but; felt that she deserved all he had in store for her. In saying that Weyler's methods in Cuba were not more criminal than Sherman's methods on his 'march to the sea, The Evening Post stated a horrible fact in. the sim plicity of truth. Li t "The comparison of Weyler to Sheri dan in the Shenandoah Valley was to the prejudice of Weylerl The story of Sheridan'sj brutality is written in the official reports. ; What he did nott re quire for the supply of his army was 'simply waste and destruction' and so thoroughly jwas his work done that even the crows had to carry, their rations in flying over the desolated with them region." CUBE A COI,D IN 'pNjv PAY Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tahlets. All druggists refund the. money if it fails to cure. 25c. The genuine has L,. B Q. on each tablet. I I BREVITIES. vhile not often, admiring the regu lation New England man in the con- gress, the venerable : Senator ; Morrill is esteern. He has certain forthy of marked ,New England peculiarities as a politician, but, he is a man of person al integrity and good record for a re- publican. He has ; just celebrated his SSth year, and is but one year and three months younger than the great Glad stone. He retainSj his mental faculties well, and is well preserved physically. A' woman in Kansas has been divore-? eu uve times, ner last ; name was I- Smith. She will be ori the caroet asrain soon, doubtless, without crepe. : The pardoning business is an out rage. ; Governor Taylor pardoned some, rascals" and-now he is beset witif appli cations. Tljai the people do ncf f every where abolish this clemency jisiness by wholesale executive interference is marvellous; ; ' . ' 1 1 ) General Grant's grandson, Algernon Sartoris. ats for a place und-jr. Gen eral Lee If he commands. ThJj; Rich mond Iesplitch says that he reports that it is 'the desire of his grati Smother- the widpw of U. S. Grant, Hhat in the ven yyrar, a Grant an a;Lee shall fight together. General Miee is agreeablei.;l;: THE ; JTQNTHTjY MAGAZOtES North s Carolina University I : Maga- r forllMy ' contains J a froiifspiece j zm: i. 'iK' , ' o AL , .. tion near saurs cross itoaas in inis portrait Ahdsketch of the tfdmir-j COuiity. The woman knew, of hkr iter able andiplamented David tiastoni rible temper yvhen he was drunk, and Worth, ofthis city: It has f 4ite f ail on this sad. occasion for her, she jhadv variety qfrticles,' among theif ..J- : vi,trt Thought jpf Student Life; -;V$ Ger many,!' byfe. T. By num: Alfred, Lord Tennyson' i?art-1," and fVandes Luci f er," by w4n ; Noppen. The iUhfversity has now thirty-five professors . ind in structorsi "Pearlsa , Classic Monthly r I the; Home Circft.'t devoted to "The Mental Forces," edited. -by Elizabeth F, Ste-t -3 phenson. Iliblished- at 465 Fifth r Ave-i nue. New rk. Price $1 a yeaf: or 10 ... i . - iT 4 ine iNewujme," a magazine "So-; cial Proge, A.pril number sihand.' Price 10 ce?& a number'.!; Publhed at: 56 Fifth ;Anue, Chicago.' .; ' f ;i; - " " "Carter?4Mpnthly" f or Apriis: be-j fore. us. lisi pdited . by dpi;Read.; PublishedNI 161 La Salle Stree;C . Chi cago. Prcg i.0 cents a number. ;'!; '; OTalrld Remains Quletli :'! Madrid jipril 17. Sunday.-MTfe . usu al SundaylSull fight absorbaithopu-! lace, overshadowing the actionPf the; United Stagessenate as a topic? pf dia 'cussipn. ' "-. v H: Perfectif jjrder reigns in j. Madrid, though the 5 streets are throng? with promeriadersv i : . 1 ;r-.;f I Governmeat 'circles feel that: jte sen-! ate resolttflpns are a fresh t j jstaclel raised to -the union- of .the insurgents and the aufonpmists in Cub4i ite 1. " : i The Officii Gazette will snprfy pub-J lish the r'epiptt Pf the Spanish! 4mmis- sion of inquiry into the Maine; faster,! demonstrat. rie- that th vr1nsi wa: ' of. internarigin; - ' r V f if j; ' j cision; altKpugh it is more frnostilej sincer it hel:s to disentangle -thfcf situa-j tion; whichMis; becoming insupH?rtable to the Spaniards, as shown by f ke out-i burst at i Atalaga and. elsewh'eij. I El Liberal: expresses . the hope fl at r the! mixed, commission will come t a de- cission quieiyy, enawrag pain j definitely! hir fate.1 - I '--rM, know j-::4 Which comment! on the senate's. . resolutions - consider t.m as further proof of America's, sclf&rne of annexatiqg;and point out that sf comes on the very day on which the tavana delegates! Jpposed starting to confer with, theilrfstirgents. -J' ' I'U'J' .'. r "V ...j ' The ministerial EI Correo,' co.iment-i ing uponitle United States; -ssfenate's resoIdtiorii;klis attention to t. "un4: expectedly- large minority." jlt;!elieves that , theivfcistence of this; mj jhorityj joined ..withl ;' other reasons, ! lead the mixed -teommittee to' agree. rto re- place thej .independence proposition with one fr immediate! intervention! "Even presuming the final! resplutiori passed in ihat form,'! !contnpies El Correo,; "wUihformed judges! believe that President McKinley . woi d j not give it immediate enTect, i preferring further - tigjrqtiations. . ; NeVe-fheiess these' optihitstic .views -dp, not 'arrant greatly ainJliorated.- If the twihouses of ; congres yote a compromise jtomor-j-row or Tueday, President Mcfeinley's action witlidon clear the atmoiiihere.'f ! j.ne iiipo$!ii 4conservative,i j. referring to the outbi-eaks of popular fell ling in government' to deal gently . ?th the rioters; considering the provocation re ceived ; frohf the American pup and parliament;! ana- -even rrom th presi dent and. urges the Spanish n tion to continue iitfc Its i dignified . attitudf 3iStand- the riations .rights. , '. :- M: V :$fi .-J' ."I ' . The Epoca, says that only students took partln the demonstrationist Bar-; celpna; bu.t.!thvat the revplutiPnijry :ele-' ment was at' the bottom of ;p , out breaks, in; Malaga, seeking to Irecipi- tate a quarrel with" America -: 1 'V 4 1 ' ; it London April 18: A special spatch from- Madrid says ' there! was Another hostile 'w demonstration voutsiife - 1 the American consulate at Mala-a on- Sunday afternoon. The civifei guard dispersed;! the ihob after ; ffpeated Charges., Three ; people were f ajured. Most of the shops were closed ! jNiaiaga, ifvprir jl . sunaay.-J,;je riot in sr which- broke - out vesterda-! was continued last -evening. The gerarmes; charged t;7nob frequently, flsd ithe yolleys of fs&nes. Many'persois were bruised, a5ia numerous arrests; were made. The city is quiter this r jrnirigM Whfen Home you get tonight put a warming, soothing, pf.jn extracung - .; : riffhtlc&t that sore and te ierl J : spot4herever it is: : ;YouluiVe 'ji taketii i-oid and anv one tE a feJ dozen dangerous diseases zj&y YA W Never trifle with Pains &nd feN 4 Ac"hec;4-triev mav meant f ltal Aches4-tnev mav mean fTji ' M,r.: i 1 -,t.:.g:. A 4 i;uiireisi.juiia. -i- -f r BENSON'S PLASTER relief at once.- It is Modem, Scientific anC Et-: ! ltotjs pi people evervwocrc v uuai taiaa I Cnrd, affirm it to be the Supreme jEi. teina; Bemeay. i-nce cents, i ,-.;! The gener;a;i tone of thei pressrm- ly warlike;!'; El Liberal 1(modeylte fe-j -DUblicanl Welcomes thel f?enatil ! -1 ! : 3 Plaster 3i 4 GoldKboro Jottings. - . (Correspondence of The Messenger.) r ' Goldsboro, April 19. . Superior court convened in this city this .morning with Judge Timberlake presiding and Solicitor" Pou at his post. Among the cases on the crimin al docket which have been set for trial at this term of court Js that of Gil Ward for the murder of Mag Dinkins Although " this crime was committed about five years ago, yet it was sp barbaric and brutal In . character ttfat the long intervening years have j not sufficed to efface it from the memory of .the people of Wayne county. ?The murder occurred on Sunday morning after Ward had been drinking all Sat urday night. Mag Dinkins was '; his mistress and they lived, on his planta- neen KeeDinsr out or nis reacn an mem. i cue nau ueea torn mat vvara wouiu j beat her when he found her, After pursuing her from house to house in the neighborhood he finally overtook her at a negro house. When he came ; upon her he seized her by the arm with i one hand and with' the other he drew it his knife from his pocket, opened the 1? J -ilj .U' 1f - - . 1.. , Jl T uiciut; ,wnu ma teem, uiiu siauueu : ner in the breast. She never spoke. The knife had pierced her heart and she reeled .and fell to . the ground, dead. Ward, took to the woods and succeed ed in evading the -arm of the law until a short while ago, when he was cap-, tured in Texas. He was placed in the county jail in Raleigh until last Wed nesday, when he was brought to Goldsboro and placed in jail and is now awaiting to answer for his rash deed. -.-..;.?;, w-i' 1 The democratic executive committee of this county have called the primar ies of that party for May 14th, at the respective voting places throughout thei county, except Goldsboro, which will meet on Friday night, May 13th, at the .court house. The county con vention will be held in Goldsboro' on May 21st at 1 o'clock p. m., to elect delegates to the state, judicial and con gressional conventions. Next to the war, city politics jare claiming most attention.. The nomi nating convention for mayor will be held in ' the opera house tonight. The; present incumbent, Mayor John W. Weill, and Captain . J. E. Peterson i are, the principal candidates. The alder manic convention will be held next -Monday night and the election comes off a week later, when the question of issuing bonds for sewerage will be de-. cided. . ! Mrant Olive Jottings; Mount Olive," N. C.v April 18. ; Thiere were twenty-three -crates; of strawlberriesshipped from- here today. This is the second shippfeg-from- here -this season and - the amount WJilT'dn-. crease, daily from now on until j we reach 4,000 crates per day or prabably more, as we reacheki that many per day i last season, and we thing1 there are more fcerries in this section' than last season.. --- ' - . ' Mrs.-W. A. Jernigan was found' dad" in her bed this mornln'g by-' 'her fhnis band 5ie and her- husband had ibeeri ' visiiting yesterday, and ; when they ; re tired, last might she. seemed as well as usual. - She leaves a husband and three ' children, artd a host of " reJati'Ves ' and? friends to mourn her untimely dte mfee iThe deceased was , ageda3oai;t 28 years. . The interment will be made in the family burying ground tomorrow. It i'sl thought that it was .heart fad lure that caused her death. j : 7 The farmers in f rids section are Icvelf. up wStn their work for This season or the .year. Some of our farmers are through plan ting cotton and' mos:ev.-ery-farmer bas been done planting corrr. some time. , ' . . - . : ' 'Al YuUnSELFJ Ve IJig i for unuaturv discharges, iutiauintattoao irritatioiis or uiceralior- of mucous nieinbrRei not u stricture. Jin rreTeotJ cpnaijion. -rainless, aril not' aslfir tf. s. 'a.' J&M or'so.nt in plain wraipr JfStS -express, prepaii; fn 4?W$3LJfF Pi" or iwtihn, 42 75. . i rreTenta cpn;ion. PlP.P I -J H v ' .(LIPPMAN'S GREgT REMEDY) is the ideal otedl ;cine for women. Its use' insures health and the sub y stantial attract! vepjjss which health alone can be- stow. P. Vl P. is ffiet greatest Blood Purifier hnbwttto M medical scifestc?; a, curing all Scrofulou AfectionsDyspepsia Rheuma tism, Catagrh, Neuralgia, Malaria and: Nervous Derangements. : cwau oy uii arugisis. j" Ul BROTHERS, For S;1ie bv R. R. BEIflLAMY. j 1 For, - SEJslX 2 ,! , . A' Large Stock of . Sheathing, - Flooring, : PARTITIONING, : ' - -. i - - Ceiling and Mouldings, WHICH. WE CAN OFFER CHEAP with Prompt delivery, i . SAXAPAHiW LDSBES COKPAHY. - Worth Building. apl 8 2taw iTouchi,, The "touch" of a piano is the life;.of it. ; v There's a "touch"! in the where!- else that sweet to -be found no expressive tone so, dear to Singers and Players . tha world over. No. other pianos' have it The Stieff rules supreme in Pianodom. - ".ip Standard Organs Tunin and Repairing Pianos for Rent-rTefms to Suit 9l.: N. Liberty St-BALTIMORE. . H21 11th (St. N W-WA$HrNGTON. .416 Main St. 'NORFOLK, VA. 213 N. Tryon St. CHARLOTTE,- N. C 'f apl 14 .:;- ' .:. : V " free siliver, n -G0O0 LOCK, Soaps, Starch, Gold Dust, Star Lye, ! ; - V v - - 1 w:' ; Mendleson Lye, i At Bottomi Prices. . :. M c(bherir apl 15 I After long delay aj'd'ecialon was handed. Sdownvin the 'United' States Circuit Court 'sustaining the , I ' - - elsbacke Patents "Every other manufacturer of Incan- escent. Mantles in the-? UaiteeP States Is an Infringer' of this patent.", last of the ecision can be seen.a: ' jHAS.f M. WmTLOCK'S. Hotel si ' Wrightsville Scmnd,. C. jThis beautiful arid popular Seaside i laotel,' containing 35 roras-, havisis been faproughly overhaiiled aiid' renovated, Isj ovr for sale. lease br rent. Unless other-!' a .lse disposed of will be opened for guests igi ; June 1st, isys, unie? eounpetenc man emeau r or lurtner ?iE.torniatixi ap-r ! ply to .- : - - I; : ohn H. Hanby. Owner, 115 South Sixth. Street, I .- . : , ; i - llWILiMIiraTON, IT. Cf- itaar.r29 .im ; ' s ; , -r- This tvoma n i9 apicture of per :ct. hsltn. H j existence is ot made mi seratsl by Shattered Nerves, Wa sting: Irregularities, 2y8pepsiay-jthe.Bl4es br any of mani f o 1 & derangements id by veakrbr impure blood. 3 full of life, and ambition, aban'isome. be is happy. . bloo 1 coursing through, her ': ( mai ntaiitsher magnificent ? womanhc -od, warding off the in numerable diseases to which a - eaker omau would be euscep- :' 7 , f" - . Miss Alice Hastings, Sairannah, ' Ga., says, she was suffering alt. the torture of a. ter rible case of scrofula,, and no relief could ha obtalnedjuntil P. Uppman's Great Rem dy, was tried ; there eult was a completo cure. J K-JS II1 oyiuc-,; :siz i DOlues, 5 "IS'Sio Savannah. Ga TAKE A DAY OFF . 1 ;' ' '. :" if " i. jjjjjnd investigate the standing of 'the Com rany 'that has written iyour policy of ft; Insurance. It may pay you to have it ine before thQ time arrives for adjust jhg a los, when investigation will be, too jte. . - .... :' ; - " ;. SIf . you're insured with us, however, tieres no cause for alarm, as eve?' com janywe represent is as sounJ as the . ock o? Gibraltar, and their policies are, f g?&l for their face! value in event ot ss 'as a-Government Bond . illard & Giles, i Mr - - - DANGER 1 il 11 Atlantic view OB L 0 V' j i ' - . j t ' - j; I am
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 19, 1898, edition 1
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