Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Oct. 4, 1887, edition 1 / Page 2
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. IHB MORNING STAR, tttf caper in North Caroltaa.la PJh dallTxPt Monday, at 56 00 per Year, $3 00 for aix months, II M for &rle monthfl? fiQ ota for one momfc. to maisSsbriberB. DellTered-to city TOb8oribM at tha rate of IS cents pt woe for any period (rjnoa.wi .- i mornlnjj at $1 00 per year. 60 eta. for six montna, so;ota for three months. ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY).-ope BQiuro a bo tu Ar.rfav i an- smAtM. si 7fi: three days. 1 250; . 13 eb i five days. S3 60 ; one wees, w. MOO; two weeks, S6 50 ; three weeks S8 50 ; one $10 00 ; two months, $1700 ; three month$24 00, six months, $40 00 ; twelve months, $60 CO.. Tea lines of eolld Nonpareil type make one sqnar. t All annonnoements of Pairs. PesaTals, eaus Hopa, Ho-Nloa. Society Keetlngs, Political Meet InjwTfcowlll be charged regular advertising rates Notices under head of "City Items" SO cents pet line for first insertion, and 15 cents per line for eaoh subsequent insertion. . n7 nrifte. Advertisements inserted once a week in Daily will be charged $1 00 per square for eaoh insertion. - Every other day, three fourths of daily vate. Twice a week, two thirds of dallv rate. taat news, or discuss briefly and properly subjects of real Interest, are not wanted : and, it accept . able In every other way, they will tayariably be rejected if the real name of the author is withheld. An extra oharge will be made for double-column or triple-column advertisements. Notices of Marriage or Death. Tribute of Re spect, Resolutions of Thanks, &c., are oharged for as ordinary advertisements, bat only half rates when paid for strictly in advance. At this rate 60 oents wlu pay f or a simple announcement o Marriage or Death. I Advertisements on which no speolfled i jaumbe? I of insertions is marked will be opntinued 111 for- I bid," at the option of the puDuaner, ana cnarKsu i W J HV hlAO Ui WMJVVMWm Amusement, Auction and Of&oial advertisements one dollar per square for each insertion. Advertisements to follow reading matter, or to occupy any special place, will be charged extra aooordlng to the position desired . Advertisements kept under the head of 'New advertisements" wUl be charged fifty per cent, estra. Adyertlsements discontinued before the ttma contracted for has expired, charged transient rates for time actually published. Payments for transient advertisements must be made In advance. Known parties, .or strangers with proper reference, may pay monthly or quar terly, aooordlng to oontraot. All announcements and recommendations of candidates for office, whether In the shape of communications or otherwise, will be char (red as advertisements. Contract advertisers will not be allowed to ex oeed their spaoe or advertise any thing foreign to their regular business without extra oharge at transient rates Semlltanoes must be made by Cheek, Draft k. irar. Postal Money Order, Express, or in Registered 'ostal Money Order, .etter. Only such Only such remittances will te as torn r!k of the publisher Advertisers should always specify the issue or Issues they desire to advertise In. Where no is sue is named the advertisement will be inserted In the Daily. Where an advertiser contracts for the paper to be sent to him during the time his advertisement is in, the proprietor will only be responsible for the mailing of the paper to his ad dress. The Morning Star. Sir WILLIAM a. BERNARD. WILMINGTON, N. C. Tuesday Morning, Oct. 4, 1887 plain words fro it! a republi can organ. The Chicago Inter Ocean is one of the half dozen great newspapers of this country. It is a Protection, Republican paper out and out. It copies some criticisms of the Star upon its course and replies at length. It denies the charge we brought against it as hating the South and and never praising Democratic men or measures. The Star would not be unjust, it aamires tne superior ability and great enterprise of the Inter Ocean but it dislikes its Radi calism and the bitterness that has characterized it. But let it be heard. It says: "Not once or twice, but often, has it praised Democrats, and whenever it could it has praised Democratic measures. For example, it was nearly in accord with Senn . ator Beck's silver bill; it upraised Senator ' Pugh's courage in speaking on behalf of the American policy of protecting home industries; it praised the two Southern Democratic Benators who voted for subsi dies to American ocean mail carriers ; it warmly approved Mr. Tilden's letter on the necessity of coast defenses; only a few days ago it gave President Cleveland credit for the patriotic tone of his Philadelphia speecn." When you examine those favora ble expressions you will see that it was not an indorsement of Demo cratic measures at all. Senator Beck's bill was popular with both parties in the Northwest. It was not a Democratic measure, strictly speaking, as the President, his Cabi- net, and all of the Eastern and Mid- c j ir c.ii. v-"xw wf f vwvv ajauu j uvutu ern Democratic papers were against it. me unter ucean merely praised The Inter Ocean merely praised beoause it Bet forth Western it views of the currency. It praised Pugh's - speech because it was in i favor of a Republican War measure. There is no Democracy in that. It praised two Southern Democrats for : -going against their own party in the ,v subsidy business. There is richness - r,just there. It praised a deserter ' , and then calls that praising a Demo , , crat and a Democratic measure. Bah ! It even liked Mr. Tilden's letter. And Pa6S tnat a man must be an out-and-why? Because it would relieve the out Prohibitionist or he cannot unite Treasury of some fifty or a hun- Wlln a certain "body of believers." dred millions of surplus and thereby stop the clamor for a reduo- - ' tion by Tariff reform. The Inter Ocean, you must bear in mind, is first, last, and all the time a Protec tion organ. It has an eve alwavs to -. ri 1 ' , w - the main chance. As to the patriotic - speech of the President it could as . 'easily praise that as it would a Sun day Gospel sermon, as there was not ' any party politics in it. So the nraiaa jjof the able Chicago "paper does not amount to much of either Democrats or Democratic measures. r- Iff. the reader "thought the Stab ., - misrepresented the Strong Govern- ment tendency in the , North, and the . disposition to blot out Constitutional - limitations, readhatolhjwiXThe : InterxOeean thuareplieso the Stab . . . -' i - i. .. -. .-. -.. .. i . i?25?eI" 9? ever ' proclaim that peace it the acceptance f ih National idea ana an aoanaonment vi ouu as expounded by Jeff Dayis, though not,' as the Morning Stab would have it. "of lnnl Belf-s-overament." The solidification 0f fa states into a JSfation was the effect tof a ft it WM - geaaencebf "uncondition- ai gurrender untu ine -reqeinon was upon them the people had no realizing sense of what the fathers of the Republic meant when they framed the government for the whole peopie. And as is complained of by the Mobbing Stab, - so-" long as the South, or any considerable part of it. has a nnliv which maenifles the State at the ex pense of the Nation, so long will the Re- I puulicau party uc iuuuu nogiug ... oat tiuce or terms." There now, that is plain enough. A full reply to this will be found in the several recent editorials in the Star on the Constitution. Judge Miller, a staunch Republican, in his Constitutional Centennial address, says there is the same necessity now of maintaining the old construction and theory of reserved rights of the States as there was in the past. We commend the address to the atten tinn rf tha Tnf.fif Oo.fi.an and thank it ' . . for 80 plainly acknowledging IHQ , , r ,l -o vi: purpose ana plan oi ine rvepuunuau party. Unless the South accepts the Consolidation idea there is no peace. Unless the South turns its back upon the past, ignores the teachings of history and the ex act language of the Constitution, and forgets all of the lessons of the ablest Southern statesmen and writers upon Constitutional limitations and accepts in good faith the Republican dogma that the war destroyed the Constitu tion, "solidified the States into a Na tion," thus practically wiping out all State lines and making them mere provinces or counties, like the coun ties in England, there shall be no for giveness or peace. Such is the real issue and meaning of the Republi can demand. The South has manliness, virtue, and enough of "courage of convic tion" to withstand all threats of war and all overtures of surrender at the price of principle. This is a Consti tutional Government. This is a re publican, democratic, free Govern ment regulated by law. The South will be faithful to the Constitution re garding it as the bulwalk of all freedom, the citadel of a people's strength, the breakwater of despo tism. They will stand by their con victions in peace as they stood by their convictions in war. It is easily seen why ex-President Davis is so cordially hated by Repub lican doctrinaires. He has produced an argument in justification of the South that has never been answered, that cannot be answered. With -Davis, Stephen's history and Bled- soe's masterly work on Davis, and the Southern man is so fortified that he can always successfully withstand all assaults upon his defences come from what quarter they may. A TEXAS LAW. Probably the Southern newspapers I could not do a wiser thing than to I copy the laws of certain New Eng- land States in the past which regu lated the public morals, made church going compulsory, and even went so far as to punish a husband for kiss ing his wife on Sunday. The ten dency, as the Stab has often had oc casion to point out, is to return to sumptuary legislation to make men better by legal enactment. The fanatical Northern fool, quoted from in Sunday's issue, who did not be lieve a man could be saved who used - , tobacco, is in the same proscriptive boat with those men who in the past nnn. a.Atn;nn o ,f f i o " church membership, put the United I otateu uag uu me vsommumon taoie, made loyalty to the North the shib- boleth of a sect, and now favor the forcing of mixed schools upon the Southern people, and sending to the "demnition bow-wows" all men who smoke or chew. There is danger that a school df teachers may spring up in the Sotrts 1 who, forgetful of the .past, may be J for applying new standards of faith and of disoipleship. It may come to He may never drink ; may be opposed I to a11 abuses growing out .of liquor- drinking; may favor a Christian ob servance of the Lord's Day; may be a strict reader of the Bible, a man of prayer and meditation, and the soundest morality, but he shall not enter not into the Kingdom of Heaven but he shall not enter the, pale of a certain Church unless he be in favor of profMunf by .aw th, use of wine, cider, beer and spirits, We say there is danger at this point. Sumptuary laws exist more or less, it is true, but that does , not -l . 3 . remove me aangers oi excess in? tne way of legislation You cailnact S 9 caaiaet, iann tuab aru oU (cDUSuaDl lO ID6 1 people that? they; are dead letters and Kfail of execution., Xoa can, drive I i . . ... . i.'-'- w j. a '. peopie , into armed resistance bv.on. I i r, . i i.wmBwuuBB ustb -no oiiim "to uecune i to eany the conditio. AnvMiiia;.i.f-m.':J vfli I ZZZ ' --v-w,;.jiMvo.iiy uo greauieas, nor nxraiy ever-attain iL I rr"J "kU" g ving-way; Mg.iiuif-uuta. I - - '.t- .--iiax r i II2&U ii nr. rn nnnrAirA . a w a m j . i . . mit mi cv Ath a - V v, r--.r .v6.vu. fiUO uiowuu,-, nW pay ids tax.-whieli3i8 taid.'-GoM Am,, - -7 J ".earievwaM, -reception -w fcJ ' - . ' ' , , - , , , ;unwfe nothing jwas done. bat ever spea " on jwrin varoiiua sions. Fanaticism stops at nothing.. fiThQjamerfl of common tense ana jastice are leaped over as if they lid not exist by the inflamed hot-heads who hold themselves to be the Lord's annointed. ; The above has been engealeor to" ns by certain utterance ices Ue have ieeh I ,jn Northern religiotif gtbi,iTig9i'n by a recent law passed by : the Texas Legislature. It seems that that pious body enacted a law forbidding, the publication of a paper on Sunday morning. Under this Act the editor of the Galveston News was arrested. Now the Star, and every other daily paper in the South, issues a Sunday morning paper. It is true it is got up on Saturday mainly, but it is worked off and distributed on Sun day morning. A Monday's paper would be much ; more objectionable, because it might have to be worked upon on Sunday. : The Star ia not an advocate for violating the Lord's Day by work. Bat it is a notorious fact, seen, and read and heard and known of all men, that in ninety-nine hundretbs of the Church-going families warm breakfasts and warm dinners, are eaten every Sunday; the house ser- vants must "clean-up ;" the people walk about, visit, read, gossip, .and I even read books that are not so : im portant or useful as the Bible. It is known that but few people in the land are strict Sabbath observers. Tbey will read newspaper?, and, what is far worse, talk business, or indulge in gabble and skimble skam ble stuff. Is not that so? Thd Texas people are no except ions. They are no better than other people. Why then strain out a gnat and swallow a camel ? The Sunday papers have much good, reading. Some of them pay special attention to religious news, fcc. They never yet did a man half the harm that idle talk does him, : or promenading about or going out ri ding, Sec. Why not enact a law at once regulating the eating, sleeping, walking, talking, smoking? Texas tried bard to get a law to regulate the drinking but failed by an enor mous majority. It now has a law to regulate the reading. This kind of proscriptive legislation will do too much. It will prove a boomerang, if the throwers do not watch. "Like that strange missile that the Auatra Han throws. Tour legal boomerang slaps you on the nose." From Virginia's Chief city. Richmond State. The Wilmington (N. C.) Stab, tx7 i n td r err vi o otkI rn Vil i alt nA Vvvr n nati?e of Richmond f a ha8 arrid at the age of twenty years. We hope for the Stab that its bright and vig orous youth may be continued to a manhood corresponding in strength and usefulness with the approved re- I c,ora 01 19 Pa" performance with T nn aoamiTr mar i nststn svr ,a .v. promise. The Stab is a Democratic paper, faithful in its conviotions of right and fearless in their advooacy. CURRENT COM SI EN r. It seems to us that the many pattings on the baok the Charleston News and Courier has had for its in solent and unexpected remarks about President Davis in connection with the Macon fair, by the Northern presp, should have brought it to la true sense of the gross disrespect it has shown for the true sentiment of the South, which is that of never: I varying, never dying reverence for I me man oi wnom mis unane8ton i When hepeople of the Sonth ceage so to love and respect Mr. Davis. I they will relinquish all title to any decent people's regard, and become successful candidates for the con tempt ot mankind. Anniston (Ala) Hot Blast. -j There is so much of genuine Democracy in what our friend Major GJass has to say from time to time on, the subject of, .Federal taxation1, mat one oi ms eattoriais is as re- freshing as a sea breeze on a hot day. Commenting on. the revenue tariff plank in the platform of the Massa chusetts Democrats, he says in the Advance: 'This sounds like De mocracy of other days and is reaHy the true creed of that party and cor rect theory of our government. Nor J reduced tariff is there any doubt of the fact that a is got to be the leading issue in the national campaign of 1888. Randall and- his hteh tariff faction mav kick and bolt f they KnA .A.4- t D.emocratio party North and South and no small number of theiRepubli oans of the -West, will eo f or reduc- tion... What we: . call 'protection'.. to' AmJican Jb.qrXImply protection 0? XZlZSti ggX working people generally." Rich- mond State, Dem. ' It would - be well for the to-: bacco farmers of Virginia, who are 1 DSmir hAltad -an. ftaatifnnnalir kir 1,a w .- v.?wj npW,onMinglej idea in their minds while there ia yet' I IllnS. I'rift nrnmiaa ia ha J .n a J xnemmore or less directly, that the 5?1ioJ? of" 5e tax tn tobacco will; I acta to the nronta nn thairtrntTh;!!1! uy iuo ui.uuiauuici thtfmaufaolurer .ndrconsumer jbut wilt not ftfTent the Drbducer. The tobiooa firmer theffwill get'ner mbre for his tobacco, arid wIl nao to pay as high aa ever "for everything be buys. By securing the repeal of the internal revenue-taxes, tberefora-nd TeavinelBe import taxes tbeyjr, J., ,; , , , ; wui-aimpiy jasien uPii fil0lMLiPifi9Pv,-ftM vears tOvoomT the -burden it now bears, without'obtaining a single iota of profit orrelief for himself.- Is it. worth .hia:whilet to accomplish ? so much harm without caue or compen 'aation ? Charleston News and Cou rier, Dem. Kapreme Court. Ralegh News-Observer. , . Court met at 11. o'olock oa yes terday morning, and the following appeal from -the first district, wW? Beasley vs. 45rayt from Currituck; argued by Messrs. Grady & Ayd Tett for the plaintiff; no counsel con tra. State vsl Whitaker, from Beaufort; argued by Attorney General and Mr. C. F. Warren for the State, and Mr. George H. Brown, Jr., for the defendant. Morgan vs. Norfolk Southern R. R. Co., from Pasquotank; argued by Mr. John Gatling for the plaintiff, and Messrs. Stark & Martin for the de(e Dant- . : Pj.1tcjiard vs. Meekins, from Pas qaotank; argued by Messrs. Hay- wood & Haywood for the plaintiff, and Mr. John Gatling for the de- fendant. Appeals from the first district were disposed of as follows: Edward vs. Cowper, from Hert ford; certioraris issued on motion of plaintiff; returnable to next terra. Thomas vs. 1 Wright, from Beau fort; argued by W. B. Rodman, Jr., for plaintiff; no counsel contra. Ilinton vs. Pritchard, from Pas quotank; argued by Messrs. Grandy Aydlett for plaintiff, and Mr. John Gatling for defendant. Hodges vs. Latham, from Beau fort; argued by Mr. Geo. II. Brown,' Jr., for plaintiff; no counsel for de fendant. COTTON. N. Y. Commercial and Financial Chronicle New York, Sept. 30. The move ment of the crop, as indicated by our telegrams from the South to-night, I is given below. For the week ?nd- ing this evening (Sept. 30) the total receipts have reached 238,745 bales, against 187,740 bales last week, 120, 041 bales the previous week, and 85,437 bales three weeks since mak ing the total receipts since the 1st of Sept., 1886, 054,776 bales, against 389,325 bales for the same period of 1885-8C, showing an increase since Sept. 1, 1887, of 265,451 bales. The exports for the week ending this evening reach a total of 131,445 bales, of which 92,617 were to Great Britain, 128 to France and 38,700 to the rest of the Continent. To-day an early decline was quick ly recovered, and the close was dear er on a demand to cover contracts. Cotton on the epot has met with only a moderate demand from home spinnere, and, although stocks con tinued very small, quotations were reduced l-16c on Monday and again on Wednesday. Yesterday good mid dling was quoted l-lOo lower. To- day there was a general decline of l-16c, middling uplands closinc at 9o. The total sales for forward deliv ery for the week are 458,300 bales. OCB STATS CON TEA7 PO II A El IBS. Democracy va radicalism Free clothes vs. free whiskey. Tarboro Southerner. A recent issue of our able contemporary, the Morning Stab, has a most excellent article in reply to some strictures upon Hon. Jefferson Davis by the Charleston News and Courier. We commend the Star for its laudable course of defending Mr. Davis, while we have no words in our vo cabulary sufficiently strong to express our disapproval of the ill-tempered language of our iaanesion coniemnorarv. List the I heathen rage. Let the Northern people lfc D ouuuiem euiior to 8peakdUrespectfulIy of the greatest of living Southrons; especially, when this is done to win the praise of the enemies of our section and the slanderers of our peo ple. Windsor Ledger, From what we have seen in some of our exchanges, next year will witness the ex istence of. a. very large quantity of this valuable tree, and its leaves will exhibit the moat attractive colors. Indeed, . some people who have a scorn for all pretensions will probably be so irreverent as to charac terize the timber as simply Gubernatorial Timber. That we have a great abundance of it there is no doubt. It Is seen In many localities where its existence ia not gener ally known. But there is a great deal of it. We ought to be proud ot the wealth of this material with which we are bleased. and our people may . be freed from all alarm that, bn account of the extensive demand, there will be an exhaustion of it. There ii no danger. Young ones are sprouting annually,, and, as the matured ones are used, they , will be ready for the demands of the age. They grow with re markable rapidity, and it requires less than thirty years to develop them f ully-fitwfc ingham Rocket. The city that is unwUlinff to J the construction or bettering I of tbe highways that lead to and from its markets, "whether they be dirt, water or. iron ways, because it is not demonstrable1 that the outlay will bring id a large direct income in proportion to the outlay, has no pub hp spirit, and is doomed to the lot of all towns: that have no public- spirit, that 18, Blow progress and early de cay, A generous, unselfish heroic disposition is necessary . to. alj high cuuoavui, uu great achievement. This is a truth that has no limitation, I Zt--Z m . . .. i wmor m civa or muuary me. in tne material or spiritual concerns of man. Self help develops -tfieDowWof heln- K. i who only avail themselves of their -natural Advantages and fortuitous , ..... . . ... u i ... --' . F COMMERCI SW I I, M I'JTO TON M A R K.K.T STAR OFFICE, OctX C P. M;-4 l&pfRITS TURPENTINE The market Bedsteady at30i cents pt gallon, with Ba1ei 0f the day's receipts at quotations, ROSIN Market firm at 72 1 cents per . . . , . centa" for Good TARl-Market quoted firm at $1 30 per. rvlhst with, sales of receinU at ' i- - quotattoos. .-CRUDE- TURPENTINEDlsUners quote, at ,$1.65 for,. Virgin and Yellow Dip and fl 00 for Hard. COTTON Market was quoted steady. Sales 1,000" bates on abasia of 8 11-16 cents for Middling. Quotations at the Produce Exchange were as follows: Ordinary 6 1-16 cental lb. Good Ordinary 7 " Low Middling....... 8 5-16 " Middling 8 11-10 " GMiddlinz....... 9i CORN Quoted firm at 60 cents for yel low In bulk, and 63 cents in sacks; white is quoted at 64 cents in bulk and CO cents in sacks for cargoes. TIMBER-MaTket steady, with quotations as follows: Prime and Extra Shipping, first- class heart, $8 0010 00 per M feet; Extra t6 00a7 50: Good Common Mill $3 00 5 00; Inferior to Ordinary $3 004 00. PEA.NTJT8 Market firm. Prime , 55 60 cents; Extra Prime 7580 cents ; Fancy 90 cents per bushel of 28 lbs. RICE Market quiet. Fair quoted at c: Prime 551c peTTxund. No 6alcs of Rough crop all marketed. RECEIPT'S. Cotton 2,175 biUfc Spirits Turpentine 161 casks Rosin , 8G5 bbla Tar .. 151 'bbla Cmde Turounline 18 bbls Dll.nBNriC ,TIAIIKKT IBr TelerraDh to tha Morning Star.) Financial Kkw Yoa. Oct. 8. Noun. Money easy at 45 per cent. Sterling exchange 479, 480 and 4844S4f State bonds firm. Government securities dull and steady. jSw , i'ottx. Oct 3, Kvening ttterlior exchange dull but steady at 4S014$5. Money easy at 56 per cent., closing offered at 5 per cent. Government securi ties dull and unchanged; four per cents 124; three per cents 108, State bonds more ani mated and firm: North Carolina sixes ltOJ; fours 97 asked. Ocmmeertai. New Yobx, Oct 3 Noon. Cotton eafly. Wllh Mies-of 167 bales; middling l.JL?' IX? '.!! with sales of 167 bales; middling cents; futures opened steady ; sales at tne following quotations: October 9.15c; No vember 9.10c; December 9.10c; January 9.17c; February 9.25c; March 9.83c. Flour quiet and weak. Wheat lower and dull. Corn lower. Pork dull at $15 25 15 50. Lard steady at (6 82 J. Spirits turpentine firm at 33c Rosin firm at 11 07fl 121. Freights quiet. Old mess pork $14 50 14 75. Nkw York, Oct. 3. Evening. Cotton quiet; sales of 216 bales; middling uplaads net receipu at all porta 46,654 bales; ex- ports to Great lintain 2.188 bales, to Franco 841 bales, to the continent 9,095 bales; stock at all U. a. ports 577,048 bales. Southern flour without chaoge of Impor tance, closing steady. Wheat options opened about steady, afterwards weakened with the West ami broke ie, closing steady and showing a slight recovery: spot generally steady and in fair demand: No. 2 red October 80181tC; November 81Ja 82 7-1 Bo; May 88f8Jc. Corn options declined iic early, later recovered a trifle and closed steady; cash in better demand and Drm; No. 2 October 51J51c; No vember 61S51c; May 5S53ic Oats a shade higher and moderately active; No. 2 October 8333tc; November 8Sic: spot prices: No. 2, 83tc; mixed western 82 84 lc Hops dull and unchanged. Coffee- fair Rio on spot firm at $19 25: options; ar shade higher and dull; No. 7 Rio October $17 4517 55; November $17 6017 7O. , Sugar firm, with a moderate demand; cen- ' trifugal 5 7-1 6c; fair reflnlog quoted at 4c; refined dull; C 55t ccenta; extra O ti centa; white extra C 55 7-16 cts; mould A C 1-16 cts; off A 55 9 16 cents; stand ard A 551116 cents; confectionera A 6 cents; cut-loaf and crushed 6f8 cents; powdered 6i6i cents ; granulated 6 cents; cubes 6i6i cts. Molasses quiet and steady. Rice in moderate demand. Cotton seed oil quoted at 83c for crude and 4143c for refined. Rosin steady at $1 071 12). Bpirlts turpentine firm at 84c. Hides wet Baited New Orleans selected, 45 to 60 pounds, Gyjc; Texas selected, 50 to 60 pounds. 10c Wool unchanged and dull Pork dull and weak; old mesa $14 25 14 50: new mess $15 23 15 50. Beef dull; beef hams steady at $16 25; tierced beef quiet. Out meats dull and heavy, middles dull and nominal. Lard opened 2 4 points higher, but closed dull, with the advance lost; western steam on spot quoted at $6 87i; October $6 76Q6 80; November 6 73. Freights steady. Cotton Net receipts bales: cross re ceipts 20.401 bales; futures closed steady, with sales of 92,800 bales at the following quotations: October 9.169.17c; November and December 9. 129. 18c; January 9.19 950c; February 9.279.28c; March 9.86 9.87c; April .449. 45c; May 9.529.58c; 9 .60 9. 61o ; J vdy 9. 669. 68c. Green & Co. 'a report on cotton futures says: It has on the whole been a pretty firm market ior cotton contracts, with a slightly higher range of prices on the balk ot the trading, though the extreme figures were modified before the close, when near months were about the tame as Saturday evening, and later options only 12 poiaU nigncr. mere appeared to be considerahls selling again on .European account and to some extent from the South, but the de mand developed fmely and more than bal anced the force of the offerings. A reduced eslimale of the crop from Texas and some falling off is port receipts as compared with last week appeared to frighten the shorts. Spots were slow and a fraction lower. OHiCAeo.' Oct 8.; Oaah quotations were as follows: Flour quiet and unchanged.: Wheat No. .2; spring 6969ic: No. . 8 spring 65c; No. 2 red 720. Com No. 2. 42c. Oata-i-No. 2; 26c Meas pork, per bbl,. $14 50. ' Lard, per 100 lbs. $6 50. Short, rib ides (loose) $7 65; dry salted shoulders (boxed) $5 205 25; short clear aides Tboxed). $795S00. Whisker tl loJ The leading .futures ranged as follows opening, highest and cloalng: Wheat No.' uctooer 7Uf, 7if, el; November 72f , 724. 71 ; May 79, 79,, 78,. Corn-No. 2 Octo ber 42i. 431, 42; November 42J, 42f. 42f ; May 451. 45. 454. Oats No. 2 October -; November 26r, 26i. 26J May 29f Meas pork all the year. $12 00; Jan uary iz 4u, f ia f ia S3, ira October $6 45, $6 474, $8 45 November $6 40, $ 40. $640; January $8 45, $6 474, 6 45. Short ribs October - $7 75. $7. 75, $7 65; January $6 80, $6 834. $6 27. St. c Loots, - Oct 8. Flour michanged. was to on subsequent lv the market bushels Increase in the visible supply, and finally closed frc below Sal urdav; No. 3 csab 70Jc lid: October 70c; May 780c. Corn there was an active eiDort demand for cash No 2 aod a higher market; ver by notion firm, but dtfsrreJ luouits wire Inwir and weaa; no xema ogiiuc; v Octo ber 88a88c; May 41a41jc. UiUHu 2 cash 23i24fc; October 24Jc fciJ; Hay 28i2SJc Whiskey steady al 105 PorL irregular standard mess f to Lrd nrm at $6 356 S7J . Dry salt meats shoulders $5 121(35 tiacon snouiaers fa zdA 6 CO; clear rib $9 62108 75; short clear So ia 12 Uami fix W14 00. OtsciSHXTi. Oct. 8-Flour In tnoderaie demand; family $3 203 45; fancy $3 60 3 75. ' Wheat dun; xto. a red 77c Corn easy; No. 2. 4445c. Oats steady; No. 2 mixed . 27fa2Sic. Pork dull; repacked $14 75. Lard in llgni demand, uulfe meats dull and lower: short rib $8 25. Bacon dull: short rib 8 874 9 12T; short clear $9 25 Whiskey itt good demand at f 1 05. liozs fairly acme; common and light S3 75 4 80; packing and botcher.' $4 604 90. Ba.ltDorb. Oct. 8 Flour firm with fair inquiry. -Howard street and western super. $2 25&2 75; extra $3 0C3 60; family S3 7504 35; city mills 6uper S3 25 2 62; extra 300850; Rio brands $4 15 4 50. Wheats-southern steady; red 79 81c; amber 8183c; western eteady and dull; No. 2 winter red on spot 79i79ic. Corn southern firm and quiet; white 59 60c; vellow 5254c; western firm and dull. Charleston, Oct. 3. Bpirm tuipen- tine quiet at 302c. Rosin dull; good strained 85c. Bavahnah, Oct. 3. Spirits turpentine firm at 30c bid. Rosin steady at 90971c. LBy Telecrapb to tbeKornlnx Star.i October 3. Galveston, quiet at Stc net receipts 8.354 bales; Norfolk, qniet at 8 13-16c net receipts 4.305 bales; Balti more, quiet at 9fc net receipts bales; Boston, quiet al Utc net receipts 7v bales; Philadelphia, dull at Vic net receipts 5 bales; Savannah, steady at 8 9-16c net receipts 11,895 bales; New Orleans, steady at 8fc net recclpta 11,134 bales; Mobile, quiet at 8c net receipts 1,644 bales; Memphis, easy at ofc net receipts 10,325 bates; Aucueta. steady at 8 7 16c net re ceipts T. 808 bales; Charleston, s'ady at 8 9-lGc net receipts 4.110 bales (fir Cable to tie Mor&nu Star.i Lohdoh. Oct. 8, 4 P. M. Spirits tur pentine 25s 4id. Liverpool, Oct. 3, 12.80 P. M. Cotton business fair and unchanged; middling uplands 5 3-I6d; middling Orleans 5d: sales of 12.000 bales; for speculation and export 2.000 bales; receipu none. Fu tures steady at decline; uplands, 1 m c. October delivery 5 1-64 5d; October and November delivery 4 61-64d; November and December delivery 4 60-64d; De cember and January delivery 4 60-64d: January and February delivery 4 60-64d ; February and March delivery 4 61-64 4 6264d; March and April delivery 5d; April and May delivery 5 2-64d ; May and June delivery 5 4 64d. No tenders. Wheat firm; demand fair. Corn firm; nothing offering. Bacon long clear 44s. Lard, prime western 83s 9d. Liverpool. Oct. 3. 4 P. M. Cotton middling uplands (I mc) October delivery Sd. buyer;. October and November de livery 4 63-64d. buyer; November and December delivery 4 61 64d, value; De cember and January delivery 4 61-64d, value; January and February delivery 4 61 64d, value; February and March de livery 4 62-64d, buyer; March and April delivery 5d. buyer; April and Mav de livery 5 2-64d, buyer; May and June delivery 5 5-64d, seller. Futures closed steady. Sales of cotton to-day included 1,000 bales American. MARINE. Port Almanac Oct. 4. Sun Rises 5.57 A M Bun 8eta 5.40 P M Day's Length . llh 43 m High Water at 8mithville 8 35 AM High Water at Wilmington. . . . 10.25 A M ARRIVED. Steam yacht Louise, Dozier. Southport, master. Br steamship Penaber. 991 tons. Ander son. Philadelphia, Hekle & Co. lir steamship Parklands, 1,134 tons, Smith. Philadelphia, C P Mebane. CLEARED. Steam yacht Louise. Doxier, Southport, master. Stmr Cape Fear. Tomlinson. Favette- ville. C S Love & Co. KIARLVB directory. Ltator VmmUIb UsPerterwiImlnc ton, N. Om OeU 4, 188T. iThls list does not embrace veaeel under a-u.-ve- . STEAMSHIPS. Beaacre (Br.). 1180 tons, Ogg, CP Mebane Thoraycroft (Br,), 1123 tons, Pugaley, C P Mebane. Nocoalan (Br.) 872 tons, Jones, C P Me bane. BARQUES. Sireno (Oer.) 501 tons, , E Peschau & Westermann. Frithlof (Nor.), 441 toha. Johnsen. Pater son, Downing & Oo. Rialto, (Dan.). 4S3 Ions, Jorgenacn, Hcide & Co. Adolh (Ger.), 523 tons, Wettendorf.Heide Akerb J then 8 wed.), tons. Johruon, Pa tenon. Dowsing fc Go, Wladmlr (Nor . 502 tons, Knudaen. Helde &lCo. Ferdinand (Br ). 416 torn, Bhoaner. E .Peschad & WeaUnaaana. Geo Davis (Oer. X 43 ton. King. Alex Sprunt & Son. Albatross (Ger.). 310 tons, Dale, E Peschau & Westermann. BRIGS. . Edith, 188 tons, Foster, E O Barker & Co. SCHOONERS. H 8 Lanfalr. 293 tona, Woodlawn. Geo Harris & Co. Fraaconia. 216 tona, Falker. E G Barker & Co. David W Hunt, 300 tool. Merrel, E Q Bax- aer oc jo. Geo U. Ames. 421. tobJE G Barker 49b Co.B Q -1- Y a a ma. w oarao x oaiu, zoo tona. iuiott, Ueo liar rUs & Oo. AmmTxixitioii. . As uauix it tcffl sxiiiis wx Cyrix to SportsmSa lnlooemenU to hay trom os tkelr apply ot feU,-bloWFvwdr b4 Sportamea'a BappUW Tlxed-anMUtto- -specialty aod those aiTlnc na taels erdara foe tAte ilo wUl be ore to De weu pieaaed witn th. Goods pat op br u. . isend us yoar ordered ocixir OILKS jT MTRCHISOK. aafea; jtee JS 18xJ taobea; rwu pries. oUier alxe nsTWortloti. A raehanoe to oret m penaaaeat boalaeai at bom.- Ttinen f iimof , .im n i i i VSZXzflf??! f1? eerapaAlea, as we are not roverneOJ ty tbe Bale Pool. Alpine Safe Oo-, cfooipatLO.. tafr aa as 8r DEVELOPED PARTS. ad ibTOtafll pti RRIK MKD.(X-.HrryTAJO.W.Y- tbabwir laBaMsHBSBiM WMicaaBtretZT OVSPEPSIA uriitu ROVQre. 11 IM ISWil ? urn 11 11 ij brru- s It. fare-, Urart'bnra, VtKlS;Kj,? 4 FcmkL etc. U enriches mad pT??1" Ih? Hum tha spprote. and aids . iaaJ XL 1 . JioearrER, the brrrdrL u l od IadiMBCion I t.lr .rT1 Vj!"Svm. aod tanganxtr. mnd rr tterjr. l,lrtJlr&& tu vumin vx ino. aaj-s: - I beir av- ... mony to. the efficacy of Iirwc'j wr Pyapepata, and aa a tonic " Clinton Co.. IdA. - I bfa . n. Boony to thd efficacy of Eimt'. Vr'Jlw,' Ooonine hia aixrre Tnxie Muri r.-J . bias's MNr ... 5ETXD c t; x minion worn flnrragicp pir K ThU marTeloua pocw-iii is dee "' ' let- To the snpenont? of Coral; o ctp- L otter matria!a, as a etiffpcr for CorsK... L To the Bnpx-rlor quaiitv. f.i',- atii wr, nansbtp of our Corsets, cosLl.nt-i w-.l ;!-' low prices. Avoid cheap Imitation rna'o! vi-,-,Dl k hil of cord. None are genuie uL.es "DR. WARNER'S CORALINE" la pnnteJ oa ,.ccij'? of e: rr,y,: oct 2 D&W2n a tjj . r tin N. H. SMITH, REAL ESTATE AGENT. FAYETTE VILLI: X f . Correepocdence so:'c!trJ iron pu-.'. i. .. bay "or sell laadf. Rr-'i.v- Mtorwt: -ployed to laTestlfate tlt!es, etc I'.: tnessmea of PaTeller!:;?. OFFICE AT NTIITII'S CEIT. Corar Ho.'r.rJ and Dot:'.:d''a st. .Vhcrp a FULL STt"K '. BEST ECE, CO At. .XZ) WOOH Can to f-td ar LOWEST PRICES t3yixt'ont for the f-'.rr, "Ic. CoaL Wood.' Ae. Jf V. iliVt: Cotton Bagging, 1000 Cs'; T '"' "' IAGG!' 300 E T T0":" 800 Earrei: GOOD 1' J T'.r ya'.elox 1-v HALL k P AgenUi fur r-n;o:,r Pi.irier. aep 13 tAW:f Dunlap StiifHats, Umbrellas. oc 2tf Now is Your Time GET 7u"P. EVGGY 01! CRT.IAf.K R ... .... ,.f TvaJrwl md Paintod. I can Kate :i iOiiu as new. or can trade ot sell you a Lew oae w me In the old lail fcalldlrc. corcerof Plata aad Seoocd ttre: Yoar itcVQtZQkVU Lamps, Chimneys, &c A FISK ASSORTMENT Ci' P.OCr.ErTIK Stands, and Bracket Lam.' A-'" Launpa. Burners. Wlcts and tirb t?. uu whlte-Tery low at A pBCK s oct 2 tf BSoutbTro m Great Eicileit QVKH THE SCFESB F.'T AND fTTLS 0T our rine Custom Mad Garment rtU Manufacturers aad ercha Jfi MaoufactnreM of the celebrtu-d r . oct 2 tf . Cotton and Naval Stores TTANDLK.D CLOSELY AT FTTLL VALnS Ooaalctimcnts and coTTmdencoK WOODY A Oockirjwlon Htsrds- tepsstf Bacon, Flour, Lard. 100nsc"!? 1000 rurjK 250tfceti LA3a' New Crop P.K. Molasses rIEST CAEGO OF TPE SSh Off IUID8 (JUST AKrUViS). u la,. a9nd for aale gEi Sugar, Coffee, Bice. IQQBbisEe&aed tUGAKt. gQ Sacks Choice KI--; OOr?i- r-A BbucABOLiNA :ncz. ror sic uj! ty rN ( WILLIAMS. RASi- an 9 tf ijriTie, noop xiuia,'-- 2g Bbla DISTTLLEB'S GLt'K." fjQQ Bondlos HOOi'IKOS. 250 KK,SAILS" Tot aale low by aUStt. W1LLLAM8. RA i .;. leUDAWly tausal j ....... .. - -
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 4, 1887, edition 1
2
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