Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / July 14, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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PUBLISHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT. THE MORNING STAR, the oldest daily news- 8a per in North Carolina, is published daily except loaday, at $6 00 per year, 3 00 for six months, $1 GO (or three months, 50 cents lor one month, to mail sub scribers. Delivered to city subscribers at the rate of 18 cents per week for any period from one week to one year. . . m . ' THE WEEKLY STAR is published every Friday morning at $1 00 per year. 60 cents for six months. 80 cents for three months. ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY). One square one day, $1 00 : two days, $175- three days, g 5; four days, $8 00; five days, ptOjOM week, $400; two weeks, $5 60; three weeks, $3 60; one month, 10 00 ; two months, $17 00 ; d34,! months, $40 00 ; twelve months, $60 00. .Ten lines of vitrt ivnnnam ivuc nuaKc uus numv All announcements of Fairs, Festivals, Balls, Hops, Picnics, Society Meetings, Political Meetings, &c,will be charged regular advertising rates. 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July 14,1891 THIS LOOKS LIKE BUSINESS. - Several days ago we wrote some thing about the development of our Southern seaports, showing how the export trade of twenty Southern ports had grown within the past year, being nearly $20,000,000 gain to the $2,000,000 of nearly all the ports on the North Atlantic seaboard. Unless the indications are all wrong the gain in the next twelve months will be even more remarkable. In an article written a few days before that, suggested by the fact that the Southern railroad systems were making Southern ports their ports of shipment for Southern and Western products go ing North, we remarked that this was a new departure which in the near future would lead to the estab lishment not only of a direct export trade with Europe but t4 an import trade as well, and that las a result the commercial importance of our Southern ports would make a rapid growth. As much as our export trade has increased within thepast year, or rather eleven months, it has been done without any regular lines of either steam or sail vessels, most of the steamers employed being what are known as "ocean tramps," own-1 ed mostly in England and at the command of any one, to go any-' where, who can load them and pay for their service. Notwithstanding the fact that the South's foreign trade within the past eleven months amounted to the large sum of $321,179,905, an increase ot nearly $20,000,000 over the corre sponding period of last year, there is not, that we know, a single ship company organized in the South, nor is there, as far as we know, a single ocean steamer or ocean sailer owned in the South. There may be. some coasting vessels, but this is as far as the South has got in the way of a merchant marine. This may seem singular at first sight, but it is not, for it is only within the past few years that our Southern ports have begun to figure in the foreign trade, and they have done? it so quietly, and made so lit tle display over their progress, that but few, and these few men who took the trouble to gather the facts and the figures, knew really what they were doing. kji course tnis condition is not going to last always, for the. busi ness which has attained these large 4 ' proportions, ana is increasing so rapidly every year, will necessitate the establishment of direct and regular lines of ocean steamers be tween the principal Southern ports and Europe. Regular lines mean an import as well as an export trade 1 4.1 O a anu me aoum will have both. The at' -ocean tramp comes at command, oaaea it sne can find a load, ships her carjro and goes on her way; but does not return, unless ordered to. from other places, but that a stu The "tramp? means trade in one dious effort has been made .to pre diction onlj She goes away loaded hut brines nbthine- back in return, The regular liners will go and come loaded thus adding immensely to the commercial j business of the ports from and to .which they run. A brief tetegram announced a few days ago that the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad Company had closed contracts for five years with M. C. Furness- one of the largest ship owners in -England, for three lines of steamships to run regularly between Newport News, Va., and Liverpool, London and Glasgow, a separate line between each of these ports. The Baltimore Manufacturers' Record,, of last week, which seems1 to have ascertained the the particulars in reference to this transaction. I savs Mr. Furness obli- gates himself to send out a steamer W t - of each line: every ten days, making nine steamers a month with occasion al vessels to load for Havre, Antwerp and other ports, i The steamers car ry from 3,000 to 5,000 tons. . It is exoected that before winter the freight, grain, cattle, &c. shipped from the West over the 2.300 miles of road and j connections controlled by the Chesapeake and Ohio, will make it necessary to send out a steamer every other day. This, is not altogether an experi ment for thq Furness steamers have been runing thence occasionally with in the past f twelve months, but the managers of the Chesapeake and Ohio railroad ', knew what they were doing whenj they made these con tracts to secure regular and reliable ocean service. It enables them to handle the., grain crop, cattle and meat shipments of that portion of the West through which their con necting lines run, more expeditiously and to compete more successfully with other roads terminating at the North Atlantic ports, in addition to which it will give to the cars that deliver the grain, meat and cattle something to carry back of the im ported cargpes, instead of going back empty. ; That's business, business not only for the railroad and the ships, but it jneans that Newport News is to become a great shipping port and a great city some of these days, so that while the railroad is benefitting itself by its; business sagacity it is also benefitting others,- and is doing a great work for the State of Vir ginia. Which of the other great Southern railroads will be first to follow the example of the Chesapeake and Ohio, and arrange for lines of .steam ers betweeri Europe and the sea ports within the territory drained by their linesK The Chesapeake and Ohio has ifaade a beginning, and it will not bd many years before there will be a half dozen or more regular lines of pteamers running from Southern to foreign ports. The day is not tar 'distant, either, when the larger pari; of the export and import trade of j this country will pass through Southern ports. MINOR MENTION. The reports that come from Bar Harbor about Secretary Blaine's health are as conflicting as it could be possible to make them. One day we are told that he is almost fully I restored to health, and that by Fall he will be as strong and fresh in body and mind as he ever was. The next day' we are informed that men tally and physically he is but the shadow of his former self, and that he is to all intents and purposes in capacitated for active service. One set of Reports, are sent out by his following, who want to put him in the race if or the Presidency, or some one else if he should not be availa ble, against Harrison; the others are sent out by friends of Harrison who want to make people believe that Blaine as a Presidential candidate is an impossibility. While there is no dependence to be placed upon these reports, enough has been told from other sources to give ground for the belief that he is a much I sicker man , than his friends are willing to acknowledge. I Some time ago in speaking of his ailments we expressed the belief that he was Sa sufferer from Bright's dis ease, though there was no intima tion of this in any of the dispatches which liad been sent out in reference to his t condition. But we caught that impression from what we had read about him before and during his present sickness. . A staff corre spondent of the St. Louis Republic, "tfn&JfBa Harbor within the past few days asserts positively that u wi'gui. a uiscusc, aim a nope-, less case of it too. He says that he has been under treatment tor it sometime and that as many as six physicians attend him, four residents of Bar Harbor and two eminent physicians vent his actual condition from be coming known, lt-it were; not ,a serious, matter it would be, amusing to see the way the political friends arid opponents, in his own party, of this man are representing or mis representing his condition v to ..make use of him hereafter,nine-tenths of whom wouldn't care whether he was dead or alive if they could profit by his death or: life.. Bright's (disease may. carry, him offhand if - it 'does it will carry off the biggest man, and nearly all the brains, in the Repub lican party. The Washington Star says "it is now definitely settled that Minister Douglass will not return to Hayti, that having brought back a. reci procity treaty he is satisfied with his mission and is ready to resign." It adds that "after he retires it will probably, be a long time before an other Minister is appointed." There is more in this than appears on the face. On the arrival of Minister Douglass in Washington he was in- terviewed by a Star reporter and spoice very ireeiy. in repiy to me question whether he would return to Hayti he said that he would as he had been entrusted by his Govern- 4 ment with an important mission and that all the talk about his resigning and his not being acceptable to the Haytians was pure fabrication. He was very well satisfied with Hayti and Hayti was very well satisfied with him. I It is a weH known fact that both the Presi dent and Secretary Blaine were anx ious to get rid of Douglass, whose color made him unpopular in Hayti, especially in view of the fact that he brought with him his white wife, and that they would avail themselves of the first opportunity to do so. The fact that he was not well received nor respectfully treated by the Haytians may have afforded an opportunity to intimate that his resignation would be in order, as it was not de sirable to keep him in a country where he was not treated with that consideration due to his rank as a representative of this Government. But his resignation puts Mr. Harri son in somewhat of a dilemma, for it seems that a negro Minister Is not what the Haytians want, and it a white man were appointed j to suc ceed him, that would give offence to the colored pepple, -whose votes in close States ar& an important factor not to be ignored; hence the an nouncement that "after he retires it will probably be a long time before any one is appointed to succeed him." If a colored man be appoint ed Hippolyte and his sable sover eigns won't like it; if a white man be appointed the colored sovereigns of, this country will kick, so it is concluded that the best way out of the dilemma will be to appoint no one, and let the mission remain va cant, which it can do without any serious detriment to the United States. The conference of Alliauce men at Fort Worth, Texas, which closed Saturday, indicates that there is trouble before the Alliance and that if the leaders persist in running it on political lines it will split up into factions under rival leaders, and its power and usefulness be forever gone Before the Ocala convention there was very little, if any, discord within the lines of the organization, but then the aggressive and ambitious spirits made their influence felt, a political . platform was enunciated, the third party was suggest ed, and the apple of discord cord was hurled in. Now there are leaders in the organi zation who hate each other with a burning hatred, who in public speeches and in the press denounce each other as treacherous and cor rupt, and these leaders have their following who will stand by them in the fight they evidently intend to wage. Now Macune, the recognized leader of the order, and Hall, the ablest leader in the West, glare de fiantly at and mutually denounce each other, .hurling charges and counter -charges which would leave them entirely characterless it true. This is the beginning of what may prove to be a wreck' if ambitious or short-sighted leaders are to remain in the leadership. STATE TOPICS. The Raleigh News and Observer states that the $16,000 due the State from the appropriation for the sup port of Agricultural and Mechanical Colleges for the year 1890 has been received by State Treasurer Bain j ,i nere is. 5114 aue iv,uuu ot tne ap- propriation for the current year '91. .The payments . increase $1,000 , an nually. Part of this amount goes to the colored Agricultural and i Me- chanical College. The contract for the new dormitories will be given out soon after thelst insU and $4,500 worth of machinery will! be purchas ed for the Mechanical department by the 1st of September. -. Thje dormi tories will be paid for out of the State appropriation, as the tunds got from the.U, S. Government can not be used for that purpose, but the machinery will be paid for out of the .Federal fund. We note the progress of. this institution with pleasure, because it is one in which the whole State is interested. CURRENT COMMENT. It is likely that the sub Treasury plan will be discussed at the State convention of the Farmers' Alliance at Richmond, August 14. Some of the leaders of the order in Virginia are opposed to the scheme, and the discussion will probably be of ai spirited character. Norfolk Virginian, Dent. -The new Massachusetts drunk law, of which we said some days ago that its test would come on the Fourth! of July, does not seem .to have stood the trial very well. There was more drunkenness in Boston this year than ever before, and the number of arrests reached 377, of which 301 were for intoxication more than on any previous day in the history of the city. N. Y. Ad vertiser, Ind. Thepossible of the Pension Bureau has been supposed to be about. 1,000 certificates per day. Since adjournment the force has been spurred up to 1,500, or at the rate of 450,000 new pensions per an- num, ana even at tnis terrmc pace could not exhaust by $7,000,000 the colossal appropriations of the Fifty nrsi congress ior tne nscai year ending on luesday night last. N. Y. World. Dem HIS GRAVE TO BE IN RICHMOND Mrs. Davis Consents to the Interment of Her Honored Husband's Remains in - Blohmond and Gives tne Beasona Why, New York, July 12. Mrs. Davis, the widow of the late President Jef ferson Davis, who has been sojourn ing at the New York Hotel in this city for some time past, in a letter for warded to the citizens of Richmond to-day states that after much delibe- ration sne nas aeciaea 10 give v ir ginia the care of her husband's body The letter is as follows : To the Veterans and People of the Southern States: After much anxious thought have finally decided to give to Vir ginia the care of my husband's mor tal body, and feel that my reasons should be made public, as he was in many senses the property of the whole country. Immediately after the death of ex-President Jefferson Davis Louisi ana expressed her desire to keep his hallowed remains for all time, but she claims only the right to guard him until some permanent place could be selected for his rest. The military organizations of New Orleans bore him with filial grief to the tomb of the Army of Northern Virginia, where they have guarded him by night and day for eighteen months, and the gratitude of my children and myself is too great for words. I asked a year for consideration and consultation with my family. Eighteen months have nearly ex pired, and I feel that the matter should be decided and set at rest now. Mississippi claimed preference, because Mr. Davis belonged to her by right of the seventy-nine years residence within her borders and the sixty years of service to the State, during which she conferred upon him unsolicited every office in her gift, save one. As her citizen, com rade in arms, Congressional repre sentative. Senator, general in chief and President, she felt her's to be the first claim. Tennessee urged that in her State after the war he had found occupa tion, I home and troops of friends, and there his dead had been buried. Alabama remembered that within her borders he was elected President of the Confederate States; there he was inaugurated; that Montgomery had been the first capital, and that from her lips had issued the first great invitation to break the silence which he had observed since our de feat; that she received him with such enthusiasm as has been manifested to conquerors, but was never before accorded to a disfranchised citizen, powerless to give aid or confer favors. Georgia claimed him and has con stantly renewed the request because his father had been long a citizen of the State. There the ex-President had received the same royal courtesy which Alabama had extended, and lastly she pleaded her great love for him as a reason for granting the. re quest. Kentucky expresses her pride in being the State of his birth, and urged her claims. Virginia asked for his honored re mains because the most strenuous efforts of his life had been made up on her soil and in defence of Rich mond as the capital of the Confed erate J States. At short intervals throughout the last eighteen months she nas renewed her tender insist ance that he should rest among the dead of all the States who fell in defence of the Confederacy. She urg ed the fact that he did not in the full ness of his name belong exclusively to any part of the country. Every hillside about Richmond would tell of "the vigorous resistance which he initiated - and directed with tireless vigilance as chief magistrate; that there he received generous and un wavering: support in the darkest hour of our unfortunate defeat. I All these claims have touched my - heart, and contended together for the mastery. It has been hard to give up the hope, of dwelling near my husband's resting place in Mis sissippi, where my home and inter ests are, buj unfortunately Beauvoir is on the coast of the Mexican gulf, and on a peninsula not over a mile wide, and half a mile of shallow water," with submerged stumps of large trees, show that the sea has been steadily encroaching on the shore for many years. 1 feel therefore that as the monu ment is for all time it would not be wise to place if there and I submit to the personal sacrifice with the- hope that the States of the Con federacy will also relinquish cher ished plains for the sake of gratify ing the majority of these veterans who have written countless - letters to me from each of the before-men tionea states to urge Richmond as the proper places for the grave of him who loved them all and labored for their glory with all his might during the heat and burden of the days granted to him here. Your countrywoman, Varina Jefferson Davis. New York Hotel, July 11, 1891. WEATHER CROP BULLETIN For the Week TTndinR Friday, July 10th, 1891. Central Office, Raleigh, N. C The reports of correspondents of the Weekly Weather Crop Bulletin, issued by the North Carolina Expe riment Station and State Weather Service, for the week ending Friday, July 10th, 1891, show that crops have generally continued to improve. The early part of the week was warm with occasional showers badly dis tributed, and rain was beginning to be needed at many places. A gen eral rain prevailed Tuesday and Wed nesday evening which greatly re freshed crops. In a tew localities the rainfall was heavy, washing land, and accompanied by wind, which did a little damage. The last few days have been too cool, which will retard growth of crops somewhat. Cotton continues to improve and looks more vigorous; is blooming freely in Cen tral and Western districts. Crops generally now cleared of grass and well cultivated. .Blackberries ripe and yield I large. Present condition of crops for the entire State is as fol lows: Cotton 75; corn 82; tobacco 82; wheat 93; oats 76; grass 87. (One hundred and sixty-six reports re ceived, representing sixty-eight coun ties). H. B. Battle, Ph. D., Director. C. F. von Herrmann, Weather Bureau, Assistant. Dixon's American Graphite Pencils known the world over for their supe rior quality. They are made in all grades for artists, architects, draughts men, engineers, and for the counting room, schools, colleges, and for the pocket. There is no pencil made that equals the finest grades of the Dixon American Graphite, made by the Jo seph Dixon Crucible Co., Newark, New Jersey. T AdMcc to Motner. t or Over Fifty Years Mrs. Winslow s Soothing Syrup has been used bv millions of mothers for their chil dren while teething. Are you dis turbed at night and broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and crying with pain of Cutting Teeth? it so send at once and get a Dot tle of "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Sy rup" for Children Teething. Its value is incalculable. It will relieve the poor little sufferer immediately. Depend upon it, mothers, there is no mistake about it. It cures Dysentery and Diar rhoea, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, cures Wind Colic, softens the Gums, re duces Inflammation, and gives tone and energj to the whole system. "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup" for children teething is pleasant to the taste and is the prescription of one of the oldest and best female physicians and nurses in the United btates, and is tor sale by au drug gists throughout the world. Price twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup Now Try This. It will cost you nothing and will surely do you good, if you have a cough, toia, or any trouble with Throat, Chest or Lungs. Dr. King's New Discovery for. Consumption, Coughs and Colds is guaranteed to give relief, or money will be paid back. Sufferers from La Grippe found it just the thing and under its use had a speedy and pertect recovery. Trv a sample bottle at our expense and learn for yourself just how good a thing it is. Trial bottles free at kobbert k. Bellamy's Drug Store. Large size 50c. and $1.00. r Read advertisement ot rjtterburn Lithia Water in this paper. Unequaled for Dvsneosia and all diseases of kid ney and bladder. Price within reach of ill. We Offer to the trade our entire STOCK OF Spring Suitings, Cassimeres ani Doltonaies' for Men and Boys' wear at a great reduction. the remainder of our large stock of Neglige Shirts and Spring .Underwear at marvelously low prices. At 5 Cents Per Yard 10000 yards of Colored Lawns and Figured Cot ton Delaines that cannot be equalled for quality and finish. Respectfully, J. J. HEDRICK, jyotf 101 & 103 Market Street. COMMERCIAL. WILMINGTON MARKET. STAR OFFICE, July 13. SPIRITS TURPENTINE Market steady at 34 cents per gallon, with sales at quotations. ROSIN Market firm at 20 per bbl. for Strained and $1 25 for Good Strained. - TAR. Firm at $2 00 per bbl. of 280 lbs., with sales at Quotations. CRUDE TURPENTINE. Distillers quote the market firm at $2 40 for Vir gin and Yellow Dip and $1 40 for Hard. COTTON. Nominal. Quotations at the Produce Exchange were Ordinarv.. 514 cts 39 ft Good Ordinary.... 6 9-16 " " JLOW Miauling..... 7 0-16 " " Middliner 1.. 7 Good Middling 8 ' " " RECEIPTS. Cotton .- Spirits Turpentine.. 00 bales 312 casks Kosin 1,186 bbls Tar..... Crude Turpentine. . 84 bbls 30 bbls DOMESTIC MARKETS. Illy Telegraph to the Morning Star.'! financial. New York, July 13. Evening. sterling exchange dull - and easier at 486488. Commercial bills 484a 4o. Money easy at 13 per cent Oovernment securities dull but steady: four per cents 116; four and a half per cents iuu. state securities entirely neglected; North Carolina sixes 124; fours 98; Richmond and West Point Terminal 143s; Western Union 80. Commercial. New York, July 13. Evening. Cotton quiet and easy, with sales to-day of 181 bales; also last week, not before reported, of 1,130 bales for spinning and 2,935 for export; middling uplands 8c; middling Orleans 8 13-16c; net receipts at all United btates ports 3,819 bales; ex ports to Great Britain 3.924 bales; exports to France bales; to the Continent 600 bales; stock at all United States ports 258.006 bales. Cotton Net receipts 101 bales; gross receipts 817 bales. .Futures closed steady; sales to-day of 40,100 bales at quotations: July 7.94c; August 7.96c; beptember 8.09c; October 8.20c; Novem ber 8.30c; December 8.39c; January 8.48c; February 8.56c; March 8.65c; April 8.77c bouthern nour moderately active and weak; common to fair extra $3 85 4 40; good to choice do. 84 455 35. Wheat modei ately active, lower and weak; No. 2, red 00M1 00M in store and at ele vator; options dull and llc lower, with lower cables and the West selling, closing weak. No. 2 red, July 99c; Au gust 99 Mc; September 95 c; December 97 Vc Corn dull and easier; No. !2. 69c at elevator; options lower and very dull.closing steady; July 65c; August 61c September 59c Oats unchanged and options generally stronger and quiet; July 433c; September 33c; spot No. 2, 43.J4446c Conee options steady and closed unchanged to 15 points up; July $16 90; August $16 1016 20; Sep tember $15 2015. 25; spot Rio firmer and quiet: fair cargoes 18c; No. 7, 17J 17c bugar raw firmer and quiet; fair refining 2 15-163c; centrifugals, 96 test, 3c; refined more active and firm; standard A 4 5-16c; confectioners' A 4c; cut-loaf 5J4c; crushed 5Vc; powdered 4c; granulated 44c; cubes 4c. Molasses foreign nominal; New Orleans steady and quiet; common to fancy 25 35c. Rice firm and in good demand; domestic, fair to extra, 5J7c. Pe troleum steady and quiet; refined at New York $6 907 05. Philadelphia and Baltimore $6 857 00; in bulk $4 454 50. Cotton seed oil dull; crude, off grade, 25S29c; yellow, off grade 33 36c. Rosin easy and quiet; strained, common to good $l 35i spirits turpentine dull and lower at 3737c Pork dull but steady; old mess and extra prime $10 5011 00; new mess $11 75 12 25. reanuts auiet; tancy hand-picked 4M4c; farmers' 23c. Beef quiet and steady; family $13 0014 00: extra mess $9 5010 00;beef hams steady and quiet at $18 50; tierced beef in fair demand and firm, city extra India mess $20 0022 00. Cut meats quiet and firm; pickled bellies 656c; shoul ders 55c;' hams 10llc; middles firm and quiet; short clear on spot $6 42 6 45. Lard Western steam $6 50 6 52; city $6 00; July $6 50; August 6 56; September $6 71 asked. Freights to Liverpool firm, with a fair demand; cotton 3-32d; grain 2d. Chicago, July 13. Cash quotations were as touows: flour nominal and un changed. Wheat No. 2 spring 89 93c;. No. 2 red 91Hc Corn No. 2, 58c Oats No. 2, 36Jc. Mess pork ter bbl.. JklO 30. Lard. rer 100 lbs.. WR 9.S 9Mnr rih sirtps ftfi 27Uf?ifi 30. Dry salted shoulders $5 205 25; short clear $6 506 60. Whiskey $1 16. The leading futures ranged as loliows opening, highest and closing: Wheat No. 2, uly 90, 9Us, uac; August 86, 86c; December 88. 88. 87c. Corn No. 2 Tuly my, 56M. 55Mc; Sep tember 50M. 51, 51c. Oats No. 2, July 355, 35Jg. 35c; August 29, 29M 29c; beptember as, 370. Mess pork.per bbl September $10 42, 10 60, 10 60; October $10 55, 10 67$, 10 eu. Lard, per 100 fts September $6 47Va. 650, 6 45; October $6 60, 6 60, 6 55. Short ribs, per 100 Xbs-September $6 42,6 50, 6 45; October $6 52. 6 60, 6 57K- COTTON MARKETS. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. j July 13. Galveston, holiday net receipts 10 bales; Norfolk, dull at 8c net receipts 40 bales; Baltimore, weak at 8c no receipts; Boston, quiet at8c net receipts 62 bales; Philadel phia, quiet at 82c net receipts 20 bales: Savannah, easy at 7c net re ceipts 511 bales; New Orleans, steady at 7 15-16c net receipts 1,933 bales; Mo bile, quiet at 7c net receipts 30 bales; Memphis, quiet at 7Jgc net receipts 78 bales; Augusta, dull and nominal at 1 ,7c net receipts 67 bales; Charleston, quiet at 7c net receipts 93 bales. FOREIGN MARKETS, , By Cable to the Morning Star. Liverpool, July 13, noon Cotton, business moderate at unchanged prices. American middling 4 9-16d. Sales to-day 10,000 bales, of which 8,900 were Amen- can; for speculation and export 1,000 bales. Receipts 1,000 bales, all of which were American. - Futures quiet but steady July and August delivery 4 30-64d; August and September delivery 4 32-644 33-64d; September and October delivery '4 36- 644 37-fMd;OrtoberndNlZr livery 4 39-64d; December and T delivery 4 43-64d; January and AKnUar dd very 4 44-64d;JFebruIrynadna4 Tenders of cotton to-day l 000h , new docket. 3 ' w bales P'A M.-Tuly 4 31-64d, value- T, and Aufmst ', dlue hh and September 4 33-644 34-UUst temper ana October 4 S7 ' P- ctober and November 4 so rVtUe: buyer December and January 4 SSJ seller; January and February delhT4 d 45-64d, seller; February and ut JPj 4 c.r7 vaiue- futures rW, 111 111. -u THEY ARE COMING! fYOU HAVE MET THEM ) hoiefoMorbus die summer Complaints ONE REMEDY Terry Davis (AND OFTEN ONE DOSE) THEin ALL. SOLD EVERYWHERE. BUY NOW. jy 2 3m toe & nrm ch.i A Household Remedy FOR ALL BLOOD and SKIN DISEASES Botanic Blood Bab 11 SCROFULA. ULCERS. SALT IT. lUreS rheum. ECZEMA, every 1 form of malignant SKIN eruption, De sides being efficacious in toning up the svstem and restorina the constitution. when impaired from any cause. Its almnct Rimarnatural heallna Drooerties justify us in guaranteeing a cure, If , directions are louowea. eCUT CDCC ILLUSTRATED Ofcli I rntC "Book of Wonder." BLC0D BALM CO., Atlanta. 6a. janlS lvD&W sa to tn TURNER'S Blood Purifying Compound. EXTRACT OF ROOTS AND HERBS. clence and years of experience with medicinal plants have produced in Turner's Compound the greatest of all Blood Purifiers, a Remedy of ub equaled value In all diseases resulting from Im paired Digestion, Disordered Kidneys and liver, or Impure Blood. It builds up and vitalizes the gen eral system and brings back the bloom and cheer fulness of health ana vigor. r ' IT REACHES the CAUSE, REMOVES the EVIL and RESTORES TO HEALTH. Price, 60 Cts. jy 12 D3m su we fr ttaralartes th torpid llTr, atrengib ens tl Ai areatlYe organs. rejrnltea tnt bowels, and are nncqaaletl as an ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE, 1st malarial districts their virtus art tritf ely recogmlaed, as they possess pec uliar properties tn freeins; tbesystem from that poison. Elcsantly sngsi coated. Dose small. Price, 25cta- Sold Everywhere. Office, 39&4J. Park Place, N. Y mar 19 D&W ly th sa tu !Q Cfcleheatfa EbsIUIi Warn" Ttrana. 'enhyroyal pills iE-v Original and Only Gennlne. A 7"t X. nriilbla. LADIES Ml A Droggk Hi Chichester t Bngltoh i0'W mond Brand in Ked ud Gold mttllioW wxw, Male wtta bins rtbtton. j mo uKtkm Xefuet danvervm intuitu- v Hons and imitation:- At DraggiiU, or km J In Mampi tor partfootan, tartimonUH "Kellef f.r tadlea," in M";ZJ lchwtor Chemical CWMarfIn. Sio" oidtr Looal Druggist. miliKia- - an SOD&CWlv FOE. IMl ONLY! 4 j 1 j la-p-DTrmartETlTLIII, iTnMkiiess of Body sad Hind, Eft tilJof Errors or Ezeeeses inOldorYwnf; Babaat, Botala HaKHOOD rally Baataraa. Bow to RfVr: AbaolatelT aafalUas: IOU TRKATSSHT Be4U ' anaatirrraaiM8UtaaadraraismCaatrlea. DaseriptiTO Book, axpiaaatiOB ana prarfs nuOled(anled)rm AdawwEHIEMEDICALCO., BUFFALO.. my 27 D&Wly tu th sat Liquor Habit nrirrnre u?ftBrn nttee K KffTOMlQIh- smiiTES GOLDEN SPECIFIC Itcan be given In coffee, tea. or In rVclSy; without the knowledge of patient It is absolutely harmless and will effect Pfr, nent and speedy cure, whether the Pat'S?i;v moderate drinker or an alcoholic wrecfe. ".f.ncn KB FAILS. It operates so quietly and witn certainty that the patient undergoes no inw enience, and soon his complete reforro"OB effected. 48 page book free. To be had oi ' JOHN oct 17 D&Wly sa tu H. HARDIN, th Wilmington, ffj 1 he Globe Composition Paint. na-r-xvm -rr r tt -VITC'T. Tn BE THE r Ti-i i rAini- nAa rA.uvxi v - - - best, cheapest and the most effectual combmaw preservation of Wood, Iron and Tin. Manufactured and for sale by the 1T r. SPIR1TTINE CHEMICAL Co., HANSEN & SMITH, Managers. mv"3 . . for Ms. s 1-1 "ST" "21 atf S
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 14, 1891, edition 1
2
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