Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / March 22, 1892, edition 1 / Page 2
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PUBLISHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT. - THE MORNING STAR, i the oldest daily aews- 5 per in North Carolina, is 'published daily except onday, at $(3 CO per year, $3 CO for six months, SI 60 or three months, 50 cents for one month, to mail sub scriber?. Delivered to city subscribers at the rate of cents per week for any period from one week to one year. THE WEEKLY STAR is published every Friday morning at $1 00 per year. 60 cents for six months, 30 cents for three months. ADVERTISING RATES fDAIL.Y)-One square coe day, $1 00 ; two days, $1 75: three days, 2 50; four days, $3 00; five days, $3 50; one week, $4 00; wo weeks. $6 50;-three weeks, $8 60; one month, $10 00 ; two months, $17 00 ; three months,! 00;,six months, $40 00 ; twelve months, $60 00. Tea lines of solid Nonpareil type make one square. - . All announcements of Fairs, Festivals, Balis, Hops. Picnics, Society Meetings, Political Meetings, &c will be charged regular advertising rates. , Notices under head of "City Items" 20 cents per Kne for first insertion, and 15 cents per line for each subse quent insertion. : ' ; ; - r : No advertisements inserted in Local Columns at any price.; : r:. 'j. Advertisements inserted once a week in Daily will be charged $100 per square for each insertion. Every other day, three-fourths of daily rate. Twice a week, wo-thirds of daily rate. - ' , - Communications, unless they contain important news r d-scuss briefly and properly subjects of real interest, re not wanted ; and, if acceptable in every other Way, they will invariably be rejected jif the real name of the author s withheld.- y , : - --..--p Motices of Marriage or Death, Tributes of Respect Resolutions of Thanks, &c, are charged for as ordi nary advertisements, but only half rates when paid for strictly in advance. At this rate 50-cents will pay for simple announcement of Martiae or Death. An extra charge will be made for double-column or triple-column advertisements. Amusement, Auction and Official adverrisrsnente, ne dollar per square for each insertion. . Advertisements to follow reading matter, or to occupy ny special place, will be charged extra according to the position desired. Advertisements kept under the head of "New Adver tisements" will be charred fifty per cent, extra. Advertisements discontinued before the time con- racted for has expired charged transient rates for time actually published. Payments for transient advertisements must be made a advance. Known parties, or strangers with proper reference, may pay monthly or quarterly, according to contract. . , All announcements and recommendations of candi date for office, whether in the shape of communica otherwise, will be charred as advertisements. ' Contract advertisers will not be allowed to exceed heir space or advertise anything foreign to their regu ar business without extra charge at transient rates. . Remittances must be made by Check, Draft, Postal Money Order, Express or in Registered Letter. Only inch remittances will be at the risk of the publisher. Advertisers should always specify the issue or Issues ihr-m desire to advertise in. Where no issue 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 address. By WILLIAM II. UERNARD. WILMINGTON.- N. C. Tuesday M-k Mar. 22, 1892 ' . FREE LUMBER. Among the other things taxed by the tariff which it is proposed to put upon the free list is lumber. This proposition will, of course, be op posed by the lumbermen generally as a damaging blow at "a great Ameri can industry," in which there is - great deal of money invested. A few weeks ago there was a meeting of lumbermen from all sections of the country held at Washington to pro test against the proposed repeal of the tariff on' lumber, which it did in address setting forth that the busi , nes was a great business, that it was the patriotic duty of Congress to pro- tect it and that protection was absO' lutely necessary to its preservation That's what all the protected say and what they have been saying for thirty years, and the lumbermen have as much right, and doubt less reason to say it-as any of them They are as much entitled to pro tection, too, as any of them and just as much entitled to exact tribute from the American people as any of them. : It is doubtless true that protec tion has fostered this great industry; it has certainly made some very rich lumber barons, Gen. Alger, for in stance, a candidate for the Republi can nomination for the Presidency, who is worth about - $20,000,000, made out of lumber. As they have opoly of the lumber business, it would be very much against their in terests to put lumber on the free list and give the lumber men of janada a chance to compete with them. This would be a good thing for the . people within shipping, distance of Canada, who have any use for lum ber, but it would be not so good for the lumber men, who would have to i come-down in their prices and suffer a reduction of profits. But the very reason, urged by the . lumber men for keeping lumber on the dutiable list, that is that it pro jects and fosters the lumber industry in this country, is one of the strong est reasons why it should come off. There are some industries that it is well to stimulate and encourage, pro vided it-can be done without robbing the people by taxing them exorbi tantly to do the stimulating and en couraging, but the lumber industry is not one of them. It has been stimu- lated and encouraged too much al ready, as is unquestionably shown in the wild havoc of our forests, which t 1 m . m nave oeen newn down witn a reckless waste that would be a reflection on the sense; of a nation of savages. All the money that all the lumbermen of this country have cleared in the past twenty-five years would not-begin to pay for the irreparable damage that has been done by this reckless de A. a. - t a tT . " .sLiucLion oi tne rorests. ; vvno can estimate the damage done by, rivers which overflow their ', banks or wash the artificial banks aWay and' spread devastation over thfc lowlands for : many miles on each side, destroying growing or garnered crops, destroy mg thousands ' of acres of fertile lands by washing or by covering with sand and driftage? Who can estimate the damage- aone oj droughts and deluges, by thestfdden changes of weather, with cold waves in summer and hot waves in winter, changes so great that in-some sec- ti'ons of the country crops: which were erown half a century ago have been practically abandoned. Fifty years, ago the blizzard and the cyclone were seldom felt and sel dom heard of in this country, while now they have become so common "that the scientists, I who study, them, have marked out ' what they call the cyclone belts, of which there are a half dozen or more passing through the country in, different directions, while the-blizzard scorns to be con fined to belts, but "sweeps in any direction it sees fit, and takes us all in when it is not satisfied with taking in a pan. x ae qvcruowiug nvcis, droughts, deluges,' sudden changes of weather, irregularities of seasons, cyclones, blizzards, Sec:, are not all the result of the cutting away of the forests, but this is the prime cause, a fact which has been amply demons strated, and one which no one who has given any study or thoughtful attention to this question now doubts. Fifty years ' ago millions of buffaloes roamed over the prairies of the far west, where now one of these animals would be a curiosity. The fur-trader wanted, their skins, and they were shot for them literally. exterminated; and so have the lum bermen with the same ruthless greed for gain, done as much as they could so far in exterminating the American forest. ' - '.':".::'--'r : r . -- . . . - - . .- . - 1 noughtful people, interested in the future prosperity of our country, realizing the damage that has already been done and the damage that is still to be done if thu havoc of the forests I continues, have been study ing, suggesting and advocating, ways and means to prevent it, some of which have been adopted in some. States where there are forests still left to be protected; but it has not, so far as we know, occurred to any of them to advocate putting lumber on the free .list. As putting a tariff on lumber has had much to do with stimulating the destruction of the forests, taking, the tariff off mi eht have quite as much to dp with checking the de struction. For r this reason alone, which is of more importance than the cheapening -of lumber to the con sumer, the. experiment 1 is worth trying. . ' V " ' - . THE EALEIGH CHRONICLE. Mr. . Josephus E. Daniels, the founder of the Raleigh State ' Chroni cle, has disposed of the five-sixths interest he had in it to Mr. Thomas R. Jernigan, late of the News and Observer. Mr. Jernigan is one of the best enuinned and ahlest ionr- -a i-r .- :- j , nalists in this State. We welcome him back into the journalistic family, although with regret we part with Mr. Daniels, who has made a good paper of the Chronicle. Mr. Daniels also retires with regret, and gives in his farewell the following, reason for doing sod 1 i v M? sole teason for making sale of the Chronicle is that I am not financially able to run it. Times are hard and com- petiuon orisK in every ousiness, ana es pecially in daily journalism, and it re quires vastly more capital to succeed in it than I had anticipated. The circula tion of the daily has succeeded beyond my expectation, hut the advertising pat ronage has fallen far short of what I rea sonably expected. No man can success fully run .a daily . newspaper in North Carolina or anywhere without a strong financial backing. .This l- have never had: and but for the emoluments from my office as State Printer, ever cent of which was invested in the paper, I could not nave continued it so long. MINOR MENTI02I. Since the war this Government has paid nearly $1,500,000,000 in pen sions, but it has not begun to see the bottom yet, fot we haven't heard the last of the pension bills nor of the decisions in the pension office which 1 :t in thousands of. pensioners not pr jvided for apparently under any of the acts passed. With the - t - oensioi boomers arid the liberality i .... . i A.Mn c., ,f nit tni- j Bussey, they will get the last nickel that Uncle Sam Sam can rake in and the next thing we know he will have to borrow money to pay up. Not satisfied with the 800,000 names, or thereabouts, which will be on the roils oy j une next tnere is ; a move ment now to: put army nurses on, and the probabilities are if .they sue ceed that the .sutlers will come in next, as the determination seems to be to- reach out and gather in every living thing that had any con nection with the army. And .right on top of this we have the third party which was launched at St. Louis asa" national - organization, demanding that the pensioners be paid the differ ence between, the value of the green backs in which they were paid and go(ld at the time they were paid. . ; If the t. p. could get on top and carry out this monstrous proposition, there is no telling . how many millions it would add to the nearly $1,500,000,- uw mat uavc aucauy ,uu u. Some of the third party " boomers in the South deny that this; plank is a part of the platform as "adopted, but assert that it was adopted afterwards by a mass convention,- which is sim- ply whipping the devil i around trie stump to fool people down here who feel that they have had about as much of the pension business as they care to carry. Senator Hill- is now in Washing ton, and has no cause to -feel dissat isfied with his treatment while in the South, for he was treated right roy ally in every city and town which he visited. He was everywhere greeted, not only with cordiality, but with enthusiasm. If he was inspired in making this trip by a desire to boom his Presidential candidacy, he has. no reason to feel disappointed in-, this respect, for in all the introductory speeches he was not only well, but very handsomely , and vigorously boomed, about as well, or perhaps better than he could have done it himself, for his- introducers said a great many clever and eulo gistic things about: him that he would : not have '- said about him self; but still Senator Jriili is no stronger " in the South to-day than he was before he made this trip, and perhaps not so strong in other sec tions of . the, country, where it and the speeches he made will be used against hi m, not so much for what he did say which was all right, but for what he didn't say, as he stu diously avoided the tariff and the sil ver questions, the two questions which are to-day the most prominent before the American people. What ever the effect may be on his candi dacy the Senator had a glorious time while in Dixie, and we are glad of it.; On his arrival at New York from England Secretary Foster hastened to deny that he used either of the expressions "clam-mouthed" or "flan nel-mouthed Irish" attributed to him in the published report of an inter view. He iurtner says tnat ne wasn i interviewed at all. Well, if he wasn't interviewed and didn't say it, that ought to settle it, but if he wasn't interviewed and didn't say it then some of the newspaper men in Lon don must be great liars, or their sense of hearing must be badly im paired.- The impression now is that in private conversation, not intended for publication, he let fall some re marks which furnished the substance for- this alleged interview. It did seem that a man occupying ' such a high and representative position in his country and party would be more guarded in his speech than that, and that he would not have indulged in such offensive epithets, if he indulged in any, even if he did not- like the people to whom they, were alleged to be applied. We don't think Mr. Foster likes the Irish, for the Irish are almost too unanimously Demo cratic to suit him, and if he had been silly enough to have talked as1 he was reported to have talked they would be still more so. The denial was in order., ( CURRENT COMMENT. 1 he people of this nation need a whipper-in at Washington to keep a quorum of their Representa tives at their posts on the floors of the House and the Senate. Knox- ville Tribune, Dem. Michigan people are wearing clothing smuggled from Canada, thus dodging the tariff robbery and avoid ing shoddy. The Peninsular State is m great luck in being so near an honest market. t Louisville Courier Journal. Dent. Dr. Parkhurst was before the grand jury yesterday to tell what he actually, knows about vice and. Jaw- breaking in this city. The- doctor was- loaded this time with steel- pointed facts. An earnest man with a great moral cause at neart is a power. -N. K Advertiser, Ind. """ " ' f,a 111 aV: The price of tin-plate in May, was per ooxr auty pata. immeuiaieiy upon tne passage oi tne McKinley act increasing the duty from one cent to two and two-tenths cents per pound, the price advanced in anticipation of the date fixed when the increased dujy should be opera- tive. i ne price is now ; per box,' duty paid ; and the . misery of the situation . is that . the country is still dependent for nearly all the coke tin it uses upon imported supplies.' Phil. Record, Dem. ; . - ' . Now Try Xbla, It will cost you nothing and will surely do you eood, if vou have a Couch: Cold. or any trouble with Throat, ; Chest or Lungs. Dr.. King s New- Discovery for Consumption, ; Coughs and' -Colds ; is guaranteed to give relieL or money will be paid .back. Sufferers from La Grippe found it just the thing and under its use had . a - speedy and . perfect recovery. Try a sample, bottle at our "expense and Jearn for. yourself just how good a thing, it is. Trial bottles free at Robbert R. sBell amy's Drug Store. Large size 50c. and $1.00. Myriads of cases of rheumatism and neuralgia have - already - succumbed to that wonderful r remedy Salvation Oil. Price only 25 cents a bottle. . t - PERSONAL. - J Princess Christian j Is the "most practical member of the xoyal family. She can sew, knit, cook, drive, garden. fish and keep accounts. Mrs.-Hopkin's-Searles' $5,000,- 000 -castle at Great Barrineton, Mass., is now deserted,; and is thought will even- Philip G. Cusach, the accom-. plished artist who died the other day ia New xoric city. , nao very -xcucnuy , iu- a large fortune Trom a relative in New Orleans. ! ' . " .. ; ' Tane Scrimshaw lived it Lon don during the reign of eight sovereigns, from Elizabeth to Anne.- Of ber 127 years eight of them were spent in a alms house.r2:;'-V";'-:S-:;r Mr. Gladstone receives no end of applications for locks of his hain To one of these, requests he replied a few days ago that age inas Ielt mm sucn a scanty amount that he ' would be quite bald u he were to grant even a iew sucn favors. ' : Mrs.- -Grover Cleveland is ar- raneine a dramatic entertainment to be given at the Lakewood Hotel March 25, for the benefit of the New York Kinder garten Society, of which she is Vice-Pre sident. "Caste ? will be performed by a company of New York artists. Mrs. William L. Dayton died at Trenton, . N. ; T- last Sunday aged 82 years. . The mention of his name recalls the ReDublican camDaien of 1856. when her husband was the candidate for Vice- Presiqeot on the ticket.7 with Fremont. Mr, Dayton died in Paris in 1864. He was Minister to France under Lincoln's administration. . . - Baron von Felder, of Vienna, has sold his famous collection of butter flies to Lord Rothschild, of London, for $25,000 The baron, who is. now 78 years of age, believed that he was too old to care for, his "collection properly.' It is said that Lord Rothschilds intends to teave his collection, now the finest in the world, to the British museum when he dies. Charles V. of France had a cup once, a queer looking goblet with a cover, which is now offered for sale in London for $40,000. James ' I. of England is known to have drunk hippocras out of it and to have presented it to ; Velasco. the Spanish ambassador. A Spaniard sold Jt to a Parisian collector, and now the collector wants to sell it to the Brit ish museum, and a snbscriDtion to raise the price is in progress POLITICAL POINTS. Mr. 1 Hill's southern trip will probably strengthen him in a few places, and it will certainly hurtbim in many.' BuffoU N, Y.,) Courier, Dent. A hunt for anarchists in Berlin A hunt for, anarchists in Paris. A hunt for anarchists in Russia. And still the People's party cannot stand America, Phil.. Inquirer, Rep. Ex-Representative Cannon, pf Illinois, will be nominated by acclama tion -for the Filty-third Congress. It must ; be a curious constituency that could see just cause for, acclaim in Mr Cannon's record. Phil. Record. Dem. The spectacle of Senator Peffer voting $25,000,000 out of the pockets of tne people to Dutid postomces in small towns must edify the farmers who chose him to defend their interests and to practice economy. Chicago Times, Dem Does the South prefer free sil vet to home rule ? The only thing that stands between it and negro domination through federal interference with elec tions is a Democratic victory next No vember. On the tariff issue victory is assured. On the coinage issue the Dem ocratic party will have a once to fight the money, of the protected monopolies and that large element in the doubtful States which oppose the Republican party: because of McKinleyism, -i but rbich dreads free coinage more than McKinleyism. Does - the South think victory possible against such a combina tion ? Baltimore News. Dem. KEROSENE FOR DANDRUFF. It Yoor Olfactories are Sensitive Ton aiar Have to Seent It. -Chicago Tribune The best thing to clear dandruff from the hairis kerosene. Of course. if it iS used, it ought to be scented and that can be done. I made what little I own on that discovery. It was when l was running a little shop in one of the interior towns. By mis take I put some'on a man's hair one day, and he came back to tell me that it acted like a charm. He did not know what it was and I did " not tell him. He said he wanted some more and I gave it to him. Then I bought several gallons ot it. scented it, put iu uuiucs, gave it some nign-souna- mg name, and people bought it by tne dozen Dottles. The demand was so great that I was ; afraid the gro cer in town! would get on to me and I sent to Chicago and bought a bar rel of it. I sold everv droD of it for the hair. I got my start in that way and that is why I am now in business in luecuy.;. Undisputed Merit. The great Success of the Royal Baking powder is de to the cxtreme exef cised by its; manufacturers to make it entirely pure, uniform in quality, and of the highest leavening power. All the scientific knowledge, careand skill, at tained by a twenty years' practical experience are contributed toward this endand no -pharmaceutical preparation can be dispensed with a greater accuracy. precision and exactness. Avery, article used is absolutely pure. " , A number of chemists -are employed, to test the strength of, each ingredient, so that its exact power and effect in combination with its co-ingredients is definitely known. Nothing is trusted to chance, and no person is employed m ; the pre paration ; of ithe materials used or the manufacture of the powder, who is not an expert in his particular branch of the business. As a consequence, the Royal Baking Powder is of the highest grade of excellence, always pure, wholesome and uniform in quality. Each box is exactly like every , other, and will retain its , powers and produce the same and the highest ..leavening- effect in any climate, at any time. The Government Chemists after havifle analyzed all the principal brands in the market, in their reports placed the Royal Baking Pow der at the head of the list foirstrength, purity and - wbolesomeness and thous ands of- tests all over the country have further demonstrated the fact that: its qualities are, in every respect, unrivaled. PRESS A; BUTTON FOR A "COP" The pneumatic Police Propeller and rnbllc Protection Company. ' -J Philadelphia Record. Not content with his. successes in organizing ithe Philadelphia r Snow anoveiing ana ravement : Cleaning Company, . the ..Anti-Beach Destroy mg and btorm queuing Company, and thp : Catapaultic Rapid Transit and ..Arel . Company, all. of which have been y fully : explained in the Record H. Wrigley Smith is about to eclipse eten his former brilliant efforts as an inventor and organizer. His new inyention will revolutionize the entire police department, and will render the safety, of, the public assured. . . . : : With a view 'of organizing a cor poration for the successful operation of the scheme, Mr: Smith yesterday called upon. Director Beitler. The director being, closeted with Superin tendent Linderji discussing the latest and most improved- styles in raids, Mr. Smith ' was unable to see him. But to a Record reporter he consent ed to give a y brief , outline of just what the invention-proposed to do. "In the first " place," he said, "I wish ' to organize . a company to be known as the Pneumatic Company. It'is a well known fact that a police officer is never in sight when wanted, and usually turns up like' a rainbow after the storm. :By this simple de vice he can be hustled to , the scene of action in less than (no time. He is obliged to get thevte .whether he wants to or noL My idea is simply to flood the 'city with! underground pneumatic tubes, with funnel-shaped openings at each corner. ; An electric button is placed at each of these sta tions, which, upon being pressed, registers at the citv hall, and an officer Is immediately dispatched : to tne scene oi action. , j, . . "At the very highest estimate the plan would cost the city only Jfiu, 000,000. This could easily b made up in cutting down- the policeuorce, as only about one half of the present force would' be reauired. To (illus trate bow successful the thing would work and what perfect protection to the public would be assured, lev Js just imagine a case. Suppose aUot of young ruffians were congregated on the street, playing 'knock-out or pussy' or any of those' objectidnable games so vigorously opposed by tRe ponce autnonties. you are walking along the street. Suddenly yoii come across the horrible spectacled Of course no policeman is in sight,! uui juu iwuicuiaiciy rusa tu me cor f. it. I ner and push the button. There is a whizzing sound, and in ; about three seconds the 'iron doori bursts, open and a blue-coated guardian of the peace shoots out, club in hand, ready to cope with the desperate law breakers." . - Mr. Smith is confident that as soon as he can gain an f interview-with Director Beitler, the organization of the company wril be assured, as sev eral prominent local capitalists are eager to invest morjey in the scheme ABOUT HATS. Orlain of the Tall Hat Its Parlla ' mentarr Use. - Youth's Companion. The tall hat, variously called "chirri' ney pot, "stove pipe, "cylinder and what not, became fashionable in Pans in 1790, soon after the death o Franklin, in whose honor it was known as "chapeau Franklin." In spite of numberless changes of. style, it has maintained its ground ever since, un expected as such a result would have seemed at its first introduction. For a time this style of hat was consider ed revolutionary in Germany and Russia; any one wearing a "cylinder" was liable to punishment; but the evil reputation soon, passed away, and the tall, stiff hat, the ugliest head covering. that was ever worn and the most ridiculed, outlives all. other styles. ' In a celebrated beer garden in Mu nich the' Hof brauhaus, any man dar ing to appear in a cylinder is likely to have it crushed flat over his head, time-honored tradition declaring that here, if anywhere, a talLhat is out of place.- ' .'?;. V . '" ' On the -contrary, no nonoraoie member sits in the English House of Commons without Iris "pot" hat on his head. - If he rises to address the House, greet a friend or cross the room, he must hold his shiny tile in his hand. Should his name be men tioned in the speech of another mem ber, he lifts his hat respectfully. If it is in his hand when his name is ut tered etiquette requires him to clap it hastily on his head in order that he may lift it with proper deference. -.L. : T.. T i: in one ,oi tne Cjuivycau rania ments, when the president finds it necessary to end an arghment, he gravely puts on his cylinder. Though it happened nearly thirty years ago, people still laugh at the recollection of a .bertain president who, to close a celebrated debate, took up his neigh bor s hat by mistake. It was far too big for him and, falling down about his ears, snuffed him out completely from the gaze of the crowded house. 'Less aggressive, but equally strik ing to a stranger is the Englishman's fashion of covering his face with his tall hat as soon as he has taken his seat in his pew'in church. 7 The Arabs, when they wish to pro nounce their most forcible malefiic tion, say : "May thy soul know.no more rest than the hat on the : head of a European." ?: r V V- i 5 Bnclden's Arnica Salve. ; ; The bett Salve in the world lor Cuts Bruises, ; Sores, Ulcers, Salt - Rheum Fever, Sores, Tetters, Chapped Hands Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions and positively cures Piles or no pay is required.- It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by - Robert R. Bellamy,-Wholesale and Retail Drug gists, t XOMflERCIAL WILMIN G T O N M A R-K E T. STAR OFFICE. March 21,' v qptt?txc i.TTTRPPNTTNE Market steady at 33 cents per gallon. Sales at these figures. . ' . - .r1. -. . ROSIN. Market i firm at $1 15 'per bbl-for Strained and $1 20 . for Good Strained. TAR. Steady' at. $1 20 per bbl. pt 280 as. : - - ; CRUDE TTIRPTTMTTNE -Distillers quote the market firm at $1 00 ! for Hard, and $1 90 for Yellow Dip : and Virgin. " ... ' -. PEANIITSFflrmffj's stock QUOted at 45 to 55 cents per bushelof 28 pounds. Market quiet, ' ; COTTON. Dull at quotations : . Ordinarv; 3 ' cts g n Good Ordinary-. . . ; . . 5 ' " low Middling..!.'... 5 Middling. . . ; . ... . . .i. 6 Good Middling. ... : . 6 9-16 : RECEIPTS. " , , s Cotton. . . . i 128 bales Spirits Turpentine.. .. ..... 24 casks Rosin.... ........... 1.165 bbls Tar . .. ... .. : 231 bbls CrHrt Tnrn.Titine : ; . . 8 1 bbls DCMESTIC MARKETS. LOy Telegraph to the Morning Sur. Financial. New York, March 21 Evening. Sterlins' exchange auiet and firm; post ed rates 487g&489. Commercial bills 485M487. Money easy at lH2,clos ing offered at 2 per cent. Ajovernmeni securities dull but steady: four per cents 117. State securities .dull but steady; North Carolina sixes 124; fours v97j; Richmond , and West Point Terminal 13; Western Union 87J. Commercial. New YbRK. March 21. Evening. Cotton quiet; sales to-dav of .296 bales; middling uplands 6 15-16c; middling Or leans 7 3-16c: total net receipts at all United States ports 10.146 bales; exports to Great Britain 5,425 bales; to France 2,165 bales; to the Continent 2.838 bales; stock at all United States ports 1.133,757 bales. Cotton Net receipts 329 bales; gross receipts 896 bales. Futures closed quiet and steady; sales of 121.300 bales; March 6.486.50c; April 6.516.52c; May 6.60 6.61c; June 6.686.69c; July 6.776,T8c: August 6 866.87c; September 6.96 6.97c; October 7.067.07c; November 7.167.17c; December 7.2677c Southern flour quoted dull and weak; good to choice extra S3 75 5 00. Wheat unsettled, weaker and dull; No. 2 red 99 Jc in store and at elevator and $1,011 02 afloat; options closed weak and MJ4C under Saturday; No. 2 red March-97Mc; May 95Uc; July 932c Corn firmer, with, fair trading; No. 2, bo4c at elevator and 4747c afloat; options closed, weak and dc up fyc down; March 46c; May 45c; luly 45 c. Oats spot firmer and quiet; prions dull and easier; May 34c; spot. N'f 3, 34M3Mc; mixed Western 34 SSfzc: Coffee options closed firm and I 5 to 15 points up; March 13 8013 85; Stember ai2 48ai2 45; spot Rio dull anVi easy; No. -7. . 14 W0ll4?c. Suerar- stijjard A 44c; cut-loaf 5 5c; povrpered &c, granulated 4?aC. Molasses New Orleans firm and quiet; common to fancy 2836c Rice firm; domestic, fair to extra, 4J6Jc; Japan 5m5c Petroleum quiet and steady; refined in New, York at $6 30; Philadelphia and Baltimore $6 25. Cot ton seed oil quiet and steady; crude 25c- Kosin steady and quiet; strained, com mon togood, $1 351 40. Spirits tur pentine dull, but- firm at 36J37cs Pork dull; old mess $9 5010 00; new .mess ill. 0011 50; extra prime $11 50. Peanuts i uiet; fancy hand-picked 4 jci farmers S?4oc tieei quiet; family 11 00i; 50; beef -hams dull but steady an)d quoted at .$14 00l4 50; tierced beief inactive; city extra India mess $14 00y Cut meats steady but quiet;; pickled bellies 4c; shoulders 55)c; nams vQtfflc; miaaies quiet ana easy; short clear $& 39t Lard lower and mod erately active: Vlsstern steam closed at $6 47; city fi6 ); March $6 4; lujy S" 57. x reignis . v Liverpool dull and weak; cotton 9-32(1 asked; gram 334d. CHICAGO, Marchm. Cash quotations were , as louows: V'our. quiet and un changed. VWheat-Vlo. 2 spring -82c; No, a red ,86MC L,orn No; 2, 37c. Oats No. 2, 27mc Mess pork, per bbl. $9 859 87- Llard.per 100 lbs. $6 12J 6 15. Short na sides $5 455 4114. Dry salted shoulders $4 755 50. Short clear sides $6. 10. ; Whiskey $1 13. The leading futures . ranged as fol lows, . opening, i. hughest and" closing: Wheat Wo.3; March 83J, 83, 82c; May 04B42S, sac: CJorn- No. 2, March .37. 57H. 37c; May March 27. 27M, 27c; May 28. 28W28M. 27c Mess pork, per bbl March $10 00. 10 02. 9 85; May $10 15, 10 17. 10 10. Lardper 100 .Hs- March, $6 20, 6 20.6 10; May $8 25, 6 25, 6 15. Short ribs, per 100 lbs March $5 50. 5 50, 5 42; May $5 55, 5 55 5 47 J. Baltimore, March 21.--f lour dull: western super $3 003 25; western extra $3 404 00; family $4 254 75. Wheat easy; No. 2 red on spot and March 98 98Mc Southern wheat 'aiiiet: Fultz 94cl 00; Longberry 95c$l 00. Corn Southern easier; white 4546c; yel- 10W40O4VC. - . V ' - . COTTON MARKETS. By Telegraph to the Mornin Sur. March 21. Galveston, firm at 6 5-16c net receipts 1,721 bales; Norfolk, steady at net 1 receipts 657 bales; Balti more, nominal-at 6?4C net receipts - bales;Boston, quiet at ; 1 3-1 6c net re ceipts 621. bales; Wilmington, dull at 6Mc net receipts 128 bales: S Philadel phia, dull at 7c net receipts 77 bales; Sa- vannah.steady at 6c net receipts 1,602 bales; New Orleans, steady at 6c net receipts 3,621 bales; , Mobile, quiet at 6c net receipts 227 bales'; Memphis, steady at 6 5-16c net receipts 402 bales;: Aueusta, hrm at 6c net ireceiots 41 bales; Charleston, auiet at 6Uc net fb- FOREIGN TlARKETS, : Bv Cabla to the MominK Stat. " Liverpool, March 21. noon Cotton steady with - fair demand; American middling ; 3 9-16d. --Sales 10,000 bales; American 9,100 bales; for speculation and export 2,000 bales. ' Receipts 10.000 bales, of which 4,200 bales were Amer ican.; ''-i-A- -1- ' Futures firm April and May delivery 3.37-64, 3 38-643 89-64d; May and June delivery 3 89-64, 3 40-64, 3 41-643 42- 64J; Tune and J uly delivery 3 43-64a 3 44-64d; July and August delivery 3 4r 64, 3 47-643 48-fi4d; August and Senl 64d; September and October dehverv Tenders-of cotton to-day 600 bales new docket. Spirits turpentine 26s 9d. . t -1 m. . - uuitij "lalCn and April 3 37-64d. buyer; April and may "r"u uu i may - ana June 3 40-64d, seller; June and July 3 43-64d seller;" july and, August 3 46-64d, seller August and September 8 49-64d. seller ber arid October 3 51-643 52-64d. Fu tures closed barely steady, v . : - ; J J 1 . . . . American miuunng iair at 4 l-16d; trnnii mirlrililTB' 3 13-1 firl- miHillinn qsx j- . r- - f u.iuuuug u8ul low middling 3 7-16d; good ordinarv i4u;orainaiy o imou. Specimen Cases. S. H. Clifiord," New Cassel. Wis.. was troubled with Neuralgia and Rheuma tism, his -Stomach was disordered, his Liver was affected to an alarming degree, appetite fell away, and he was terribly reaucea in nesn. ana strengtn. lhrefe bottles 01 ciecxric Ditters curea him. Edward , Shepherd, .Harrisbure, 111 xxclva a luuuiufj sun uto Ul Clgur, .nA n - n'mn ni on V..o 1 f i . year s sianuing. usea inree Dottles of iiiectnc fitters 1 ana seven boxes of Bucklen's Arnica' Salve, and his lee is sound and well. John Speaker, Catawba, O., had five large Fever sores on his leg, -doctors said he was incurable. One bottle u.iecinc outers ana one dox cucklen s Arnica balve cured him entirely. Sold bv R. R. Bellamy's Drue Store. t " "HORTU & GUXT7SAA BOS." For SICIC HEADACHE, j ! --"ii .1, me ncau, ninu, 1 Pain, and Spasms at the Stomach, Pains in J the Back, Gravel, and flying Pains in the!; Body, Rheumatism, etc. - . Take four,' five or even sii of Beecham's ' Pills, and in nine cases out often,they will , give relief in twenty minutes: for the pills ! wiJ go direct to and remove the cause, the 1 cause beiagf no more nor less than wind, ! ! together with poisonous and noxious va- pours, and sometimes unwholesome frWl. ( ' Of all druggists. Price 25 cents a box. I "feb-4 D eod th sat tue 4Wly omit june jul aug. r"' Mothers' Frie nUKES CHUD BIRTH EftSY. Colvin, Iia, Dec. 2, 18S6. My wife nsedt MOTHEE'S PEIEKD before her third confinement, and says she would not be without it for hundreds of dollars. DOCK MILLS. Sent bv exnress on receiDt of Drice. tlJSO ter bot- ,tle. Book To Mothers " mailed free. ' . ' BRADFIEU3 REGULATOR CO ron BALK BY ALLDRUOaiSTS . ATUUTA, Gl. I fap.9'&W ly tuth'sa - nrra, 3p mm IanawmsKeyHablta cured at home with out pain. Book of par- I ticnlars sent tKd I VI IBJOBHSM B.Jl.WUOUJSV.ll.U. : NuaAUanta, Ga. Office lOU-i WhitehaU 8t dec 28 )&Wlv ti tb sat CURES ASSURED WEAK MEN WITHOUT " STOMACH DRUGGING. ' For all diseases of men sncb as Kcnoni Debllltr, Ittmm of Tfffor, Impotence, Lack or Development, Strietore, Kidney and uuiui-r uimcninea, vaiicoeeie, etc. i-ree iiiuHranTD iTeaiiae giving run particulars lor Inome ireatment seru sealed on application. MADE STRONG THE MARSTON CO. lo rARKrlACE, NEW YORK. dec 22 L)W 17 tu th sa ifieo Easily. Ouiclclv. Permanently Restored. ' Weakneu, Nervousness. Debility, and all the train of evils from early errors or later excesses, ' tbe results ot overwork, sickness, worry, etc Full stremrth. development, and tone eiven to every organ and portion of the body. Simple, natural metnous. immeaiaie improvement seen, r tiiiure impossible. 2,000 references. Book explanations Md proof s mailed (sealed) free. Address - ERIE MEDICAL CO., BUFFALO, N. Y my 27 D&W1 - x tu th sat DuCKO'Si ALIMENTARY ELIXIR the best Tonic for MALARIAL & other FEVERS. Highly recommended by Fhysicians of Paris, l s : E. FCUGERA & CO., New York.j it: sepl : .ly I Reasons why YOU SHOULD OEDEB. TOUK . FROM V T.W.WOOD &. SONS 1 RICHMOND, VA. GARDEN SEEDS. At 1,000 miles distance we malre It just 1 - as easy for yon to obtain the best and ( moat Improved varieties and lat- - est novelties, as we DELIVER I POSTPAID anywhere all Garden ( . Seeds at nacket and ounce rates. 'and - give 25 cts. worth extra pkt. Seeds for - each Ji.00 worth ordered. We also have epeciai uw races on teas in cait. Our GRASS, CLOVER, and Field Seed trade Is the laree6t la the Southern States most convincing ( proof of our high-grade Seeds and rea- ( eouaoie pneea. NO RISK IN SENDING MONEY through the , - - maus, ana we guarantee tne Bare arrival 01 all orders nlied by us. Full information and cultural directions . 1 of all Farm and Garden Crops is given in 1 our New Catalogue, which is the most in- ) Btroctlve ever issued. Mailed ree. Send for it . T.W.WOOD & SONS Seedsmen, RICHMOND, Va. jao 30 D tf we sat W 4t 1 - .AfrlL0G.W nW t-J 1' 1 - I r I JOHN CJ 1 STMt. ROSTON 1 Mass. - dec 6 4m .... r.r:.p:. tor ,.w.. Beeswax. for It in Boston and NO CHARGE IR COMMIS SIONS or carting. References all through the South If required. .- "J w-'i' 7- f . fl. Bowfilear 4' Co., : Boston, Mass. " ,1 Office and Warehoane, mar 7 8m. ta tu th 36 Central Wharf.
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 22, 1892, edition 1
2
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