Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / June 27, 1877, edition 1 / Page 2
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PUBLISHER'S ANWOttlf CBBWT. THE MOSNiNG STAR, the oldest daily news paper in North Carolina, is published dally, ept Monday, at $7.0J per year, f 4.00 for six months. $1.25 for three months, $1.00 for one month, to mall subscribers. Delivered to city BODBcrlbera at the rate of 15 cents per week for any period from one week to one year. THB WEEKLY STAR Is published every Frld mnrninrr at i m Der year. $1.00 for six moBths, ceuta for three months. ADVERTISING RATES ( D AI LY) . One square one day, $1.00; two day. $1.; tnree y. "J: four days, $3.00; five days, $pne weekjH-Ul, two weeks, $6.53; three weeks, $8.50; TOwmti, $10,00; twojnonths, $17.00; three , six months. $40.00; twelve months, $b0. 00. Ten lines of solid Nonpareil type make one square. All announcements of Fairs, Festivals. Balls, Hops, Pic-Nioa, Society Meeting Political Meet ings, Ac, will be charged regular advertising rates. No advertisements inserted in Local Column at any price, Notices under head of "City Items" 21 cents par hue for first insertion, and 15 cents per line for each subsequent insertion. Advertisements inserted once a week la Dally will be charged $1 .00 per square for each insertion. Ev ery other day. three-fourths of dally rate. Twice a week, two thirds of daily rate. Notices of Marriage or Death, Tributes of Re spect, Resolutions of Thanks, Ac, ate chargedtor as ordinary aavertisemente, but only half rates when paid for strictly in advance. At this rate 50 cents will pay for a simple announcement of Mar riage or Death. Advertisements to follow reading matter, or to occupy any special place, will be charged extra ac cording to the position desired. Advertisements on which no specilsdj wmberof inanrtinna ia marked will he continued Till forhla, at the option of tha nabliaher. and charged dp to the date of discontinuance. Advertisements discontinued before the time con. traded for has expired, charged transient rates for the time actually published. Advertisements kept under the head of "New Ad vertisements" will be charged fifty per cent extra. An extra charge will be made for double -column or triple-column advertisements, All announcement aad nsco m m endations of cant dictates for office, whether in the shape of coram u nications or otherwise, will be charge! merits. as advertise- Amusement, Auction and Official advertisements one dollar per square for each insertion. nnntr.t ju)vnrtiaffr will not be allowed to exceed their space or advertise any thing foreign to their regular business without extra charge at transient rates. Payments for transient advertisements must be made in advance. Known oarties. or rtraueers with proper reference, may pay monthly or quarterly, ac cording to contract. Advertisers should always specify the issue or is-i sues they desire to advertise in. Where no issue la . 1 BilnniDMAant will ha InQOrtAll In thfll Daily. Where an advertiser contracts for the paper to be is in. i sent to him daring the time his advertisement , the proprietor wilTonly be responsible for the I mailing of the paper U1K Ul UMAI w mo hum i.. nittiuii mnnt he made bv Check. Draft. Pos tal Mnnpv irrtcr TCxnress. or in Registered Letter, onlv such remittances will be at the risk of the publisher. f 'nmmnnirjitirms. rmleas thev contain important news, or discuss briefly and properly subjects of real interest, are not wanted; and, it accep i every) otb.tr way, they wUl invariably be rejected If the id, lr accepiaoie in real name of the author is withheld. Correspondents mast write on only one side of; the paper. (ormtuj max.' By WILLIAM H. BKRNAKU. WILMINGTON, N. C: Tuesday June 26, 1877. EVENING EDITION. ' . THE NEWS. Another great disaster has befallen some of our countrymen. A portion of the town of Marbiehead, Mass., lies in ashes. Bun dines covering sixteen acres of land have been de stroyed, and thousands have been rendered homeless. It is supposed to have been incendiary work. Whilst the fire is raging at Marbiehead, where fortunately no lives werejost. relief was pouring into St. John's for the benefit of fifteen thousand desti tute and homeless ones. So it is that one calamity treads close upon the heels of another calamity, and the colnmns of newspapers are lugu brious reading filled with all manner of misfortunes and crimes. The last battle between the Monte negrins and Turks seems to have been of a particularly sanguinary character. The defeat of the latter is very complete, and their loss is in calculable, whilst the heroic Monte negrins suffered very severely, fight ing as they did against more than four times their numbers. Before these words are before the reader probably the telegraph will have brought us the intelligence that severe fighting is progressing all along the Danube, as it was under stood that the Russians would make a general movement on Monday last. Iu France there is unexpected qniet under the circumstances. The National Assembly has been dissolved without commotion, and the Presi dent declares his purpose to remain in office until 1880, and that he will answer to r ranee for order both at home and abroad. The announce raent nas tne one-man power ring about it, and we trust he will be able to preserve the tranquility of the na tion. Whether he continues in office will depend very much upon what he says and does when the new Assem bly meets at Versailles, and upon the complexion of that body It turns out that the two bull-dozed patriots in Louisiana, Messrs. Dula and Chapman, who said tbey were not allowed to act as postmasters at their homes, were simply falsifying for effect. Gen. George Sheridan has investigated the matter, and recom mends their removal on account of incompetency, as they could have re turned and attended to their duties if they had so elected. He might have added, that they should be re moved for Blundering the people of Louisiana. Thus ends another slan der. It appears that Judge Hilton is net the first man of Northern birth who has (9bp his hostility and puerile prejudice to the Hebrews. In 1863 Gen. Grant exhibited the same traits. He issued an order eEetoifcg Jews from the lines of the army of the Tennessee. The New York Swisaysj 'Some years ago certain fire insn- ranee companies prohibited Jews from taking oat policies ia them; and very recently the Bar Association of this oily refused to cant for memberehi Jew." appli ed was Whilst wealthy men in the Nortli, who have grown plethoric by the war and its results, are applying class-tests and indulging aristpciatic exolusi veness, the South is welcoming all comers who are willing to contri bute to the developing of the country, and our Gov. Vance, in three or four States, tells the romantic history of the wondrous "Scattered Nation," whilst its press shows the utmost tol erance for all sorts and conditions of men, of every race and clime . and re ligion- tm GOV. HAMPTON Iff NKW lOBK, Governor Hampton's visit to New York has given occasion to much gossip among the newspaper men of the Northern section. We yesterday gave an extract from the Baltimore Gazette relative togChamberlain. The Philadelphia Ledger has a New York oorresponnent who is usually careful in his statements. He thinks there is peculiar sigmhcancy in the great South Carolinian's visit, and that he was sent for by the Tammany leaders that the threatened breach in the Democracy may bo healed. We do not attach any great importance to the gossip, but give the following that, nnr rPAAM msv ItAAn t.Vinrniicrh- J r Jy posted as to Speculations as Well as actions, lhe Ledger says: "Just after the Electoral Commission was settled, it will be remembered, there were some pretty sharp criticisms on the New York managers by the Southern De mocratic journals, with plain enough inti mations mat in tne next campaign these gentlemen would have to take back seats. and that the South and Southwest would come to the front, in order to place the party on its old oasis of success. Now, the Tammany people, seeing tne growing popu laxity of Hampton, think it is better to pis cate him, than to break with him. They are in such things astute and far-seeing men. "As heretofore stated, Mr. Tilden thinks the party bound in honor to tun him and Mr. Hendricks again, but Hampton. Wat terson, Lamar and other Southern gentle men of that school, are understood to have other convictions. Their idea is that the New York politicians have ruined the party, and that therefore there must be, for 1880, a new deal with these explana tions. Mr. Hampton's mission is one worth watching." THB HEVKNI E FRAUDS. Some of our readers do not know the precise nature of the revenue frauds in North Carolina about which so much has been said. The scoun drels who have been engaged in blackening the good name of our people, perpetrated the grossest frauds, as is charged, by collecting money from the General Government for the alleged capture and destruc tion of illegal stills that were never in operation. What is baser, and what crime deserves severer punish' ment ? Not satisfied with oppressing those who were guilty of illicit dis a tilling, the bummers have actually magnified the number of the offences and robbed the State of its good name in part. The rascality is somewhat on a par with burying mules for Union soldiers, and putting head stones to mart the graves that the Government might be cheated. It does not show a very healthy condition of affairs when a hundred students have to be suspended for in subordination, bucb is the case at Princeton where the entire Fresh man class has been sent home. There is either very defective discipline or there are "mighty bad boys," or both, when this takes place. We believe there are but two systems that work well; either let the boys govern themselves, or have strict military discipline. Among youths of the right sort the former works well. For boys who neither respect their teachers nor themselves the system of Martinet is the thing. Some of the young men at the Naval School ap pear to have acted in such a disrepu table way as to bring reproach upon themselves and the profession they have adopted a profession that has been distinguished in the past for the high honor and noble aspirations of its members. The Franks trial has not yet come off at Washington. IT. S. District Attorney Lusk from North Carolina is in Washington withjthe witnesses that have been summoned in the case. We sincerely trust that a very thorough and satisfactory examine m f'Vtmk m Li ML"' 14 uon win De maae, ana mat every guilty rascal may be convicted and punished to the utmost extent of the law. The case is regarded as singu larly interesting because it is the first one of many that will probably come to trial, as the same sort of inex cusable bad practice that prevailed in Marshal Douglas's office is said to have prevailed generally throughout the South, and in the North, too, i we may credit a Washington tele grasa. Let those who have charge Of (be civil service reform be vigi lant, be honest, be earnest, be perse admit p-fecai verin, and "let cane."'" i no guilty man es- A K ENGLAND, leginnjng of the end has pro- come.- England understands the situation the "true inwardness" of the sick man. We think it quite certain that British statesmen believe that Russia Wilt soon "dictate terms to Turkey, andln case tjiere is any despoiling to be done England means to be ready to guard her interests, and to secure possibly a' share of the Is. Her chief interest in the struggle lies in the Suez canal, and she is determined to protect and pre serve its free navigation.. .It is stated; that 20,000 British soldiers will oc-i cupy Egypt with the consent of the Khedive and Sultan. The New York Journal of Commerce says: "The conduct of the British Government in this Suez Canal business has been ex- j; ! .i T.u ceeuingty suspicious tor some time. otu Russia and Turkey have given to England: the strongest assurances that they will re spect the neutrality of the canal. Both countries are deeply interested in retaining the good will of England, and Russia espe cially has the most powerful motives for not invading the waters ot the canal, ay so doing she would only exasperate and' provoke a quarrel with England and do no; good to herself. Perhaps: the least vital; point of Turkey is her Egyptian principal ity, and ttussia lias no inducement what ever to go there. But England chooses, for ulterior purposes, to make it appear that the neutrality of the Suez Canal is imperilled by the war, and that she must fit ready to protect it at all hazards. It is ngland's policy to figure as the exclusive champion of the canal and the menu and patron of Egypt. Therefore, instead of calling an international convention of all the great European States to guarantee jointly the freedom of the canal during the war, she acts alone ia the matter. THIS COTTON CHOP. The New York Financial Chron icle publishes the following facts con cerning the cotton crop for eight years including the present: Acres Planted. Crop pound net. 1,381,800,000 1,900,300,000 1,305,700.000 1,729.400,000 1,830,800,000 1,682,700,000 2,059,029,000 1,960,920,000 1809-70 7,833,000 1870- 71 8,985,000 1871- 72 8.911,000 1872- 73........ 9,560,000 1873- 74 10,8l,0) 1874- 75... 10,989,000 1875- 76........ 11,685.000 1876- 77........ 11,500,600 Pounds per acre 1869 70 176 1870-71 191 1871- 72 147 1872- 73 181 1873- 74.. 169 Baits in the crop. Net w'g't per bate. 438 438 3,154,946 4,352,317 2,974,351 3,930,508 4,170,888 3,832,991 4,669,000 4,430,000 439 440 439 439 441 444 1874-75 154 187576. 177 1876-77 171 The table is valuable, and should be preserved. We would like to see an estimate of what the eight crops brought the average per pound and the total. It would be seen that the smallest crop brought the most mo ney. TBI PERIODICALS. Jhe Eclectic Magazine for July contains several excellent articles. We may men tion, as of special interest, a paper by Gold win Smith, entitled "The Political Destiny of Canada," a curious article on "The Re ligion of the Great Pyramid," by Richard A. Proctor, and a useful and instructive one on "The Kitchen and tne cellar;" a brilliant historic and descriptive sketch of "Montenegro and the Montenegrins," by the Right. Hon. Wm. E. Gladstone. Other noteworthy articles are "Barry Cornwall," "Translations from Heine," by Theodore Martin; "The Hopes of Theology," by Dean Stanley; "Slavery in Egypt;" and a pathetic poem entitled "A Mother's Heart." It contains a fine steel engraving. E. R. Pelton, New York. $5 a year. LittdVs Living Age, a weekly eclectic, is always good. Latterly, among other valu able papers, it contained the following articles: Wallace's "Russia," Edinburgh Review; The World of Fiction, Church Quarterly; Mrs. Lucy Hutchinson and Lady Mary Wortley Montague, Victoria Magazine; The Kitchen and the Cellar, Quarterly Review; A. Circassian Scotchman, Leisure Hour; The Income of the Estab lished Church, Spectator; Kidnapping a Sloth, Leisure Hour; with instalments of George MacDon aid's "Marquis of Lossie," of "Pauline," a remarkable new serial, and of Wm. Black's new story, and select poetry and miscellany. Price $8 a year. Little & Gay, Bostou, Mass. OUR STATE CONTEMPORARIES. ' We don't believe in gushing over Hayes, hut we can see no harm in giving him credit for doing bis duty, when so few do their duty. farboro Ethernet. - Our conception of the true policy of Democratic journals is that they should op pose him only when he is wrong, and when he is right let silence give consent. Do not mount the house-tops and proclaim that Hayes is the best and greatest than in America. Rocky Mount Mail. The Democratic party must stand where it is; not aggressive towards Mr. Hayes, but according him support and counte nance when deserved, but with the con sciousness that it contains within itself all the elements needed for national safety and regeneration. They must not be diluted by the Republicanism of even Mr. Hayes. The Democratic party may approve, but it Oped not i combine with opposing forces. Let Trimmers choose their own course. They may possibly pick up some stray re wards. But, if that is the inducement, let it be understood that the rewards of office are for the Republican party. IZillsboro Re carder. It may seem impolitic at this time to challenge Mr. Hayes' right to the Presi dency, but something mute than policy is due to the American people. The liber ties and rights of the people must be pro tected, and it will not do to suffer the prin ciple to be established as a political maxim that fraud of any kind will" be pardoned, or condoned, if it happens to be success ful. True the country may not be able to do mere than to offer a solemn pretest, but Mr. Tilden is the man to do it, and the refrain should be caught up and wafted from one end of the"country to the other, if for no other reason, that succeeding generations might profit by our example. Phartfftte Observer. 1 1 vm lably crjRRENT OOfltfltBIfT - The misgoyernment of cities has become intolerable, and it has been proposed to give property espe cial powers in municipal affairs in order to check the abuse. This is opposed on the ground that it would limit the suffrage. The dogmatic assumption heTe is that the privilege of alt men to vote on all subjects is a sacred and inviolable and absolute right which the State may not in fringe upon any grounds of expe diency. In truth there are no such absolute rights at all in the indi vidual. The community has a right to good government. iVo. Sum ner, of Yale. "If Mr. Hayes is not a legal President, who is responsible ? Not he; but our overwhelmingly Demo cratic House of Representatives at Washington, which, backed by a grand popular majority of three hun dred thousand with a surplus of twenty-three votes in the Electoral College with a victory, cleat and indisputable, recognized by the coun try and the, world wttn right, jus tice, the constitution and the people on its side went to dickering, dodg ing and compromising, and got beat en, as it deserved to be. W hat tyro in the law does not know that the de cision of dully constituted arbitrators is as legal and as binding as the ver diet ol a lurv or the magment ot a ourt. Cok P. Donan, in JRtdeigh News. The true extent of the social change that has occurred in the South will not be known until the returns of the national census of 1880 come to be published, wheu it will be discovered that the whole South has made very decided progress in manu factures, mining, agriculture, rail roads and education. This develop- ment, it is true, win Dear no com parison with that of the North and West, but under all the circumstances will be found very gratifying. As for the cherished memories of the Confederate struggle, it is not pos sible to obliterate them, as we see that the literature and minstrelsy of Scotland still idolize the Jacobite re bellion, and as most of the past his toric conflicts are idolized in much the same way in Continental Europe. So long as these things produce no actual trouble, they may be safely tolerated and overlooked, and need cause no ill-feeling. Philadelphia JVortfo American, Kep. Death ol a Brave Soutnerner Capt. Catesby Ap R. Jones who died in Selma, Ala., on the 20th, from the effects of wounds received in a personal difficulty with Mr. J. A. Harral, was one of the most capable and gallant officers in the Confederate service. As soon as his State seceded he resigned his commission in the United States navv, and was in ac tive service during the whole war, He was First Lieutenant of the Merri- mac at the time of her engagement with the fleet in Hampton Koads. The Selma Times says: "Capt. Catesby Ap II. Jones has a history, and his is a name that will live in history. In Selma he was known generally as a quiet, unobtru sive gentlemau, as a polite, elegant friend, as a tender, loving husband and indulgent father, as a model gentleman without shame and with out reproach in ail the walks of life; but in Virginia, he was known not only for these qualities, but also as the daring soldier, as the brave un flinching opponent of oppression, as the hero who almost unaided held aloft the Southern flag on a day that will always be illustrious in the annals of the South." TWINKLINGS. They play base-ball on Sunday in Bethlehem of Pennsylvania. Lafayetteplnd., is about to send 1,000 head of fat cattle to England. Somebody wants to know if the seat of war on both aides of the Danube is not about worn out. We have put off buying a pair of dumb bells for exercise. It will soon be time to slam around at mosquitoes. Her ald, P. I. Mary Clemmer says she ia not a blue stocking. What nine does she belong to? N. T. Herald. Femi-nine. Norris town Herald. One of our fellow-citizens pre sented us with a new lead-pencil. Such email Fabers are thankfully received. Whitehall limes. A Southern physician thinks dyspepsia would be unknown in the South but for hot bread and the frying-pan. Philadelphia Ledger. The Chicago city council has prohibited the retailing of fireworks in that city, imposing a penalty of not leas than $25 nor more than $100 for violation. A German who had just landed was before the city court last week. He spoke seven words, all the English he bad learned coming over, and was fined $7 for profanity. Norwich Bulletin. When you have seen a woman twisting up herbaek hair, and holding twenty-three hair-pins in her mouth, while she tells a neighbor on the other side of the street how to make strawberry short-cake so the man can't find the strawberry, the secret of Demosthenes' successful training With the pebbles is ao longer a mystery. SOUTHERN ITEMS. The Inoxville Tpihww has ab sorbed ten different papers in its day. Savannah (Ga.) Newai Madison county is called the land of chinquepina and ox carts, but for sterling independence and full smoke-houses it is par excellence the productive county in Georgia. Nashville American'. Gen, N. B. Forrest and family are at Hurricane Springs. Quite a number of his old escort, who live in the neighborhood, visited him Monday last, and there is talk of a reunion of his comrades during his stay, there. ' Wm. Parker, of Hamblen coun ty, Tenn., was killed by a blow with an iron poker in the hands of his step-daughter, on the 11th inst. Parker slapped bis daughter in the face, and she retaliated by striking him on the head with a poker. He died next day. The girl was lodged (in jail for lack of bail. She is seventeen and he only twenty-five years of age. POLITICAL POINTS. A recent decision of the Su preme Court relieves Arkansas of $16,000, 000 of carpeVbag debt. Powell Clayton's railroad bonds were declared unconstitu tional, and therefore void. - The noble Indian is whipping our soldiers in Oregon, handsomely. Let us reduce the army. Oinn. Times. If the E resent army is too. large to overcome l,uu adians, many of them squaws and pa pooses, let It be reduced indeed. Courier- Journal, Dem. Give Mr. Hayes all due com mendation, but never forget that the inter ests of all classes, as well of morals as of law nay, the very perpetuity of our insti tutions demand tnat tne parw oi which he is the head be swept from the control of the country. Montgomery Awoernser, item. General Butler is the only American statesman who can safely look two wavs at the same time, and this with the General is a sift of nature rather than an acamrement of experience, it Mr. Hayes imagines that he can satisfy both the West and Jiiasi on me suver ouesuou, he is a more foohsh man than anybody has hitherto believed him to be. Bait. Gazette, Dem. PERSONAL. Gen. Shields has UBGn twice a Senator. - Dumas has become "insufferably haughty." Jrunch reports want as using that word "thanks." -- Rev. Joseph Cook, the cele brated Boston preacher, was married yes terday to Miss Hemingway, of Fair Haven, Conn. Mr. Seligman is probably will ing to have his case before Judge Hilton submitted to a Jewry of his peers. Boston Bulletin. After Washington Gen. Grant is the President who will occupy the largest place in the history of the United btates. London limes. lhe fhiladeipbia Times re marks: Some of the Annapolis cadets turn up as guilty of conduct decidedly un becoming officers and gentlemen. The Duke of Wellington fre quently misspelled his own name. The Duchess of Marlborough had five ways of spelling ber patronymic. A Parisian doctor has discovered a rapid remedy for gout. He has cured Marshal Canrobertand will presently tackle Prince Crortachakon. A correspondent of the Boston Transcript accuses Gail Hamilton of having passed herself off as Mr. Blaine while she was on the railroad from Augusta to Port land with Mrs. Blaine, who has a pass for Blaine and wife. Fred Douglass advised the col ored people lately to get money and save it He said: "Without money there is no leisure; without leisure, no thought: with out thought, no progress." And yet some of the wisest, best and greatest of mankind lived and died in poverty. We are grieved to learn that Mr. A- R Watson, for several years city editor of the Macon Telegraph, but better and wider known as a Southern poet of rare excellence, died last Tuesday night of gastric fever. He was about 89 years of age. Though born in Virginia, he had, by long residence, become thoroughly identi fied with Georgia and her people. Augusta Sentinel. COMMERCIAL. WILMINGTON MARKET. The official or opening quotations below are posted at the Produce Exchange daily at 1 P. M. , and refer to prices at that hour. STAR OFFICE, June 261 P. M. SPIRITS TURPENTINE. The market opened strong at 28i cents per gallon bid for country packages. No sales up to the closing of our report ROSIN. The market was firm at $1 45 for Strained and $1 47i for Good Strained. We hear of sales of 600 bbls Strained at $1 45 and 600 do Good Strained at $1 47i per bbl. TAR Market quiet and steady at $1 80 per bbl, the receipts of the day selling at that figure. CRUDE TURPENTINE Market steady and unchanged, the receipts of the day selling at $1 25 for Hard, $2 10 for Yellow Dip and $2 30 for Virgin. COTTON. The market for this article was firm and unchanged, with sales re ported of 24 bales as follows: 4 bales at 9 cents, 5 do at 10 cents, 14 do at 10i cents, and 1 do at 11 cents per lb. The following are the official quotations: Ordinary 9i cents lh uooa ordinary iu Low Middling iu " Middling 7. U " 4 Quotations conform to the classifications of the American Cotton Exchange. . RECEIPTS. DAILY RECEIPTS, Cotton 5 bales. Spirits turpentine 615 casks. Rosin... 1884 bbls. Tar 38 " Crude turpentine 61Q " IB? TELEGRAPH. DOMESTIC ITfAKItET. New York. June 3Q Noou. Stocks weak and declining. Money 1 percent. Gold opened at 105 and closed at 105. Sterling exchange lone 488, sbort 490. Governments slightly weaker. State bonds dull. Commercial. Flour quiet and unchanged. Wheat firm Corn a shade firmer. Pork firm at $14 50 Lard steady; steam $9 209 25. Spirits turpentine steady at 3131c. Rosin firm at $1 901 95 for strained. Freights firm Cnttnn rmint midfllinor nnlnnrta 1 1 A .to middling Orleans 11 cents; sales of 45(3 Daies. mures opened nrmer, as iollows: July 1L7211. 74 cts; August 11.8411.80 cts; September ll.78tl.8l cts; October 11. 45H.47 cents; November 11.2811.30 cents; Uecemberll.29ll.ai cents, -FQKE1GN MABKKTS. Liverpool, June 80 Noon. Cotton -firmer; middling uplands 6 3-16d; middling Orleans 6fd; sales of 7,000 bales, including 1,000 bales for export - and specu lation; receipts 10,809 bates, 6,800 of which were American. Futures l-32d better; mid dling uplands, 1. m. c, June and July de livery, 6 3-1 6d; July and August 6 3-1 6d 6 7-82d; August and September delivery, 6 9-32d; September and October delivery, 6 ll-32d; shipped in May, per sail, 6. 3-lQd ; new crop, shipped November and Decem ber, per 'sail, 0 9-38d. LATER. Middling uplands, 1. m. a, October and November delivery, 6fd. The sales of American cotton to-day were 5,200 bales. BY TBLEGRAPHUff iCTfr 0B)ffi)fETf tb j Afternoon Reports' WASHINGTON. The Administration and the Souili- weatern Klephants Tlie Democrat ic Gathering at the White Sulphur The Storm In the Northwest. Washington, June 20. The latest programme outlined by thq administration, to shelve its southwestern elephants, is to give Postmaster General Key the isupreme Judgeship, tsnstow uie uircuit Judgeship, and Gen. Pillow the mission to Mexico, lyner will become postmaster General. j It is asserted on -good authority that Messrs. Cox4 Morrison, Bayler, Good and Blackburn have signified their intention to be on hand at the Democratic gathering at the White Sulphur Springs next month, which promises to be large. yesterdays storm extended from the Lakes to the Ohio river, and at last ac counts had reached Columbus, Ohio. But few fatalities are reported. The weather reports this morning indicate that the storm had exhausted itself. No cniftidnar 1UU fit signals ordered. FORJKIGN INTELLIGENCE. Fearful Contest Expected aU---MmmL- chakc Tories KetreatinKtrow 1U Dobrudscha Buaslan Movement for Crossing the Danube-Turkish SucceBen In Asia Confirmed Excite ment in Constantinople Against Hie military A utborltlea Bombard ineniof Rnsicliak,&c, dec, - London, June 26. The Standard has the following from Vienna: "It is supposed the Czar will leave Bu charest for Alexandria, to be pretest at the crossing thereabouts, which is expected either Tuesday or Thursday. "A fearful contest is expected at Kost chuk. "There are eight hundred cases of ty phoid fever in the Russian hospitals, " The Daily News' special from I brail re ports that the Turks have retreated to wards Medeje, on the line of the Knstendje railway, and that the whole north end of Dobrudscha will be abandoned. It is not likely that they will make a stand this side of Silestria. The Fourteenth Corps, under Gen. Zim mermanu, will cross tbe river as rapidly, as' possible. It will be joined by the Fourth Corps, now in the direction of Rina, and will march south with tbe greatest dispatch. It is not known yet whether this army will form the column of advance between Var na and Shumla. It seems probable that to these two coips will fall tbeduty of re ducing Silestria. and perhaps Shumla. It is further likely that another passage; ol the uanuoe will oe attempted some where between Guirgero and Turner Ma gruelli, within the next few days, without awaiting Gen. Zimmermann's advance, which cannot he available to turn the Turks' position about Rutscbuk, under three weeks. Moukhtar Pasha's successes iu Asia are confirmed. Tbe Turkish losses in Montenegro, during the recent engagements, were 10,000. A special dispatch from Vienna to the limes h as tbe following: "In Constantinople the agitation against Radif Pasha, Minister of War, and all the military authorities, is on tbe increase. The success in Montenegro, so far from calming this excitement, has rather increased it, it being deemed downright folly, almost trea son, that in order to gain successes at com paratively trifling points, the important the atre of war in Asia should have been so wo- fully neglected." The Post s Bucharest special, says the corps now entering tbe Dobrudscha is or dered to advance auicklv un to the line of Czernavoda, and tbe Knstendje railway. and after this arrival the right wing or the centre army will force a passage higher np tne stream. The Daily News dispatch from Rustchuk, says Sunday night's bombardment at this town by the Russians was terrible. The Turks stand the fire with great coolness, and they reply vigorously and with good aim. A shell has fallen ia the prison and suied two prisoners, and several non-com batants have been killed and wounded. Shots have struck the German, English and .Belgian Consulates. Shells have burst near the hospital, bntthe Russians' fire seems di rected to the centre of the town. Constantinople, June 36. It is reported that the English Consulate at Rustchuk has been entirely destroyed by the bombardment. NBW YORK. Arrival at Presidential Party en roate for Boston Appointment of Bishop Gibbon to be Archbishop or Baltimore ArcbbUbop Barley's Health Broken Down. New York, June 86, President Hayes and party arrived last night on their way to Boston. He was ac companied by Secretaries Evarts and Schurz, Attorney General Devina, and Postmaster General Key. Tbe train reached Jersey city one hour behind time. The Presidential car was taken on a steamer and conveyedjto the Harlem end of the New York and New Haven Railroad. The party reached Boston at 3:30 this morning. A Baltimore dispatch, in regard to tbe appointment of Bishop Gibbons, of Rich mond, to be Archbishop of Baltimore, says: Archbishop Bay ley for some months has been in exceedingly bad health, and was threatened with softening of the brain, which is now said to have supervened, and which has hopelessly incapacitated htm for further active serviee in the church. In February Bishop Bayley went to Europe for the recovery of his health, but his malady developed so rapidly that on his arrival there it was found necessary to con. vey him to the Trappis monaslery.in the north of France, where he now remains. Produce the Cash ! ND BUT YOUR FAMILY GROCERIES OV CHAS. D. MYERS & CO. Produce the Cash ! T THE COUNTER OP CHAS D. MYERS ft CO. eWL ii fi - :. - m m rroauce tne uasn i ND GET ITS PULL VALUE ! IN FRESH SUPPLIES, AND AT THB VERY LOWEST MONET FIGURES. CHAS. D. MYERS ft CO. Produce the Cash ! jND WE WILL GIVE YOU ITS EQUIVALENT IN THB CHOICEST AND THE FRESH EST FAMILY GROCERIES IN THIS CITY, And Deliver them Promptly at your Residence . CHAS. D. MYERS ft CO,. je24-t(D&W 5 ft 7 North Front at. Corn, Hay and Meal. 2000 BHshe,sCORN Bales HAY. KA'll BusheWFresh Western Ground MEAL,' For sale by ADRIAN ft VOLLERS, EuutiieasJ corner Front and Dock eta. je 17-tf PT liMW'KlW ROMWOOD (not aged 1 1 a 11 U U over six moDioij, 01 onlv 130! cost fi?vt New Pianos at wholesale. Great bargain r rr, su, Hups, mo; & stops, stoDB.fW; 7 stops, $60; 9 stops stops X 55 to 75. Bare onnortn . nities. New organs at Wholesale. Beware imita tions. Best offer ever made, READ. Sent on 5 to 19 days' test trial. Money refunded ana freight paid both ways if unsatisfactory. Bat. 1856. AGENTS WANTED. Discounts to Teachers, Ministers Ac ASSreas PAMOtL V. BEATTY, Washington, N. j. Add a week la your own town. Terms inrl r. (pUU ouur tfree. II. HALLBTT A )., Portland, Maine. on Ait . TO RATIONAL TSXAWt.Jn sickness erery portion ot the body sympathizes with the seat ef the disorder. When the stomach fails to perform its functions, tbe liver, bowels, nerves, muscles. veins, arteries, &c, are all more or lees affected These delinquents require a medicine combining tbe properties of a stomachic, an alterative, a pur- Stive, atonic, and sedative to bring them back to eir duty: aad all these elements, in their purest and most effective forms are united ia TARRANT" H EFFERVESCENT SELTZER APERIENT, the great Saline Remedy for Indigestion, and its conco mitant consequences aoia py an flmggirts. dfCCtn Otnn A Week to ts. SIS Outfit UU J IU U Pan. P.O. CKERT. Augusta, Maine. $12 A DAY AT HOME. Aeents wanted. Out fit and terms free. tru: XFB & CO., Aagusta, Maine. Drunkard Stop ! C. C. BEERS, M. D. f formerly or Boston) has a harmless cure for INTEMPERANCE , which can be given without the knowledge of the patient. Also one for the OPIUM HABIT! Permanent cores guaranteed in both Send stamp itr fcviowjce. ask druggist nr it. Address BEERS A CO.. Birmingham, Conn EXTRA PINE MIXED CARDS, with name, JbO IS) cents., post-paid. L. JONES ft CO., Mas N. Y. l n Ann day at home. Samples worth $5 3)3 IU free Sttkboh ft Co., Portland, Maine. je 10-4WU& W SPORTSMEN'S Oil-Tanned Moccasins BOOT MOCCASINS, SHOE PACKS, LADIES' MOCCASINS 1 CAMP SLIPPERS, made from carefully selected stock, in the best ma ner, at prices to suit the times. V send ror circular ana trice L,irt8. MARTIN S. HDTOHINQS, P. O. Box 368, oct 17-DftTftf Dover, New Hampshire. SECOND CIS AMD DRAWING Kentucky Cast Distribution Company. Louisville, Ky Judo 30. 1877. iqio nnn hastt in mrTS! WW-vyww vwa u -a. jl sw NEW ORGANIZATION ! NEW SCHEME ! NEW MANAGEMENT FARMERS' ft DROVERS' BANK, Louisville, Ky., Depository. THE KENTUCKY CASH DISTRIBUTION CO. authorized by a Special Act of tbe Legislature for the benefit of the PUBLIC SCHOOLS UP FRANK PORT, will have the SECOND of the SERIES of GRAND DRAWINGS ia the City of LOUISVILLE, KY., SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 18TT, At Public Library Hall. $60,000 for only TEN READ THE LIST OP GIFTS. 1 GRAND CASH GIFT $00,06 1 Grand Cash Gift $45,000 1 Grand Cash Gift. 15,000 I Grand Cash Gif t . '. 10,000 3 Grand Cash Gifts. $5,000 each 15,000 5 Grand Cash Gifts, $2,000 each 10,000 10 Cash Gifts, $1,000 each 90,000 40 Cash Gifts, $500 each 30,000 100 Cash Gifts, $400 each ... 28.000 300 Cash Gifts, $100 each. 30,000 500 Cash Gifta, $50 each 85,000 6000 Cash Gifts, $10 each 60,000 6972 Cash Gifts, amounting to $310,000 Whole Tickets $10, Halves,? $5, Quarter $2 50. II Tickets $100, 33tf Tickets $300, 56 Tickets $500. DRAWING POSITIVELY JUNE 30th, 1877. And every three months thereafter. The present management emphatically notify the public that there will be no postponement of this drawing, as is usual in such enterprises, bat that it will positively and unequivocally take place on tbe date named. This, the Second Drawing, will be conducted like the first, to the fairness or which the following named gentlemen have testified: uon. Aivin ouvall, late Chief Justice Sup. Court of Ky. James G. Dudley, Chairman Board of School Trustees. Grant Green, Cashier Farmers' Bank of Kentucky Hon. S. I. M. Major, Public Printer State of Kentucky. Hon. Thomas N. Lindsay, Pres't Farmers' Bask of Kentucky. Hon. Thomas C. Jones, Clerk of Sap. Court of Ken tacky. Judge R. A. Thompson, Pres'dg Judge Franklin County Court. James G. Crockett, Clerk Franklin County Court. Remittances can be made by Mail, Express, Draft, P. O . Order or Registered Letter, made payable t G. W. Barrow ft Co. Tickets paid promptly and without discount. Reliable Agents wanted. Address all communications and orders for tick ets to G. W. BARROW ft CO., Gen'l Managers, Courier Journal Building, Louisville. Kv Or THOS. H. HAYS A m LTJ.I' oeuu mr circular. 037 Broadway, New Yirk. june a uasw un )nne 29. M BTALLIC CARTRIDGE, MILITARY, MUNI iMUAKU " CruSEDMQOR" RIFLES RiX'KL ALL OTHERS IN AOCP RACY, STRENGTH AND SAFETY Ho Frsmature Discharge Ever Ocean Every Rifle warranted good shooter. Calibre 40, 44 and 50-100 o f ian inch, and of any desired length. Charge ef powder from 50 to M5 grams. Weight of bulla from 220 to 548 grains. Stock, plain; also Pistol grip and checked. Sights: plain ; Globe and Peep Sights; Vernier with interchangeable from Bights aad Wind-gauge. Every variety of am munition for above gone, constantly on hand. Prices from 30 to SHARP scot 21-DAWtf RIFLE COMPANY, Bridgeport, Conn. High-Bred Dogs. Ei iNGLISH, IRISH AND GORDON SETTERS of the Choicest Bteod, with guaranteed pedigrees. Por sale by nov'I-DftWtf P. WELSH, York, Pen b. Snort inor Hncrc wnr.w v vgvi Breeding, kennel op a. :x waddell, (Formerly of New Jersey), ED IN A, KNOX COUNTY; MISSOURI. The Finest Strains of SETTERS , POINTERS, SPANIELS AND OTHER SPORTING DOGS, Bred from both Imported ami Native Stack, at mo derate priceu,,, j ,.u ., . -,uaplPWtf THE SNEIDER BREECH-LOADING Prices, SO OO to $250 OO. MUZZLE-LOADING GUNS ALTERED TO BREECH-LOADING, 'Pricea, $4 OO to $14)0 OOc Clark & Sneider, h iron MANACEjES Pratt Street, iisIWnBk Baltimore. dec 3-DftWU Send for Catalogue.
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 27, 1877, edition 1
2
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