P U II E.ISITKRS 'ANIfOtTJfCKaTEirr. TEX HOKSTSQ STAB, the bMftst JaOy Bem naper in North Carolina, la published dally, except Monday, at $7 00 per year, -$4 00 foe six months, i 00 for three months,-$1.60 -for two months; 75c for one month, to mall anbeoribers.- Delivered to city subscribers at the rate of 15 cents per week for any period from one week to one year. THE WEEKLY STAB Is published every Friday morning at $1 60 per year, $1 00 for six months 60 cents for three months. " ' ADVERTISING BATES (DAILY). One square one day, $1 00; two days, $1 75 three days, $2 50 ; four days, $3 00 ; five days, $3 60 : one week, $4 00; two weeks, $6 50 : three weeks $3 60 ; one month, $10 00 ; two months, $17 00 ; three months, $24 00; six months, $40 00; twelve months, $60 00. Ten lines of solid Nonoarell type make one square. All annnrmramenta of Fairs. Festivals. Flora. Pio-NJcs. Sooietv Meetings. Political M ngs, Ac, will be charged regular ad vertlsinjr rates. Notices under head of "City Items" 30 cents per line for first Insertion, and 15 cents per line for each subsequent insertion. Xo advertisements Inserted In Local Column at any price. Advertisements Inserted once a week In Daily will be charged $100 per square for each Insertion. Every, other day, three fourths of dally rate. Twice a week, two thirds of dailr rate. Notices of Marriage or Death. Tribute of Re spect, Resolutions of Thanks, fco., are charged for as ordinary advertisements, but only half rates when paid for strictly in advance. At this rate 30 cents will pay for a simple announcement of Marriage or Death. Advertisements to follow reading matter, or to occupy any special place, will be charged extra according to the position desired Advertisements on which no specified number of insertions Is marked will be continued "till for bid," at the option of the publisher, and charged np to the date of discontinuance. Advertisements discontinued before the time contracted for has expired, charged transient ates for time actually published. Amusement, Auction and Official advertisements one dollar per square for each insertion. An extra charge will be made for double-column or triple-column advertisements. Advertisements kept under the head of "New Advertisements" will be charged fifty per cent, extra. All announcements and recommendations of candidates for office, whether in the snap, of communications or otherwise, will be charged as adve rtisements. Remittances must be made by Check, Draft Postal Money Order, Express, or in Registered Letter. Only such remittances will be at the risk of the publisher. Communications, unless they contain impor tant news, or discuss briefly and properly subjects of real Interest, are not wanted : and, if accept able In every other way, they will Invariably be rejected If the real name of the author is withheld. Contract advertisers will not be allowed to ex ceed 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 parties, or strangers with proper reference, may pay monthly or quar terly, according to contract. Advertisers should always specify the issue or ssues they desire to advertise in. Where no Is sue is named the advertisement will be Inserted n the Daily. Where an advertiser contracts for the paper to be sent to him during the time his advertisement is in, the proprietor will only be responsible for the mailing of the paper to his ad dress. The Morning Star. By WILLIAM II. BERNARD, WILMINGTON, N. C. Monday Evening, Sept. 4, 1882. EVENING EDITION. THE RADICAL LEGISLATURE OF IS 68 69. As we have had occasion to say often, there is nothing comes home to a people more nearly than exces sive and oppressive taxation. The reason why the whole people have been so tolerant of the tariff is that they have paid $1.50 tax on their $3 hat and f 1.25 tax on their $3 shoes and have not known it. It is so, too, with the revenue tax to the majority. They have been heavily taxed, but did not feel it, because they paid it to the dealer instead of the tax collector. " He that is taxed, not seeing how you tax him, Let him not know't and he's not taxed at all." We may extend the remark and say that the people of North Carolina have been far more tolerant of Rad icalism than, they would be if they had imprinted upon their minds pre cisely what it has done against them in their pockets. If every honest la boring man and hard-pressed tax payer in the State knew the extent of the plundering of the old Radical party; if they knew the actual excess of taxes they had paid because of these plundenngs, we feel certain that two things they wotrrd never do forgive the plunderers and vote to put them and their successors in of fice. It is the duty of the public press to recur to the past and to remind the over-burdened taxpayers what they have suffered in the past. Reminded of these things they will understand better what they may expect in the future if the plunderers are restored to power. In matters of govern ment nothing is more important than to recur to first principles and to ex-, amine into the management of par ties.. The test of the worth of prin ciples is to reduce them to practice. Politicians as a class are not careful as to what they promise. They go for winning. Parties in convention may declare that they favor this or that principle or measure, but may fail in their practice. Let us bring the opposition to the only safe test. Let us examine into their record and see how they did when in possession of the State Government. In 1868 the Radicals got full pos session. No one can ever forget those times. A visit to Raleigh w2s enough to give a patriot the blues for a twelve-month. Corruption lift ed its unblushing head in the capi tolT Ieculaticra, fraud, bribery, de bauchery, were the order of the day, and marked the progress of the night. It was a time of political prostitution. 'Li ttlefield and his set were masters of the arena, and ITbrth Carolina, was prostrate. Pre datory beasts and human ghouls held carnival in the halls of debate and in the chambers of conference, i But no pen can draw the lines; no brush can deepen the colors enough. ' What did the Radicals when they got into power, ? ! In the first place the Legislature sat for nearly an 'en tire year. The exact time was 304 days. This useless, foolish, corrupt long session resulted as might have been expected. It cost the poor ople the stripped and pealed and hard-worked, tax -oppressed whites, $430.958.68 four hundred and thirty thousand nine hundred and fifty eight dollars and sixty-eight cents. This is what the Radical Legislature of North Carolina of 1868-'69 cost you, the people. As long as memory lasts this period of wholesale plun der and corruption should never be forgotten. Let the honest tax-payers never forget that when the Radical party had full sway in North Caro lina that they spent upon themselves $430,958.68 during one Legislature. In contrast take the Democratic Legislature. The total expenses of the two sessions of 1879-80 were $71,293.80. We see that tbe sum wasted by the Radicals in paying themselves for one Legislature would last for nearlv twelve vears under y Democratic rule. Do not lose sight of this important fact. Cut it out and paste it in your hat. The Legislature of 1880-81 cost but $56,259.26. At this rate of ex pense the sum expended by the Rad icals in paying themselves during the Legislature of 1868-69 would have been sufficient to meet the expenses of legislation under Democratic rule for nearly sixteen years. Be sure to remember that for Legislators are to be elected this year. We shall show .next what the Long Legislature did how the men who paid themselves $430,000 handled the people's money in other things.. A REBELLION, . There is a rebellion going on among the more intelligent colored voters. We have noted evidences of this in New York, Washington, Vir ginia, South Carolina, and some little indication in our own State. The negroes have been drawing the ma chine for seventeen years ano! the few white bosses have sat hieh above their heads and cracked their whips. It seems that the tidal wave of revo lution has struck Pennsylvania also. The Philadelphia Times has this to say : "The rebellion in the colored vote against Bosses and machine methods is one of the gravest problems the machine leaders have been called upon to meet. It is all the more grave because it was wholly unexpected; and when it is remembered that the colored vote of Philadelphia holds the balance of power between the two parties and that it is also the balance of power in the State, the Bosses are justly alarmed at the formi dable defection in the machine line. An other trouble is that the leaders of the colored movement for emancipation from the Bosses are unpurchasable. " In this State in the past this could not be said. Any attempt at inde pendent action has resulted in a free distribution of "loot money," and op position on the part of the negro has been quieted. We have met with a paragraph in an exchange that shows how the re volt is widening. Turner is one of the best educated and ablest of col ored men, and was minister to Libe ria, we believe. The paragraph is as follows: 'Missouri newspapers say that it is the intention of J. Milton Turner and other leaders of the negro element in Missouri to place independent tickets in the field when ever the opportunity presents itself, as a means of punishing the Republican politi cians for their neglect of the negro." FARMING IN THE SOUTH, If a writer in the Atlanta Consti tution does not overdo the thing very much, farming in Georgia, and in deed, in the South generally, ought to be profitable. According to him an improved farm of 500 acres can be bought for $2,500. To stock' it and buy the necessary tools and a year's provisions for a family he places at $6,325. He says three fourths of this is permanent capital. The crop would be this in a good year: "One thousand and five hundred bushels of oats on one hundred acres, $1,200; 1,500 bushels of corn on 100 acres, $1,200; 300 bushels of peas, $300; 600 gallons of syrup from 5 acres of sugar cane, $300; 500 bushels cotton seed, less seed for planting, $300; 80 bales cotton on 200 acres, at $50 a bale, $4,000 ; total, $7, 800. " This estimate may be correct in some instances, but it is doubtful if so much can be realized upon an average. In North Carolina a good improved farm capable of producing such "results could hardly be bought for $2,500. In some sections it could not" he bought for . three or five times that sum. There are farmers in almost all of the coun ties who do as well or better than the suppositive Georgia ; instance.- We have published year after year and week after -week in our State gleanings many, instances of farming in various sections that equal any r in the land. In some instances we have published facts , that show ? North Carolina' farming other States and make them open their eyes as to the excellence 'of North Carolina farming wheij pur sued, intelligently and upon advanced ideas. ., ; ; . ...... There has been made more than a bale of cotton to the .cre on fields running from 100 to 300 acres. We have known authentically of such re sults. We have known of twenty one bales being made with one plough. We have read in our ex changes of very encouraging and astonishing results during this year from truck-farming. In tobacco, as our readers know, sections of North Carolina greatly excel any other por tion of the United States. There are hundreds of farmers who make from $250 to $1,200 to every field-hand they work. Some few have even gone beyond the highest figure. Farm ing, when scientifically, wisely, indus triously and economically pursued in the South, has been generally profita ble. It is never wisely or economi- callv pursued with mortgages. A A ww. word to the wise is sufficient. There is no falling off in railroad building after all. In fact the month 0 of August showed more work than w any other in railroad construction. The Philadelphia Press says there were fifty miles of track laid every working day in August. It says: "This means that a working army of over 200,000 men have teen drawing from the quick capital of the country at the rate of over a million dollars a "day, and putting it where it can never be recalled and can hardlv be expected to return at the rate of more than three per cent, per annum during the next decade. If population will follow these roads, or if they go to meet a traffic which awaits them, there need be no fear of the future; but too many have been built in order to divide a trade now amply ac commodated by existing lines." The Northern capitalists have a. failed to understand the splendid opening for investment in construct ing a road connecting Wilmington with Cincinnati or the Uhio at some other point. There is still a chance for profitable investment in railroad building in the South. HERE IT IS. What has become of that letter, which, the Star said Judge Bennett was going to aciaress to oi. LocKery, askinr for a joint canvass? Oh! where? Neic Bernian. Here it is. We copy from the Ra- leigh Neios- Observer : Newton, N. C, August 30. Capt. S. A. Ashe, Raleigh, N. C: Dear Sir: On the 22d current, at Lincoln ton, in the presence of Col. James A. Leak, I asked Col. Dockery to meet me in a joint canvass of the State. He said that he could not make an arrangement to that effect without the concurrence of Col. Cocke, and that he would write me from Asheville in respect to the mat ter after seeing- him. Herewith I send you the letter this day received from Col. Cocke. Make such use of it as Capt. Coke and yourself deem proper. I had a splendid audience here yesterday. Cordially yours, R. T. Bennett. Asheville, N. C, August 29. Hon. JR. T. Bennett: Dear Sir: At the request of Col. Dockery I write yon. He informed me that you desired a joint canvass for eight or ten discussions some where in the State. . I decline to al low it on acoount of Capt. Coke's action toward me. You can blame no one but your chairman for my de nial of the request. I am, with great respect, W. M. Cocke, Jr., Chairman, &c. BENNETT CHALLENGES DOCKERY. Charlotte Journal. While at Newton Judge Bennett received .a letter from Mr. Cocke say ing that he wroto at the request of Col. Dockery, who bad informed him that Judge Bennett wanted ten or twelve joint discussions in the State, but that he (Uocke). woulq not allow it, and he went on to . charge the re sponsibility for not having joint dis cussions from the begiphing on the Chairman of the Democratic Execu tive Committee. This is, of course, a very poor excuse for not accepting Judge .bennetts proposition, but in order to settle-this matter once for all, we are now authorized to say this: Judge Bennett respectfully invites, nay, most eaarnestly re quests, Col. Dockery, the Republi can candidate for Congressman at large, to meet him at all of his ap pointments throughout the State, We are further authorized, if this is declined, to say that Judge Bennett will abandon all his appointments, and go to Col. Dockery's appoint ments, if Col. Dockery will divide time witn mm ana pnrsuo tne usual course of alternating in opening and closing debate. -And we respectfully call the attention "of Mr. Cocke, Chairman of the "iberalV ; commit tee, arid CoL Dookery and the public to these propositions. ' EXPERIENCE THE BEST GUIDE.-, The reason why women everywhere use Parker's Ginger Tonic is, because they have learned : by exnerience the .'best cuide that this excellent medicine overcomes des pondency, periodical headache. " indiges tion, pain in the back and kidneys, and other troubles pt Jthe fiex.'r-jBbww Journal. best and nfrequently.surpes; giho.was surgeon kMCoui& ,R01I ALL PJLRTS OF THE W OBXD. ail others. - It would be veryjnstruc-r .rate army, and a friend ofJBenIill I rtT! ? 44 tive to have all'these gathered iri one and Yancey, (gives the following ;,ac- 'P - f- ai.rTe.1o ' AT- imnrooo riOAnlo ?ri COUttt ofrthe jdiffiCnltV-'tbat OCCUlTed, -' Via ' EGYPT. . I r BEN HILL AND YANCEY..:. between Ben Yancey : " When- Mr. Hill - was sent to the .Confederate $enate.liet was much op posed to ihV war.' Mr! JYancey was a Tire-eater, and a great nater -ot President Jeff. Davis.r Mr? Hill as sumed the championship of Mr. Da vis, took sides with him and . defend ed him in everything he said and did. This so exasperated Yancey that one day in the Senate, after Hr. Hill had concluded a speech in defense of Mr. Davis, he rose in his place, and in that style of his which is simply in imitable, proceeded to charge Mr. Hill with inconsistency, and a want of ardor for the cause of the South. He then brought up Mr. Hill's past record, and finally referred to the Stephens difficulty, and inti mated that Hill was a coward. W hen he did that Mr. Hill picked up an inkstand and threw it at Yancey, just grazing his cheek-bone. Yancey, in dodging, slipped and tell back ward over his desk, thereby hurting himself slightly. That was all there was of it." "Then Mr. Hill was not the cause or producing sucn spmai injury as to eventually cause his death ?" "He did not. He was not within ten feet of Mr. Yancey." "Then the seemingly premature death of Mr. Yancey was not in any sense caused or brought on by Mr. Hill ?" "It was not. Mr. Yancey died of Bright's disease of the kidneys. This vou can state as a fact as true as Holy Writ." CURRENT COMMENT. If "Mr. Hubbell's documents" represent anything they represent "Republican doctrine." The spirit of "Hubbell's documents" crop out in all the Republican campaign docu ments and speeches; crop out in every act of " the Republican President; crop out in the acts of all his subordi nates. Mr. Hubbell has abundant "party authority" for his blackmail ing operations. He is backed by the Republican Administration. The Re publican party is pre-eminently the party of regress, not the party of progress. It refuses to touch the living questions of the day. Louis ville Courier-Journal, Dem. Mr. Houk, the drunken Re publican Congressman from the Second District of Tennessee, once declared that the shooting of Gen. Garfield was a good thing for the Re publican party. He now is appeal- jm, to the Hubbell committee, of which, by the way, he is a member, for a larere portion of the proceeds of its robber v of office-holders to assist him in securing his re-election over a Republican opponent who has been nominated to run against him. Are the clerks, laborers and scrubwomen in t he employ of the Federal Govern ment bound to pay money to elect such a fellow? Baltimore Bay, Bern. COTTON. New York Commercial Chronicle. New York, Sept. 1. The move ment of the crop, as indicated by our telegrams from the South to night, is given below. For the first day of Sept., 1882, the receipts have reached 5,055 bales, against 12,352 bales last week, 6,356 bales the pre vious week, and 4,811 bales three weeks since; making the total re ceipts since the 1st of September, 1882, 5,055 bales, agamst 15,956 bales for the same period of 1881, showing a decrease since September 1, 1882, ot 10,001 bales. The exports for the week ending this evening reach a total of 26,928 bales, of which 20,240 were to Great Britain, 961 to France, and 5,727 to the rest of the Continent, while the stocks as made up this evening are now 111,470 bales. The deliveries on contracts in the regular way were very large on Wed nesday. The market on Thursday was quiet, and tutures slightly de pressed. To-day there was a decline of 89,points, with September most freely sold, and the general specula tion very dull. Cotton on the spot showed no change in quotations down to the close of Thursday's business. The transactions of the week are without important feature, except a considerable business for export on. Monday afternoon (reported in Tues day's business), arid large specula-, tive transactions on Tuesday after noon (reported in Wednesday's busi n pss) , To-day there was a decline of 1-16'p. and a qniet market, middling uplands closing at I2fc, OUR STATE CONTEMPORARIES. The North State at, Greensboro is ecoffi. nized as the leading Republican paper in this State in point of ability, and while it: has not taken kindly to the Liberal coall- tiou movement, it supports the nominees' and fights the Democracy. In its last issue h was candid enough to write the following about the Democratic partyi; "We are aot- among. those who can see ho good and nothing out ruin .ana destruction as a result' of the past ten years of unfriendly political State control. We point with Drlde and gratification to the evidences of increasing wealth and prosperity which appear on every side. , And .with stilLgreater grati- tuae ana pnae ao we jook upon the lm- imepsp lncrewe i itj: educational -facilities for oom races wwcn can oe seen an over qrm Carolina." New Berne Journal. Jim Leach stigmatizes the North Caro lina press as i'purchaseable, licentious, sub sidized and perverted." This is cool, coming from a man who . has sold himself to the negroes for the sake of office, and the neo- ple. of North Carolina will be apt to apply these epithets to Leach rather than .. the press,. whichjbas exposed his political tur pitude and wral; obtusness.; Lance. -":' ':, ,'. ' ' v ' '.''. ,apopu- lation of H.W0, nnA William Ti I i I THE LAXEST NEWS. Sleknew Amone BrltUb Soldiers at r Mekjtii -Acconnt of Bad Water The , edopln .Entrenching their PoiU lipnareatnxfety . Cairo The rolIcLlJn.aWe to Maintain Order meoyerrof aGreeli; -Conspiracy to . massacre the Europeans In Alexan ' drla. V "'- JBv Cable to the Mornlne Star.l ' London, .September 3. :A dispatch from Alexandria reports that the English soldiers at Meks are suffering from-diarrhoea and dysentery caused by the bad water in the forts. It is stated that Gen, Wolseley has tele graphed to the authorities that it is unnec essary to prepare the Third Army Corps, as he ontv reouires a few reinforcements to fill up gaps. ; Alexandria, September. 3. The Be douins continue entrenching their positions on tho Aboukir side of Alexandria, in close proximity to the British outposts. . The Khedive has given he British per mission to cut dyes at Meks, thus inunda ting Marout Lake, and preventing an at tack by the enemy from that side. Advices from Cairo say that great anxie ty is felt there lest the prefect of police will be unable to maintain order. Despite his unceasing efforts the populace continue to menace the few remaining Europeans and threaten wholesale plunder. Alexandria; September 3. Three Eu ropeans to-day went boating on an excur sion and landed near Fort Dakhilh, west of Meks. Three shells were fired at them, and one of the excursionists and one of the crew were wounded. The officers of the British man-of-war Bitt,ern observed the incident and sent a boat to rescue the party. Arabi's cavalry pickets are reconnitering the British outposts. Gen. Sir Evelyn Wood and staff inspected the enemy's camp on Sunday evening, frcm the top of Count Zezena's house. London, September 4. A dispatch to Reuter's Telegram Company, from Alexandria,- says great uneasiness is felt in conse quence of the arrest of a native spy carry ing a letter addressed to Antono Paulo, the Greek consular agent at Siout, who is stay ing there. Paulo has been arrested. It is rumored that the police have discovered the ramifications of a conspiracy in which several Greeks are implicated, the object being the massacre of Europeans in Alex andria in the event of the British troops being seriously engaged at liamleh. YELLOW FEVER. Tbe Epidemic on the Decrease at Vlttaraora Snmmary of Its Pro eremm at Brownrvllle for tne Week- Great Destitution at Brownsville. By Telegraph to the Horning Star. Galveston, September 3. A special from Matamoras, to the News, says the epidemic is slowly on the decrease. To day the weather is cool and cloudy, which is favorable. , A small number of new cases have been reported. During the twenty four hours ending at 9 o'clock this morn ing, only three deaths were reported in the city, all from yellow fever. The fever is reported very bad at San Fernandina. Thirty cases of fever and five or six deaths have been reported at Point Isabel. So far most of tbe cases under treatment are considered light. There were two or three new cases yesterday. The American victims are generally improving. Dr. Milton is convalescent and able to be on the street again. Washington. September 3. The fol lowing summary of the progress of the yellow fever for the week ending Septem ber 2d, 1882, is furnished at the office of the Surgeon General of the Marine Hospital Service, and is compiled from official re ports from Brownsville, Texas : Date. Cases. August 27 46 August 28 82 August 29 . ..- 70 August 30 50 August 31 , 60 September 1 71 September 2 103 Deaths. 3 8 2 3 2 3 5 Total 482 26 Heretofore reported: 631 cases, and 40 deaths. Total during the epidemic, 1,113 cases, . and 66 deaths. Surgeon Murray, of the MarineJHospital Service, arrived at Brownsville on August 27th, with assistants, nurses and supplies. He immediately organized a hospital for sixty patients. There is great destitution in .Brownsville, and the Mayor is about to issue another ap peal for aid. Many of the poor decline to go to the hospital. The population of the town at the beginning of the epidemic was about 5,000. . Brownsville, September 3. The fever continues to increase in this city. For the twenty-four hours ending at 10 o'clock this morning there were seventy new cases and four deaths. The fever at : Matamoras is at the same stage. Seven deaths occurred in the last twenty-four hours. The weather is cold and damp, with- some rain at inter vals, and the outlook is not favorable. NEW YORK. Anxiety About tne Steamer Western Texas, of tne Fernandina Line Her Owner Thlnlc Bier Safe. By Telegraph to tbe Morning Star.l New York, September 4. Reports hav ing been received from Philadelphia that life-preservers, with the name "Western Texas" marked upon them, had been found off Chincateague, Capt. Spicer, of the firm of C. H. Mallory & Co., owners of the Mal lory Line of steamers, to which the West ern Texas belongs, was quesuonea mis. morning. He said he had seen the report in tbe. papers, but, it had. caused him noun-' easiness. "Capt. Risk,", said he, ;"who commands; the .Western Texas, baa been with us from boyhood up, and he would have sent, a boat ashore and telegraphed us long before this if anything serious had hap pened. I account. for the life-preservers having been found overboard in this way: The steamer was thoroughly inspected on the Friday before she left this port for Fer naudinat ;. The life-preservers, one hundred and twenty in i number, were piled up on deck, and some steerage passengers proba bly threw .several of them Overboard, and that is all there is of it. . The Western Texas is due at:Port RyaI,. S, O., this afternoon, .and we shall probably here from her before night. Port Royal, S. C, September 4. The steamer Western Texas has not arrived here as yet, and nothing has been heard of her. Shfels not due, however, until this evening. THE BRITISJI RIFLE TEAM. Their Arrival and Reception at New . - i . Jjtorls. Sunday. By Telegraph to the -Horning Star.l New York, September 8. The steamer Alaska, which "arrived here to-day, had on board the British team of riflemen who are to compete with our -National Guard at Creedmore on the 14th and 15th of this, month. The steamer was met at the lower quarantine by the steamer Hopkins, bearing Gen. ; Malireux, ex-Judge Stanton Col. John Bodine, nearly.ali the members of the ; American iRiflOi Association, a number of invited, guests and, a large detail of newsr paper men, IRELAND. ? C, '-;; ' i ' ' . The Police Strike Virtually Ended ?..The Dismissed men to be Reinstated. , i tf By Cable to the Moraine Star. f London, September 8. A dispatch to the Observer, dated Dublin, Sunday even ing,, says: The police strike Is virtually ended. The superintendent, in an Inter view with the dismissed, men, advised them to draw up a memorial askiDg that they be reinstated, and acknowledging that they committed violations of discipline. This memorial will be submitted to the authori ties this evening, and tbero is little doubt that the men will then be reinstated, with the understanding that their grievances will be investigated. Several street rob beries were committed last evening. The wounds of several persons injured in the street melees were dressed at the hospital, but no injuries of a serious nature are re reported. BALTIMORE. The Western Union Telegraph offlre Slightly Damaged by Fire. " TBv Telejrraph to the Mornlnjr Star.l Baltimore, Septembers. The Western Union Telegraph office was damaged to the extent of several thousand dollars to-day by a fire which broke out back of hc switch board. The fire was extinguished after the building had been somewhat in jured by water, and communication, which had been interrupted, was restored. SMALL-rOX. Twenty Cases Reported at Paterson, N. JM Sunday. By Telegraph to the Morning Star J Paterson, N. J., September 3. About twenty cases of small-pox are reported to day. The City Physcian is removing the victims to the pest house. He says it is not known exactly how many cases are in the city but that before morning there will be thirty patients in the pest house. GERMANY Terrible Railway Accident Fifty Per sons Killed and ITIany Injured. nor Cable to the Mornlnjr SUu-. Carlerhue, September 4. A train of cars running between Frieburg nnd ful mar left the rails' near Iluystcttcr. Fifty persons were killed and many injured. The first new bale of cotton received at Memphis arrived there Sunday night from Herbart's Landing, Tunica county, Miss. COMMERCIAL. WILMINGTON MARKET. STAR OFFICE, Septeml)er, 4, 4 P. M. SPIRITS TURPENTINE The market opened firm at 39 J cents per gallon bid, with sales reported later of 100 casks at 40 cents. ROSIN The market was steady at 1 30 for Strained and $1 45 for Good Strained, with sales as offered. TAR The market was steady at $1 80 per bbl. of 280 lbs, with sales at quotations. CRUDE TURPENTINE The market was.steady at $1 25 for Hard trnd t2 50 for Yellow Dip, with sales at quota tions. COTTON Market dull, with small sales reported on a basis of 12c per tt for mid dling. The following were tbe official quotations: Ordinary 9 7-16 cent lb Good Ordinary 10 13 16 " Low Middling 11 11 16 " " Middling 12i Good Middling 12 RECEIPTS. Cotton Spirits Turpentine. Rosin Tar Crude Turpentine. . 23 bales 326 ranks 1.6.")7 bbls 38 62 bbls bbls DOMESTIC ITfAItKET-ft. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Financial. New York, Sept. 4. Noon. Money moderately active and weak at 5 per cent. Sterling exchange 485489. State bonds generally unchanged. Governments grn erally unchanged. Commercial. Cotton quiet, with sales of 409 bales; middling uplands 12 13-16c; Orlcansl3K Futures steady, with sales at tho following quotations: September 12.31c; October 11.75c; November 11.56c; December 11.56; January ll.65c; February 11.76c. Flour dull and heavy. Wheat heavy and llc lower. Corn active and lJ3Jc lower. Pork dull and weak at $21 75 22 25. Lard easier at $12 65. Spirits turpentine 42143c. Rosin $1 751 95. Freights steady. FOREIGN MARKETS. Br Cable to the Horning Star.l Liverpool. September 4, Noop. Cotton In moderate inquiry and freely supplied; uplands 7 l-16d; Orleans 7d; sales of 8,000 bales, of which 1,000 were for specu lation and export -.receipts 1,350 bales, all of which were American. Uplands, 1 m c. SeDtember deliverv 7 l-64a7d: Rentemhor and October delivery 6 54-646 63 64d; October and November delivery 6 40 64 6 3S-64d; November and December delivery 6 34 64d; December and January delivery 6 34-64d ; January and February delivery 6 85-646 34-64d ; February and March de livery 6 86-64d; May and June delivery 6 43-646 42-64d; June and July delivery 6 44-64d. Futures weak. Lard 61a. 1.30 P. M. Uplands, 1 m c.Novcmbor and December delivery 6 43 64d. 2.30 P. M. Uplands, September deliv ery 6 63-64d ; November and December de livery 0 84-64d. London, September 4, 4 P. M. Spirit! lumemine jtcs. aaaas. ou. These f axooua Btaal Pra oombina the aaaential , PurabUityndreaiSwaa unui . aotlon. and arj anit. d to a to all Btytaeof writing. For aale every where. Ivison, Blakeraan, Taylor & Co., N. Y. au? 13 2taw eow tf tn fr DOBBINS' STARCH POLISH. covery, by which every family may Cire their Jioen that beautiful fitv I Ish peculiar to fine laoncVy work. Ak your Grocer. J. B, DOBBINS, Philadelphia, P. Tor sale, IWholea&le and Retail, by ADRIAN AVOLLERS, P. X. RRXDQKBH A CO. and 1. O. STSVEMSON. . taUia - apO DeoUWIr mm I i pen 1-4, I fli'i, J I.. I. I MALARIA Malaria is an almost in describable malady which not even the most talented physicians arc able to fath om. Its cause in most fre quently ascribed to lKal surroundings, and thcrr ri very little question, but tin, opinion is substantiated ,y facts. Malaria does not ru-( -cssarily mean chills .ml fever while these troubles usually accompany it It often affects the sufferer vutli general lassitude, anom panied by loss of apjwtii' sleeplessness, a tired f !m.; and a high fever, the j. t son afflicted growing w ,il er and weaker, lose. t1. !, day after day, until h. I,, comes a mere sk(r? .n. i shadow-of his form i . if hold upon lH human Irani, ii. ' the twm lhr.. ..i- i, to nrrnu. diwim T I,,..', fik and er.iM..i alp...u . nouriahmrnl, but auliai.i it.g itfcrlf. th dtfnv ti.g.... , lotier prrforin lHit (un i . .. tiWIirrr WoiiiH trjil. and .11.. , organ (ailing to do ikon r...n.... work apfvdil- LtKnm dtaofU,. ' and diaaolulion and draih .. i to enau. In addition to tx-inr, a certain uir for malana and chilli an. I (vrr. Hhown'j Iron llmrit u ).it..l recommended for all dier rrjun ing a certain and efficient lomt , jxciallyindigetion. dyjicji.ia. itt i mtttent fever, want of jriiir, J. of Hrenglh. lack of enrrpy, rt Knriche the blood, trenrl)i-n idr muscle, and jpr new lifr to tir nerrei. Act like a chirm on the dipctfive organa. It it for le y all ropectahle dealer in mrdiotir. price, 1 1 per Untie Be sure and gt the genuine BROWN'S IRON BITTERS. Take no other. ap2ftrAWljr Iw firm Up Salem Academy, FOR OIKLR AND VH N(i WuMl.N ALi:n, v t ., YS-S,'MEM TKC'I A I. Kr.-iMMI.IT1 I" the education a wrll trm ln.t n t i, . ,i committed to IU chare" For nw CaUilnfu rontalnlne r juirt n. i.i for almlMlon, courw of atudr in Au-iettii. other I'partmmt. and fulf (card to rynim of d'mou- tri. m. ui.. metho1of lnt ruHI.n. addn-aa KKV J T i V Cru.' i. Nventr- ninth Annual vrii IhiIih iiini br7. tu llin J) f.n. SWAETHMORE COLLEGE, KK-orKMNO IN KKHTOKKH i..i !,.i Both Seioa admitted Ctli'g and I'rrpnrai-iri Hnhool. I nilircirt of Memxr "t U.rKiii of Hrlrndu Th main building d-ir .)! I f t. Vth month. Iat. ha txwn r..mpl tHr n-tmln. . i. larT, and fitted up wlLii all -.tin.nlf r. "t't. rouarh Instruction In I-ane"" Lltrrniun at.-i the Science. Nw Scientific llnlldlrie -.m ait.h.r IjlKrtttor1r. Iiraftlnx Koorua. M hif ) and all appliance for putanlnt a thr.tigi (! In Cheuilntry, Mechanical and 1ll V.tifUn rinjr Tho next term open lh mo (wtt t trth. A t.j. early. a, other thin: twin e.jual. .mo l!i I., trlvon the carllcat applicant For full particular, addre. KIiU AlU MM Gil. I.. Iret . Hwarthmre ( .ll re. ItHav ar ' I'a. ) I". WasWoD Lec Unirersity. iKN. G W l.T.K. faaan.rwt THOKorn iNsniriTtoN um.i a.i I I.ITEIIATI'KK and M IKN K arid In ! ' felonal Hchrx.U of LAW and KulNKRKIM. Healthful location In the Valley of Vlrlnl n ceary eipenae for hol emal.in rtr-lualrr .f hook and clothe. nwd not eicee.j ze. ui Senalon open Her.teml.er II Yr tlir 'l dreaa J. I,. ( ' A M 1'llKI.I.. Jr . Ocra. U iir.-i..n Jy 4 eodifm tilth Law School ofWasWoB&LecUm?'!?. JKN rAOVLTY-- w. r i.kk. r.u.T 4 A. (Jrare. M A . Pr.f c..mm.n t 1 I' ll..n I l;.Mfl..l..k TurlM ICjiilty; LL. !.. IW. -onm Itutlonal l-aw. Judr " ShefTey. I.I.. 1) . I turer m Will. Jii-lr w McLaughlin. Iecturer .n PVudlnr K.i..n U rim HeptmtK-r 21. 1HH3 r.r atal'Mm " "'" Information addr. I W A .HAr Ui Irurton. Va. m tint j)4rm ST. OI INI ROIMJK'S HAM an nnurpa"d iw.i. Hcmooi. for iw.ra and Y '' TKBJrrriwW. 111. To t i , J rj 'nl',n V"" the I'nlvemltle and (V.u.aoa. or Itt i frr' a year IW J. ' Kiitei. A U . ITIrw ll culant with reference aent. I I" YOUIt CAPITAL. Inrnctor of rral ard nwlmm anvmnt tn rJn. rrnrtamrt Htork fully tirAmml m.l iWniTiuid InPl ontlJ m-Uf tror auoeHiafol, folly truL "in tI.Mb1 ptta Try ft. li-t aont wekly,dirldat M tf h ly. Knd at oto far lpltii"f elretilar and r rrl. r 1 H1lnd imUl diirin tt tbr) nvmUl on thla rrnvl t- hartt AddrMl Lit M I MKHfllAM. 11 ! la' ht., ( hti-o. in. M- W wast a Ineal T Tvry r.wn F.irllnl InAw nrjt fwi par rwp1 ba. mterriiialijr' maa. WrtU Venua. m ' AT STOCKS $100 1e 97 ly C. B. WRIGHT 1H (iRINDINt. ntoM Choice New Wheat ! AND THE BEST MEAL IN NORTH CAROLINA, AT Cape Fear Mills. PERRY 4 C0.'S Mcl Pens. ft i m eUNl- i Tbeo TM am bi-AmA al U- point, wl3 not onrrode pt roM, mad will b f"""1 tooait nrrVW4a aad doratia. aanr4mr4. wMi bra dlffnenrit yV nf BlcJral (44-4 . s-wtf" trial by taatl on lnr at U nt Hole Aaei(a, Iriton, Blakeman. Taylor A Co. nr.w York tawlr U tr