Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Sept. 10, 1882, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
v. ----- 3!H a :n PITDItXSllKH'S 'AIVNOfTHCSaCENX THX MORXTSQ STAB, the oldest daHy news paper m norta ivoiini, is paouanAa aauy, except Jdonaay, at 97 w per year w lor six monina, ti 00 for three months. $1410. for two months; 75c for one month, to mall tabsorfbers. Delivered to city subscribers at the rate or 10 cents per weec for any penoa from one wees: to one year. THK WEEKLY ST AS la TmbBshed ererr Friday Htorninjr at $1 BO per rear, $100 for six months SO cents ior tnree monxaa. ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY). One square ne day, 51 00; two days, $1 73; three days, four davs. tS 00 : fire daTS. IS 60 : one week. S4 00; two weeks, $6 SO: three weeks (S 60; one month, $10 00 ; two months, $17 00 ; three months, $34 00 ; six montns, yto 00; twelve montns, oo w. ien iuiea of Boiia Monoareu type maxe one square. All announcements of Fair. Festivals. 3alls, Hops, Plo-Nlcs, Society Meetings, Political "Meet- aga, wiu do cnargea regular aaveixumc; rates., Notloea under head of "City Items" 20 cents per. line 1 or urst uueruon, ina 10 couu ir iuro iw acn subsequent insertion. No advertisements Inserted in Local Column at any price. Advertisements inserted once a week in Dally will be charged $100 per square for each insertion. Every other day, three fourths or daily rate. Twice a weex. two thirds or daily rate. Notices of Xarri&ge 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 50 cents will pay for a simple announcement of Mamace or jjeatn. Advertisements to follow reading matter, or to occupy any special place, will be charged extra according to tne position desired Advertisements on which no specified number of Insertions Is marked will be continued uu ror bld," at the option of the publisher, and charged ap to the date or discontinuance. Advertisements discontinued before the time contracted for has expired, charged transient ates for tune actually puoiisned. Amusement, Auction and Official advertisements one dollar per square for each insertion. An extra charge wQl 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 shape of 3ommunications or otherwise, will be charged as advertisements. 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 witnneid. Contract advertisers wfll 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 wfll 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- The Morning Star. By WILLI AST II. BERNARD, WILMINGTON, N. C. Saturday Evening, Sept. 9, 18S2. EVENING EDITION. DESERTION OF PARTY DOES NOT INCREASE CONFIDENCE. The most conspicuous failure in the history of North Carolina poli tics is the attempt of a few score of disappointed office-seekers in the Democratic party to set up a party of their own under the leadership of Mott, Ike Young, Moore, Jim Harris and a few other wool-dyed Radicals. It has been a fizzle from the start, and in the Centre and West, where it was thought it would develop considera ble strength, it is almost extinguished, and like an old-time tallow-dip, it will expire about November 2d with much spluttering and stinking. Where the Radicals will gain one vote by such an unnatural, unholy, and unwise alliance, thev will lose two votes. And this ought to be the case. Why should the long tried men of that party be set aside to give prominence and office, if the people at large shall be stupid and blind and corrupt enough to consent, to such hoary-headed Democratic office-seekers as Clingman, Johnston, Leach and Ed wards ? Why shall the goslings of Democracy who go limp ing into the Radical preserves be fed by the tender hands of Mott and Young and Jim Harris, the bribe taker, to the exclusion of the stout docks of the Radical party who have been "quacking" and spluttering for so many years, trying to get their heads into the great National Radi cal dough-trough ? But this is not all. The fellows who deserted took the people of North Carolina for fools, and lo ! their mistake. They went masque rading in the thinnest, gausiest of all possible coverings, and as they pranced around, pirouetting and gambolling this way and that way, they thought all the time the people who looked on took them for "Libe rals" for members and avant-couri-ers of the new party," without prin ciples or ideas, that was to regenerate and disenthral and make glad the hearts of mankind. But how mis taken they were ! The people gazed at the cavortings and at the very thinnish guise, and then they laughed as they saw the tail of the old Radi cal party hanging out behindhand saw, too, the hoofs and horns of the same old animal that had wrought so much mischief in the years gone by. So the only persons that have been fooled are the fellows who tried to deceive the people. But why should any one be de ceived by the "Liberal" farce ? Who compose the company who are play ing it ? Men mainly who have been "acting" with the Democrats since the war, and some long before the war. They have helped all they can to make the Democratic party what it is. They have spent their best years in helping to build up, pre serve and give control to the Dem ocratic party. Why. hay e they left it ? Can there Ti but one answer s What is there in Jcffantecdeiits in their wisdora,Ansei8hn6ss, , dgvo tion to principle to make any one believe that a new party conoposed of snch men will be any "better -than the party thep haveiservedf for' so long a time and deserted .-and which. contains so mneh material so infinitely sounder than they are? Does a change of party cause also a change of character? Has Leach or Clinfif- man or Folk or Edwards changed their trne characters by changing po-; i . litical front? They gave to one party their allegiance, their professed support, the labor of their best years. They went off after office and set up a little concern of their own, leading Radicals and of the Revenue stamp at that being sponsors and parents of the new-fangled clap-trap affair. So no one is deceived by the "Libe- ral" dodge. The nickel-plated Derifo crats would do well to take down the sign. Let the old Radical garment be donned and they will be better thought of if not better understood. Senator Garland, of Arkansas, in a recent .circular letter addressed to the Democracy of his State, placed the question of desertion of party in this light. He asked: 'He who crosses the ocean changes his sky not his soul; he who takes his hat and leaves the domicile of a party, after years of service in it, and crosses to the threshold of another party, to combat his old party, changes his base or location, but not neces sarily his heart or his convictions or his methods of action. The pretence to the contrary is too etheral, 11 not too thin, to preach to flesh and blood. Therefore be not deceived in being asked to turn over to any new party. A new broom may sweep. clean, but the old one knows best where the dirt is." So do not allow yourselves to be deceived for one moment by the De mocratic deserters in their persuasive blarney in behalf of a Mongrel Com bination. When you vote for a Libe ral you are voting for a Radical to all practical intents and purposes. Do not desert the old ship in the midst of the storm. I HONOR TO WHOM HONOR IS DUE. We are glad to notice that severa of the leading Southern papers have been discussing the recuperative powers of the South, and have been showing that the vast improvements that have taken place in the South have been due almost entirely to Southern men. We note this because it has been quite the fashion among Southern journalists to write about the need of Northern capital and Northern enterprise to rehabilitate and develop the South. This con stant crying for help has acted in two directions: it has excited in the South hopes not to be realized, and it has provoked the North to put on an air of self-complacency and to look patronizingly down npon their "poor Southern brethren." A certain amount of self-reliance and self-determination are necessary for any people. The South has been aided and some good and true Northern men . have moved in since the war, as before, but the work of recuperation and de velopment has been done by South ern men themselves. We would not claim more in this matter than we think is warranted by facts. In North Carolina, we are sure, that most of the enterprises of importance have been undertaken and carried ont successfully by South ern men or Northern men long resi dent in the South. The men who have made the largest fortunes, with out an exception, we think, were born South of Maryland. We could men tion a dozen of the most prosperous men in the State and they are all Southern, we believe, and most of them North Carolinians. The aid received from theNorth, whether in men or money, has not been one tenth as large as is supposed.. The Baltimore Day points to two cities to show that Southern men have done the work of rebuilding and developing. It says: "As an illustration none better can be found than the natural progress of the city of Atlanta since the war, which has no parallel in Southern history, and its growth will be for all time a monument to South ern energy. Southern brains and Southern capital. The men who have made it are principally Georgians, South Carolinians, Alabamians and Tennesseans. They fur nished the brains which God gave them and the money which their hard labor had earned, the outside assistance being indeed seamy. iaKe anotner instance. A few months ago the prospectus for a million- dollar cotton mill was issued in Augusta, in the same State of Georgia, and one man in that city subscribed a hundred thousand dollars and one woman fifty thousand. It is true Northern .capital was invested, but the majority of the stock was, taken right there in Augusta. It has been lust so ever since the-war with industrial enterprises all over the South." That our readers may see how the late Thomas G. Lowe impressed a scholar and divine of eminence, who is himself an orator and a preacher of very rare powers,; we copy to-day an article from the Raleigh Chris tian Advocate from the pen of Rev. Dr. CharleB Deems, pastor of - the Chtfrchtfflh Strangers: Now York. It will bgood'Sunday reading. - Mnto. divm WnPsiil r , -5 7 J heavy also. Itj is so much so that, Ulj6-Episcopar Bishop in convention address was led to say this: -jji-, uLwixxn , w Juiuxuua2f..-UJL Maine is certainly not JessihaOMJenhonthe grave of -orta varouu This coiili? rxevetr hfevfi 'hAnnkrtprf Against I or A ASrirtn srvn j : 'f'-ts.- : i fi the protest or without the express or tacit God, and implicit obedience to the precepts of i;nnstr-iana1tneretore it denotes; jeitner gross unfaithfulness or gross negligence on or - (jbristiatr-ormmKAtinnn in our which are not based r squarely- and fjuneem- promisingly upon meyunai. and law. of joarriage... as civil-contract theory, and ries which do not recognize . divine -institution, imposing -of -itself pecu liar and perpetual obligations 'which no human hand may justly assume to annul or morliiVv or modify.. This is a serious charge about a very5 serious matter, and the worst part is that it is a true charge. So Massachusetts and Connecticut do not have it all to themselves in this undoing of the Divine law of mar riage. There is no social ulcer -in, the South half as rank and as dan- eerous as this divorce ulcer in New vnnA. 1 r,a Kmn tha' witnesses, cs j. : -r : c Txr a. tt; ; aviB' WA ,TCBO J5"-: .maaean attempt to investigate the books of the United btates lreasnry. . - - Tt was a task too oreat for Hercules 0 nr flip liorhtinnor hnnlr-treoner Un & to , . discovered enough to snow mat Radical book-keepers did not under- stand the art of balancing by at least one hundred and fifty million dollars This is bad book-keeping. Something very corrupt has been back of those figures. The Louisville Courier Journal says: nnrWk ,inon the ArmnnLo of the Roister as to the public debt.' The books are known to be full of alterations and era- sures which would be a disgrace to any iuui lunjiaaa uuwucaa iiuusciu iuc wmuwj. A novel Is to be published pur- Trrfinrr tr hf Ku itt Toi,nn;,,i iTo..,. r o J tnorne, tne greatest American writer. Miss Una Hawthorne, Mr. Lalhrop, son-in-law of the great novelist, and his wife Rose Hawthorne, all insist that there is no such novel. Thev say that their father left "afragmen tary and unfinished sketch." Per contra Mr. Julian Ha'wthorne, the sou, and, with some marked gifts of his own, says they are mistaken, that there were two manuscripts, one fragmentary with parts of the plot, &c, the other elaborated in detail. He will publish the latter. It is en- a . : . l ,1 tiTA (i : u r , c 1 11 The title is Hawthorneish at least. trial will be long . . ise of the position The Star Route remembered because of the defendants, the nature of .the accusations, the length of the trial, the impudence and effrontery of the criminals, the character of the de f m 1 rt . . I ience, tne enorts 01 so many papers to shield the rascals from an outraged I , ... .. pUDHC sentiment, ana tne attempt to bribe the jury. Long ago the public decided as to liorsey, Jtsrady ana J others that they were guilty. Judge Wvlm t.n havA bn frnvlm.. to - J vmaicate tne law. The papers in the North are still harping on the adulterations of cot- j ton. It is said that the United States i 1 a. t a. i , n , consuls at ou jreiersourg ana om- enburg have written to the State De- j partment making heavy complaints. I Thfi New York Cnrnmernnl 7itdUt.in has an editorial upon the subject,and thinks there must be some good grounds for the complaints. That there is some cause for the complaint may be accepted as true, but that the adulterations are as extensive as has been charged we have seen no proof. Two noticeable political events have occurred. Luke Poland, whose memory is savoury, has been restored to public life bv beinf? elected to the e I United States House from Vermont. This is distressinsr. The other event is that "my dear Hubbell," the cor rupt and bare-faced Radical fraud, who levied the two per cent, black mail upon the women and poor clerks in the departments, has been defeat ed for renomination. This is en couraging. We see it stated that the Mormon missionaries have taken the people of Cleav eland county at their word and have fled. Now they are moving, keep them at it. Letr there be no rest for the wicked this side of Salt Lake or Salt River. But the latter is the delightful home-of the disap pointed politicians and deserters. Folk, Edwards, Dockery, Darby and company "will take passage early in November. They would do well to pack their traps, for the hand-writing is on the wall. It reads 30,000 ma inn nart t,.'. i r,, 7"7 r : mm 1 naa many s.wkbu 01 aucvuvn midst. .But iBnall haven icon- i;t--3,wj,z fidence in the effectiveness of any measures from my first knowledge of tiimj "The Register's and Treasurer's books' tnev endnred analytic examination, to-day publishes a letter from Col. A. K. fail to agree within $144,577,678, and Bout- H; ,nm.nt. wprp nfrrmw-hut McClure, editor-in-chief of that paper, ad well himself admitted once that there was His aiguments were pictures, Dut dressed to T. P. O'Malley, Secretary of the jority for the Democrats. , . r- DR. DEEMS OK TSOMAS G. ' 1 JLOWE. Raleigh Christian Adtocatft nr-L ' J J w4Vf r . e'&ifeand character-of uhe-ftevTfcomas Lowe " I feel impelled to lay my hum .1 . - :r-iK.: : y I ; T An hia with t,h minfirled emo- J that Kingsburyawas .my . pupil, ana , JLowe, ior more tnau a .uusi vi,, I century, mv devoted friend. J2 rom ; I - -r.-t --1 ,:-:j e 'xffv.;.n: We1 are friend unbefitting a pure there was in him a tenacity of pur- pose which quickly clung to his con - I ... 1.. . t,i mA Victions ana iKepi; uiux wuw. mwr, ings. ; I shall; never cease to cherish the memory -of the matt Who WS SO, great and spotless in himself and to O T' - - 1- -j 1 me such a noble, devotea mena. In the spnngof 1842 1 wasinew Berne. Under the ministry of John, E. Edwards and?'John; Todd Brarhe; a creat revival of- religion occurred. w I had just; attained my majority ana. -s . - . . . j ..- j- 1 reached New1 Berne as Agent or. tne I American Bible Society. There 1 1 preached twentv-eight times in twen- i a v,iMnmct9T.nog T :J J . "..," rn I. Ua I I V t-4 I M !. 4 M lllllir:! Illl iiiinniM-iniv.n v 1fla1 rTTTOlc, uave uevei f1, JLV"1"Di i me ciuse ui tue bciviuco auvu-iw T.na av TT wah tall, slender. 8anOWr. He was eentle and unob- - - t , . trusive. I was told that he was un educated. He preached several ser- I 41.. r r,:,.v. T vj I ' ... heard and have never heard since. l t Bi,oii nn atmnt. tn At t.n thp full and fully deserved description of his powers wbich Mr. Kingsbury nas maae. hut, a rew imugs x win mention. In preaching he was ab sorbed by his theme aud gave no evidence of self-consciousness. The plans of his sermon seemed mapped by his imagination, ratner tnan wrougnt out by his logical understanding, but tnev were no aauos: iney were raas- .1 .1 1 J.1 . ter-pieces, many of them very beau- tiful, some of them gorgeous. His voice oh! his voice what miracles I r . v, -r J feel their delicious thrills along ray nerves. 1 nave neara air. ixjwe auu I t-v TToinVo TTioco will nrivov Ka foro;ottenthe 0rgan-Uke sonorous ness of the latter as he once read the Episcopal service in Spanish from the pulpit from which 1 aiterwards preached, nor the soft and luscious tones 01 tne tormer, in wnicn nutcs and hautboys mingled with the notes of larks as he leaned on the pulpit in New Berne and preached of the pleasures evermore. Mr. Lowe had a little peculiarity which interested- me. Jivery now and then he licked his lips quickly- I do not know how else to express it as if the words he was .about to utter sent forward their sweetness to his tonerue and he seemed to be tastinsr what we were about to hear. He had another peculiarity. He was as ignorant of grammar as was Father Taylor, the great s preacher of Boston. The latter fn a gae of eloquence, got ta sailor- once, tangled in an intricate sentence wnicn ne could not straighten, but carried everything before him by clapping his hands and shouting, "Brethren, my verb has slipped my nominative, - -w . .".i ana 1 can t get 11 aooara again, out, nevertheless, glory be to God, I'm bound for the kincdom !" Lowe's . . , parenthesis within parenthesis, but I never heard him, under any circum stances, utter a single grammatical error- 1 cannofc sa7 that of an7 Athpr nrat.nr AKn0 0n 1,0 tiro a rin ro onn t n rk- rousrhlv rslieious. No man in all my acquaintance has left in my memory and heart a sweeter, deeper sense 01 punty tnan nas tms unspottea man He believed the gospel he preached j, throUffh and thl'OUffh him. It both subdued and exalted him, and when he preached you felt that on the altar whence came dow that blessed thing, which "touched Isaiah's hallowed lips with hre, there are still bnring the glowing coals of hre. OTJR STATE CONTE9IPORABIES. We cannot believe the tax-payers of North Carolina will vote to aid Mott, John son and Leach in making the $15,000,000 of special tax bonds good. . No, even , the negroes will kick against it. Oastontan Gazette. Let our noble old State be the Ararat on Which the waves, after sweeping over Vir- Einia, and North Carolina, and Florida, and lOuisiana, shall surge in vain, and on whose summit the ark of the covenant of the constitution may rest. Aleck Stephens. xr ...l. ' 'TST-V. ri,.vl.n ' o-nA HUH LUUbU U V'tl -U, - c-UL "don't you forget it." There is too much true manhood left in the "Old North State." Charlotte Observer. Far more noble and unselfish is it to bury anv personal slights we conceive we Lave received than to desert to the Radicals, a taste of whose misrule the white people of North Carolina have already had, ana whifh hitter taste thev have not fortrotten. Democrats should ponder well before ta king a atep that is prompted only by sel fishness, t 'Better to bear the ills we have Than fly to those we know not of." , wuson uiavanee. Edwin Booth has cleared dibout $10,000 on his engagement at the London Adelphi. TI C11 4. T D1 "5 For Sale at Lowest Prices. X00 Hhd IORTO mco m6lasses Bbls do do lo I Bags COFFEE, SUGAR, SOAP, FLOUR, TOBACCO, CRACKERS, And all Heavy Groceries, By T alwavs loved him: - tirjf - . s:r "-ivLRii, own request tne lury were aiiowea to omaii u. k .httwni umconcepuon ana triena. tie was a vivwvi wt thtr nZt t: thiTinrv room and 'aea5n'V" "J ' opposed to. the J ' With the ifen rTrr.u 11 o 'oiir COTTON Market firm, with sales re in mnrriatrp ft L1U8L IllilU IlelS- mauucio n rr j i.v i i wuku Lliuo wio WUl h mjuh a icwsb. , I puiwu ui uora uu u unsio ui ut - I not be unbeHttmsr a pure maweu,:, - , for "middling, 'ine following were tbc Jy28 tf - WORTH Sb WORTH. THE LATEST NEWS. raon Ail pae s ox the woeU). TMXhSTAH ftO XJTE TRIJJL.t The jrnry ' oi yet Ak,tA They Amlt Given Strongly Aealn tlie Defend- JSitftSiv- . vvASHTNOTOir.. oeDiemDer v xuc jui. in the Star Route cases came into Court a to.tline Af ter40'.9i'(crAn4.-.anBpuoced , 'that they had not "agreed upon a ' Verdict, , .Tmed.foy.furttiei tiiaShW were given by Judge Wyhe at considerable length, and their general tendency Was Btpongly against .the defendants. -At their; YEI4I4O W FEVER. , : Te Ep,demic Rapidly Di.appe.rlic I w 1 from matamoras nd increasing j slowly a Brownsville By Telejrraph to the Jlornuwt Star.l Galvjsston, Sept. 8. The News' Mata- I m "vrt ci enaATfl 1 antra 'ihrf TrAlli-hW tova nrtl- ; rKZSJZZZ fT tfu clt During the twentVfour hours end- ifiar1 this morning at 9 o'clock there were but two. cases of fever recorded, and so far I . 1 m . ., tut seven persons nave oieu m tnis city or 1 mar maAnv nn nnnrmnna irr mn rrnin 1 Iju-..-. teriod-diiring the nast two weeks: - ing extent among the ranches." . A report from Brownsville says that the fever seema to be increasing slowly. 1 be I . . official 1 i: 1 1 . r . v. . ' I oiuuiai reuurii lur tuc ihm. .wcuijr-iuur uuurs ; shows only forty-eight new cases and two aeaios ior uiai penoa. me iveiiei com mittee furnished aid to 887 families. Col. Grasty is reported to-day -as dying; Wm. Scanlon is very low. Several new cases have broken .out among the soldiers sta tioned here. Maj. Witherell's son is down. Unless funds are placed in the mail con tractors' hands we wlll soon be without mails. The new cases bulletined in Pensncola on Friday were thirteen, instead of thirty, as reported in the night telegram. POLITICAL RASCALITY. Letter Relative to the Sale of tbe Irian Vote In Pennsylvania to tbe Repub lican Party fteandalon Expoinrei. FBv Telegraph to the Moraine Btar.l Philadelphia, September 9. The Time Central Branch of the Land League at Scranton, Penn., in reference to the charge by the limet that certain assumed leaders of the Irish Land League were bargaining with the leaders of the Republican party for the transfer or sale of 30,000 Irish votes. The letter is of great length, and reiterates in detail tbe charge originally made, which is that a contract was to be made with Cameron on the basis of the removal of Minister Lowell from England, to enable Edward O'Meigher Condon to mislead the Irish, and the payment of a liberal amount of money to Condon. FOREIGN. Crist In tbe Cotton Trade at Oldham Bold Intervention of tbe Chinese In Cores. mv Cable to tbe Mornlrur Star. London, September 9. A correspon dent Writes to the Manchester Guardian that something like a crisis in the cotton trade at-Oldham is beginning to be felt 1 he weeks stoppage for the recent holi days should have been the rule, not the exception. Short time will soon be almost compulsory unless there is an unexpected change for the better. A dispatch from Pekin, dated the oth inst., which has been communicated lo the Ttmes, states that tbe Chinese authorities intervened boldly in Corea and seized the father of the King and brought him to China. The King has been reinstated by the Chinese troops and ships. FINANCIAL. New York Ktoelc market Irregular bat Higher. IBy Telegraph to the Morning Star. New York 8ent 9 11 A M The j stock market opened irregular, but prices in the main were iai per cent, above yes- terday's closing figures, the latter for St. Paul. Minneapolis & Manitoba. In the early trade there was a general advance of ii per cent., the latter for Oregon Trans Continental, after which the general market became weak and fell oil 1J per cent.. Missouri Pacific leading the downward turn, while Minnesota & St. Louis sold up f and St Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba per cent. COTTON. A Summary f tbe Crop to Date. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Nkw York, Sept. 9. Receipts of cotton at all interior towns 23,696 bales; re ceipts from plantations, 29,681 bales; crop in sight, not reported to-day. The total visible supply of cotton for the world is 1.311,843 bales, or wnicn 513,643 bales are American, against 1,664,731 and 1,130,761 repectively last year. The broom factory of Samuel Cupples & Co.. South Second street, St. Louis, was destroyed by fire last night. The loss is estimated at $100,000, which is well covered by insurance. ' EXPERIENCE THE BEST GUIDE. The reason why women everywhere use Parker's Ginger Tonic is, because they have learned by experience the best guide that this excellent medicine overcomes des pondency, periodical headache, indiges tion, pain in the back and kidneys, and other, troubles of the sex. Some Journal. We Offer X00 Boxes D s" and 8moked snEs do smoKea nouj-.ut.K, Bbls Heavy MESS PORK, 1400 d 000(1 rLOUB- Hhds Choice rorto kico muiassj-, Bbls Refined SUGARS. 30u BaRS COFyEB' AT CLOSE PRICES. HALL & PEARSALL. auf?12T)4Wtf Disinfect Your Premises, T3YR0LIGNE0US ACID, MANUFACTURED AT nnm ia . Lilt? ll OllXlCfc vll TT vJL0, AO lovuiiiuivuucu -J Board of Health and used by the city authorities as a disinfectant for sinks, drains, stables, water closets, &o. For sale by the barrel or gallon at trifling prices. -1e 10 tf HANSEN A SMITH. Drugs, Medicines, OMBS, BRUSHES, SOAPS, EXTRACTS, Proprietary Medicines, Cigars, 3Karettes, To- bacco, Trusses, SurKlcal Instrumc &e., &e. ; For sale by - WnXIAMD.1 surgicai instruments, uanaages. , GREEN, Druggist, Market Street. 8ep3tf COMMERCIAL. W-l Ir Mjl NQTON MARKET. r ? STAil OFFICE, September 0, 4 P. M. ff SPIRITS .TURPENTINE The market -opened'firm at'41-cenU per gallon, with sales reported of 120 casks at that price, an advance of c on last reports. ROSIN The market was quoted firm at ft 03i for Strained and '. $1 40 for Good ,-,-L3teaijaecU but held for. higher, figures No . ;l"lTu' , - : . TAR The.. market was firm at fl 80 per hbl. of 280 lbs, with sales at quotations. ' CRUHE TURPENTINE The market 4 . . , TT , . Am M is firm at 1 25 for Hard wind $3 50 I 2 70 for Yellow Dip, the latter being paid g. ine following official quotations: Ordinary. . : v 9 8-16 cent V lb Good Ordinary 10 9-16 Low Middling 11 7 16 " Middling 11J Good Middling 12 RKCEim. Cotton 134 balet Spirits Turpentine 283rak m I KAC1 n Hosin 1,030 tiblH 182 bhli 146 bill Crude TurpenUne. . . DOPIKSTIC FIAUKKTH. I My Te)orrapli to the Morn In Htr,) Financial. Nkw Yoiik, Sept. 9. Noon. Money strong and active at 5 per cent. Sterling exchange 483f488i. btate bond neglor ted. Governments unchanged. Oommcrcwl. Cotton steady, with sales of 888 balci middling uplands 12 13-1 6c; Orleans 18jc Futures quiet and firm, with sales at the fol lowing quotations : September 12.49c: Oc tober 11.86c; November 11.6."c; Dccemficr 11.63c; January 11.71c; February 11.81c Flour dull anl heavy. Wheat, cash Srp tember c better, others c lower. Corn dull and iic lower. Pork dull and weak, new $21 75; old nominal. Lard Arm at $12 15. Spirits turpentine 43c. Itmin $1 501 85. Freights dull and weak. FORRION KIAllKKTS. Br Cable to tbe Mornln Btar.l Livkrpooi September 9, Noon. Cotton steady; uplands 7 l-16d; Orleans 7$d; sales of 8,000 bales, of which 1,000 were for speculation and export: roociDts dodc Uplands, 1 m c, September and October de livery 6 6G-64d: October and November do livery 6.43-64d; November and December delivery 6 86-64d ; December and January delivery 0 3o-64d ; January and February delivery 6 36-64d ; April and May delivery 6 40-644; May and June delivery 6 42 64d. Futures dull. Lard 60s. 6d. ; short clear middles 76s. 2.30 P. M Uplands, 1 m c, September delivery 7 2-64d ; November and December delivery 6 S9'-64d; February and March dc livery 6 38-64d. Futures steady. Sales of cotton to-day include 6.100 bales American. Spirits turpentine 33s. 6d London, Sept. 9. 2.30 P. M. Spirits turoentine 33s. 9d349. Kx-Gov. D. B. PENN, President. JAS. D. LYNCH, Vice Pres t and Gcn'l Manarr RUFUS G. LYNCH, Secretary. Mutual MARRIAGE AID ASSOCIATION. Or New Orleans. S. VanAmringe, General Agent Tor the Male of North Carolina. For Both Ladies and Gentlemen. Incorporated under tbe Law of Louisiana. ITS OBJECT. l.The object of this Association In to afford pe cuniary aid to young men and women when th-y assume the responmbUiUes of MARRIED life, a time when, above all others, they rcnrlly no.l such aid; and, subsidiary to this, ltatparponr l to promote induKtry, eoonomy and mornty. chabtkbbd. 2 "to chartered for ninety nine yean nndrr the laws of Louisiana, and has a Deroetua bu cession. Its officers and director are prom lorn, and well known citizens, whose hlrb character and eminent standing tn both bnstnem and social circles la an ample guarantee of the good faith and fairness with which the affair of tbe Asoo elation will be conducted, and they are deter mined that It shall be a benefactor to society. Its officers are bonded. TXIK PLAN. S. It differs from other mutual Insurance or ganizations chiefly In this : The policies art mad payable npon the MAilRLAQB of a member. In stead of npon death; and In order to plaro thr benefit of the Association within mach of all worthy young men and women. It is divided Into three olasses; and upon the MARKIAGK of a member all the others contribute to the payment of the policy, each one according to class. Iu Class No. 1 you will reoolve a 1 900. In Class l"o. 8 you will receive S340O. In Class No. 3 you will receive f 360O. t VArenU wanted in every town In the 8tte For full particulars address 8. VahAMRINGK, General Agcnt, sep 0 3m Wilmington. N. C. Box 49. Dissolution of Copartnership. TIIK FIRM OP ALTAFFKK. PRICE A CO. was -a. dissolyed Auirast 15th, Inst., by mutual oon sent, R. W. Price naTlnsr bourht out the Interest or u. Jn. Aitairer and U. M, Pummerell. lie as sumes all liabilities, and Is alone authorized to collect tne deDts due Ihe late firm. (i. M. ALTAFTKH. It W. PRTcrK, O. M. SUMMERELL. H. W. Price, MANTJTACTURER AND DEALER IN SASH. Doors, Blinds, Lumber, and all kinds Build ing Material. Moulding. Stair Work and Orna mental Wood Work a specialty. Mr, O. M. ALTAFFER is still in charge of Fac tory. Office, Factory and Yards, foot of Walnut St.. Wllmtnjfton, N. C. George M. Summerell, Ballder and Contractor. HA VINO RETIRED FROM THE FIRM OF Alt&ffer, Price A Co., I will hereafter rire my attention to BUILDING DWELLINGS, STORES. WHARVES, BRIDGES, WAREHOUSES, A.. In or out of the city. Plans. Specifications and Es timates furnished at short notice. Office with R. W. Prioe, foot of Walnut St. ang 80 tf SEED COTTON WANTED. J3REPARATORT TO THE OPENING OF THE new season, we call attention to the fact that we WILL PAY THE HIGHEST MARKET PRICES FOR SEED COTTON. Apply at aug 3 tf Willards. For Sale, QNE GOOD SECOND-HAND TURPENTINE STILL, Twenty Barrel capacity ; one HALL'S COTTON GIN (30 Haws) and PRESS, almost new aug 18 tf HALL A PEARSALL. MALARIA Malaria i an almost in describable malady which not even the most talented physicians are able to U. om. Its cause it most frr- quently ascribed to 1 ' .11 surroundings, and thcrr UlllV ,JUl .TIIWII, I HJt opinion is substantiated ,y facts. Malaria docs nt n . cssarily mean chill. .u,,j fever while these tn.ul.lt., usually accompany it often affects thesuff. re. u,th pcncral lassitude. ;k t , . panicd by loss of .'1 j 1; t , . sleeplessness, a tired j. , j.,,.. and a hih fever, t!i son afflicted Kr"wini.' u' " cr and weaker, 1. , day after day, until 1, !, conies a mere sk 1 t. t, t shadow of his form. ; Mslaria rmr. !.,. Koltl unoa ih hum.n (. ,, 4tn ai lh iritt ,. . . , . , lo I,. k ntl rnlllH ftl.-. , rtmriftimtil, Hul u1n(.1 . iUflf, lh ticiv .g... longrf twrftimi th.n dm... . f Kr li rrr nam . mn "rjam (Uin( In do !. r aiMolutuMi U.i to rnu In sdilllon In brin s r r rtait for malaria an l (hilU in I (. . I.IOWN's Itr.N lllllll'. 1 n I rccommmtirtl (tr all diviwi t , ing a crrtain and rHiMrt.t t .1,1 j-CiaJy iD.hritfion. f)vi jki.. .,. miflrnt frvcr. want ( ain , of rcn(th. la k .( t i.tjj i Knnchr thr 1.1kk1, ttrrx, it., muvclrt, an. I pvr n' .. il.. nerrc Art hkr a hartti ..n il. digrslivc oratia. It i l .i t.aW l all rc;w1al.r dralrr in n. l- h.. . . ricc, f I r 1ilr Be sure and (ft the crnutnt BROWN'S IRON UITTEK6 Take no other. ap nwiy Mr SWARTHMORE COLLEGE, RR-OPKMNU IN KKHTXilil 1 '1 1 I 1 . 1 Both S-xr s-lmlllvl ( ,,1). ft. ui, Hctxvil. I rxler ram tit mrmtxr. .f it.i k i, of Kricnda. Thr main tilllli,f n r.., 1 , Ih month, last., haa lw-n t .n..l i !i t.tii 1 . . larirnd. and 0tt- op lth all roorh instruct ln In I-anroar1 l.iii rttim m,.i the Hclences. Nw Hclrnllflf liuililinj t.t it.it.c Iaboratotis, Iraftln lun. M Mnt n.,,, and all appliances for tuinlnf a t)...r. In Chemistry. Mechanical '! i li . . ... Tb neit trm otn ttm iH.fi mo, - early, as, other thing twine mjh1 .in , u glTrn t he earliest appll' snta For full particulars. lln l l.u aim. 11 v GILL. I'resl., hwarthmorr li ft l. uh.. Pa. . .: in. ST. GEOHGK'H HALL an tif....t -.m. .1 Iv .t .. ma StuooL for IW.t dI . .i h THurpow Bl.To . Mryl'.'l .r.M f the t'ntvpmllles and c "i.i r. of Hi .him t r a year iTof J. (' Kian A IVm. ij.h . oulars with rrfrrrwon srnt. Iv 1 i w vu,t Turpentine Lands for Sale, "yiTH ONE ?. IlPI. STILL. 4 I So A- hi PINK I.ANH. 11 Arrr Town I.t In 1 . .U ... . Six MuIp. Two ll..fM. Tw t. HueeU-m ti,h w gnn. llarnpss. Cnjt anl 7 iirtM t.l n. " htK it Mrn han'lla. fll-nt f will. ..i.mI, ..! and Kitchen Kumtlurw ShI.I lnl arr. 1h atl In . .fir m!i o.o . ko.i a half to ln mllMifrom J...r Oi. Tt,.u..' A'Tci of samn stlil unl"ifl 1 un- '"' l'" tlllfr-)"- Htnrr lions1. Slal.lc. jl.rtr. si.i.i,.... and IU-slft"nr! ar In Town of J- t l. un ... iriMxl (llmato hcslthr No .il.f yuniuti the Cf.unty. (rno buntirr-tl n! Ilvlt.-' n.. on Live ak Kranrl. of h r anl V l(i from Warsnnah. ttvi Addrvsa mo al Ja r. Ilamllloti t .. . n srpt r. 2m JoMN rii INCREASE . A YOUIt CAl'ITAL. Inr.1rr tif ma41 anl m"lltiin smtmnU in f4o. rrt.niti fc.l SUirk sa fully j.r.iVr-tl a ft' pitoiia.Taii'l inflOMiUaJ iww t... ..--. f., I tt.ll. -.! ,ff UMltlMl an Iff II- )ili' ilFAT "nt "klr. tJiritiwrxIs r4 m",,,h It Knl t tmnm tm iw.Wl' rlmilar" ancj tt rM. rs 1 T.t.d il tliirtna sM tnonU.a 'tti Uiia fnna S--'. "I I" har AV!r H.ICMI MKItltlAM. I1 141 ! T f n 17 O kl I klnrm. 111. r VS . want WvwJ ar. 1" mr W.vn r,tr.llit in tn'fiU t rt""' ll. ntririsli' uiaji. Wr. f' trrma. $100 If IT If C. B. WRIGHT H i.KlMitvi ISr-A7- Flour Choice New Wheat! AM TIIK BEST MEAL IN NORTH CAROLINA, AT Cape Fear IVIills. Y. H. PARKER. Commission Merchant. no ii.arl RTitr.irr. NKW YORK. lONBIONMKNTH OF txrm-V STORES, RICE and HOITTIIKKN rHl" "" cited. i Executes ordom for tho io '"' '' "' FUTURE CONTRACT In lb C..tin " ,1 If duo Exrhantrmi. AT Schutte's Restaurant CAN GET TIIK II KMT THE MAKKlT affords, neatly and nWly wrrl. ! ' tbe day and night. Special attention paid to thtt wM '' men. Fnll Meals or l-ow h to I .! sonable pHMts and at any n-lnoi -ir. solicited. r. A nouns. 1e is tf Granite IW.w. rr.m ' The Person County News, Pvbllhd at ROXlWHt". M wiiitaucii a mmu Editors snd rmprteUr The NEWS has Uk Wrwt rlriU' .;;. paper pabltsbed orelrmlaWd In ' ' 4latrtoi cf North Carolina. , AdrsnisiiMr rates rery llral n,7ht f "iii-i- 'i V
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 10, 1882, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75