Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / June 2, 1883, edition 1 / Page 2
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ft" 1'" it iff 4 r. , i- i - 4 - 14 I'miLIHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT THE MORNlNQ STAR, the oldest daily iwp oapor ia North Carolina, ta published dally, except Monday, at $7 00 per year. $4 00 for six months, J2 00 for three months, $1.50 for two months; 75c. , for one month, to mall subscribers. Delivered to eity subscribers at the rate of 15 cents per wees for any period from one week to one year. THJB WEEKLY STAB Is published every Friday morning at SI 60 per year, $1 00 for six months w cents for three months. ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY). One sqaafe one day, $1 00 ; two days, $1 75 ; three days, $250; four days, $3 00 : five days, $3 50 ; one week, $4 00; two weeks, $6 50: three weeks $3 50 ; one montn, $10 00 ; two months, $17 00 ; three months, $34 00 , six months. $40 00; twelve months, $60 00. Ten lines of solid Nonpareil type make one square. All announcements of Pairs, Festivals. Balls, Hops, Pto-Nios, Society Meetings, Political Meet-, ngs, Ac., will be charged regular advertising rates. Notloes under head of "City Items" 20 cents per line for first insertion, and 15 cents per line for each subsequent Insertion. No advertisements Inserted in Local Column at any price. Advertisements inserted once a week in Daily wial be charged $1 00 per square for each insertion. Every other da7, three fourths ' of daily rate. Twice a week, two thirds of dUr rate. Notices of Marriage or Death, Tribute of Re spect, Resolutions of Thanks, 'Ac, fevP,aS for as ordinary advertisements, but only half rate when paid for strictly in advance. At this rate SO cents will pay for a simple announcement.; or Marriage or Death. . i Advertisements to follow reading matter, or to occupy any special place, will be charged extra according to the position desired snActfied number of insertions is marked will be continued 'till for bid,?' at the option of the publisher, and charged I V ' us to the date of discontinuance, I I Advertisements kept under the head of "New vJ' Advertisements" will be charged fifty per cent. CT- extra. 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. All announcements and recommendations of eandldates for office, whether in the shapt. of sommnnications or otherwise, will be chargodat advertisements. Payments for transient advertisements must be made in advance. Known parties, or Strang er with proper reference, may pay monthly or quar terly, aocording to contract. Communications, unless they contain impor- ably ithhe 'r rejected if tne real name of tne author is withheld. Si "v Remiitances must be made by Check, Draft, r. Postal Money Order, Express, or in Registered i' Letter. Only such remittances will be at the .Thw -. risk of the publisher. V t Contract advertisers will not be allowed to ex t ' oeed their space or advertise any thing foreign to V their regular business without extra charge at ' t 5 transient rates. ::. L ,r. Advertisers should always specify the issue or 1 t" -7 83UC3 they desire to advertise in. Where no 1s- l V ne is named the advertisement will be inserted -l n the Dailv. Where an advertiser contracts for f -- the paper to bo sent to him during the time his "V- "I advertisement is in, the proprietor will only be r responsible for the mailing of the paper to ms.aa- CK drew. . The Morning Star. By WILLIAM II. BERNARD. WILMINGTON, N. G. Friday Evening, June 1, 1883. "EVENING EDITION. NTWR PFRMr RAADfi O I7KSTION . 1 Several of our exchanges have been jr' latterly discussing the very impor t ' ? ,tant public roads question. "We have f not' taken a hand in it although we C Jave 'a realizing sense" of the bad ; k VV ness of the roads in some sections and a positive need of repairing them. I," We have known the roads in some of the upper counties to be so bad in winter that it was impossible for load ed wagons to pass. Indeed we once knew the road between Leasbirg and Milton, in Caswell county, to be so desperately muddy so thorough ly cut up and so bottomless, that a man in a buggy drawn by a powerful horse would stall. Good roads are one of the marks of civilization. An English gentleman by rank, an Oxford graduate, $aict to us once that Americans did not walk, and that there was reason for! it. Said he: "I have walked twice all over Great Britain, sending my bag gage ahead." He said in England and Wales the roads were fine, walk ing was good, and inns every few mires at which you could rest and ob ' tain refreshments if you desired to do so. But in the United States the walking was often very disagreeable and the opportunities for food and drink very uncertain and remote. We suppose every judge and eviery . lawyer in North Carolina will admit that road building thus far in North f. Carolina is of a most primitive sort. f.'lt is a great mistake for all business centres not to have the very best highways possible leading to them. 1 Up amongst the red hills andithe ' jblack mud during a rainy winter jit is , almost, if not altogether, impossible for ladies to get to the towns if they desired. Trade is very much short ened by bad road." The question of bad roads gerier- ' ally in the State and the imperative necessity of making them good -not better, but good is we take it, ac cepted of all. The main question the question is "how to accomplish this most certainly and satisfac torily." There are two plans that (yT have advocates. The one way is to " -ido it by taxation; the other way-pro-P j;'-' poect is the old one by calling out , l,Vtbe population between certain ages. H -Wo have not given the matter that j attention necessary to justify us in ';,;V taking a decided position as yet. It !i f 'Is uite certain that the old . . A . ' "J v tviu I' has ; ieen a lamentable failuro r.- -lation it can be made effective we ' -fV cannot undertake to say. If & 0f k 'ins luaio jjuji.uioMvu "cmceii eignteen .7-- und-tony coma ue iorcea to work ' upon the Voads upon the pain of a ,V Vcavy finfe n ca8e of neglect or of '--.imprisonment when the fine was not f ' paid, and under the direction of men ' - 'vCU'irT,w how to build roads. thn thcra ia no of the result. .The State wpttd tiaye excellent public igwsjgttj when will this be dp6 ? . L The other plan to constructna improve roads by taxation has many intelligent advocates in the States. Thev presea jseiisioie re- sons for the plan proposod. , Rridgp and court houses and jails ' and poor houses and hospitals are greeted at the public expense'Tbe question is aske'd why not extend the public Vork to public thoroughfares? Why not make highways of traflic apd travel in good condition? A loaded team can transport double the num ber of pounds over a goOdj , substan tial road that it can over Totiky? cat up roads. It would be a clear favihg in the end viewed from this standing point alone. It is urged that as the people have to be.taf ed for all otljer good and beneficent and useful pur poses why they shall not bevtaxedialso for the improvement and construction ofjthe best possible thoroughfares?; Then it is urged that the old sys tem is unjust that it . niakes thou sands work the roads who never use them save as pedestrians. Then again a community that is' sparsely settled is sometimes taxedfour-fold what a thickly settled community is taxed, and this is safdj to be unfair and unequal. .... ( It is urged that thfe pecfple of ihe market towns and busjijesjj centres are so much interested in. the ques tion of . good roads that they can well arrora to tax uiemsei!jjMrs fcv "im provement. The, Cciurnbia (S. b.) Register recehtly"discussed the mat ter at ranch length and went into c cost, &c. " It shows that a. ; skilled hand employed by the. year cofcld keep in thorough repair eight miles of road. It says twenty hands under a good road master, with five ani mals, could keep in repair each year 160 milas of road, and at an expense of $7,000. It thinks the old system can never be made ' to answer. It quotes from State Senator Hart,' as follows: ' "Modern experiment gives the follow5ug result of resistance to traction on common and paved roods: Say that one horse will draw 1,000 pounds on a common dirt road; he will, on the same inclination, Paved with gravel, draw 2,100' lbs Paved with broken stone, draw. . 4,200 " Onawellmadepavementdraw. . 9,000 ' We hVve 'no decided views of our own. We have not studied tbtf ques tion. We have not the requisite (lata for an opinion. We have merely un dertaken to give the passing discus sion upoaVpublic roads, r; A STATESMAN'S VIEWS OF INTER NAL TAXATION. We publish elsewhere the views of Senator Bayard, who is ordinarily regarded as jl very pure, honorable, and conecientiens --' satesraafi, up on the subject of the internal taxj ie does not say a word about dboiisMng but he does favor both a reduction and a change in the manner of bol lecting. He is in favor of doing "away with tiiQ arnjyj of spies and ascents and the detestable , inquisition- practiced under the present jay s," and to have the system so changed that the important tax can be snjved to the country. He suggests a sub stitute; rW"letiiUir seen a North ern paper not running in the interests of U protective ;.taYMEj fca$ evc fa vored the total abolition of the; tax on whiskey and U&baec$ It is ery certain Senator Bayard does no fa- There is a concensus of opinion' amoni?,tlie ablest, exponents in the-t North of tariff reform, as far asj we have seen, J that. it would be extreme ly suiciJal in the foemocritsi to abolish the internal tax. Those j pa pers, like the Boston Herald, Boston Jost, NeW York Times, Baltimore Day, and other papers ofr large in fluence, never once ask i or the abol-" isbing of the internal ijpia sys-, tem. Some of them are emphatiu in condemning such aproposition. They see only danger to a tariff Ireforih in such a movement. u Cutoff 146 miilions or 150 jmil lions of the tax from whislcey, cigars, &c; and you must replace it by' a tax upon the poor man's necessaries. This is true as we believe. It is true in the opinion of m&try o the ablest papers in the land. We copy a portion of an . mtek est-i ing article from the ERifebeth Citjp Economist Upon the . A&hvsh of a" State history. . VVe ' agVde' witlj all that is said. North CartilUia h a history worthy of BfeW renpwn. W hat we have possess a 'certain talue thuy are historical material bujt not. history, or aje.in ,an extremely im perfect form. We would be delight ed to know that; the distinguished gentleman referred to wa giving all of his time to the very : iwpokant work of preparing a history ot his uiive Carolina. He would do the ' ' - 'I MlilTlWITI"- " llll'IArlM1- IhelttSlectirf itsntireind fjdlf f 11 iWkfeut thWfletaUs witli skill addf ThefinorenLltoCJfaiii co'nscientt&fi iienttoos devotion. Wr doubt if there is a living Carolinian would o the work better. who "Kansas owns 5",555 school housed, wof ,1 $iQ00t00a, Jt, , haa . n ..sXmiMivfxaityjA state fml colpgs. formal i for the education, of teachers for t r' - - Ni : . . .1.- A col leces for the' public schools, a college .to teach the deaf and duttiftto speak and the blind to read. " Exchange. ' ' ' 1 .'i i-.fu a t-i.t." ' ct. North Carolina owns probably 1,000 eehoo houses which are worjth probably $250,000. It has a. State University, six male colleges, a dio zen or twenty first class female in stitutions and a large number not jBo' good. Jt has six or seven Normal Schools, a Deaf, Dumb and Blind Institution for both races, two negro Institutes, and a tolerable system of common schools that has been some Vhat retarded and crippled by re cent injudicious and unfortunate leg islation. NISrtRCfliha needs more and better solvool houses, a larger school fund and better teachers with much' higher salaries: The colleges of the State need a niorc generqus patronage and the University stands in need of a- large endowment tb make it all that it ought to be and its friends desire it to be. THE PERIODICALS TJce Century for June is au excellent number of this.yery popular monthly, 'its illustrations are excellent and its matter ia steadily jmprpving. The current number has rarely been excelled by any of Its pre, decessors. There is a fine bust of the gecat English poet, Tennyson, as a f rontis-piece. The article; of Mr. Gosse on "Living Eng lish Sculptors" is most enjoyable, and Ihe engravings of the exquisite specimens are most admirable. Mr. Cable contributes another of his instructive historical studies of New Orleans, entitled 'The Great South Gate." Among the other contributors Sire Henry- James, Jr., James II. Morse,, HoWells, Joel 'Chandler Harris, whose story-sketeh, "At Teague Poteet's" is capi tal and shows him to be as much a master of ttm dialect of the 'illiterate Georgians as he is of the negro: Mrs. Burnett, Edith M. Thomas, J. iV. Cheney, Charles Dudley Warner and other writers of talents and reputation. Price 4 a year. LittdTi Living Age is a long way ithe best eclectic publication in the world, $nd being made up of choice articles selected from the, wide field of British periodical literature it ia by odds the best periodical in the worhr. Iyo-ean take but one) by all means get tMte Among the papers in the numbers for May 2Cth and June 2d, are Bishop Thirlwall, Church Quarterly,' An Unsolved Historical Riddle, by J. ' A. Froude, Nineteenth Century; John Richard Green, MacmSXan; Robert Herrlck, and Mr. Gladstone's Oxford Days, TempU Bar; English Longevity, and Wills, Ancient and Modern, Spectator; The French Republic, Economist z How the Egyptian Land-Tsx is Paid, Globe; with instalments of "The Wizard's Son," the conclusion of "The Ladies Lindorfs, 1 and poetry, our 'Stayb coimnr oilam i i$s. The papers wlilch have, bxa'.rofldeinn intr the WHBinston Stab' for its Dosition on the tarift and revesue have-doubtless forgotten that newspapers have a right to their opinions even should they' differ from the party. which is by no .means the case with that paper. We hope the -Star LLXllt .9 ' f ..LJ. iT . - 1 - wiu conuoue ira crnsaae againw niguf la riff. - Wetdon New. ' , ' The fttibi-Qbtervlr may thlhk It -"naughty? to criticise the action 1 of the Ralfeigh Democrats: We admit, the duty is n6t a pleasant one, btrt claiming to be a D4m6 crat of the Democrats, andetandiBg pledged to endorse the action of tee party, we. be come responsible, and claim that it is not only a right, but a duty, to notice And, M necessary, to censure the proceedings of "Democratic gentlemen" in Raleigh; or any where-else, when by siltace we wbuld seem to opyvaiota oourse which in olir judgmeafcsltf slmiqpen the entire par ty and on ourselves as a unit of the mighty whole. Durham Reeordjsr.' ' ' TlfE TJ&rFirMQUE8'FION. " ' 0f afoaa fBtfMiitte-ltwUlwt. . . New Yort- World. . ' . , , . r 'Bis' a Toati wiry a t ,t of i?rbiAk k. i , Wcmay be feowe time reachiaar a- Hotutiorii iae uston. ,,oai . s j uie pifbjic "nrimi cdmcfl'tQ be lightened it will not be satisfiedVwith any tariff iua. lips not pris leauuiK, purpose ;ths risinff of revenue forthe geVern- nieni,, uur wsn ine uebaus oi jany tariff Ikw fn J-whiMi kh ifnltMr !1w1 'upon foreign rnerchandfee hal be aoove uie revenue point. . . . ! ' .':KOIS. ' . ' : ' j !,!- , ThoserM.'SocatC, incidehtal protection, some protectsom or any qWindVprdtecU'dn UroDablv mean no more' than is meant bv ' a tiarlffi ohtjrifdr.reveftqe, Jdrk tafiffclaid for iotVttb.iljf.Afrorii; some ad vantage to our "own - manuf aciurers. The'.diViaibns is., perhaps nvorje of PVct..".thw.' of r.oreedillier arei DpiHocrats Viwhoi " professedly Te't;l jpmfy tH?t 'Who lrislstl as a tnatter;of policy, that we 4hall fflot say. so,. . The b"hly purpose of silence would' be to nide-oar 'real purposes. j I . know of- no osltion morel ias- 1 preghable, a liponitriiicti itiis more important tor t&e, iemocratiq pjarty to form its lines, than, thai -libhc property canribt be tatceri for private JTJ1M3K JKERV BI.A'OKi O TBlfNSV LV Congress had no more rfghf to levy a tax on imports than it had oh JandJ beyond what is .kecessarv . for the support apd maintenance of the gov- I ernment. .All Knna iti I bery. JUS TORI CAJCr ME2I02SA UlLUL if. fl II Hi H orihe rotfabl sw strm, srcrTablrhenl4Aonuloe: . M. A 1 i to a North Carolina statesman that liisan be found in the State. It is a well autucuiiuitieu vrauillOn xnau vanvro n was destroyed attho burmnk df the' o pitoluilalngin "KSrelgU, 1U "1831, and which was a,CMerdoTtvre' of art, was supposed h f tire legisa-' tors who ordered- it . to be; an ordfer. for a plaster-cast of the Father pf. Country. . John Stanly, ,pf JNw IBernei ldBv'd the'first'appropriatibn and it was his adroitness that n' :ve&rled"the lestsUtaro- into the ap propriations which, prpejured thisjgim of the illustrious sculptor. j Our 1 iter drjr rhonnmetits kre hardjy 'wlrvrthv riff"!f.fin tin'mn: Monti v half-1 penny pamphlets, aim osrt out of ptlf tj tell the story;o,he. lives of Noftn. Varofina;s great sons, i ne . pcnsir. able rpcords, most of them, were ejuv ri'qd'to Louisiana, for the purjtodeiof completing the History of the mate bv Martin, when he was appointed py Mr! Jefferson a Federal tTudce tin that District. Thev were lost by the negligence of the Legislature in if aid ing to recau men wnen juartiH iu ished his incomjWete history. , II probably lost interest ip the subject wnen ne removed irom tuu owit. . rr f T-itpt-s had timhahlv o.iM&e.tkX a larije amount of vnaterial for (lis history, all. of which was in the hands ot his executor at nifl-aeainv in ine first number pf this paper,, which ip- pcj.red in February, 1872, we called upon, the Legislature to get pc-ssbs- Sion ot these vaiuamc nisioncai epi loMmna of T)r' Tfiurlfs1 lint no aktin: tion -was paid to it," and they rc destroyed by fare, afterwards, in lil timore. I " Other historiaus, with .meacrro rna- terials, have sought to produce our record, but they have labored under great difficulties. Wheeler has don mnch for us. He preserved his ldve for the State thro ngh a long n en- residence, and did tnnch i a preset" v lot? our ijerishincr records. Mai or Moojre, his uephew, denerves crepit for wliat he has done, . but ;he was without the ineahs or the time' to do his Work as it should have bcortl He wrote for money and we hope he trot iiav. The materials for a suitable history of Ihe State are not all destroyed. But, it is expensive to get at them. 1 bey are found in the court and county records of the several counties of (he State.' It wilt require diligent and long Search to find them all. It will require caTefnl examination' by )an acnte, observant and patient mind to discover all the hidden treasures of Our history that can be found in the records- ft he-Htate. The Stfte must do it, if done at alT." IJet ihe State employ some comrjetent North Carolinian, at a gooiT Salary, to flo the work, this work to be- the prip erty'of the State. We have siich men. One Bitch occurs to osat'this writing George-Davis, of Wilmington. fIr. Davis is a gentleman aod ascholaj-, a man of literary tastes, a thorough T North Carolinian, in good , health J of mature age, idontined with the f?titef and his own fame is bound up in1 its history.. A pure manA without f)ear and without a suspicion of reprodch. Mr. Davis has a large and profitable; law practice, L theState see tp it that ne sustains no loss b'the wprk. jLct him have a"compelent and"gpo4 sat ary, and let fi?& labor be the oro perty of thcState ! CURRENT COMMENT, Tlifi. snjr of Garfi eld agioes with many leading KopmbiMaua still in the flesh, in thJ opinion that Mthe country will go Democratio at tho next Presidential election. .Ix-3na tor Conkling has already madle a similar1' prediction. Mr. Jay Gopk3, whtf has edhtributed more than hny othei individual tp Republican iuc cessos, think8.the- Democrats jivvl succeed. Ex-Secretary Blaine j is undetSlood: to entertain the sarriej be lief. 'The ' indications all favejr 'a forecast im , which dead al living Republicans agree. The old Rei ub licart, leaders are out of the t eld1. The neW lights are ' being1 e5 t!n guished"'Tffl(f tTfpBr another. The Tabor bubble has toursi. JfaoVi i is use1 irp, Keiferl Robeson, Cornell are all unavailable! Arthur Twill not get a utiited " Republfcan 1 inn- and, m the language of1 arfild, spirit: 'Th'eoontrvt will goEDett" ocralicAr York-Warkl, Item: ' - - If the delegjftioTi from Ohfo rh tre De'nScfaticNatidtJal Gonien tiorr of -YehalMm ndM ff kiia!'v monrfyaTid ttf hCStly 4 fovor oBth TKmination ot Alien j "Thurmnh . as the anot flair-President, Timr nian will be nominatea."lltj!ke 4ele-.: gati6ri"from Tndi'aria'rsb'4,Ilu1!fe solidly and' ieafotislV In fhr e1 ' TWQmi TC. M6f)otfalewWbTifJmihate If. 1,110 ucicgamm- irom-iiimois snau ije urianibously and1 dartiest! in wrpv 01 nominating j oon McAHlev ! naim- et, be will be nominated. .1 i .That UXiiT say, 'if: Ohio iaf-unaaimonsW for Thttrttvxn, .while Ithliatii rfd-Illnois are not unites in favor orMcllotiald andBipSEJrl3tumaft will bd the candidate; if Indiana is nnaniiiotte f 0 Mciyorialdj while Oh W and T Iffl: nois are divided, then MoDbn aid -vfllf be the candidate, and,, it Illinois' is unanimous for Palmer, whUaJohid and Indiana are divjLdedthenBalm er will-bi the candidate. Tf "tfither ofithe'thfeemrtpJptr.1 Rfc tho ojatiow as the candidateT hef will4 tjonyenwow as the Candida chosen fa tufijiftn pbeflt,h,e'OPrideVy'o,f:i tha-lj pitl uwucw-tt...,, vwnt, jlhq, jJem, . ; ' 1 1 ' nil t '"Col. B."W1teim.'-IX'fi TMoMm Kansas City, Mo.-, autborlee the foikXrlJtf' ' statemebt; ,SamaiUmNtrvins eurdd mv niece of spasms." Get at druggists. $1.50. SET" ITOIt rAYJLRXX OIT IN : itelCJ 1 SEVEN 'mm II anxe In tMe f raUin. 1 br in N. Y. Cor iem canvo t ar-f ranged, x am sure, a to ao ateay with the army of spies and agents, and tbo 4ctEstaUeDqtrtsition prao- ledvTmddjv vwsenl laws. A tax (he l&oeHkitikd capacity o,a Hiii VW9 imtii4iL&m.iU hnaf, of. Wpolitieal- storeloSepers,'. nd t gaugrs aiia armea Tnarsnaia wnonow oonnu 'jtcijthtf chief KCrtrf1 1 off the Radical 'oajiV.ia'inanvBUteil' .And !a sensi- - blo reduction -oi Ucaio of tax t,a a true revense mni weniatsccorapusii '& vast r6ferm,Adgive. 'great relief, ( v FINANCIAL. ,.. Tt Ttelemph to MWOniln Str.) ICKW YQJtK. ' Jttne'iW A. M-The stock market oneiihrf emtiMht-tiirtintr tnn jMlvance of percent:' from IhrydOslnir dflWatious bt yestprd'sy. purine the ' pa$t :nauj 'frrttd KAnoHA.ilifo., Ptsb. , 1880. I pnrcbased' fire bottles of ymrr -Iktp Bit tcrs 'tSf Blatwvp & Co.. fast Tarll, for my daughter, and am: well pleased with the cuter?. . Tuoy did ner more good Uinn all the nrwlicine sue has taKett ror six years. The above ia from Vv very rcliKblc farmer, Whose' daughter wtrs itf-' poor, boa t h for seveh1 of 'eiglr' years,' and eosld obtaiu no relief she-used 'H0J Bitters.' She is now fri a good health loS'ay person txi AUc country. We have a large sale, and 1 hey are run king remarKaoie cdtm. ' t 1 W: B: Bisnor & Cd To wah'uiMir you are fn bed with deenM) you may abt get'dver ro'Tncwjths: 'm the .height of folly, when: yen tnJght be easily cureo tnnjug ran canr syrapioma Dy rark ers Giireer Tonic . Vre hare ltnjVn sick lv famflles made fhefteal thirst, by a timely tiso prints ihediclac.Utemtfr. - Jt--""--' .Use the Aineenan Graphite lead peobila maanractured br tUa Joseph Jiixoa (Jru clble Co., of 4raoy City, Kew Jersey, House esWiliehed i 1827. Tho ouiy rien cib awarded the Grand Medal for Progtess mh vianna in o. a IT! 1878. ighy-one Brat $re- ouums awaruei) for superior m lanufoctitrt'g ef Uaek leacU Pcils ( oil nn.de and ai t L style at eaaoopble pr loea. M A N 1 1 K A f TUlt JCR8 OV KVFRT DXSCRTFTtOIl ' lit 4 At 1 it a t C0TT0F IOlCHINERY Of moat Approval iiUnfM ai, yrUh Rovmut Improveoieiita. Paper TVFachinpry ALSO j TURBDTX WHZELS. Shafting' !and Gearing, Bydraillo r Preseei aad Ptuapt, Elevators, &a. PLANS nH COTTON AKDCrAPKR KILLS n' lT n iii BTTn, supt. tOWXli, MAB8, ' WU . Jl WTWt. Treaa, 1 nMti , 8 8fi Btrt. BcwttL Dental Association, Tns Nnmi annual kkkttno of tmc North OaTolhta State Dental Amoolatton wffl be Jkfld at MORSHKf n CITY. N. C oomcMnclmr TUK8PAT, JISE laxb, IS8S. Tb MtMitlpa ct everT praetttioncvof Peat fstrv la aapeciaUj called to the at retrulatln tb lTrac tlce of Dentistry ta North Ckrotina, paaae4 b f the fist Inthe StU WoStaarttflStS frmitha Stat Board of Ontal Xxamlaera, Which Icon veas at the same time and place. . t. i..,.: , a. y, oEhrrrrn, President. ..W.JI. nQjrrMA.fiepmtary, ' tiff 4 hn 3000 TSREE4I0USAND 3O0P tianufacturefl Tobacco Ooaslsttns? of Ovr welt IradWil -and prmnMx hrands of Fl.' G I Manufactured this Samner and for sate at BOT V TOM PKICKB. We woaM oalT (mortal RttenUoa to omr CITKAF BSAKDS, which we claim to be JFAR SVPSiOR to other low grades ftoid m tnu marret. - MJAOQW& A KlDDJa, j proprietor CAPS IXAS TOBlAJDOO WORta 'deetrtf Tobacco. I B ' A A VB. FtTLL " LINES OF TOBACCO, which we stre willing1 KtOIIT fI?NT n4w pTtoett prior to May la Also a very large tt. fiOPiSB UkD .! . ) .' , i PROVISIONS at botton Ihxuroa. , 1 ! ' ' mv tf " WORTH A WCTBTH. ; ..I. ' i'.. .. i-Ji n 1. i- I J. H. PARKER, oinusion Ierchak 0: rnONSWNMENTS , OJ. ,CpTTON. NAVAL HTORI8filCB aba VTITHKIIN PRODUCf sotf cited. :! - ! "Sxeontea orders for' rh pvrehaoe nd sale of inWriiji txiNliAfrarf thle'Dotton una p tH sTDITlONt TH-TXAJt OF PUBLICATION, WlffOontalA'dveV BO.OOO NAMK8,and ts to tended io b'the' WtEk AND MOSt ItELIAr- BLi AgKifHKNoiE BOOsi' ever pntlttned for TCeftWOsroUiau -' I , . .1 , TMe Btwfaifesa fchd ft'ijasstflorisl afoa Af:tm OountT, cay and Vlllac wiU be, recorded end oias8inea ror convenient reference. 1 Fries apBStf ill JOS, SAGS, A beautiful Mfqre bort biMll fHS1". ttoZ- before bortne. w defy oojPeCtlon In exceUetioe, beauty and prioes. A lto,f.?n .tt .werlor jroeda.- Jlarnoss,' aoa oaaaiBs ana everytfalnf; in short . Wtit.be p.eayd to satisfy my customers. 7 a J. H. T1T1 A KTi ' V u No. 105 Front St. ft J t?5n. J PrdLetd tRongjQ- quJCt, aid a,f utthcr ajTrAAee of i iVP.n,V was larded; led bt.TiOis, San Prtradsco nrdferred and Tv"abnh irc- r. : --ji -7." y-- , -TIJlTirn.ttST NEWS: MH ALLa'ABTS 0FTHX WORLD ? 1 FOREIGN. L Reprieve for Carrey fltTae 4 Par ticulars of the Disaster to tbe Freark jTfipm. ia Afnmk-Tfk Vsuna mm Knglsnd-TBe'FnruUs Fllsileirv De- f"" 'Mb' to - rakw "eso isnim 1 Ckarrta 91 sit ton 1st Their Owe Hands. ' f Bv Cable to tke Mornina Biacl 'DtrBLiN, Jane 1.' Ear! .Spencer, Lord Lnentenant of Ireland, baa refused a re . pTieVo.'to Caffrey, obe of the Phoenix Park murderers. 'Ta1U8 June 1. The, Qavlm, hi an oc couct of the attack of the. Arntmltn on a French force near ilarroi, says Cpt. iQvers, In, leaving the Fort advanced with ISO ma rines, leaving in reserve a force Of ES0 men. These, however, remained too fs in the rear to be Df setvlco to Capt. Rivcfa'a advanced guard, which was surprised by a large force oJ Arnamltcs and almost a tin I hilated. On the rear guard arriving at the oeae the Amarnitcs fted, carrying off Capt. Hi vera and fifteen marines, all of whom were impaled the next day. London, Juri 1. The StamLird't qot respondent at I to mo says a vehement an tagoolsm exists between Cardinal Lodo cbowskl, Archbishop of Poaen, and liafoo Von Schloezcx. The latter accuses the former of intriguing to frustrate negotia tions, and the tjanduial oocuso 13aron Voa Schloezer i bad faith. A dispatch from Berlin to Um Exobaage Telegraph Company. aays Priace Uismarck presided yesterday at Um meeting of tlie Pruasinn Alinislry. Itwaadeotdou by the Ministry to lake ub rcguhtlLou of church mailers iu their own hands, independent of Home, and si j bout a WU ta ,tW I)iet pro viding for a modification of Ala May laws. Ho mr, Jnnc 1. The Vatioan has aban doned for the present the hop of 'estab lishing diplomatic , relations wrth Kngland. THE MISSISSIPPI. The Hlver Cos-amlaolosi Visit tke Works AkoeftTlelCskarK-aotlsto-lorv Proerreoe sit all attv--Tl.e Br- Tttmeal Flan a Perfoet Sarroee. By Tetocraph V Um Moratser Mar.) Nkw Oelkans, June 1. The Picayutisi Vicksburg special aaya the U. 8. steamer Emma Etheridge arrived last cvening.hav in? on board Gen. C. It. Comstock, Prrl dcuL Mai. U. M. Ilarrad and Cant. C. R Scars.of the Mississippi Rtver CommiMion, and Capt. W. Ii. Manhali. or the U. H Engineers. They Inspected Plumb Paint and Piovldcnce Reach, and the work done at Delta Point by the Oom mission, tern Comstock Ls most favoraMr lmnreed with the work at Providence Reach, and is satisfied that the plan and work done there are a perfect soocesa. and wUV accomplish the desired end, and reauit in pcrfna aent .benefit to the navigation oi the river. Soma vety. decided cUaagca have bcea made in the channel there, as predicted by CapL Marshall. A carcfu itwpeclioB was made of the cevctment work done at Delta Point, and it was foand that not the slightest portion of the work had given way. Gen. Comstock aays thin revetment has demonstrated beyond cavil that it ia possible to hold the bank and pre veni lis caring oy tnis meinoa at any place on the Mi3ss6U7pi. The work at this point has had a fafrsTnd aathf actory tesA. It h stood thett&cks of the strongest current in me rivTT ror several rnontna without yield ing,' and another bank where revetmg is thoroughly doftc will do the same. An in Bpcctlon of trre dredrinr work now la pro f;ress jn Tlcksburg harbor, waa madf, and n the ODtnlon of Cbede t-mtlemm the alan "of making dorr vvnterwlll eventually prove successful. COMMERCIAL. W 1 I.MIriOTON MAltK.Kl. STAR OmCrX June 1, 4 P. M. SPIRITS TunPENTLNt The Market opened dull ai 8Si ecata per gall on, with tales reported of 25 casks at that price, and, later, of, 300 casks' at S3 cents. ROSIN Market firm at tl 25 bid for Strained and fl 30v for Good Strained, with aaka as oilexed. V TA It Market firm at 41 tM per U1 of 20 ibs, with 'salee at quoUtlons. ' CKVtP .TLTffENTTJTErr-Thje! ' market, waa steady, with ulo. rcForted at $ JS for Hard and $2 06 foF Vdow Diptaad Virgin. , . , COTTON The market waa quiet, with small sales reported on a basis of 10c par IT) for Middling. The following were tho offl -clal quotations: Ordinary v . . , . . . Good Ordinary.. . , 7 8 01 10 roi 116 rents f lb 5 1C " f" IiOW Middling,. . . Middling Middling..., lJKTKiPn. Cotton. . ' 1 .. ... 9 pairs 2S5Cakj G7& blls 81 'bhls 113 bbls Spirits Turpentine. ICosul, Crbde Terpentine. . ttc rmimrTrir ivtANKirra. tnr TWecfapej to the Momlet Htar , finaneiaL Nkw Youk. June 1. Neon. Mkny opened weak and lower, but at noon! the market waA firm with a pnrtwrf recovery at Si per cent. Sterling echange-44!Cj&l!iy,. State bonds d nil. 'Gorermnonbf generally unehhftged. " . Cotton dill. witkalcs ul 880 baVa : 'mid dling uplaoda 10f coats; Orieans il dnots: Fwturea steady ;aales a UMf4uowhigroiio4a. tiom : June 10.70c; Jly 10.6Qcl Apgust lO.flOc; September 1A43; Oolohor lO.lBc; Nerrembcr 10. 06c Hoar Arm and ufct. Wheat opened a shade fcrwar, hut siee- quently advanced le. Coxa quietl and a abade better. Pork dull sAfi0 ()&) 25. Lard weak at $11 43. SpiriUtarpcnttn 7e lioain $1 CO 1 65. Freighla dujl and 1rcak. smRRicirf maicBtsrra. Bv Cable to Ota Maratac Mar. I fHvrwoot, JvtDe l-l-Nooa. Ootlotr easier; uplands &M; Orteana 6Id r as lee of 7,000 bales, iaoludiar 500 for speculation; receipts 15.400 bo lea, iactodiaf 1&.900 iAM rican. Unlandt. Im c. Joae aad Jalv deliv ery 5 50-64v 6 49-64 and 5 60 64d; Jury and August delivery a WMi&i 534d; Ajurost and September delivery 558-643 6T4d; September and' Ojctober delivery 5 5t-64dt Oqtober and Novemhor dcUrery 5 45 649 ,44-644,; November and. Deceraber'de wy 5 43-644 . Fathxca dult : Saiea for the week wero 90,000 aW, ot wnicn uou . uoiea were A-aaertcan: docu- ion 120 bales: export L630 balea: actual export 5,400 hales; import. 84.000 bsdea. of Which 65,000 were AjDcricanj stock. 78.000 balea. of which' 730.000 are AxenrtAAfc fWt mOOQ; balea, ot.whih HO.OOQ talte .are American. , . . , .' , , , 1JB0 P. XtJpTanda'.l c, Jqe and 1 July delivery 5 4a 64d: November tod De cember delivery 5.42,-64d. . ,. . Sales of cotton Uvfl a v Include 4.900 balea American. I FORTPMrs 'FAYOBITES, Who .Thej Ar, Wnere They Live, aad to Whal "Extent Sha Blo., Them. The Wonderful Rooord of the Paat Year. A peril! IUa of ihe tttM s.hTt(iM n onipny darlnc tho yrer etxtlnc AhII. iv ,, relber with (he the m lour lr Ihe U'.l.lrr., ituiiili,r' il w i, Kate rqartl U. Hoeelp4 for the tmonnti an on nu i ti,. , floes of iImt Company. ' ''-tmAWTNO or MAY . rfcJ Jocta WWver, Kaat, Ml.n . Ikroarh Y ;. NaUuasJ Uouk, tL IVlr, Mtuu Charles NrlsuD. cr KlxUvnihui umi A v.. two M.Galrr-itnn. Tn yf.n. Arters. ntnrret..rvmlfr1r''P"H FastFrehrht Um,li Court uitrr. : FrenkllD t , sn.l n Kllhr i , n...i,,n Irvtn Mmw, lhnirh nok of '.,mmn, , fU. LoeU. Mo C. M. ISUrMoa, Pttlrf.ia, l.,rs DKAWftfOftr JCNK 11. im v rvnll A lltrkptt. Ihroarh Kotiitifcy n llonsl lUnk. Ixtvinr, Kr Mrs J. Fruotr, 3W Darua at., N m , Inaaa Iji . .,. Chan. W. SUi-rUon. El! worth. Mr Jo C (listnbfxlnt. rialrron. Tt i ,. II. II. ItHjmc. llarimfw bimI 'unl Mo . N v Urhoanx, Mr. X. Itors, 1&7 Kl Ann t . N ot l. m, PltAATITJO OKJt'l.V 11. ik Wm W. Irwle. I. A W R It . M nn l ,, U , Lnwswlllo, Kr ,k Kd. E bkutraaoa. HyicUvlU-. N , PhIL Wltslebea. lih H u Dun a i ., ,, Irolt. MWh , W. M Marttn. nnrT, Wl. h , . C. Iltlmaa. Ml. Vnrnnw. Ky . tkr..urli i iaor' Nollonal Hank, Slatifor,). K i I". b Dloltarrr, A eunic.ii 'rl-l.. I ., tltruiich fVrrnttr.l Imnnn. hti il..,.M vlllo. La , IT B. Meytiard, irwTlilrJ t . N. w orl. nn. '-a r A. Maid, 1U UouIUk oi , Nr m, .,u- La .. L Dut'ir. 8VI Iu.lilrr .t , N (t -.,v J a. Hmr. 10 mad W r)lion Matin h I Ml Ion, Mun Jno. Itrott. W A fl. H K Co . Wh-Iuim' t'n. I (' i ., II(AWIN(J (K AI fHT h im: I A. Burks. Lt-olla. Nai lilihr. i-;1h i( Koholior hlalloD). Le i . i. w. Rwffnr, dhU1 oir. t . au . i .i IhrtMiirh rannlB Couiily lnk, llonlntm. Trx i .,, John Hwd, 1H Weil W'utilnt 'ii ( Ilh torn I tiff ton. III (. (I. (I. Itev, t.yon, WU i W. W. II-.llowr. ', Houlli (1.1 t . l.t ,y I'. IoU i Panlel Rrryl. lx rV.nlli (1atk t . l.t, (" I I i .. PftAWINO OF 8KITKMIIEII 1 in ' It. Tt IW'twtn. co)Ih ihr, iirl it. rantr National Bank, liullrr. M i ' D. P. ne.tr, rnilrit Real Mlw Mntrl soalal AaatirlalloD, CoIuisInj. MIn l P. N. Johnson. Ilounton, T i o m 1'ctrr O. Johnaon, 1 1 1 jH-nof a ft.. U'mrn worth,' K as Michael A. Flnnopan. I KMrr plncr, ll..t..n DRAWINU OF CX-rtirtKR 10. Ihmj John C. KniM, Aarnion rar1i.h. Iji Uwynn ILsrrln. OO F at . a W., WaaWtie Urn, I). C W. L. LpwU, Co-opTallv lt Co . Wi.li lesion, 11. J h&m. Uobooil, Mrtnt4iU, Trnn O. C. Ilontlnrtnn, New York tltjr F. Rannan, PuhlWier AratoX TSiIIkmUux, r. i h r. im, ', iHki 1. '' I "Hi DRAWTJvO OT MOVBMBKR 14. hm-; i. M. Dlson. XuaU. Tei. . , 1 '.! Josephine Miller. Sit X. WiA lrol. rw York City .... '."' Cha. Mo watt, lohoonr "Uk-J Mar." Nw borvport. Maaa 1 '"' Itomaiwi JeaatMnrI Mow .York Hit r. mm Chaa. No. Oil Nw Church utrrH. Nrw Vtr lAlm . . f. Ill, WT lurt.PhUejphU ''fi' "' " XntlWeWtU. HO M&xaxtbe str. rtw OiSiauo, ia. .. .. Tom oooouat o ArpL skiuhera Kurra Oo., Lrachborx. Va DRAWTira err dbctkmbbb i, iimi rtallle P. ahrml'y, ITsa Maaaor at., Milla delnhta. l"a m o" TK. V lull Ml It Mil l Honth lloaton. Maaa . ' Ilarpax a. Frtea. yn W. Omri, al., tin. It. natt. Ohio in '' JohjiT, ttarrla & WUlard l'iar. Houtii Knd. llfrfiton, Maaa . . loom ',(, I IHKI i mm L. rHon;' fMIeetew Stwoevo Keaturkv HaSaoaeJ lUab.. .... ..... Mrs. ilarrtot U ok1ia, Veaiier. 0DJaru tXl , It. M, l- i Paid Well. FXrro 4ra. Ilaak. Has Fran clan, OeJ.i.w.. I'ndVrwood Flahrr, nollsrlMtl Uirouxh l"t NaUmai KaaU. Thrrm JOrnn. Mk b 1 mm ' mm Goo. C. A U. Arrea, DanrUU. va PAWITTO OrATTTART t. I'M Alvln keeear,fleaaa,la AajruaUnLopK, M Manwuia at , Nw r FTacllpleUa, izi Coti at-. N-w irloana, i II. B. HU"vena. THuarlll, I'a . !! U1 (m l '..mi i , mm !.' I.jmi I. Jim I. ".mi throua-h IVnn neak.niiaiMir:e. ra. N. B. AMtiav Oiraha. Hcb 4. U. KrUtiam. 6. Broad war. N" York Pakl I'a Umi sad Fs&atare itaaa. aeansni.. Teoa PRAWITJOOF FEBIirARV 11, IHrfl OrarWn RIstt, Jf ., Memwllla, Aln .natVanl nd throush W. K Klaun A (", llunl CrUtoDd'en T. Colllnfa, teconl National Rank. TyelarfHe. Kr ' Tllm, Ala t',.m 1", mm : ii Paid NsOonal MeUvifltaa Baak, W aftl.lt tM, lr. rV. . . . : . . ... Oeerre KohW, 7-alkl, tW. i.I tfiKtswirfc Fir "aUusal Beak, t avlti natL OhW Mmml Wea fUlk at.. N. M.. Weak Inston. I. C . . rteorre st HerMs. He nreow-ltewaral s tl . L. R. PaTUaW "VSklnirtna at., New r Inane, la P. Loar-y. & Banmndr at., NW tartaana Henry Wla. uuttettM tarows:h Hrawm auod, Hooe A Co., ClartiaaaU. Ohio O. rVUiakirti, la,i I'aWl Nodaway Valley Beak. Marylll.,Mo DRJtWTH a' pF M ARfll 1. HM mm mm V , V.mm J ' 1 m l,:hm 1'. mm IT..""' JT. ATlen HrWCrVf. AlWUVw. Pa J. J. lieyer, Itaadjxaus Lx-pot, HouUaii ton On.. Va i . F. K. Callennec. M. Panlt Minn.. otJIw ud ' thmnjH NaL Hank of Kt Kal John KhlpUy. cwTaVn.Tmi . lararl RmiL Orala. via j-,mm f. mi' r, mm O. Alia Pelrow, im (nal at New orloaim V m Paid Interaallaeial Bank, vUat. Ml - B. A. a4hawaf'tteafe. IM. ... Jaea.F. Wcaaxaa, NewWrwwI.Maap rr "Vrhliman, Krenrrrille. La Prof. John C. BptlK ItBoaakes e , 1n ln aatltMrlo.ti.M .... OenraeH Feraoaa, Moaai Leukoet. )M WT H. CJord. Amelia, Ohlt) John rrarx'W'o. WaaMatWia l. ' W. Bt. ClsM Waablas-Wa, D. C. ! ma I.'."" 1 .' 1 i' 1 "' i)AAwHaorArBiLit. ihks Michael Oowaoily. TrA. H. T HenrvM. aWtfnr, 1W Pearbotn at... a I AaaUae rrtooi! VanDUioavVue. Ia . Jamra R. Ii f, fersJtaBaa, Bailee . M.. dWlnT. naenfr. it., IliUadalnhla. I'a 57 H. harper, Bt (Mrtrire'a, Oolfeton . wlnTH'iisJnp'r'rtry.' Frank lit. ft FIrsrr Ut rFoortii' M liwsok i. . ; (' Wis.. for rmtm or rM tmrtUtOm of Us Orami .V mhoiti ' ctWvma (flkU patrr tn-tlny
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 2, 1883, edition 1
2
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