Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / July 25, 1884, edition 1 / Page 2
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V ... . JL .'if - f f4" 1 1 he. , -V A."' .-. T'Kl,XHEltJ ANNOUJTCESIEJfr, VHS atouNWQ STAB." lie oldest d&ny new aper la North Carolina, is published daily, except Monday, at $7 00 per year, S4 CO for six months, 00 for three months. S1.S&. for two months; 75c 'or one month, to mail subscribers. Delivered to . ity subscribers at the rate of 15 eenta per week 'aw artv uarfv? fmm yia wAaV aha waa " V TUB WEEKLY STAR is published every Frtdaj .norning at si mi per year, si 00 rcr six monua on ents ror three months. ' ADVEOTISINQ RATES DAILY).-One aanara fine day, $1 00; two days, $175: throe days, 2 50 -our aaya, j w; are aays, as ou t cftwees, 4 iw weeks, $6 60 : inree weess 53 to; one monm. toes of solid Nonpareil type make eoasauara, 'All announcement of F&rra. Festivals, Balls Uods. Pic-Nics. Sonietv KaettaM.-Political Meet ags, Ac, wiUDeohargwgnlaradTertJslngratee iuw, iwo montna, 17 uu; inree monies, suwj - -Ax months, $40 00; twelve months $0Qi 00. 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The Morningtar. By WILIiIAM B. BERNARD. WILMING TON, IT. C. TlIUESDAT Evesohs, JlTLT 24, 18S4. EVENING EDITION. CLEVELAND. - - We have not been able to publish a Bketcb of Groy; glveland as yet. His life is not marled with many surprises. The greatest is that a man of high integrity and who is devoted to the great work of Reform '"should be so appreciated so honored. Be ginning his reform as Sheriff, for he hanged with care and skill twa scoun drels, doing his work well and . hu manely, and then continuing it as Mayor of the city of Buffalo. New York, he exhibited so much of zeal and firmness and devotion to duty that he attracted the attention of the best classes of citizens throughout the great State in I which he lives. AM eyes were at last directed to him as the proper man to carry on re form in the State atjlirgi. It seemed to be regarded that Tilden's . mantle as the great reformer had fal len upon the younger , and broader shoulders, and Grover Cleveland was selected as the right mart to bear to the front the banner of the Demo- cratic party, inscribed upon it Re3" form in all Departments of the Go- YernmenVV' He s was elected by nearly 200,000 majority. Nearly thatnumber of Republicans, f ef used to vote and hence the . tremendous majority. They did not like FolgeH the Republican machine candidate, . and they stayed fromthe polls. ' Cleveland has not disappointed the honest people of his great State as ' Chief Executive. He carried, into his high office the pure principles of his life, and looking to the good of the Commonwealth , he I pursued a . i straight forward, honest, . open, de , cided course. He would not be dic- tated tor by any 5min or'clique or cabal. He dared to pursue the right. tie remembered sonian line' that was the way to glory.w - And (nobly and fearlessly do his work. and honestly3 die) fhe A youhgHerctdef, he . went hard to work-in cleaning out 7 the AusearuStables and heTnal .the .grand Tennv- I years of adventure and sufferine and anxie- ' Afiitit0w I 1316 field 18 cleat- J i remain so, , Kot ? the "patb'of -duty bfen 'when. At' i . nUved , uudat f avbrahiA m"am ihi iflr-.mOlU g; ; . : Reform has been the guldipg principle of Cleveland's entitetxjffi ' cial life. He is for reform in llfie- ; partments. If e is an indefatigable ttwlli make a inefficilnt offibeYrU& ii . ; will carry into the Chief Executive Chair a trained hahd a mind4ocus- . ; toraed to "methods of reform,' aho! an v ; earnest and sincere ' purpose to fe- store the Government of -the United ; totates to the old j condition dr hon esty, capability and economy" j 1 Ue will gather about; him tnealilestwien A; in the Democratic party' as rhisffi- , ; : cial advisers and friends; He will ana aespouea people. He will be the President of the whol s 5, ,n : hte9t free tive of the men composing the crew - P , dC!lVf Pe!fe!ut? ?n oppressed 1 liazardoui it is to send' out exoedi-' States of all of .the thirty-eight States.' and not the - President ot a party or a section. ;3f ;J .'y-1 V . " t Gov. Cleveland ia wt a pew, man altogether, as ssenea.ae . tainly a far beiterTcnown maaithan" either James K. Polk or ranKim Pierce or Abraham Lincoln was when Vwas nominated. I He is n the full of a. virile manhood. .IIis age is 47. His father was an nonorea oni -ftWft Prpsbvterian minister, and; I the son remains still poor : alter nav-i ing lived an industrious life. 3.UfV; & f Tf; nnntv Tr!vat.p and DUDLIC: II ;ntnrrrit.r:nrl n.tnscientiousness and "KWSVJ . . , decision of character ana aevowon ws WIaT "o man t.A ihfi confix ilUVllw A MWv m. - I dence, respect and support ot tue AmArinan teonle. ; then Groverj Cleveland deserves all this. He is much more of a student an a man of letters than the people at large suppust;. o reader all his. mannooa. tie is un-si usually well informed in many de--l excellent taste.. For fear that, ourj J reaaers wiuim eu &su - j ouijw at this statement as to question if not I to discredit it, as they have probably; concluded that Cleveland, is nothing:! but hard-working, pains-taking, plodding lawyer,wew of an editorial in the leading Demo , . . cratic paper of Albany, the Argus, one of the oldest and most influential. papers in the 'I State of New York. The rrw says: He has been a. constant student all Mb! life. - T-T2- v:v. i I ui"i wiuu 'jiuujaw' Wj SoSVdSSiaSSSn HtoS! and ciDe&oua a&a clear uiiaerstanaine. thn intnitiTA inntinrt or tne nmcK ana Alert obserrer, as well as the careful habit of the ij cpusclenUou. invesUpOor. He Jim great ! lSii He distinguishes between things. He fe- ' ciple, :or a sentiment, in prose or ; verse, never passes before him - without, being stereotyped on his recollection.' He can re peat pases of poetry or prose after a single reading" He cannot account for this po. er. xie recognizes it ana nuiizes ii, dui ne is careful to make it his servant, not his master. It is noteworthy that he remembers prose substantially - and - poePry literaPy. The rythm and the letter chain and charm his mind, f :. : He has a benevolent heart and is incapable of using his faculties for; malevolent purposes. 7 The work, he has done In large trusts has made the coun try familiar with his qualities as a reformer and a statesman. POLAR OBSERVATIONS I W A K,w,lr 4-rtA or, vnntf An n arfA Kw I lects the best.! His imagination is a martea quarantine should be?very rigid." - 1 aia. it enables mm to vivuy iacis Dy pic-1 : 1 - i. ; ;:. r -. y -.., I and purpose; On Which refJf,1- THE INDEPENDENT I it, was organized. "I, dp, ... .US ou68wv(u vo .j opinion on subjects which have been I ing with the great KepabUoan fath Chief Justice Daly, of Neiw Torkis I long in' controversy, and indicate an I era that political morality and purity a practical and sensible one not to goonfoolish explorations in search -xt -V t i u V vi- v of the North Tole. bnt to establish ' r I permanent stations arouna tne. r'oiar basin iOt sea for continuous scientific observations. That this may result in benefit to mankind,' we do no much believe, but that it would be interesting and Instructive to men of science is altogether probable. We can understand how such stations might prove particularly ricti in ob servation of natural phenomena, but it may be that even this would be obtained at too high; a cost of life and of human suffering, j We shall I be better able to comprehend the value of such observations when I reely nat. published his fell report of observations and , ' explora tions made during two years or mofe. He will probably supply all '. needed data for; determining the practical !nes8 and value of circumpolar sta- tions. We hope that no more expe- ditions will be f."i r ttt .). . sent trux ; like those (that have1 penetrated the Northern) Sea where so many have perished and so little has been accomplished. Of course these ! expeditions1 will 1 not cease and .already an. English ex- plorer in those frozen regions, has sigr med a desire to . go again Land out do if possible the Americans. Gree- y and : his men now stand at the f u . y L1oAn?r fT: AffJ plated inditlnnd is thn crnmo vrnrth ' tVia anlo he discoveries made by our exDldrers and ibservers in r an uninhabitable . region are ut.dust in the balance when weighed t the unending sorrows of bereavedT families, the misery of; broken homes, the horrible sufferings of so many worthy men and the grief of a nation. Let there be an end of this folly." : i :.. It is a singular fact : that ; Greely's party. were twice within : a hundred pr so miles of a relief ship sent out n search of them, t On the 12th of A.pril, 1882, it is now rknbwnthe Weptune . was not more' than 140 miles southward of ! where Greets i . - , . pas taking observations. : At another ime c the . Neptune, commanded by papt. Beebe, was only 125 miles f outh of the very spot where Greely f '' : jev -is was neanyMwo years after" tliis before he Svas found: and by the second expedition (count' Ing Garhngton and Beebe as ' one) and bnlv after ninetBn nf tltw: i tions and how- very difiicult it is to ' party : oemg . searched for. The wonder is that explorers are over i v - ii j 1 - - It'i ! A?ox'iBt--- -' - h ' ?- i There are nineteen ataies ientedhjbel National ohibio Convention in Bossion at' Pittsburgh Pennsylvania. - Five Southern States I Jtjffers acandidate who is an n ave delegates. TheT bodycan be4-fit leader; -wiiT-swwori3ff ,nrlnan fr rTT ThQ BTID IBnE T.IRI.H UM- played irisingingildehTrBrowtTj " . I wih a refrainGlory tglory hallef in4a, nnr nAnsn is marchino- on.M I What'conne6tiorf thereisbetWeH art 1 :!- 1 ..KU-jliK cwy.ttesewea ranging an nnnare times if he had had an hundred lives, and a cause that jprof esses to cure the the bodies ot mwt removing a curse, ' it I js "; hard to discby er. A body net comppsed of fanatics with out regard for decency and the fitness of things tould never sing asong glorifying one of the deepest dyed. yiuams in American, nisvury us , ,a8i been proved. , again and .again by; Northern - writers, when j assem to mankind. ; WWt will be thepolitl-l cai outcome or tne Doav 'and what effect it will have npon tue: xresi- tdential election is. not to be foretold! now. Butler is already the nomiriee ofhree ConVentions an - . . . -- . . ..... ( I Brown Convention. ': ' ; i pot your: lots jind the city ;C9ri der: With yelio w fever at?;New Orleans, 'and.dliolljripldiyd-.l S : !n wither, . r ,T .f t'Vn. 'A...! wMutjr wg"- mwu . ores, . the Wition of Wilmington 1 be closely examined, and all 1 1 : v ''VUv:iV-r.'Lim II that judicious samtaUon can accom- U plish.should.be resorted to murder to prevent disease and save life." The J JL1CAN PLATFORM r.i r 1 Li - r :l ; I The following is the platfprinpf 1 xpe lnaepenanij fvepupucan party: i tnat it win ai ways, pr even long, pre The paramount. issue of thevPresi-1 serve its courage,-its moderation, its dential election of this year isr moral I ather than 'political. 4 It - concerhs 'the 'national1 honor .a$d 4 chatectej and honesty of, administration rather than general policies of. the.govern- ment, ; upon whieh the1 platforms of the : wo parties do not' essentially differ. ' . No position c taken by "one, platform is seriously traversed; by uif! iwm. ciiucuuj 'wuwup - - w ..w. ... - - .1 unwillingness to declare,' upon other and cardinal questions, views which m the present condition of opinion, r r .5 miguii HenouBiy uisturo toe parues witmn themselves. -x . j -.jt Parties indeed nowcohere mainly h? habit and t.Iti?njln,dIid been settled the most vital pdliticar activity - has - been the " endeavor of good- citizens in both parties to ad- just them to living issues and make. them effective agencies of ; poliUeal progress and-reform. ; The indispen4 sable necessity of : this course has profound peace at home and abroad the most threatening national peril is anr' insidious ppticalicorruption mercenary and demoralizing in spirit auu bcuuuvj , hoae's pat desceiptioit. - The result, pi Twffatt is ,weU descri- I bed by Senator Hoar,i of .Massachu- setts, as "the shamelesa doctrine that' the true way by which-power should be gained in the Kepublic is to bribe th people wi's the ocei . rat for their service, and the true, endj for .which it should be: used, . -when gained, is the promotion' of selfish ambitionTvand' roefrgracaUoio;':ofA personal, reyenge-' ui'4, this doc trine has produced results which aret still more alarming. 'A eorvupt - spi rit and tendency has so rapidly, de-' veloped that they se'ek political pp W-. er not only to H' gratify ambition and revenge, but tofwi omotepi ivate gain. They deride?1 appeal to the public conscience, defend, the" soiled reputa tions of poblio men hy.; a bold asset-1 ; guOiydecnre-tbat taipuig mmpn.iHJSijion .juisposes , pi. ttcal measures ''idf rBforrJtheAsystepx of ' ofiicial ; patronage which -i f ostert j Miisnones poiiog, maites i great par xy . nominally TCspownoie-ior pro- lcraged and ' faoMWOus ?f raudft.: atfd proclaims tua.iv is uty or very : cttiih roVTiea! enda i hasV. habitually : supported the payiv'regard :4he,;uc part?5 sPHoi ;withoat regard; to the jcharaers r'of thosA hom- ctcvyo a.vo PAuveaeuiH, w uui a BUDreme national necesattv. L;f AHendencr more fatafr-ltrtfat bountry-sielfatecan't be oonefeived, and when by public indifference or inisunderstand bporrttpt spirit is. able to'demanCiatlthe .country ihall approve it by aecording to - ltt ihe highest' Hohbr ihits'gif t, eVery patriotic citizen must -perceive that no duty opuld -:.be more preasing,-iVi. jtal and imperative .tban that of .baf fling and defeating this" demand ' If the Republican Cohvfentlon 'hfre- pe&ted , acandidate whose character and career were, pledges of a resolute eontest, with the. tendencies that:we bave describedwfthev4ad- foretold every-'inataon aijfi suspicion of, wrong-doijagiaBd.rdesniaihe all prac. itern dealingjrilh jpoiiccorrup- J jrbved by his offi6ial acts, moreKde won and vigorous correction of the I eisive than anv TABnihlo Vriiffirtritor rast abuses which a ioh aid tindis-i turned term of power by hny party', P t40 !863 the Buccess of ithe eandi hadh promised ? inflexible honesty' of administration, purifica tion of the government and the ele-' vationiof te party standard, eYerys. puDiican jvote; would hare giaaiy suDDort id tie aominatiorr: but; these -reprehi)sapportadQ ihitioCl arejpreHselnticJpatf Sns iThicKthe nomination forbids? -K ! BLAINE ABSOT.TTTUT.V ITNP1T. ' . rT . - T-T .S""VvSi Tr, a m n n nttiftio ,ta 'Deouniarv cain :ka reriresehtatlve of h; "".r1 f u atu lnei ' puoiio conscience oonuBinuB. LotiIh 7 ,1 whlfih Jffiftaftr fficft 1 reform-1 Suehv-a- nomination-' jdoes! not- promisV 4n ; -the jexecutiYe chair inflexijbl ciat Vf integrity,' calm and wise judgment, sole .regard for the ,putilie!!y5far shrinking dcirminatftff to ;prbrote reform in the civil service, and cease-i L.rtKViw JLiaa lessiy to pursue ana -punisn ' pttoiic The IndependenrVoTers have gener-1 BvHuf.'r.u Jtvepupuqap nomi nations as more surely promising. re form than those .of the1 Democratic' party. The- Independents, hdwever, cannot support ft nomination whiob. is; the culmination of a tendenoy theyi J ft- . .-nf.-. - i won ia correct.; me riepuoiicans can? not hope thaf bonder such leadership at we. have mentioned :the abuses of i i . i . t tne past, can oe correciea. or Jtne par ty, reformed. : We are very, proud of 'f0,0 nd service of the nnrdu be dispraised . i i ; -.i ? . : ' 1 KJl UUUUII BUVO OUB1I : LUU 1J- . 0 .. .. I , DiVOEH OP DESPOTISM s" Every party must be consistently renewed by the intelligent indepen- . c6 of ita own raejnbers, Of it . w ill " . . poUso?. , The Kepublican party first sprung from a.: moral aeqtiment,,. It was mesparty pi poiiucai morality and personal liberty. It appealed di rectlt f he science Ofe citi 2eni .ImtvliWall parties,' It was a p0- litical agency, not to he worshipped, out to oe careiuuy neia to tne spirit and forWhioh not1 know,'? saidMr. Reward thirty years ago, wnen ne leit the VYbig.party toioia the Republicans "1 do : not' "'knowt eosnsisteney .if- it shall do so; it will secure , and saye the ' country.; If it, too, shall.become nnfaithfl as all pfece,dipg. parties haye dope it will, without sorrow and regret on my part, perish . as . they . are perishing, and will give place to another truer one.' Thib reasoning must n6l be for- I gotten, i It iawith a profound con- Tiuuuuuuiiiia nisuum . awpuvii r - . ' . of administration are - more precious than the party, are more constrained to oppose the Republican Presiden- . r . .- , 1 uai nomination in tne mierest 01 what the believe to. bej)ure Kepubli- canism, of the publiowellare and of the honor of the American name. ,h OKFICIAX, UOXESTY AT STAKE. f juThe 1Bepnbliean nomination has for the time, superseded other is I sues, bv raising the . Question of offi I cial honesty.,' This question can't be I av.olded except . uppn the plea that 1 tne ofiicial ' character of the'candir I date need not becbnsidered, and thatj present' hiembefs :o f the 'party' ougTit to Vote for' any candidate who has been regularly nomihated. -1 This is a plea beyond which' party madness vttuxiu jw iivHjuKMwouua iu i wuuiu st J . " . 1 j m 1 require tnaurrenaer 01 ine seu-re- spect of, every voters, ?x here could; ( be no candidate so,,unfit that this j plea would npt demand his support, I and publican success justified by, , an argument , which , defies public ! conscience,5 .ald b he overthrow i ot the' vital principles, of the party, and show that the spirit' and charac tef which created its' great traditions are Vapidly perishltig: - THE BSAXS ISSUE OP JTnE' tAMvilGS. P Upon the practical questions of the tariff and finance, - and" othfer ques tions upon which both parties are divided within 'themselves, we1 also are- divided,, in - opinion We shall vote, therefore in the choice of Rep resentatives and. other offioers ac cording to pur individual opinions of their political jagwa Jindi their per sonal character. Divided on othen questions wer are united in v the con viction that) the foundation of the of fice and the holder . should . be pare, and;, that the highest office in the; cQuntry should be filled by a man of FgS61! HFPted; integntyAs. J itnere u no , aieuncuve issue upon iC Dolicv presented for thereon-' bideVaiiori .of yhe country,' the charac.-: highest importance to all citizens 5 jwho do not hoTd tfapjurty viQtQry jBh.puld Lbe seurgkat any .cost: WhUe jthjptepubliqan ominaipn .presents ja'partyirfwiiom we 'cannot support.. tue enocrauc . party presents pnp whose " hame'.' is" the synOrivinLof . draea'nd.honist istrative' political rfef ri-rrt t Ta Hischbgeevery ofiicial nrust 'witl!' bofe regard to the public1 welfare1; ana wnn usi .auregara' Oi; mere par tisan and"poirtrcalftegeJwhich,; kith the. applause ana confidence of b parties,'have . rad binjfrpra. "lvf .?'iv administrator Jtcai. liity. io inaii oi a great fHts Unreserved Ihteffitfenl and sin-: ere support of reform Tn'the 'civil1 ervice has ffrmTf .e'stapTished tJiat rf-J arm in me otate and cities ,of ew ifOrk. and his personai elarations, are a guarantee that in its ipifit and in its letter reformvould be ehforOed inl theuiiationab adminy atration. His high sense of duty, his absolute and -unchallenged ofiicial in tegrity, his ir-exible courage -in re- sistipg party pressure and pupnopnt- cry, his gretV experience .in ' the Re tails1 of adniinistration. and his.om- inanlding Executive ability and - ihde- penoence are precisely tne equalities,! wmcn tne political Bituauuu ueiuanus in the chief executive officer of the -government-to resist- corporate mo- npyjojlthejone band, o:emagogue; communism on the other, and "at Wmranabr5aaMth6urn1etiaceor fear; to protect every right of Araerii can citizens. . and- to respect 'every right of :'f riendlyStates ; byM making political morality and private honesty the basis of constitutional administra-! CtBVLAD THE MAK; FOB Tfifi HOUE. frpe from all associations with thei eontest and wlibse financial views are. in harmony with those of the , best! men in both parties, and coming mto publip. prominence at a time when ; ofiicial purity, courage and character; are 01 cmei importance, ne - pruseuis j. 1 . . y : ' . i. ! ' . the dualities and promise I which - thei inaepenaest voters aeBire ana - wnicn the' great body of - Republicans; be lieving' .those qualities to be abso- luteiy inaispensapie. in tne .aamini stration of government at this time, do not find in the candidate of- their own party, Such independent voters do not propose to ally themselves in- xtricably ' with "'any party. Such Republicans do not propose ; to aban don the Republican party nor . to merge themselves in any other party. r ' BOtTNP To'dBFBAT BLAINE. ; i But they do propose to aid in de feating, the ' Republican ' nomination, which, not for reasons of expediency only, bflt for high moral and patriotic considerations, with a due regard for the Republican name l and, for the American " character, was unfit to be made. . They desire not to evade the proper responsibility. , of American citizens -by ? declining to vote, and they desire Also - to1 make their votes as effective ai possible ' for an honest and pure and wise administration. How can such - voters, who, at this election, cannot conscientiously sup port the Republican . candidate, pro mote the objects ."which they desire to accomplish morei' surely than by supporting': the 'candidate who rep resents.' the . quality, jspint and pur pose which they "all agree in bejiev-; ing to be of 1 controlling importance in this election r- No citizen can rightfully avoid7' the isstie or refuse to cast his vote. The , ballot is a trust. Every 'voter is ' a" trustee for good government, bound to answer to nis pnvate conscience lor . ms public act& 'lhis conference, there fore, assuming that the Republican and independent voters who for any reason cannot sustain the Republican nomination .desires to take cause which under the necessary conditions and constitutional methods of Presi dential elections' will most readily and surely secure the result at which, they aim, respectfully recommends to all such citizens to Support elec tors who will. vote for Grover Cleve land, in order most i effectually to en force their conviction that nothing could more deeply stain the Amen can name and prove more disastrous to the public welfare than the delib erate indifference of the people of the. United States to increasing pub Ho corruption and want of official in tegrity in the - highest trusts of the government. , CURRENT COMMENT. The .real workingmen have no grievance against Gov. Cleveland and they will : not,, upon mature re flection, suffer themselves to be mis led, either by professional agitators, ! who work .' their mouths , more than their muscles, or by republican mis- sionanes anxious ior recruits at any price. JS08ton Merdld, Ind, Jiep. Senator Dawes is impressed by the gobTecdrd of : the Republi- can , party. iuei young - spa intelli gent votet has heard of that before. Just now he is impressed by the fact .that this party nominated, its worst and -not its best at Chicago, and made La demagogical platform ; upon which to mount its candidate. Thousands of; conscientidus Republicans do not recognize in these acts the old party i . ... . ox moral iaeas wmcn tne " senator pictures. Certainly they do not feel bound byf' such , unworthy ; proceed ings. , The old ; and. much , lauded pnnoipMs" are missing, and South America does not fill - up the aching jvpidm a .way that satisfiea the .mOral pense'of men .whose ' sovereignty, re- field RetnMican. t - , ; : THE NEW R OA RD O F MEDI- CAL EXAMINERS! y Wood's: North , Carolini Medical Journal --.THE ITEW BOAEP OE EXAMINEES. ; .There were present at the meeting bf orfeanizationVTrr; Wm. Rl r Wood . BpotladejakhOrri r.WKnbx,, Kaleigli ; - L1r,K iVaneis a Buffy New Berne; rDriPioIis Mttrpby. Morsran- Dr. f Willis Alston; -Littleton: CWJ.3-mBeliamVWiMin zDr. Wm-R. jJvVood ? Was lfifttwi fesideindimr Beretary'feideasurer : ' The act of. the Generaissembly. festablisbirig the Board waathen care- ir t uu -uiscussea."- ,v r - 1 x: ;The 'diftenthranchea Of mdiein kero AsigPdhy Jpas; f oltows:ii ; ourgylWjnvL Wood.a j Chemistry -and TharniacyDr. W. THBelamf: 'Anatomyr. Pi' 1 urphy:' v H practice. oii'MeeineDr-Willia 'Material Medica and "Therapeutics -Dk Ffancis Duffy: . , ; . .rV; ihyol?gyIr. ;Beaan; i V UDStetnca apd I Diseases ; of i Worn- n- lr A7WKnoxi THE LATEST NEWS. FR01I ALL PAETS OF THE W0ELD .1 1L FOREIGN. The Plana of the Warsaw onplraf tora-noira icporta Heavy ITIerY lallty at Ariel-Expected Rebel At tach Piv Snalim--Tle Salvatl Arjtnf Prohibited rromH.bldlns Ittectlnsa l4 fWARSAw, July 24. The inquiry into the conspiracy to blow up the palace during -the A Czar's vlait to- Warsaw. : shows that elaborate and far-reaching;-plana were adopted. :; Evidence is adduced to prove that the conspirators; after murdering the Czar, intended to provoke ?.a : rebellioa Jn Poland and Western Russia, to plunder the! Jews and rich tradesmen of Warsaw, and: to seize the arms in the.arsenaL , 5 1 Loiroosr. July 24. Earl Gran ville. Secre- tary of Foreign Affairs, has refused to ias4 the whole of the Acheen coast, with, a view to securing the release of the crew - of the; British : steamer; Nisere, wrecked on that! coast last autumn. 1 ;. , Pams. July 24. There-Were ten deaths from cholera at Marseilles! last! night, and j twenty at TouIob.- The number of. death?; at Aries reachea thirty-one in two days. - A: maiority of the people of that town .have' fled from their homes. ; : '. which mark the close of the fast of R6m iion KofTin fr rroir lit to nvruuttail thotn lyormidable attack ; npon the city ill jbe vmaue by the re oels. ' . - f Bbbsk, July .24. All meetings of the Salvation Army here have been prohi bited. TUE GREELY PARTYi . :, : Programme ftor the Official Beeeptlon of tbe Surrivora Pad t.Portf montb, N. H.-Impoilng Ceremoniea . marked Ont. ' t ;' . ' By Telegraph to the Morning Star.i j . - .Washington, July ; 24. According to the programme agreed on by the Secretary of War and the acting -Secretary of the Navy, the : vessels of the Greely relief ex-. pedition with the ; survivors and dead of the Greely party, will sail from St John's on the 25ih. or 26th inst, and proceed dii rect to Portsmouth N. BL; where they will be officially ' received by the Seetary of the Navy, the officers of the NorthAtlantid squadron, now at that port, and the State and local authorities. ' Lieut. Greely and the other survivors will disembark- at Portsmouth, and the vessels will .proceed to New York; with the bodies of the dead,' which will be landed at Governors Island,- and placed in charge of Jnai. uen. Han cock. The latter will transfer them to the care of relatives and friends, upon acolama-. tion. The vessels are expected to arrive at New York about' the first of ; August" Should any of : the bodies, be unclaimed, which will probably prove to be the case with some of foreign birth, they will be buried with appropriate ceremonies at the National Cemetery, New York. The officers of the Belief Expedition will probably re-' port in Washington-early next month. ' V NEW ORLEANS. Tbe Reported fellow Fever Caae ;Not Confirmed. 1 ' ' By Telegraph to ths ICornme Star. v: . New Obleans July24 Director Gen eral Burke, of the World's ' Exposition. sends the following telegram, in 'regard to, the alleged yellow fever case: -' New Orleans, July 23. The Board of llealth reported a suspicious case or fever, and Dr. Bermiss, of the National Bbard of Health, Dr. tiodf rev. of the Marine Hos pital service,: Dr, ' Finny,' ex-united 'States Offlcer, ur. ttoiomon, and rresident Joseph Holt, of the Louisiana Board of Health; were appointed a Commission to investigate and cause a post-mortem examination to be made. Dr. H. Di Schmidt Pathologist of the Charity Hospital; made'- a' micro-' Ecopical examination, .and upon his report, ana the statement oi tne commission, the Board of Health declares that the report of yellow fever is not confirmed, Drs. God frey. Finny and Solomon also declare that h the case was not yellow fever.,; : ISignedj . . j js. A. 4 ispbkx, i . Director-General.'' THE PROHIBITIONISTS. Tbe National ConventlOA at PitUburs Names Presented Tor . tbe Preai j deney. j' 'd 5 r'"'"---"" . By Telesraphto the Mornhuc Star.i . , Ptttsbtjkg, Pa., July 24. The Prohibi 'tion Convention was' called to : order this : morning at 9 o'clock. The aUehdance'was I very large. .After-prayer and the, offering oianumoeroi resolutions tne convention i proceeded to the call of States for the nomi nation of candidates. 5 Mr. Babcoek, of CoL put in nomina- ; tion K. 11. McDonald ; and Geo., a Chris tian, of III.', proposed the name of ex-Gov. ! St J6hn,; which was received wfth cheers land enthusiasm . . ' ,i .. . FINANCIAL, New Yortt Stoek JIarJcet-Ilaoynt and Hlaber. ( ., ' By Telegraph (o the Xbrnlnfr Star.l i: t - New Yoek, Wall Stieet July 24; 11 A. M. Stocks have been bouyant this morning. and prices rose 1 to 11 per cent Near 11 o'clock the improvement was partially lost ' f , . 4 c Ayer's Ague -Oure is' strictly a vegetable preparation,' hamlessv and 'warranted 'to are all malarial disorders. , , f :: . , f Groceries.4 Qroceiieis;. . . - ; - w rW11 AKE CONSTANTLY REPLENISHING ear ULBQK STOCK QF .GROCERIES, and now offer. Jat Wholesale, at prices to suit the times : MEAT. FLOUR. COFFEE, SUGAR, V . ;h MOLASSES, MEAL, COBN. BIAX, ;. ' it: " SALT, LIME, CASE & CAN GOODS, - HOOP IRONi BUNGS and GLUE. , fihi New and Seooad-Bano COTTON GZNS, i- Agents for Wilson, Childs & Co's r. -,t- FAMOUS HICKORY WAGONS. i -': -! .-I''-' EERCHNEB CALDER BROS., , . -rr r p Wilmington, N. C Jy 13 tf 1 r We Can Supply f A HEALTHY DEMAND FOB u..jtu;. DRY SALTED aifdSMOEEI MEATS. ' ? - AH grades of CUBA; PORTO RTCO s. MOLASSSS auCSYBUPS, COFFEE, eUQAB, FLOUR, i And CASE GOODS at IOW PRICtEsT1.i $t-'l1 And sollolt orders from all reliable bnyeraL ..'-' aALL & PEAKSALL, Jy 29 D&Wtt v.-. hang Why don't you buy my shirts ready-made ? What's the use of wearing your eyes out over fine needle work, and breaking y0ur back trying to save a few cents! I4on't see the savin' of it. Why you can buy shirts now-a-days for very .little more than the cost . of material. , Look at this " Dia - mond " I've just bought. I say ; Maria, I am going to buy a dozen mqre.rignr.ayay. If vour dealer does not keen t to Daniel Miller & Co., sole manulkcturen r&S more, Md. my 2 DiW3m chd hoc&nrra Bulfalo Lithia Water FOR MALARIAL POISONING. USB OF IT IN A CASE OF YELLOW FEVER. Db. Wm. T. Howabb, of Baltimore:, Professor of Diseases of Women and Children in the University of Maryland. Dr. Howard attests the. common -adaptation of tnts water in "a wide range of cases" with that cif the far-famed White Sulphur Springs, in Green brier county. West Virginia, And adds the follow-1 - "Indeed, In a certain class of casas it is much STrpenor to the latter. I allude to the abiding debility attendant upon the tardy convalescence from f?rave acute diseases; and more especially to the Cachexia and Sequels incident to Malarious Fevers, in all their grades and varieties, to cer tain forms of Atonic Dyspepsia, and all the A fic tions Peculiar to Women that are remediable at all by mineral waters. In short, were I called upon to state from what mineral waters I have seen the gnat-Tt- and most unmistakable amoun t of good accrue in fbfi largest number of cases in a general icuif I would unhesitatingly say the Buffalo Springs', in Mecklenburg county, Fa." .1 Db. O. F. Manson, of Richmond, Va., Late Professor of General Pathology and Physio- logy In the Medical College of Virginia : "I have observed marked sanative effects from the Buffalo Water in Malarial Cachexia, Anionic Dyspepsia, some Of the Peculiar Affections of Wo men, Anaemia, Hypochondriasis, Cardiac Palpita tions, tc. It has been especially efficacious in Chronic Intermittent Fever, numerous cases oj this character, which had obstinately withstood the wual remedies, having been restored to perfect health in a brief space of time by a sojourn at the Springs " r Db. Johh W. Williamson, Jackson, Tenn. Extracts from Communication on the Tlierapeutic '. , Action qfthe Buffalo Lithia Water in the . Virginia Medical Monthly" . for February, 1877. "Their RTeat value in Malarial Diseases and Sequelot , h&s ,ben jno8t abundantly and satisfac- 4- noil t. fr .oY nrT ftnIl a im nr nTTOcf inn that it vnillil it have been a valuable auxiliary in the treatment or the epidemic of Yellow never which so terriDiy afflicted the Mississippi Valley during the past summer. I prescribed it myself, and it gave prompt relief in a case of Supin-espon of Urine, in Yellow Fever, and decidedly mitigated other' dis tressing and dangerous symptoms. The patient re covered, but how far the water may have contri buted to that result (having prescribed it in bnt a single case) L of course, cannot undertake to say. There is no doubt, however, about the fact thai its administration was attended by the most benefi cial results." . Springs now opens for guests.. Water in cases of one dozen half gallon bottles $5 per case at the Springs. Springs pamphlet mailed to any address. For sale by W. H. Green, where the Springs pamphlet may be found. ITHOS. F.GOODE, Proprietor, apIOtf nrm Buffalo Lithia Springs, Va Ice. Ice. Ice. WOULD RESPECTFULLY NOTIFY THE Ci tizens and the public generally, that I have I laM n a fnll snnnlv nf O ROTOR Tf!B. and am DOW 'fully prepared to fill -orders at LOW PRICKS, by the Barrel, Hogshead or Car Load, to all points ion tbe Railroads or Rivers, and hope to secure a ! reasonable share of patronage. -'. ,' B. II. J. AHRKNS, ' Proprietor New Ice Hons, j Bend for Prices. wefrsu ap3Q3m j ;- Choice Hew Crop Molasses. 2ND CARGO NOW LANDING . i i. AND WILL BE ISOLD PROMPTLY FROM WHARF AT LOW PRICES. ti WORTH & WORTH. Bank of Hew Hanover. I Authorized Capital, jCa&l Capital paid in, Surplus Fund, - $1,000,000 $300,000 $50,000 .DIRECTORS j WV.LGOBJt; t j I G. W. WTLLIAMS, C. M. STEDMAN. ISAAC BATES, JAS.A. LEAK, i F. RHEINSTElNr E. B. BORDEN. 'DONALD MacRAE, H.VOLLERS,! 'R. B. $RIDQERS, J. W. ATKINSON. ;.r..., " ISlAAQBATBStfPresldent, i, :,,., ,G.WWlUIAMS,,VteePresl8nt aaaotf. a D. WALLACE Cashier. Important Hotice. fpHE NORTH CAROLINA STATE Sirvoi i ppens (October. 1st. and closes octooer wn Propceala for -Bentlng . Restaurant Privileges. Beer Saloons. Stands for Soda. Mineral Water TobMCdTrwpLe received unta 1st, 1884. . Pera(H wlsbmg to Rent any pt these Privileges will address the Swretary Raleigh, N. C or Mr. JohoNlohols, Cihiel oi pepartmeat of WvUeges, Baleigh, Jfl ghat Privilege is wanted, when a DL" the Grounds andBuUdlngs will be ent, showing w position that the Stands would occupy, ana I 4J. , , ' IfylStednian, Jr AT LAW, i Office oa7Prin In the Basement Journal Boflding, WnMTN Bulldto VViiy. Coart? of New Hanover, Bladen, cUmnbos, .Pender v Brunswick Counties. Jan 19 Dswu bes,betwe FrWt and 26 is of. BulldingNo. u w - ' i-i it -ai m ' -, V .. - - "
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 25, 1884, edition 1
2
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