Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / July 26, 1884, edition 1 / Page 2
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t'Xv -V.-' "t- -. x x- X- In .-'-xx I-- Xx XX llS?IirHES ANNOUNCEMENT. morning STAR, the oldest dally news ' aper In North Carolina, la published dally, except U -4 SV ttJ V -1 ..tl. $3 wu tor tnreo months, ii.w lor two months; 700. -or ons month, to mall subscribers. Delivered to sty subscribers at the rate of 15 cents per week ny punw irpm one. wees to one rear. ' THE WEEKLY STAB is published every Friday , inoralnff at $1 60 per year, $1 00 for Six months 50 (enta for three months.: ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY). 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V. 1 Fbidat I Etenikq, JUI.T- 25; 1884. EVENING EDITION. X XXj' --' LOGAN, - ' We shall not take up Gen. Logan's - letter at length. We intimated in a paragraph our estimate of its worth.; The judgment of the leading papers t; is in harmony with our view. He shows that tae has no proper under-; standing of the Tariff and its opera tions. President Elliot, of Harvard University, says in his fine ? lecture before Johns Hopkins University, that the most difficult and complex of all studies is political economy. This is ; the complex sotewtbat - newspaper editors and politicians nni X dertake to master without study and to write about without reflection and -investigation. How many men in our country now discussing economic questions have ever sat down for an hour to the study of the great au thors who have spent years, yea, a life time over the investigation of the principles of economic science and their .application? How many ; men who will harangue crowds this year and give easy, off-hand opinions upon the Tariff and its cognates, hae ever seen a copy of Adam Smith, " read a page in Ricardo, studied for . ten minutes 57ayland, Jevrons, Mon gredien, Perry, or any later author? Gen. Losran probablv r has never heard of any of these writers. He certainly can never have seriously studied any of them or he would not have betrayed so much of ignorance in his recent 'discussion. We take it that Logan on public economy is not worth considering. . x But we must not overlook his vAT- terances - in another direction. He shows a bitter spirit 'when he leaves the difficult and impenetrable thickets of political spience which he cannot enter and turns his face towards the -South. It isjthen that the virus in his veins begins to simmer and spurt. He is in sinking contrast to the Maine Hotspur who uses soft and honeyed words when writing of the UV" ?J?. .aiue is pontic. ; , , wjgan is xne binary ngure now on the great American platform f who is f-, 1 clotbed m a war costume, as he has ueidP r'6" mvv Bniri inai ': . used to do service in the buccaneer . . ! . . . .. ... .- - da vr of Grant." PnV rtnivTnf- ! y J T - viig w duce a. cartoon of the implacable Mo- ' .xv hawk from Illinois, full panoplied in 4ixwar paint rattlesnake mockasins and ; a bloody shirt. What the Southern . whites have done to the Mohawk we cannot sq well understand. He must : . think' they re Zuni I Indianwith free springs and enticing reserva . v ; tions." .' .. - ? - a-i-f : t . . x . Logan swears that violence and in ' '-. - timidation are the political , weapons X of the Southern whites and this so' XX, stirs his heroic soul that-he raises the the - "vp aui oranmsning nis club tomahawk he dances the war dance and - nnnna tTn am fW ; war dance and -croons the war sons ! x , ln . other words Logan, K1 rVxfeV:? hopea to make votes ilandering the white South. The' Philade Vino nnta it in Ant words inahle them to compete with the whites, ne 1 nni irw ru. uin BuiaunHMvw . favor of 4he party towlucft . ne to e belongs. Hiaippeal to 'the Tgreat business and oiner P"r VL . s tiAhnir nf nut- I i-o,m Ka onnntro in behalf Ol tins the Southern States , in couimi w fehorance will hardly prpve very; effective The sweat of (he demagogue oozes through thts Us wea as all the rest of hit labor, I Logan ought to has a record.' . He "go slow, lie not only tried to get the lands 1 from the Zunis by most contemptible trickery, but has a record that soes back of the war. hayo already given H, bat in View of his recent letter it' is well pnough to refer again to tie is the very man who his career, hated ? the Uce negroes before the war with such I an undying hatred that he introduced a bill in the Illinois . Legislature to exclude them from the State und to Danish them if they came.- It was jto be made a "misdepieanor? at law for any negro to enter the State of SllmoisNow that is Logan! - The Wnaltv fnr violatinfr this law WM - a . .. for the negro id be .Isold ,at auction il though he may have been as free Jas the freest bora white !man before he ' entered Illinois. The Mohawk jalso made a speech- in the U. S. House before the war, in 1850. . We ;have before given an extract, from what he said,' but here it is again: .'.. U "You call it the dirty work of the Dem-J Ivnnt.A r Mhh ffflfltitYt SUIVM fnr the 8outhera peoples t We are willing to iperf orm that dirty work. I do not consider at disgraceful to perform, any work, dirty ior not dirty, which is in accordance with the laws of the land." X ' j This is the Logan who is now atti tudinizing on the great American stage and before the hundreds of millions of the earth's population as the great friend of the African. There was never greater pretence than that. The blarney is too thick the motive too plain. Milton's lines in Lucifer's mouth might not be out of place as applied to Logan iwhen he "would tickle the negroes and win them to his ways: . j 11, under fair pretence of friendly ends, Baited with reason not unpiausioie, :Winrt ma ?ntrt thn o OIT-h Pfl rilf mftn lAna nug nun into snara. i BLAINE AS A PROHIBITIONIST. I There is no doubt that Blaine is a Prohibitionist. He is not one possi ibly so much from conviction as from Dolicv. - He drinks himself, but ho is in favor of prohibiting others from ; doing so. There is, we ; suppose, no doubt of Blaine's f position on this hnnpHtion. A Bangor. Maine, corres- . - O ,. .;'' pondent of the Albany j Argus ap pears tec be well informed as to Blaine's record as a Prohibitionist, iHe was a voluntary advocate. There : was no need of his taking' ground in its favor. He lived in a State much given to prohibitory laws, and "the Plumed Knight" caught the infec tion. In 1882, only two years ago, Neal Dow published an article on ;Prohibition in Maine. He quotes Blaine 'assaying: . ' ' X vl did not reside in the State prior to the enactment of the first prohibitory law, and therefore cannot make .a comparative statement from my own knowledge; but, so far as my knowledge extends, derived from 20 years' observation of the cause of tempe rance in this State. I most heartily concur in all that is said in the foregoing letter." 1 1 Dow is the great exponent of Pro hibition in Maine, and Blaine in dorses 'all that Dow has said in its favor in his article. Among other things Dow had said this : ; - "At the time of the enactment of the law. in 1851, the traffic existed openly and every where in Maine, as a now does in those mates where it is not prohibited. The immediate effect was to outlaw the trade. xTbe favor able effects- of this change are' great and everywhere apparent to the most casual ob server.. We do not believe that the people would again sanction the policy of license ' to . drinking houses and tippling shops." , Now this is plain enough. If Blaine is not in favor of Prohibition, then Dow is not. Of course Blaine has a perfect right to hold any opinion on this subject. This is a free country and he has the privilege of all men to jadge of questions upon their merits. If his conscience and judgment ap-. prove of a Prohibitory measure he onght t0 Btaild by his convictions, e only censure him when! he under- takes to avoid the force of s his decla rations and to play something jilse to suit the millions. 'He should be held fast ' to his ? voluntary Prdhibitory opinions. 4 x I ' The Chicago papers said that the North Carolinians at Chicago kept a bountiful supply of the best "sper rits," and that theMaine delegation spent most' of their time with the Tar Heelers. - -They kept a pitcher of ice water on their o wn- tables and courted a closer , affiliation with tne boys from the Old North State.' A I VerV innOCent COrresnOtldenfe of th H i xmeieii xivocate r thinks: that the only I t.:: ' -r.... . tteiAiAxftA -4.ta iL - some- tiding to gi, Perhaps he, never at ' tended . a xDemocratic Convention. ;yM-ViX-r xxfexx; . xk -: xx.. :p x- ',vw- x ; ' ' i n the North by I 'He ought by all means to go the next 1 ,.--..--v:f 1a a blank an "Sv' HttThe Prohibitionists did not noran iicawi- eEpeciallyv :,;;,v rrii -T.It.i uL ,i:i:ffirV''aW Voters; -into su win-. 1 It might have I nominated Blaine as he is of that fipM on that, American hiraDrc - ; t, t, -1 nlatform. Wo are not treDared to I sayi no w v 1 1111 . movemei; wuau 1 - - - . -. . . '. , . .. ,flf . .4- I the,-two old;parties. 'We euppose, however, that in;: the! ' Ngrth it' Will draw' many more voters "from 'the Republican x party than - from the Democratic. - i At this time Col. Colville and an- other English ffieer, are Aygi$ J & small force of Arabs to rescue their distinguished countryman ;Gen. Gor- don. It is heroic in them, but in all probability will result- in thei r trucUon; ; England; owes jt to - de- civil- ization an4 'herself ' : that Gordon should be delivered if it be possible. In 1 August the English expedition will start..! ,7 1 . tub PERIODICALS. Tlut Atlantic Monthly Jot August has a continuance .of Dr. .Mitch ell's .story,-T"In .War Times." 'Mr.' Grknt White continues his remarkable . papers on Shakespeare. j'The Bdda Among the - Algonquin In dians,", in whici Charles G. Leland relates, some supposed traces of Norse , mythology traditionally preserved ' by the Indians at Bar Harbor, while a good part, if not the Dest part, of 'The Contributors Club" dis cusses the early discoveries of America by f ...(. ... - - j ... ... - . .. ':.," .the Norsemen . ..There are other papers of Interest Price $4 .'a year.' Houghton, Mifflin & Co., publishers, Boston. . I LippincotCt , Magazine for August, con tains amone other papers "Personal Recol lections of Chatles Reade," by John Cole man, Reade's associate, in many theatrical, enterprises, and the intimate friend of his late yearaXi The second paper on the "Suburba of New York" treats of West Chester and Long Island, and is finely illus trated. .-'In an article on "VlvisecUon," Dr. Albert Lefflngwell shows that this prac tice has done nothing for the mitigation of disease. The second paper on ."Life in a Russian Province" is very readable and in teresting, and a short account of the "Con federate Postage Stamps," with engraved specimens, has a certain degree of histori cal value. There axe other noticeable arti cles. Price $3 a year. J. . B. Lippincott & Co., publishers. Philadelphia. THE ANTJ-BLAINE HENCE. CONFE- New York Times, Rep. I The men who'met in conference in this city yesterday represent the high character and deep conviction 'which originally founded and guided the Republican party of this country. Their action indicates an aroused moral sense among the people and a' . . - ki . ? -. aeterminaiion io ' maintain a uigu standard of politicaLaction, regard- fully lhan himself 'the great delica less of the decreer of party conven- -ni AHKnnii-v f oinatinn- . t;flF tions. l ne conference naa no issue to evolve) and therefore had little oc casion for discussion. The issue with i which it had to deal had been already made, and its single purpose was to ; declare its position unequivocally.' This it did with absolute unanimity. There was no difference of opinion as to the object witb which the dele gates had met or the means of pro moting it. The obiect'was the de- feat of a bad ' nomination made by one political party ; the means of pro moting it was the support of a good I j nomination mado by the other party. As to this there was no dissent and no hesitation. In it was involved' every other consideration with winch the conference was concerned; - -The motives and purposes of the independents and anti-Blaine Repub licans are. fully and clearly set forth in the address which .was adopted. TWO OF A KIND ; Phil. Record, Ind. Dem. The' letter f General John A. Lo gan accepting the nomination for Vice President was not needed to mark him as a fit and , congenial as- . . '. t j i ni -t -i : i1 sociaie oi j ames vr. xiaine. vaenerai Losan's letter is pitched in a lower key than that of Blaine, and is some- r what more repulsive in its coarse ap- peais to ignorant prejuaice. ;xut in the elaborate.' deliverances of them' both are the same shallow assump- tiond, the eanie want of logical co- herency.thersame reckless false state-' trubus ui wuuwm uibwi j, auu, ua same- pretenaea zeai , ior reiorms which their lives have been employ ed. in combating. ; In both letters .is the same' spurious jidgle of an exag gerated patriotism which recalls to mind the vigorous definition of Sam-' uel Johnson. Though the letter of the candidate for Vice-President has been . stripped . of most of its Lo - ganese, the pruning nas been so care' less as to 1 overlook such ambitious purae its we xuiuiiuauuu ui au- other cycle of 'advanced thought," and "the plastic ' hand ; of time and accumulating experience," and suck ' ridiculous jargons as that "we stand alone in our circumstances, our forces our possibilities and our aspirations.". X Promise and Non-Performance. Irish-American. ' Mr. Blaine ot so very long since was as " United ' States Secretary of State in the very position in which" to exercise this noble duty4 in .belialf of several -Irish-American citizens: who were locked up untried and un I nhnrcroA nrrtK rimain T?nrKa 4oila I vvnat is tneTecord r ; Where was the 1 "Plumed Kniflrhf? then ? Ona blast "Plumed KnighfT then ? One blast upon the bugle, horn, . of his "aggres sive Americanisin" were - worth a . thousand ! demagogue bids rom the election I hustings now. - But the re- blank as are Mr. fooling the fpub the naturilizea rf ortmp: hixrr at the . . 1 ' . y . - .. -", ty i . -': V CUBllENT COMMENT : The;Washrag"tbn ar, a Re- H"nxppyfr, rT?,,, .T tertain PTeat rPHftAt fhi- TVfr- Rlame's' tAt a AT ft An 1 fZ Uf-J9Tlm aIh nCyna Ann jiiuwvh. ygw uu wuwuwuaruu reminds hiin that f'the; prosperity of the 38 btates, hotfevEf lS.dne largely; to the absolute l freedom of , trade, which thev :eniov? withXeaeh mother.: and ?ii one place ' Blaine appears to 1 commend tha Tpcent reciprocity treaty with Mexico, and expresses a. Wish to see like treaties lwith; all the jaaiviSnKiHa: rv m0od when;he wrote that letter. nations on this hemisbhere." f f Mr." He tried to pleae evervbodv. i?05- ion JT08tt jjem. " - The address of the jndepen-r dent KepubUcahsj x who x- met in con f erehce yesterday at Hew Yorr, can--1 not fail to cbrhmand' the considerate attenUon.; of the - whole country, fl nere can De no question of tne sin-; m. - .. .. - cerity ana unselfish 'earnestness or theses merl, ' amongr-wbom are not -I. . . Republican party.T3BByare as proud of its past achievements,- as. younger Republicans can be: but, jthey, Ippk jupon a party as a : means to T an ed and not as a despotic vower .that is to be obeyed at any cost. Phil. 7Vme, Ind, Kep. ENGLISH VIEWS OF CLEVE- land: London Daily Telegraph! I With the unanimous 'nomination of Gov. Cleveland as the Democratic candidate for the Presidency Ameri can politics are taken out of the par ty rut. lie is a Democrat, but his f'record" is remarkably pure, while he has won golden opinions from all sorts of men by his hostility to cor ruption and plunder in New York, London Daily News. ' The Republicans in ; nominating Mr. Blaine fell back into the old-rut out of which Gen. Garfield had en deavored to lift them. The Demo crats, on the other hand, by their nomination of Gov. Cleveland have broken with a long and mischievous tradition and jmt themselves in har mony with the: reforming spirit of the time. The restoration of the Democrats to power which would be the result of ' Gen. Cleveland's elec tion, would be a matter chiefly of do mestic interest to the American peo ple, and its chief importance to them would probably be in the com plete reconstruction of political par ties in the United States which would result from it in the long run. LOGAN AS A? TARIFF FORMES. RE- Washington Post, Dem. his letter of acceptance In Gen. lntyn antra that, nn rtnA rpftliTM tnVm an n0jAv nrmthW ju. m nrntM.t. every home industry, sustain every class of American labor, promote to the highest point our great agricul tural interests, and at the same time to give to one and all the advantages pertaining to foreign productions not in competition with our own, thus not only, building up our foreign commerce, but taking measures to -carry it in our own bottoms." . in other words wen. Aiogan con fesses that it is a "delicate and diffi cult" task to tax the people into equal and boundless 'prosperity, collective ly and individually. As Dr. Holmes's deacon, when contemplating the con struction of his "master-piece." the "One Hoss ' Shay," .determined to "make each part jdst as strong as the rest," in order that no one part should ever fail, so lien. Aiogan pro poses to give the people the great blessing of taxation "so nicely and equitably" that every individual man shall be just and happy and prosper: ous as every other man. MR. LOGAN'S LETTER. N; Yt Times, Rep, It is impossible to seriously discuss Gen. Lo cran's Jetter of acceptance. and we do not feel like ridiculine- it. j John A." Logan, notwithstanding his sympatny and association witn the elaveholding Democracy before the war and his coarse defense of the fugitive slave law, was a brave and able! soldier. It is that and that in puuuo me, uut we ueueve inai ae: i nas in tne mam Deen honest and de voted to the public interest accord ing to his lights.; He has nonoof the equipment of a real statesman, and his letter is a marvel of ignorance and . bad reason ing. He goes to the extreme of do- fending' the protective policy, fur- 1 ther even than' Mr. Blaine, but it is I apparently because he does not un I derstand it, but simply assumes it to be a cardinal doctrine of his partyl' ; WHO 8UOTJOUGLASS? : Wadesboro.Times. Last Friday Mr. J. Pawloy Doug-. lass, who is thought to be the person who , piloted the 'posse t that killed. Boggan Cash, was , shot down while plowing in his field, x-Mr. Douglass was removed to the residence of his uncle, about a iuile and a", half from the place vwherV the shooting occur red, The balL supposed to be from: a Winchester rifle, entered his back on thexrightlsideiperietrating ; the I UnAv side I inst oeiow the ribs. The physician l thinks the ft ball nassed between 1 thinks: the ball passed: between ther bowels and liver without injuring either,' -but' injury to the 1 kidneys is indicated by blood in the urine. : r v , . -v :- "v '.it . ' - .. y . . -. t . .. . THE LATEST NEWS. FltOlIIAnTSOFTmTOBLIJl - ' h -r- 1-4 The Scourge Spreading Throughout JFramee-rPltlable aund Pathetic case Reported A Steamer from Iflaireeille Reffaetd th4 PrlTllese of Coalins at Glbrmltar-Parie Reported Healthy, Deplorable Condition of ACTalra at I . - IBt Cable to the Hornlne Star.l Pabis. July 25. Isolated cases of cholera continue to be renorted in various parts of I'ranco, some widely i aistant from itne jn . . i ji.ii.i . . . : . 1 . : ' ieciea aisincis. . a womB1'uiBK, M Courbevoic,;: a - village onlyr a few f miles from Paris, was seized with, sporadic cho lera Thursday. T She was at once conveyed to the hospital, and her lodging. Was tho roughly disinfected. Xo apprenension oi further ... cases, is believed to exist in" the community.- v ' (,r 'Two cases ox cnoiera nave occurrea ai Narbonne, and at St. Nazaire, a village not far from Toulon two deaths from that dis ease have occurred' - One of these deaths was of an esneciallv 'Bathetic-character. An unknown woman was . seized with the 1 dread disease while passing along the street ; fJ3 lulVuuur 1 1U1WCU1IHUT.. .. I ,? pitiable case is reported ; from Mar- 1 Beilles., An old woman, of over 'seventy 1 years, was missing jor seyerai- days.x The I 4M.lmnr Than frviinrl nop hnniri nrun'ha I tavo been dead for some days.- "An exam- ination - proved that she was a, victim of cholera. BJae Had lived almost entirely on fruit. X . ' : - . ' ?-' .-v - ,' 1 The corvette Argentena, which was re cently at Marseilles, desirerrto take on coal at Gibraltar. The .English authorities there forbade this and threatened , to fire on the vessel unless she departed at once. vThe Argentena thereupon proceeded to a port in Portugal and began coaling, but the in habitants of the port became panic-stricken and compelled the authorities to order the immediate departure of, the unfortunate vessel.'jw here tne Argentena is to find fuel enough to enable her to return to La Plata. appears to be an insoluble problem. London, July 28. The Paris . corres pondent of the Standard says that the large number .who recover; from the cholera shows that the ; disease is not Of the same deadly character which some previous out breaks have displayed. . There is a consid erable exodus of people from Paris, who are apprehensive that the epidemic will reach the capital, but nothing of the nature or a panic nas yet appeared. The corres pondent has never seen Paris so deserted as at present.' English and. American tour ists, be asserts, give Paris a "wide "berth. Such a scare, he contends, is altogether un justified, as the capital is better cleaned, more abundantly watered, and ' healthier than .any other city in Europe, u . Paris, July 25. -The Condition of affairs at Aries is deplorable in the extreme. - The water supply has been entirely cut off, ow ing to an accident in the hydraulic appara tus. Numerous funerals of cholera victims have been conducted by men who were generally drunk. These funerals have moreover been greatly ' retarded by the fact that tne carpenters reiuse to make comns for those who die of -cholera.! Nearly all ,of the bakers and butchers have left the city, and the supply of food is consequently scarce ana aitncuit to ohtain. i The panic throughout the city is simply indescribable. Tne eDiaemlc appears to be 1 extending-. One death has occurred at Sainte Moriea De La Mer. The inhabitants of that town want to expel all refugees from' Aries. In six different villages of the Department of isaucnes jju Jffcpne, from one to two deaths have occurred. 'jv ' - FINANCIAL, New York Stock Market Prices Ir resnlar. By Telegraph to the Mornimc Star.l New York, Wall Street. July 25.11A.M. Stocks opened irregular, some shares being strong and others weak, f Before the first call a selling movement set in. which carried prices down to 2f per eent., the latter in Central Pacific. This stock de clined to S8f, on the announcement that the- August dividend would be passed, Louisville & Nashville opened 2i per cent. lower at 29,but later returned to 311. At 11 o clock the market was better. - WEST VIRGINIA. Democratic State Convention Nomi nations of State Officer Tne Na tional Ticket Endorsed. By Telegraph to the Mornhu; Star.l Whkeuno. July 25. The Democratic State Convention yesterday nominated E. Wilson for Governor. Patrick M. Duffv for Auditor, and Alfred Caldwell for At torney General. The resolutions adopted by the Convention endorse Cleveland and Hendricks and the national olatform. ..j -av-as Uaiveston has removed the Quarantine against New Orleans steamers, the yellow iever Bcare navmg subsided. OUR STATE CONTEMPORARIES. Excessive newspaper ' puffing is one of the native products of North Carolina soil We propose a change in the coat of arms of the good old State an amendment at least. Let it be a nineteen-year-old young- Bier wiw goose quui, scissors and band bel lows all in one. ureensboro workman. The legislative department of a govern ment in a christian country, proclaims its disbelief in or disfagard of the Sabbath bv continuing in Session amd passing bills and performing other routine work on. the day in which God rested and said should be hallowed. , What better ban we expect from the masses when" our rulers openly bath day to keep it holy, and make the Lord's day a xy for the transaction of secular business. Wilson Advance, Our1 friend of. the Wilmington Stab rignuy urges organizauon as the Democrat ic necessity, and as rightly recommends the )lan adopted by Governor Jarvis for revo utioningthe politics of Pitt. There is but one difficulty lack of means. There was not a dollar expended in Pitt except for le gitimate work, but the i campaign that re deemed u cost ine. nu Lemocrats $3,000. All the efforts of the State committee in 1880 resulted in $500 for the State cam paign that year, and in 900 for 1882. It is worth the money to each county to do me wors: mat was done in Pitt, but our friend will see that it is impossible for that sort of work to be doner from these head-; quarters. Raleigh Register. ; Burnett's Cocoalne. FOB PREitATuRK .XOSS - PF,V THE .HAER A i : rHIIJLDELPHIA OPIKION One year ago mv hair commenced falliner out until I was almost bald. After usins? Uocoajne a,few months,: I have now a thick growth of iww nair. '. Alexander Henbv, . a ; No. 18 East Girard Ave Burnett's. Flavoring i Extracts. -1. al- ways standard. 7 x 'XX X - . . t 4' " New Scborougli House, NO,: 104 NORTH vWATER faBBlt " ' AND PRINCESS STREET WTLMINOTON. M. C. v The Plnest Restaurant in the City. - X ' , Boar $1.25 per Day. Three Tickets 11.00, Sla gle Heals S&orf Ho Meals sent out. t - deoTtf - B. f. SCARBOROUGH, Prop'rl : P.O AT TTT."R P.T AT " IHiMINOTON.JARKKT. M. SPIRITS TURPENTINE The market was quoted firmxat'O't cents per gallpn, with no sales reported. X i r -JIOSIN The market was quoted firm at cents , for Strained, and $1 02 J for C'obd Strained, with sales as offered.' . TAR The market xwas quoted firm at $1 80 per bbl of 280. lbs,; with sales at quo- tatibhst;WxX'';?':-"'x '? f,-K.O. CRUDE TURPENTINE The market was steady, with .sales reported at ; f 1 00 for Hard and $1 85 tor vjrgirit and Yellgw . COTTON The market was quoted' dull and nominal. No sales reported. The fol lowing were the official Quotations ; Ordinary. . . 8 1 cents ) lb. Good Ordinary. ...' .'. 1 LowMiddling...lxr.l0f X ? " . Middline.....;.xxI0 Good Middling. .... ..11? " " j PEANUTS Market dull and lower to sell, on a : basis of 8085 cents for Ordi- hary,095 cents for Prime, $1 001 05 for Extra Prime, arid $1 101 15 for Eancy. . . '-. ! "' CTTCCKfPTS. Cotton.... ..L Spirits Turpentiue . . ; . Kosin... . ........ ..i. Tar.......: Crude Turpentine.'. 4 , "1 bale 407 casks 1,403 bbl 141 bbls bbls 431.. DORIES JTIC iriAKKETS 1 Br Tererapii to the Mornlnir Star. 1 . Financial. ,. , ., ;. X New York. July 25, Noon. Money firmer at. 13 per cent. Sterling ex change , 482483 ; ajad 484i485. State bonds quiet. Governments steady.; . f t J - Commercial. X ;i . , j Cotton firm, with sales- to-day of 805 bales; middling uplands 11c; Orleans lljc. Futures dull, with sales to day at the fol lowing quotations: I July 10.86cr5 August 10.99c; September l(;.92c; October 10.64c; November 10.50c, December 10.50c J- Flour unchanged. Wheat declined ic, which was afterwards recovered.' Corn dull. Pork dull at $17 00. Lard-firm at $7 35." Spirits turpentine firm at '38e. ' Itosin firm at $1 22il 27. Freights steady. - -Baltimore, July 25. -Flour quiet and steady: Howard street and western super $2 753 25; extra $3 354 00; family i a55 5U; city mills super S2 753 15; extra $3 354 00; Rio brands 5 S0 5 62.. Wheat southern lower and active; western higher; southern red 9294c; southern amber 9698c; No. 1 Maryland 95i95c; No 2 western winter red on spot 94i94c. Com southern quiet and nominal;-western higher and dull; south ern white 7173c; yellow 6668c. FOREIGN ITfAftKKTS. IBt Cable to the Mornlne Star. , : Lin'krpool, July 25, Noon. Cotton steady but less active; middling uplands 6Jd; do Orleans 6 7-16d; sales to day b.OOO bales, or whicn oOO were for specu lation and export; receipts 800 bales, all of which are American. Futures dull but steady; uplands,. 1 m c, July and August delivery 6 l(MJ4d: August and Sep tember delivery 6 16-64d; October and November delivery 65-64d; November and December delivery 6d; December and Jan uary delivery 5 63-64d; January and Feb ruary delivery 6 l-64d; September delivery 6 iy-t4a. -lenders oi deliveries at to-day s 'clearings .300 bales new- docket and 100 bales old docket. Sales for -the- week were 47,000 bales, of which 31,000 bales were. American; specu lation 600 bales; export 2,600 bales; actual export 4,800 bales; total imports 23,000 Dates, 01 which 11,000 were American; stock 832,000 bales; American! 514,000 bales. ! 2 P. II. Uplands, 1 m c, July deliv ery 6 16-64d, sellers' option; July and August delivery 6 16-64d, sellers' option; August and September delivery 6 16-64d, sellers'." option; September . and October delivery 6 15-64d, buyers' option; October and November delivery 6 5-64d, sellers' option; November and December delivery o i-04d, sellers option: December and Jan uary delivery 5 63-64d, buyers option ; 8ep- lemoer oeuvery o is-4d,. sellers option. DTitures steadier. ,. r 4 P. M. Uplands, 1 me, July delivery 6 15-64d, buyers' option; July and August delivery 6 15-64d, buyers' option; August and September delivery 6 16-64d, sellers' option; September and October delivery o io-o4a, Duyers option: uctober and no vember delivery 6 5-64d,v sellers' option ; jNovcmoer and Jjccember delivery 6d, buy ers' option; December and January deliv ery 5 63-64d, value ; September delivery "6 18-64d, buyers' option. Futures quiet Dut steaay. . . Salea.of cotton to-day include 610 bales American. t Spirits turpentine 24s 3d. Breadstuffs firmer on American advices. Lard prime Western 87s 9d. Cheese fine American 49s 6d. Wheat red western spring 78 9d7s lid; do. winter 7s 7d7s lOd. Corn new mixed 5s 4d. Receipts of wheat for the past three days 132,000 centals,, 60,000 centals of which were American. Receipts vof American 89,900 ceniais, New TorK M aval Stores AlarKet. - N. Y. Journal of Commerce, July 24. Spirits Turpentine The. market is. very strong, with little business; merchantable order quoted at 83c; sales of 100 bbls for July at 33c, and 200 bbls for August at 33c. Rosins demands are somewhat bet ter, with a generally steady feeling as to prices: Strained, at $1 22i; good strain ed at SI 27f, JNO. 2 at SI 35; NO. 2 F at $1 401 45; No. 1. G at . tl 50ai 55. No. 1 Hat $1 851 90; good No. 11 at $3 00;. low. pale K at fa 30? Pale M at $2 752 80; extra pale N at $3 803.35; window glass W at $4 124 25. Tar is quoted at $2 for Wilmington; pitch is quoted at $1 70. X . . ; - . , 7 . . . : Charleston Rice JTIarKet. C!hajlesten News and Courier, July 24. , Rice was in demand to-day, with sales of 350 barrels, at the same steady rates for some days past, viz: Fair at 55fc, and good at 5i5ic. .1 Mr. Gonsn on Silk Ilata. "It would be no violation of the com mandment," said John B. Gough, "if a man were to fall down and worship' the silk hat, for it is not made in the likeness of anything in heaven,, or on earth, or in the waters which : are under, the earth." Besides, it heats the head and causes the hair to fall off. .Parker's Hair Balsam will stop that, and restoro the original color to gray or faded hair. Not oily, not a dye, beneficial, deliciously perfumed. A pre fect hair dressing. 50c. All druggists, f r Thenarion Staj " TIE OLDEST NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN the Pee .Dee section, one of the wealthiest and most prosperous In the State, offers to Com mission and Wholesale Merchants and Manufac turers, and to those' who have adopted the plan of soiling by sample, an excellent medium of com munication with a largo and influential class of merchants, meohaalos, planters and naval store men. whose patronage Is worth solicitation. Ad vertisements and Business Cards Inserted on lihe ral terms. - - -yv X s. : . v -..,- - Aduress " X'X'X-THISTA aoot.5tf ;:., : -:.;v;V-rrf,llailoira--. I CUPID D'ADs. When cupid wears the Diamond shirt His conquest's sure of hearts so tender For when they see this manly guise ' . . The ladies always quick surrender. . Surely the ladies are attracted by neatness of dress, which adds so much to the general elegance of one's appearance. What's more vital to a well-dressed man than a perfect-fitting, smooth-setting shirt? . If your dealer does not Vem it cj v:. . j , to Daniel Miller & Co.. sole manufacturers Zl? more, Md. ' my 2 D&W3m chd hoc&nrra Buffalo Lithia Water ! ' FOR MALARIAL POISONING. USE OP IT IN A CASE OF YELLOW FEVtR De. Wh. T. Howard, or Baltimore, Professor of Diseases of Women and Children in the University of Maryland. Dr. Howard attests the comiiwn adaptation of Vm water in "a loide range of cases" with that tit the far-famed White Sulphur Springs, in Green brier county, West Virginia, and adds the follow ing : . "Indeed, in a certain class of cases it is much superior to the latter. I allude to the abiding nobility attendant upon the tardy convalescence from grave acute diseases; and more especially to the Cachexia and Sequels incident to Malarioxt Fevers, In aU their grades and varietiesrto cer tain forms of Atonic Dyspepsia, and aU the Auc tions Peculiar to Women that are remediable at all by mineral waters. In short, were I called vpon to state from what mineral waters I have seen the great est and most unmisCakable amount of good accrue h the largest number j)f cases in a qeneral way I would unhesitatingly say the Buffato Sjnings.-in Mecklenburg county, .Va." Dr. O. F. Manson, op 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, Anamia, Hypochondriasis, Cardiac PaT)rita tions, &c. It has been especially efficacious in Chronic Intermittent Fever, nmnerovs cases oj this character, which had obstinately withstood the usual remedies, having been restored to perfect heultlt in a brief spaceqf time by a sojourn at the Spring", Db. John W. Wiixiamsoh, Jackson, Tejtc. Extracts from Communication on the Therapeutic Action of the Buffalo Lithia Water in the I "Virginia Medical Monthly" for February, 18T7. i Their great value in Malarial D'tseases and AevwWB Vi o a haan mstat. ol-uinHnntlv and 'i t isf 'i f- .tortly tested ; and I have no question that it would have been a valuable auxiliary in the treatment of the epidemic of YeUoio Fever which so terribly afflicted the Mississippi Valley ' during the past summer. I prescribed It myself, and it gave prompt relief In a case of Suppression of Urine, iu 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 but a single case) I, of course, cannot undertake to say. There is no doubt, however, about the fad that its administration was attended by the most benefi cial results." Springs now opens for guests. Water in cases of one dozen half gallon bottles 15 per case at the Springs. Springs panlphletniailed to any address. For sale by W. H. Green, where the Spring pamphlet may be found. ITHOS. F. GOODS, Proprietor, aplOtf nrm Buffalo Lithia Springs, Va Stories on the Road. Commercial Travellers at a Wayside Inn Something to Fnt in a Gripsack. "Gentlemen, I almost envy you the positions yon fill; your experience of the world; your knowledge of business; the changing sights you see, and all that, you know." This warmly expressed regret fell from the lips of an JeWerly pleasure tourist, last August, and was addressed to a semicircle of commercial traveller seated on the porch of the Lindell Ho tel, St. Louis, Ho. Yes." responded a New York representative of the profession, "a drummer isn't without ms pleasures, but he runs his risks, too-nsksnt-. side thechanoes of railroad collisions and steam boat explosions." - "What risks, for instance ?" rs-iin This, for instance." said Mr. W. D. Fran, "who was then travelling for an Eastern hbuse. and Is known to merchants in all parts ot we country: "The risk which, indeed, amounts al most to a certalntv-of getting the dyspepsia from perpetual xshanpre of diet and water anu from having no fixed hours for eating and sleep ing. I myself was an example . I say va, a"lSd,ttW-on your digestion;" tag-J Chicago dry goods traveller, lighting his cigar "SSSt a quarter per cent. But I had to give np travelling for a while. The dyspepsia 1 red paper.- KnaUylcamei across an adverUsemM oltPARKBB'S TONIC. I tried it . ana n fixed me up to perfection. There is notow on earth, in mv opinion, equal to it as a cure for MesffWox & Cox. of New Yort , the P prietors, hold a letter frornMn FranUui sU that precise fact. PAHKEBie digestion, enres Malarial Fevers, Heartbnm Headache. Coughs and Colds, and all , chroo diseases of the Ir andKidneys. Vutw in your valise. Prices, 50c. and $1. Economy larger size. '. se8 sep 8 D2taw&Wlv . wed sat nrrnJ New York and Wilmington Steamship Co. FROM PEER 84, EAST RIVER, NEW OBS, , At 3 o'clock P.M. REGULATOR ..Saturday, BKNEFACrOB..... " REGULATOR .... ....... " BENEFACTOR. ......... " , . FROM WILMINGTON. BENEFACTOR. ..Saturday, REGULATOR . .-a . . " BENEFACTOR r - - " July 5 July 12 juiy 19 July July 5' joly 1 July i juiy REGULATOR . .x.: rawest Throuj;" Bates guaranteed to and from poinw i" and Sonta Carolina. For Freight or Passage apply to - n. a. SMAI.I.BONES, 15 V..--. V-i?
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 26, 1884, edition 1
2
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