Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / July 27, 1884, edition 1 / Page 2
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i ;. .. . s ;-. Vr f..v s J M i 'i.isiiEs ANNouwcssuarr;;.-' - THK MORNINIl STAB, th oldest -dally e-w Vper in North Carolina, Is publ'sfleddaily.exoept Konday, at 57 CO per year, $4 CO for six months , 1 2 00 for three months, $1.60 for two months; 75c .'or one month, to mall snbeoribers. , Dellrered to I Ity 8absoribers at the rate of 15 exits per week -' or any period from one week to one year. fc -s tub WEEKLY STAB is published' eTery. Friday morning at $1 50 per $1 oa for six months nents (or inree mom WW ADVERTISING RATES COAILTVOne sonare una day. $1 00 : two dava. 11 75 s thw d &T9. i3 SO ; tour days, $3 00 ; fire days, S3 Mi ce week, $4 00; two weeks. SB SO thrm war Ira 1.5 nna month. - 310 00 ; two months, $17 00; three montha,24 00; . months, $40 00 ; twelve months, $aa oa- Ten : ,; lnes of solid Nonpareil type make one sgntt- All annonnoementsof Fain, FesttralB, Balls ; Hops, Ho-Nios, Society MeetinsA: Poiltieal Meet oto., wiu oe onargea regmar aayM - IkX.-ttluui'frrmdn, k,.L( CWHW Ttomfl' 90 AflntSDeT v A 7. - un tor nret insertion, ana 15 cents per uk." ." v'-V 1 ach snbseqnent Insertion. . t : ' A No artTertteements Inserted In Local Column at . t - ;-ny price. --; , - ; - v : v veil) ho nhanred 100tersoiareforeaoalnsertlosw J -- .ilvery othef day. three fourths of flauy rate. ; , v-'fvfloe a week, two thirds of daily rate. . ; '; . v An extra charge will betoade for donhle-eomnm ': ". - ' . .. rintaunlmmi julvertifuanents. - . i N.viloes of Marriaee or Death, TObttte or aa aooot. Resolutions of Th&nks, o.. are ehara-ed for as ordinaryadrertlsements, bat only half rates when paid lor stnouy m mavtuivo. . -i i s w cents will pay for a simple announcement ot ..Marriage or Death. '. Advertisements to follow reading matter, or to occupy any special place, will be charged extra According to the position desired ; - Advertisements on whlon no specified number f insertions is marked will be continued tillfor- '. -.Id," at the option of the publisher, and ehargea 1 np to the date of discontinuance. . Advertisements discontinued before the time contracted for has expired, charged transient - atea for time actually puDuaoeo. t y - , Advertisements kept nnde the bead ot "New Advertlsementa" will be charged fifty per cent. extra. j . ;-. . Amusement, Auction and Official advertisements one dollar per -square fox each insertion. ; , , -. , All aanounoementa and reoommendkuons r , candidates for office, whether In the shape of aommunlcations or otherwise, will be charged at advertisemental v'r v: : s i" ? - , Payments for transient advertisements must be -made In advance. Known-parties, or Strang er- with proper reference, may pay monthly or quar- lorly, according to oontraot. ' ' Ctontract advertisers WO not be allowed to ex- coed their space or advertise anything foreign to their regular business without extra charge at transient rates. Remittances must be made by Check, Draft, -. postal Honey Order, Express, or in Registered -Letter. Only such remittances will be at the risk of the publisher. ,; - v Communications, onlesa. they contain tapor- lant news, or aiscnss oneny ana . of real interest, are not wanted shin In ATnrr other wit. thev will mvariablT - rejected if the real name of tne autnor is witnneia. AdverUsers should always specify the 1bst ot ssues they desire to advertise in. Where no Is sue is named the advertisement will be Inserted n the Daily. Where an advertiser contracts for - the paper to be sent to htan during the time his . advertisement is in, the proprietor will only be responsible for the mailing of the paper to his ad- -. .areas. ' . . ;- The Morning Star. By WILLIAM H. BERNARD. WILMINGTON, N. C. , ll II- Ill I!' I I I I I -INI I Satuedat Evening, Jult 26, 1884. EVENING EDITION. CANNOT THRILL THE WORLD." The "New York Tribune, the lowest down Republican paper in the North, that twelve years ago was extremely I liberal and supported Horace Greeley, I the Democratic nominee,- and that under Whitelaw Reid has been a dis- ' grace, to journalism, can find no greater cause of complaint against v Gov. Cleveland than that his mes sages "have not thrilled the world. : No, but they made him the nominee of a pafty that has the majority and that will elect him President in Novem- ber. Wise, judicious, calm, dignified I r. ! . State papers about local matters are not intended 'to thrill the world, but to secure good government and reform in i the various departments." The "Plumed Knight," .-with his , in-' I tellectual yagaries, his potent "mag netism," his "aggressive ideas about foreign governments, his methods of advancing private ends through the channels of , diplomatic chicanery is the man "to thrill the world, break' up friendly relations, precipitate con flicts, destroy commercial enterprises '' and activities and send dismay and ; sorrow and bereavements into tens of thousands oi families. Gov. Cleveland is not of that order of men . His is a well poised Jntel-f lect that weighs all results and calmly surveys the entire, field before published an excellent volume j of acting. The ends he seeks are j ustice sketches of the Pioneer Methodist and purity and efficiency in the pub- Preachers" in North Carolina. . lie lie serjice; He aims to do right, and ought to supplement his work with in the exercise of his office he looks not another volume that shall embracej to his own personal ends, but to the preachers of a later . jtime. He is do advancement of virtue and economy ing this, we believe. In still another and the welfare of the State. He is . not the man to astonish the natives : by intellectual fire-works or to set the nations by the ears by his unwise -: . and hot-tempered; manifestoes or plansi MtL 'lametipC.themaiuioc that sort of work." He can f'thrili the '". world" byj a few dashes of his pen, : and if ;a curse is to befal the country '.j : in his election he will be able to give . the United States full employment in I getting into scrapes; anol in getting font the best and easiest they can. : The country needs purity in the public service; and not I vicious f and corrupt methods.: The country needs thorough reform in all departments of the General Government, and not a continuance of the system that ' :has debauched the whole civil ser-. . . vice. The "country needs a strict '.-'. economy In the - administration of '-': public affairs and noVa perpetuation .of r the ? wide-spread " extravagance,' r.-:., waste and peculations .that ; have .v-i plucked the people and. destroyed, - : , their, substance.' -The country, needs . -1 boneat,reliable,capable,energetic men - - -ahe hea of af airs and not men of - - smirched records,- of damaged moral r:, characters, of corrupt meth6ds,?of; - "muo Pas. . The country needs a ; jise, cool head a ; paotmea ; . eteadyhand at the helm, and notW heated brain, ari ; excited ftew-iii beats': to ' its own; selfish aspirations and plans and hopes, and a hand that trpmr,lPatthe thought of "thrilling the world" with the , braver y,.,of its. own precipitate and unwise an 'startling acts. : - ' ;-: ..-rzr 1 .No,, no, the United .States have no Wed at this time : of ; any of the thnlli6clasa;of lainpdlitl tijano " 1 TKfiV have had more than lenough of that sort of tricksters and khains. Grant, Hayes, Garfield and SArthurare -as muchras any xsountry Jl !J'1ia aaniA'Alltnnr.'.'-;"TllA can Biiauu iu tuc oamo vui j. -. y country needs Cleveland and not 31aine. The issue is Jieform. l he man needed is a Reformer. Cleve land is the man. In hoc signo vinces. Judge. Reader theme at, Asheville before the Bar Association of Wes tern North Carolina, was he Le al Profession of North Carolina What it is and What it Ought to Be.' The (7tin- compliments it for its, hunipr, , good sense, and pleas- ant reminiscences. I here was no eloquence and no display of learning. Jt says: ;k v.-. . 'f '-t'- l "Many ref erences were made to the lu minories of the bar of past generations, not o much in the form of ; anecdote as1 in in cidental illustratlonsr of : i characteristics which led to the illustrious fame of the gentlemen brought into review. It was a, glorious galaxy of great names that Judge Eeade pointed out in the legal firmament to the admiration and ' emulation of the young men of the fraternity. ' ' Puch names as Badger and Mangum,Battle nd Nash, Graham and Haywood recall not only an era remarkable for its professional glories, but also note the eternal existence of a series of fixed . and guidiBg tars to which, all after' generations of 'the legal profession may look for example and for courage." - -', V "1 :v:'"- ' ( 4; 1 "In this connection we may meniion that the admirable series of sketches pf eminent lawyers that appeared in the Raleigh News-Observer from the pen of .Hugh F. ' Murray JSsq., of Wilson, has ended. IThe iast of the t series was upon Col. f D. M. Carter We have been trying for two weeks' to call special attention to this par ticular sketch. We hope to supple ment what has been so finely said by the gifted Murray by some recollec tions of our own. LroL. Uarter was the classmate and personal friend f the writer and we desire to inter- twine one leaf of our own in the gar land so skilfully fashioned by the deft fingers' of Mr. Murray. The lawyers of North Carolina will not be neglected. We hope Mr. Murray will; undertake, at the suggestion we " made : some : months since, the task of preparing sketches ; of the eminent North Carolinians of the past. Davie, Judge :IredelI,Cas well. Wiley Jones, Gen. Tom Persori, I John Ashe, Cornelius Harnett and some others of the Revolutionary pe- riod ought to be sketched. Then," coming down later, such noble rep- resentative men as Chief Justice Henderson, Judge John Haywood, I Chief Justice Taylor, Justice Taylor. Archibald I. Henderson, Marphey, Gaston, C. J. I Rnffin, Badger, Bragg, Batt Moore I Graham, - Miller, Kerr, -venable, Saunders and others might each be treated with more or less elaboration , . as the material justified. Mr. Murray can do this work well. ; It would re quire much research j it may be, and certainly no little, labor and time." It would make a very enjoyable vol nme. y ... . i , - v ?' ; Rev. M; A. - Moore has recently I work he might not restrict himself to his own Church. 1 Such preachers as H. G. Leigh, John Kerr, 'Thomas G. Lowe, . Josiab 1 Crudup, Bishops Ravenecroft, Ives and Atkinson, Dr. J. B. Buxton, Dr. N. II. Harding, Dr. ElishaMitcbelLTir. Caldwell, Dr. lames Phillips iand . many others del serve being faithfully sketched. r Then there is a volume of sketches of the military and.naval men of the State-' that ought sto ,be v written. Johnston Blakelev. : Howe. Nash.1 Davidson, Davie, Sumner, and others of the past ought to be treated 1 to. separate sketches. .Then as we come down to recent times there are many heroes who richly merit painstaking PettiOTew. Ram.Anf; : flrtrtT1 9nA many, others will at once rise to the 2; "'" i. ' - . -1 . - '.. .. 4 - t UPS. -Vr; r ''rf-? Then there is still another volume: that might be written. There ought to be a series of sketches of the for? mer editors of ; the State either: writ? ! ten by one or many hands. The jonrth Estate is - always making great men; and ; some . times out of i very .small and imperfect' materiaV and it ought not to neglect ;; its most illustrious and useful tnembers in xWe pastwee)der Jo-Galesy his great genctr, Col. W7 W. Seaton, Jria asso- ciate.Lumsden. the founder of tne New Orleans I Picayune, and others who wenVout and made famo'woula navel to" be' -Carefully cofcaideridV Then! there are such editors as . . i , -Thomas Loring,-Weston. Bw Gaies Seatoh Gales, H. J. Husted. JEdwpd: J. Hale, Thomas J. Lemay and others sket6hedVTh6yt wewi prominent and jasffalneiKlirtheiEday -an4jreecte Honor upon ine-profession flu --'I x nere are many ex-eqiiora uving who can be sketch - hereafter iiuanean.Lic Rae, Holden Jo f Turner;-Daniel R. Goodloe, Swaim, and so on. -v! A pleasant ; volume might be wriV ten ! oy - some .ciever;-.pen : jupon - tut Men 4.&nd7WomenM. -'Letters in our ugftloerige'M n" TTVS WKTir: .ToHfinh SewGll 1 Jones. Cuthrd'Hfe kiss t'Uher, Theo. H. Hin,fJHr; Boner, r . - - ji ; w-- - Mrs. OartefkrC Spen cer, Hay war Gniofls'Gov Graham, fcov.!sVain;frGrimto Clingman; and many others,, some' of whom have succeeded' in making some i very ypoorodKB some very trashy books. : ; . I (D1TE8TIUNS AND ANSWER. 1 "Can you tell me where I can find or wnvii iheiiHbof'r iur.4oMwng-.i-UtionB:' rioonsisteney,' thotf th V Jewel."! ' 'Thxi, the mills '-of, lhs jiwds grind slowly they rrind exceedingly fine," and. VHe that tempera the winds to thershorn j lamb." . : -- j ' u. 1 -We answer : . -. I 1. The author of the first quota tion is anknown. TiThereis aBrtadu lent stanza purporting to come from a Scoich poem published in 1752 that contains it. It runs thus; . 4 VTnclt t ineh . mv . Iqqca niirh thnmrhta i ' Comparisons are cruell, Knebtooressuit :iafrBme8li1fine.T T a ?5 Oonsisterrcfe's a Jewell. This, like the - poem that has de-: ceived so many, and v. which contains the well known tone line, Though lost to sight, to memory dear," was written . to order - to supply; the Remand for -the authorship. - The latter poem ostensibly was published in 1700 by Ruthven Jerhyns and published in the,. Greenwich Maga tine fornMmne8. is t a forgery as is the Scotch poem. 2. "- We; have several times given; the history of the second quotation m the Stab. The well known lines' of Longfeilow read : - "Though the'mills of - Ood grind slowly, yet they grind exceeding small; Though With patience lie stands wailing, with exactness grinds he all." , t This Is a translation from the Ger- r . ... ... s . ... . . ... - - .. man of Friedrich Von Logan., It oc curs in J his poem "Sinnege-dichte''J t learned and quaint collection of odd sayings; entitled JacuJa'Irudentumt ocenrs this ; saying "God's mill grinds. slow but sure. He died in V' original w in tne ree Oracles of not later than the third ientury, and probably earlier Ora-eula-HibgUina Lib. XUL 14. Mr. J. H: Mills, f of rThomasville, has a copy of the work. In the Greek it ,t Li i-.i I not gods as ,usually? loosely! quoted. The New York, Journal of , Commerce says the 'quotation is also found in another iwork-:-Corp. Pa- ; , A"; - rem. Graec. Vol. l; page 444. I 3. "God tempers the wind to the shorn , lamb is the correct quota on. . It .is ;.m. Lawrence Sternes celebrated "Sentimental ; Journey in the chapter entitled5 "Maria." In Herbert's piculanPruSentuin occur these' lines : . ; "To a close shorne sheepe, . j God gives wind by measured i John Kelly would not allow the four Tamman y members of the New York Democratic - State Committee, to attend. This looks as if he still controlled th&helm. John has - not yet mace his baTgam.' ruck repre-v sents him as selhng Tammany to the highest bidder. The limes bjb: ; . He is actiog on precisely Jhe principle1 that was-to be expected and that he would have acted on whoever had been nominated for President. .Tlie matioual ticket is. nothing to him but a thing to dieker, wlth He would sell it out if ' he conld "train his" end thereby, and her will support it only on condition that he gains bis, end, which is now and always to get his grasp as firmly: as possible on municipal affairs -for pur-' poses of plunder." . a ,;.;;T; , . . .. , Havings thrown over Kelly at-Chi- cago we 'hope the;Democraj in New York will; make no bargains with the I wwu- vw. v riddance, if Kelly , and Dana will leave for good. : The Richmond Whig of .the1 19th .; ."It is current gossip'on the streets of the city of Newt York. :': that Cleveland cot . fl,000,00d from the street car - companies for vetoing"? the ;;Twelve-Hour bill and the Five-CentFare bill. : Let us have all the. UThis is it big eamJigaJerVThe; respecUble.and trnst worthy Tlnd pen4entypfna? pfi poftifnetce Ixjcx e w .York thus wpOTes!f it: , ; h "There is no such storv current here. Nn i man with : any Teputation . would dare repeat such a slander In this State, even for cam paijn purposes. Whatever faults Governor Cleveland icay have, venality 4s notone of ; them.' We are sorry tLat any par sr oven in liahone's interest; can be inc. iced to ipnnt a pararapn :r this sow m tae nope J inluriiur a DolKal ODnontat r !A falsa- ' hood like this can hurt no otte but the pub-i Usher." . ' . It will be impossible for the most venal press to derearCIevelahd. by" defamation; J His'J character is too Voiled -by slandeVfeS U yESE 'REBELLION', Dr. some of; vour readers piva ma Borne on aq. jtem insc noticed in Mr, ForbesXife, of Chinese Qor- I Fbrbess Hon ? It is as. follows: ;VA no worthy inan in bis VayV this BuffVe- I llneV iiV sketchlng whbse strance llfel been one-Of i NapoleohV omcers. tie was a scholar ana naa eman, .yhomadeship.. wreck of his life, because " ambition unsupported by i steadfast- purpose, of restlessness and finally, ..drink Dr. Wilson says of him:- A much wandering manv, he .seems to Jiave turned npn 'California, Australia, the Sandwich Islands.- India, whero iia- tnMA TTin!BoaftJT;w -I V"HHi"r tT iaub una ui luuae uauucai genuemen Who combinq a taste' of. literature with the power of navigating ' coast ing vessels, and would fate allow, of founding great Empire&-r-ianWin Bquare lAbr&rp JEaition p. 14. --'- i Is not" thls'TBtirgyifte'V" a Bur- gwyne ?" Can you with .your his toricarin8ight; 'divine the mystery ? Vpur many readers will be a in- terestcd as touch as ' ': x ' ' CnssTNUT Street : ' (The name is 'correctly given by Mr. Fprbes.. His' father live4 at New Berne. He af towards removed to Washington City. He waPa furni ture dealer, .and he had a sister who married ' a - man by' the name of Backus.. The" man who became so' i . - . t .fir.-- , - , . . '. i conspicuous afterwards was a boy at the time of, the removal. n He got a page's place through Hon. Edward Stanly, then in the; House of Repre sentatives. Afte wards he was taken . to' China by some United States offi-J cial, - remained there, grew up to man's estate, and in due time became - the leader in the great Rebellion that was finally stamped out by the genius, of Gen. Gordon.STAB,) Spirits -Turpentine The ' Local Preachers of ' the N. C. Conference are , in , session at Slsbe- vuie. . ... ; y . The Young Men's Democratic Club; of Ashevflle has indorsed the Daily Advance, and have subscribed to four hun dred copies of the weekly. - i '- " Lenoir Topic: The 3 funeral of the late Sheriff. Robert Gains Tnttle took place at Littlejohn's this morning at 10 o'clock. Rev, B. L. Bcall officiating. A large crowd was in attendance. ' 1 The Elizabeth Jjonomwi sug gests the formation of an association, with' Senator Vance as president. for the pur-, pose of erecting a monument commemora tive of Sir Walter Raleigh's colony. ' Pittsboro Record:. Mr. . R. VV Bland informs us thai Mr. B. G. Lambeth, of Baldwin township, owns a mule whose favorite diet is young chickens, if rom all parts of the county., we. hear most en couragiog reports as to he crops. - Monroe JfaguirerrJEzpress: Up land corn is splendid.', Cotton has. come Out wonderfully in the, , last two weeks. - Dan Gould, a neero. confined in An son county jau unueruonTiciion oi muraer, andawatnJg sentence of the court, made son county jail under conviction of murder, his escape yesterday, morning. Sheriff Hardlson offers' a reward of $100 for his arrest. -We have an Irish potato from the garden of Mr.: H. " J. Wolfe, which weighs just 34 ounces. . , ; Raleigh News and Observer: We had the pleasure of meeting yesterday Mr. Henry G. ' Turner, the member of Congress from Georgia, who has distin guished himself so greatly hiring the ses sion of Congress lust ended. Mr. Turner - I is a native tar heel, and he adds another name .to the list of Carolinians who have achieved merited success in other States. I We think Mr. Turner is a native of i'rauklin county. Stab. : Miss Mary I. Kerr was born in Mecklenburg county, N. X,-October 25, 1822, and ..died in. Kew Orleans, June 6, 1884. Her home was in Mecklenburg until 1856. She went to New Orleans in 1857. From 1844 to her death-ra "period of forty. years sue was a memDer ox tne Metnodist Vhurch. This good woman was a sister of our friend, Mr. R. C. Kerr, Secretary of the Cotton Exchange, at New Orleans, who is also a native of Mecklenburg county. EcC- Some-Democrat.' ? ;? Wilson" Mirror: ? Rev. W. J. Gay reports a very interesting meeting at Bethlehem Chapel, In this county. , Thirty-five have made happy professions. Our talented young' triehdrE. H. Davis, law. partner of G. W. Blount, has accepted an invitation to deliver an address in Spring Hill township, on the 15th of Au gust, on the subject of education. We have heajrdit jtated: that: Miss LUlie Gay,i of this place, a highly 4 cultivated vo calist of the finest po wers, will take part in the concerts in Goldsboro on' the evenings Of the 30th; and 81st instants,. ' ; :i Fay etteville ! Observer : -Jron is' now laid to Lumber river. :As there is a bridge to be built at that point and con siderable trestling to be done it will be ten days before traina -run', across. rWork is being pushed rapidly below Shoe Heei,and: the road bed will be ready for4 iron to the 8. C. line wnen trains rntf to Shoe Heel. Across the line towards Bennettsvillo simi- lar. activity ..preyails, - rr-f There is so foundation whatever for J the statement of the Augusta, ' Ga., : VAronicle'a Columbia, 8. C, correspondent,.copied in the fNew York Times . of the 20th, that the Scotch Crofters recenUrjBettled , ia tthis State are: discontented and unable toV find employ mentquite the reverse beingtrue, u - , Fenner JPuller, a colored carpenter, well and favorably Jcaowu;: toour citizens, died suddenly Monday morning. : -Hearing that there was some difficulty in getting the right f way through' the lands of several persona living fnear Shoe Heel, and that it wastnougnt the routed would be changed so as to run above the town, because of this trouble.' we inquired IntdT th . matter and found that it : had 4 been .satisfactorily ar- -1 THE LATEST-NEWS. mtOII Ali Pl J,Ti3 OF THJ5 WORLD Mi TnEjcnoimw 8CAnE,M Tbie Reported Cue on a miaalaslppl --Steamer ThoX!hllda Disease. S a m " mer Complaint OTio' -Tfamlly "not I from !ronioD4No ndleatlona What- L r -ZL fc!Ti- . . 1 wwr wa Avssiiiv vuwsvrai ; tByeleWtn6T BTtoufenu BC.VTheiBteanIerAnf nia PUveTpferredHo iirthe dtspatche from 'Washington, arrived here Thursday knorning, and hef captain; ;w.Bryant, 1 a! . i t.s -2 pas Keauy surpriseu ou ueiag wiuruicvt, ui ne contents or oureeon uenerai lamii- on's dispatchcsand instructions to the aDtain Brvant R'Btatea'tliat.iiusfe before" eaving New Ort8t'th4fitteBft.'; family, consistine of a man; wife and four amny, consisting o a uiau, wucoumuw shildren. evidentlv in Ihdifirent' circum- Stances, came n boardand 'engagedrdeck 8,iniJH: a babv six months old was auite. sick with the ordinary summer ;cmplaiaf,"and when the boat was opposite 'Greenviller'Trtiss- . it ied. The carpenter of -the ; tat, made a fine coffin, in fwhich the .remains wero de posited, and at"'thevnext' landing placeV on i.naerson xney- were - uuneu , ih me resence r of; most.: of.' the -passengers and rew. ma one- ior , a momenta susDeciea hat the. disease' was anything 1 but common lummer complaint. Theeircumstance'was soon forgOtten.7 and cholera ; was not thought of. i,On the arrival of the steamer here the, remainder of the. family left the boat in eood "uealtli,J trarwhere they went Capt. ' Bryant doetf not Know.i 'ino man had stated, thmugh an .interpreter, that he sailed from the, latter place. to Vera Cruz, Where h'e kept a 'saloon' "two months." He then went to NeWprleans, and from there he concluded - td come to.:8t. Xouis.r, ,IIe Could not speak French, and, Capt. Bryant does not believe heat any time came from Toulon" ' - '- " ' - f Up to a late hourlastnight-the Surgeon Jt the Marine Hospital had not been seen, nd nothing therefqre is known as to what, if any, action be has taken in the case. THE CHOLERA.. The Sconrc no? so Virulent u 'ln I Prevlons Outbreaks Tne Infection I Prevalent In Fourteen FrenebTowns i Marseilles Threatened with a Meat ' Famine. t , . ; , ' " - tBy Teleph td the MbrnW iStar. ) London, July 26. A dispatch' from Marseilles to the Times, says it is quite cer tain that the present epidemic of cholera has not the same virulence that has charac terized previous outbreaks. It appears to have -'attacked sickly individuals, rather than whole sections of the population. - At Aries many persons have become insane through fear. The total number of places in France where the infection has so far ap pcared is fourteen. ! , . I MARSEILLES. JUlV 20. The CUV IS threatened with ' aimeat famine, owing to the fact that many butchers . have shut'np shop, and others find it difficult to procure rr WARS 'A IK The City Placed In, a minor State of f . Meee. ByTeleKraphto theMornlntt Star.l ' f Warsaw, July 26. The police have closed a . number of. coffee houses and restaurants, and all other places of this sort are required to close theic doors at 8 o clock every night, and to remain closed altogether on Sundays and holidays. The city is to all intents and purposes placed in n minor state of siege. :,;..-:'-,;. -v 1 FINANCIAL. Hew York Stock Market Active and Higher. " ' (By Telegraph to the Morning Star.l j Nkw York, Wall Street, July26, 11 A. M. 4-The stock market, after an irregular opening, became' bonyant. New York Central was weak in the-early trad m p. and fell off to 107. At the. present time the market is active, and the main .shares are selling at the highest point of the week. i VIRGINIA. rreit of Three Tenns Idea Charsed I with auamptlna: to Wreek a Train I ' fBy Telegraph -to the Morning Star. I Lynchburg, June 26. Silas Hudson. James Padgett and Arthur rage,' three young men of coed families, are under ar rest for placing Iocs on the track of the Richmond & Alleghany Railroad, to wreck a train, on tne nun mat. guished Democratic candidate for the post of Lieutenant-Governor reached Asheville on Sunday morning, to rejoin., his family which had preceded him. He will remain here until some time in August, when he wui enter upon nis .campaign in the coun ties west of the mountains. Due notice of his appointments will be given in the Citi zen me presence here - of i our distin guished fellow-citizen intensifies the en thusiasm already aroused by his nomina tion. Weil known ia Asheville and the Surrounding country, and with great repu tation as a statesman and unflinching Dem ocrat, the cordial endorsement of the rre- sentation of .his name was a foregone con clusion, lie and his chief on the ticket are assured of a magnificent support in the west. General . Clingman expresses himself approvingly of Grover Cleveland, and says n no is eiecxea, ne wui prove tne oest fresi aent tne country nas had tor the past twenty-five years. He does not. accord to Gov. Cleveland very .high order ot talent. but ascribes 1 to him firmness and decision Of character, high and patriotic purpose, morougn nonesty.. . mat is the. man for safe and good President. We deeply regret to learn of the death of "Mrs. Black welL i Which i occurred : at her home, near iuacKweu s suipnur spnngs, On the 10th, after a short illness. Her husband, Mai- aw uh;wi, preueueuncr somemoniU3 ago. . ;v;r: - -' j ' - . r- r - . - rwt W' v f Z a.-UV UARUJ friends of Mr. and Mrs. .Victor C. Bar ringer will be glad to learn that they are now On their way to the United States, and are expeciea in charlotte about the 1st o August, to; remain only one month. Mr. uarnnger is one or the Judges of the Inter national Court in Egypt, and his duties wui require nis return early in. September. This will interfere with visits elsewhere. except probably short trips to Concord and Morganton. --5 The Atlanta Constitution says: lesterdav moraine-about . davliirht Capt. Couch, aided by Patrolmen Aldridge and Hildebrand, arrested a young ' man who will remain the city's guest until' his previous record nas been carefully inquired mto. The young man occupied, yesterday and last night, cell No. 8, and gave his name as Oscar J.- Orr.- 'He'1-claims to be from Charlotte-NorthiOATAli n - Mill (Ia. Clares he has never in his life 'Committed a crime, and appears to be very indignant on account ot nis connnement. Mr: Clrr. -while in Charlotte, was connected with the nouse Of" MessrsV" Lndolf 'Hartsfleld acting in the capacity of clerk and , ccK lector. Inouiries as to the nrobable cause of his arrest elicited the fact that since his departure from Charlotte he has made sev eral araita on roanies in thl r.itv. all of which, were protested for non-payment,, he. aayiag no claims on the parties drawn on. f Ayer's: Ague Cure id strictl r a vegetable preparation, harmless, and -warranted to core all malarial disorders, -jf vp f COMMERCIAL. VVrl I;M I N G TO N f M ARO T, lv STAR OFFICE. July 26. 4 P. M. SPIRITS TURPENTINE The market Var;qun?edi:qui with nofales reported.; w .C ' UOSINr-Tbc market . was ; quoted firm at 97Jjceat8 for Strained and $1021 for Ijood StrainedwiUi sales as. offered, i ;. V The market waa.qaoted,vrm at $ U 30 per bbl of 280 lbs, with sales at quo- CRWE 'TURPENTINEThe market Was steady'with saWreiwrWat'$iiro"fof Hard and 1 85 for Virgin and Yellow"Dq XiOTTON The marketuwas quoted teady ;- higher grades -firm; -No, sales ::re ported,, JThel:. following jwcre;1Uie official, uqtations: , ' r , . r . -,.: -V " ., Ordinary;; . U . 8f " Good: Ordinary.'.... 9i s-cents ?fH; i .-ui, ixrw jjuaaung. . i . -;iof : MMdling. . i . ; A0i UooiMidaiing..f;i.ll ; : PEANUTS Jfarket dull and lower to ell, on,ja basis of 8085'r cents for Ordi nary, 0095 cents for Prime, $f O0l Q5 fr "TErtraJ Prime,tand $1 iei ' 15 for RECEIPTS. Cotton. ... Spirits .Turpentine. . bales -865 casks 926:bbls ; 46 bbls V 81 bbls Kosin.... Tar;.;-.:.....;:. Crnde Turpenune; , -... domes nc Mabketk A IB? TelegfaDh to the liorntntrUr.i ; Financial - New York. July 28." Noon. Monev firmer at 12 per cent, i Sterling : ex change 482482J and 484484. State bonds qulU Governments barely steady, r Cotton quie1;,fth "salea"tSdav 0f 55 bales middlingrupiands llc:Orleans lljc' ji u nil co uiucijr vcaujr,wiu iKuts iu uio xui- lowing quotations : July ' 11.15c; 'August 11.15c; September 11,04c; October ia.73C; November.10.56cw December 10.60cK Flour dull. Wheat Jc higher. Corn iic bet ter. Pork steady at $17 00. - Lard firm at $7 3a Spirits turpentine - firm at 324c Rosin firm at $122! 27,. Freights Steady. ; . ' f Baxtimore, July 25- Flour dull and 25c. lower for city mills. Wheat-T-southern firmer and active; "western firm; southern red 9496c; southern amber 88 99c i Na 1 Maryland 9595ic; No. 2 western winter red on spot 9494lc ' Corn southern nominal;, western nominal; southern, white ?y75c; yellow 6668C. i i ' WOITB1GII ldAUKBTS. j ;; ' I Br Cable to the Moraine Star.l I LivKKPOOL. July 26, Noon. Cotton firm but the denfand is light; middling uplands 6id; do Orleans 6 7-16d; sales to-day o.uuu Daies. ot wmcn ouu were tor specu latjon and export; receipts 3,000 bales, all or wmcn are American, f utures are flat; uplands, 1 m c July and Au gust delivery 6 16-64d; August and Sep- lemocr delivery, o i7-o4a; September and October delivery 6 16-64d; October and November delivery 6 6-64d; November and December delivery 6 2-64d; December and January delivery 6d. j 2 P. M.- Uplands, 1 . m c. July deliv ery 6 17-64d, buyers' option; July and August delivery 6 17-64d, buyers' option; August ana September delivery 0 17-64d. buyers' option; September and' October delivery 6 17-64d, sellers' option; October and November delivery 6 6-64d, buyers option; November and December delivery 6 2-64d, sellers option ; December and Jan uary delivery 6 l-64d, buyers' option; Sep tember delivery 6 21-64d, sellers' option. Futures closed firm. ; ; , ; Sales of cotton to-day include 3,900 bales American. . . ;. .' Breadstuff s firm,' with less offering. But tergood American 70s. Lard prime western 38a. Wheat red western spring 7s 7d7s 9d; do. winter 7s 7d8s lOd; No. 2 California 7s'8d7s l0d: : . COTTON ". A Summary of the Croik to' Date. : ' V By Telegrapb to the Xomfaur Star. I - New Yokk, July 36. Receipts of cot ton for all interiortowns, 997 bales; re ceipts ' from plantations, . bales ; total visible supply of cotton for the world, 1,905,388 bales, of which 1.M4. 688 bales1 are American, against 2,064,865 and 1,352, 465 respectively last year; crop in sight, S.643.063 bales. - : Servants of the Stomach. I The new Governor General of Canada brought with him J thirty-nine - servants seems a good man. But every stomach has more servants than that. Lungs, liver, heart, arteries, ' veins,-esophagus, kidneys and all the rest of the party must be kept in prime order if first class service is expect ed. - Brown's IrOn Bitters is the great regu lator for all these. , It quiets them when in rebellion, and keeps them to their work when they are lazy. i NewTork' aid Wilmington : Steamship Co. 'THOU MER" 34, EAST RIVER, NEW YORK, 'V; V. ' AtoolockPvM. i v' ' -4 EEQTJL&.TOR ...........Saturday, BENEPACrOK. . .....t. . "71" REGULATOR .... . . . . . . BENEFACTOR " : PROM WILMINGTON BENEPACTOB. .. ..... ..Saturday, REGULATOR . .. M " BENEFACTOR. . . . . . . : . ' July 5 July 18. JulyW. July 26.v Jnly & July 12. July 19. July 26, REGULATOR.....:... -W Through Bills Lading and Lowest Through Rates guaranteed to and from points In North and Soutn Carolina. t . - For Freight or Passage apply to ' H. O. SrtLAXI.BONKS, " f - i . .. ; Superintendent, Wilmington, N. C. W.: P. Clyde & Co. General Agents, ' je.28tf 35 Broadway, New York. PUR C ELI. HOUSE! ; 4 . ' 1 J': UNDER NEW. MANAdEMSNT, .. . Wilmington,- W. C. -' Yi B. IPorpy Proprietor. ; First Class in all its appointments. Terms C2.00 lo ts.00 per doy. , r , feb 8tf?; WHY IS THE WILMINGTON 8TAR THE most popular paper with school children Because they do not like the "Review." - -i-v i SF1.8 Sundries,. Perfumery, Fancy and ToOet Articles, Ac. ':. ,. u r, ::!!w.;-t . ; I Prescriptions a speclaltyat '"t&M , ; ..,i v - , F.T&inLLER'S, 'f"-: . my W tf Corner of Tonrth and Nna Streets, : THE PaOPOSAb-1 .My darling;' you look irresistibly lovely to-night 1 r She. Do I? Thanks very nw), i ' are handsome as n VA-nr-o. ru 1- - - --..wj vuauc dress suit. ley,vyqui ! lt. to the Diamokd I bhirt, my love, which I wear for the'fr j I time to-night; it is that which givesW I to my toilette. - Here is its prototype'fslin J .pug the iamond engagement rina L t her finger). -. : s : - V She-May. our love be as endunngls, the fame of . " The Diamond Shirt." j Tableau, If your dealer does not keep it, send his addr to Daniel MiUer & Co., sole Ln'ufacturers more, Md. - mv2D&W3m cbd hoc&nnn PILL torpid rowfi c DISORDERED LIVER, and MALARIA. i OTptoM indicate theiiStece i llfi ftep eatlnK version to at od, Irritability; of temper, Law Heart, ota before the eyes, bJehlv cel. mand tiie nse of a remedy that acts directly ;onlheLiver. As aLiver medicine TCXX'S SfP8 naveno eqnal. Their action on the Juctaeys and Skin is a4so prompt : removm yjl imparities through these three " scot engers of the system," producing appe .tite, sound digestion, regular stools, a clear sian ana a vigorous body. TXTT'S P1XU8 S 1? nausea or giiping nor interXero Wltn daily work and are a perfect i ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA. HE FEELS IiIKE A KEW MABI.! tnat. nave done me any good. They have cleaned me out nicely. My appetito asf splendid, food digests readily, and I now .have natural passages. I feel like a new man." WjD. ED WAEDS. Palmvra. 0. ' BoiaeTerywhere,25c. Office, 44 Murray SU.N.T. HAIR DYE. : GEAT HATR OB WmSKEES chansred ih stantly to a Gixsst Black by a single ap " plication of this Dye. Sold by Druggisto, -or sent try express on receipt of $1. . I ?y Qfflce, 41 Murray Street, Key York, i TDH'S HAKUALOF USEFUL RECEIPTS FEE. Jy20Deod&Wlv njm suwefr lySa Buffalo Lithia Water I : FOR MALARIAL POISONING. f USE OP IT IN A CASE OP YELLOW FEVEK- Dh. Wm. T. Howard, op Balttmore, Professor of Diseases of Women and Children in ', the University of Maryland. J Dr. Howard attests the common adaptalioh of r this water in "a wide range of eases" with t hat ot the far-famed White Suipnur Springs, in t.reen brier county, West Virginia, and adds the follow ing: i "Indeed, In a certain class of cases it is rone h superior to the latter. I allude to the abiding debility attendant upon the tardy convalescence from grave acute diseases; and more especially to the Cachexia and Sequels incident to MalaMii Fevers, in all their grades and varieties, to cer tain forms of Atonic Dtsjxpsia, and .tne -auctions Peculiar to Women that are remediable at all by mineral waters. In short, were I called ?; if state from what mineral waters I have seen the great est and most unmistakable amoun I of good accrue in the largest number of cases in a gmeral mv.' would vnhesitatingly say the Bvffalo bprum Mecklenburg county, Va." - :. Da. 0. F. Masson. op Richmond, Va., Late Professor of General Patholofry .and Physio- . logy in the Medical College of Virginia : j "I have observed marked sanative effects froa. the Buffalo Water in Malarial Cachexia, A Jhfspepsia, some of the Peevdtwr ASectwm men Anosmia, Hypochondrias Cardiac Pdd tions,tc. It has been especially efocacims in Chronic Intermittent Fever, nunierovsceis oj m character, which had obstinately withstood thensm remedies, having Been restored to mfJZ" in a brief space of time by a sojourn at w bpniw- I- Dr. Johh W. Wiluasisoh, Jackson, Teknj Extracts from Communication on the TTuram . , Actlmtf the Buffalo Lilhia Water in the "Virginia Medical Monthly" f for February, 1877. I "Their great value in Malarial 2)Jft"f Sequela has been most abundantly and satiaac torily tested; and I haveno questioB that Jt womu have been a valuab auxiliary in the treawi". of the epidemic of Yellow Fever which so terBWJ afflicted the Mississippi VaUey during thet summer. I prescribed it myself,, and l it p ve prompt relief in a case otSupprtwnoflimf bellow Fever, and decidedly tnitigaUd oiMTJ1 tressing and dangerous symptoms. The Pan?t2. covered, but how far the water may have comn bated to that result (having lAt?S a single case) I, of course, cannot nidertaK There it no doubt, however, abmd 'A0?. its administration was attended by the mod ew cial results." i i Springs now opens for guests. ' Water In cases of one dozen half gallon ooi" $5 per case at the Springs. . .. I pampwetmaybd. I Clioice ITew Crop Holass- 2ND CARGO NOW LANDING t . AND WILL BE SOLD PROMPTLY FROM i i . ; WHARF AT LOW PRICES. I" ! WORTH & WORTH. If T The Central Protestant tant Church in North Carolina, fa pubiisn Greensboro, N. C. . f- I Terms, zss uo per annum, m mbcr too1 activity of its agents, and. the fViassesor tag demand f orlt among the more solidms readers in various sections, give rtte .epatron- vuivr ui aw vyVf I i fnfiTCa PROTESTANT peculiar claims aTOr ZzcJuZ adrerpublk Term nrgT bio. CoBsalt your business interest, ana t . " : .. -1 Greensboro . f I have had Dyspepsia, with Constipa tion.two years, and have tried ten different kinds of Dills, and TUTT'S nr th flot 5 ?i:-r:!: ?ir-iKvt'-a .f .!-.".- ,vt : . '
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 27, 1884, edition 1
2
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