Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Aug. 7, 1884, edition 1 / Page 2
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1 s :i - J r- V- i jr rf f ; Hi- iv V-i' - m i.".-'- . , . . . - - m. - r--i.. " v .r't.iMB AWNouNcnansNT;-.- rra xorninq STAR, the oldest dally news - " : per in North Carolina, ts published dally, except - .Monday, at $7 00 per yoaiy $4 00 foe six months. ? 3 oo for three months, $1.90 for two months; 750. v f -yr one mouth, to mall subscribers, - Delivered to '' rjr.y subscribers at the rate of 15 oenta per wees :Mr unT period from one week to one year. 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Where an advertiser contracts for the paper to be sent to him during the time his advertisement Is in, the proprietor will only be responsible for the mailing of the paper to his ad- IreSS. , -: j - The Morning Star. By WILLIAM II. BERNARD. -1 WILMINQTONt N. C. 7 Wedxesdat EvKNiuia, Axrp. 6,1884. EVENING EDITION; . r .. , , REPUBLICAN PROSPECTS IN TBS " - . south. ! The Republican managers are de termined to try to capture one or more of six Southern States. They are' Virginia, West ; Virginia, lorth and 'South Carolina, Louisiana" and ' .Florida. They are flattering them selves that they ban break the "Solid Southland to that end they will use : "soap" and wind and lying docu ments most freely. They pretend to be very hopeful of West Virginia. The Philadelphia American, an able, decent supporter of the "tattooed man," says this in its last issue: "In almost every Southern State there Is a growing dissatisfaction with Democratic . rule. It is more marked in West Virginia than perhaps any other State. The poliey of the Democratic party in that State has been snch as to involve it in heavy taxa tion, which now extends to .all kinds of movable property, as well as to real estate. WUh the Democratic party itself the most serious disagreements have arisen. " Hut the best and latest news is that the Democrats will ' carry that State and elect their Governor and give the electoral votes to Cleveland. The American thinks Louisiana good fighting ground, and next to West Virginia the most hopeful. It ex pects the present High Tariff to bring over Democrats to the support of Blaine. And yet the Republican party favors the abolition- off the . sugar tax. The American thinks South Carolina may be captured and says "there is a largo body of Inde pendent Democrats which has ser ceded from the party," and its organ, the old fire-eating Mercury, says they' will" vote for 'Blaine. Hut South Carolina will - give jits' electoral votes to Cleveland all7 the same. The Republican are not so -j-- v sanguine now of carrying North Caro lina as they. pretended to be a month or no ago. The prospects of the f Dem- ocratic annexes" of the Republican ',:: party York, Cook, Winston and the r " other turn-coats are . not quite so a ; ; rose-tinted and bright. The truth is there is not a, sensible and candid . - . f . . . . i . - Radical in the State who has the - 'slightest hope of carrying the State, THB TltmCNE ON IGOy HEN' T'-l'r :k :y- " BRICKS. '' The JSiew, York Tribune is now . praising Blaine. It once denounced uiui a a - unoe-iaicer,- .it ' is now i abusing liov. Hendricks as a bad man." But let us go back ten or -twelve years and ascertain how the eminent Indianian was L regarded by - " this very paper- that now assaults . uu;aHperBeB-mm. . xvecoras. are ex cellent things to have when a politi J cian or a paper changes fronfcr Here is what the present- editor of the m v " . '.s - irxtmnc, Whitelaw Reid, said of Mr. Hendricks 22d July, 1 872 : V V . thA u of national affairs ly ' be hS0ma8A" Hd'io-s is sure to ' u 3"ist, an able and in i ;iiuuuuW siaicsman, and a wiserjoliti ,. :- .cian,hisviewson public tiareeS- titled to great weight. . . . Tb ot Mr. Hendricks' ti&cBLBL e tnnd ?n the phrase which he gives as a watchword for the campaign-'just 1 laws and - public virtue. We have before now heard some such sentiment aa this from the lips of men who have come - fresh; from making re pressive statutes and from divisions f cor rupt official spailsbut in the mouth of a man like - ex-Senator Hendricks the sen tence means .all thaf is honest and true. His record as 8enator, RepresentaUve Commissioner and State Jegislator is pure and untarnished i and whatever he is able to do for justice and public morals when chosen Governor of Indiana, we may bo sure he will do.: ; i , The praise was justly bestowed in 1 872, arid it is equally as deserved in ft84. Mr.- i Hendricks , has " rather added to his greatness and excellence, daring the intervening twelve years, and at 65 he is a wiser, more;" emi nent statesman than Jiewas when" he wasjthe Bubjedt of I the Tribunes Icuerited ealogxum.: He has Higher, claiws Un '1 884 than ' he :- had in 1872, : and : by a very great; deal, upn the American people, " and be; cause of the' villainy practiced in 1876 by the Republican party, aided' and abetted by this very Tribune. The Great Fraud of 1876. is still un vindicated or atoned for. Mr. Til den and Mr. Hendricks are the "two gentlemen who were i so foully wronged by the rape of two . South ern States, " and through them four millions of Democrats who voted for them. The American people will, we hope, this year make all the amends now possible ; by placing Gov. Hen dricks in the Chair to which he elected in 1876, by a ' majority: of a quarter of a million votes;?. " '. ' A SIGNIFICANT REPORT. j 'The Young Republican Club of. Brooklyn has an Executive and Ad visory Committee. We mentioned that this Committee had been at work upon Blaine's record. They have been carefully and diligently examining into the Mulligan busi ness. The Club is composed exclu sively of Republicans. , They have before done important work in re forming abuses in the municipal go-- r mar " nr r vernmentot isroofciyn, rne uiuDat present is - divided xa. , opinion as to who ought to be . supported o f the candidates for the-Presidency. That is, they have, reported, not con demning any one, noir indorsing any one, but leaving eacn member to make his own choice and vote as he preferred. But each member is furnished with a copy of the report! upon Blaine's recorlT'his report gives a fall his tory of the, matter and the evidence bearing upon iL- There are Blaine men and anti-Blaine men on the Com mittee; and henco the; action to leave each man to select his own candi date. . The report has not been made public yet. The Tithes says of it: "In this pamphlet voters will find a sum mary, without color: argument, or com ment, from Which disputed facts and cir cumstantial evidence have been . excluded. It is a history of the matter, prepared and -approved by Blaine men and anti-Blaine men worfcmg together. J?'or that reason it will be accepted as a. fair statement, and will carry conviction to the minds of many a wavering man who' may have supposed that the story, of which hetias heard more or less, was a' "campaign he. : Its origin, and the impartial war in which the ' facts are presented, make it a valuable politica document,"; :r .-- - Here is another bit of evidence to show ho w" irafai?' and ;"even corrnpt Blaine was hen he, was ; speaker of the House. Representative Reeves, of New " York. made a speech at Riverhead, Long Island, last week. In the, coarse of his speech he Ar raigned Blaine for his participation in the land grant legislation' in the Forty-first Congress, Mr. ; Reeves said: : ' ' 1. ; i i "r ' " - ' ' ' "The standintr committee -on Pacific Railroads, to which the matter was referred, Should nave been made up, so that both sides of -the-question should be fairly re presented ? What did, Mr.' Blaine , do?' he continued. 'Out of thirteen members nine Republicans and ' four Democrats- he did not select a single sincere opponent or the DHL .Every man oi them was either openly or secretly friendly to the .grant some on grounds of public policy, ! other. makina: a -majonty oi the committee, on grounds that would not bear the light. The result was thaU47, 000,000 acres of land, some fof it worthless, much of it valuable, were handed over in pne lump to Jay Cooke, to be made a basis for floating the bonds of the Northern; Pacific Itailroad. For this enormous robbery of the Ameri can people under the forms of law no man is so directly or so largely responsible ras Mr, Blaine. ' It may be proper to add what would doubtless not surprise you to hear that during the Forty first Congress, however it may have been at other times, the Speaker's room was the favorite resort of the lobbyists and harpies who gather where the carrion is.' ? j '., This, is the fellow that the Repub licans ask voters 'of the - United States; to make President.Thi8 is the corrupt demagogue the Irish voters are asked to support! and, to do this to desert the old Democratic party that has been their jtried and only friend in America. ! ' C ', The Reform meetings in England I in protest .against thet very unwise ubiuu oi sue xiouse ox ;xords con- tinnes.; They are ; immense in hize and the speakingris!; Wyrarkable power, and eloquence. A purer,mdre upright man does not live in Eng land than John Bright.' He Us" the greatest living British orator and al- tioughr 7$ years of age his. eloquence is stilt great- and his intellectual powers are in perfect . preservation. When ho arraigns . the Peers with burning periods and excoriating ..de nunciation it is sure to have a greats effect in shaping the tpihion-flI "the -great r middle and -;lowrclas. Bright is- not an agrarian but& .re-. iformer. " TheHouse "of Lords must yield 'or ' be ' broken 'i';1 - !G6v: Cleveland is irr possession "Of: letters promlsirig "to furnish f affida vits of . persons;- high in the 'eduba-l tional ranks of Kentucky, as well as affidayits made in another and. .more, easterly ; State which , would, iplaoo MK Blaine is a bad plight and "would forever settle ( the question Y of his moral status. These - letters ''have ; i been voluntarily sent to1 hifn. ?f' Gov, Cleveland will not . use, these or oe party to any exposure of his competi tor. i; He nor his closed friends i will bring out the pistol business or any thing else that, affects Blaine's pri vatblife: - J n 5 ':f 'The Republicans now think they will get a good amount of "soap" for their campaign from the poor clerks in the departments . ; Tbey have about completed their plans and the Jay Hubbell system will be well Worked. This is the party that expends so much wind an3 printer's ink over civil ser vice , reform. But party needs are stronger, than - moral platitudes " or snivelling pretension, and the old tried corrupt methods must be resort ed to in their crying emergency. ;" ' Accord ing to a report of Dr.' Praven, the State Veterinary of Illi nois, North Carolina is among the States-; in -which cattle have the plaguy. How true this is we avo no knowledge. The plague is what is called the Texas or splenetic fever. .. TUB PSRIODIOAIiS. : . The Season tat September contains 2 col ored plates. 2 historical cortume-pictures, 121 illustrations of dress and needlework, 11 flat paper patterns, 6 embroidery de signs and 4 initial letters. This is an ex cellent fashion monthly and contains the latest from Paris. Price SO cents a nunv ber. Tho International News Company, publishers, 31 Beekman street, N. Y. ". : The Art Interchange Is a household jour nal devoted to decorative embroidery. china painting and other of the household arts. Handsomely printed on fine paper and well illustrated, it is furnished at f3 a year, and is published fortnightly!' I The Electra for August contains its .usual variety of original and selected articles. It contains one handsome . engraving each month, is excellently . printed on clean, white paper and is devoted to "the good, the true, and the: beautiful." Price $2 a year. Published at Louisville, Ky., and edited by Annie . Wilson and Isabella L Leyburn. ; . ; -.t. BLAINE'S FINANCIAL OBE- ' kAtIONS. ' V , 1I.1GUT upon, nn past career; A Letter from Augusta, Maine, In Spring ".. field Republican. - T , CHAPTER FIRST. His Money MalLliic During Ihc War, i When the war period opened with its revolution in prices and its vast opportunities for speculation there was probably ho man in the State of Maine who .more, clearly perceived the avenues to wealth- then opening than James G. Blaine. " Possessing a remarkable natural power for organ-" ization and combination, great busi ness sagacity and a love for adven ture, Mr. Blaine not only seized upon the opportunities that came ; he cre ated opportunities. .' - Mr. Lincoln had pnt Simon Cameron- at the head of the' War Department,' and. Mr. Cam eron had made Thomas' A;' Scott his trusty assistant; Mt. . Blaine was, a Pennsylvahian and ; from; .the-.'yery first found .that he could obtain fa vors at the War Department--ia Pq: partment nobody needs to b told where all things went by favor. Mr. Blame was Speaker in : the House "of Representatives in - Maine, and as captivating then aa now. lie . in stantly :'. turned to : 'valuable i ao count the information ; p and- : the favors whioh he was able ::to bbtain in " Washington; One Of his - first operations I was-. the collection" from the War Department of a large snm of money for ;the . Maine Central Railroad Company: ;It will" be re memberedj; thaf at the outbreak of the war and the grand uprising' of the 'jtnoliibN!9r&tit"w' felt to 2 be almost wrong to ask compensation from i the Government for the ser vices that were . so freely prof erred. Men felt like giving all they had to save it. The States fitted ."out - their VWU UUUUB, i)UU lUG liUUUiiU WU1 panies offered to " transport 1 them to the capital free of charge.- But this sort of 'j tijogldidit lastafter the war actually i opened.' The railroad companies were glad to be paid for all: the servicerenderedieten; though they had given it gratuitouslyin the first instance. Mr Blaine discoverr ed a claim ifof IgMOQffor the Mabie ventrai ana ne oixerea vo coiieci iu HeVwas.JiyttiaJ per cent, fai the:!5ob, & and ? lie was speedily successf uLt He pocketed 5,qoo and purchased the house und grounds) iiov? ehlargod and iadornedj where he has for, nineteen "yeard rer sided. A Bimilar claim for the Bod- ton and Auama ivauruau company was collected by him about the same timefand-Ife railroad J eorffpanies did not shinen the'iransaction, llr. Blaine" was at least made" 1 10,000 richer by ' it. For a man who started with nothing, this Was V prosperous beginning in , business.--r.: The ' equip ping of - -1 h e . S talc troops required re , purchase - oi material in Boston, ax'l&.tf-giiino .tsbeodi jy-i-r,, -Auuu.ian.;acqttamiijnco with the Adiutant General! way of doing ; business, andt the men with whom he did business, was trainable; xx w was a memoer oi jiu&XjegiBiaiure, but he was also private citizen, and as such he had. a right toengage- in business operations that were profitable.- ..Thero, was no law in"te State of Maine j. agaiftsi a v.member of the Legislatufe beitigfihter estied ingo vernmeht- Contracts, nd i wheir the war was fairly begun-Mr; Blaine found that ! he . could make all the money - he wanted. He had the en tree at th wot: office and the favor of i Cameron:; aqdrJScott-, who,. thought him one of the smartest, young men they t hack ever met.. : jrje, speedily transferred hs base- of, operations , to. Washington. ; He did not need much money, for it was not so much capi-1 tal as information and political favor iuai . were vamauie n iuoho uay. When there was a'f it "contract to be had at the ' War Department ' Mr; Blaine was one of 1 the first f to. have the information and he' boldly avail ed himself : of y all 1 he"; obtained. Still he was a little green -at first; and early 'in : his speculative Career ' he heedlessly ;. put- ' in a bid for a :-certain army,, contract in his : own: name. .? When. ; the , s bid reached the eyes of Thomas A. Scott the latter was astonished. , He sent for Blaine at once. "Don't you know? better," he said, cMr. Blame, than to put in a bid here in your own name? I advise you to go "and withdraw that at once, and not let your name appear." Mr. Blaine was not slow, in 'taking the advice and ho never" forgot it afterward. He i sometimes relates it as a gook joke on himself. He made money at a wonderful rate. I will not attempt to: give any list, of. his operations. 'His large commission, on ; me couiracts tor opencer rmes and other war material, are already a matter of history, , Tho downfall of Cameron did not, hurt him, Vfor Mr. Blaine did not confine his opera tions to the" war department. He was equally well'fixed" at the navy department. There -had " drifted down to Augusta from one of the interior towns of the State1 a fel low; of line address7 and a n talent for : success, who,- like Mr. -Blame himself, ' had been at one-time a school-teacher. His ? name ? . waa Alanson B. Farwell. . He had studied law and become . partner with Lot M; Morrill, afterward our United States Senator. Mr. Farwell was. ta ken to Washington, and by the' help of Maine political ' inftaerice' early 'in 1861 was made chief clerk of the bu reau of construction and repair. It was a place which gave him knowl edge of all bids, and 'of contracts before they were made. He was not slow to turn this knowledge to profi table account, and Mr. i Blaine was, his . most- intimate: friend. . Did the navy department meed a large quan-; tity of material for f the construct ionj of its ; war vessels?; iMx.1FarweIl was the first to know the fact, ,andMrn Far well's fricml were .the first to have he ojiportunity, to control the market. ' His -.knowledge ; was not confined to the operations of his own bureau, and in hemp and in a variety of .'materials' he' was' enabled Ho' speculate ' with absolute Certainty of large ;; profits. - Farwell made plenty ' of : money, although - h always : told his ? friends that Blaine claimed the lion's share of the profits, and long -before the ; war closed he purchased for himself a handsome place on State , street, : in which he is said . to . have in ve sted $35,000 and which is still occupied, by. his .widow. .AVhen. Farwell. re signed he j became State agent for Maine" in' Washington, and 'subse quently engaged .inthe "paper 'credit frauds -perhapd the idoat1 gigantic dwindle perpetrated during' the war by which ' the" n Government was cheated bht;of huridreds - of : soldiers and the towns of Maine" were collec tively robbed. of more than half, a million pf dollars. aIrfj, Farwell be came insane 'as rosalt(of .e Oexpoj sure' of, his connecUon t witl iose frauds and died about the year l87i. Previous to becoming insaneT he 'Free, ly asserted that . Mr. 'Blaine "wis" a sharer in the profits . 'of the' paper credits a', statement '''wTiich ' Mr Blaine has" 'always vigorously de nied."" v ' -: u - SOUTHERNERS A T OLD POINT, s Correspondence Courier-Journal. , j ii Julia Jackson. , the, only, child of Stonewall Jackson, of beloved menv- pry,. is. here.; She is, a u slight, blueT ; eyed girl, -.with .fair . hair, dark eye brows and loner lashes, which eive strength, and character toer' mobile j changing f ace. " She is'Tquite' an ac- f bmplished'-ybinnladyswims'likb'a) i fish, shoots liks a'rifleman,ahd rides I like a Kentucky belle,' in her gray ' Uonfederate uniform, trimmed with big brass buttons. ; It is very pretty to seothe deference' paid ther widbw l ana only child of their lost leader by ? all the Southern men and women who l may chance- to'nieeti them.:f Mrs. Jackson is a modest little lady,, with -t. ; ,J-i r cxiarming manners ; ana sweet voice. , ; , Gen. Robert E. Lee's eldest son, ! Gen. W, F H. Lee. (Rooney), inhere; with his . beautiiul . v-wif e. f; Ile is a large, handsome mant? who' has spent j .most of. his life m tho ; open air and; looks like an Eurrrish country baronet- " who keeps ihe 'hounds, 'serves'" God: ana nnnnra thA tinir. - - - -;. i ah4 honors Ihe king 'if : ikitA It V Aa.aMV VUIW UVTVI w VUlUj i warrantee - " - -v t IT ITLOM ALtrAlltS OF THE WORLD1 V FdniiiGN. Cholera. Reports France antf tUeltal- , Ian QnarantlheSentelie orTnrtef h deaths from bholera 1 at -Marseilles,, and" three at Toulon .last? night ; Seven returned, f u gitives haveeb"iardiea;v jJThe Steele says: ThelGovernment has de termined ; to. .demand a suppression, of the quarantine along ; the Italian - i ronticr. v: If, Italy refuses to grant this demand reprisals tare threatenedfc,: " ilisKiiiLKS, ' August ie.vnoon. Two; deaths from cholera here since 9 o'clock this morning. - T - - . t pxmo; August 6.Eight of terTiirkish. mutiieer8., at ,4s8iant, iwero: sentenced to death. Two Were shot at Abassyet td day.' The sentence of the others ' was commuted i td penal 'servitude,! or lifc' ' '.' - r'. :; AIry GoodV ilone Deatroyed In Co Jomba, Gp;-TwentrNlne Roalness . Rnlldlngcs Burnf. In Portland, Ore- i By Telegraph to the Mornnuc Star.l ." .... ..Coi.mrBTjs. Ga., August 6. A fire broke out in the wholesale dry goods house of J. A. Lewis, In this city, at r3. 30 o'clock this morning,' anpT obtained such a headway 1 be fore diacqyered that two, storehousts and; nearly the entire " stock . Were"' destroyed.' The buildings ahd stock are valued at $75.- jOOO, w30op0msurance; ,,f : " 1 bAN rBANCisco, August 6. A lire in East Portlands .Oregon, yesterday, . de stroyed twenty-nine (.business - buildings. Loss - 475.000 : . insurance 30.000. The ) largest ; sufferers is : Charles Logus, on his : Duiioines ' and the contents of nia meat t packing house, whose loss is $25,000, The l other individual losses, are under $5,000. FINANCIAL. New York Stoclc. market Strons and vi? ...,:, .vBnoyaat. . . .-.a .; . ' fBy Teleirraph to the Morning Star. t. Nrw YoKK. Wall Street. AueuBt 611 'A.' M. Stocks' are strong and buoyant this morning. Western Union rose 14 per cent i to 68, Northwest to 105, Pacific Mail to Slf , Missouri Pacific 1 to 03, and other active Shares to per cent. ' -; ' ' jg- POLITICAL rOINTS. - " Editor Dana does not seem to be nappy in tho company Of' thelndepen- Itdent' mug-wump8. BaUitnorean, -Bad. : Urgan. - - : -V''"f ' ..; election .of Blaino would ! stop the . agitation, of i a ( surplus revenue. There , would bo none , in the treasury in three months . Augusta Hew Age, Bern. . : When a' college president der dares for Cleveland he is a mug-wump, a dreamer and a dude.- . When he comes out for Blaine he is a distinguished publicist, a gifted precepter of ' youth and a revered patriot. Utiea Observer, Dem. v ; j: - i '!'"? At a Blaine and. Logan Banner' I raisins in New Haven. Conru. the other evening, one of the speakers expressed the liope tuat i ale uollege might .burn down. Colleges are offensive to Republicans this L year because they don't teach Logancse. narrtscmrg I'atrtot, jjem. - -s Z rr" A Republican cont'emporary is pained ,to observe . that '.'Cleveland shows no sign of intending to resign the office of Governor of New York." No, indeed Business ia hot done , in that way. There was Hayes,' who did not resign the Gov ernor's office till after ho reached Washing ton, to be inaugurated, and. Gen. Garfield didnot renounce the Scnatorahip till after his election to the; Presidency. Cincinnati Enquirer, j JJem.; ..i -To-Enjoy JLlfe 'Many people do not enjoy their lives any more-than prisoners in lail or exiles in the mines of Siberia. It is because they have overworked themselves into nervousness or biliousness or dyspepsia. ' They can be hap- ?y ir Xhey will use lirown s iron isitters. 'his is a . peculiar preparation of iron, -which enters into the blood, driving-out impurities and. giving: enrichment: for poverty, strentrth for Weakness, and vigor for lassitude. Mr. Edward. Case, of Jersey- City, N. J., suffered from dyspepsia and loss or 1 appetite, lie used lirown s iron Bitters and writes "It made me fat and happy." v ;. f FTltCELL EOTSE! TJKDBB NKW MANAQKHSNT, Wilmington, N. C. B. L. Peiry, '' -- " Proprietor. First Class m all Its appointments. Terms f2.00 13.00 perdo7. j feb 8tf Atkinsbii & n!anning's ' Insurance Rooms, BANK OP NSW ilANOVIR BUTLDINQ, , , . Wllmlncton, js. c , , Fire, Marine Comoanies. Atrjrreffate Capital Bepresented Over 9100,000,000. ton tf . ' . - . . PAESLEX& WIGGINS MANUFACTUBKBS OF ' :Vr:-':. ..AND-..., ., . ORNAMENTAL WOOD WORK. . myll tf BOXES AND CRATES, , For shipment-of Vegetables and Fraits, in (thooks or ready 'made. - - - - . :-',--.-. : YELLOW PINK IMBEB. . A fall stock of Bough and Dressed Lumber. " f .Laths, Ac., for BnUdlnjt purposes. " t5 Orders by the cargo, Domestic and For eign, solicited. . v ; . ... . my 11 tf , PARSLEY A WIGGINS. " itvWE;:SIIAlLv COTINUK "TO OFFER A FULL 8TOCK OF GOODS In our line, and Invite particular at tention to onr SPECIAL MIDSUMMER PRICKS f Coolers, Freesenv Drive Wells. Oil Stoves, Ao. aad especially to that terror to all competitors, the Farmer Girl Cook Stove. This is our Jubilee season for all kinds of Tin Work and Roofing. Jy27tf - P.M. KING A CO. and Tobacco. IF YOTJ WANT TO ENJOY A GOOD SMOKE for five cents, Bmoke ihe 'GEORGIA MAJOR. I also have an excellent brand of CHEWING TOBACCO. - - X. , ; ? J H,i HARDIN, f j .5 " Drug and Seed Store,' VangStf NewMarkeWWumlngton,N.C.a 188Fiirii ''DfTHOtESALB AND xlETAIL. NEW STOCK i T -arriving every day for Fall trade. : Mer-: chants and othora will save money by placing1 orders with me. Please send; for price list or1 .-r" au ueiore piaomg oraers fllR otneis. : aug 8 tfC3 Furniture Dealer; Nd.FrontSt. ii. 1 i . , , 1 ; 1 Tnrmp and: Oabbacre Seeds; RESH-LOT, 'OP JOJjjsiui and CABBAGE BEEDS,. for sale low. - ' W&BKIGG3ACO I DrngStore, Northwest corner ' ; Front and Market Kta. "Jy29tf 14 " : COMMERCI ALr WILM1N ftTON MARKET. p. ST All OFFICE, Aug. 6. 4 P. M. ! 8PIIHTS TURPENTINE The market was quoted quiet at .29 J cents per gallon closing at 29 cents bid, but without 'report- ed 'sales" v1" -!:r ..-.-r" - S:; ROlf4-The Sfeikei was quoted firm at 97" cents ,for Strained 1 and "fl 02J i for Good Strained, with sales reported at oub tations. ; , : ,y TAR The inarke? ' Was quoted firm at fl 30per bbL of 2801bs, with sales at quo tations. ; f - - ; . - i '. ;.:. . I CRUDE ; TURPENTINE The market was steady,- with sales reported at , $1 00 for .Hard and $1 85 for Virgin and Yellow Dip . ... " COTTON The market was quoted firm. No sales reported.1 The following were the official quotations: ' ; , Ordinary. ;. -4 .... ... 8 11-16 cents S. Good Ordinarv. .- Q1bir . ' LowMiddling. . .... 10 9-16 " Middline. . . ,10 15-16 " ft GoodMiddlingv....41 3-16 y'f-i ; PEANUTS-iMarket dull, on a basis of 7580 cents' for Ordinary, 8590. cents for -Prime; 95cfl 00 for- Extra Prime, and $1 051 10 for Fancy! . ; Cotton. . . i A .". ...... , ... bales "295 casks 579 bbls 122 bbls 85 bbls spirits 'inrpentine. . . .... . . . , Kosin.: . .Tar. Crude Turpentine. DO HI KS riC MARKETS IBy Telegraph to the MOrntng Star.! . '' Financial. INaw York, August 6. Noon. Monev Htfiftdv At 1 (Fh9. rwr ront - Savlin . J J - - - .wvm. -MV.AAUK C4- change . 48$482 and 483i484i. State uonus uuu. uovernments nrm. . K . .. Commercial,- . ; : Cotton weak, with sales to-day of 640 bales; middling uplands 11c; Orleans llic. Futures steady with sales at the follow ing quotations: August 10.85c; September 10.82c; October 10.48c; November 10.32c, DecembeT 10.35c; January 10.43. Fkmr declining. Wheat iK lower. Corn dull. Pork steady at $16 5016 75. Lard firm at $7 '77f Spirits turpentine dull at, 82c; J Rosin dull at $1 22il 27. Freights steady. j , Baltthork, August 6 -Flour steady: Howard street and western super $2 50 3 00; extra $3 254 00; family $4 25 5 25; city , mills super $2 753 15; extra $3 304 00; Rio brands $5 12 CL 25. Wheat southern steady, with a fair demand ; western easier, closing quiet ; southern red 91 93c; southern amber 93 95c; No. 1 Maryland 94i944c; No. 2 western winter re on spot 91191fc. Corn nominal southern white 7172c; yellow 6869c. T ;: FORBIQN AARKBTSi IBy Cable to the Morning Star.l , Li VKBPOOL. August 6, Noon. Cotton Business moderate, at easier prices; mid dling uplands 6Jd; do;Orleans 6 7-16d; sales to day 10,000 bales, of which 1,000 were for- speculatiori and export ; receipts 12,000 bales; of which .6,500 were Ameri can. Futures fiat;' uplands, 1 mc, August and September delivery 6 ll-646 10-64d; September and October, delivery 6 11-64 6 10 64d; October and November deliv ery 6 l-46d; November and -December delivery 5 60-64d; December and January delivery 5 59-64d; January and February delivery 5 60-64d; September de livery 6 12-64d. Tenders to-day of 2,700 bales new docket; 2,700 bales old docket, i . 2 Pf, M. Quotations for American cot ton have declined l-16d.: Uplands 6 3-16d; Orleans 6fd. ' Futures Uplands, 1 m" c,' August delivery 6 10-64d, - sellers' option ; August and September delivery 6 lQ-84d, sellers' option; September and October de livery 6 10-64d, sellenT'option; October ad November delivery 6d, ellera.' option; No vember and December; delivery 5 59-64d Duyers option; uecemDex: and January des livery 5 59 64d, sellers' option; Jasjoary 'f February delivery J5 60-64d, sellers' optno; September delivery 6 12-J4d, sellers' option. Futures flat.- - U 1: re sales of cotton today include 7,600 bales American. - y. - - 1 3 P. M.i Uplands, 1 m c, . August and September delivery 6 9-C4d; September and October delivery 6 9-64d; Novem ber and December delivery 5 59-64d. 4 P. M. Uplands, 1 mc, August delivery 6 9-64d, buyeis option ; August and Sep tember , delivery 6 9-64d, buyers' option ; September and October delivery C 9-84d, buyers' option; October and November de livery 5 63-64d, buyers' option:' November and December delivery 5 59-64d, value; December and January delivery 5 58-64d, buyers' option; January and. ; February de livery 5 59-64d, buyers' option; September delivery 6 ll-64d, buyers' option. 6 Futures closed steady. " ; : . : i New Yortc IS aval stores ITIarKet. . n N. Y. Journal of Commerce, Aug. 5:; Spirits Turpentine The market is easy and dull merchantable order is quoted at, 3232ix 'i Rosins are without much atten tion; Bales of small lots, with prices gene rally unchanged. The following are- the quotations : Strained at $1 22; good strain ed at $1 251, 27 ; No. 2 Eat f l 8da 85; No. 2 Fat (1 401 45 ; No. 1 G at fl 50'; No. 1 H. at fl 80; good No. 1 1 at $1 95 2 00; low pale K at $2 30; Pale , M at 2 752 80r extra pale 1? at $3: 303 35; Window glass W at f 4 12i4 25. Tar is quoted at : $2 for Wilmington; pitch is qnoted;at$l 70. . - v. , '' ' '"ajilo'ii " .. '"' i: New Torlc Peanut Market. -: t - N. Y. Journal of Commerce, Aug. C. Peanuts are held at Bteaidy piceai with a moderate demand. . Quoted at 6c for band picked, 7ic for extra hand-picked and 8 ojc for fancy' hand-picked.' - v - Irritation or tbe Scalp An Authentic - ' - Tetlmotiy. ki';"- -Oentlemen-FoT five, years I 'have been greatly troubled -with dandruff, "with a severe itching of the scalp, and my' hair, falling out. I have tried almost every ; known remedy; all proving worthless. See-: ing Burnett's Cocoawr and Burkett's Kaixiston advertised, hi procured a bottle Of each, and am happy -to ? state that the dandruif is completely removed, and no; itching whatever remains.." T.- ' ' - -" ' : 1 , ; . .. j;;E. CAyENKansas CUy," Mo 7 j liesL IB zc nil m ii SMOKING TOBACCO, MADE "FROM - PUREST NOETH CAROLINA S - v ... ... - LEAF. . ...... j . : Guaranteed to be THE FINEST GOODS on the - : HOLMES WATTEBS, 'f I " Jy 18 2m - - .U- Sole Agents for W ilmington..' - The IferaoffOoiiiitlewsri pPnpllBydat'ROXBORO j BdltorsWlpetOTa." tji' A The KEWS has the largest eircnlatlon- of 4xtl paper published or ciroulated In the fins tobacco section of North Carolina. - i : . Advertising rates very "liberal, nbflcrlptlotf StOOper year. .'. vi-v---.; t -' -x-- -.TUP BEST TONIC. This mediclnA iTnhTiTio t ... vegetable tonics, quietly and '21 Care. Dy8pep9ii, iHdigtion, wSSl KMfv fOT Discof tte It is invaluable fop Diseases nornUo . Women, and all yho leaddltanfe prodnce constimtion-oiAfr Iron muS?? It enriches and purifies the blood the appetite aidsthe atlo&of lieves Heartburn and Belching, and ens the muscles and nerves l'ugth For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude Tom, , ' Energy, &c., it has no eqnal. ' Tk 01 " Penuine bas above trarte mnrY n crossed red lines on wrapper. Take otto? Mad..I,by BKOWN CHEHICAL CO BALTUK.nE, jjr ja.niy . . , toe or irm nrm Buffalo Lithia Water FOR MALARIAL POISONI(, USE OF IT IN A CASE OF -YELLOW -FEVER Db. Wk. T. Howard, op Baltimore, Professor of Diseases of Women and Children m the University of Maryland. Dr. Howard attests the . ... '"t itiiv in Win,. Ing : "fnilAA iTI fl Alta1n nlnca s.C . u u, . . . M ML UiUj "S 1' J In.,..! aUSI th? latter- 1 allU(la t0 tiw ai m,r debility attendant upon the tardy convalXrii from grave acute diseases; and moreesw, ' iv to the Cachexia and Sequels incident to iL,; l Fevers, in all their frradea and varleiies, f. -V tain forms of Aiomc Dyspepsia, and nil the .Tl,. lions Peculiar to Women that are remediibicai i by mineral waters. In short, wm I ctM v state fromwhat mineral waters 1 ,,-, A, ,. J est and most unmistakable amount off,, ,.,.;, -the largest number of cases in a mnfrnl m, would unhesitatingly say the Buffuln ,s,i,o ;,. Mecklenburg tounty, Va." Db. O. F. Manson, of RicHafiNn, Va.,. Late Prof ossor of General Patholopy and I hyr.k,- lUKjr ui mu jmeuicai coaeRe oi Virginia : x"176 observod marked sanative effects f mm 1 the Buffalo Water in Malarial Caclu ;rin, A,.u., -Dyspepsia, some of the Peculiar Ajl'eclkmsvf wil men, Anaemia, HyjXKiondriasis, VunlUtc. ,;,. tions, fec. It has been especially efficacious in Chronic Intermittent Fever, mtmerom 'am $ hi thi character, which had obstinately witMootl the vsum remedies, having been restored to pnjh-t h, M in a brief spaceof time by a sojourn at the Spi ?:- . Db, John W. WnxiAMSOK, Jackson, Tesi. Extracts from Communication on the Tluropmr,,- Action of the Buffalo Lithia Water in thr " Virginia Medical Monthly" for 'February, 1877. "Their great value in Maleirial Diseases and Sequela has been most abundantly and satisfac torily tested; and I have no question that Itwoaid have been a valuable auxiliary in tbe treatment of the epidemic of Yellow Fever which so terribly afflicted the Mississippi Valley during tho past summer. I prescribed It myself, and it enve prompt relief In a case of Suppression of lYme, in Yellow Fever, and decidedly mitigated other rf tressing and dangerous symptoms. The patient nv 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. Tliere is no doubt, hotoever, itovl the fuel ,( its administration was attended-by the mmt in m ti dal results." Springs now opens for guests. Water In cases of one dozen half gallon bf.ttlw $5 per ease at the Springs. Springs pamphlet mailed to any address. For sale by W. H. Green, where the tin iTurs pamphlet may be found. tTHOS. F. GOODE, Proprietor, aplOtf nrm Buffalo Lithia Springs, Va IMPORTANT ! A NEW AND VALUABLE DEVICE! ' A TATENT ' ater -Closet . - Seat ! " FOPIIB CURE OF HEMORRHOIDS, (Commonly call! "PILES,") Internal or External, and PROLAPSUS ANI, for Chil dren or Adults. NO MEDICINE OR SURGICAL OPERATION NECESSARY. I have invented a SIMPLE WATER C1a)SKT SEAT, for the cure of the above troublesome andpaiuful malady, which I confidently plate before the public as a SURE RELIEF AND CURE! It has been endorsed by fine leading resident Physicians in North Carolina. Is now 1 ing test ed In the Hospitals of New York. Philadelphia and Baltimore, and we are satisfied the result Will be satisfactory, as it has never failed el Where.. You can write to any of the Physicians orpromlnent citizens In Edgecomle Co.,N. c. These Seats will bo furnished at the follows WALNUT, Polished, f COO 1 Discount to Thyse. CHERRY - . 5.00 - clcians and to POPLAR, - - 5 00 ) Trade. Directions for using will accompany each beat. "We trouble you with no certificates, we ieav the Seat to be Its own advertiser. Address LEWIS CHAMBERLAIN Patentee, Tarboro, Edgecombe Co., l 1yl7P&Wtf NewTork and Wilmington Steamship Co. FROM PIER 84, EAST RIVER, NKW T0KK At 3 o'clock P. M. REGULATOR Saturday, BENEFACTOR REGULATOR. BENEFACTOR REGULATOR - - , t . FROM WILMINGTON BENEFACTOR,.. Saturday, REGULATOR.. . : . . - " BENEFACTOR. ...... " REGULATOR Angnst ' Anfiust 9 Antrnst 16 Ausust Anast " Aunst. 9 August 16 ; Anpnst August 30 J Through Bills Lading and Rates guaranteed to and from points i -and Soutn Carolina. -. For Freighter Passage apply to , H. O. SMAI-LBONES. V M.-:- -.: f . , . fiuperintendent, jisv '-- " . ' W. P. Clyde & Co., General Agents, ' jy 29 tf . 35 Broadwaywew, u, Choice Sew.; Cm 2ND CARGO NOW LANPO ? BOLD PROMPTLY FRO AND WILL BB '5:; ; : ' wharf at low pricks- - tf ' WOIITII & WORTH' lzic 11 11 1 U w.vw w,w m w,W IWtlfG VI VUSiS With ill a t the far-famed White Sulphur Spring h, ' ' brier nontitv. WtVtMnl r,.i '. r:,11.'r,'t;n- ;-jw auu OUIIX UIC llillou'.
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 7, 1884, edition 1
2
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