Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Aug. 14, 1884, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
A (11 ftr: ' " NS" - -f' fife - ' : ' '' " j v l:i: , - . . -i i kLisiier'S announcement. I rrf morning stab, tins West daHy ne I aper ta North Carolina, to pnbHshed.exoept tnoruta? at $1 SO per ; lOffrorrtxBioiitto m a nvKRTTsmo n atrs fDAELTi. Ona a aa. m j.. me fhMmilfeM 1350? :onr days, $3 00 : Ay days, $3 80 : one week, $400; : wo woets, a ao : luree weea-s o ou i uw Inea of solid Nonparoli type make 0M BQnarov'.T I ... -i wiittnii. B&Ua 1 ao-Ho-Nica. society MeeftiirAutte Meet 1 a.,wmieoaairegttiaru.----- 1 ntanAv . ! lunmat mnimn uuuor utsau ui vyin - ' Itt for first insertion, and 15 cents per h mibsMment Insertion. - " .No adTertlsomenU Inserted ta Local Column . M tny pnve. An extra charwmberiadefordonble-eolanui r triple-column atireruaemeii us. "MntJofla of Marrla or Death, TrUrtn m e- Doct. Resolutions of Thanks, c., olrdtaarwtisen whenpaMforstricHymaayauuj cants wui pay ior a simpm miiiwut Marriage Advertisements to follow reading matter, or Kicnpy any special place, will-be charged extra lotiording to the position desired : ifis ; AdTertlsements on which no specWed nnmber ,t Insertions Is marked wUl be continned 'tulfor- W," at the option of the publisher, and charKoa (! to the date of disoontlnnanoe. AdTertlsements disoontbned before tb ttm oatractd for has expired, charged transient '. atos for time actually published. i? : . Ad?erentekeptder neaa Wt- Adfertlsements kept nnder the head otJnm ' !?--,i''iviii . a. jnii.. km anim Ia mhh faiMrtkiB. - 1 it " :fwKdate to offlc.w ; --. sommimioauoBB orosoerw wuw fv: - .wtiMiMnta.' . i -.. i I MlTertteementaJ " Payments fox transient advertisements nmat !) made in adTance. Known parties, or stranger' with proper reference, may pay monthly or quar terly, aooordlnjf to contract. - - " ; Contract adTerttsers will not be allowed to ei oeod their space or advertise any thing foreign to their regular -business without extra charge at transient rates. - - r Remittances must be made by Check, PeatalMoney Order, Express, or a, winaierea rtokthiKTemMee I Hnmmnniftsitions. nuiees they contain impor- i iiees tney ooniam impor tSl&S r, they will invariably be wof thflautto withheld, &nl news, or uiauuas urrouj amu lv"I.,'v''svr 01 real rate rest, are hoc wanieu , zuui, u ble in every other way, ejected u the real name The Morning By WILLIAM H. BKBNAKD. WILMINGTON, N. C. ? Wednesday EviNrHAirG. 13, '84. 1 THREE PERIODS OF DISTRESS SINCE 1866. The tariff of 1842 was in existence but three years and seven months. It was a H,gh Tariff. In 184J tke ixr.ii t hp :r . : rnil I swing, and continued to bp so until 18G1, the first year of the war. :That was the great prosperous period of our country, as we have 'already shown in previous articles. Mr. Blaine's statements - as to the unpre- nlotit(w1 rrAnorittr nf t rio nnntnr I -"-I frnm 1 ftT.O tn 1 SfiO "iro Tirif hnnf . fnnn. I , . . , ' L . dation in fact, as We have Bhown by J an appeal to statistics. Look around now and you will see it is not so. . , Bishop's "History of American Manufactures" is a standard work. -"The author is an extreme Pro tec- tionisti Of the decade between 1840- J 50, for a Low Tariff operated for I more than six years, this author says I in the work referred to: "The astounding fact was revealed that the capital invested in manufactures, not counting any establishment that produced under $500 a year, exceeded 1550,000,000. and that the annual product had reached $1,019,000,000.' But of the next decade that be-1 High Tariff was in full sway and has , - - . . . 9 - , . . v - a : . 1 850 and 1860, when the l-been. to this hour.. And yet in 1 808, . r, t-' m. n-JB1,. i.i xr' t tween Walker. Democratic Low Tariff was in full operation at the time, Bishop J says: . t . . . - , ; . - Vast as this production is,:we find ten years later an increase of more thana per, cent., and if to this amount was added the very large amount of productions below the value of $500 (of which no : oflttcial cognizance is taken) the result would in-. . r . - a ..v.. I In the U. S. Senate on the 7th of I 1 July, 1883, Senator Lamar, of Missis-1 sippi, one of the ablest mbiteal- uU put est ui living Americans, i made a very elaborate, speech on the iariu. suoweq. ,oy tne most in- contestable facts and illustrations that the prosperous nOdsofur ' r ,r 1 txmniry uau oeen unaer.a tipw i arm. J We say heprot)Z this, and we mean precisely what we say. . He quoted only from .Protection authorities: - Greeley, Carey, Bishpp, etc-yand : from the record nf tfcA OvLf V Thefnllnwinc, in .. . " . - ; concerns the decade just- preceding u was iu iorce. oenator Xjamarsaid: I "Sir, from 1850 to 1860 the wealdt'Sis wuuuj luticaacu, ms esumaiea, ijjo per cent During the same period the capital in manufactures increased 90 per cent,., the product 86 per cent, and the profits on cap ital 47 per cent It is stated by Mr. Bishop that in this period the capital In pig iron in creased nearjy50 per cent, and tbeproduct over 50 percent In bar.: sheet, and rail- Ami v iMM MAMnkj,3 a y jm iron capital increased ovt 4T. Wr . cent,, products over 100 per cent, and pro- fits rose from lS per ceiuTon capital tSS YZJSU J&&2-" durhS the capital of cotton manufactures increased 29.6 per cent, products nearlvfln nofmni .. 'andprpfitAfrmtoWes same aecaae tne capital ofwbollenrand -TWe have asserted that the cpuntrv -cent.prcirc JPP-VY haCHf f :.- - rose from 43 to nearly 50. per cent Agri- &a ely Protiection has not "prevented' that hemade & desperatei' struggle to r : TTJISITT1 Pding ratio th m, and, it ia not an unmixed bless- bf oarthem.,- This,1 1 shduld think; 'r: I2f2J mmea bleM is sufficient to W. that Mr. Blaine i-m--rr' Khiahed gentleman from vii-inia t I - ' ' -; -- '-- ' - 5 I nimself m - ' - : iu vrnv ann nnuM m I' m... . uiini.innfi . -1 . . ,;.- -. . - . i j wnua uu- cities' destrpy.- tne i ' BBBBBBBBbI I ! I ...... 1.1 . , nucwations in limes ui prcg8iont in times of plenty and safe, , x -VT advancemenL -:llesays: -There liever Jubeeu ..period itfeich4Uy utilitye real opjeoi e have noi increased, in, prosperity .and men 0f our material ! JcmazatiOna I AIkAh;0f t Hav;was.notour 1 1(viDon foreign trade; but the fact I inai we nave oa uua wuiuicm y"'iw' a2o& yyeifc fiommxbeinm State which our OoriWtm e-m h4;r fcn thJ eontinent tf2 aran&itl . - n ? j . The noint is. that under aLowTa riff inanufactures haVe erown faster than under .thelProtective syster Th'ia is Uie ppposite -of : ElaW a :patp lor calculation ex!( 1 ti,. w- nnbl shed in , w . , . r hnftA '1'hA tirnrPR fWff lulHi8neu m. J of Blaine letter" clearly oar !review ! : t d inftur. inirio refiitedhiastatement and made good J; ourjblAiniiivff'v -c -WtJJh lL present condition of the coun- try I is que, jvU calculated,, excite, pouuiauou. j i m , .uw, w w Ihe nrofoundest Uneasinesai Kor a.isindate that the reportersurpose to ;;.;.ru-nt :9f, beeton tbtf vere of a panlcTandr during that I . ' 4i ' :il 1 vn :nwAnan I calculationft torjon the excess. - . t. , I v, ,:i,. mnnrATinnirinilna. I? rer j have ; not ' fifospef edl t At Tj.itsi very v time he?c sii down of mills or the work- ing) upon short me "or with re- A,nkui fornW nr.inna.'l There is ofr-. "--; ;iriy:;...;y greft distress and it is not eptirely .coupned tp" tne XXOrtn uow.iiexu. Petersburg and other' poinb there is y . . , . suffering amog dischargedj ppera- yii,finerf in the North - now. At I lives and but few mills are making I moaey. l ne.rrotecuon organs i;e nudiate the idea that over-production 1 is the cause, and that too in the face of the declaration ;"pf x manufacturers; o.omivM Wht .aiiHAft'tliA5 ro-rat depression why 'the immense rshririk- I I io ; ivaiiiM na tfm. rlen com- I ace in lvalues ; and the-.; deep com plaints that come up from a thousand I nlaeeR? . Whv should roanufacUrera i places?. Why should manufacturers be tottering on the verge "of bank ruptcy ?- ' ; --f : . There is a High Tariff averaging p cent on 4,000 arUclM no m - it 1.00 tuun m mumhAn ever since- the war ended. Why then trade stagnation and manufao turing embarrassments if Protection be the great thing for the country that enthusiastic disciples of Radi- cal papers claim? . If taxation be the vroo t onnnA ff tmaT0Tit.V ' aft". Rfirirtft" I . . . , -- j on1 Tmn rtntnrt' JnonTiv 1UI lrlA51XkA I ; -, ' rr'.. v - r T- ': T"'-'"' . ,L pile: i on the 'taxation If 3 percenW is such a gldnous" thing for the I . , . ... i AAimtiift Knn rmtlff Qk w-vav nnnt iinil l . j : . ... . , I do ueiter. it is not potaiiuio w uavu too much of a really "good thing.", j J In 1873, and for five succeeding years, there was distress. Froni 1881-1 and until now there has been distress, Why all this? " The" answer cannot be j the currency, for that is.spundv What then? If Protection , has any thiiig to 4a with the bad condition it is riowerless1 to furnish a remedy. ' lilarki ypu,,. in 18CG the present fqator Morrill, the Vermont Pro- tectionist, said, this in the Senate: "'pok at the industries, that are at the present moment unusally depressed. Take fori instance the entire woollen interest, There U Mf an,establishmeDt,llitt is not' losing mmiey , ay Take Mhe i wool- grower; not a pound of wool raised last year that will bring 10 cents per pound of its jcost Take the cotton interest The whole circle of manufactures are ia no bet- wnoie circle of tnanuiaciures are in no Del- ter Mrcumstances. Look at the value of thoir ofvtra TfVr lMlgnm talrn the Kata manufacturing stock, of Maine.' r- ven Pig.iron'Kellev?of Penn syibanja wa dolorpus Und in the Honseof Reelentati ves. in 1868. he 8ang this sad turieVj : w-;S ,: ' "The loom and the spindle, no longer abl1 ,to yeM prpllt-lo their proprietors, stand ; idle; the fires are extinguished in ferie and f araacd,' -and the rolling-mill does not send forth its hum of clieerfnlaqd I pruutouio iuuubwj, vii una uay u. wi. month 1,800 operatives in the rfass factoJ aut f , " . j I rie&l of Pittflbdrgh: were depriVed of the nrivilAn nf Mn.inff o.to hnnMt tl .1 the trade'in which they are skilled: the eS-1 tabbshments in which they worked are FlS?': :i&V!H:-' i .1 xnere was mncn mere 01 tne same I 'spA: So'we can find1 three 'p'eripds I since 1866 of great trade paralysis ana manufacturing (depression, and I J all the time there has.been High retection. .. We. ask again, if , a xugu i arm oe so wonaenui a Diess- inc 41 '111 . ' . V ' "" lbw all this disturbance.' this de- ! .1 .... pre&sion, this loss, this bankruptcy ? in 0868-9. there were nnvertv. rfiaI I treks denreAinn Aca?n inv iftTa-ft ILi , , 6 , ' f e were bankrupt rain, - finan- I m wrecks all pver the land. And I Wlagan!ja 1881 -84, there; i are rnni.... .i tt.-. gwaue aisturpances, .aimpst an VIAI. STATISTICS inPnRTiwrr .trz';r?? r?1- r - 'r - rv-- ; " . especially population an the weatr,: A ilAX 'Wh 19 nnn'arAa SO bmwbmw r ought to. be to ascertain l as ta rte1rCTeMtiri JfcZJ-tX. tual tney. mnst at lorttieth lo-the tiotoulation intdrder T t . . ; ix.' "';- aii a towns, -with. - bo , are eroeptions, :r - .v,;-.,.;r - I .LfA:,.,..,.. -.u w We be. lievb that this :tUte iprfeyaU in this Itaie j"f U olfebi f oge honesBy I'cessive Hffures wiui. noi, reauv-aivur q j. - L,;ii nvt ." - "f 'r .re"? : v7' v . . :the f actf thojdeath trate ialthoual rpeopie m; wwf:. and woman liasra right to Jcapwpr cfsely what fs tlje ratio; pf 4eat,hJP0 svf..I VI hey -accept, l?e tJiexag- feer Lted estimates, of .the coramuni tira' na ia. rvinulat.iftn j and tnni.!naH6 r 1 1.1. cj. jujfiji t. We are frlad the -'imKrrtafir has JcaWpi attention to this matter, yilal. the tfto fjrtt jdealniTOcoll bel3ve the calculations for Raleigh, j TV. i Vtm " '"V " "u " i LChriotte and Wilowngn based on too mmca wxpwwea Hpopniauon. w oujwduiiujwwmuu.... ' erioto'ih thetefts bf tUbrtali- ; . .... ;.A, f . y ty ptatistics' that Ijynchpurg, .Va., remains by far the sickliest place in UlUj UUUVU'UUtbCB) IIU, ,Uyb k week or two weeks; but fpr . months, and! we flappoeej for y oars J Now Orleans, in the ' last irepcrt, showed 35.4 deaths to the 1 ,000 inhabitants? whilst Lynchburg reported 48.4 to. Ihe 1 1,000. Mobile is next- to Hew tMfans y?33. this was Tor May. Wo have seen up later repprtsl. ' TH Is CHARGE OF CANNIBALISn It is to be hoped that for the sake rf ilia Amnruxn n a mm ami hnminito ly .. ..g th0 1 - . 0 cannibalism of the Qreely party may turn put to be a cruel fabrication. It must be admitted,, howeverthat there is some ground for thp charge. The fact that the New i-YorksTSmev is tto first paper to publish- the hide ous! charge gives colpr to' the stery . t for ithat paper is not a sensational and . . T ; : irresponsible paper given to: publish- in iact. it tne revolting en arges a should be found - true . it will dp more to "break up the . fool-hardy, vain-glorious, and even . inhuman at tenjpts tp push fartlier into, the fro zen! regions than-any thing else could dp.l -But what a stigmhx the fact, if I." .1Jl-"! 'jl -1H a '.-' 4 'mil-' ll.' 4m buouiu vurn oui. w .uo iuo iaci, wpteld fasten npoQ the Greely party. and what a reflection, it would be ...... i i Upon the humanityVeTOierndurance i . . . . c p:ti fi . r i i: i and fortitude of the American; char- n4w.i 1 AmSii isa ad r moa' sinAaralo 7", Tu v trustthat the awful accusation may 11 . . ui . n.,, , trrrnpnt to'beutteHy'gronndless. If, untrue, , what an lneicusablo and shatnefql assault upon the IjYiog and the! deadr-upon, ; ia .baml of , heroes who risked so mach'andi, underwent such terrible sufferings for art idea, for an aspiration. nr a WTkTtmu rwmtinT . ? pa. ilB Ti AilABEF Hit EXAMINATION OF ONE j rawr. : s . - . t-. From Hon. Carl SchiirjfXJ3ccaJLSpeech in BrookrBff; auuuf . - N VBHSBtt 'THRKE J j t f in You;will; readify" adniitit isa sbr ajt miu uuuiiiiaiiuig uutug w dot? iui ; BJaane, the lae, Speaker, Pf ?the Na- tioaal House oi xtepresentatives in- voiced is a pomted;iBaaeotverABitv op Bworn testimony Detween mm and' f tmf J iwhAKittkxii i . i . i i rJ ".rl AirS&'JiVZ: I lriBUUU? flif.. IBUerttWUlVlUK tWiat Xie had known Mr. Mulligan intimately fprtmar-eart,a4 thafcfhis charac 'tt&&?VrV- i haj s better tha.n;tnar pahy man he kne Blaine's friends, Mr Aiken. swear inrf thathe had ;.. never 1 heard ? an r thibg . against Mr. JJulLganVrepiita-. muij, auu i.uaj. n nevrapupea. anyr thins Mr.' Mulli-ran -s:saidi all' of which -you nead.f at length," lit' juisceiianepus jjpcument in p. pi the House of Dresentatives. Fertv- I Fohrh , CpngTessfitBt sesaipTi?'" A SOITV Storv. 1 repeat :: DUt the SOrriGHt I t9lPg of all waa that Mr- Blaine fi- 1 naOy discredited . himself by'' darihff and tivicus . miistoteSeiits'toS own .about other 1 points connected I Wifhthis . affair: pf which; . shall I sneak later. At.-anv.rte' ;1t ia rvnt l An t l.rtA cdhscience; felt v ihpse'-let- J . -T W rather ghastiyrwlietheyiortrv to light Pf tberxt. w-.t' owv thendidtheletterstfcctt !MulHgans fifistfmbnyibeinjg p. There was a universal outcry; It bo-4 came . clear, to Jslr. , iilaine that too urthervconcealment of -;thes5.1ett"crs Sv&i impossibly Itwas! surcdea'th; y Mj$ was Btiu a qeperato ctance in aprfentiudifiity . ThjWlyjrx- vuiug tsueuu ia huh rememoereu us nu uimseii reaa inem - to - tne iiouse 01. 1 Y . m UiepresentatiTes-Jjut 4e who -oooily-f aaos (jUie printed proceedinpjqi thai did jnct permit the letters Jwhiobiha read to pass intpthe Uartd rof the .pf .ficerspf jth.0 lipase, so that their eon-J ' i ' i i -yr"f prompt puf??tlmintPihj pwiei naiu auu carried mem away, And, seccndly. - in reading them tp' athe Ilouse lie dexterously mixod loL ters, oi nmerent fieriodsii aaq.. aoout different subjects together, m thatp listener r-could..' on the rspQtw; make i ji .i . ?ius;Mrt1Blaine , could prevent thp Ipttso" FrPra yeHfyinfii the leucra and from at ence understanding1 their fuU KimpprticBat 'ho could 'notJprevent tne letters as actuaUy road f ronvr be-.. Lu: i r iug jsuu-cqueuuy arranged accoruiug to dates and subjeqts anpprupared wnu tne testimony, j. nen tneir con- neciich1lbebamew cler'ahd "with"- it their tneaniherr What'is tnat meah ing WhatpeV it: signitywheh cs tt i -e . r. rri , T..j.Liin uv ub ;writes tQ.arvrUsines mai uxsa he (tft Speaker): wants, a profitable interest 19 .enterprise, the value: pf wnicn nas. Deen, ana mayt aain. pe, affected by this, acts pf tho aani'e leg ialaiive body ever which the Speaker presides, ' And in which ho -exercises gret power; when that Speaker says be. jfeels.. that. he:. shaU not; .prove a deadhead tin the - enterprise, ii , he, pnee erubarka in j it," and:, that Jie -sees various cnanneis in wnicn .ne knows lie can be useful;" and when, finally; the desrred profitable interest not Ibeing forthcoming, he- points to an 0xerciso of ' his power, as Speaker by vhicb,-even .f without j knowing it," he did a great favor to the -party from whom he asks that profitable interest! thus pointing directly at the field upon which ho can make, bun-. .A eeii; mom, useiui r.v.nat-aioes . mis mean? On iu, very. , f aocL it mcana one pf the highest and moat ppwerr, ful ioflicers in the government rmar-i iceting nis ouiciai power tor private 1 ;L n-- . . !. . v r v m gain. -v. it means. pm0iapwer pn.er-. ingiicii ipr prostitution, to ma&e money.!. cv ..;r1u.,,v.p; H( -vJ, I'sayj this is its meaning on thp very faco of it.' Still, let us caref ully oxamine whether that face' may not DObsiuiv ueceive us. nor . ciDiana- tion we, naturally turn to Mr. Blaine himself 'arid' IP his nearest1 friends. What have they brought fprth ? Let Krst, Mr. Blarae, in"a f:Bolemn statement in the House of Represen- tati yes, saia tnat tne 1 "company iao rivod its life, franchise and i value wholly from the State," and that "the little Ilock road derived all that it liad, from the Stato of Arkansas and not from; Congress.'' The obvious object pf this statement wag to con vey the impression that the House, over which Mr. Blaine presided as Speaker, had no power over that land grant road or its interests and value, and that therefore his owning or his asking for an interest in that- enter prise while ho was Speaker 'was an absolutely harmless' thing, I- re gret ' to say - that this ex pi ana! tiort, coming from. JHr. Blaine, was almost as bad .as ; the r original i of fence, for ia making it he deliberate ly said what ho knew not to be true. And this I affirm, npt upon the au thority of one of Mr :. Blame a ene inieB and detractors, but upon the authority , of Mr. Blaine .himself. Remember ; Mr. Blaine'a letter, of OctL 4, 1869, to Mr. Fisher. "It was on pa last night of the Bessioh," he tvvrttn 'nlii 4fia ' KiTl ' vnnaft!tiM: tl:n land grant to the State of AVkansas for ithe Little Rock road was reach ed. This was the bill whrch he in forms Mr. Fisher and Mr. Daldwell .would ha Ve failed tP pass but for his '(Speaker Blame's) i ppportnne. inter vention. ? And Speaker Blaine. wan ta it nriderstood that by inter;vemDg'he aia: jr. uaiaweit ra r. greatti lavor." Vy Hp. was s Mr, Cald well ? Wai he the State, of, Arkansas?;. No; he was . the, builder, of (..the jLittle Koffc -J road.,.: And - it (vwas t ithel Little, Rock man. and, not the o.i.--':-j t.--'ii' ri-iMi-r Dtaio jui zrKansas, bo. wnom . jur. 'Blaine claims to have done that' fa vor y. Mr. Blaine knewyts eVerywell- Informed - man knows, that land1 crants for railroads, with some , few ' exceptions, iwere, . npminally : fuada to States but - really with, spine specific; read in view and that. a4L legislation concernipg u thpse; i land errant roads made to States for railroad purposes always directly affecteji the interests of (the ;!.s .cpncernpd; snejw mis is ciear trom tne language in Mb owXletters imids, :1but I' tes ; Blaihe?hiili8elf;iv-w1ip haslprbved ' out Pf his pwri- 'toouth that when be made this erilaiiAtion i hc Hduse of . Reprcsentativeslie snew it to dw untrue. t-fl , ..U.i, Bp. vj R, ftyy i Cas8iusM. Clay will make an opening, speecn lor.yJJiaiuo. atiexington, i Mr.'James BlicorPenhsyl w;a u& out Van a,n says that the 'Prohibitionists wUl poll from 15,000 o-? 25,000 votes ia' that watey anu not less thau 50,000, a . X(ew York, two thirds of , which will come,, from -the jRerjUbllcim nartv 1 . .:-- The Colored nnfo "or (Hincin: jMkti organized a Cleveland and- Hendricks" Jlub last mgbt, with 14 natmbert en rolled. -Th4 gleaner of political straws should, Jjnd thiaiinhia sheaL Citu:inna.ti J&miirer-7 :the!MintsctC mocracy Associauou jNew xorK city; have takAn Ateps to form a 'CleaVer' Shards; to -carry as weapons riaxgo f Wooden -Melearers -Tnamotfowiu bejmir iv, U.,-::iti :i'tWo Polked them.H fc.'. ;J .- 1We Pierced Ox'M'm s.ti'We Buck'd tt&m&?:My&.H& -: 44And by the help of God well 'cleaye : them' : i-;-;: THE LATEST-NEWS. -f 7 1 FEOIT ALL ?AST ; OB THE WORED? 1 Destructive conflagration in Boiton- Ptto - Firmn Fail- into. - naap , of Flames and are" Barbed to ly Swept Away. - . HosTOir: 'Aueustf J8;-rAtf an early dipur this (morning a fire occurred "in the four-' star prJCBVpuvding, INos. JL08, 110 and 112 lieaqumreet, pwnea. by tietfry Fdronjiiine building was occupied in the -basement as , house2 for 1 old MUeff.Vi: on rst fioer were Potter & Watson, manufacturers of sdleTeirtlwItshpe machinery,t etc,f-ATh -second and & portion, of, the . third. - story were occupies oy tne nxmoj f. w neeie-, .Caioinj-Hecklo & Cos,; manufactucers of ' straw AtfdTelt hats, i Jatorj, 'liectWJt Uo suffdr Atotal loskof stocks and tnchinery amounting' to1 2Q,00 7 WheelorlCk &Co.. lose iabouti4ne"8&ma':f PtotteT fo TWatsoft'B' loss kill bd' about $15,000; ftnd tho building is dajmaged $15,000. The insurance prac tically. covers-ill of. te iBsca, . Mr'-i " VABad-lnciaeqtpf Ihenxawaa thejerrible deatk oWwofirejneuol '6axaerrNQ,-i' VeteV ran oeepii rierce, one i oi ine pes nosemen. hardly set foot ppoiii the roof wheq it Kfl in with? a .crash and precipitated the" men to the floor of . the Upper etory lnlo a-'seelhiijg massi of flameg. vKnmhut iiiu.il k benisubdued.the bodies pf the men? burn-i ,ed w a' crisp, were found' lying, close to ethroui the ConrUrfldor$ .Pricty mtas-i K mlij . . a Jt . . t . weu Known -memoerm ae jaeparaueati at was le whoVhen everybody pise retreated from tbjejrrpo8'held his position, a the flt-tff t Loweirs min stored a vea'r or more kgoja not Ul thei thkats nibt oft-repeat - plosibn iujd dijva hlta f rout it Ifq was l fnilliFi'il warVfitf annrinfi 'Effort tifon lh- fjure4 lh(hW euorti to save . the property of otues. ue was. marnea. wmie.iis -com: panivn in death was' a Aingle man. J'" EiJibPa August. 3, About 3 p'clock ithls morning a fire brbke but hi1 the drug store! of J Brookings t & Fleming,'1 at Nortu east,iin this county and spread rapidly.4 In' reui w u n can lor ossisuince a Bieamer was Seat by the Erie iPircfPejiartraent1 It.'was5 several "hours before toe" fire could be got' UDdqr control,' and, the Dusiness portion of the ItowU is ' now f hf ashes.4 Among the blocks 1 destroyed' Are1 ToWm.'Jjoomis', ilallfe, 9 Belknap's" the r Union 'and -the llayfces Ilouse. These and the Presbyteri-1 an tiiBrcn,. were tuie nncic Duuaines, uuut amce) tho iir; of 18?1, whea4hU same-dis-triQt was burned oyer;: Qvej, two thirds of the liusiaess nortion of the town is destrov- :cd(-iincluding -the , best buildings in the placA riJi Or insinuate pi the- loss and in 8urajrce can.yet be made.: i; i. - -." j m x ' FOREIGN; - Sadea Death or (tie Pake of1 Well Ins: .jtea Cblna wllf Real! Ibe French pepBmMav'UT .5f;HV Vtllrii-.-MyfvVV vfBVORbto'to.UieaitBiilaeStaT;!'-)'--,' v XttoDPN, ; -'August 18.4.A dispatch 'from Brkrhtoa savs "the Dbke Pf Wetlincton .dropped ttead-here to day as he was -ittr- Ing ttie train. lor lxnaon. . f Advices from Shanghai, 'of An gnat 12th, sayst " "Tsung-Li-Yomen -announces .its determination to resist the French demands. Tomsin,' on the northwest coast of Formosa, is befog defended by torpedoes. Li Hun g Chaag is to be impeached for transferring the China merchant fleet to an American firm ' ' - New Ycrlc Sioelt lIarike4-.Strne and t.n? . jByTetoraphUtheMornlniUrJ N$W York.; Wall Street, August 13 Spectiftitlon at ' the' Stock- Exchange this morii iSg has beew -strong and higher. . The imprbtement In prices ranged from to 1 per qent; and was -well distributed. The marl etta strong e faofabTb crop news.- ,OI BSTATK COldTErrlPORAUIES. . Tl e' rTilmingtori -BTAivrigliUy ;thinks that pketcbespf the prominent "men of the Stat should be written that their virtues -may be1 preserved, : and suggests a list of namfeAAmOng these is1 Col. W:- W. eatpn. 'lite writer has read a biographic cat sketcli of Col. Seaton, written or rather' published in 1871., From his it is learned that Col Seatou was bora in; Virginia in 1785! Be- was at first , assistant editor in T?illiiminr? in thA samn fflv wttTi tn ilia- tingished Thomas Ritchie. Fpm there ne went to reierspurg ana, toot charge or a paper with Col.: Yancey, ; - lie was called to BAleigh oa aa errand and remained there Utwhl whenr, ho ,was persuaded, in tho. spFiog fL imn to tatocuarge ot the north, CaroHnai 'Journal., published : at . Halifax. where he remained.,about a year. and. then -td Iikleigh, inarried Jliss arah Gales, and . With! Joseph aJc, published the r Raleigh ijyocal years; Beaton uid Gales removed. tq Wasinttand.r began :the tkfbSnALion of the National 'Tnteuiaeneer in 18121 .,?aUf ax s herst, place v North uuraiina.in.wjucu jtM, auaiun nermanenuv locaied and; iiublished' a paper. He was theni about Vfenty-one years; of, age.-r;lre- f Tlero is no ob.iection.io homestadv. ttm- v4deU tlje applicaon pn, the part, of ,tlq pupil, within. trbperl bounds: and " the !as- ! Aisl4ce':fciy'eu? lyvrent ahd others aie' t, voluhtaVf ' Vmt:wheh it forced; oa both wlcmDeiledfto'do the' Wdrilof the teacnerias is piicn uie cagch ana, any: such attdl! the Si I-. i ,',. ... j irj'lMo.fr,4hA8eilf-7AQ: thetie. l GentiertenFot flSfc veara l have-been :greaiyN:tr6ublio witll s dandruff. ) with a seVe itcliiDg frr the scalp, and my rhair iiatimg out 1. nave v tried almost. very anpwn remedy. Air proving WortinessT-Dee-Irig BrmirrrV Goccaiie ndfBpRNXTrlB AAijusToiraaveTOsecr; rptocurera tajttie i of leach, and am bappy fQ , state lhaj the waceruii is completely removed, and no itching whatever remaws'w'KfMl.--Tot: J. E. CAVEKj Kansas Citv. Mo. BtJKNKTT'8 FLyoBo Extcts are the OQIKS. TUB BEST CHEAP BUOOIKa KV1CR maae. wanave m stpca oi oar wa mann? iacturo upon ana Top Bogtries, maetons. Cbno- P7 'Ippa, Jtunp Seats,. Carta, jUraya. &o., together ""i, uohv ana . caeapesc Haaaies, Harness, JTronkSi Bafrs and Satwhela. t Trunks repaired as itisnal Dir the nnlv Drantlcal trnnk ma.knr.ln thn State. r- ' MoDOPGALLABPWDXN, -Ki 114 North Front St. anglOtf Next door to P. A. Srpitlra. , - trfnOLlSALlff AND RETAIL. OTw-'STOCK- VTf arrivinff. evory darjfot FaU.traa. Mer-, enaats and others will save money by placing ordrs with tnef Please-Seikb for price ilst or ': ang 10 if Fnrnitnre Dealer, No. Front St- ncKioit KAJ., mauuiociijrers.oi lace puoua,-. -Tufflings, etc:;,and the rjemainder. or . Hjfe third and the irbDer floor were oceupfedliv in.iBj i;iior Hiniy, opeut uie; Southeastern,men,'carri a' Jine.of :ho3c ta lhb top of , the, Uaztog buUding ' but had i lessons, wpuio pe pyddaflce to" many . households 'pi nd. Aira a cause of 'rel&idriff'xri "mitriv COMMJRGIAL: rn;7ll?'TON MARK KT. fj t-" ; - -43-" . , :3 L STAII.'OPFICB; Aug. 13, 4 P. M SPIBJLTS TUUPENTJNE -The market wis " quoted firhr at ' &8 cents per gallon with sales reported of. 250 casks at that IiQSIN -The, marke was .quoted firm, a detents bid icflr tr&irkxfand ft 00 4Eer Good tmmedf wilhede repotted of 300 bhls Geod Strained: it j$ V$$i r per bb vrfj TjLItThe ;nw quoted , firm . at $1 tfO per bbi. of 280 lbs, with sales "at quotations. . ' .... : , ' '" CRUDE ; TURPENTBE The : market 4 was steaily, witli sales reported at $100 for Jlard and j$l 5 To Vniriand Tejlow Dip, . 0TT0N-Tha;vmarket was.r quoted tfrm VHo sales reported. Th following -were the : omcialqiiotatlons . i .-r 'prdiiary. . .M.. ) cents lb. uxf vruinary. yj Ldw?MiddBnsr.J' lit'l09 ": r 'Mifldlinir.ix.i -.1.11.1109.. ..;, ;Goo4 Midlline..U....U . " .' x fiAH u i D marKui uuii, on a oasis or 750 cents for Ordinal 8590 behts'for Prinze . 9oc$l OOr for Hxtra Prime; and $li 0B1 10 for Fancy.' ECEirrs. Cotton.,. . .;. ..... ... , balr$ ftnirit.jr.Tui tontine . J ' V ' " RO oct-fl 282 casks : libit. . A&X. 'V.I (ii le Turpentine . . :82 bbls, noiriES ric niAitKiETS I, ilfv ToTeffrairi to the Morning Star. "f; Naw York. August 13. NoonJfoney strong atl2 per centj Sterling exchange 4S2i4S2i and 484i484J. - f3tate bonds . uovernmcnta stcadyj , : ,;; , . " llni.tAri firm with mIm tv-rlair ' RQl bales; middling uplands lOfc; Orleans llc:' Futures easy, with! sales: at the following quotations: August 10.92c; Beplember 10.84c ;',Odtober 10.55c November 10.40c; DpeeWber 10.40c; January, I0.49c.t, Flour, deel ip ing. Wheat declined iric, recov ered and advanced ic. Corn lc higher rPtrK dull at $17 2517 00. Lard steady at $7 80. - opinis turpentine null at ole Uosin dull at $1 201 25. Freightifweak. ;.5i B4LTn46BA, Attgysi 13.-Flour i quiet, with. only local demand; Howard street and 'western super $2 503 00; extra $3 25' 4 25 1 family $4 255 25; city mills super $2 753 15; extra $3 354 00; Rio brands $5 00. Wheat southern steady, withmo fletato demand; western firmer and auiet: southern red 8C8So: southern, amber 89a U3c; j Ho. 1 Maryland tili93c; No. 2 west- era winter red on 8potb7f88c. -t Corn-; southern steady; western nominal; southern white CG70c; yellowj6869c. 1 COTTON MARKETS. IT UVt. .A . 1 . . ' t n. . i LivBorooL. 'August 13, ; Noon.-Mtt6B business good at hardening rates t middling uplands 6&d ; do . Orleans 6 5-16d; sales to ay 12,000 bales, of which 5,000 were for speculation 'and - export; receipts 2,000 bales, of which 1,00 were American. Fu tures firm at an advance; uplands, I m c, August and September delivery 6 8-646 9-64d; September and. October delivery 6 10- 646 ll-64d; October and November delivery 6 2-646 3-64d; November and December delivery 5 62-64d ; December and January delivery 5 61-645 62-04d; Jan uary and February delivery 5 62-645 63 64d;6epternber;delivery 6 10-64611-64L .- Breadstuff s dull and neglected; prices no minal. Cheese American fine 53s. Corn new mixed 5s Aid. , . , 2 P.' ' M. Uplands, 1 1 m August de livery 6 10-64d, buyers option; August and September delivery 6 10-64d, buyers' option ; "September and October delivery 6 ll-64d; buyers' option; October and November de- liyeiV 6 4-64d, sellers' optkm; November. on1 1 AorwtmVvnv rlnliwanr K tiH AAA oaIIam' .tioni December and; January delivery 5 62-64d, value; January and February de livery 5 3-64d, sellers' option; September delivery . 6 13-4d; : value, r Futures . firm. All quotations pf American cotton have ad vanced 1-I6d: uplands 6 3-I6d: Orleans 6d. ;' ' vy ' ' . , 4 rV MI Uplands,' 1 m c, August delivery 6 104646V sellers', option; August and Sep tember: delivery; 6 l0-64d, sellers' option; September and October delivery 6 ll-64d, selleps" option .October and November de livery 6 2-64d, buyers' option: November and i December delivery t52-64d,' sellers' option; December and January delivery 5 61HJ4d, value; January, and February, de-, livery 5 62-64d," value: September, delivery 6 ll64d, sellers' option. Futures closed ' Sales of cotton to-day include 9,900 bales American.-, nSk;:., 4 . t t y:H -a L-fVT : '.--t ' , , t ' b 1 ' -t .: ! new Yortc Naval Store rnrAet.f! Ni Y. Journajfof Oommerqe, Aug; 12.. , a.: . Spirits .Turpenline The market.,, contin ues quiet, v the sales , of j; a jobbing char acter; merchantable order is quoted at Sic. bid and 31c. asked; Rosins The market is f ,-sf ithooti. much ; demand; the business '.not 1 exceeding small lots: . Drices--. .aro uncaapgj.VT' following .are, ,' .the, stramed at $1 25 No! 2 E at $1 0; NoV'2 )Fatj$l-40t t4T;NoM G at$l D0;lfo. 1 H at $t!75ll80i good.No. II. at $1 95 2 DO; ow pale; K at $2 302 35; Pale Mat $3. 752 80; extra pale I( at$3 35; wihdqw glass'W at $4 12J. ' Tat is quoted t' $2 ' for 'Wilmingtoh '; i pitch Is quoted 'at $1.- - '6fV?.'Vit.jifjj- 11 h- ! -A-K sATwnjaah Blee BlarAet. aw. 4i..Davannanii?iews.rfl.Uif. mi vvr. "The market was steady; with only ampd--entte deman. The sales for the dav .were 31 Wils.- Appended are the r official miotar' ttoni of the Board of Trade; Pair 5i5fc; Good 61a5fc: Prime 5ai - ' ' 'iRoush riceCountrv lots OOcffotl 20:tido watr $1 251 Z i I, K:: ... .?f ewTorlt "A UW Ni Joupal of (JSmmerce Aug: : 1. , ' Peanuts have a iight trade, demand' at .firm prices. Quotations are : 6c for hand f pickted, 7fc for extra hand-picked. And 8 'Mo for Xaney Jiand-picked... ... .1 The :"sryHehlchi:Mrs: i.:EtusTof ' Ininburn', Iowa,' tells; Is one" in which many thousands of Ihe ladies - of America have a vital-interest Briefly 4t is thus : Vl suf , j ferefl lor several years from, generajl debili .ty afi . pervpuaness. . In fact, X was. com- Cletely run down.' I had tried, two doctors, ut tney could " not do me any good. ; I trie4 iBrown Iron Sitters. Since -thenar-'hrrve used four .bottles.' ; It has;'.helped me vpand dorlemc , a great deal, of ,,good, and I would not be without if u'Why will airy: lady suffer1 with debility When a dolrar 1 wllli buy ' a bottle Of Rrowa'tf Broa Bit tersjf vV Mr&: tel& avaih-i&mfi. O OQi ID iB IE 3Ii' :" I KTIOKITri Ton ACf!0 iMADE FROM PUREST KOteTlI CAROUNA J "Gaaranteed to be T1LB FINEST. GOOD3 on the market. ' ' . . ;. :i .v,f HOLMES &'WATTEBS3,H : JylSJhn . -y. Sole Agents for Wilmington. Rows -THP tn o BEST TONIC llils rnedibine. coaihim'no- vegetable- tonira, miicklyand ;BBdNeraWaV """"V Itifl an unfailinc TAmMv f r.,- iKUmmsu nd AJyefT "'" of the lt is invaluable for Diseasrs tw.o,,i:. . f;-.i t, women, and all -who teadsedenix rv w ,or ric. the appetite, aids the assimilation of Zt T haves Heartburn andBplohii o. M000- ... ' sin m7 miwca miu nerves. " u i 1 b, ,m Slrtnirt .. Energy, fcc, it has no equal. ' ck of W-TheKenuinehasabovpfm,i , vcrpssed red lines on wrapper, a akc nooulS . Bdewiljby BROWS CHKXICAL CO., BALTlsurv Jy2rD&Wly tocorfrm nrm -ir- alo lithia Water 1-j FOR MALARIAL rOISONlNO. J--l TJBBQFIT IN A CASB OF TEM.oiv . '- I I Db. Wm. T. Howaed, op Caltimork, Professor of Diseases of Women and Children in r the Unirersity of Maryland. ViP' Howard attests the common MaMar... , tnu water m "a wide range of cases" wit h tw the far-famed White snfphnr Spring infe, " J " ' 1 ubuuc ouu UUUH LIIV III' "6 Off- "Indeed, in a certain class of cases it is much debility attendant npon the tardy convalw'em uriur iaj iub laiMJr. 1 ailUtte to tlia il,i,l;n to the; Cachexia and incident to .l,-,, ta all their (Trades and vavlotins, i""n. tain forms of Atonic Dyspepsia, and all the Air,r Uon Peculiar to Women that are remediililo at 1 1 by mineral waters. In short, ira-e I culled vm, , . state Jivm what mineral waters hur, .. est and mostvnmistakabU amount of gnimr, i. ;,, the largest nvmfer of cases in a toimil mi,, I would unlwitatingly say the Iinffulo F,l- h Mecklenburg courtly, Ya." Db. O. F, Manson, op Richmond, Va , Late Professor of .General Patliolojry and Phy -i,-, logy in the Medical College of Virginia : "y6.08660 marked sanative effer-ts ft-.im tho Buffalo Water ia Malarial Cachexia, Ani.mk Dyspefisia, some of the Peculiar A ffeetUmt of n nen, Anaemia, Ilypocltondriasis, Cardiac viyi.f tions, f c. It has been especially enicacioii.s in Chronic Intermittent Fever, numerous caws oi character, which had obstinately witisood tin "... remedies, having been restored to perfect haW, to a brief spaceof time by a sojourn at tile Sprim." u ' Db. John W. Williamson, Jackson, Tenn. Extracts from Communication on the Tlruptntk j "Virginia Medical Monthly" 1 for February, 1S77. 1 "Their great value in Malarial Phvaws and Sequela has been most abundantly and satisfac torily tested; and I have no question that it would hare been a valuable auxiliary in the treat ment Of the epidemic of Yellmo Fever which so tcrrilily afflicted the Mississippi Valley during the past summer. I prescribed it myself, and it jwvo prompt relief in a case of Suppression of Urine, in Yellow Fever, and decidedly mitigated otur (Ik tressihg and dangerous symptoms. The patient re covered, but how far the water may have contri buted to that result (having prescribed it in hut a single case) I, of course, cannot undertake lo say. There is no doubt, liowerer, atoul tin-fart Unit its administration was attended by the n,o :l 1 . ti rial results." Springs now opens for gnesfa. . Water in cases of one dozen half gallon bottle-; $5 per case at the Springs. Springs pamphlet mailed ta any address. For sale by W. II. Green, where the :.iiiit": pamphlet may be found. TiiOS. K.(JOODE, Proprietor. apIOtf nrm Buffalo Lithia Springs, Va IMPORTANT! A NEW AND VALUABLE DEVICE ! A PATENT Water Closet Seat ! FOR THE ; CURE OF HTffMORRIIOTDS, (Commonly voM "PILES,") Internal or External, au.1 PROLAPSUS ANI, for Chil- dren or Adults. NO MEDICINE OR SURGICAL OPERATION NECESSARY. 1 I have Invented a SIMPLE WATER CLOSET SEAT, for the cure of the above troublesome and iaiufnl malady, which I confidently pta-e before the public as a SURE RELIEF AND CURE ! It has been endorsed by the leading resident Physicians in North Carolina. Is now being test ed inthe Hospitals of New York. Pin ladclpba and Baltimore, and we are satisfied the reMiii will be satisfactory, as it has never 'fa. cd eh Whese. Yon can write to any of the Physician. ,'drprpminent citizens in Edgecombe Co. u ' .These Seats will be furnished at the following ALNUT, Polishedi $C-00 j Discount to , Phyrf CHESRY, . -.- .. 5.00- cicians and to the POPLAR, - 5 00) Trade. Directions for nsing will accompany each Seat We trouble yon with no certificates, leave the Seat to be its own advertiser. Address , f XEWIS CHAMBERLAIN Patentee, , I fj t Tarboro, Edgecombe Co., N. c, r . jyl7D&Wtf . Nw: York and Wilmington , , Steamship Co, IBOk PIER 34, EAST RIVER, NKW T0FR At o'clock P.M. REGULATOR . . Jl" " ' BENFACrOR. ...Saturday, .in August - Ausnst 9 August 1C Ancnst S3. Anqnst REGULATOR -- sbem!ctos.'. . . . lii " JBBGDiAWiitlt'.vX.J.t-' " i!J r PROM WILMINGTON BEN-tPACTOR. Saturday, REGULATOR , " BENEFACTOR. BJIGUIT)R,.,vr! BENEFACTOR . " August " Angnst 9 August IC August 23. Angnsl ; V-Throagh BtttoXading andLowes tWh Rates guaranteed to and from pobit and Sontn Carolina. - ' ; Pci Freight or Passage apply to i . H. Cf. SWALI-BOIVE8, . , ; .Superintendent, ' - -an tnlnfton, r- 11 - ;XwVPf Clyde & Co.',' neralAsents. ,,:tyB9tf 35 Broadway.e, EARSLEY& WIGGINS -ii -i ! " v MASfUFACTUBERS OF asb?f Blinds, Poors, OBSAMEIiTAlV WOOD WOH. vmlltf ' ' T,; I BOXES ANI"CRATKS FdT-shipmenr of Vegetables and vmu A run stock ofRoughaBd Dressed Lntnrwr Orders by4the eanc9 Domestic a Big KitedV ' " ' ; PARSLEY WIGGINS. - 11 11 -t UJ a - ' 1 - - RnnMnntinT nrodiice eonstination fti ""'.'e 1ICU
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 14, 1884, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75