Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Sept. 6, 1884, edition 1 / Page 2
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;..f: V. -':' t." r- 4.. Id- m Jt.' r , . . -- VTf . " T -' ' ." js-.w-...4 - '-i sv--: --KlT- sJ-sMh 'iWrftX'W???- '-S-- r.'f ----: -. -. --.-,v " : -- " - r , I P J i ML! II II Will IB 11 W .-II.. -g J " i wftTTwr-TCitrKirr. I UlMHin'Mn n ka nMat iiin mm 1 ia arwr to North Calliia,topuMlBlxMd,exMpt I i 3 00 for three months, S1.50 for two rnontna; jao. 'or one month, to mail subscribers, Bellrered to ity subscribers at tbe rata of 15 oenU per week -v uny period from onaweek to one year. . TUB WEEKLY STAR la pbUshedTry PndftT 1 norninsr at J 50 per year, 1 00 for Blx monuur hi i i- 1 An . nA .ttci 1 r. thnAHva-X250: 1 fro wMks, $6 50: three irMweeuio "ss 1 n10 03 ; two months, $17 i7 oo : taree noouu, v i -lx months. 40 00: twelve months. S60 00. Tea lno3 of soil) Id Nonpareil type make one square. - AU announcements of rrs, i jresnvai I aopsPio-NSooletyMeetlnJUMeet ns. c.. wiu do cnareea regular aayervmu mi. Notices nnder head of H7lty Items" 20 cents per I !n for firat Insertion, and 15 cents per line for I acn subsequent mserupn. I No advertisement inserted 1ft Local Column at I my price. , -.t: ,r. ;$.: .-a., I wm be charced 81 00 per square f or eaoh Insertion. I &arlr chwmbemadetordooblehinto -r triDloofmM advertisements. , : I Notices of Marriage or Death. Tribute of Be-1 for as ordinary advertisements, but only half rates I ,s. when paid for strictly to advance. - At una rate i Advertisements to follow reading matter, or to 1 Advertisements on which no speciaea numBer i ,f insertions Is marked wlU be eoffinaed tulfor- I tsm, at me option or me puDiiaaer, &uu giuuvhi i Advertisement discontinued before the thne contracted for has expired, charged transient -ates for time actually published.: . Advertisements kept under the head of "New' skepi 'will Advertisements' be charged fifty, per vent. .extra. f Amusement, Auction and Official advertisement one dollar per square for each Insertion. ' All announcements and recommendations of candidates for office, whether In the shape of aommunlcations or otherwtae, will be charged at advertisements 1( Payments for transient advertisements must be made In advance. Known parties, or stranger with proper reference, may pay monthly or qnar " lerly, according to contract. , , . if,tjt$ .Contract advertisers will not be allowed to ex- oeed their space or advertise any thing foreign t6 - Ibelr regular business without extra charge at transient rates. - . ; . ; ;.-. t fiemlltances must be made by GheoDrafW Postal Money Order, Express, or tn Reglsterea Letter. Only such remittances will, be at the risk of the publisher. ' " ' Communications, onless they contain Impor tant news, or discuss briefly and properly sabjecttl of real Interest, are not wanted rand, if acoept jble In every other way, they will Invariably fee rejected U the real name of the author is withheld. Advertisers should always specify the tesae' ot ssaes they desire to advertise in. Where no- Is sue Is named the advertisement will be Inserted n the Dally. Where an advertiser contract for thn nanar to he aant to him dnrhur the time his advertisement is in, the proprietor wilTonly be responsible for the matting ottJie taper to his ad- I rUU - The Morning Starr By WIIil-IAM H. BERNARD. , WILMINGTON; N. G. Friday Evening, Sept. 5, ' 1 884. EVENING EDITION. WELLS IN REPLl To HOAB. Mr. David A. Wells has written an Open letter to Senator Hoar, of Mas sachusetts, in review of some of the points presented by him on the I L, . ,TT .. . - ; f ariff. Mr. Wells is one of the few I well eauipped - political economists in ourcountry and when he discusses J i l; economic questions , he is at home. He Rhows ud tbe binnaenncr state- i ments of the benator the Tariff as Mr. Schurz days ago concerning' Blaine gan letters record. Hoar is very un fortunate. He is not comparable to Schurz in arguing a question of facts; and he is a mere' child in the hands of Wells in discussing political m..ent,. I i y-.-m a - 1 I 4 We confess -our compassion '. waa y -.:UV: .!.- m- we uu ruau ur. Wells's brief bnt thorough (Bxtjosnre li . -. . " ot Hoars ignorance, it is painiui to see a man high ia position entering , , , " -I- - a field of debate without proper auahtications. Our 1 readers know1 - 4. that we. have more than once pointed to the presumptions of ignorance, in this important matter of political economy. , iwery. ;i aay we see newspaper, discussions, when it is manifest- vtha really no proper conception of the subject. They have read a speech or so, heard possibly a few harangues on the subject, have run over editq - rials prepared by partisan smatterers and sciolists and that is all. They think " themselves well up in - tho science and with ink and type go to . work to educate the nation arndelec trify the universe. We repeat, no man is fit to handle the -Tariff and can handle it safely, wisely, intelli gently who has not made it a special study. The great political writers i must be studied - or there will be blunder and misstatement at every jurn. : . ' i ) ' V. -Senator Hoar is an example, .He is a scholar, a man of literary train - ing it may be, is the - Senator, of the most cultured State. He presumes to give instruction : in political econ . oray. Ilia hearers, ignorant as he is, - listened and believed. It was Sena tor Hoar who was talking. He is a . statesman and has long Been! in po litical life and he knows." Of course. Such is man's credulity. And yet fit all tu v.OUgre.8- mere ,are not ten men who are half qualified to make speeches . on the Tariff. Of course they can talk and talk and keep talk ing. They can fill a dozen of the . broad pages of the iW? with their . : partisan or sectional twaddle, just as . Blaine and Logan spun out their ab - f surdities in their letters, but showing at every tepl wlcompetency, igno- : " v rnce ,an4 even misrepresentation. " I f " at j n?ai: not understand Hhe . subject he handled, andr. Wells" ' -1 . :itr . . . . snows it. cann01 reproduce the reply for want pf space. The point taKenin nana speuiauy j " utUa, v;iiir nf a mfincan manutac: i i, i Iji-. Ji'Ai! ducts." Senator jHdat-had talcenithis MaJ ti Prudent for his text, tqgwner i who I xs,uoi, oj: xiarvs I - tAot 1a' AlrtShnfttrn.i mannfacturers bv tne! oiffu i ... . - k I lax on materials u.' h : . was very rougu uu mo . 4 1 me : univeraiiiY, ;u muuo v i " t",T us'o" irrnnranpo an& 1 8UOW, np his ignorancp anu that hi'a nUtptn'pntft' were that . m8 ,8Utement&, were It is on this point that he Mr. Well S. and the exposure complete. must mako room for . ' ..?: -1 U ?o I OBe.exwagjiu murr, i-vm.-;-. , truth that may illuminate other clGa taxed, than I camaffe iimatenaiS. ! . . 1 . . . . . . Wells says: - f ; - "Now none of your positions and I ttnnft ftw wisft. In the' first place, ; ; ahnnld tiild his nttnr nrA mxtiHenf ipreiga . pruuuvb iutu , could not thereby escape the harden of ta" . . . . , . . resrxndine carriage material ; ine exieni i that you respresent; Wbat ; are inese taxes I on carnage 'iruuai. xuuiuuiu iwia, romm-from 35 to 90 ner cent.: on steel, I - n I n n tAAia Tnav from 83 to 55 per cent ; on enameled leath-1 .)Mh. iNtiAttftiwrivnt on -vArmsh. 40 to I VWUip W v w vwp y m m 67 per cent; on pamts, 85 low perceni.; 1 on brushes, 40; per cent; on percent.; obHanv tliese fvrtkJetL- trhen. Import- I ZV'lSlg: rtnna tn an exafit and eouivalent extenu I butit caxmot be . denied atl!1! uius ocxssmmbu .very wua-uciowc, ouu the present tune, u tne lull extent oi uie i f.nTD- nr that it (.OPS not in i the CaSC Of I American carriage auerment their cost to I the extent tf 8.or 10 pe icentl at the very I - - . V.a A Atni( a 1 iea, or io & nuiuuub wuwu uw uwuotw. manufacturers would be only too glad to' have: permanently assured to him as a re turn on his investment. But even if the enhancement of the cost of the domestic Ann oinA w th tifF vu nnt more than 5 per cent., thisr under the mod' era conditions of trade, when the commerce: of nations is; turning on fractions of per-: centages, would be sufficiently determine-! tive as to which of two or more competi tors should possess and control a mar ket. If, furthermore, these! tariff taxes on imports do not ha you practically affirm enhance the cost of corresponding domestic products, and if the latter can be afforded here as cheaply as la competing ' countries, why in' the name of common sense, I: ask, is there always such resistance to any re duction of these duties? What need is thereof 'any tariff at all on such articles when tho Treasury fa suffering from a plethera of revenue? .-Why keep up the statute -providing for drawbacks of these very taxes? And . why is it that the most recent act for the encouragement of Ameri can shipping provides that all wood, iron. steel, copper, bolts, hemp, &&, desirable for tbe construction of carriages, may be imTw.rtAi fr of dntv if there was nothine fl benefit t to accrue U the American ship. I : . .. - . i ' ""ui , . ... , . I just . wbat Mr. Wells proves j8 tr--- -:-x m,-'--i- I foUows; and it is sharp enough:, :; j -i. . f" - I .? 1 do not mean to be personally diare-1 - . ... . .'... - . . I A--.nnv-.-- i. - . - . . oaao tn it. vaarnnvn lom-iannn trron ii i nrnnor innirnviinv nn i ii iinRunmi. q i .ueaiuerence ueiweeucuuuueuLiiiut-I l - , , j. . eh uuuntrrer uj tue interrogatories oi tne ue- did a few ran co and trained abilityi The con- bad, hence he tclU tho New Kng- 11 "" ' lii U in u.ni i u II). i .i i - rr . mz J a - . m.d l , OilA IVM V w IV l.ll.X.. n VMIU I r v w. w np . V wmv j . . " . " 'a Mulli- -lojio- f Wells, brief review U as I 'nd m'nnfct.,,rs that lhey mmt I nd onl obiecl of nnhlie diaciUionf MX AMU A I.. spectful, Senator Hoar, but you do not un- is . sonna , economy. . jrroauce, uiat Slwt&S;; most rem.ner.tive and ex and correctly in respect to it before an Amer- change for articles that can be better t political econ&ny and the recent commer- cial experience of. the United States.' If yoneed "personal histruction, in addition - 0;-,-ii- tort w. t Am n- Trt.r.nt Eliot, notwithstanding the almost brutal F - wav in -which vou have critisied him. will I, &ble'andglad to detail some ono oat of abs F the many members of his Sophomore Llass r who are fully competent to; give it, orta I teaching of Harvard College in this depart tne ur: llment of knowledge is far less thorough than I now think it is.' COSUPLBTB AT 1.AST. ; t There was only one th ing needed I to make the campaign of 1884 redic julous. " Ihere are the regular ,can- didates, Cleveland and Blaine, repre- 8entyig5 the tendencies and princi- l p8 dpprfioses of ! the two : great j national pai-ties. r.Theil therel is a 1 -Prohibition candidate representing a proscriptive sentiment, and there is a rich old candidate, representing him self and trying to make the more I- silly laborers believe that 1 he repre sented them as he boiled along in his sumptuous royal sleeper attended by servants as if a crowned monarch. He is known by many appellations "Old Cock. Eyes,? "Old Ben Bolt," "Spoons," j "Bottled Up," : 'fFhe Widow Butler," and iso on. Then there are one or two nondescript can didates representing local prejudices; JNow comes to complete the cirens and menagerie one" .' Belva Lockwood, a ji woman's rights shrieker and female degrader and Ae too is a can'didate for the Presidencv; MShe wishes-to extendheniand tection of petticoat f government" 'pett I dyer the whole land I: domestic arrangements : Wood homo ' will Vto for lUlvo'knf she regards "the "whole boundless IX-JU continent" as her nar sh RrV : W the woman in petticoats. ' ; " ' i- tkbmont Tt. ia r,owt.wii;Vi.-. t.:. 1 . - "v isiriTTiuGurwat jiut3 'is too heavy a load for even Vermont -Republican to . tote In laibthe7 1 Rennblin m, oi Now if Blaine was' the nonnlar that was claimed; Vermont would have rolled n f rom pbb to 30,000 2 majority at least Why not? Other candidates have carried the Stata hv I i 7 r even more than 27,251 i inajonty. I Whv: not! Blaine? f Th .Wtifej. The election ' is - r . ...ww.v.. J. . :-r- t -.i- - deairous I desirous i ""F'wfK, . that if ohonid .rnsnit in an. increase Ji.j -lv . j:4irtf 'W Republican parly. He greqttfy needs anSjii i at a tlavvidi. iBflOTsenenwe is TOYi0 trthatceltodeFtho aujapSpofJpoL,iia?Q : Wnll Rfroot I F""MUi" w-., . - . .Ia. Xr.,.CrRrt mill ha in I November will olFm the noluicai ccirorooro -woxaiessw ,1 inan vy ara auu -riu. btopit ia uun i Qn ino moueiarv,, . once. J t v,:. L 11: i reason to bf'S or , bfat t U evident that tley were not dUK p08ed.w exert vtnemselves, lo siaxiauuwu i:A new Tjste fos T0f8-'7::: nClSgmwagreatenlhmasf fiirt i a fenhvct. of tobacco as; a.i curat I r-y -, j : , ;- l mwd w . i to g,ow that it ja yerv-eihcaciauft-for I . . . certain jut nRfta 'are not vet Known, tteccnt 1 R. show that tobacco can be used. I . , ' . . of'-. . j v- - ! U V8txenetb,,,and .t cbeapness. ,. TThft Springfield llepublican has an article m hd unh f mtn which r-oe I Ltt6l&?l - L ,; - i - - - . , . . , i - ... ' -iv - itffM iry fennd in every pip.miiUis. re. 1 beaters, rotary and grintiing ma- the pulp Is tbe fa ranrh .Tlnrv f.ni.rl nnircd beaters, rotary and jrrindinff ma- I chines; while wood bait to W skiiihed, I i i! i r i a- w l mkU . I sirappeu, reiieveu ui &uuu nou iutM7u ious and grated. The average quality of. wood used loses from to to BO per cenv. in, waste I ,.M. j, n.iD , ki w.r.t Thowi I stalk, however, reduced. by . a, purely me-. I chanical process to a bone dry pulp,Tshows I a waste of only 5 per cent." r - - J So the tobacco' stalks, lonfj?used for manuring Jnd'and grinding into smoking ltobacoo," (?) , can .now be; utilized, by the paper inillau It will do less harm if turned into paper ex cept when used for dime novels, tho Police, Gazette and the tnorb vicious SDecimens.of Republican papers, than I it does now in diDDincr. smokiner and I , . .i. -- ' I ' f ' I GOOD TniNC. Dr. Blame m his ehorfc, Dolitico-ag, ricnltnral ' address strongly favors I Free Trade as 'applied between the I Statea an3 Territories of our coun- .- ... ... I try, He is clearly right, lie Ttnows wnai is coou or. me peppie. xie sef1 lue,r fpew 10 J-no vvesi ana i rfof in fnrn 5ta" trJ-J ' fliiri1ina ''hia I f ....... .r, .. ,, , r - r . , . I r.j r- where: England ships hex boat and .".li??,&rf: ft!H? Spain, and in return receives r silks andrTtesv- The olimate oFEnaisnot favaMeanhnce I . . r , ... .-' I she wisely goe atroao. for cheaper goods. Bat if Free Trade is found to be so very desirable between New TjJ.'a !.. ii-'twiAct' ..:. I ngiauii.auu iue est or ptroui BOW I V 11 thaV & becomes . so . undesirable w ucu i. in jji ujMjfMju ur .uc i aap vana da or Mexico or Cuba? Can there, be too much -5004 tbing? - .T.!7;...7Jityv..4,i9 , w v.1- ii 'r4 ' i ' . v We publish elsewhere the circular of Virginia5 relative to "joint "discus- ... . .. . -" . . . LBions." It wilf be seen that the mat- ter is left to. the' discretion audiudg- , ; - - i i i ; fai ment of county ad local party au; thorities," where it properly belongs, What may -be- 4djlou, if you please, in a mountain fcountry her6 ir-;B toiighv injudicious and even. ;4aBgerpus in sections 1 where the negroes are in great Yfumbers.J A rrow'di''tWo'6f a r-ioha H.r.V.A4 'i wotd fcltfalh'4.1.fl' . t ... . T , . Jr r - Kadicals, as they think,. , Veare en- tirely in favoof. disappointing all 11I. Vril- such calculations ,and? to exercise caution at the right time. That is jo, prevent, X possible, iH"3omt discus- 1 onwh(Sre l8 adpros ... - I 01 U1er; Personality,, that; maylead I Kt:?t . , " ' '" ; " veeiy may maie a name ,as a yentoryet .- Hi; be, mayhap,; has vonly ; brought" ridi- cuie and jnoney as L yet;Iit brings. farrie U must be in the fuinro- JBut. I Keely hasnot been 'idle, jtappears, . . ... . . . - . ; - . . ' .r T tnat: 18 rmm remarkable re8ult8.;.Two armyffi--- H?moand;, Cap Vii, Reed, have been allowed to witness sohie B&$SeiUy Times says, of what bcnrredi - ;Fi - "Half a dozen ieaaen bu-ets fnrtro tli on an inch in diameter. were-flred through a I vu - uuctcr were -lireu inroiiffn a f andvflattened out against an Jroa, I Ela.hJH?e7feaA Pqunde . w&ua li it j-ii Kin uif r - . I ni, nn wa inint - - " .g, n HO tUOUCU aru- 1 for Blaine. and tbe .lignt voie is simpix an i . z ... . , '..-2 : I t.:.A.'tnXT..;itn soDAftfifntfrtn I f TCrirAnfl j.iynardnd hJ war hins oti 1 cholera wrthatcUy, -J v-v I were the., offleial quotations: " , .. ... Soarty managers wiU know better ; comparative weK eric w 'TS-JSSSSSd. entrUaur Middling . .-i :Ll0iiv vi u if the I VT T T & i ; ; phbhes, t -like' slavery.vith prated .of I -jJitSpezia, duru?g-4h past twen tjvwnr I ddw , r w . il0a - - . I T.." rr. --" worm;a. a stronger man than ever .Bismarck . "No pent up" sh,P , wad of cautio-afte';the;: rb has I given him credit for being. in the Lbcki I S1"8 : -.:;:y--.:- i ' - : with the wonderful 'etheric vapor' in the I THE LATEST NEWS. mn nMfi TvA twAnfflflfiral,: . - I .seemed, touch; pleased and considerably, astonished. Atrangements.cre Deing wquv run nam t6n, Nevr nforAnd give ajbwbttf 2IM?Liic Hq exhjbi- ilton and Cant. Van Keed . - - n"'r' " " tiv!i..i.i.l:. m:. T1" Dan - if-f.vi,;i y-a. "ir ' T 40r Tlf5.."Si!M Wadloifrb nf Nev Hamnsbire. a XiO- Vt'J Lobberv1' insta Vii4: ;'i,'4;'i"' vti-iw, Af faUi I Mj$ W vaP:rr TO I it, It sought no fieja for. profata-1 veryti tiery of -the American flabat t?KfS , - " - -'.-. . i I i snacKies." , i .it-i.' i.jji .: l JH,r, I Y.ieigPvC9pcwftt.i-iP I by;fiayiBgr;,lvuwt .f, o mi mate honest Lt an, natrintih man ahonld vTf?- I it. and patrioup maipwva.x i ly , protest , by word, .tasatiaxwl I orous ambition noraudaciousi jobbery n w. l. I .. M.MMlnn,Al. - inMvdrv1 jPa flTJi, ffi Of Woyember, I the; Uarnsburg , reUgrapfrr:B?mo:- lipj ppe? indorsed Wa4eig "picture of MiBlamfe adminijtra- tion of the office of Secretary of the Jiamsourir rVeifnrrirK a . Iipnnl). I ' " '- t . tioh 6f 'the office ' of Secretary State" as V "not only VtrutbTul -bnt -T - , . spic, i 2 , u ttjoUfT JI8CUSS10NS -Ufti '1 hfi loHOWlhtf' Circular baB1 DOCO 1 issued by tive btatc LemocTatij toin- " .1 1 l . A - . ' ' ' . Jt T n mittoe, and is .published', for 'j tho" in,-j . - . m - tormation ot wuom u raay,.concerq !Ro6ms State Pkmocbatic . I Executive Commitxse rAl.EXANIBI A,VA.,Sept 1 i84t. )r-T- To County Chairman; 1 " The State -Central' Comraitte of the Democratic party, conceding the richt of county " and ' local party of county " and - local authorities to determine and regulate such matters for themselves, yet re- spectfully suggest that. joint discna- sion with onr political opponents be discouraged. Apart from ; -other considerations not necessary to bo mentioned,, tho, extraordinav voslion taUen bv the Republican leaders in Virginia in charging that the result of the last- owt eouoj was ,uuo to yioience art n nloonslinn and mfikino it ft rrnvfl 8ubjt of congressional inquiry has placed them beyond tho pale of onlv obietvt of nnblio being to enlighten, not to inflame, liA rsTir.nl or mi nil 11 r, rlttMmtu Very Tespectf nlly, ' ! JonN S. Babjboub, Chairman. 7iCs Shepperd; Secretary CURRENT COMMENT. " In his twenty-five 1 years5 of 1 contiittous- service in- the United I States Senate Henry Anthony's I recoru wa wiiueus a stain orsnaat ! PicOIV; Ho ww never accos I or any act aictaica oy sen-interest or I uv mfttiv bnt. a mote the welfare of the couhtry and ite people. He was a;f air typeof the W v mmm w smv w --w w -. wwa w W V I old-fashioned Republican" who' main-' .. ihnnh , lK win?.:.-4- politics the highest standard of publio action. xAvmg in a smaurCttateWnere the suffrage is t exceptionally restrio- hyllxS Ji g? newSpapor in, that State for I many years, he exerted an inilnence: . ff;, 'thit' vihWfcarf S parallel in -any other State, 'arid 'vet I ho was never accused of attemp'tinff' l cel. ? a 'a: .5 -v 1 w w : w uicutpe tne ?oue of the maionty intheuroran., ued capacity. He believed m free discussion, fair consultation, 'aid, un. biased action on the .part of repre-" seritatives of the mass of voters. T' e8JRP' , X 'A '.'! ' V'. Lr 1 succeed the late I.ord Ampthill, does riot imply that Mr. Gladstone-means tb conciliate or take any special no I wee oi -nnce i.ismarcic'8 recent un 1 !1-VL 'T rcceni, un- I b-inrllTT , nttorannaa . orvain of hn . ,1 I yancement: of ultra-Saxon., ideas. I meaning the progress of English I TiiT-t-raliarV-'all Ya mT;iH Ttfw .iir -nwuiigiu IU1 VUQ nUUUi 4U.I ulallb Duff is inthcrough accords with Mr." uiadstone on all important national I and international ideas.V Tn tmth: i. r -:u.3 T3; . .. .. .P. I Ttt 'VTv yaye1?ei y.,ia' OTsJ.; Stedman's Appointments, , ri-ei-; Co I annbnncd, the f 0U0 wing appointments; f for Maj. C M. Stedman, at "which I airciotn,. tne itepubli-- can candidate.'ra irrvif ori tn me i,$,V Charleston, Saturday, Sept. 6.5 Asheville, Thursdays Sept. tli- ' 1 nickory,'Monday,$ept.,T5.' , ..SUtesville Tuesday, SepL 16 fe?jnr8ay;Sept; 18. .y, i SiSh ?omfc Tday, Sept. 19. , WinstohSaturday, Sept.O. ;"f " 'Durham, Monday, 'Septi;2; nttsbfifA WsVrtis1i' tek "o n '-t 5.1G.i.ill i-.TJI-.-r -, . C . ' . , To act on the liver, and cleanse the bow els no .medicine equals "Ayer's Cathartic JM 53SS2 s- m , , yeviuey jiriaay; aept 20. ' LumbertOn4, Saturday, Sept.1' 57 ?fei!urgaw,J Monday, Sept; 29. ) si BIGN. Tbe Cholera Spreading Rapidly In Italy and Spain Strange Mnwpiclon . -oftne f opniace-r pie ioa o uu - IRvTHihlA to h llnmlri St&r.V measures against me cnoiera, permitted such measures to be The p0pe.haenrf 53XKTC measures against the cholera, or have even JSOT Toulon." Toulon, " SepV 5 There, were three friths ftomcboicrahcre last' night and four at'T.a ftovnf , Perminion renertsfihe dH - r . i . omie apaung. f . . . t l'Sept. li.-DurfngW cbolcra and four aeatns are repor NoTelda tegirmcTfiBrrrCTOr Moafort0?aid iwddeaths kt Vllle cholera and four deaths are reported1 from ToardeaLbs at VUIdna. Advioea .from.: Newj the .large emigrant ship .vnnnn inr vv HiiinirtHH.1 . : r . . . . i . . . . - r drowned. ?r.AtMr'SeDt. 0.ThfeIteWis' att4e tr-.--f. . ;. "j: f. n1 .wii.:raU xvoqaum Kicm iuiw uu v....i..v. Kassola in'grea with b f 'Ki losses. ' '"' Deatrnetlve GaleA Vessel '-Wrecked a-idatrilandsxost. lift 7tefTac)ta (he Morning btar-t r-. St. ' John,' N . F. Sept. 5? A "dispatch this morning from Terpassey, reports a de- at4irttvikZmthttltx-iiW on Mnadav Tast . - . . s x m . ! i . npon the west coast On Tuesday morning an unknown, vessel, painteu uacK witn wue mastheads, and blue, streak around her bull, was lost, with all hands, , on .. the .western head of St. Sbotts.,. Seven bodies have washed ashore, v i n . ; OBIT UA.lt Y.u alb or tbe Wife or E-naf 'frit. . .. lty Telegrapb to the Morning Star.l . Forthrss Honrok, Ya., ptember 5. Mrs. Harlan,, wife iOf iex Senior and ex Secretary of the Interior, John II. Harlan, 1 died t tha ny(:eUll0lei at midnigbt Her I remains will be taken ; u Washington,' to-' ; night, accompanied byBeeretary and Mrs. Lincoln.' : : -' ' ' '. 1 ' im sla a ami suit. Blaine's Attorneys Fall U Answer Derendkuts Alleatloua- 1 . I By Telegraph to the Morning Star.) Indianapolis, Ihd September 5, Mr. Blaine's attorneys, have failed to answer, I denying the truth of the defendant's alle- It tVttf rn Tim nn?t crfnn n. Ill itAKnllir 1 a a a si . 1 1 Tfew York Stockf Market Active 'and IBy Teleeraph to the Moraine Star.l ', Nkw Tork. Wall Street.. September 5. It A.. M. Stocks opened irrceular but bc- . came, weak,, prices declining i -to f per cent. Toward 11 o'clock speculation, be came strong and .active shares advanced. . . 'ALABAMA. ! i temWeraUc'NoInaUa for Con Kress s s n Jfttt larle. ; .., IBy Teleraph to Ue Moralnrf Btar.l MoHTooifBnT.aept.. Tbe Democrats . . T ,T'A'V'-. "c. 1 ia I UI, lilt. TIILD l-inrrPRllflTini I HfiirlPE Q T laQl" O days'4eadlk,toayiiom I W rTto preset : respresenutiv OUR STATE COrfTEMPORARIKS. ; - The Register but expreesea, now as many times, before, the.feeling of the white peo ple of. North Carolina when it says that the colored race is neither to be unduly exalted nor disparaged. : It is - an aggregation of persons to be looked at and considered as they re, not aa what we would have them ; ipr. leaving out ot view; .tbe question of What they might hate -been under other cir- cumstances, xr.What they mav be in the courso of. the coming decades, we must ac cept tne (act tbat.4ney are largely, if not entirely, what the . white ; race has made them dutim? the last two hnndrpri They are as much herb, on this soil, as the white race is, and we do not hesitate to say that our people, all things being considered, &J&W-!&1& the .r-ir-iT' r"",?. luuc-aPwen of E toTTJ'- or people. Inis -remark refers, of courso. sariry, beof - thmoiisA Register, -'.'ii -' .i xu, r -,.! One of these means extensively nnod in poliUeal conventions of .late. isTtheunit rule, by which a bare majority of the dele gates from a township, county or State as sumes the right to cast the whole Vote for tte choice e Baid majority, and thus to force the' minority to aid in a nomination that could ' not otherwise be made "and which will receive, It any, only a passive' support. This is only one of the results ot the rule, - It is the key that opens the door td nearly all, if not att,1 the frauds and Un-i democratic combinations and - trades that have disgraced Icorivetttions in the past and made them so - uaoorjular tin a moo nf lecung our candidates in the f uturei Ilick ory'Carolinian. 1 In tbe Poor House. t-wll thA .&- ,' V.;-i ' ,il hoS -tetT JISfi'S-'Ti ? lh Pr Kh ,ghu M wel1 I makes his home In: the. poorest kind of a house, and everybody iitas wretched a himself;f Raclt with Bfimaliria. tormented With dyspepsia;. and floored by debility,. no wonder the man is miserable Mr: M; E, Tarrant is ho longer miserable. He wntea from Nevada, Texas, toay'I used Brown's Iron: Bitters for dyspepsia; of twenty-one yetfs -standings and it ( improved me. at once."i WJ:;,j i- 'itzUCl i?st. mP.fl-.i d xysBx wJsaijA.lt, at ' umcoln By JOHR C. TIPTON,' Ed'r and Proper. .The PRESS Is acknowledired, by ttiose who have tried it, to-be one of the best Advertising1 todiums In- Western North Carolina, It has a uu-ko nuu Hteaauy moreasimr patro coin, Gaston, Catawba, Cleavsland Mecklenbunr onntles.i Advertlsini rai. Subscription I1.&0 per annum. mhlltf ' r"- V v. I ' f Lf .Vi VCiTtRJClTQ: 1 COMMERCIAL. I U Mti N OK MAHKKTl r STAR OFFICE. Sept. 5, 4 P. M. iSPIpJTS TURPENTINE The market ! , H8 qiTHU iJAf M' AO . UflUS pur TailOU, with &le8 rrporltd of' 100 casks at that: pricey . .r v . '.- ' HOSIN Tbe raju-ket'was imled Heady it 94 fcetiis ftjrY'SlraiptMl and ft 00 for jaopflrahejdwjt .,TAK The. market was . quote1 quiet at market 00 Yellow Pip. i I.jCOTTQNJ The ij market, wasf iuoted 1 v!BIFTSr- - Ootton..b. iS 90.bales Spirits rihirpente: - w . Kosin. . . .-i . Tac. 357 bblS '''"'' tbTetegr aph to the Morning Star.l .Nbv YQRK.September 5, Noxm. Money strong at 23 per cent. . Sterling exchange 484S3i and 485a485-.: State bonds Cotton quiet, with sales to-day of 1,684 1 .bales; middling uplands 10c; Orleans 114c. I Tntiirpa fjv"pith Rnlpfl tn rlv at tho To! " ji - j - - f iowmRquoaiioi8:cepieiioer xu.ix,yjco ber i 10. 53c ; November . 10.43c ; Uecember 10.46c; January 10.55c; February 10.66c. Flour heavy. Wheat iic lower.; Corn i. c higher. Pork dull at $ 18 0018 25. Lard weak at $7 85. Spirits turpentine steady I atSlic. ltosin steady at $1 221 27.i Freichts weak. . .. Baltimork, September 5 -Flour steady and qtitetat quotations -.-tiowara street and western superfine 2 S02 75; extra $3 Q0 3 75: family 4 005 00; city mills super $2 30375; extra$3 003 50; Rio brands $4 754 87. v . Wheat--southern f easier; western . lower, closing easy; southern red odic;qo amoeruioc;io. l jnaryiana h fl2l??ift:V.- No. 2 western winter red on snot and September delivery 8888fc. Corn- southern firm; western no offerings and no bids; southern white 6870e; yellow 63 j 63c. .rOUElCM 1TIAIKECT8. : IBy (jable to the Mernine Star.l LtvKPOo, September 5, Noon.--Cotton business fair at unchanged prices; mid dling uplands 6 3-16d; do Orleans 6M; sales to day were 10.000 bales,, of which 1,000 were for speculation and' export; receipts 1,000 bales, of wbicb 600 were American. Futures quiet at an advance; uplands, 1 m c, September deli very 6 12-o4C ll-64d ; Sep tember and October delivery 6 9-646 8-04d;' October and November delivery & 3-646 164d : January- and February deli very 5 62-64d; February and March deli very G 3-b4u ; Jtlarcn and April delivery 6 , 3-64l; October delivery 6 i-64d. Tenders to-day 4,900 bales new -docket; 200 new docket. Breadatuffs dull but steady. Short clear middles 50s; 6d. Lard prime western 39s. 6d. . , 2 P.'M. Uplands. 1 m c, September de- . livery 6 ll-64d sellers' 'option; September and October deuvery G o-C4d, sellers . op tion; October and November deUvery 6 l-64d, sellers', option ; November and De cember delivery 5 62-64d, sellers' option; IJccember and January delivery 5 61-64d, value; January and February delivery. 5 G3-64d, sellersLoptioii ; February and March delivery Qd, value; March nd April delive- A A f - Jfe ri - t i so . m -m ry o -o4u, vaiue; ucroocr aeiivery o o-oa, sellers option. Futures -dull. 4.00 P. M.Uplaids, 1 m c, September delivery .6 10-G46 9-4d: September and October delivery 6 7-64d : October and No vember C5 63 C4d; November and De cember delivery 5 60-64d ; January and Feb ruary delivery 5 61-64d. ; 5 P. M.-rtlplands, 1 m c, September de gj :SSin?5ovJffi livery 6 9-64d, buyers' option; September sellers'. option; November and December delivery . 5 60-64d, sellers' option ; Decem ber and January delivery 5 60-C4d, value; January and February delivery 5 60-64d, value; .February . and : March delivery 5 6-64d, value; March and April delivery 6dr value; October delivery 6 7-64d, sellers' op tion. Futures closed steady. Sales of cotton to-day include 7,700 bales American. New York Naval Stores AlarKet. N. Y. Journal of Commerce, Sept. 4 Spirits Turpentine The market is stea- dier, with light' demand ; sales of 50 bbls in" merchantable order at 81 Jc. liosins There is little life to the market, with generally a steady feeling as to prices. The following are the quotations: Strained at $1 22J f rKr . i . 1 r 1 a. a ont.u o at tl 35ck 2 F aVtl 42,' No 1 Q I alSfo; Nb. 1 nallS lotgoNo3 L l Itxmom 15; low pale K at Tf2 50 F 2 65 Pale M at I3 103 15; extra pale N I- f o no nn. !.j...i.ur or is quoted at fl 70 . - . savainau Rlee Market. I ; i a : ai. . The sales for. the day were 141 barrels. Ap pended are the : official quotations of the Board of Trade I Fair 55fc; Good 5i 5fc ; Prime 5i6c. , ., , ' Rough rice Country lots 90c$l 20;tide water ft.25l 40. , ;S ' 1 :.: v;Iglm SLfppery disss Ey ' . ; 1 The Squire,''; says' the author .of .''The Hoosiqr . .School master," , V wore , .one - glasa eye and a wig. . The glass eye was constants kuo uioiacii uuuuuura uuuuuai lysiippiog out oiiocu?, and. the Wig turn- I; arouna Bwewise on ms neaa wnenever ; he addressed the people of tho Fiat Creek : District". . Sad . spectacle, r Parker's Hair Balsam preserves and promotes, the growth me natural uair. it aiso restores mo -ainral color to-'hair which has.faded or I become' gray.-Clean, elegant, btmeflciaP . bii?hlviJrfnmeAl T5 hVbW-&umL 1 of 'the natural hair. It also restores' the The Biblical Ecprier bdt V... i -prrnT.Tsw-grt fry : ; '-- fi'"'v ' "-"E 1 Wards, Broughtoii & Co. , i,.r: ,,L4EIGH,'N.-aj;1 .M-.-r-, V;EVi'EBAiijiYV EVERY BAPTIST SHQUU) TAKE IT ' Aan" Advertising' Medium trnsmpassed.' :. 1. '. 7 . Only $3.60 Per Year- - fii;i!rivn m m m : ,.f--, Address - - f .. . deo"a8:tf BIBLICAL RECORDER. RaleIth,N.C - ' M JUffl I " IIBll 111 III Hi ""i tS I THr BEST TOHIC This medicine, eombininir i yegetablo tonics, onicklv nt,,i :"iM"9 and NeuralRlo. u"a"illeveii!) It is invaluable for Diseases peculh, . IVpmen, and all who lead sedentary iTvfJ 10 produce coristapation-otfer ;rowZS' It enriches and iurifies t.ho v.u .1 ''. the appetite, aids the assimilaUon of St' heves Heartburn and Belching, and Ar'Jl'' sits the muscles and nerves "iHi- - For Intermittent Fevers .Lassitude, w Energy, tc, it has no equal. ' k . The genuine has above trade mart , crossed red lines on wrapper. - Take ii- tf Made e! J by SU0WK CUK1ICAL to., UaLtimoke n j j "v"ij or inn nj-ra 1ys Buffal0 Lithia Water I FOR MALARIAL POISON lf. USE OF IT INT A. CARE OP YEMny 1R. Wh. T. Howaiid, or Ealtimoit Professor of Diseases of Women and f hn i the University of Maryland. Dr. HowardJittesLs the comwm inh,..i,,r tats water in "o wide ranae of . ( it the far-famed White Sulphur Sprint in r of brier nomitv. WMtVtnrini, . JS 11 i'- ;!. . aim auus f superior Indeed, In a certain class of cas, u m k vl-. 4-L- 1... t .it.. , . Iu 1S UlUl-fi t dehilltv attendant, nnnn f ha t.-,i,. .. . .. , " iui i,uo lauier. i a,iiune to tho 'diiilii, tv attendant nnon thA trri uuu!, w -. i.,i ,n. -ouj -uin aieseeii,.,. from grave-acute diseases; and more e.wX!t to the Cachexia zxiA Seavdstlxu-M "t..r'r Fevers, In all their grades and variety tarn rorrns oi Atonic Dypsia, and all the A ' Iwns Peculiar to Women that H.n,m,.ii,t.i. . J ., by mineral waters. In short, v, r? l . nUd ',,7... - state from what mineral waters 1 1, an- , est and ' most unmistakafjU iihe largest number of canst t. a amend irl," wmua unnesiianngiy say the ;,qr,do .Mecklenburg county, Va." Db. 0. F. Mahson, of EirniiouD Ya Late Professor of General Patholojrv and l'lir;.. logy In the Medical College of irriniA : I have observed marked 8anaiivppffo,.i r...-. ; the Buffalo Water in Malarial C'.c7 .ri,,.i" jsys-jttjxiu, noma oi me recutmr A tint inr, oi 'I!,, I'ys' ,x" u especially emca. i.,us i KiKTViiic lniermuieni fever, niniuron . ,.t n:, character, which had obstinately mthttjl ih nu' remedies, having been restored to pa t'td hmlti in a brief spaceof time by a sojourn at tile " Da. Joitsr W. Wilijamson, Jackson, Tens. Extracts from Communication on the Thrmutc ActumoftiejJvJJ0Lahuiaii?i,iite ' Virginia Medical Monthly"' for Februaiy, 1S77. "Their ereat value in Malarial T)i Sequelae has been most abundantly and sal isf ic torily tested; and I have no quest iun that it wtmiii have been a valuable auxiliary in the treatment of the epidemic of Yellow Fever which so terribly ainicieu me .Mississippi vaney during ibeu-n summer. I prescribed it myself, and it save Ii prompt relief In a case of Sirfliremoh .f (";.. in ' Yellow Fever, and decidedly tiiitigaUU' other dis tressing and dangerous symptoms. The patient re covered, but how far the water mav have contri- I buted to that result Oiavtag prescribed it in bnt a single case) l, ot course, cannot undertake to say. . There is no doubt, however, abmd th. f,iet (hat Us administration was attended by the nmt ti dal results." Sprinffs now opens tor guests. Water In cases of one dozen half eallon bottles $5 per case at the Springs. , springs pamphlet mailed to any aaureas. For sale bv W. H. Green, where the sprinss pamphlet may be fonnd. .THUS. jr.OU-, iTopneior, ap 10 tf nrm Buffalo Lithia Springs, Va Patapsco Flouring Mills EstabliHlted 17T1. Bnbrs 1774. UMln 1SS2 I n ammim ifinA iCAGAMBRILLMfcCo, i THIS COMPANY OWNS ANU OPKK.vib THREE MILLS, as follows : PATAPSCO MILL A, ai ULLICOTT CITT, U PATAPSCO MILL B, tit BALTIHORB, Md. ' PATAPSCO MILL C, at ORANGE GR0VS. Mi; Haying a daily capacity oj 1 500 Barrels. If valne of Flour depends on tlie proportioB- ate quantity of Gluten, Starch, Susraua phateof Lime. Maryland and Xbgm VUft from Which our Patent Roller Flon rs are roann factored, is unequalled for its purity and supe rior quality of alible properties. Ask your Grocer for i . ... Patapsco Superlative, Cape Henry t amu) , -Patapsco Choice Patent, North Point nm.J Patapsco Family, Chesapeake Kxtra, Patapsco Extra, " Bedford Fannlv. orange urove jixira C. A. GAM BRILL MFG OO. , Si Commerce Street. Baltunore, Mu. . Represented by aug2Cm sat tu th j.T.MrlVER, r WilmingxouiiLX ; THE LANDMARK. r PUBLISHED AT BTATESVILLE, IREDELL CO., N ' . IS THE Leading Newspaper in Western Nortn Carolina. It is the 'tJii Iredell Connty-one of the lar&'J oounties In the State-and has attained a w local circulation than any paper ever feervu pnbllshed in the county. Its clrtmlatlon ita Alexander ftfV5?ffi-: Shanv Yadkin. Davie and Iredell, is ''YrTii.ii)d anySpemthe is rapidly pairing urt,' Sorry, Rowan and western Mecklenburg- It Wtteonly paper In Western Notth tat employes Caxvabsob Jfeae, thus keep constantly before the PP'n vb tbe tills system a rapidly increasing cu-culation result, maktaar tne Lahdmabk. wKSt THE BEST ADYERTISINQ MEDIUM I " KRN NORTH CAROLINA. i Address -'''tXtC , j ADVERTISE IN Herchat find Farmer. PXJBISHED WEEKLY AT MAEI0NtS0UTJS CAROLS ' It has a large and taoreastag circulation heart of the Pee Dee country, the besi section of the two States. , oinmnDlc3S It is a desirable medium p'j?p 0( rJ -ao,o tita and Farmers and Marlboro Counties. It lsthereioro tor the Business Men of Wiimmsws, ' J. D. jYoprlef?--adecStf ; -The Person' County News; 'n'-'VptoHsiiea-a E0-B0R0. K. C " WIIITAKER A CSIBBOS , --Edltort andPropr , oftf .The MOTS has the iWhe finotoP paper published oroircalated In the section of North Carolina. gnbsorip"0" Advertising rates very liberal, ft 00 per year. . 'V ,: -'.r.- w .'- ': 11 ; -
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 6, 1884, edition 1
2
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