Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Oct. 18, 1884, edition 1 / Page 2
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j 1. ' " 1 ' " " ' ! - f.S.ISHER'S ANWOUNCBOTKNT, : mis MORNING STAR, the oldest dail WJ aper In North CarolmMs published dally, exoept . oad&y, at $7 00 per year, $400 for six month, ! 1 00 for three months, $1.50 for two months; TOO. . r ono month, to mail subscriber. Delivered to ly subscribers at the rate of IS cents per week - sny period from one -week to one year. i CHS WEEKLY STAR Is published every Friday !: oruing at $1 60 per year, $1 00 for sis months 60 U mts for three months. . , I ADVERTISING BATES (DAILY). One square True day, $1 00; two days, $1 75: throe days, $2 50; ; ur days, $3 00 : fire days, $3 SO ; one week, $4 00; ! wo weeks, $650: three weeks $8 50; one month, T 10 00; two months, $17 00 ; three months, $34 00 ; - ix months, $40 00; twelve months, $60 00. Ten nes of soM Nonpareil type make one square. - - i All annoraoements -of Pairs, Festrralsf Balls Hops, Pio-Nics, Society Meetings, Political Meet nss,fco.,will be charged regular advertising rates ! 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Contract advertisers will not be allowed to ex i eed their space or advertise any thing foreign to i their regular business 5 without extra charge at j transient rates. . Remlltanoes must be made by Check, Draft, i Postal If onev Order. Exoress. or in Registered Letter. Only such remittances will be at the risk of the publisher. Communications, unless they contain Impor tant news, or discuaa briefly and properly subj ecta of real interest, are not wanted: and, if accept able In every other way, they will invariably be -ejected if the real name of the author is withheld. Advertisers should always specify the Issue or ssues they desire ter advertise In. "where no Is sue is named the advertisement win be inserted n the Daily. Where an advertiser contracts for the paper to be sent to him during the time hit advertisement is in. the Dronrietor will odv be responsible for the mailing of the paperto his ad' dress. The'MormngStar. By WILLIAM H. BKBK ABXK WILMINGTON, N. C. Friday EvENnran 17, 1884. EVENING EDITIONi THE CU1ISJB OF THE SOUTH. ( The sum of money that has been collected in taxes from the people of the United States since the war closed in 1865 is so great as to make the mind stagger under the great load in the effort to understand its magnitude. The people have been taxed in such a way as-to keep them stripped of a large part of their just earnings. When the amount taken from them in nineteen years is con siderea it is not a matter or surprise that the people groan and are poor. We do not purpose going into the matter now only so far as the Southern people are concerned. We have be fore shown in many ways what & burden the Tariff was upon the great masses of the people. In view of the fact that Blaine and his illiterate associate are travelling about trying to make people believe that High Taxes are a great blessing when . they are collected under a Tariff and for the benefit of a few; and in as much as the Radical bush whackers, who . are as ignorant of economic questions. aa-the". aegroes are to whom they address their ram bling and stupid talk, we propose to aid intelligent readers in understand ing better one feature at least of the Republican War Tariff that wire barbed fence that encircles our coun-! try shntting out foreign productions and shutting in home products and thus keeping manufacturers straight ened, operatives poor and hungry,and farmers in distress. Since 1865, the tax paid at the Custom. Houses under the Republi can War Tariff, still in force, is more than three thousand , millibp, dollars. The figures are $3,206,057J482,. JSow if you can takthafc sutn in you will begin to see what the Tariff has done. It is a sum sufficient to buy up all of the real and personal prop erty of twenty States like North Carolina. , - - This tax under the Tariff, enor mous as it "is, has been '. paid mainly by the people. They -" have been compelled by their necessities to bay the things imported, and the tax be ing added for the most part to the price of articles has to that extent - increased the cost. This is certainly true or the Monopolists would 'not be eternally howling "Keep the tax up . or it will ruin the country," meaning by country themselves. They have had the bounty so long they think they will starve unless it is continued. In ttje meantime the bounty has about ruined them, as the shutting down of mills and the blowing out of furnaces show, y ' lhe internal tax collected since 1 865,aggregates (not including 1884) ,yi,DB4,928. This vast tax be- ing laid on luxuries mainlv tobacnA and spit its, beer, &c.,-i9 only paid ' "vwiuaruy use .them. From other sources the tax raised is $275,050,347. : The total from all sources is $6,556,692,457. Six thous and and a half millions of dollars is a sum that but-few men can com prehend. It would buy nearly forty North Carolinas. This is the tax taken ' from thepeople in nineteen years. .- - Are not taxes a cufse and a bur den and ought they not to be . made just . as little as possible consistent with the safety,' suecess, and perpet uity of the Government? : All but remorseless office-holders and bum mers will say yes. The Columbia (S. C.) Register, considering these enormous figures, says: U , l ; - -v "Now. as the cotton States contain 23 per cent, of the population of the country. there snare 01 tins .enormous Duruea. ior the period is $1,508,045,265. That is one thousand five hundred million "of the earnJ ings of war worn, harrassed people , have been swept into the Federal vaults, i. The story is no yet half told. The Til den platform of 1876 asserted that for every dollar that wetit into the Federal Treasury from customs, "the iniquitous ana. oppres sive system of protection took four. Call it three for one, and we see $9,700,000,000 wrung from the earning of ' four-fifths of the producers of the country, as so much tribute paid to the other fifth The cotton States share of this tribute is $2,231,000, 000. This vast sum has vanished like a dream from the sweat and substance of the solid South-r-white and colored faring alike." ' Now if you contrast such tremen dous figures with the productiveness of the Cotton States you will see bet ter what the drain is. The Register figures are: cotton $4,600,000,000 arid' other products $4,400,000,000 total $9,000,000,000. Add still manufac turing and mechanical productions $200,000,000, and the total products aggregate 12,000 millions, or $631, 578,000 a year. This is for 11,000, 000 people. The Register asks," What has become of this vast product? What is left of it at the South?" This is important. What has be come of it? Who aot it? The an swer of the Register is: "The Federal Treasury has swept over bSVSk. AAA AAA I 5 2. $l,OUU,UUU,uuu Oi inese earnings iuiu u vaults. The cormorant of protection has swallowed $2,200,000,000 more, not men tioning the enormous wastage in carrying I the taxes of the country round in trade. 'We see. then, some four thousand millions gone forever from the earnings of this 11,- 000,000 people of the Cotton States to re spond to the remorseless exactions of the Federal Government and the Republican policy. This would leave the people of the Cotton States eight thousand million out of their eleven thousand million of earnings in the period cited. One-third of the earnings of the people have been taken away from mem oy jreqerai taxation, oesiaes ineir otaiy, county and town taxes." Here is something for farmers to think over. They can see now where their profits 20. High taxes will keep any people poor. On June lltb, 1884, Dana.wsaid in the Sun that he would support Cleveland if he was nominated. Here are his words: "We mean, of course, Grover Cleveland and Roswell P. Flower. Each has peculiar merits, but those of the Governor are rare and elevated. But each also has points of comparative weakness. Yet should the Convention determine to nominate one of them we say emphatically that the candidate will stand a fair chance of carrying the Stale of New York, and that the but efforts &f the Sun, will be devoted to securing his entire success. 5ut, finally, lhe tnumpn 01 Democracy is of infinitely greater moment than the nomination or election of aoy in dividual, however eminent or gifted," The fellow who wrote those words and published them is now a traitor And is trying his very best to elect Blaine, the man he has so warmly denounced.' It is true he is pretend ing to support Butler, but that is a fixed up job. Butler is merely trying to draw off votes, that Blaine may capture Nw jfork, Connecticut and New Jersey. Read elsewhere what the jSWrsaid of Butler. At Waterbury, Conn., operatives in factories are bulldozed and made to Vote to suit the Republican bosses. But a "change has come over the spirit of their" action. Mr. G. W. Bunham, the boss millionaire and manufacturing king of that burg pr bury, is out in, a letter for Cleveland and there is much consternation among the bulldozers. A New Ha ven special to the New York Times says: . . - "To him, Mr. Bunham says, Blaine is but a political trickster, an unscrupulous adventurer. The immediate effect of the millionaire's letter will be to stop the bull dozing of mechanics and laborers by over seers in those factories at Waterbury in which he has a controlling interest. Mr. Banham's reputation among New 'York business men makes his utterances doubly strong., He is only one of the large number of manufacturers in this State who have had the power to resist Blaine's allure merits. The letter will undoubtedly work to the advantage of Cleveland in the vicin ity of Waterbury." . ; The Tories held a meeting at Birmingham on the- 14th. The Lib erals made an attack , when a riot en sued. A dispatch says: "There is a gap eight feet wide in the wall where the mob rushed toward the Town Hall, the Skatine Rink, and the Aquarium. The platform, which the riot ers twice demolished, lies m the centre of the rink,.a confused mass of, timber. , All the ' chairs 1 and doors were smashed into atoms. Thfthali looks as if it had been the scene of a - dynamite .explosion.' " The re- iresnment oars were looted and the liquors drunk and the bottles thrown on tha floor: The gas fittings were - wrenched from the walls. The gardens and flower beds were also destroyed. The Conservatives pro-i Headers for inciting the riot." I That shows the trend o opinion ; The af- among the. laboring classes. fair was infamous and omihbus. The Aurania, Arizona and Austral, three fine ocean steamers, took a-race across the Atlantic. Thei Aurania beat. Thev never saw ach Other dnnpg tbyyae;TT)mejdays and 54 minutes between Xjueenstown ana Sandy Hook.1 SS6vAJbrbjJntJ424 saloon' passengers' 271 intefmeaiate and 'figs' j steerage; which, j with her officers and bre w, is the largest num ber of persons tb'at any' steiraer Has landed ai New York port iso' far this year., ; .1 ; - " ; Judge Sneed recently made a speech at Somerville, Tennessee, that has boen printed in ipamphlei form. The . Nashville World says of it: ; : .. .. "Judge Sneed is nor only recognized as a clever, original thinker but such is the known simplicity and sterling integrity of his character-that bis bitterest opponents yield implicit faith to. bis utterances when ever be touches any question, of social , or, political economy, . , , . Judge Sneed is of . Granville stock' but was born in Raleighl . CoL Dockery is delighted with the Mulligan letters. ' Like tUeir author he finds them just auph epistles as a very, high toned., and honest man would write. 1 Dockery Jias less in telligence than we gave liim credit for; A' blind man readlh those in famous prod,ncti6p8 wifh raised let ters, wqu14 know at onoe that they were the offspring of a corrupt heart and a quick brain active in planning disreputable and rascally schemes. We relied upon the statements of a Sduthern Exchange for ' the returns of valuation in Alabama of sheep, L pistols, &c that were , very damag ing. We find in the' Montgomery Advertiser a correction which we gladly copy. It says: "Now, the reports' from this State to the Agricultural Department for 1882 makes the value of hogs in Alabama' $5,318,818, and the Value for 1883 is still greater. The census reports for 1880 gave the value of agricultural implements as $3,788,978 " A large committee of prominent Germans living at Lafayette, Indi ana, on the 12th addressed a letter to the Chairman of the Independent Republican State Committee of Indi ana, asking for cooperation and sig nifying their purpose to support Cleveland and Hendricks. THE PERIODICALS. The Musical Herald, of Boston, is a capi tal monthly and musicians will be inter ested in it. The October number contains in addition to the reading matter, which is varied, three pieces of music. Price 10 cents a number. Published jby Musical Herald Co., Boston. ' Home Science It or October is Number 3, of this new candidate for public favor. It contains 95 pages, printed on good paper rwfth large clear type, and is furnished at 42.50 a year. There are fourteen papers in the current number. Selden R. Hopkins, editor. Published at 29 Warren street. n. y. I Wake Forest Student for October is a i good number of the best of the Southern college magazines. Among the contribu tors are Professors Potest and W. Roy all, end T. J. Simmons. Prof. Poteat's con- tribution is a portion of his fine address at Kinstori College in June last j Price $1.50 a year. CURRENT COMMENT. ; There are distinctive and po tential elements against j Blame in CNew York that were unknown or en tirely unf elt in Maine and; Ohio. The Independent Republicans are large an numbers, ably led, and are vete rans in independent voting. ' Thev have taught independence for years, jand they have the high example of Blaine's1 leaders in bolting Folger and" electrng Cleveland Governor by 192,000. f 'Th'ey atea jkwW in every 'countyof New York anid they will poll not less than 25,000 Votes direct ly for .Cleveland. Another i element peculiar to . New York and implaca ble in its antagonism to Blaine is the Sextreme Stalwart or Conkling wing of the Republicans," Conkling voiced its feeling, in the contest when" he paid substantially: 'If j Cleveland was regardedyby Mr7 Blaine -and his' jnenas as a gooa 'enougn man to Biect uovernor over tfolger, there may be many Republicans ready to accept Cleveland as a good man to nlnnt D 331.. 1. n . picb m. icNueui, uvrr ijiainev . mat element-is strontr in NeW York, and it is , more bitter in its jaostility to Diaine tnan any other element of the islame opposition. Phil! Times,Ind. Rep. -The bayonet which, as a j udge of elections, had been used exclusive ly in the Soutb is now taken to the mighty West. : Only eight years ago the Legislatures of Louisiana and South . Carolina , were ; dispersed by Federal soldiery, and battalians of in fantry and.battenes ;of .artillery kept watch and ward at.theiDolls.. The warning giyeri j in hoso . troublous days of the people of r the Uni ted States .finds -its. fulfilment no w The United 'States deputy mar shals, pistpi in' 'hand, drive lawful voters from the polls hi the great y"? v,vuw, auu ename importea repeaters to derSosit ! heiif1 franHn1n t. ballots with impunity; The curse of militarism, nas gone home to roost. The lawlessness and tyranny : which pose to prosecute the Liberal made the South a Poland a few years ago find a new field of operations in the 'North arid : West.-Charleston News- Couriers Dem. r f. 3 ' Edward Everett Hale's malig nant sectional trade vtagainst the "Southern Oligarchy" ought to be distributed in theSouth along with that soothing appeal" to the Southern people recently .issued by the Re publican National Committee4 froto 'head;quar1fe the" address gives the; people Jof ; the South Iargfr.quatities...0f,afi--ijBuch speeches as that of Hale are designed to stir up Bectibnal'lanimosity aindrig the people5 of the North. 'There are pleasing signs . a that ' both r these methods of playing upon , the, public sensibilities will signally fail.- -PAt. Record, Ind. BEN BUTLER. ? vutiriDv uinR'i ronnui vi muii -;j , New York Sun, June 26, 1873. . ... Hated by some, condemned by many, and distrusted by all, this ba$ man, with his crooked, ways, foul methods, distorted mind and wicked heart, glories in these moral deformi- ties flannta f.hom onnot.ftntlV DfiTOre the public eye and trafics iri'xhem aff political merchandise. l nr notorieiy which: decency shnnKs from as a de- er ad at ion he seeks, at any sacrifice.- lie treats tne reproacq wmcn ioiiowb such exhibitions as so much capital added to the stock of. ill-fame that had already made his name odiously conspicuous in and out of Congress, Rejoicing in his own shame and coin-- ing money from open venaiity, ;aia cardirig any pretense of prtociple, bound by no ties of honor, scoffing at religion, making politics a trade, despotic when clothed with authority, cowardly by nature, mercenary from habit and destitute of one ennobling quality for manly attributes to lift him up above these wretched characJ teristic?, he is to day 'the leading candidate for the highest -honor in enlightened and moral Massachusetts. BLACKS A CK'S BA TBIO Tl SM. Cleveland Plaindealer. Now lien. .Logan may be very patriotic, but in 1861 Stephen A. Douglas went down to Springfield, III., and took Abraham Lincoln by the hand and said: "Our country is in a terrible state, what can I do for you?" Mr. Lincoln said: "Call a mass meeting at Springfield and ask the Democratic party to stand by me, for without their aid I can do nothing." He did so, and a mass of about 10 acres of people assembled, and Mr. Douglas, with tears in his eyes, asked the Democratic party to stand by Mr. Lincoln, and when he came down off the platform your correspondent was standing near him and saw a tall, swarthy looking man elbow his way through the crowd to Mr. Douglas' side and hissed in his ears: "You have sold out the Dem ocratic party but by Q d you can't deliver it!" Upon inquiring learned that this dark man was John A. Logan, and afterward learned that he commenced recruiting a regi tnent tor tne Confederate army in southern Illinois. TRYINGTO GET BETS. Washington Star. . The Democratic pool men here say they cannot get any even bets against Cleveland's carrying New York, or upon the general results.- Two bro kers took a hack last evening and drove around to the various places where tney were told they could hnd men ready to bet even on lilaiue s election. They had $2,000 to put up in even bets, either that Cleveland would carry New York or that he would be elected. In several hours thev could get only $210 covered. They then offered to bet $100 to $90 on New York, but could not get takers. ' The same men telegraphed to par- ties in New York who they under stood would, bet even on Blaine, but their money has not yet been cover ed. Other pool men who have been to New York to get bets say they can t get them taken. YORK WIf,L NOT DO, Greenville Standard. " Jtie openly charges tnat "every Confederate soldier was a traitor. What will the gallant Confederate soldiers of Pitt county say to tbat ? tie said in his speech in ureenville that he favored placing both the white and the colored insane , in the. same asylum. White men of Pitt county, what do you say to that ? He said in bis speech in Greenville tnat he favored "civil rights." His whole speech was an appeal to the prejudices of the ignorant arid aeoasea. OUR 8TATE CONTEMPORARIES. The Republicans have drawn the color line truly in Jones county. The-xiominee ior tne nouse of Itepresentatives is an in competent ienorant the color line for all it was worth in their convention. There was only one white delegate present, and he, we learn, voted for the negro against a white man. The only reason under the heavens why Sandy Strayhorn was nominated was Jaecause he was a negro, j They dare not nominate negroes for the other offices- because they cannot uona. n.insion Mtee tress. ; What was the record of the Republican party in North Carolina while it had con trol of the State Government ? It was one oi violence, aisgrace and ruin. It trampled aown our constitution - and forced upon us objectionable laws. It destroved tha HtAta'a credit and honor and squandered her re sources. It did evervthino' tn jeopardize, trample upon - or nullif y '"the' principles ana guarantees of t personal and civil liberty. Now, on ? the other hand, what have the Democrats done ? They have forced the bayonet from the Dolls and made the ballot box an untrammeled ex pression ;ot me sovereign will of the people. '? Ayers Sarsaparilla is the'mrinkMt for all blood diseases. Its effects are immediately. cure felt THEXATEST NEWS. FEOtt FiHTS OF THE WORLD 'i ll t 6-.; Kir V5' fe FOREIGN. Fire In Cargo of tne Steamer Nevaaa, : of tne GulonXlne-PaeBser vrnfeij Landed, .at Qneenf town Another JButlle between Vref en ,and Chinese Noted Home-Ruler Dead Honor Ottrwvrtoww.' Oftt'' 17' The Gulon line steamer Nevada.nGapC Bremer f fom New York, Octebef ;7ih fort Liverpool arrived off here at p-.45 o'clock this morning. She reports that there' is fire aboard.' and that great excitement; preyaus,jnioasr? sengers. . ' . Noon.Ih&teaa oi ' proceeomg w uivcr pool the -Nevada has. entered this harbor.. Her cargo has been on fire since, last Wednesday- .. .a i -.f-v-l 1 P. ML A tender from the Nevada has been here, and has returned to h& steamer with gangs of -laborers to aiero suDoue me fire. - It brought no passengers-asnore. it is supposed that the fire was caused by spon' taneons combtistioo among the cargo. 2 P. - BL The Nevada passengers are safe.'. 1 Evfcry effort it being made to extin gnlsti the flames. ' ' Londok, October 17. The Foo-Chow correspondenTbTthe" telegraphs that another 'battle has een iouht on 'Bhore, near Tomsui. 'Three -thousand Chinese were killed, but the French loss was trifling. JjOndon, October -47. Mr. Alexander 1L Sullivan, the well known Irish leader, and one of the founders of the Home-Rule movement; died at Dublin this morning. Rome, October 17. His Holiness the Pope has sent $3,000 to Catania, to be used for the relief of the -sufferers from the re cent eycWne . The Pope has presented his portrait, with an autograph letter,-fc Father C&rci, as a mark of favor, the recent recantation by the great' Jesuit of his peculiar views having been accepted as altogether satisfactory. At the same , time - the Archbishop of Flo rence has invited Father Curci to preach a thankdgiriug sermon On the escape of that city frm a visitation of the cholera. Democrat Elected totfeonfcreae In tne Eleventh District. By Telejrraph to the Moraine Star.l Cikchwati, October 17. The Commer cial Gazette publishes returns showing that Ell8bury, Dem,, has a majority of 600 over Hart. Rep., in the Eleventh Congressional District. , FINANCIAL. New York Stock market Weak and - Xower ' By Telegraph to th Morula Star.l ' Nkw York. Wall Street; October 17, 11 A. M. The stock market opened weak on West Shore cut, prices declining i to 1 per cent. Trunk lines being the weakest. Later on there was a rally of to per cent., but at 11 o'clock the market was weak. Mr. Cable has finished his "Cre oles cf Louisiana," and early next month the Scribneis will publish it. Falling Eyealcnt Is generally attributed to something wrong about the eyes. But before you pay heavy fees to an oculist, just see if your system is not debilitated. Very often that tells on the eyes and makes you think your sight is failing. You need Brown's Iron Bitters, whicb.in toning up the whole sys tem, will help the enfeebled eyes. Mr. A. R. Sherwood, Bethel, Conn., says; "I used Brown's Iron Bitters with -best results, for indigestion and weakness that affected my head and spike." f Cy-CAPITAL PRIZE, 875.000. Tfeketaonly $5. Shares in proportion. ; JMana State-Lottery Company, ; We do herein certify that im tmeruit the ar rangetnenttfor ail Uu Monthly and BemUAnnual Drawings of The Louisiana State Lottery Company, and in person manaas and control tM drawings wemtetves, ana uuu tne tame art etmmetea texux konetty. fairness, and- in good faith toward all par ties, ana toe authorise the Company to use this eer tiJUaU, with fac-timiles of our signatures attached, tn its advertisements." . Commissioners. , Incorporated In 1868 for SB years by the Legis lature for Kdueatloaal and Charitable purpose wit a a capital or i,iaw,imj 10 wmcn a reserve fond of 1560,008 has since been added. By aifroverwhelming popular vote Its franchise was made apart of the present State Constitution adopted December 2d. A. D. 1879. . Tktonly LoUery ever voted on and endorsed by the people of any State. IT NSYKR SCALEStR POSTPOOTIS. ITS GRA2CD SINOLS NUMBER DRAWINGS XA1US f LAUlfi 0THLX.. j A SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY TO WTJ A FORTUNE, ULEVSNTH GRAND DBAW ING, CLASS Im "IN THE ACADEMY OF MUSIC, AT NEW ORLEANS, TUESDAY, November 11, 1884 ltliMoBtlilv Drawing. CAPJTA1VPRIXE, 9TS.OOO.- lewtOOO Tickets at PIto Dollars Each Fractions in Fiftns in Proportion. LIST OP PRIZES. i 1 Capital Prize... . 1 Capital Prize , 1 Capital Prize ! 2 Prizes of $6000 SPrizesof 2000.... .. . 10 Prizes o? 1000. .. 20 Prism of E00.:.: ....S75.0Q0 .... 25,000 .... 10,000 .... 12,000 .... 10,000 '10,000 .... 10,000 .... 20,000 .... 80.000 ; r 100 Prizes of 800 Prizes of 600 Prizes of 1000 Prizes of 200.... 100.... 60.... 25. ... .... 25,000 .... 25,000 APPROXIMATION FRIZES. 9 Approximation Prizes 'of 1750...... 8 Approximation Prizes of 600. . . . 8 Approximation Prizes of 260.. 1 .... 6,780 .... 4.600 ... 250 1,967 Prizes,, amounting to .... fyj's.MO : Applications for rates to clubs should only be Sans! nice of the Company in New o-. , For further Inormation, write cieaily, giving foil address. POSTAL NOTES, Expresi Money Orders.orpiew York Exchange in ordinary letter, Currency by Express (an sams of $5 and npTrcrl at our eipenseaddreaafd i OTA. JBATJPHIN. t New Orleans, X.. or M. A. DAUPHIN, ,607SeventnSt., Waahlaston,D.C. iHrt6 Pt, .one? Orders payable and address Registered Letters to NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BARK, - ,New Orleans, La, J oo 15 D&W2aw4w . , - . wesat ; To Turpentiiie Hen, ND OTHERS.WHO WOULD LIKbJtO Bur gage In the manufacture of PfBEE TEOMPTKB STBAWvfor Mattresses, .Upholstery, and other hidtiBtrial purposes. A new process; requires no outlay for machinery; produces a superior fibre containing all the" aroma of the pine. Women and children oan do the work: State, tjonnty and Individual rights will be sold. m tv gLTT. , Address "A. B..T sep 6 DAWtf 1 Care Stab Office. ALL COMMERCIAL. WILMINGTON MAKKKT .-,!. .. h ' - i"V i - : iff .. ' . ' ; .i:s H STAR' OFFICE, Oct. 17t 4 P. M. SPIRITS TUltPBNTINE The market was" quoted firm at 27i cents per gallon, with no eales to report. ROSIN -The ; market was quoted dull at 02i cents for Strained and 97 cents for Good Strained, with no sales reported. TARThe market was -quoted firm at $1 40 per bbl. of 280 Ibsrwith sales at quo tations.-. ... : ...i. - o CRUDE TURPENTINE The market was steady, with sales reported at $1 00 for Hard and $1 60 for Virgin and Yellow Dip. ' ' y.y : COTTON The ' market was quoted dull. Sales reported of 200 bales on a basis of 9f cents and 250 do. on a basis of ,0 cents per S for Middling. The following were the official quotations: Ordinary . . .'. 7j cents lb Good Ordinary.;..... 8 LowMiddline......... 9 " " Middling. 9f Good Middling. 9 9-16 RECEIPTS. Cotton,... Spirits Turpentine. . . . Rosin, . . Tar..;.. .... Crude Turpentine. '. . . , 927 bales 107 casks 379 1 bbl 234 bbla 101 bblfl The receipts of cotton yesterday footed up 1,397, instead of 397, as it appeared. - D ITIESriC IUABKET8 I By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Financial. New Yokk. October 17, Noon. Money heavy and depressed at l2per cent. Ster ling exchange 481481i and 484484f State bonds dull. Governments firm. Commercial. Cotton dull, sales to-day of 189 bales middling uplands 9 15-1 6c; Orleans lOfc. Futures stead v. with sales to-day at the ' following quotations : October 9. 75c; November 9.80c; December 9.84c; January. 9 94c; February 10.08c; March 10.22a Flour quiet and heavy.- Wheat heavy and lower. Corn lower and heavy. Pork steady at $17 00. Lard weak at $7 65. Spirits tur pentine steady at 30c. Rosin steady at $1 25 1 30. Freights nrm. Baltimore, October 17 Flour steady and in fair demand: Howard street and western super $2 i252 75; extra $290 3 75; family $3 75tf&4 75; city mills super $2 252 75; extra $3 003 75; Rio brands $4624 75, Wheat southern firm; west ern irregular and easy; southern red 83 87c; do amber 9095c; No. 1 Maryland 88 Jc ; No. 2 western winter red on spot 82 82ic Corn southern firm; western dull and nominal; southern white 5860c; yel low 5760c. . iroKBIOH BIAtCKKTS. I By Cable to the Horning Star.! Livkkpool, October 17, Noon. Cotton business fair at 'unchanged prices i mid dling uplands 51d;do Orleans 5 11-1 6d;ales tc-iay of 10,000 bales, of which 1,000 were for speculation and export; receipts 17,000 bales, 11,700 of which were American, ru lures steady; uplands, 1 m c, Octofeer de livery 5 27-645 29-64d; October aid No vember delivery 5 27-645 S8-64d: No vember and December delivery 5 28-r64 5 29-54d; December and January delivery 5 3U-645 3-64d; January and February delivery 5 33-645 , 34-64d; February and March delivery 5 36-645 38-64d; March and April delivery 5 40-64 5 41-64d ; April and May delivery o 45-64d. 'lenders to day 7,000 bales new docket, 3, 300 old docket. Sales for the week were 58,000 bales, of which 41,000 bales were American; specu lation 1,200 bales; export 8,200 bales; actual export 7,300 bales; total imports 43,000 bales, of which 37,000 were American; stock 484.000 bales: American 265.000 bales: afloat 165,000 bales., of which 136,000 bales are American. Breadstuffs dull and depressed. Lard prime western 38a 6d. finiritn tnrnpnt.ino 9.4a 2 P. M. Upl&uda 1 m Crf.'Qctober defly ery 5 29-64d, buyers"optkm; October and jNovemDer aeirvery o y-4d, buyers option; November and December delivery 5 80 44a, buyers opuon ulecember and January de livery 5 33-64d, buyers option ; January .nil l?AYn.ow, italivanf & A A mm tion -.February and March delivery 5 39-64d, value; inarcn ana April delivery o 43-C4d, value; April and May delivery 5-47-64d, value; May and June delivery 5 50-64d, value, f utures nrm Sales of cotton to-day include 7,000 bales American. Savannah Rice BlarJtet. Savannah News, Oct. 16. The market for , rice was quiet. . but steady. The sales. for the 4ay were 218 bbls. Below are the official quotations of tne noara oi iraae:- jrair o5ie; uood 5f 5ic; Prime 5f6c. , . .i . Rough rice Country lots 90c$l 20;tide water f i ioi f i As Ttionsands 4breiry. So does Thomas Roberts, Wholesale Grocer. Philadelnhia. who anvav "Rttw Hett's Cocoaine allays all irritation of the scalp, and will most, effectually re move dandruff and prevent the hair from falling out. BURNETT'S FLAVORING EXTRACTS The superiority of these extracts consists in their perfect purity and great strength. They are warranted free from the poison ous oils and acids which enter into the composition of many factitious fruit fla vors. f Furniture. N1 EW 8TOCK FOR FALL TRADE ARRIVING everv da v. mannfafitnrad atti-parbI fnritMa mtirKUb new oLvies ana ixtw tmnen nan ond examine our extensive variety of New aad Fash ionable Goods, ail made this season. . oo!2tf Pnrnltara DeahM;Mo. patt. Land Plaster, T7VDR SALE BY WDODY CUBRH, JL General Commission Merchants, WBminjrton, N. C Ateo. Sole Agents for the PORTLAND PLAS TER MILLS, the products of which are made rom HARD PLASTER and FINEST GROUND. : Correspondence solicited. ap 3 tf WHITE CYPRESS & TELLOW 1 PIKE BLINDS & DOORS. GUARANTEED AS GOOD AS THE BEST. MOULDING, BRACKETS AND ORNAMENTAL WOODWORK. v. ang84 tf ' PARSLEY & WIGGlNa.'. 10 000 21:37 uiLDmaBBicK - ' 2000 BUSh White and to COBt : v '500 M otoloe othy - 50(yBQsh OATS- -; "Best Bolted Veal in the city" nronnd daDyl s i . , PBESTON CUMMING A CO., oo 14 tf Millers and Grain and Peanut Dealers (ylllCuici A PASITI For Every Form of svj . mteaseomPmpiestoScroS"1 Boston, who helped me, but nnfSia doctr. l0FeU 1 8w Mr- Carpenter's rlettS? e did mine. I tried the CuncrrBA fic,Iy descriS bottles i Jw f mi;dies. usin.T1 SoAta proportioK" and cal J? 3? Watebfobd, N. J. . YEA Re tf. NotaSlsrn nrit. i, KS Cured. Ynnr t. done a wonderfm ","e(- me more iwo years ago Knt 1 Vf ure m reappearance since. It cured me f ' S reappea Eczema rears. I shall always eak wS.0re, i seU a great deal of it. Wel1 ol(- THANK C. SWA V r. Hatebhill,Mass. tn&N'Tj,'J!ik ' BEST FOB Xyv 'TttTZTT LmaiM ittoTell on Tli j.mu 11 ueona any remedies f vT UD- I for Tetter, Burns, Cuts, etc in 5?? the best medicine I have ever tried for an Mtbtle. Miss. S- hR'10n?' SCROFULOUS SORPc I bad a dozen bad sores udou mir V a triel your CuraouRA. Remedies aiidtw1 v188 cured me. . .TvS P7have Hebbon, Thatxb Codktt, Pexx. astilLL Every species of Itching, Scaly piniXl lous, iHherlted and ContagioS' Humot? Loss of Hair, cured by CtjtictirT Re8, Wti new Blood Purifier internally, and o S I, T' ,hf CtmcoBA Soap, the great Skin cSres Snlrt nmnnvhoM t? ,"..hures externa t. Soap, 25 cents; Riivrai;'!. ' LEA' 50 Potter Drug and Chemical to.,Bog1(tn BEAUTY For Chapped a'nd m. bkin. CuTicniA Soap 1 wed8at tocorfnj Buffalo Lithia Water ! FOR MAI ARIAL POISONING. USE OP IT IN A CASE OF YELLOW feves Db. Wk. T. Howabd, or Baltimoes, Professor of Diseases of Women and Children is thei University of Maryland. Dr. Howard attests the common adaptation m thts water tn "a wide range of cam" with that I the far-famed White Sulphur Springs, fa gS5 brier county, West Virginia, and adds the foll "Indeed, in a certain class of casss it is SaEeort?.tbSlaiter- IaUode to the abidC. debility attendant upon the tardy convalesce! from grave acute diseases; and more eneci li? to the Cachexia and Sequels incident to jrevers, in all their grades and varieties, to cer tain forms of Atonic Dyspepsia, and ofl the At turns Peculiar to Women that are remediable at all by mineral waters. In ehort, were I called nm to state from what mineral waters I have seen the mut est and most unmistakable amount ofgoodactnitin the largest number of cases in a general vm I would unhesitatingly say the Buffalo -Sprinfiu Mecklenburg county, Va." Da, O. F. Manson. or Richmond, Ya., Late Professor of General Pathology and Phyvfe logy in the Medical College of Virginia : "I hare observed marked sanative effects from the Buffalo Water ia Malarial Cachexia, Antouk Dyspepsia, some of the. Peculiar Affections of Ho men'. Anaemia, Hypochondriasis, Cardiac Faipiit tions, tc. It has been especially efficacious ii Chronic Intermittent Fever, numerous cam ojtMt character, which had obstinately withstood the'mtl remedies, having been restored to perfect halft in a brief space of time by a sojourn at the Spring Dr. John W. Williamson, Jackson, Tenx. Extracts from Communication on the Therapeutic HMKTII, VI UUS JiVJI UMJ JJlUilU, I) UUT 111 IM u Virginia Medical Monthly" for February, 1877. "Their great value in Malarial Dtieata and 33jMim.em lias nVnnl 1 .... .i , torily tested ; and I have no question that it would have been a valuable auxiliary in the treatment of the epidemic of Yellow Fe ver which so terribly afflicted the Mississippi Valley during the past summer. I prescribed it myself,' and It gave prompt relief in a case of Supin-ession of rrine, jn Yellow Fever, and decidedly mitigated other dis tressing and dangerous symptoms. The patient re covered, but how far, the water may have contri buted to that result (having prescribed it in bit a single case) L of course, cannot undertake to say. There is no doubt, however, about the fact M its administration was attended by the most bevfr ctai results." ' Snrfaurs now onens for guests. ' water -in cases of one dozen half gallon bottlet 5 per case at the Springs. Rnrlnjr nanmhlat m ailed to anv address. ;. For sale by W. II. Green, where the Springs pamphlet may be round. .-. -THOS. F. GOODK, Proprietor, - apIOtT nrm Buffalo Lithia Springs, Tills isciS A jt -"- For RBSTOBisa gray hair to its natural color, For pkxvkktin& the hair from rningAj . For RADicATiKO scurf and dandruff, For cxriuwe itching & all diseases "f tjje f i For rBTXHTniale hair from fJM ! For ivkbtthino for which a hair tonic, nr imired It has no jual. .j. i The msHXST tbstmokialb of its merits Ret. CHAS. H. READ, DB, PastorGrac f Stt Presbyterian Chu I For several years I have used no other H breeein than the Xanthine, which had l warmlF recommended to me by a Wenawmj tested Its value. I has, to my ' e.fPf& llshed all that Is claimed for 1 1SSor of preserver and restorer- of the , Baton! eo the hair, and i a taorougn v""'? rraJ). CHAS. H.KBAD- . nnTxr T1irl9t . For sale by ov291y cm ju aug sep jv All Wool Cassimeres -pOR SCHOOL BOYS' WINTER SUITS. J0BI iStJolored Jerseys. Cheap lot of Hamburgh andthehamdiomest Dollar Corset evesoldm Oysters. Oysters. A FINE LOT OF FBESH-OYSTBES JUST BB cSved. WINES, LIQUORS, LAGSB, BBBB.C1 GARS, Ac. at STAR SALOON. No. 13 Sf" BOSTON POST. THE OLD, INVINCIBLE AND THOKOW TRUE BtUE DEMOCRATIC NEWSPAF The dean Famllyewspaper of Mafflac Containing the most complete news oi ia New England. f The Boston Dally Post is especially adre3. Its reliable Commercial and Financial r t SUBSCRIPTION fc & t Dailt One Year, $9; Six Months, TwsxT-FKmATB-$1.00 per Year in advance; 81s Copies for $5.00. i ; CLUB KfTES-- - finjshed ' Five or more to one address will w ftiAffiTpiw- at $8.00 peryearpercepe" copies for $7.60 each, to advan cj b. y. &Y POST at per TWe In Clubs or Five or more, one copy to the organizer of the Club, sep 8 DAW tf ' , The Lincoln Press PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY AT , TON, N. C; TOpV, By JOHN 0. TlFTON,d'r and ' The PRESS &EeBt. Advert have tried It, to be one of gJXa. Mediums In Western North carou in Vfr birge and steadily tooreastog ggrfee cota! Gaston, Catawba, Ciatf.MfiT
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 18, 1884, edition 1
2
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