Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Oct. 22, 1884, edition 1 / Page 2
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viritLISHEtt'S ANNOCNCEMKTJT. THE MORNING STAB, the oldest "dally new; aper in North Carolina, la published dally.exoept Stouday, at $7 00 per year, $4 00 for six months, J 3 00 for three months. $1.60 for two months; 75o. for one month, to mail subscribers. Delivered to lty subscribers at the rate of 15 cents per week ' '? any period from one week to one year. - THE WEEKLY STAB Is pnbllshed every Friday morning at $1 50 per year, $1 00 for six months 50 uents for three months. ADVERTISING BATES (DAILT).One scnard one day, $1 00; two days, fl 75: throe days, 12 80; our days, $3 00 : five days, $3 50 ; one week, $4 00; iwo weeks, $6 50; three weeks S3 50; one month. i 10 00 ; two months, 1 17 00 ; three months, $24 00 ; lx months. $40 00 ; twelve months $50 00v Ten lnes of solid Nonpareil type make one square. All announcements of Fairs. Festivals, .Balls Bops, Pio-Nics, Society Meetings, Political Xeet nga, &c, will be charged regular advertising rates Notices under head of "City Items" SO cents per Ins for first Insertion, and 15 cents per line for ach subsequent insertion. . ;s - '' -,. .T No advertisements Inserted In Local Column at my price. , . ' .. .. .. .. ,;:.:..,::: Advertisements Inserted once a week In Daily will be charged $1 00 per square for each insertion. Every other day, three fourths of daily -rate. Twice a week, two thirds of daily rate. An extra charge will be made for double-column -r triple-column advertisements. ' . j ; Ui. k " Notices of Marriage or Death.' Tribute of .Re spect, Resolutions of Thanks, Ac, are charged sor as ordinary advertisements, but only half rates when paid for strictly in advance. At this rate 50 cents will pay for a simple announcement of Marriage or Death. -' - t - . Advertisements to follow reading matter, or to occupy tmy apeuuu pinoe, wiu uw viuuou uui according to the position desired ? -, - A J . i T 1.- Vl-l. l A mmmVav auverbUKMiHuius uii wiuuu iiu Eiravura uuiuvn -of insertions is marked will be continued till for tid," at the option of the publisher, and charged up to the date of discontinuance. Advertisements discontinued before the time ontracted for has expired, charged transient ates for time actually published. Advertisements kept under the head of "New Advertisements" will be charged fifty pet cent, extra. ;? Amusement, Auction and Official advertisements one dollar per square for each Insertion. All announcements and, recomaewlatieHB tiT candidates for office, whether In the shape of aommunlcatlons or otherwise, will be charged at advertisements.? ' Payments for transient advertisements must be made In advance. Known parties, or stranger with proper reference, may pay monthly or quar terly, according to contract. t - Contract advertisers win not be allowed to ex- aaajI that hum af nHrApHaa f i?ti cf fnrcAtm tA their regular business without extra charge at transient rates. Remittances must be made by Check, Draft, Postal Money Order, Express, or In Registered Letter. Only such remittances will be at the risk of the publisher. Communications, unless they contain Impor tant news, or discuss briefly and properly subjects of real Interest, are not wanted: and, if accept able In every other way, they will invariably be rejected If the real name of the author Is withheld. Advertisers should always specify the Issue or Bsues they desire to advertise In. Where no Is sue Is named the advertisement wul be inserted n the Daily. Where an advertiser contracts for the paper to be sent to him during the time his advertisement is in, the proprietor will only be responsible for the mailing of the paper to his ad dress. The Morning Star. By WILLIAM II. BERNARD. WILMINGTON, N. C. Tuesday Evening, Oct. 21, 1884. EVENING EDITION, PARTIES IN THE SOUTH. There is not a single important measure A Jl il 1 . m . suggesteu oj me piauorm oi eiiner nauon al party this year on which the Southern members would not be distinctly divided. N. T. Times, Rep. This is no doubt true. The Dem ocratic party in the South is a for mation that is the outgrowth of ne cessity. The opinions upon all lead ing 'questions are variant and antag- nniQt.? Vnn will lion-r o Ttamnnratii speech to the main points of which you may not be able to give assent, and yet you and the speaker through necessity are driven to support the same candidates. The Republican party has grown so corrupt that it is in fact a necessity for all honest men to combine against it. In the North the best Republicans are com bining with the Democrats to beat Blaine and Logan, and rid the coun try of machine bosses, thieves and "continental liars," as Beecher calls them. In the South, the negro element that is "solid" for corrupt men and corrupt methods, forces the members of the old Whig and Democratic par ties and the large accessions from young men wtjo have attained to their majority since the war, to co operate and combine to save "the land they love" from the despoilers and oppressors. The safety and pro gress of the South depend upon such an alliance. If the negroes were di vided at the polls the disintegration among the whites would be inevita ble. Men will seek alliance with those with whom they are agreed. The men who hold that fidelity to local' self-government is of prime impor tance; that the Constitution is to be construed according to the known laws of language and the well attest ed canons of criticism and strictly " both as to letter and spirit; that the true principle of raising revenue for the support of the Government is to tax the wealth of the country and not the povertyto lay the 'tax on the luxuries and not on the common necessaries; that a strict economy in the administration of public affairs is to be insisted upon at all . times the men that hold these and other great fundamentals will naturally seek fel lowship and cooperation' with those of like opinion. But the negro question is always to the front. It is impossible in North Carolina that there should not be a uniting of whites as-long as the negroes solidify in supporting a par- ty that is the great, aggressive, per tinacious enemy of themselves and their interests. Hence, white men in" the States unite for a common purpose and for self-preservation. When they enter the great domain of national questions thev at bt, their real sympathies and convictions and there is division of sentiment. Senator Lamar, in a recent speech in Mississippi, holds this language as to the "solid South:" "The just and intelligent people filtig North have no apprehension that the South, cither solid or divided, can control the aoA tion of the Government against the interests of the North. They have seen the South, through her Representatives and Senators, present in Congress, sometimes as part of the minority and then as part of he major ity in both Houses, without deducting any thing from the national honor ordoingany harm to national prosperity. There is no such thing as a solid South as a factor in legislation. Upon every . question of na tional policy affecting either our foreign or our internal interests the Southern mem bers show as great .diversity of, sentiment and independence of action as any other section, and perhaps more." INDIANA AND THE OUTLOOK. ; It is said that in Ohio the Protect tion speakers in their addresses to the great masses drew pictures of the prosperity that, awaited this great country under the future influences and potentialities of High Tariffs that rivalled in splendor and fabul ousness the high wrought scenes in Oriental life where wantonness and luxury prevail. The workingmen were to have homes of alluring com; f ort. . Only elect Blaine and the wives and daughters of workingmen woitfd. 'Wear, silks and have pianos, and carriages and so on. The stories were highly garnished and were be lieved by some of the poorer and more ignorant. The same game of misrepresentation and delusion and purchase will be worked in Indiana, and because it is now : understood among the Radical manipulators, that the 15 Electoral votes of the State of Mr. Hendricks may be absolutely necessary to elect Blaine. Within forty-eight hours we have seen in our exchanges statements looking to the plan of campaign in that State and the reason of it. The Baltimore Sun's Washington correspondent thus views the field: "While it is not impossible, perhaps, that one or more States of the Northwest, such as Michigan and Wisconsin, may furnish some assistance to the Democratic candidates, experienced politicians will ac cept the Republican forecast and put down Indiana as the only doubtful State. On the Pacific coast Nevada can be put in the same category. In the East, New York, New Jersey and Connecticut are by com mon consent regarded as the battle ground of the two parties. "Blaine can be elected without New York; Cleveland cannot. Cleveland can win with New York, New Jersey and Con necticut, and still lose Indiana, or he can win with New York .and Indiana and lose New Jersey and Connecticut, or New York, New Jersey and Nevada would give him, with the South, 201 votes, exactly the requisite maiority. The vote of Nevada may therefore become of great importance in deciding the contest. The popular vote of Nevada will not, it is anticipated, reach more than 15,000, and the character of the vote is such that if Mackey and Fair, the two silver kings, were in accord, they could throw it either way. The tariff will play no part in Nevada. Mr. Mackey is not on good terms with Mr. Fair, but it is said he takes no interest in Mr. Blaine. Senator Fair, who has been in Europe for some time, is daily expected home, and the Democratic National Committee hope to carry the State through him." DEPRESSING IF TRUE. The Washington correspondent of the Baltimore Sun is a man of sense and discretion. He often writes so ber truth in the midst of heated sur roundings. If he correctly reflects the situation in his letter of the 19th inst., he only confirms our fears hith erto expressed in these columns that the masses cared but little for the personal fitness and personal honesty of the men they supported for office; that partisanship was with them all and in all and the true interests of the country but a secondary ques tion. The correspondent says: "The Presidential . election will not be decided upon the personal honesty or dis honesty of Mr'. Blaine. There are doubt less, thousands of Republicans in such States as New York and Massachusetts, men of culture and position, who will vote against Mr. Blaine because they know him to be a legislative jobber and speculator, A. 3 I A. . A. .. I lL . 1 TIT . auu uuuk w sit m we cnair oi w asrjingion and Lincoln. But these are as a droD in the bucket to the millions of operatives and agriculturists, who have been told without contradiction from one end of the country A. - A- 1 - - t A . "V . - to ineomer inai democratic ascendency means closing of furnaces and mills, stop page oi employment, unsold crops, and other dire evils, and who, when such an alternative as this is- presented to them, do not care a button for the Mulligan letters. Tons of Mulligan letters were distributed through Ohio, and - Mr. Blaine at more points than one had literally to wade through them." Philadelphia had a grand Demo cratic demonstration on Saturday night. There were 20,327 men m line and the torchlight procession was very imposing. Senator Pendle ton made an elaborate and eloquent speech. The following will be read with satisfaction. He said: "I am just from New York applause, where I witnesse4 the spectacle of 50,000 voters hailing Cleveland as the leader of their party. To-morrow I go back to Ohio, and you may take my word for it, when the votes of the November contest have been counted my State will be found in the Democratic column. Did ever the politics of any country witness such a spectacle as was seen in Ohio, when the Plumed Knight went through the State in palace car furnished by New York monopolists, and making an effort to convince the starv ing workingmen of the Commonwealth that his party was their best friend and faith ful ally in the struggle for bread? Indeed, jny friends, the Government is now in partnership with the Republican party to keep control of andmismanage the affairs of the country. - .. 1 : Just as was foretold in the begin ning the Blaine libel suit against the Indianapolis . Sentinel is set for trial nearly two months after the election. It will never, be . tried. It is clearly not. to. Blaine's -'interest to have it Iw'onghtto atrial. He brought similar atitfon against the editor of .... . . i - . . the Augusta (Maine) -Argus sixteen years ago and dismissed the case without, consulting the defendant whom he had ' sued -for $20,Oo6 dam ages. iTwtf "Methmsrffirniste?sT1iave been undergoing trial at' f Hillsb'oro, Maryland.' Mr,W Lightbourn was tried for attending-Hha circus. He was censured and his - case was taken to the Annual Conference, jln the meantime he resigned , his surrendered . his ordination tials, and will take a position charge, the New York Herald., He is. evidently attracted - by i the sawdust and the monkeys. Is he an evolutionist and does he' take 'to shows and the mon keys , because "a ,'!' fellow-feeling makes" him '.'wondrouakind''" The "other preacher, Mr, Aldxed, was ar raigned for a worse off enje that of impurity. A young girl furnished a deposition. He has been su spended and will be tried at the Annual Con fereng in. March 1,885, v The National Democratic Com mittee have issued an address show ing the results of the recent elections. They send out words , of hope and confidence. They say of. the Blaine methods in Ohio and West Virginia: "The Blaine managers employed extra ordinary methods in both States. jThey ex pended not less than five hundred thousand dollars in Ohio, and more than one hundred thousand dollars in West Virginia in their political work. They did not use money only. They called from every State the officeholders best fitted to do the work at which they were put. They crowded these two States with such men. They employed in political jobs the men engaged in the postal service of the United States. They left the veterans, who had saved the life of the nation, without the pay to which they were entitled, under the pretense of having ah insufficient clerical force in the pension bureau, and then used the commissioner of pensions and a great number of his clerks as part of their political machinery in the late elections in Ohio and West Virginia." A very strange and distressing story is sent to the New York World from Albany. It is to the effect that twenty odd years ago a young man of wealthy parents ran away with young girl and went to Iowa. In year or two the young wife iired of her husband and eloped with! another fellow, taking her only child, a daughter. The daughter afterwards fled because she was ill-treated. She was fourteen. On the train she met a gentleman much older than herself. The friendship ripened afterwards into love, and at seventeen she mar ried him. They have one child. It is now revealed to them ihat the father is married ignorantly and innocently to his daughter. They are said to be in the deepest distress. The following from the Baltimore special in the New York Times of Monday throws some additional light on the Butler treachery. The correspondent telegraphs: "Gen. Parsons called a meeting of the Chairmen of the Labor Party of seven States. Four States were represented at the meeting, which was held in! Washing ton. Gen. Parsons laid before them the perfidy of Butler. He urged that Butler be retired and another candidate named in stead. Gen. John Tyler, of Florida, who is a government office-holder, opposed that course. His second choice would be Blaine. O'Brien, another delegate, who! is known to be a Blaine man, also opposed it. They antagonized fusion in the Southern States also. They were in favor of a solid South, which they believed would keep the Re publicans of the North from leaving Blaine." i Hon. Frank Hurd tells a reporter of the Herald that he Has taken steps to ascertain whether the ma jority against him was corruptly taken or not. He says: "If as I have been informed is the case, I shall learn that I have been defeated by the changing of ballots, the perversion of returns, the purchase of votes and repeat ing. I shall immediately institute proceed ings for a contest. However, if the ma jority proves to be the fair expression of the will of the people of the Tenth district, I would not take the seat if proffered by the next Congress." Old Ben is out in a letteij denying Gen. Parson's statement as t!o his sell out to Blaine and betrayal of the la bor cause. But Ben and Blaine are pulling together in the same yoke and it may be a part of 'the pro gramme that both shall do as Ike Young formulated the Radical sys tem of campaigning "Lie like h-lll" l The Greensboro State, Republican, modestly claims that York will be elected Governor by not less than 15,000. It says it can be made 20,000. Jess so. But the Democrats must stay at home. -There is no ,- other way to elect the very illiterate bush- whacker. . Disraeli tried to makeCarfyle a Baronet and to confer upon him the Grand Cross of Bath. The sterling and stalwart old Scotchman ; cour teously declined thefionorsl; Disraeli also offered ;Tennysoa a - B. arrnetcy. f . The Western New York Metho- ust Conference; in session last week declared for St. John.r r A paper was gnea Dy 137 preachers warmly in- uorsmg mm. THE BLAINE PLAN, Ntw JTorlc iYlrtoally Glverf Up-To . ' plght for Indiana, and New Jersey. , : 14 Special to Philadelphia Times, ft ?New Yok, 3 OctofcerV 19. The" Blaine plan forthe remainder of the campaign has been fully developed here during -the " past -forty-eight hours. , Many." Jeading Republicans hae been" here ! Tn .consultation. Among these was Pension" Commis sioner Dudley, who managed the late campaign - for Blaine in Ohio. New York is substantially given, up as about certain to go for Cleveland. it is recogmzea in as ic wouia oe up hill work tacarty this' Stater - Little moneywill, therefore, be spent here,! The Republicans will mnke a noisy and demonstrative campaign in New York and the Blaine caravan will go about,5 but this will be done to divert the attention of the Democratic man-: agers. While all this noise is being made keen Republican managers will be Dudleyizing Indiana, New Jersey and Connecticut. . By these methods the Republicans expect to get Indiana certain, and New Jersey if desperate means will accomplish the result. This would elect Blaine, provided he carried the hitherto Republican States, even though New York go against ; him. The Democrats are basing some hope on Wisconsin, but it is not a .good re liance unless there should be a Cleve land cyclone. Should Blaine get the naturally Republican States Cleve land will have to get New York and Indiana, or New York, New Jersey and Connecticut to be elected. He could not spare Indiana and Connec ticut nor Indiana and New Jersey. This is now the Demcratic danger. It may be discovered when it is too late. Dudley goes at once to Indiana, where United States marshals and government officials will be employed as in Ohio,' to debauch the State. The New Jersey campaign will be managed from this city. Money will be poured into both States, while all over New York , a ceaseless racket will be maintained- There is not much danger that the Democrats will lose New York, but they may be caught napping elsewhere. CURRENT COMMENT. The proof of Butler's mise rable perfidy, secured by Gen. Par sons and given to the public by the Timw, is already opening the eyes of many of his dupes. When they all fully realize that the old dema gogue and servant of monopolies has been and is now in the pay and un der the direct control and manage ment of the Blaine National Commit tee, tbey will not only understand the real character and motives of this old man who is willing to round out the remnant of his days as the Bene dict Arnold of American politics, but will also be able to fairly judge the candidate and the political mana gers by whom he has been employed. A more infamous attempt to deceive and mislead the workingmen of this country was never made than this which has been ' made by Blaine and Butler. Our dispatches from Balti more give additional facts concern ing the exposure of the job. N. T. Times, Hep. In a recent speech, General Hawley is reported to have made this timely remark: "I want to see one system of bossism abolished, and that is the bossism of journalism, which defames and traduces our public men, so that to hold a position is to bring down upon one the venom of reckless journalists." In this Sena tor Hawley is right, but he ought not to encourage such things by endors ing Raum's uncalled for and unjust misrepresentations of the South. N. C. Christian Advocate. The Defeat to be, Regretted. . . Phil. Times, Oct. 16. Considering the quality of his op ponent,, the defeat of Frank Hurd i much to be regretted, even by those who do not like his views. .The name of the victorious candidate is Romeis, and he follows the 'highly intellectual calling of a baggage smasher not of the reformed, but the real variety. His fitness for Congress is less than nothing. It has been' Frank Hurd's fate to be elected every other term since he first entered the Forty-fourth Con gress. In that body he leaped at once to the front. He was a strong debater, with a vigorons, pointed style, behind which was a mind well equipped for his work, whether in committee or on the floor. OCR STATE CONTEMPORARIES. Tyre York'voted against giving the ne groes an Insane Asylum in which their afflicted could be taken care of. Kinston 'Free Press. In material development, the State can Eoint to more accomplished than in any ke period of her existence. In the educa tion of her people and children, like results have beenn attained. Her credit restored, her name loved at home and honored abroad, her officers, her Representatives, her Senators, richly endowed for the parts assigned them, working for het prosperity and her glory, North Carolina . is to day what she never was before.; One looks back on the seven years, and stands amazed at what has been done; forward, and sees the light of a bright future. Danbury Rs Prter. ; f ... . ; . ; . j TWe wish to impress upon our readers the importance of electing Democratic candi dates to the Legislature, The Radical bosses have no hope of electing Dr. York and his associates on the State ticket, but they are making every effort and usin every artifice to obtain control of the Legis lature, and we cannot too earnestly urge all Democrats to be oh their guard to avert so terrible a calamity. The election of a Republican Legislature would indeed be a very serious calamity to our State, and we cannot understand why any right thinking man should aid in bringing it about.' There has never been but one Republican Legisla ture i m North Carolina, and the experience of that is not calculated to make us wish for another.-Jtt8&r0 Record, i Ayer's Hair Vigor- cleanses and invigo rates the scalp; cures dandruff and itehinV an elegant dressing. .: . . f THE LATEST NEWS. FB0H ALL PA&TS OF THE W0RLU! . FOREIGN. The Financial Outlook at Liverpool The English Turf-Portugal and Enelahd-UneaalneM In Paru Rela- five to the War In China More Ho-' 'mlir Cardinal; ;v -ji .tBrCahle i totheMornlncStar.j -v: London, Ocjtober 2l.-r-In reference to the Standard's atatement concerning- the financial outlook at i Liverpool it is said that the position of the produce people has been strengthened by the rise in sugars, so that no trouble is - anticipated. - It is ex plained also that the meeting . of creditors referred to was concerned With the private: estate of one of the partners in the Steam ship Company, and had nothing to 4o with the Company's business or condition.. The race for the Cambridgeshire stake was run at New Market Houghton meeting to-day. It was won by J. , Hammond's four-year old brown filly Florence; H- T. Barclay's four-year old brown colt Bendigo, second; Mainfess' three year old bay colt Pizarro, third. . Lisbon, Optober 21. -The Portuguese Government has sent a note to Earl Gran ville, Secretary of State for Foreign Af fairs, protesting against the annexation by England of the territory which the Boers have seized Irom the Portuguese. , v Paris, Oct. 21. Chinese troops continue "tot pour into Tonquint,and great uneasiness is felt in Paris on this account The Cabi net are divided as to what measures .should be adopted to provide f enforcements. Gem Campenon, Minister of; War, declines to mobilize a corps d'armee without the con sent of the Chambers. ; Rome, Oct. 21. The Pope will create eight new cardinals at the Secret Consisto ry. The persons who are to be honored are the Archbishops of Vienna, Seville and Palermo, and Monsignors Massaia, Mer soigori, Laurenzie, Masotti and Virga. There are still seven vacanciea remaining in the College of Cardinals. The P. pe has summoned a meeting of Cardinals to consider the troubles arising from party violence in Belgium. NEW YORK. The Carthaee Fire One Hundred and Sixty Building Burned. LBy Telegraph to the Morning 8tar.l Carthage, Oct. 21. One hundred and sixty buildings were burned by yesterday's fire, which was the largest that has ever occurred in northern New York. At 2. SO o'clock it was expected that the entire vil lage would be destroyed. Among the buildings burned were all of the school houses, the Presbyterian, Baptist and Epis copal churches, church of the Disciples' parsonage and the town hall. FINANCIAL. New York Stock market Weak and Lower. t fBy Telegraph to the Morning Star. New York, Wall Street, October 21, 11 A. M Stocks opened strong and after a fractional advance became weak and lower. A drive was made against New York Central, which fell off from 89 J- to 87. Other active shares' declined i to H per cent. At 11 o'clock the market was firmer. MARYLAND. Death of a Juror In a Murder Case. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Baltimore, Oct. 21. Harvey Johnson, a juror in the case of Irving Mills, on trial for the murder of Capt. Davis, at Princess Anne, Somerset county, died suddenly this morning. The prosecution had closed its case yesterday afternoon and the defense begun. A new jury will have to be chosen and the case postponed. "Gone Down Red Lane.' This is what the youngsters say when they wish to express the idea that eatables have been disposed of. Happy is he whose stomach can digest all that goes down ''red lane." Unhappy is the victim of indiges tion, who cannot comfortably dispose of his food. Aches, pains, 'grief and mental suffering are his portion. The cure for all this is Brown's Iron Bitters, the greatest iron medicine in the world. Mrs. Teid man, of St. Louis, says, "I used Brown's Iron Bitters for weak stomach and general debility, and am cured." Substantial Satisfaction. "tjTE FREQUENTLY HEAR MERCHANTS SAY "It la impossible to please everybody," and we have no donbt a great many have that trouble Ve do not claim to be Infallible, yet we take It as substantial evidence that we come very near pleasing everybody by onr steadily Increasing business. While others are complaining of dull business we are pushing right along with a good trade every day. and, appreciating the favors of the public, do not Intend to relax oar efforts to please, but continue to show the largest stock of MEN'S, BOYS AND CHILDREN'S CLOTHING in the State at popular prices. The price tells, and a customer well pleased will send others to buy. We will make no specialties this week, but eve ry garment In the store is stylish and good, and the price asked for it is much less than the same good 8 can be bought anywhere else in the city. It is a pleasure to show our goods, and we strive to make it a pleasure for our customers to trade with us. A. DAVID, ' . oct 18 tf Merchant Tailor and Clothier. New Goods. New Goods J HAVE MADE LARGE ADDITIONS TO MY stock this fall, and now Invite your .inspection of one of the most complete assortments of BLANK BOOKS, SCHOOL BOOKS, STATIONERY.PANCY GOOTS, KCTURES, FRAMES, MUSICAL IN STROMENTS, &o., ever brought to this city, and f J?F v l. w compare with any similar es tablishment in the State. . 1,000 STANDARD BOOKS, handsomely bound, at the very low price of 59 EST volume; former price f 1.50 and up ward. This Is bargain. To make room we offer 10 PIANOS AND 10 5i S 11 a,L5o.Sacrifioe,f These instruments are strictly FIRST-CLASS, new and perfectln every xespecu C. W. Y AXES,. 119 MARKET STREET, Wilmington, N. C. oot 19 tf BOSTON POST. THE OLD, INVINCIBLE AND THOROUGHLY 1 TRUE BLUB DEMOCRATIC NEWSPAPER. rJSln&fSmnI?ewBpaperof Massachusetts. SNw &Ub 0mpleteneW8 0f 7 paper nliW?0 DauyPost ls especially noted for Ita reliable Commercial and Finanolaf Features. . -STOSCBIPTION RATES. Vance?"0116 Year, $9; 81x,Months, $4.60; m ad- sixvTooar,1;Mper adva'; ! - CLUB BATES. as foflow? not address 06 famished IntoFwSF " L0 Per year -per copy. Sep 8 DAW tf , COMMERCIAL. VV I h MI N G TO N MARKET -:rl" r V ' '- STAR OFFICE. Oct 21, 4 P. M. - SPIRITS TURPENTINE The market was quoted firm at 271 cents per gallon, with no sales reported. ; v ROSIN The market was quoted dull at 92 J cents for Strained and 97J cents for Good. Strained.with no sales reported. .TAR The marketwas quoted firm at $1 40 per bbl. of 280 lbs., with sales at quotations. ''V O'5 - CRUDE TURPENTINE The market was steady, with sales reported at $1 00 for Hard and $1 60 for Virgin and Yellow Dip. ' COTTON The market was quoted steady. Sales reported of 200 bales on a basis of 9 5 16 cents per lb,' for .Middling. The following were the official quotations: Ordinary.... 7 ' 1-16 cents lb. Good Ordinary, 8 5-16 " Low Middling. 8 15-16 " " Middling 9 5-16 " " Good Middlinff....... 9i " " RECKIFTS. Cotton...! l,051bales Spirits Turpentine. ...... ; . . . 141 casks Rosin 278 bbla Tar.. 77 bbls Crude Turpentine. ..... w ..... . 141 bbls 6 PIESriC MARKETS IBy Telegraph to the Morning Star.l Financial. New York, October 21, Noon. Money excited and active at l2per cent. Sterling exchange 480f481 and 483f 484. State bonds quiet. Governments steady. ' Commercial. Cotton quiet, with sales to-day of 193 bales; middling uplands 9fc; Orleans 10ic. Futures steady, with sales to-day at the following quotations: October 9.70c; No vember 9.79c; December 9.82c; January 9.91c; February 10.06c; March 10.20c Flour dull and heavy. Wheat unsettled. Corn quiet and better. Pork dull at $16 75 17 00. Lard dull at $7 62. Spirits turpentine steady at 31c. Rosin steady at $1 251 30. Freights firrm Baltimore, October 21. Flour quiet and steady. Wheat southern dull and lower; western dull and steady; southern red 8085c; do amber 9195c; No. 1 Maryland 8888ic; No. 2 western winter red on spot 81i81fc; October 81i8Hc; November 82i82ic; December 83f84c. Corn southern quiet and steady; western dull and nominal; southern white and yel low 5458c. . FOREIGN MARKETS. IBy Cable to the Morning Star.! Liverpool, October 21, Noon. Cotton quiet and rather easier; middling uplands 5d; do Orleans 5 11-164; sales to-day of 10.000 bales, of which 1,000 were for specu lation and export; receipts 16,000 bales, of which 14,400 were American. Futures quiet and at a decline; uplands, 1 m c, Oc tober delivery 5 28-64d; October and No vember delivery T29-645 28-64d; No vember and December delivery 5 29-645 28-64d; December and January delivery 5 3l-645 30-64d; January and February de livery 5 33-64, 5 32-645 33-64d; February and March delivery 5 37-645 36-64d; March and April delivery 5 41-645 40-64d ; April and May delivery 5 45-04d. Breadstuffs dull, with very small business doing. Wheat red western winter 6s 6d 6s 8d. 2 P. M. Uplands, 1 mc, October deliv ery 5 27-64d, buyers' option ; October and November delivery 5 27-64d, buyers' option; November and December delivery 5 28-64d, sellers' option: December and January de livery 5 30-64d, sellers' option; January and February delivery 5 32-64d, buyers' option; February and March delivery 5 36-64d, value; March and April delivery 5 40-64d value; April and May delivery 5 54-64d, sellers' option; May and June de livery 5 48-64d, sellers' option. Futures dull. Sales of cotton to-day include 7,600 bales American. 4.00 P. M. Uplands, 1 m c, November and December delivery 5 27-64d; January and February delivery 5 32-64d. : A beautiful set of fancy cards sent free to persons who have taken Brown's Iron Bitters. Address Brown Chemical Co., Baltimore, Md. -f Creamery Buttered Flour ! gINCE OUR ADVERTISEMENT OF LAST week we have received many testimonials of the richness and excellence of this new article of diet, and in every instance by competent judges. It will go one-third further than any other Flour. Good housewives will find it Indispensable In making cake, muinns. Ac. Give it a trial. It comes in 3 lb, packages, and costs 85 cents. Hew BncMeat, Oatmeal, k, &c. THE FINEST SUGAR CURED MEATS. HAMS, HAMS, HAMS. Shoulders, Strips and Drief Bee Compare our goods and; prices with any house in Wilmington. Weoan't be injured - by comparison. Pi L. Bridgers & Co., 110 North Front St. oct 19 D&W tf 1 The Biggest FIRE INS. COMPANY IN. THE WORLD IS THE Old L. & L. & Q." I which pays all losses without discount. Over $33,000,000 paid in the TJ. S. JnOsW.Gordon & Smith . AGENTS, oct 19 tf BRASS FIRE DOGS ' and SHOVELS AND TONGS. SOMETHING NEW AND NICE. . r . ' GILES A MTJRCHISON, '..i ' oo 19 tf 88 & 40 Murchlson Block. Oysters. Oysters; FINE LOT OF FBESH OTSTERS JTJST BE ceiYed. , WINES, LIQUORS, LAGER, BEER, CI GARS, &o.. at STAR SALOON. No. 13 Market St A POSITIVE. riTT, For Every Form of Skin and m , w yxca to scrofula. About fivenths agol applied tani.Drt mo' BoBton, who helped me, bat uortunati xnear to leave, but continued taktag hlTv 1 had nearly three months, but Tthe dfaSSf!? fo" leave. 1 saw Mr. Caroenter's TiPt- e did not adelphla Jto'adltoS pSSti016 Ph mine. I tried the CdtictjrT K??;ly de.so'ribed bottles BE8oLyNTrIn?CKrBf3and r Dff tw" Soap in nroTtortinn -n Cuthtp. cured. lTr1 Watebpokd, N. J. F-BAENiED -.v.Munu. x It EARS Cured. Not a Sign of its Reappearan. Your Cdticuba has done a wonw.. ance me more than two yea ao NotlULcnurf fo' reappearance since. It cufed me of n v11 Eczema which had troubled le for m.1 twenty years. I ahall always speak wl 0f nthan cuea. I seU a great deal of it of Cut- HVHBHIIX,MAS8fRAKK S ""''J'-' BEST FOB ANVTHiMrs Having used your Coticura Eempt, , eighteen months for Tetter, and final w s r I am anxious to get it to seU on SffS1 . recommend it beyond any remedies lhl0IL 1 used for Tetter, Burns, Cuts etc in ? ? f ver the best medicine I have ever tried for anrthin'3 Mtbtlti. Miss. & 8. HOBTOS.-6 SCROFULOUS SORES. I had a dozen bad sores nrxvn mv ka tried aU remedies I coutt hew of La It ?nd triel your Cuticuba Remedies aid theT h1 cured me. JNo riwT,,aTC Hebbon, Thateb County, Penn. UAbKlLL- Every species of Itching, Scaly, PlmDlv t Ions, Inherited and Contagious Humon? Loss of Hair, cured by Ctjticuba Resolvt11 new Blood Purifier internally, and Cutkx Cuticuba Soap ' the great Skin Cures Sallv Sold everywhere. Price, Cuticcba 5? Soap, 25 cents; Resolvent, $1. ' 03 ceDts: Potter Drag and Chemical Co.,Boslon. BEAUTY mh 5 D&Wtf ot unapped and akin, Cuticura Soap Oily wed sat ; toe or frra Buifalo Lithia Water FOR MAI ARIAL POISONING. USE OF IT IN A CASE OF YELLOW FEVfil; Db. Wit T. Howabd, op Baltimore, Professor of DispasAs nf Worn ""iwu uuuren in the University of Maryland. Dr. Howard attests the common adaptation of IMS water in "a wide range of cases" with that , the far-famed White Sulphur Springs, in Green brier county, West Virginia, and adds the follow ing : "Indeed, In a certain class of cases it Is much 5i!?ior J1 tbet tetter. I allude to the abiding debility attendant upon the tardy convalescence J1"0 srave acute diseases; and more espeeUlly to the Cachexia and Sequels incident to Malariom Fevers, In all their grades and varieties, to cer tain forms of Atonic Dyspepsia, and all the Afftt lions Peculiar to Women that are remediable at all by mineral waters. In short, were I called vpon to state from what mineral waters I have seen the great est and most unmistakable amount of good accrue in uus utryest numoer oj cases in a general icau 1 would unhesitatingly say the Buffalo Smirw h Mecklenburg county, Ya." Db. O. F. Manson. op Richmond, Ya., Late Professor of General Patholopy and Physio logy in the Medical College of Virginia : "I have observed marked sanative effects from the Buffalo Water in Malarial Cacliexia, Anionic Dyspepsia, some of the Peculiar Affections of llo tnen, Ancemia, Hypochondriasis, Cardiac Palpita tions, Ac. It has been especially efficacious in Chronic Intermittent Fever, numerous cam oj this character, which had obstinately withstood the usual remedies, having been restored to perfect health in a brief space of time by a sojourn at the Springs:' Db. John W. Williamson, Jackson, Tenn. Extracts from Communication on the Therapeutic Action ofthe Buffalo Lithia Water in the "Virginia Medical Monthly" for February, 1877. "Their great value in Malarial Diseases and Sequelot has been most abundantly and satisfac torily tested; and I have no question that it would of the epidemic of Yellow Fever which so terribly afflicted the Mississippi Valley during the past summer. I prescribed it myself, and ft gavo prompt relief in a case of Suppression of trine, in 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 but a single case) I, of course, cannot undertake to say. There is no doubt, however, about the fact that itt administration was attended by the most benefi cial results." Springs now opens for guests. Water In cases of one dozen half gallon bottles $5 per case at the Springs. Springs pamphlet mailed to any address. For sale by W. H. Green, where the Springs pamphlet may be found. i THOS. F. GOODE, Proprietor, aplOtf ,nrm ' Buffalo Lithia Springs, Va THE BEST PREPARATION For bsstobinq gray hair to Its natural colon For PRivrarnia the hair from turning gray. For PBODUcraa a rapid and luxuriant growtn, For kbadicattno scurf and dandruff; For cuBiHe Itching & all diseases of the scalp, For PBBvNratfie hair from falling out; : For bvxbttbxns for which a hair tonic re quired It has no wjual. m'arus.re The highest nsmioHiAXfl of its merits are ffem Rev. CHAS. H. READ, DD., Pastor Grace Street Presbyterian Church.l Richmond, va For several years I have used no other tt Dressing than the Xanthine, which had wSv recommended to me by a friend who had tested Its value. It has, in my expenenw accom pllshed all that is claimed for It as a wholesome preserver and restorer of the natiird cotorg the hair, and a thorough Preventive o dMdran. For sale by jThThARDIN, DragfJ nov 29 ly om Ju aug sep ieo IMPORTANT! A NEW AHD , VALUABLE DEVICE A PATENT Water Closet Seat f FOR THE CURE OF HEMORRHOIDS, (Commonly called . TILES,M) Internal or External, ana PROLAPSUS ANI, for ChU- dren or Adults, NO MEDICINE OR SURGICAL OPERATION NECESSARY. I have invented a SIMPLE JwATKR CJgg SEAT, for the cure of the above troui k and painful malady, which I confidently P before the public as a SURE REMEF AND CUBE! TthM iwHm endorsed by the. leading resident Physicians in North Carolina. 5adclpM" ed m the Hospitals of New York. Phuaa and Raltimore. and we are satlsnea . iu lM. will be satisfactory, as it has never where. You eu write to anr of. the or prominent citizens m ""b"--!. f0nowinB nhooa Kuota nHil h furnished at tne 10"" POPLAR, - " S00) TacbSeat. FDlrectlbns for using will accompany eMJ - We trouble you with no certificates. the Seat to Jjeto own advertiser ntee. W TaVborEdombe Co., - lyi7PaiWtr - i Cologne Bottles, &c. rr.-o-ii. tttht HTlfnirVED A LABGE ga I WtifnlrntiPXllerSoal PUFFS AND COLOGNE BOTTLES ofered to endless yarieftr. AH oftte above very iow. a j . H. HAivui-- lggistandSeeasiuj.. cct!9tf NewMSiWllmington..C GEO. F. HERBERT, Proprietor. oct7tf
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 22, 1884, edition 1
2
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