Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Oct. 25, 1884, edition 1 / Page 2
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- - - i . r f.ISHGftS ANNOUNCEMENT. THS MORNING STAR, rtdeVdatty news aper la North Carolina, to pnbdT. ex Mnnd.iT at 17 00 Der year, 4 00 for six montna, ?i fto for m n3hsTlk for two ttB750. ;or one month, to mall subsoribert. DeUwredto Transcribers at the rate of 15 cents per week nr any period from one week to one year THE WEEKLY STAB Is published every Friday morning at $1 60 per year, $1 00 for tflx month 60 ,ents for three months. " " ADVERTIStNO RATES (DAILp. Wjaare ne day, 1 00 ; two days, $1 75 : throedays, 1850, oar days, 3 00: fire days, 3 50: one week, $400; wo weeks, $8 50 : three weeks $8 50 ; one month, flOOO; two montka, 117 00 ; thr moirths, 24 00 ; -lx months, $40 00; twelve months, $80 00. Ten lnes of solid Nonpareil type make one square. All announcements of Pairs, Feetlrals, Balls Hops, Pio-Nlos, Society Meetings, PoUtlcal Meet nss, &a, wlU be charged regular adyertlsing rates Notices under head of "City Items" cents per ln for first Insertion, and 15 cents per line for aoh subsequent insertion. - No advertisements Inserted tn Local Column at my price. -, . : :- "- Adyertlsements inserted once a week in Dally srfU be charfed $1 00 per square for each Insertion. Bvery other day, three fourths of dally rate. Twice a week, two thirds of dally rate. An extra charge will be made for double-column t triple-column advertisements. Notices of Marriage or Death. Tribute of Be- anant. T?uu-ilntHrYna nt Thcnka. M.. are OhHTea sor as ordinary advertisements, but onlj half rates when paid for strictly in advance. At this rate 10 cents will pay for a simple announcement of Marriage or Death. Advertisements to follow reading matter, or to acoupy any special place, will be charged extra According to the position desired - tdTArtiumAntii m h!flh no gDftclfied number ,jf insertions is marked will be continued trafor- Vid," at the option of the publisher, and charged np to the date of discontinuance. fcdTrarHoATnATitfl illflnrmthraed before the tlmC 'contracted for has expired, charged transient ' ates for time actually published. Advertisements kept utder the head of "New Advertisements" will be charged fifty per oent. extra. Amusement, Auotion and Omcial advertisements one dollar per square for each insertion. All announcements and recommendations of candidates for office, whether in the shape of jommunications or otherwise, will be charged at iQvertlsementsj Payments for transient adyertlsements must be . made in advance. Known parties, or stranger with proper reference, may pay monthly or quar terly, according to contract. Contract advertisers will not be allowed to ex ceed their space or advertise any thing foreign to their regular business without extra charge at transient rates. Bamlltances must be made by Check. Draft. Postal Money Order, Express, or in Registered Letter. Only suoh remittances will be at the ; risk of the publisher. Advertisers should always soecify the Issue or ssues they desire to advertise in. Where no- Is sue is named the advertisement wnl be inserted n the Daily. Where an advertiser contracts for the paper to be sent to him during, the tune his advertisement is in, the proprietor will only be responsible lor the mailing oi the paper to nis.aa The Morning Star. By WILLIAM H. BERNARD. WILMINGTON, N, C. Friday Evening, October 24, 1884 EVENING EDITION. BLAINE IN WAR PAINT. Jklajor Jeemes Blaine, who did not go into the war but hired a negro substitute and has never paid him for risking-his life in his stead, is now on the war path in Indiana. At Terre Haute he appeared in full war paint, feathers and all. His theme was the terrible South. He gave the old shirt a great many shakes and flaps and then enveloping his "tat " tooed" form in the sanguinary gar ment he danced a war dance and crooned a war song and told his braves that the country would be eternally swamped and "busted" if the awful Democrats got into power. It would be a bad time for the ras cals and rogues, but honest men could have no fears. If Jim Blaine thinks that in 1884, the bloody shirt : is the Weapon he only shows his stu ! pidity. That instrument has had its ! day. It shows how desperate is his chance when he suddenly pulls out iL . .13 it" a - . - t the old moth-eaten" garment and i tries to make .votes by displaying it. The bottom is about knocked out of the Blaine campaign.: We have no doubt that Blaine hates the South. He has never - failed to manifest his extreme dislike of our people when ever he has had opportunity. . For years in the i Con gress he was in the habit of making ferocious assaults upon the Southern people and he'did it often when in the House without reply. But when he was transferred to the Senate to prevent him from being tried for his official rascalities, he .found .a foe man in the late Senator Hill of Geor gia, who was more than his match in all the essential elements of oratory. Hill soon. toepBlaine,8 fscalpfand won it at his'wampum. .It was a pleasant thing to see the Maine bully flayed: alive by the ' incomparable surgery of the skilful Hill. Blaine's independence and magnetism" were of no avail whea the manly, Tand able Georgian met the "plumed knave" in the arena of debate. . - ' The New York World has an in dignant and pointed, rebuke of Blaine's foolish and. ill-timed "revo lutionary threat." It 1880 good we must reproduce the main portions. Blaine said this ,.of the South, in his attempt to make the people" he ad dressed, and others who would read ;his vain talk, believe that the South ern people were in a state of semi- revolt; that the South : was aland of traitors and conspirators who were ," eternally seeking to destroy the Go vernment and subvert the laws. , Blaine knows that either in Congress ; or elsewhere there are r no people in all this land Who "are so devoted to V liberty and so faithful to the Consti tution of the fathers a the villified - and;' abused Southern ' whites the , men who fought and their descend-; ants. - Blaine said this, among other ma lignant. slanders: - "The intention is, with an "absolutely so lidified electoral vote from the Bputh,added to the votes of she two States im New York and Indiana), T08EIZE THE GOYJSKNALBiNT Ux 'inn ur-v-. To tnis bravado and threat the World replies thus: "What fines he meant Does he deny the right of, these eighteen, States,-wilb, a . ma- onty o? electoral votes, w cw i0Tt T hi inshient and revolutionary declaration a foreshadowing of his inten tion to resist the wUl of the people if ex pressed by the majority of votes cast by those Btatesr , "Is a candidate who slanders and maligns the people 6f sixteen of the States of the Union, and utters the lies which disgrace irresponsible campaign organs in reparu w them, fit to be President of the United States? . ; ; r . : This gross assault of Blaine on the South proves that he abandons all hope of breaking the Democratic column. His revolutionary threat proves that he despairs of New York and Indiana, isut u wwum be far wiser for him to retire from the con test at once than to attempt to subvert the mill nf tbfl Twumta'.if Grover Cleveland should carry the election by a single elec- torai vote! . . ' , "The white-feathered, bogus knight who knelt to MuUigan and prayed to Fisher is not the man to .threaten the people of the United States with rebellion against the will of the majority. . . "New York does her own thinking. YORK. Dr. York is not fit. to be Governor of North Carolina. ' -This is the calm judgment of such long-tried Repub licans as pr: Eugene Gnssom, Hon. W. A. Smith, ex-Treasurer Jenkins, Judge Dick, Judge Bynum, ex-Gov. Holden, Samuel F. Patterson, and others. He is not fit to be Governor by reason of v his 'intense illiteracy. It would, be a reproach to the State to put at the head of affairs an igno rant, unlettered man, even though his character was the highest and his personal amiability and virtues equal to the foremost. But York is not" only ignorant, but he is afflicted with a very treacherous memory, and when cornered in his assertions he tries to slip out by "die remembering" this or that. But not only is York very ignorant and veryl forgetful, but he is ma licious. . He is now making war upon his old party friends with whom he pretended to affiliate for bo long time and of whose feasts he partook. He is engaged in the ugly, mean, de grading work of misrepresenting his old party and in indeavoring to bring back into power the old Radical i party that plundered the people, op pressed and misrepresented them, and even attempts by Civil Rights to degrade them to the level of the negro. I Young fussy Winston is out for free schools for negroes and whU but in the same rooms and with tne same teachers; He is for the two races being taught together. .York is with him, we may well believe. We have not heard York. He is said to be capable of making low demagogical appeals to the negroes and what he calls "the poor whites," and endeavors to arouse their preju dices and hatred in hostility to the Democrats generally. But Dr. i York is not fit to be Gov- ernor for other reasons we derive I, from his official record. He was against all railroad im provements. He voted against the completion of the great Western and North Carolina and he refused to vote for the "Cape Fear & Yadkin Valley Railroad, in which this and other sections are so much interested. i- . He voted against the Colored In sane Asylum at Gold sboro. He voted against the Western Asylum at Morganton. He voted against the establish ing, of the first Normal School, and he 1 voted against ' the establishing of additional Normal Schools. He has shown himself the pertina cious enemy of the leading measures in - the .last ten years that were in- tended to develop the resources of jthe State, to alleviate human suffer ing and calamity, and to advance the, educational status of the people. He has not a single element of statesmanship. He is a demagogue, he is ignorant, he is an enemy to genuine and enlightened reform. He is now a Republican tricked out in the nebulous, gossamer gar ment called "Liberal," and he is ut terly unworthy of the confidence and support of any white man in North Carolina. . It would be an evil and a misfortune beyond estimate or repair if such a mountebank was to-be elected by fraud the Governor of the State of North Carolina. It is in the. power of the white men of the State to prevent such a calam ity and disgrace. ' LOOK OCT FOR FRAUDS. There are indicationsthat the Rad icals will attempt to carry North Carolina by the same infamous me thods they resorted to so successfully ? -r r ft i .r- . . . in ioa. in,tnai noUh A vo. t ...... i. j n u thousand pegroes were shipped from Washington and through . the ca- nai irom ; iNortolk nn1 a ... r -r ... w -- -wr, r ..... . uiavilUUIiCU throughout Eastern Carolina. 'Mr - vv nw.e a cultivated and wort.hv a - 1 em. correspondent of the New York Tribune, who ; snent two months - in eastern ;arouna investigating f raudstold us thai he was fully bat- isfied that two thousand" negroes had illegally voted in that section. On the Northern border negroes were run . into tms state : irom ,jvuyuic j and nerhaos other ioints. And;ao it I was on the Southern border. vDoubt less many negroes from South. Caro lina were voted in this city and else where along the border. That the Radical , managers will capture North Carolina by ; iraua and "soap" is not to be doubted, if they can. That the attempt will be made there is no doubt, we may be lieve. The Democrats are not enough stirred. They, should be on the alert for the enemy is both very ac tive and very unscrupulous ' We have received the following from a Washington correspondent: "Sam Johnson, a colored Democratic officeholder here, and a former servant' of Gov. i Vance, says that North Caroliha ne groes who have lived here at least twelve years without once returning to their na tive State have been sent to North Caro lina to vote at the coming election. All the employe's under the Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate, Col. Wm. P. Cannady, have f;one to their homes to work for the Kepub ican nominee. I hear from North Caro lina, that a large number of strange negroes have appeared in isolated county districts. Recently, a number of Republican mana gers found a sub-committee with head quarters in this city with the" avowed pur pose of manipulating North Carolina, I learn, from a responsible source that this self-constituted committee is sending every negro they can find to North Carolina to vote at the coming election. In the face of these facts the ballot boxes ought to be watched with the utmost vigilance, and every doubtful vote challenged." The bulldozing of clerks in Wash ington continues. Another threat has been made by Blame's organ at headquarters. The clerks must pay to elect Blaise, whatever their poll tics or preferences, and if not then they must be turned out. ftnen is the order. The organ says: "The moral of all this is that the clerks and employes who are in and want to stay in must do their share toward insuring the success of the1 party which put them in and which alone will keep them inH They are not doing their share by simply talking and voting for Blaine and Logan.' Thousands of patriotic men- all over this land are do ing and will do these things, -and they neither told nor expect to hold office. He is a poor party man who, deriving his sup port from an office conferred upon him by his party, refuses to contribute money for its support. Mr. HcS weeny, the Irish-Ameri can citizen who was imprisoned in a British jail for fourteen months, and Blaine, as Secretary of State, would not try to have liberated, in his f flpeecb - r New-York few Bights. ago, concluded as follows: ' "I have to night laid before you the plain story or my wrongs and I leave it to' the good sense of my fellow countrymen to say whether, after hearing the story of how an American citizen of Irish birth has been treated by Mr. James O. Blaine when he had the power to protect me I leave it to Al M. . . lueir common sense to aay waeuier iney will trust him in the future with the power to again assist the British Government in administering the outrageous and tyrranW cal provisions of the coercion act on their unfortunate countrymen in the beautiful island which they ail claim as their mother land." Raleigh, N. C., Oct. 22, 1884; To the Democratic Press of North Carolina; At the close of the campaign I have to invoke your aid, which has been so cordially and efficiently eiven for tne success of the party, to secure. a full vote at the coming election. I While our success seems assured, we will make it overwhelming and triumphant if ,wo can get put a full vote. - And 1 ask that, you urge, through your . columns, th,e people everywhere io'fay ill other business aside on election i 4'av and g6 to the polls and see that their neighbors :cro to' ihe pplls'and fve one day to their State' and their country. ' - " XAt this Critical time, when the election of a Democratic President seems almost certain, let every Dem- ocras m ine estate arjuwnii duty. J R. H. Battlk, Chairman! A TERRIBLT5 WARNING. Raleigh Chronicle. There is one fact that is univer sally admitted in North Carolina viz: that the negroes -of" this State when left to their own impulses are not inclined to violence. Another, fact is equally self-evident viz: that as the tools or victims of party lead ers they are inflammable. The' dan ger pf the negro consists; of ' course, in his ignorance,' but chieflV m hi susceptibility to being the Victim of improper mnuencesr '. . TUTl 4.1 - tf ucu, duerexore,' sucn an 'Occur rence as the attempted stoning of mr. Dcaies ana Mr. staples at Wil wiugwu 4 iasi, .mgui -:, aisgraces ; our campaign, it carries with it a terri ble warning. And-. it . is .a warning that is easily understood. . 'The ne groes even of the black counties if lett to themselves are net given' to making organized assaults k on any body espiecially on a meeting of the best citizens in our largest citv. JBut this attempt to stone Mr. Scales is ,a terrible demonstration of the revolu wunary enecxs oi ttepuDiican in fluence on the negrq. - :' In the Tery.,?! ereihis, hap pened the whites are educating the negroes and. upbuilding them with a charityas broad; and Render, as is re- uoraea m the whole fJongi jtoryof Anglo-Saxon TjhilanthroDv.i The ne. gro public ahools are under the same energetic,; well-trained and progres sive . management as the ' white schools; and while the 5 whites' pay nearly all the taxes, the blacks re ceive their per-capita, not the pro rata share.. - CURRENT COMMENT , "L6gans candid brutality h$ij cleared the air,' said the New York Tribune on May 29, 1880, the week before the Repubhcan National Cpik vention at Chioago. . "The.uoscrupu lous fraud, the unparalleled' violence which have beenemployed to: brings Grant in." it further declared, "nave roused the people to a resolve that he shall stay out." On the day be fore the Tribune bad fallen into tne following train of 'reflections anent the candid and brutal Logan : "It is not, unnatural that Senator Xogan should maintain the Coh federate idea, for he was a States rights Dem ocrat up to the outbreak1 of the re bellion. I He appears v not to i have recovered from the poison .received in early life." Can this Logan, who ' r. tt: t : J IS now running lur v iuo rreBiucbu wu the Blaine ticket, the loyal and fear less Logan of to-day, whom the Tri bune cannot sufficiently admire, be the same Logan in and upon whom it thus burst in 1880 with its worm wood pen? But perhaps the Tribune was ..edited by a different person in 1880 N. Y. Times. Rep. : - - When Hoar wrote his letter to his "dear young friend," defend ing Mr. Blaine, he made desperate efforts to discredit the testimony of Mr. Mulligan by trying to show how improbable it was that a haughty, aggressive statesman, such as Mi. Blaine had shown himself to be in public places, should use the manner and speech that Mulligan charged. But the recently published letters to Fisher are in -such an abject and pleading strain that it is not' difficult to believe the author of them capa ble of playing the spaniel whenever he found himself cornered. In Ja6t, it is just what one might reasonably expect from him. How can a liar and a trickster have any true manli ness about him, any way? Boston ostt JJem. WHY MARK TWAIN IS A Mtrowuatr. Speech on Taking Chair at Schurz's Hart ford Meeting. This isT an informal meeting. I ureside and believe I am the only legally appointed officer, rLauffhter.l I knew it is customary to read a long list of vice presidents, but I forgot all about it; so all gen tlemen present, regardless of their political complexion: will De Kina enough to act as vice presidents, TGreat laughter.! I believe no Dem ocratic DaDera have ever convinced me of; anything, and the esti mate II bold of Mr. .Blame in the position in which I stand to day I attribute to the Republican press. I had read those papers in the past and what they said appeared to me to be convincing. The editors seemed to consider him unfit to be President of the United States, and, as I had confidence in the integrity of my friends, the editors of the local Re publican press, these things reduced my estimate of Mr. Blaine to what it now is. i I be personality oi a man or his : character gives immense weight to what he 5 gays or does. -Take Gen. Ilawley's - paper, for in stance, and what -it has said of Blaine in the past. I consider I am a mugwump constructed by Gen. Hawley. - Ticket. 5 Raleigh News-Observer. We learn from the Executive Com mittee that the Presidential and State tickets have been sent to every county. Applications should be made for them from every precinct to the chairmen or tne county com mittees should telegraph at once to Chairman iiattle. ' " - - Congressional tickets are furnished by the candidates for -Congress in their respective districts who should be notified if they have not been dis- triouiea. i uemocrauc exenanges please copy. . Or. GrlsMm'a Opililoa'isf Yrk This is an unusual crisis; and wuue l am not amouious ; to. any claim to consistency, save in a love for North Carolina.nd vheinterests of all her people. lam especiaUu de veted to Hie unfortunate afflicted. t among wnom inq oest years or my i - .i - t . j me nave neen passea, ana nence i cannot support York. Dr. Grlaaom'a Opinion of York. , lam satisfied from nv long fa miliarity with his public course, that neither the charitable nor educational interests of 'the State would be safe un- x : i ...... . y t r . acr ucn policy as nas always, char acterized his public career. PERSONAL. ; in regard to Theo, It is quite logical that even Theological students snouia like her.JV. Y. . World. , The Prince of Wales has a su perstition that his mother will outlive him. and that he shall never be King of Eng- tanu. .- ; - - uenerai wrant is to receive $50,000 for his war articles in the Centurtf. .e woum ramer wme than be resident, Phil Record., i j 1 , . . .:..;f f " Mr. Hawkins, colored, . of -Bon ham, Texas, used a brick to dissect an old Dombsbell, a relic of the war. His end was pieces. jtAm. Record. POLITICAL POINTS. r riemy oi umtea estates . mar shals and good revolvers twill do the work every time. Pension Commissioner Dud ley, liep. 5- '... i ; Protection as , now practiced means high taxes and reduced Cage's. ' Revenues-reform means ; lower taxes, and 4n creased; business, which will give better wages. Phil, RecordInd. 1 V ' GeorgeTPrisbie Hoar do not seem to be toU towing up xneir nrst defenses of Mr. Blame After a certain amount of crow has been swallowed it ceases to taste good. Boston Post. Dem. - v-, ;. -' -' - , - J"E0M ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD " I -T i WASHINGTON. Tbe Ban 111 nz Firm of Cooke & Co. nxakean Aaalcnment Decision in Xelepnonlo Interference Patent Case. ? Pi Telegraph to theKornlng Star. 1 : 3r-SHfflGT0ffMCJL24,-Tr Cooke & Co. to-day made an asignment to Horace' T. Cummings. iof the W ijhingtOfl law finnj.of- Cumminga &, Baker, Mr. UOOKe gays ims acuuu la lanea iu urutsr iu nrotect the interests of alPconcerned, until the firm can arrange for resumption or pay ment. ;;-:4 - i " ' - The Examiners in Chief of the Patent. Office, . in the celebrated telephonic inter ference patent baser have sustained the de cision of the Examiner of Interferences in favor of Bell, as to the issues A, B, C, D, E. Fj I. J and li. ahd have reversea tne ae- cision so far as It applied to issue G, (which involves tbe principal - seaturexi tne - tele phone), which was awarded toilcDonaugh, and which the Examiners in Chief have decided in Bell's favor. v ;-. FOREIGN ' Fond for Relief or Family of Late A. M. Solllvan Tne Irian Nationalists Fxaltant Over Secretary Tr evil yan's Reslffnatlom Etc. - - : " .. . . Bv Cble to the Morohur Star l , . . Dublin October 24. It is proposed to raise by subscription a fund of 10,000 for for the benefit of the family of the late Alex ander Sullivan, ' Tbe weekly Nationalist ' papers are ex ultant over the resignation of Mr. George Otto Trevilyan from Ihe Chief Secretary ship of Ireland. ?. .. . ,. . , Madrid, October 2Lt-Jvo deaths in ibis rtitv vpsterdflv. , which were sunnosed to .have been caused by cholera, prove to nave been due to inflammation of the bowels. JACK FROST. V Tne Miuiphle Section Visit eH No Great Damaseto Crops Anticipated. By Telegraph to tne Morning Star. Memphis. Oct- 24. There was a heavy killing frost last night, tbe first of the Beason, throughout this section. The dam age to the crops, if any, will be very slight. Cotton in bottom lands only may : possibly be affected by the cutting snort of the top growth, but the lateness of the season de bars serious injury to the - majority of planters. FINANCIAL. New York Stock 'MarketStrong and Higher. IBy Telegraph to the Morning Star. New Yokk. Wall Street, October 24, 11 A. M. The stock market has been strong throughout the morning. Prices rose i to 1 per cent. Lake Shore'Sold up to 65$, New York Central to 86i, Northwest to 85f. 8t. Paul to 73f rand Lackawanna to 103. Pleasant Words from Pleasant Grove. The place is in Pennsylvania. Mr. Timothy Leek, who lives there was for twot yeaT8 grievously vexed with dyspepsia. He writes to 6ay that since he has taken Brown's Iron Bitters his troubles are over. He is greatly relieved, and recommends this tonic to all who are troubled with dyspepsia or indigestion." It also cures liver and kidney complaints. : f -THE BESTT0II1C. ? This medicine, combining Iron with pure vegetable tonics, quickly and completely Cores Dyspepsia, ladlrestlon, Weakaess, Iaipare Blood SIalaiia,ChUU and Fevers ana Nearalcia. -It la an unfailing remedy for Diseases of the Kidneys aad Over. ' -;" It is invaluable for Diseases; pecnljaf ,tflk Women, and all who lead Bedentary lives. Itdoesnotlnanthteeai,esii8ebedehe,or . produce constipation other Iron medicines do. ' It enriches and purifies the bloed, stimulates ; the appetite, aids tbe asrimilatton of food, re - lleves Heartburn and "Belching, and strength ensthemiuaeles sad-sierves. . For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude, Lack of Energy, Ac., it has no equal. . r . Mz The genuine has above trade mark and M crossed red lines "cm wrappec Take no other. sUh mrr aaw tmaicu. ea, bihiwmu, ma, ' jylWDbWly : . tooorfrni nrm 'fjyfir Wliite Heal Yeast. i Havfai beeii thorbughiy tested by a great many . i j W'-.kI "v ''.1' .. i . i or the ladies of WHmmrtou: t -fM ba knitf&tinn in commeading it to theoablkv It U elegant for breadrplls or btocait. J.":. v " i "... u J s made by Miss Hodges, of this city, of pure ; Vegetable matter, and she refers to . - Mrs A jL Wlllard, r 't ; , - t Mrsl Gen. 'hitlng, Mrs. W.l Gore, '' Mrs. Samuel Noftinrop, " ' . i ... ... for the correctness of her statements.1; ' for sale ny JljWv L. JBpATWRIGHT. a ' ; 1 - 13 14 No. Front St., u"' ' K-- ' Sole Agent. mhSOt1 i A Perfect Plan. " ' - ...v4sT9iK' ?UJjt- -s8"aai..i Jffla EW FiyTKABDBTUTON POLr ICY of the Mutual Life Ins.po. f New York is: "l8t.lncdntetlbli-J n-M ..;.. i; . ?j 2nd. No restrictions upon travel. " 8rd.' Has all the advantages of "Tontine" insur ance, without the speculating and gambling fea tures. - 4th. Claims are paid immediately upon presen tation of proofs of death. . 6th.. Payments of premiums may be' made in monthly instalments. - , , 7 Porany further mformatioiiaadreeh-' J i t M. S. WILLABD, Agent, Telephone NO. 8, -86"' TaiEnt i A fOHT CLASg. WEBKLY PAPER, published Afe the GRAIN REGION of the SteftL?'" Subserlntion ti.Mtn Yearly Advertising SiSrlii0 w 01X0 Column, yiation from above rates. Address, - s ENTERPBIffE. ynt . ,-. i:- : Stonewau. 8fa 2921??; ?;Four8qnare9.$s;2 Quarter Column. 1100. Node- COMMERCIAL. VVf I L AI I N G IT O f M A R K K T '.: 3 STAR OFFICE,' Oct. 24. 4 P. 11. . 6PIBIT8 TURPENTINE The market was quoted quiet at ,27 cents per gallon, with sales reported of 75 casks at that price.";-:;: ' ci ' - ' - . : ROSINj-Tha market was quoted dull at J)2J cents for Strained and 97$ cents for Good Strained, with no sales reported. , " TAR--The mirket was quoted firm at $i 40 per bbl. of 280 lbs., with sales at quotations. : : . . -: 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 quiet.' Small sales reported on a basis of 9 51ft cents per lb. for " Middling. The following were the official quotations: Ordinary. . . . . . .i. ... 7 1-16 cents f lb. Grocd Ordinary. . . . .. 8 5-16 " " Low Middling 8 15-16 " Middline....... 9 5-16 " " Good Middling....... 9, " '.' RECEIPTS. Cotton. . . . 1,354 baits Spirits Turpentine. . ; ; . Rosin... Tar....:... Crude Turpentine. . i . . . 158 casss 372 hi la . 153 J i285 bbls bbls D ITlESriC RIABKETS By-Telegraph to the Morning Star.l Financial. Naw York, October 24, Noon. Money stronger at 12 per cent Sterling exchange 480480l and 483484. State bonds dull. Governments strong. , Commercial Cotton quiet, with sales to-day of 111 bales; middling uplands. 9 13-1 6c; Orleans 10ic. Futures steady, with sales to-day at the following quotations: October 9.73c; November 9.76c; December 9.76c; January 9.85c; February 9.98c; March 10.10c. Flour dull and heavy. Wheat lower and dull. Corn dull and lower. Pork firm at $16 7517 00. Lard weak at $7 67. Spirits turpentine dull at 31c. Rosin dull at f 1 251 80. Freights steady. Baltimobe, - October 24. Flour quiet: Howard street and western super $2 25 2 75; extra $2 903 50; family $3 75 4 75: city mills super $2 252 75; extra $3 003 75; Rio brands $4 624 75. Wheat southern quiet and firmer; west ern fairly active; southern red 8486c; do amber 9395c; No. 1 Maryland 9091c; No. 2 western winter red on spot8182c; November 82i82c; December 63f64c; January 8585c.i Corn southern ir regular; western dull and nominal; south ern white 5360c; yellow 5256c. FOREIGN MARKET'S. I Br Cable to the Morning Star.! Livkrpool, October 24, Noon. Cotton steady, with a fair demand; middling up lands 5 7-1 6d; do Orleans ofd; sales to-day of 10.000 bales, of which 1,000 were for speculation and export; receipts 14,000 bales, of which 4,400 -were American. Futures firmer after temporary depression; uplands, 1 m c October delivery 5 23-64 5 25-64d; October and November deliv ery 5 23-45 25-64d; November and De cember delivery 5 23-645 25-64d; Decem ber and January delivery 5 25-645 27-64d; January ahd February delivery 5 29-645 30-64d; February and March delivery 5 S2-64(a5 S4-64d : March and April delivery 5 86-64537-64d; May and June delivery 5 43-64O5 44-640. Breadstuffs dull and prices generally in buyers' favor. Wheat red western winter 6s 3d6s 7d. Lard prime western 38s 9d. 2 P. M. Uplands, 1 m c, October deliv ery 525-64d, buyers' option; October and November delivery 5 25-64d, buyers'. Op tion; November and December delivery 5 25-64d, buyers' option; December- and January delivery 5 27-64d, buyers' option; January and February delivery 5 30-64d, buyers' option: February and March de livery 5 34-64d, buyers' option; March and' April delivery 5 3S-64d, value; April and May 1 delivery 5 42-64d, value; May and June delivery 5 46-64d, value. Futures firm. Sales of cotton to-day include 8,100 bales American. 4.00 P. M. Uplands, 1 m c, October de livery 5 26-64d; October and November de livery 5 26-64d; November and December delivery 5 26-645 25-64d; December and January delivery 5 29 645 27-64d January and February delivery 5 32-645 31-64d ; February and Marcli delivery- 5 85-64d; March and April delivery 5 89-64d. 5.00 P. M. Uplands,! m c,' October de- livery 5 24r-64d, buyers' option ; October and November delivery 5 24-64d, buyers' option; November and December delivery 5 24-64d, buyers' option; December and January delivery 5 27-64d, value; January and ; February delivery 5 80-64d, buyers' optibn; February and March delivery 5 84-64d, sellers' option ; March and April de livery 5 88-64d, sellers' option; April and May delivery 5 42-64d, sellers' option ; May and June delivery 5 46 64d, sellers' option . Futures closed steady. NewIortN axal Stores Marlcet. N. Y. Journal of Commerce, Oct. 23. Spirits Turpentine The market is slow, with sales of small lots, but holders are indifferent, except at about steady prices; merchantable order quoted at 31c. Rosins The low grades are slow, but the better grades meet with a fair sale at strong prices. Quotations: Strained at $1 251 27; good strained at fl 271 80; No. - 2 E at $1 85; No. 2 F at. $1 401 42; No. 1Q at $1 50; No. 1 H at $1 70; good No. I I at fl 902 00; low pale K at $2 40 2 50; Pale M at $3 003 10; extra pale N at $3 503 60; window glass W at $4 25. Tar is quoted at $2 002 25 for Wilmington; pitch is quoted at $1 70 1 90. Savannah Rleo Marfceu Savannah News, Oct 23. s The market was steady. Prices declined slightly. The sales for the day were 386 bbls. : 'Below are the official . quotations of the Board of Trade: Fair 5c; Good 5fc; Prime 5fc. Rough rice Country lota 90c$l O0 ;tide water l 101 25. 10 000 bbstbi:?ldinqbeicb:' 000 BQSh WhIte &nd Mized CORN, r'QQ Bales choioe TIMOTHY HAY, x 1 gQQ Bush. OATS. "Best Bolted Meal In the city" ground dally." .Wm -.PRESTON GUMMING St CO., . ool4tf Millers and Grain and Peanut Dealers B, P. McDOUGALL. . . : . H. M. BOWDEN HcDougall & Bpwdeu, JANUFACTTJBEBS OP AND WHOLESALE and retail dealers in Carriages, Buggies and all kinds, of Saddlery-and Trunks. Opposite Giles A MnrchlBon's hardware store. oo 1 9 tf lyCoJognepdttles&c. T HAVE JUST RECEIVED A LAEGE AND beautiful assortment! of- POWDEK BOXES, PUFFS AND COLOGNE BOTTLES. Toilet Soaps 1 ui vuuieBB variety, ah pi ine noovo are onerea yery iowT A call is solicited, lie Drnffglst and Seedsman.' - ;Cptlftf New Market. Wilmington, N. a A POSITIVE CUR ! For Every Form of Skin and Blood .waV, uuui tnuies io Bcroiula .? na"e had tt" Psoriasis for niie mrr,tk Boston, who helped me, but unfortunate tE to leave, but continued taking his medif iT11 V.!1 BW Carpenter's letter ln th adelphiaeowtf, and his case perfectly dearth "i" rrX. vu.iuuoA US n ... ifoiues rtEsoLVENT, ana uuticura. and (VtV, " Soap in rjronnrt.inTi. ftnri nail lT?crnA cured. L.TP'etely . Watebfqbd, N. J. ECZEMA TWENTY YEARS Cured. Not a Sign of it. Reappearance Your Cuticuba has done a wonderful ci,r. , ' me more than two years ago Not a sign of u reappearance since. It cured me of a vprv i. , nnh srf ma . "an l great Haykrhill, Mass. BWAN., BEST FOR ANYTHING. " Having used your CtmcuBA Bemfw- eighteen months for Tetter, and finally cuiert ? I am anxious to get It to sell on commffi T f recommend it beyond any remedies I hav 1 nsed for Tetter, Burns, Cuts, etc. in fa, t the best medicine I have ever-tried for anythin1 MTiffiL..Vn. R.8.HORTOI..e- SCROFULOUS SORES. I had a dozen bad sores upon my "bodv onJ tried all remedies I could hear of, and at'h? tried yourr Cuticcba Eemedees and they haw Hzbboh, Thateb County, Pekn. ' u Every species of Itching, Scaly, Pimply, Scrofn " lous. Inherited and Contagious Humors S Loss of Hair, cured by Cuticura Ei"oTmT? new Blood Purifier internally, and Crrir i-n , 11 Cuticcba Soap, the great Skin Cures extend Sold everywhere. Price, CrTiccKA, :,icl Soap, 25 cents; Bbsolveht, $1. ,ls- Potter Drug and Cbemical t'o.,Bo0n. BEAUTY : mh5D&Wtf l2I Chapped and 0iiT tskln. Cuticura Soap. , weu eat toe or frui Buffalo Lithia Water FOR MAI ARIAL POISONING. USB OF IT IN A CASE OF YELLOSV FEVE15 Da. Wm. T. Howard, of Baltimohe. Professor of Diseases of Women and Children in the University of Maryland. Dr. Howard attests the common adaptation oi this water in "a wide range of cases" with that of 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 superior to the latter. I allude to the abidin debility attendant upon the tardy convalescence from grave acute diseases; and more especi liv to the Cachexia and Sequeisl ncident to ilaiarm Fevers, ln all their grades and varieties, to cer tain forms of Atonic Dyspepsia, and all the A fic tions Peculiar to Women that are remediable at tf by mineral waters. In swrt, were I called umn tt state from what mineral waters I have seen the great est and most unmistakable amoun t of good acme k the largest number of cases in a general my would unhesitatingly say the Buffalo Spring i Mecklenburg county, Fa." Db. O. P. Mahson. op Richmond, Va., Late Professor of General Pathology and PhjsV logy in the Medical College of Virginia : "I have observed marked sanative effects fron the Buffalo Water in Malarial Cachexia, Antoi-k Dyspepsia, some of the Peculiar Affections of Ho men. Anaemia, Hypochondriasis, Cardiac Palpita tions, Ac. It has been especially efficacious in Chronic Intermittent Fever, numerous cases oj th character, which had obstinately withstood the'mmi remedies, having been restored to perfect health in a brief spaceoftime by a sojourn at the Spring" Db. Jnirw W. Wtt.t.tatwsiW. Jtrrrama Trvu Extracts from Communication on the Therapeutic Action ofthe Buffalo Lithia Water in the " Virginia Medical ioniAy" for. February, 1877. "Their great value In Malarial DUeaxes and Segueks has been most abundantly and satisfac torily tested; and I have no question that it would have been a valuable auxiliary in the treatment of the epidemic of Tellouf Fever which so terribly afflicted the Mississippi Valley during thwiast summer., I prescribed it myself, and it gave prompt relief in a case of Suppression of Urine, in Yellow Fever, and decidedly mitigated other dis tressing and dangerous symptoms. The ratient 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, abovt the fact that its administration was attended by the most kn'ji 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 Spring pamphlet may be found. THOS. P. GO0DE, Proprietor, apIOtf nrm Buffalo Lithia Springs, Va THE BEST PREPARATION Por restoring gray hair to its natural color; For psxvxnting the hair from turning gray; For producing a rapid and luxuriant growtn, For teApiCATiNe scurf and dandruff; For euBDie itching & all diseases of the scalp. For PBEVMrarae the hair from faUmgout,anQ Por BVKBYTHIN9 for which a hair tonic? is re quired It has no bcjual. oritk-e The highest tbstikosials of its merits an Srom Rev. CHAS. H. BEAD, D D., PastorGrace Street Presbyterian Church.l Richmond, v a. For several years I hare used no other but Dressing than the Xanthine, which had wen warm recommended to me by a friend who had tested Its valuer It has, in my expe?'S lished all that is claimed for it as a wholesome preserver and restorer of the natural eokg the hair, and a thorough P"6! Por sale by jIThABDIN, Drwaj UUT 9 a J j ""n r IMPORTANT! A HEW AND VALUABLE DEVICE A PATENT Water Closet Seat ' FOB THE CUKE OF HEMORRHOIDS, (Commonly called "PILES,") Internal or External, and ' PROIAPSTJSANI, for Chil dren or Adults. NO MEDICINE OR SURGICAL OPRATI1' NECESSARY. I have invented a SIMPLE WATER CLjg SEAT, for the cure of the above twnWe and painful malady, which I confidently v . before the publio as a SURE RELIEF AND CUBE ! It has been endorsed by the leadinetMt Physicians in North Carolina. Is now being din the Hospitals , of New York, and Baltimore, and we are satisfied tne will be satisfactory, as it nas never faiiea where. You can write to any of the Phys or prominent citizens in Edgecombe Co., These Seats will be furnished at the fol.o" LNTJTr Polished, $6.00 1 Discount to CHERRY, - . 5.00- cicians andto POPLAR, V - - S 00 ) Trade. gt , Directions for using will accompany eacn JWe trouble you with no certificates, vve the Seat to be its own advertiser. Addrew LEWIS CHAMBERLAIN Patentee, . Tarboro, Edgecombe Co., v 1y 17 D&Wtf Warning ! Warning THAT COLD WAVE THE OTBTO DAY WAg warning to prepare for the winter s d p. Many heeded, and out went some of our- e TIFuL HEATING STOVES We have i moro. and suit yourselves. ; -yhat Cook Stove yoi d me my wife is pleased to death with, so I(j man to us. Put that old stoye in the yaru buy a good one from pAB?ER (&TAYL0B- PURE WHTTS OIL. ct 13 1 jLczema wmco nsui r.r twenty years. I shall always speak well of r, an ctjba. I sell a great deal of it. of Cl T'- ; t ;
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 25, 1884, edition 1
2
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