Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Oct. 31, 1884, edition 1 / Page 2
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PI tU.ISHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT. THE MORNING STAR, the oldest daily new; apor in North Carolina, Is published daily, excepl tfondav, at $7 00 per year, $4 00 for six months, ! 2 00 for three months, $1.50 for two months; 7SO. ' rr one month, to mall subscribers. Delivered, to . i ity subscribers at the rate of 15 cents per wee or any period from one week to one year. , THE WEEKLY STAR is published every Friday morning at $1 50 per year, $1 00 for six months M wnta for three months. - ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY). One square ne day, $1 00 ; two days, $1 75 ; throe days, tS ! 50 ; our days, $3 00 : five days, $3 50 ; one week, $400, two weeks, $6 50 : three weeks $8 50 ; one month, 310 00: two months, $17 00 ; three months, $24 00 , lx months, $40 00 ; twelve months, $60 00. Tea ines of solid Nonpareil type make one square. All announcements of Fairs, Festivals. Balls Bops, Plc-Nlos, Society Meettags, Political Meet nga, Jtc, Wiu do cnargea regular uvwi". 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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. I By TOTLLIASI IX. BERNARD. WILMINGTON; N. C. Thuesday Eyektng, Oct. 30, 1884. EVENING EDITION. j TWO POINTS, i Dr. York was a strong friend when in the Legislature of the present sys tem of County Government. He is now a Radical and is urging on every stmp its abolition and a return to the Canby-Bayonet system that wrought so much i ruin and caused so much robbery, j ! j . Dr. York is in favor of placing twenty-seven counties in North Caro lina, New Hanover among them, un der the control of negroes. He fa vors making negroes the; financial bosses and managers of those coun- ties. Dr. York now pretends to be the true friend of the common schools. But he is not sincere. Actions speak louder than ;word3. A hbaiely max im that is loaded with truth. His Legislative record gives! the he di rect to all of his professions. In the session of 1871 -'72 the following oc- I - I i i I i carred. (See House Journal, page i si.) ; . s ; .' : r "The bill to raise revenue being under , consideration, Mr. Loftin moved to insert ' a special tax of four cents on the hundred dollars valuation of property for the sup port of public schools.' The ayes and noes were ofdered. 1 Dr.' York voted NOl " ! . ! - - : i He also voted against establishing Normal Schools. . These schools are of, much importance. Without them our common school system must re main inefficient and. because of the inferiority of teachers. ; They are training schools fox teachers. But York said no. THE TWO COUNT GOVERNMENT SYSTEMS CONTRASTED. The great, primal question with all of the counties in which' the negroes are strong is County Government. The Stab has again and again pre sented the importance of this subject to our people. In the" last two or three elections this discussion has been forced upon us. and in this cam- paign we have several times consid ered it. We must once more call the attention of our readers to its impor tance. . ' : : . v -;. j f - j If the negro counties j do not put forth their best efforts j to save the Legislature and the State; from van dal hands, they will have no persons tftMoma Vvnf 4V.nn,.l ! if '.i V I " .y are again made to mnrl in tha hhA m;u, O O wuw ucAU XL1.1B of Radicalism and taxes sh'all run iip again from 25 cents on the $100 as it was in 1883, to ; 80 cents, or more than three times as much, as it was in 1869. There is no telling what the Radicals would do if they were to have control again in North Carolina. The Democrats ! have so developed ana improved the btate that there is now, as the Northern bummer said of South Carolina, "a good deal of good stealing left." i lhere are many reasons why the i.ounty government system should sLlftoiL WiUc0nfin? our: 1.. It is an old and long tried sys tem. It was the system of our fathers. For nearly 100 years it was used with excellent results. It was never disturbed until Gen. Canby came with his bayonets to back up the ravening carpet-baggers and their corrupt a lies, the scalla wags. 2. It is a grqat economical system. It has been the) means of saving hun- dreds of thousands of dollars ta the honest and industrious tax-pjayers. turn to the present system and had got rid of the irritating, oppressive Canbt-Radicalj bayonet system the oppressions of the robberies and whites in thirty or forty counties were, enormous. , . The following table shows the value of property in certain counties in 1876, the year the Democrats beat the Radicals, taken charge, L but before they had and te year 1883, had control for seven after they had years: COUNTIES. 1876. , V 1,486,585 1,694,912 1,271.633 1,873,543 955,734 4,857,814 2,892,322 3,486,796 1.468,521 3,138.279 1,225,737 761,823 1,551.181 1.519,383 5,618,526 2,416,121 1,078,525 1,156,234 1,156,153 2,516,868 1.732,422 2,014,033 V,S7B,037 2,235,174 731,322 2,819,044 1883. Anson Bertie Bladen....... Caswell Chowan Edgecombe. . . Franklin Granville Greene Halifax Hertford.,... Jones. ....... Lenoir Martin New Hanover. Northampton. Pasquotank. . . Pender Perquimans. . . Pitt Richmond. . . . Robeson...... Vance. . ...... Wake :. Warren . Washington . . Wayne. ...... 2.045,505 2.218.377 1,865,06$ 2,336,039 950,928 4,453,125 2.570.091 2.710.336 1,717,202 3,773,400 1,803,022 734,819 2.369,493 1,859,068 5,883,514 2.939,264 1,371,254 1,303,000 1,159,458 2,984.222 2.336,303 3,458.335 1,827,284 10,522,390 . 1,864,774 866,358 4,493,596 Total. .I ..... .f59.061.722 $71,916,224 Nqw observe that in seven years the actual increase in property valu ation in these 27 counties is nearly $13,000,000. When the Uanby-bayonet system came to an ena in ib mose ntie9 had a debt of 545,108.00. The Democrats then took charge and in three 198.00. years reduced' it to $266,- To show how these counties im- prjpved under Democratic govern ment take two years to contrast with each other. In 1878 the Demo crats had had control for.two years. In that year the personal property of the above 27 $19,506,527. ' counties aggregated wo years later, un- der Democratic rule, it had increased to $22,321,993 Here is a gain of nearly a million and a half a year. But let us come nearer home. Let us take New jHanover county, and see how Radicals and Democrats have managed the public finances, and under which party there has been the best government the most economy. Tax-payers read the fol lowing, and thijn vote as your inter ests require. The negroes had possession for three years. The county expenses aggregated $150,360.00. The debt created in' that time amounted to $59,900.00. The Democrats came in under the present County Govern ment system and what was the re sult? The expenses were in 1880, $24,735.61; in 1881, $29,226.04; in 1882, $25,042.49 and in 1883 $21, 761.44. In the last three years the expenses have been $78,384.36, against $160, 360.00 for three years of Radical control. Under white government the ex penses are lesu than one-half what they were under negro government. Why return tojthe negro rule? Have you any money to, throw away? Do the taxes for county you desire that purposes shall be doubled? The debt of nearly $60,000.00, created in three years by negroes has been cut down to $6,000, and the monev to nav that sum is in the bank I j i New Hanover afford to go back to the corrupt, oppressive, vicious Can-by-Radical system ? . We need honest, just, economical government. We did not have it under the Bayonet system; we have had it under the long tried system of the fathers. Shall we abandon the finance8 again t0 the tender mercies I . r - ... of negroes and their hungry white allies ? What, say the tax-payers ? Max O'Rell is suspected of being an Englishman in disguise. He is ostensibly .a Frenchman; and he has written two books upon England that have aroused a great deal of in terest in England and elsewhere. His first book was slashing in it nrit.i. cism of England and the Britishers, but there was an under current of admiration, n It purported 0 be th satirical work of - a French observer, Hii latest book is said to be full of good points. He is evidently a keen uuserver wuu a pen mat is pointed and plain. , We find ' the following excellent point: ' 5 "To speak of pantaloons is unpardon able, but it is quite proper to appears at Lilly Bridge or Lord's almost without any." The meanest paper in. America is the 'New York JSun, It is literally without truth or . consistency or honor. It not only teems with lies, but it is a iraitor to all it fias advo cated in the past. On the 10th 6F July. 1884, ii said this: "How could such a party be rightly rep resented or its principles duly illustrated except by such a man as James G. Blaine, the matured rood agent of the highway of State, proud in the impunity with which he hat carried off his booty f Now that he stands before them flushed with the as- surance of success, a brilliant, reckless and vulgar adventurer, the trusted associate, friend and counsellor of Star -Route thieves, the first choice of every eambler in Wall street, the flower and the hope of every ami MHtftr tnol IhMalnno tha tvalfafP finfl I perpetuity of the Government what won- aer is 11 usi tney aamire anu ionuw mm This truculent and unprincipled sheet is now actually doing all it can to elect that very same James G. Blaine President of these United States. THE PERIODICALS. The Atlantic Monthly for November has its usual variety of matter. Its contribu tors are numerous and manv of them of world-wide fame. In the current number the array is strong. Among them are 8. Wier Mitchell, Harriet W. Preston, Maurice Thompson, John Greenleaf Whittier, Paul H. Hayne, Henry James, Edith M. Thomas and N. S. Sbaler. The last named con tributes the most striking paper in the number. He discusses the "Negro Pro blem." The Atlantic keeps up well. It has always been scholarly and intellectual and relies upon its matter entirely for sue cess. Price $4 a year. Houghton, Mifflin & Co., Boston. The Eclectic Magazine for November is an average number of an excellent monthly, that relies exclusively . upon the foreign monthlies and reviews for its matter. Gen erally the selections are made with intelli gent care. We sometimes wonder why a paper was selected when there were so many rejected papers that were far better; but the editor has a plan of his own, and in his eclecticism is governed by principles of taste and judgment that we may not un derstand. The current number contains several solid articles Among them we note Modern Mysticism, by W. S. Lilly; What Dreams are Made Of, by Dr.Andrew Wilson; English Supremacy in the East, by F. Bulkeley Johnson; Protection from the Workman's Point of View, by Wm. J. Harris; The Darwinian Theory of Instinct, by G. J. Romanes. One paper by that ad mirable historical essayist. Prof. Goldwin Smith. is timely and striking. He discusses "The Conflict with the Lords." Price $5 a vcar. K R. Pelton. publisher, 25 Bond street, N. Y. WM. M. EVABTS AND SOUTH. THE Sir. Keltt, of Soutn Carolina, Aaka a Pertinent Question How Mneb 1 Ellison S. Keitt, of South Caro lina, at the Democratic ratification meeting held under the auspices of Tammany Hall at No. 106 Third Avenue, last evening, answered Wm. M. Evart's attack upon the South as follows: "I read in , the Tribune a speech delivered a few nights ago in Brooklyn by Mr. Wm. M. Jwarts He said: The South is solid and has no interest whateyer in the present issue. I am from the South, and 1 tell you no part of the country has greater interest in the present issue than the south. Ho section is more united to the Union than she is.. She has had" a baptism of blood and fire. She knows what despotism and corruption is, and sne knows wnat nonest govern ment is. I tell you the intelligence and character of the South is solid. It is solid for honest government. It is solid .against tne fraud ox tne ageg a stolen Presidency, when the rights of 50,000,000 were trampled in the dust. Mr. Wm. M. Evarts was , the master champion of that fraud. He had his price. It was the highest position in the gift in .the fraudulently seated" President. As inch he will go down in history. What now moves Mr. Evarts to speak for corruption and fraud, when good men of all parties are coming together for honest government Is it tne mission to England or rrancer Mr. Evarts had his once in the Dast. TT . He has it now." OFFICERS TO BE ELECTED. Pittsboro Record. Not many persons have thought of the number of officers to be voted for at the ensuing election, or the num- ber of tickets there are to be voted. There will be seven ballot-boxes I at every voting place, in which tickets will be deposited as follows: . 1. For Presidential Electors, eleven in number. ' 2. For Representative in Congress; 3. For Governor, Lieutenant Gover nor. Treasurer, Secretary of State, - Attorney General, Auditor: and 5 Superintendent of Public Instruc tion. 4. For Justice of the Supreme Court. o. X or members of the Legislature 6. For Sheriff, Register, Coroner, v Surveyor, and a Treasurer in those counties: that have not abolished the office. 7. Township Constable. Persons and Property. Raleigh Register. , liver as careful of peraons as of property, the ooor man's boll-tax nn der Democratic rule decreases as well as the richer man's property tax. Three cents come off the poll tax for every cenv 01, reduction from the J ,vi j IQUUUUUU II $100 worth of property tax. HOT SHOT. .' "t Raleigh. Register. - 5 ; ? Mixed schools ineans ; white and negro teachers. So that if you want your children taught by negro ieacn ers, vote tha jxepuDiican ucKew xi. vou want vour children'compelled by law to go to acfiool with; negro chil- area, vpte ine rvepuoncaa iuj.ci. 4 Democrats 'take no negro in theirs," while every man. who joins the Republican party is obliged to be "hail fellow well met" with every negro ho sees and treat him as an equal. . !. Do you think the negro is the equal of the white1 man ? ylf you do, vote I the Republican ticket. If you don't, . vote the Democratic ticket. : The (Hiicago Platform declares that whites and negroes must be made equals. Blaine, York and the whole Republican State ticket square- j endorse the Platform. Are you willing for negroes to in termarry with, white people in North Carolina? Aro you willing for your vchildren to go to school with negro children ? If you are, vote for the Republicans. If you are not, vote the Democratic ticket. Are you willing to. live under ne gro rule ? If you are, be sure to vote the Republican ticket; for Democra cy and negro rule don't run together in North Carolina. But, if you are not willing to live - under negro go vernment, and think this is a wmte man's country, be sure not to let the Republicans get into power. Another Republican Ontraee. Special to New York Herald. Asheville, N. C, Oct. 28. While the Democratic candidate for Attor ney General was addressing a Demo cratic club here last uight several stones were hurled through the win dows from the outside, slightly in juring two men. Ibe Republicans here are following the example of their party friends, as shown at Wil mington last week, where a Demo cratic mass meeting was stoned. OUR STATE CONTEMPORARIES. E?ery;white man who is willing to for swear his race and make merchandise of his manhood and his humor, will vote for Blaine. Clinton Caucasian. As the campaign has cone on. Dr. York has become weaker and weaker. His single lianded canvass in the East was a disastrous experiment It was the flattest campaigning ever done by a candidate for Governor in the whole history of the State. iiis defeat overwneimingly is a foregone conclusion. Raleigh Chronicle. The Republican orators of this State. from Dr. York down, are constantly charg ing that the Democrats arc opposed to edu cation, schools, &c. They know it is a lie they f now that the Democratic party has done all that has ever been done in this State to build up schools and promote edu cation. The Republicans while in power squandered the educational fund ana shut up the school houses. And yet they harp on the Blair bill as if there was something in it. Ask them who objected to takine ud ana passing ine bill. "Ash; them wno is Mr. Hiscock, of New x ork. and if he is not the Republican who defeated the Blair bill? Salisbury Watchman. York is a tali wiry -looking man. with rather angular t features, reminding one very much in appearance of a cunning old rat. looking out of a hole. We mean no unkindness by this reference to natural his tory but to refer to the fact that the charac teristics of certain animals impress them selves upon the features of men when they have long adopted the habits of those ani mals. Dr. l ork 19 said-to be an exceed ingly cunning man. So is an old rat. Dr, York has small gray eyes set close together in his head. So has an old rat. We have no doubt their similarity of disposition has produced similarity of personal appearance. Any now, an wno were present will re member the resemblance. Dr. York does not speak the king's Engluh, but we will make no point of that, except that some persons do not like to hear their mother tongue murdered. But that docs not mat ter. But Dr. York is a good speaker, an energetic, forcible, emphatic speaker. Senator Vance. was asked recently, what sort of a man was Dr. York. He said: "York is the biggest liar north of hell and east of the blue ridge." Excepting the boundaries of York's bigness, we think the Senator was not far out of the wav. In conclusion, York's speech was the most adroit, the most cunning, the most wicked and the meanest we have ever heard in our court house. Elizabeth City Economist. POLITICAL F01NT& Mr. Blaine made his last stand in Ohio at Lancaster. Still old Fairfield county came up with a broad grin on its countenance and a Democratic gain of 184. Cincinnati Jbnquvrer, Dem. There is one satisfactory thing about this campaign after it is over the public will probably be spared the Infliction of those articles which the New York Sun used to shoot oil with such vigor on the in- decencv. imbecilitv. inconaistencv nnrJ nn. I iairnessoi tne partisan press. Philadelphia nra, ina. Out of 1,400,000 spindles in the mills at Fall River, Mass., 1,000,000 are to be shut down and thousands of operatives thrown out of employment. This is a srje- cimen of that splendid prosperity which the Republican party has brought to the coun try. Jacksonville (Fla.) Times- Union, Dem. When the new Postmaster Gen- eral Hatton was editor of the Burlington Havokeye he delivered himself in this style uu iiic ouujcci, oi jiiame: "jar. isiaine a po litical intimates were and are tho represen tatives of all that is tricky and insincere in politics, as well as of all that is bad and cor rupting." ; Mr. Blaine's hopeful son. Walker. has rendered the country no service what ever since the 1st of June last, but has reg ularly drawn his salary as one of the coun sel for the Government before the Alabama waims uommission. He is now travelling with ! his father's circus in the Western States. Boston Post. Dem. Appointments, Maj. C. W. McClammy, Democra tic Elector for the Third District- Seven . Springs (Wayne October 30th. j i Raynor's Mill, (Wayne) October 3 1st. I Fremont, November 1st. Harrison's Creek, November 3rd. A Cabd.-To all who are suffering errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness earlrdecay, loss of manhood, &C. I Will send a recme that wfll mira vn JgStSLSJJJ T hI Zt, JZZZZZZl Pyer- "-u":ii cuvuiupo to tusv, Joseph T. Inmah, Station D, New York, f THE LATEST NEWS. I FE0M ALL PARTS OP THE WORLD gov. hendricks. Grand Democratic Demonstration at Springfield, Ills. Fifteen Thousand People i in FroceMlon The Demo cratlc Banner Boldly Unfurled by In dlana's Favorite Son Brilliant TrI : bate to Gov, Cleveland, etc. . By Telegraph to the Morning aw Chicago, Oct. 30. The Hendricks de monstration at Springfield was continued until a late hour. The city was brilliantly illuminated, and it is estimated that 15,000 nonnlr xpprp in nmnpaslnn at nierht. - The following is a delayed report of Mr. Hen- oricfcs' speecu "Next Tuesdav we shall unite in the most important act of four years. That act is the election of a President of the United States, In selecting a Presi- dent, the people of the United States, under the Constitution, will decide for this country whether there shall be a change in the administration, or whether we shall continue under the Re publican policy of government. I will offer a few reasons, my fellow citi zens, why we " should . have a change, and that is all the argument I have to make. For twenty years the Republican party has been saying to the Democrats. you are not worthy to take chatge of pub matters. For twenty years tney nave excluded the Democrats from, every posi tion of power, trust and responsibility, as far as they could. Wheat sells at a lower price in the Chicago market now than it has sold for twenty years past; yes, for twenty-five years. Since the Ohio election I believe that wheat has fallen about eight cents on the bushel and corn about seven cents on the bushel. So. my countrymen, do you regard these as good terms ? When a Republican now says let well enough alone, you will tell him we will try a change, and see if it will not be better for the country and the people. Applause. Mr. Hendricks then proceeded o arraign the Republican party for its tariff policy. He said. In their platform the Repub licans assure the country that they will remedy the inequalities in the tarilf system aud remove the excess. Is not that an admission that the tariff law of the country is not equal, and that taxation is unequal upon the people; that upon one man taxation is higher, heavier and harder than it is upon another man ? I think so. What have they been doing in the nineteen years that have passed by since the close of the war, and the Republican party has been all the while in power? Why is it that they have come before tho people and admitted that the revenue system is not equal and just ? Why is it that, they have admitted that there is any excess collected through the instrumentality of the revenue law? How much shall the people be taxed? The answer is a plain one. Taxation shall be equal, but not exceed the wants of the government economically administered. Applause. That is what President Arthur said two years ago. It is what the Demo cratic Convention said in July at Chicago. That is the first proposition of our platform. The second is that taxation shall be only for public purposes, and not for private purposes. The third, that in the adjust ment of taxes great care should be taken that labor and capital are not hurt; and fourth,. taxation shall be heaviest on arti cles of luxury and lightest on articles of necessity. Applause This is the banner that the Democratic Convention placed in the hands of Grover Cleveland and Thos A. Hendricks in July last renewed ap plause ; and that great Convention said carry this banner before the people, and stand or fall with that banner. Renewed applause and cheers. I After elaborating these points the speaker said Blaine advocated higher taxation in stead of a reduction, and the taxing of lux uries and the relief of necessities. ' He then .said there ought to be a change of adminis tration, and showed that the Republican party bad been guilty of extravagance and corruption. bpcaking of Uov. Cleveland, in con clusion, Mr. Hendricks said, "I can say of Grover Cleveland what can be said of no other nominee of any party. For the first time in tho history of politics, Grover Cleveland has the endorsement of the best men of the opposite party. I Applause! High toned Republicans, the most true of their party, those who have no stain of dishonesty upon them, loudly and earnestly 'assure their fellow citizens that Grover Cleveland is qualified for the high office that he is nominated for. Applause. For him then and for myself, simply bring before you the banner of Democracy, equal laws, economy of appropriations and economy of expenditures, that the people shall have all the money in their own pockets and in the channels of trade which the government economically administered does not require." Great applause and cheers. FOBEIGN. Appearance of Cbolera In the Lower Seine Region of France The Pope and the EnglUh Government. By Cable to the Horning Star.1 Rome, Oct. 80. The appearance of cholera in the lower Seine region in France has led Italy to establish a quarantine against all ports from Dieppe toCherbourg inclusive. A cable dispatch from America stated thatBi8nop O Harrell, of Trenton, respond ing to words welcoming him back from Europe, last Sunday, said, alluding to the audience which he had with the Pope on the Irish question, that his Holiness assured him that he felt sympathy for the Irish people, and he hoped that they would soon De able to free themselves Irom the cover n ment of England. This statement the As servatore Romano pronounces absurd. It says: "It is impossible to suppose that the Pope expressed himself in suoh a manner concerning a government with which he desires to maintain the best relations." FINANCIAL. New vork Stock market strong and Higher. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. I New Yobk. Wall Street. Octoher an 11 A. M. Stocks this morning were strong and higher. Business continues quiet, and sales are attended with little or no excite ment. The improvement in prices ranged woui t w per ceni. XHonnwest, Bt. FauK Union Pacific, Lake Shore and New York central were the strongest shares. A Minneapolis mother. Many a mother will read with interest what Mrs. McCurdy,of 907 Cedar Avenue, Minneapolis, says; "Since an attack of diphtheria, a year ago, I have been troubled greatly with indigestion, which no doctor's medicine would help. . I began using Brown's Iron Bitters two months ago, and it acted like a charm; gave1 me such an appetite I was hungry all the time. I con sider, myself well, and recommend my friends to use it. Shall also use it when my children are ailing." j The Robesonian, Pnbllshftd " ' OOUtt' m"unDerton'"-v TT AS thb largest CIRCULATION AND TUB AJ. largest advertising ntmn...7J ?e 3 "S"1" J counties of Moore, dim-, I i voramDus, Kicnmond, and m I &lht!?aromS0n Ma?& t?d COMMERCIAL. W I I,MINOTON MA RKKT STAR OFFICE, Oct. 30, 4 P. M. SPIRITS TURPENTINE The market was quoted quiet at 27i cents per gallon with no sales to raport. ROSIN The market was quoted nom inal at 92j cents for Strained and 97 cents for Good Strained, with jno sales reported. TAR The market, was quoted firm at $1 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 $1 60 for "Virgin and Yellow Dip.' COTTON The market was quoted firm. Sales reported of 150 bales on a basis of 9 cents per lb for Middling. The fol lowing were the official quotations: Ordinary 7 cents lb Good Ordinary 8f LowMiddlino:......... 81 Middling 9 Good Middline. . 9 7-16 - RECEIPTS. Cotton. . . . . 1.125 bales Spirits Turpentine.. . . .. 98 casks liOSin.... 244 lM8 Tar......... 147 bbls Crude Turpentine 61 bbls .lTIESriC MAKKETS I By Telegraph to the Moraine Star.l Financial. Nkw Yokk. October 30, Noon. Money strong at 12 per cent. Sterling exchange 480480$ and 483$484. State bonds dull. Governments strong. ' Commercial. Cotton firm, with sales to-day of 104 bales; middling uplands 9c; do Orleans 10c. Futures steady, with sales to-day at the following quotations: October 9.75c; November 9.80c; December 9.81c; January 9.90c; February 10.04c; March 10.18c. Flour dull and heavy. Wheat dull and lower. Corn dull and lower. Pork dull at $16 50ai6 75. Lard weak at $7 47. Spirits turpentine dull at 30c. Rosin dull at $ 1 251 30. Freights quiet and steady Baltimore, October 30. Flour steady and quiet: Howard street and western super 2 253 75: extra S3 au3 5U; iam ily $3 754 75; city mills super $2 25 2 75;extra$3 003 75; Rio brands $4 62 4 75. Wheat southern firmer; western lower; southern red 8890c; do amber 92 95c; No. 1 Maryland, 989jc; No. 2 western winter , red on spot 81 f eac. nominally steady; southern whiter new 52 55c; yellow new 5052c; old 5b57c. FOREIGN RIAKKETS. (Bv Cable to the Moraine Star.l LivKiiPOOL, October 30, Noon. Cotton Business large, at advancing prices; mid dling uplands 5 7-1 6d; do Orleans 5fd; sales to-day of 14,000 bales, of which 2,000 were for speculation and export ; receipts 15,000 bales, -13,900 of which were Amen can. Futures very hrm; uplands, 1 m c, October delivery 5 27-64 5 28-64d; Octo ber and November delivery 5 28-64d; November and December delivery 5 26-64 &5 28-64d ; December and January deliv ery 5 29-64a5 32-64d; January and Feb ruary delivery 532-645 35-64d; February and March delivery 36-645 39-64d; March and April delivery 5 40-645 42-64d; April and May delivery 5 45-64d. 2.00 P.M. Good uplands 5 9-16d; mid dling uplands 5 7-1 6d; low middling 51d; good ordinary 5d; ordinary 4 ll-16d. Good middling Texas 5 l-16d; middling Texas 5 9-1 6d; low middling 5 7-1 6d; good ordi nary 5d; ordinary 4fd. Good middling Orleans 5 -ll-16d; low middling 5 6-16d; eood ordinary 5 5-1 6d ; ordinary 4f d Fatures-T-Uplands, 1 m c, October deliv ery 5 29-64d, buyers' option ; October and November delivery 5 29-o4d, buyers op tion ; November and December delivery 5 29 64d, buyers option; December and Jan uary delivery 5 33-64d, sellers option; Jan uary and February delivery 5 36-64d, value; February and March delivery 5 40-64d, sellers' option ; March and April delivery o 44-64d, sellers option; April and May delivery 5 48-64d, sellers' option; May and June delivery 5 52-64d, sellers option. Fu tures steady. Sales of cotton to-day include 1,100 bales American. Mew York Naval Stores MarKeu N. Y. Journal of Commerce. Oct. 29. Spirits Turpentine The market is steady and quiet; merchantable order is quoted at sue; sales ot iuo Obis for .November at 295c Rosins There is an absence of change m prices; trading is moderate. The follow ing are the quotations: Strained at $1 25; good strained at f 1 271 30; No. E at $1 851 37; No. 2 F at $1 42 1 45; No. 1 G at $ 1 50; No. 1 H at $1 70; good No. II at $2 00; low pale K ats o.mz w: jfaie m at S3 I5a3 20 extra pale N at $3 62i3 70; window glass W at $4 254 37. Tar is quoted at 2 002 25 for Wilmington ; pitch is quo ted at $i 7ui yo. Savannan. Rice IttarKet. Savannah News, Oct. 29. The market continues steady and changed. The sales for the day were un 532 bbls. Below are the official quotations ot tne iioard of Trade: Fair 5c; Good ofc Prime 5?c. Rough rice Country lots 90c$l 00;tide The Great Faola JJASBEEN, IS NOW, AND EVER SHALL BE, the leading HALF-DIME CIGAR In the city. All we ask Is a fair trial: GARDEN CITY CIGAR EMPORIUM, ang 10 tf TheWind BLOWETH WHERE IT LISTETH, and when it chooses to blow from the Northwest you will no doubt blow your fingers. Are you pre pared for it Stoves, Grates and Furnaces all in order and ready for service 1 If not let us hear from you and we will fit you up in fine style. .. .. W. H. ALDERMAN & CO., ool5.tf 25 Market Street. , Valentine's Menctoi Pencils, SURE CURE FOR HEADACHHL NEURALGIA, Toothache and Nervous Aff eetions. Only 10 Cents. Also, Drugs, Perfumery. Fancy and Toi let Articles, Prescriptions a specialty at . F. C. MILLER'S, augl2tf Corner of Fourth and Nun Streets. Land Plaster, F OR SALE BY WOODY CURRIE, General Commission Merchants, Also. JJple Agents for the PORTLAND PLAS- wumuigton, . c xjut MixajH, uie pi products of which are made rom HARD PLASTER and FINEST GROUND. Correspondence solicited. ap3tf The Cotton Plant. An 8-page 40-eolumn Agricultural Journal, the only paper In South Carolina published exclusively to the Interest of the Fanner and Manufacturer. The best and cheapest Agriculture tj thi South. . ; . .. . . . . . . - , ONLY 60 CENTS A YEA . The official organ of the State Grange; 'Endorsed by the leading citizens of th St t and by the best farmers in the State nd b couth, .v. . ' -: -r ; Send postal for specimen eoples for yourself and your neighbors - - ?. Address W. J. McKERALL, ott Marion, ac. BROWSE is rsi , fwjl IJg THE" BEST TQHIg. J This medicinfi. fYvmhininor t- vegetable tonics, quickly" and corn ri1!5 Cures lySpePSia, Indigestion, Impure Blood, Malaria.Chilisau J and Neuralgia. vs It is an unfailing remedy for Diseases of thr Kidneys and Liver. " -"soith It is invaluable for Diseases peciilhr fn "Women, and all who lead sedentary W to It docs not injure the teeth, cause hcadao produce constipation other Iron mdiHwVrin It enriches and purifies the blood, stim -ki : the appetite, aids the assimilation of f()( ll lieves Heartburn and Belching, and strcnnT ens the muscles and nerves. wio"i- For Intermittent Fevers Lassitude, Lack of Energy, &c, it has no equal. 1)1 The genuine has above trade mwk and crossed red lines on wrapper Take no otw Bade only ny uuunn tntaii AL CO. BA1TIS0KE, an jy27D&Wly tocorfrm nrm iy; Buifalo lithia Water FOR MAI ARIA L POISONING. USE OF IT IN A CASS OF YELLOW I'KVER De. Wh. T. llowAEn.oF Baltimo Professor of Diseases of Women and OliiWiren i. the University of MarylaDd. Dr. Howard attests the common ailm,t-it;,,n , the far-famed White Sulphur Sprfags, fa i'f bner county. WestVirsinia-nnd nn.tc ti....r ,r'u" superior to the latter. IaUude to the a' from grave acute diseases; and more esi.c-kiir to the Cachexia and Sequels', ncident to Vnhin , Fenerx. In all t.hAir tain forms of Atonic Dyspepsia, and all th i it-. by mineral waters. In short, irw I aitUd in,,,,,,,, st.alp. frrrm.mhnJ. minfrru ' innfwo I ., ' est and most unmistakable amomd uf q,-i n'J,',', ine largest mimoer oj cases tn a r. rnt:i i would unhesitatingly say Uie ISnfu'o :. Mecklenburg courdyYTa." , " Db. O. F. Makson, op Richmonb, Va., Late Professor of General Pathology and Piivsio logy in the Medical College of Virginia : "I have observed marked sanative effects fn.m the Buffalo Water iu Malarial Cachtrtn A,,!,,,,; Dyspepsia, some ot the Peculiar Affection W men, Anatmia, Uyjwchondriasis, Cardiac rnh,;in Uons,&c. It has been especially efiicauioiH in Chrome Intermittent Fever, numerous a,.-.? oni,:, character, which had obstinately withstood t,t remedies, having been restored to pfrfai hnii in a brief space of time by a sojourn at the Stit ht De. John W. Wiliamson, Jackson, Tex?.-. Extracts from Communication on the Thera'pntic Action of the Buffalo Lithia Water in the " Virginia Medical Monthlif for February, ls77. "Their great value in Malarial Dixa? and Sequela, has been most abundantly and satisfac torily tested; and I have no question that it would have been a valuahle auxiliary in the treatment of the epidemic of Yellow Fever which so terribiv afflicted the Mississippi Valley during the pan summer. I prescribed it myself, and it gave prompt relief in a case of Suppression of Uri,,. 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 iii but a single case) I, of course, cannot undertake to say. There is no doubt, hoicevtr, ato'd the fart Unit its administration was attended by the mm Uw ti dal 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. THOS. F. GOODB, Proprietor, an 10 tf nrm Buffalo Lithia Springs. Va THE BEST PUEPAUATIO For restoring gray hair to its natnral color; For fbbvkntino the hair from turning gray; For.PBODUcnia a rapid and luxuriant growtn; For eradicating scurf and dandruff; For curing Itching & all diseases of the scalp; For preventing the hair from falling out; ana For everything f or which a hair tonic, is rs quired It has no equal. 4 , - .. n The highest testimonials of its merits are Tom Rev. CHAS. H. READ, D D., Pastor Grace Street Presbyterian Church. 1 RicnsoND, Va. For several years I have used no other Uatt Dressing than the Xanthine, which had been warmly recommended to me by a friend who naa tested its value. It has, to my experience .accom plished all that is claimed for.it as a wholesomo preserver and restorer of the natural color ot the hair, and a thorough Prevef For sale by J. H. HARDIN, VtastfsL nov 29 ly om ju aug sep 1 Ealeigh Eegister. Early in February as soon as the printers , ro. ceive the neeessary material -the publication 01 the RALEIGH REGISTER, a North Carolina Democratic newspaper, will be commenced. .11 ii thn The Register will be printed weekly until in great political campaign of 18S4 begins. It then be Issued twice a week, or as often 1 as m. be useful or necessary to the Democratic pany In North Carolina. It will be printed from ne and beautiful type, on good white pane r, , ai w though It may not be large enough to how i at i once all the good things that glowing PKl n.,nu.Hn,iimTnw TOtthfi ftDnllCatWIl l- thorough knowledge of how to use them ,w l Into its thirty-two broad columns all the nt., much good reading, and -a complete history . what is done in North Carolina, Mr. Ualem be editor of the Register. -11..;1i The price of the Register will be f 2 a year, -for six mouths. Pay for your home paper , au then remit for the Register. Those who rcnu $2 to tins office will receive as A PREMIUM,4 . . , Sfr either volume ordered of "Hale's 1 Industrial ries." Two volumes are now ready: The Woods ajtd Timbers of North Cakolwa Curtis's, Emmons', and Kerr's Botanical e ports, supplemented by accurate County.1 ports of Standing Forests, and Vn l4a an excellent map of the State. 1 volume i-tu Cloth, 273 pp., $1.25. CoAt Industries op North Caroiina in the and Iroh Counties. Emmons', rrs, a ley's, Wilkes', and the Census Reports, sm 1 mented by full and accurate sketches ot Fifty-six Counties, and Map of the swa. , volume 12mo- Cio?h, 425 pp., ?1TC'rTJR. The Biblical Recorder PUBLISHED BY Edwards, Rroughton & Co. RALEIGH, N. C. r REV. C. T. BAILET, Editor. REV. C. S. FARRISS, Associate Editor. Organ of North ' Carolina Baptists In Its 44th Year. EVERY BAPTISTSHOULD TAKE 1? . As an Advertising Medium Unsurpassed Only $2.00 Per Year. , Address BIBLICAL RECORDER Aontr RaleiehiL NOW, IF GROVER CLEVELAND SHOi - r XtTt elctfd Preswent S shave. Hair- then t WeU, all in search of a fd snav out or Shampoo, shouldcall at HKki . u PERT'S, at No. 7 South lnt Street, wne can get Ringworms cured, .Mole9Av" Person tracted. Corns taken out, &c Alway p aUy in attendance with a No. 1 lorce ants. sriifii! mm mm lUl 11 11 151 I"
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 31, 1884, edition 1
2
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