Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Nov. 8, 1884, edition 1 / Page 2
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fTBI.ISHEK'S ANNOUNCEMENT. THE MORNING STAR, the oldest dally news per In North Carolina, la published dally, exoept Monday, at $7 00 per year, $4 00 tor six months. ' 2 00 for three months. $1.50 for two months; 790. for one month, to mail subscribers. Delivered to !ry subscribers at the rate of 15 cent per week t -- ny period from one week to one year. - i'il E WEEKLY STAR is published every Friday nii.rutn at $1 50 per year, $1 00 for six months 50 f ats for three months. i - ADVERTISING RATES (DAILY). One square i ne day, $100 ; two days. $1 75 ; throe days, $250 ; '.ar tare, $3 CO ; five days, f 3 50 : one week, $400; : wo weeks, $6 50 : three weeks $8 50; one month, w 00 ; two months, $17 00 ; three months, $9 ? . ix months, $40 00; twelve months, $60 00. Ten ines of solid Nonpareil type make one square. . 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All announcements and recommendations of candidates for office, whether in the shape of 3ommunications or otherwise, will be charged at advertisements.: - Payments for transient advertisements must be made in advancer Known parties, or Strang er 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 Jheir regular business without extra charge at transient rates. ' Remiitanoes must be made by Check, Draft. Postal Money Order, Express, or in Registered Letter. Only such remittances win be at tha risk of the publisher. communications, unless tney contain impor tant news, or discuss briefly and properly subjects real interest, are not wanted ; and, if accept able In every other way, they will Invariably DO rejected if the real name of the author is withheld. Advertisers should always specify the issue or ssues they desire to advertise in. where no is sue is named the advertisement will 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. " . me iviuiiiiim OLdi. By WILLIAM H. BERNARD. WILMINGTON; N.C Friday Evening, Nov. 7, 1884. EVENING EDITION. THE FUTURE OF TRK NEGRO. ? In Senator Morgan's article in the Symposiain of the North American Review for July, to which we re ferred at some length some weeks -since, he takes a correct view of the negro. It is the view j that ninety- nine in the hundred of intelligent Southerners would take. - The negro? is a strong man physically. He is stronger in the South than he was in his native jangles iri Africa. They now number more than 6,000,000. Senator Morgan shows how the dom inant party, has endeavored to assist them. "They were t clothed with "all rights, liberties and privileges that are enjoyed by the whites.'! They were invested with the -ballot, and had such very remarkable as sistance as could be supplied by those unique and choice institutions the Freed men's Bureau and the Freed men's Bank. Then they have had the f alt benefit of civil rights stat utes. and ait f hp , r . J courts to enforce their alleged "civil rights." " And in the facei4andin spite of such cunning and supposed potent helps "they are no stronger n a n .aaa n n r-1 maVV1m 1 . o a law;, auu, yiUUHUiy , UU UeibST 3LS individuals than they were at the be ginning of these efforts!" All of this strikes us as a fair presentation of the facts. Senator Morgan next touches upon the latest expedient to lift up the negro and make him wise and ' hap pier. He says: . . "The latest expedient of Congress is to .unnrnnnof. din nAA AAA ' . Tf w,wv,uw a year to educate the children of 6,000.000 negroes, so that they can understand the government which their ignorant fathers are engaged in con ducting We shall probably try this expe dient and fail, in the States, as we have failed in the District of Columbia, where the abolition of negro suffrage has been decreed by Congress, notwithstanding the fact that the negroes in' that district are of much higher average intelligence than in the btates. - After two or three hundred millions of dollars have been expended in the effort to educate the negro into the knowledge of the proper uses of political power, and to induce him to forget his race prejudices and vices, the same party which claims to have emancipated turn will become the most active in his disfranchise ment. It has begun .this process 4a the same place where it began his emancipa tion, the District of Columbia." - The Senator points to the efforts of Congress to make an issue be tween the races in the South on "a question of caste and to stimulate in dividual negroes ;to demand social wjuaanj which they are not prepared to. enjoy." Of course this is very censurable,and no class of politicians bat ignorant, , blind and vengeful leaders would have resorted to such a base system of aggressive legisla- tion- Tbe attempt 'of the Republi can party to force civil rights upon the Southern whites was a damning and shameful failure "and was well calculated to provoke strife. The Republican party ought to be con ; stantly arraigned for its injudicious - ? base attempts to enforce by le gislation social equality. It is true the.' Supreme Court of the United States has by its decision broken the force of such mischievous and vindic tive legislation, but the party ought to be held responsible for all time for its attempts in that direction. The Republican party in North Carolina even now is pursuing a course the result of whioh ,if successful would be to oppressandj impoverish the whites. I Senator Morgan says -that neither race desires the breaking down of race barriers nor thej practice of mis cegenation. Individuals indulge this very degrading proclivity, but at the expense of all character. Indeed none but the meanest and lowest of whites can ever agree to the intermarrying of the races. The able Senator refers to the course of Congress in dealing with the District of Columbia. It gave the negroes the right to .vote, but after a most expensive and hazardous expe riment what was Congress forced to do? Good government was destroyed, and to restore order and law ;what think you the Republicans did? Says Senator Morgan, they "disfranchised airmen of all races there ? The whites as well as the blacks were disfran chised. Such was the experiment right under the noses of the Con gressmen. They attempted to give the negroes control and afterwards had to disfranchise their own race in order to get control of the District. Says the Senator, "legislative reme dies have failed to remove the negro race from the plane which they ap pear to have selected for their pur suit of happiness, in accordance icith natural latcs.. The failure is definite, and it is folly to repeat the attempt." Senator Morgan thinks the ne groes will improve that they will become . more intelligent, will ac cumulate more wealth, have more ex perience in business affairs and will have hereafter more power and im portance. We sincerely desire that the colored people shall be elevated morally, intellectually and material ly. We would gladly help them in all efforts to become purer, wiser, happier, They will never become the dominant race whereverthe Teu tonic element prevails. The Aryan stock will rule wherever they settle in numbers. Read history and learn this lesson. It has dominated the world wherever it has penetrated. The negro must be content to be forever in the United States the in ferior race. He can prosper and Crow and be elevated if he works along side of the whites, but when he antagonizes and threatens and in vades he will go to the wall and Con gress will be utterly powerless to prevent it. Says Senator Morgan: 4 'Here they have to encounter personal, individual competition with the white man. The greater their personal success may be the more they will feel the pressure of caste, and their advancement in enterprises which may bring them personal honor and wealth will be checked by the jealousy of caste, so that the race-prejudice will for ever remain as an incubus on all their indi vidual or aggregated efforts. Turning to a land that has been under the seal of dark- ness until now, we seem to discover the natural theatre for negro development, and welcome it as a door opened by the hand of Providence to the Africans who have gained the powers incident to Christian civilization while in bondage, and are now prepared to enter upon their inheritance witii the assurance of success. The Free States of the Congo open to the American negro his first real opportunity to prove himself worthy of the liberties and civiliza tion with which he has been endowed." The Democrats will have a large majority in the next United States House. The outlook now is that tHe majority in the present House will be maintained, or if reduced at all, that it will be very small. Good enongb. The Democrats after March 4th will have both President and House, and now that the' reform movement has set in in earnest we may hope for a gradual change in the complexion of the Senate. The printer mixed our editorial on first page in Friday's issue. Here it is: "To prevent a conflict they submit to a great outrage upon their rights. They will never submitted to such an outrage a second time." It ought to read "they submitted" and "they will never submit," These are election times and the excitement is high. Politics and types get mixed. Cooked Reports. New York Herald, November 6. ! We are informed" that a Western Union expert and an Associated Press man are constantly closeted with all the reports from this State and Indiana, and that the mysterious ly made dispatcher which which in terpret all doubts and possibilities in Blaine's favor come from that source. These dispatches help the Blaine journals to keep up their courage a little, but they can do no permanent harm; for a false report from the Western Union or from the Asso ciated Press cannot chaige the re f J S,c.haJ:d Grant White savs r the SL V is disappearing from the "Ameri can tongue, and we think he is rights The jend-off which Parson Burchard attempted to give the three "RV was a dismal fSure. PRESIDENT CLEVELAND. New York Herald. ; i Honesty and common decency have triumphed. Governor Cleve land is chosen the next President of the United States. ( . - It is a great, very great, gain-to the country, and to the cause of free government, every where." The candi dacy of, a man like Blaine,. with his surroundings, was' a humiliating dis-; grace to- the country. His election would, have been the:national justifi cation of public dishonesty and trick ery of. every kind. " It would have whitewashed every jobber in the country, and would have been, as the Republican ex-SenatprWadleigh said in one of the most powerful speeches of the canvass, an invitation to all young men in places of trust to abuse those trusts. President Cleveland bas shown himself, as Mayor and as Governor, an incorruptibly honest man, a man of brains and of undoubted courage, the enemy of jobs and. jobbers, the faithful servant of the people. Eve ry word he has uttered during the canvass, as every message and other public utterance of his aslMayor and as Governor, marks him. as . a clear headed, sagacious man, entirely capa ble of that great work which the1 pepple have intrusted to him to do at Washington. At last the country has (hat change of parties for which it has been ready eight years, and which the seinsn and corrupt political managers who have gamed control of the Kepub lican party had come to believe they could, prevent so easily that they dared to nominate one of the worst men in their party. Gov, Cleveland himself stated the case admirably when he said: There should be no mistake at this time concerning the meaning of the contest. ' The struggle js to break down the barriers between the plain people of the nation and the ad ministration of their government The question to be determined is whether the people may change their public servants, or- whether, while they fondly hope they have a representative government, they are bound and held captive by those who make politics an occupation and hold public place as a profitable business. This gov eminent was made for the people; but if they must select the agents who shall have its administration in charge from a self -dedicated and self -constituted class, and if a party once in power can perpetuate its hold upon office for all time, it is a mockery to call this a government by the people." On the 4th of next March the Democrats will therefore come into power. We wish them well. They have succeeded by naming a first rale ticket on an un exceptionable platform. They are committed to thorough reform. They will give the people that "look at the books" to which they have a right. REVIEWING THE BATTLE. N. Y. World, Thursday. The World urged the nomination of Blaine by the Republican Na tional Convention. We did so be cause we wished the Republican par ty to appear before the people with out a mask. Garfield figured as a Saint. Blaine was known as a Sin ner. If American citizens were to elect a bad man President we wanted them to do so with their eyes open and not in blindness and ignorance. ; We urged the nomination of Gro ver Cleveland by the Democracy be cause we knew that with Grover Cleveland as the Democratic candi date the Republicans would find it difficult to . divert the attention of the people from the real great issue to the tariff, the bloody shirt or any of the old subterfuges behind which they have hidden their unworthiness in previous campaigns. The developments of the canvass have justified our judgment. In the conduct ofrthe canvass we took truth and Teason as our guide and avoided personalities, scandals and appeals to passion. Not a charge was made against the opposing can didate that was not substantiated by evidence, mainly from his own hand. Not a campaign falsehood found its .way into our . columns : unless Y, snp- fjosed to be true at the time of pub ication. Despite great provocation we refused to cast filth for filth. If we suppressed truth in any instance it was to the. advantage of .the Re publican candidate'and in" the inter est of decency. , , ..,.- . In a word, the foundation of our action both in regard to the nomina tion and the canvass was that Truth is stronger than Humbug. v Cleveland Elected. N. Y. Times, Thursday. The Times' informed its readers yesterday morning that Grover Cleve land had been elected President of the United States. If during the con fusion of the day any one was led to doubt the correctness of our conclu sion,it was because -he foolishly al lowed his. faith to be shaken by the extravagant falsehoods and bluster of the defeated. The returns we have received during the last twenty four, hours confirm and make certain what we then asserted with full confidence.- W .''iMjjVf': t,i- . - . There are 50O pieces in the $15, 000 set of china used in the White House. Of the three it is difficult tossy whether Belva, Mulhatton or Butler was of least consequence in the just closed cam paign, TorklVbrld.. ' ..-f. "The New" Tori: market is ex-j tensively supplied With, eggs.' 'We thought our fathers cast ,dff ,the foreign yolk for good more than a hundred years ago. Boa- ton Transcript. " " -: - ' ; t.- The Astors of New York are the reputed owners of 3,600 substantial re- t nfl8wnS bu8inea8 buildings, the cheap-' est of which rents for f 1,500 1 year. The Grand ResUlt7 NO MORE STEALS. The Voice of, Hie People is the Voice of Cod. - Cleveland & Hendricks The Grand Sections Embrace Each Other. Where is Blaine of Maine. The People Decide to Give Him a Rest. THE GREAT NEWSPAPERS. Wbsl Tbejr Have to Say About lb. Rcaalt In New York All of Them Concede Cleveland Election Ex cept the Tribune The Albany Jour nal, Strongly Republican, Grace fully Yields to the Voice of the People. t By Telegraph to the M online Star. New York, Nov. 7. The question, who has carried New York State, is now chieflv a question of accurate footings of long columns or ngures. lne footings of the countv clerks, with-nnlv a few minsinir in dicate that Cleveland has about 1,000 plu rality, lne footiDgs of the election dis tricts, made in the Associated Press office, indicate that Rlin hsjt nn pnual nltrrnHtv j -j . Twelve districts in the State had not, up to tins morning, reported at all. Some sixty oiners naa reported, but their accuracy was Questioned. n.-,rl thpv will ha vprifipri tn rlnv The whole list of counties will be carefully added to day, aud the remit of that addi tion, as well as the result nf the pnmnikt.'nn of the county clerks' figures, will be sent oui oy me Associated rress. mis wort will probably not becomnleted before nizht. The Herald of to day says: "New York State is Democratic, that the official re turns show it, and that these returns, and no others, will be regarded bv the State Board of Canvassers ; aud that' although mere is a conspiracy to steal the Presiden cy and Vice Presidency again for the can didates whom the people have rejected, it cannot possiDiv succeed. Tlie Sun says: "Twenty-four hours more have passed, and the result in the great State of New York and in the coun try at large remains undetermined. Re turns cotne in slowly and with conflicting effect those from sources upon which Heretofore we have been accustomed to rely differing wholly from those which our own sources of information supply. We infer from the returns thus rcceived.up mj me nour oi going to press that Uleve iana nas a plurality in this" state of more than one thousand. The Sun also says, "there is no cause for aiarm or Buspicsion Dccause or the delay in receiving the returns from the remote districts;" and adds, "the , State of New lork will be carried by the man who has received the most votes, and by nobody eise. i nere is no power that can. wrest it from him, and it is an insult to the people of this country to intimate even the possi bility that the crime committed against them eiarht years ago can be repeated." The World says: "There need be no doubt about the result of the Presidential election. New York has given Cleveland a plurality of not less than 2,500. He has been fairly elected, and will be the next President of the United States.'? It also ridicules the idea of any successful attempt to steal New York's vote, remarking that "the onlv cnnncivahlA rpnnlt. nf mnln. false electoral return to Washington would oeto throw the election into the Democratic House of Representatives." The Tribune persists claiming New York for the Republicans, and also says that the disDatches indicate that thn P arm Viii have probably carried- West Virginia, Vir ginia and Florida, wnfoh election without the vote of New York. ine nmessAji there is no shadow of doubt that Grover Cleveland has been elected President. :' .. . The Mail and Express says: "Neither party yields New York State. The con test is so close that the official figures may be necessary to determine the result. Th returns so far received indicate an apparen plurality for Blaine." Albany, November 7. The Eoening Journal concedes thn Wt; rut nf H1awcfAiil It says, "There seems to be no longer anv i j V? . urover vieveiana has been elected President. Every county has sent in its full vote, arid o oorofnl nn.in of the results assure Gov. Cleveland a nln- raiity of about 1,000 in the State. .The vote will not vary 200 on either side of these figures. New Ymt irim ni,it enough votes to elect him. The Journal has devoted all of its Anprorfoa fsira.i . . -Q.vw Dw Curing another result nnrl it. nw min.t . ly states that the election has been decided uiuwcuyj Hum us aesire, oecause it be lieves that a prompt recognition of the will of the maioritv is PBHPntiai n tk ),v buu ajuaiutcu-- ance and Dreservatinn nf Ami ,: o " , . y Auebivu- iiuua. ou long as me people of the United! ouaica uavt3 uer.uiRn T.n trnnefa tv 1 administration to the Democratic party we .au u mc uewsionnas Deen made in favor of a Democrat from New York State. The nrMn trf tK- lt?L 91 which has furnished only one President to iflm ,r; v.li - run Van Buren, in 5S 6jfu?d0UKbtea,y e to every citizen of the State a bias in favor of his fpiinw zen. " " -:- : : ? - , . For the cure ot HoMa hilJji 'Vlf"' difflcunies, Ayer's CheTpTctorai iVlH equalcd.r : .. ,.; . . - a A PHITEDlBOWT&Y; THE EMPIRE CXTY, Canoon Boomias In City Hall Park In Honor of Got. Cleveland' Blee- ; tion, r Orlcr of County t e-mocracy-The JPooplo WU wttb En tboslasm. sY' ;.;"' . By Telegraph to the Momuu Star. , t Nbw Yobk, ' Nov." -7. This morning a CAlv Hall Park: hv order of the leadars of the County Democracy in .hionor:of Gov. (jieveiana s - eiecuon ta ma rreaiaency. ine ooomiuv . oi me KUQB urew.s uuga crowd from the bulletin boards at the news paper offices to"the Park. . During the firing a' portion of a wad from a gun struck, a little-news boy,? Jacob' Seman,- in the face, knocking out his eye. V s , The Herald, Sun, and Express have with drawn their bulletin boards. At the forld . bulletin; '. board this' 1 morning, the crowd was , quite enthusiastic over the announced 'jelectibn -of; '-Cleveland and Hendricks, ' and Jhis was in creased . when it . was declared that Jay Gould bad'conceie4 e State to Cleve land, and had sent a telegraphic "dispatch to the Governor congratulating him iipon' his election. The Republicans continue firm, however, and still msiutaiiji that Blaine has carried the State,", v The A- ting Superintendent of Police to day sent a message to all of the police cap tains to prevent alt parades' not having proper permits fron the police, and to give escoi t to tb03e trat had permits. , . jApnD. : ; i t i , . Tbo Orrat Rtettey King and Head Front of Iteaallanlana Sends ' Hearty Consratalatlons to Gov. Cleveland on Hla - Election to the Presidency, I' By Telegraph to the Morning 8tar.) Nbw Yohk, 1 Not.' 7. Jay ! Gould this morning sent the1 following dispatch' to Gov. Cleveland: ' ' "I heartily congratulate you on your election. All concede that your admin istration as Governor has been wise and conservative, and iria'larger field, as Presi dent, I feel that you will do still better, and that the vast business interests of the coun try will "be entirely safe In your hands. Signed Jat Gould." MICHIGAN. The State Claimed by both the Repub licans nd the Faalontsta The Offi cial Vot MeccWsarv to Oectd. iBy Telegraph to the Moraine Star.l Detroit, Nov. 7. The election in this State appears to be Republican by a small majority. The figures already sent must be somewhat reduced. The Congressmen are as previously stated, with the exception of the Second district, which is now claim ed by both parties. The Republicans are claiming a majority of 46, and the Demo crats a majority of 84. The Democratic State Committee places the Republican ma jority at about 1,500. The Free Press (Dem ,) has reports from a large part of the State, including the up per Peninsula, which is strongly Republi can, and states that the estimate indicates a small Fusion majority, but it will take the official count to decide the question. It estimates the Fusion vote for Cleveland at 163,000, and the Fusion vote for Butler at 38,000. As the "Fusion" was an agree ment to divide the electoral vote proportion ately to the popular tote, ft Fusion vic tory would give Cleveland 10, Butler 2, ana Hiaine 1. - The State Republican Committee does not allow the claims of the Fusionists, but stBl claims a majority of 7,000 oa the State electoral ticket. i . . The Post, Rep.; claims the State by from 5.000 to 7,000.- Figures received from cor respondents in most of the counties, with an estimate oa ibo rem&iBiBgouBtis, give Blaine a plurality .of a little over 6,000. It also claims to" have fifteen ReDUblinan Tien I resent atives. v The Prohibition vote has been estimated by the Free Press at about 2.000 for Pres ton, for Governor, iand 17.000 for 8t. John-i FINANCIAL, New York Stoek: Market-Steady and ' Higher: - ' By Telegrapa to U Morning Stax.l NEWYoRK. Wall Strata 7Sft-o opened lower. and in the flint few ml business prices droDDed I to 1 oer cent. Union Pacific sold down to 47 .Lackawanna to lOOf, St. Paul to 73i, and Western Union to 57t. Later there was a rally, but at the present writing (f0.25) a weaker feeling again prevails, ... 10.30 A. M. A much steadier foaltn. exists in the stock market, prices are better tmurouna. union racinc is up to 48. Tresiern union and New York to 58i, Northwest to 84? Centraf to 184. In some higher than atthe close of cases prices are hich yesterday. 11 A. AT. stocks cnntinnA tr imnm and Dricea current hnw nn alnniu i m . VI Y W 1 per cent, from the lowest figures of the morning.. a GREETINGS. Alabama VemvcrMy Sends Congratu lations to got. Cleveland. By Telegraph to the Morning Star. Montgomery. Nov n tt rtn -T TT T" Dawson. Chairman nf thn TomnM:M o.... Committee, has sent the following tele gram: Hon. Grover Cleveland Alabama sends you greetings and congratulates the country upon a united North and South in the cause of reform and honest administra tion of government. Amr.Fn.htf.lF.il. A mason nampri po5. :I Pa.. M frr rrM.CTTfirA 4" his p;7;6"5uu ?1 OI horrible anroa Thn T?. hut the sores are all heale. The healine ZS nCfCSpli8h?d vltt "even weeks by th! use of BownV:Trnn niH. -Li.: " am suiia &rK hliii rnorn purifying the blood"Tnd7tngthing'the system, drove out, the humors which had kept ud the aft t: if IT" knrt .i:.,. ::, . : wen " " vaiiiaic una vicinity. THE BEST STOCK 0F NrrURB ANI) CARPETS IN THE CITY is iept by BEHRENDslfc MONROE, B E. Cor. Market and tod fits.;-Their irin ,.. est.' Examine them r-- Vn0T8tf v. fTP COMMERCI&iE I isM IN OTON, MARKET L'STAR OFFICE. Nov. 7.4 P. M P1RIT8 T URPENTINE The market was quoted ifirm at cents per gallon, wMfr &Ues"Trf norted of 50 casks at that price. . - - j ROSIN This market was quoted tteady at SO cents for Strained and So cents for G-ood Strained, with sales reported of 1,000 bbs at quotations, - . - ' TAR The market was quoted firm at $1 ''40 per bbl. of 280 lbsfwith sales at quo tations. , . .i - - CRUDE TURPENTINE In- limited supply and market steady,'; with sales re ported at;$i OO.for Hard and f 1 60 for Virgin and Yellow Dip . ' COTTONhemarket was quoted fim, with sales reported of 30 bales on a basis of 9 716 cents and 150 do. at 91 cents i ii ? ' - t .e ''if.,.'-. pet! lb. for Middling. TbeT6Howin""were the official quotations: Ordinary-. tv.Tvrr, . 7 3-16 cents lb.. 7-16 vf -1 Good Ordinary 7. J Lbw Middling;...... 9-1-16 v " I jaiaaiing. . ....... . V -7-16 Good Middline 9i 1 RECEIPTS. Cotton. : . . i. . Spirits Tui&entine. Rb8in..'.....V...".:. Crude Turpentine. . 692 bah 6 139 cask 8 720 bfcls. 76 bbls 155 bbls C09IESTIC MARKETS By Telegraph to the Morning Star. . ! Financial. Wkw Yoke. -Nov. 7. Noon. Monev nrm at per cent, bterling exchange 479480 and 4844Wi. State bonds dul . Governments easier. ; ; Commercial. Cotton qijiet and steady, with sales to day! of 801 bales; middling uplands 91 5-16c; do Orleans 10 3-16c. Futures steady, with sales tjc-day at the following quota tions: November 9.95c; December 9.95c; January 10 D4c; February 10.19c; March 10;32c; April 10.45c. Flour dull and de clininy. Wheat heavy. .Corn lower and dull; Pork! firm at ill 50. Lard weak at $7 50. Spirits turpentine firm at 30 30ci. Rosinjfirm at f 1 251 80. Freights steady. ' , BjtLTiMORK, Nov. 7 Flour easier and j : quiet: Howard street and western super $2 252 65; extra $2 753 07; fam ily! $3 504i 50; city mills super $2 25 2 65; extra $2 753 50; Rio Grands $4 62 4 ?5. Wheat southern steady; western lower and fairly active; southern red 85 87d;i do amber 9094c; No. 1 Maryland 8989jc; No. 2 western winter red on spotii 80i80fc. Corn southern steady; western steady and active; southern white 54&55c; yellow 5556c. . FUKBIGN MARKETS. IBy Cable to the Morning Star.l LiyicttPOOL, Nov. ; 7. Noon. Cotton steady with la fair demand; middling up lands 5 7-16d; do Orleans 5 11 16d; sales to day pf 12,000 bales, of which 1,000 were fori speculation and export; receipts 8,000 bales, 6,800 of which were American. Fu tures very firm; uplands, 1 m c, No vember and December delivery 5 28-645 29-64d; December and January delivery 5 31-645 8-64d; January and'February deliyfery 5 35r645 36 64d; February and Mardh delivery 5 39-645 40-64d; March andiiLpril delivery 5 '43-64d ; April and May delivery 5 48M4d; May and June delivery 5 51-64d. i Breadstuffs quiet with but little business doing. Lard long clear nominal ; short clear -38s 9d.j Spirits turpentine 24s. 2 ;P, M. Uplands 5c; Orleans 5 ll-16d; uplanids, 1 m c, November delivery 5 31-64d, buyers' option; November and December delivery 5 31-64d, buyers' op tion j ji December and January delivery 5 34-64d, buyers' option; January and Feb ruaryi. delivery 5 S8-64d, value; February ands March delivery 5 42-64d, sellers' op tion March and April delivery 5 45-64d, buyers' option; April and May delivery 5 49-64d. valufe ; May and June delivery 5 53-64d. sellers' ODti on! June &nd Jnlv Holiv. ery 5 57-64d. sellers' option. Futures firm. 5 fjiM. Uplands, 1 m c, November de livery i 5 3l464dV value; November and December delivery 5 31-64d, value; De cember and January delivery 5 34-64d, sellersf option; January and February de livery's 5 S8-64d, sellers option; February and March delivery 5 41-64d, buyers' op- firm 4 if dmK avisl A JaKa. tr r n i sellers option; April and May delivery 5 49-64dj sellers option: May and June de- livery 5 53-64d, sellers' option; June and Julys, delivery 5 57-64d, sellers' option. Futiires closed barely steady. Sales of cotton to-day include 8,500 bales American. ; ii rVw TatIt ni nf.,... T. y. Journal of Commerce. Nov. fi ! Sandwichedi between political talk some uusiuess juas Deen aone, although it may N; called an "offdayi as the volume w comparaiiveiy imnt.! Advices from the duui-u vumiuue to note lull demand t the old adtanced rate Foreigbs are in good uuiauyt a uuvukogeq quotations. We quote: Carolina and Louisiana, common gS nK,?;, JS? t0 Prime at SSS at Mgo:!rtni (brand) at SiSlfST44 dutypaid.and tt2iC in bond: Patna at nsThKln- T. . pliarleaton Rice ikarket. Charlesten Kews and Cniiripr Vnn a . s. ; j v. Wej have no change to note in this mar- r vu wu""ies steaay ana nrm as iasi reportea. with sales today of 600 bbls miat4f4i(? fair af4i5ic Rood wtuju, auupnmcaiot5jc. Upland '.""ft"; quoiea at $ ltmi jn. and uue-waer $ i i5i 30 per bushel. I ! ' I Pl-ematnreLosaof tbe Hair j ! r ana v ue-ennrpiv nrpunnfoH ,v BuKNtefT s Cocoaink. No other compound uiv pecuuar properties which so cwujBuji me various conditions of the uman pair, it soothes th irritated scaln. XIZJTL - A". Prevents the Mr Alf AWfA "-X j . - " &- "PrornctesttshtaUhy, xW? v"Wrn- " ffreasy nor stickv. tnoauagreeable odor. It kiUsdan- ' -tZ.-L JL ; . the Dest.i i ; i . OBTIKRN OBTRE) ASSURANCE CO. 1 Sun lire Office Co. - ; Firelasnrance Association. ; Britfalii and Foreign Marine Ins. Co. Boston Marin a Tim. Pn MntnaJt4felis.jo0fNewYork. - Th hnwoA i w"u ajuorM5- I Aft3Wy Jbeglad to write Inance ol I AUU1UI9UL IT1H I A Af HlAaL a ."..umure ienngai lowest rates. - . ; . . ... i. " . i M. 8. WILLARD. Telephone No. S. 18 N. Water Street. - novstf : Beautiful and Useful. f ?Y7v RECEIVED BY LAST STEAM LanrnfadiS"!0)? let ns show them to yon also. -.' - "b -, w Wl tr t . nov2 W. H. ALDERMAN 4 CO.. mil v Market Street. : ""g Diseases plicaUonof CuticubI thtt! ana a sink7 renefttert AuX, ereat Skin rw.elean- tating, the bowels oSpt. v,Sr ,? PUr and nut e-p active, will speedily Pcnre ,llver ad k dtn worm, Psoriasis LichPt, p8?4- Tett4nys Pimply bnmors of the Sclln and Sca y and PhiansUkg ECZEMA TWENTY YEapV ' erratitndfi oa Hef I h n "Z"":13 .U1 bounded fn..t.. t have obtah mtes. ' I ha egs for twen light for yea ttnse. Noi ble ODly t s remain as my legs for twenty years i h.S wutl Ecma ble night for years the buraffa1 limbs remain as aIonecd..Wtol1es' ;': r .ui. lurmp.r fr.i .... log Wist Ayexce, EocheTter; n. lltSTVl) XT 1- 1 lJU. ECZEMA 0NXcHlLD Your most valuable Cmcrr. m"' -done my child so much good i that T?1K,wkave tog this for the benefit of those whii !ikf 5 with skin disease. My little eM -!re with Bczema, and I tried L Veveral rin med,icmesjbut did not do her "Dv dr3 and used the Cuticuea Remedifs vhffi gcod untu i Kdinbcegh, Inb; ""osjJIEIi - t MOn linhcl,.. TETTEE OF THrTRfTsT I was almost perfectly bald cancel v. Remedies about kit woot-t ? Cut, -7.r of scalP Perfectly, and now ray hair is as t hick as it ever was. i T! ,1 De baek Whitisboro', Texas. LH0ICB. C0VEEED WIT BLOTcKP I want to tell you that-your tra. ' JKira is magnificent. About three mf Beso1 face was covered with Blotch anTu0?y 23 St. Chabxes St., KES,KLf AI1 BE.0 : IVY POISONING vot all cases of polsonlBg by ivy or 5 can warrant Cuticcua to cure eylry tinif ,0hod-1 sold it for five years and it never fail" 1 hare HOLUSTOK.MA88.' ' C' OUt , . c,5whre- Price CtTin-nA. 33 (.0,. BjA.r, go cents, JiESOLVENT, 81. ' , tu"' Potter Drne; and Chemical Co p mh5D&Wtf wedBat0'1 iZ Buffalo lithia Water FOR MAI A. RIAL POISONING . i vv- USE OP IT IN A CASK OF YELLOW FSVER DB. WjX. T. HOWAKI. OF BALTJ.WRK Professor of j Diseases of Women and Chiktaam the University of Maryland. -Dr Howard attests the common aJan'atu , this water in f 'a wide ranae of cases" with tw the farampd White KnTn- s... " V1 brier county. West Virginia, and adds the foiw , rr.v"' wj,uc laiicr. i auuae to the ahirtm; detUlty attendant upon the tardy WakS tZnt ante diseases; and more espu! Fevers, In all their grades and varieties, toTet tain forms of Atomc Dyspepsia, and all the X Uons Peculiar to Women that are remeduble stall state fromwhat mineral waters I hate Men tfoqnl est and most unmistakable amount ofgoodacmidu' the largest number of cases in agena7my i would wnJusttattrwly say the Buffalo . Spring', u Mecklenburg county, Va." ; TVR. O. V VlVflnw n-a T),m., tt. Late Professor of General Pathology and Phvsv logy in the Medical College of .Virginia : ' "I ha ve observed marked sanative effects frola the Buffalo Water la Malarial Caciexia, Antmr Dyspepsia, some of the Peculiar Affections ef li; men, Ancemia, Hypochondriasis, Cardiac falpitn. Uons, Ac. It has been especially efficacious Li Chron.t1 Tnlsrrnitttnt. .. I v. luvaauAli. u . ; . ; ; ; im ui uux character, which had obstinately witlistcdd the'usmc . i '-"j tu jttrjKi maun in a onef spaceofhme by a sojourn at the Springs:- - . Db. John W . Williamson, Jackson, Te.vk. Extracts from Communication on the Therapeutic Actimofthe Buffalo Lithia Water in the rirytinu mtaicaj, juonimy . jvi jjcvi uury, io. . "Their great value in Malarial Mm&s and Sequela 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 Yellow Fever which so terribly afflicted the Mississippi Valley during the past summer. I prescribed it myself, and it gave prompt relief in a case of Suppression of Trine, ia 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 Giaving prescribed it in but a single case) I, of course, cannot undertake to say. There is no doubt, however, about the fact that its administration was attended by the most benefi cial results." ' Springs now opens for guesti ' 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, pampmet may De rotmd. THOS. P. GOODE, Proprietor, ap 10 tf nrm Buffalo Lithia Springs, Y BTOAPITAI, PRIZE, ?5.000.g) Ticket oialy $5.. Sbarea In proportion. I hnipifnin Qtotn TnftonTr fmnTiQin) JLlUUlfllUllU UlULU UULIUIJ UUlUUUUJi ' Mr- x r . if v J. J , tf.r rangementsfor all the Monthly and Semi-Amu -Drawinas of The Lamsnnnn Staff. Lottery CommVi and in person manage and control the dramm themselves, and that vie same are conducted tft.f honesty, fairness, and in good faith toward all par ties, ana we authorize the Company to vsejhis eer cificatef with facsimiles of our signatures attached, tn its advertisements." Commissioner- , Incorporated in 1868 for 25 years by the latura for Educational and Charitable purposesr- wlt.li q Tltii1 i nnn nnn nrhinh a reserve fund of $550,000 has since been added. aj au overwhelming popular vote us i'uv"--was made a part of the present State Constitutioc adopted December 2d. A. D. 1879. ... The only Lottery ewr voted on and endorsed oy the people of any State. IT NEVER SCALES OR POSTPONES. ITS ATlAKTl RTWnT.TB -NrTTVRTTR DRAWINGS TAKE PLACE MONTHLY. .Mir rrv A SPLENDID OPPOBTUBI" iY WIN A FORTUNE, ELEVENTH GRAND DRA INO. f!T.ASH TNTTHR! Af! A mtMY OF MISH' AT NEW ORLEANS. TUESDAY. November 11 1884 174tli Monthly Drawing. CAPITAL PRIZE, $75,000.- 100,000 Tickets at Five Dollars Earn Fractions In Fifths In Proportion. LIST OP PRIZES. 1 Capiial Prize-, 1 Capital Prize .$75,000- 35,000 ' 10,000 12,000 ! 10,000 10,000 .' 10,000 20,000 ' 30,000 25,000 35.000 i capital rnze. .. Prtz 7.pa nf Rnnn SPrlzennf 90no 111 pHtaa nf 1000 20"Prizes of 600 900 .... '10O..vr...... 50.......... 85v,;u..... 100 Pnzea nf SOO Prizes of BOO PriKAn nf lOOOfTrizesof APPROXIMATION PRIZES. 9 Approximation Prizes of $750 ..... 9 Approximation Prizes of 500 9 Approximation Prizes of 250... 6,750 4,500 2,250 1,967 Prises, amounting to.. tW.500 1,967 Prises, amounting to Applications for ratfs to clubs shoubf. office of the Company in No., leans. . , ,v,n For further information, write cieany,s"' fall address. POSTAL NOTES, Express Money Orders,orJNew York Exchange in ortw? letter, Ourrency by Express (all sums of $5 upward at our expense) addrse83jJAljpHliV. i - - : . MNew Orleans of OT. DAUPHIN, V . , :t 607 SeventbSt IFaalilnKton, o l ! Mak'a" P.'oohey Orders, payable and addre Registered Letters to . , 1 NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BA - New Orleans, - oql5D&W2aw4wL - we sat i - . - - . . ... . Mr -
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 8, 1884, edition 1
2
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