Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Nov. 20, 1884, edition 1 / Page 2
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y - " --"V . '; - i ! . I,f iIIKR'S ANNODNCKfllBNT. THE TUNING STAR afSLJ3SS a per tn North Carolina, Is P?dTe0XntiE! : 'olay. at $7 00 per yew. fj M 5??5 J 0l for three months. Sl-Mfortwo go"jPg f r one month, to xnrobecribeDeimreaM . rvai-v fTTm ana week to one year. ubsorl&ers ai me uwm w "rrriwi " ' K . . . njJ.. JJST . ente for three months. j- t i nTTRTTSTwa hatrs fDAILY). one square i rmeday,$ioo;twodays,$i75: thdaB,. for that would be almost an lmpos tourdays, $3 00: fire 'day W W; oneweefc 4 ; , v . '. wo weelis, JO mree 'rTts. S24 00 fl0 00;twomon$1700;imonl -lxmon ,4uuu;.wem uiwiiyuD, I All announcement of Fairs,' Pestiyal, Balls ot 0X58.1 WftfttinM. Political Meet I rawiulMadTertiglngrates Notlcea under head of "Cl Items" Sine for first Insertion, and 15 oents per line tor ach subsoqnent Insertion. No advertisements Inserted to Looal Column at .ny price. Advertisements Inserted once a week to Dally yui be charged $100persqHare foreaohlnsertton. 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Advertisements kept under the head of "New Advertisements" will be charged fifty per cent. extra. !!Lrhmii amTywi-, --r I All announcements and reoommendaaona or aandldates for omoe. wneinerja ww "i aommunioatlons or otherwise, will be cnargea at advertisements.! Payments for transient advertisements must be made In advance. Known parties, or stranger with proper reference, may pay monthly or Quar terly, according 10 ooniraow Contract advertisers will not be allowed to ex- I coed their space or advertise any inmgioreigniw 1 their regular business wnaou transient rates. . - 1 Postal Money Oer, JSxreas, or Raftered I UOhVOt VUiJ OUUU IQUUkWUiwa Tl w w rlsi of the publisher, I tant news, or discuss oneny ana propeny i aMthef reieoiea u uieroiuiuuuoui unsuuivi u tt i mm Advertisers should always specify tte 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 nun daring tne tune nw iHvarMMmflnt la in. the nroorletor will only be responsible for the mailing of the paper to hie ad dress. The Morning Star. By WILLIAM H. BERNARD. s WILMINGTON, N. C. Wednesday Evening, Nov. 19, '84. EVENING EDITION. GOVERNOR CLEVELAND, The Democrats conducted the last campaign masterfully. Heretofore the Kenublicans have reioiced in a A. - W certainty of success because of "Dem ocratic blunders." But this year it is different. The Republicans be came the "blunderers" and from first to last the managers under Blaine's leadership perpetrated many mis takes, the biggest of which was the feast of the Money Kings and the alliterative insult of parson Burch- ard. Gov. Uleveland.has borne him- self most admirably. Ue has shown himself to be a man of even temper, of sound judgment, of calm dignity, of firm will, of self-contained re. sources. Tried severely by slander and venom he remained calm and unmoved. He made co mistakes. He spoke at the right time, he acted at the right time, he journeyed at the right time.'- Good taste, pro priety, excellent common sense have marked his career from the Mayoralty of Buffalo to the high position of be ing President-elect i of fifty-six mil lion people. Although elected he maintains his serenity, his mental equipoise, his good taste, his dignity and his simplicity. The "man of destiny" means well. . The people in selecting him have madeno mistake themselves. We say this, and he was not our choice. We would not have named him. But he has grown upon our good favor by his bearing, by his excellent, con servative administration as Gov ernor of a great Commonwealth, by his discretion, his good judgment; his prudence, his cool balance under pe culiar temptation and trial. Let him have a fair chance. Dem ocrats at least must be patient. There are 115,000 offices. There will be 1,000,000 ; office-seekers. Nine out of ten are doomed to be disappoint ed. Do not curse and abuse Cleve land because you fail in your desires and aspirations. Mr. Cleveland has been elected as a Reformer. He must sustain that character and be tested by that standard. The Inde pendent Republicans must be fair and just towards him, and he will doubtless be fair and just towards them. Let us look forward with hope and conndence. A new era has besun. AlreadyHhe Orient is illumined with Auroral light. In a little . while the Days of prosperity will be upon us, and then all men may rejoice in the triumph of an Honest Man, LOGAN SWAMPED. "Me and Jim is - beat." Black Jack Logan has fallen upon disas trous times for him. He is not only left out in the cold as far as the Vice Presidency 5 is f concerned," but he is -also relegated to private life by the tact that the Democrats have contro v of the Illinois Legislature. We are glad of this. Logan is an illiterate fellow who ouffht never to nave uwu in the U . 3. benate. i ne uesu wm6 - that Illinois can do for him, iterate- rv i... i.:o in thV tinted lui iw uw. BcrYiwo - JeH, is to send him to sc L6- nan ih nnf a. a man as Blaine is, zz..zzzr . --- SlDHltV, DUl ne IS Oilier, iuiiSu J ,...;. ' ; .1L teilOW WOO nas ueeu eiviouio ; things. He was extreme m. bis at- ,. , . - v iV a. 1 - nnn naorAna hp t ATA lha .nil - bfi .19 extreme aeainst the now V i whites of the South now, "that the rrnel war is over." He was with tne ' . I South at the beginning of "the lat? onpleasantness" and when he flopped . - , te get ia war coulter very deep and " " . . r ever 8ince Qa8 Deen giving ine wi whoop and brandishing his torn a hawk. Tlnf. t.hA hold and emptv headed ignoramus is to go into retirement. We hope Mrs. Logan will at least find time from her domestic and lit erary cares to teach Black Jack some of the rudiments of "English as she is spoke" by her knight of the long locks and the agonizing frown. She ought also to correct nis Daa ' . - . 1 . . a manners so he will not spit tobacco juice into the faces of citizens when the next time "a campaigning he does go." The country is to be 'con- - nr lrtTlrt0 ,av;n(, I giaiuiaicu u w6v-. . oarv:a nf ft.- TlHnois ronser. dv.v - . - iFltrjHiKD KNAVE, I umflnfw rpanhed Mr.': Blaine's house I of KennebeT Sr? Ee tVpoTdd hU speech being continually interrupted by applause. He said the national contest Was over, and the Republicans had lost by the narrowest or maigins. waM fpeecn at Augusta. The Republicans did come very near capturing the Presidency again. It was driving too near the precipice for comfort. But for the Belshazzar feast and the Burchard alliterative slip-up the Maine office-trader would have cone into the chair once honor- I ed by the presence of Washington, , T-re j f. aouveiiemuuauu mauiauu. i What is ; to be thought of a party I that could .nominate a fellow of the I well-known record of Blaine? What can be said of a party that could first nominate and then support such a creature? Seriously, deliberately and with all our heart we say that there is not as vicious, as selfish, as desperate, and as venal a poll tician known to the history of our country as this rascal from Maine, who is utterly without principle of any kind. He would trafo 0ff as country for money if within his power. We believe that Arnold had a white soul compared with the defeated knave of the Re publican party. Arnold under dis appointments and mortification, with the bad in his nature uppermost, es sayed most basely to betray the lib erties of his country. This is the one great blur in his heroic life. But Blaine is bad all the time. He sold his personal friends; he sold his high oflice when Speaker of the United States House of Representatives; he sold his honor, and he would sell his country if he were in power, and op portunity offered. We have never . - . read a more disgusting record than his. His official life is stained with guilt and crime, and it is an eternal disgrace to the rjartv v. . that nominated him for office, and then came so very near cursing the country with his supremacy and triumph. " l he Kepubhcan party , j - , . . ii ... . , I luUBeu Aa"eu wiuiiy. iow wnen admitting raw materials free of If we get it, we shall abate him with it got low enough to select Blaine I duty, and , of making duties out cost to the city where he lives. ' and to vote for him for the Presi- dencv I When we know that so many mil-; lions of people voted for the office-I broker and rascal for the highest office m this great country it is most dispiriting. It shows how wide spread as the corruption of the AmeTic&vpeople when : they can o. readily -support a man : of the most; shameful life a fellow without' honor or virtue of any kind. How can any man familiar with the history of nations have hope for his country in view of such an elec-- tion ? The heart of patriotism must sink in the contemplation of such a shameful and staggering fact. A propos, of Blaine's vileness and the vuuuwjTB uegrauawou in allowing him to come so near beins elected is a passage in a letter from a dis - tinguished North Carolinian, a mem ber of . the present Congress and elected . to the next House. Our friend says: - r "Thanks to . Him above and congratula tions mutual for the oDnortunitv afforded us in the election by a Constitutional party vuici juagusutiuj oi a return to con stitutional methods. Heaven grant that our man r prove a good sweeper, and Dlv the broom right lustily. We must prove our selves Radicals in ; ejection to get at the bottom lines of 'Radical rascality.' - Has Blaine . his match for brazen 'impudence outside of hell or the penitentiary f Have written afriend thmt u - fl.Tir:r to an utterly vile career, his attempt to steal the biggest thing in the world, and in re- r.iirn Tnr tnio riiahniiom i ji - aicaeu.mw obscurity, instead of his retiring with th& (1wnnim nt on nrdimrv rfljrilfi and SC0U11 areL - Jleet termination, J. repeal, iq nw uu- . t fl. . to ht Roman Empire at public auction, by tne-Prsetorian this fellow's enrontery an no yu Daraileled in history . And let it be aaaea of him, .-; - . - ' Sinre he miscalled the llornine Star, Nor man nor fiend hath f al lea sov. If the languageniof pjxr. friend or our own woras appear narsa we cau say truly that they are deserved. We did not write one word ' or line oon- UiU -r.-- lieve or that we would recall We were dealing with a very bad man, a Jaaanna man an1 ma xurAtf I TSh SoSed me ?Jr, Blaine as the very Macbeth of poll- very ticians. lie would stab- his country to death to secure his own ends and to gratify bis -"vaulting ambition." We rejoice that "even-handed jus tice" has. "commended the ingredi ents" of his own 'poisoned chalice" to "his own lips." Col. Wharton J. Green's majority over Brocrden is 4,533. The vote 0 was as follows: . Green Broaden I Moore 619 Harnett 526 Cumberland 335 Sampson 1.105 Dunlin 1,069 Wayne... 144 Onslow. 000 Pander 19 101 ciauen Total.. 4,653 120 . This estimate gives Brogden 96 votes in Bladen that were cast for n.' Deduct these' and Green's majority is 4,629. Col. Green carried all but two counties. A few more votes in Pender and he wonld have had that, and with the Boyden votes thrown out in Bladen he falls behind I but 5 votes. We congratulate the I worthy Colonel on his splendid, vic tory over unstable Brogden. A gentleman at Lumberton, W. F. H., writes us a polite note relative to a recent Quotation in the Stak that I was credited to Byron. He is right I. ,. .., . ? in nis corrections wun tne exception i I I 0f the beginning, which he thinks should be "But time," &c We re- I produce the lines as they should be, which we take from the book: "For time at last sets all things even. And if we do but watch the hour There never yet was human power. Which could evade, if unforgiven, The patient search and vigil long Of him who treasures ud a wrong." Our correspondent is wrong in say ing they are in Tom Moore's "Fire Worshippers." He .will find them in ByronV "Mazeppa," tenth division. We relied upon a very imperfect copy in a newspaper which we had Previously clipped, not having copy of the poems at hand when we were writing. CURRENT COMMENT. In a recent speech in New Tork Mr. Randall defined the pro- gramme.of the Democratic party to consist in the abolition of useless of fices, simplicity and economy of ad ministration, "the reduction of ex cessive taxation," the curtailment of monopolies, and the protection of the American citizen wherever he may go, no matter where he was born. So far so good. But in re gard to the reduction of taxation Mr. Randall does not speak with the ex- F phcitness which the public have a right to expect from a statesman, .uunng tne campaign just closed the only reduction of tares which he ad- vocatea was tne internal taxation on whiskey and tobacco. . Tbe platform on which Cleveland and. .. Hendricks were eieqjea aecurea against repeal- mg this internal taxation until the war ripht. is TtAiri. arm in favnr of " - . J -j - - bear lightest on articles .of ne- cessity. If Mr. Kandall favors this between him and the advocates of tariff reduction. But none but the most extreme advocates of the pres ent tariff will join him in advocating repeal of the liquor and tobacco taxes in advance of a revision of the tariff. As for "the curtailment, of monopolies,", that is a, mere phrase, without meaning or purpose. What the times demand of public men are plain, unambiguous speech and straightforward action. - Democratic double-dealing on the tariff question in Pennsylvania has run up the Re publican majority to 80,000 votes. JnuaaelpMa liecord, JJem. -The result of the Congres sionai elections is now Known., it is certain that the tariff Teformers will have a majority .in the Forty-ninth crats who are now cA tariff I reformers crove to b nrotentioniatn and follow the lead of Mr. Randall. It is noticeable that of the forty-one Democrats who joined Mr. Randall in opposing the Morrison bill, only eigh A. - 1 . . m, . m teen were reeiecxea. - ine tarm re formers who followed the lead of Messrs. Carlisle and Morrison were generally returned. It is fair, there fore, to interpret the recent elections as an approval of the tariff reform policy, and-a' condemnation of the pwuciwve BYBbem u lar as uie xJem- fmfra f"Q fpAvn rtr-wn ----Tot. mni- S. C it. n r -. t- i ii f vuugreHB jur. -nanaau, , as jar as now appears, will nave a following of only gu-een as against lorty-one in the PrBBe congress u me takes a posi- f tion against a reduction of the tariff. cr , . auvannan JSews, jjem. - ; AN ASTOUNDING PHENOME NON. . . Which startle the People of the Blue mate Section-Do the Element lie- olee at dieveiaiia's sueeew t ; Dr.i J. S. fT. Bairdi writes the Asheville Citizen as follows: "The- people living in the vicinity of JLlk mountain, both on the Reema Creek and jjeaver yam 8iaes,wer9f Hi-avicu by a strange, and 'unusual phenome non which visited tnat 8eciion.,auouu 9 o'clock on Saturday morning the 1st mst. standing as x aiu ou u elevated point on my farm, with a full aud unobstructed view of the e'ntiro Elk mountain range, "and hap- neuinsr at the very moment to - nave mvavoa tnfnod in t Vlft fJSrPnt.inTl fif t.llfi r 0 . a. it- an excellent opportunity . to' ob .,u -.v1. nu. serve the .whole phenomenon. The morning was - exceedingly bright and almost ominously calm. At a point about due north of my home, and seemingly, just over the crest of the mountam,and at the hour above stated, there was what seemed to be a most terrific subterranean ex-; pIosion followed by a very percepti ble jarring and trembling; of the earth for miles around, as of the deep intonations of distant thunder, which came on with increasing: volume ,for several seconds. ..The sound, pro- ceeded with rapid undulations In an eastwaraiy- airecbiou, loiiowiug mo course of the mountain,1 and seeming to traverse the deep bowels of the earth, until it reached a point on the horizon of our valley about forty-' five degrees east from where it start- ed, when it suddenly leaped ionn from the besom of the mountain, and lifting itself far above ? the horizon, peeled out upon the ear like a mighty thunder-bolt, and thus it ended as saddenly as it began. I have conversed with one gentleman (Mr, A. E. Hemphill) who was on top of the mountain in the immediate, vicinity of where the first ohAlr nivnrwii Ha'ravs it seemed to be directly beneath him; and the sensation was as though the whole mountain was tumbling from its base, with a fearf nl shaking and trembling. of the earth. I learn two other gen tlemen, (Mr. Steve Munday and Mr. James Edwards) who were on the mountain some two miles further east, describe the sound and the shaking and trembling of the moun tain 48 m.9t appalling and terrifying, even putting the leaves on the trees -:J -j i? i , x in rauiu tuu uveiv uuuvu. a um 8een other persons who felt and heard the shock many miles away. But what renders it really phenome nal was its recurrence about sunset on the evening of the same day. BLAINE WANTED MARTYR. TO BE A Bla Son , Says lie Knew Be was De feated at tbe Time He was Claiming New Tork. N. Y. World. Washington, November 17. Mr. Blaine has not leased the Sarsreant House, as was reported. Walker ' j ' Blaine arrived in this city this morn mg and is looking for a house. But he says he has thus far been unsuc cessful in his search. His father, he says, will probably arrive here some day next week and ill remain here during the winter, working upon his book. "How docs your father feel about his defeat? ' was asked. "He accepts it quietly and com placently. The morning after the election he sat up is his bed and wrote on his history. He knew he was defeated and went to work at something else." Ths Rot. Dr. Ball. New York Evening Post, Not. 17. Kev. ur. Han has got out an apology for the filthy and lying ttUVlWCJ V VUl? I AUV, IllUt stories he told during the late carT vass. which is in substance a plea. Of good intentions. xut this will not do. Nobody, knows anything about his intentions butmmself, while all can judge his acts. We must remind him of a. libel suit he brought two or three months ago against the Even ing Post. He must not let it drop. I Txr-. V. n n v:m : f 11 c waub vuauiso au uiui m vuui li. OCR STATE CONTEMPORARIES. Our Democratic brethren must not think that the millennium is at hand. We fear that many of them are expecting too much from our great victory. In national affairs we cannot accomplish as much as is de sired, because the Republicans will con tinue in control of the Senate and can pre vent the passage of bills repeating existing laws. For instance the revenue laws will remain in force because the Republican' Senate will oppose and prevent their re peal. But while the election of a Demo cratic President and House of Representa-I tives will not enable, the Democrats to re peal any of the existing laws, yetit will prevent the passage of any more. Es pecially will we be able to defeat any civil i rights bill that the Republican Senate may attempt to pass, in accordance, with the : pledge made by the National Republican Convention. PitUboro Record. Wh'le the colored people of North Caro lina wili be treated exactly fair and just,5 and all necessary rights accorded them, all; classes should continue to understand that this is a white man's Government, and that white men must fill the public offices..' Let there be no misunderstanding ori thati point and don't deceive the colored man in any way. There is no danger of his beingt put back into slavery under any circum-; stances, but he is not considered the person to hold office over white men. That was what all Democratic , speakers said before the election, and it is what the great mass' of the good white people of the Btate sayi now. Freedom and justice and all neces sary rights to the colored man, but the wniies must continue to rule and control. All who talk otherwise only; tend to keen PJP contentioa aQd bad feeling. Charlotte I MMiMiir I VHIWI wv. i - a. i u au who are Bnrrpinir frnm errors and indiscretions of vS?B. weakness, earlv decay, loss of manhood a wui send a recipe that willenm vn I 5nrf Ki"aa-; great remedy was ETofS S.a.53SW m South Amer- kuu oou-auurengHn RnvpmnA tn uav Joseph T. Inmak. Station ri ' - - 9 ' vi rva THE LATEST NEWS. FROM ALL PAIIT8 OF THE WORLD' pTBlE GUI? AT DEFEATED- r- r S - V:' Ills RaTlnas atAnsnsta ou Tneaday. Nlgbt A Failure to Reaeb tne Presi dency makes him Stark Mad Com ments of theiNew-York Berald.and Times. on. tbe Great Demagogue and Ineed,IarTs5.KiJ4, 1 1 '' " ' K I Tlit TalAan1i tn fA Vrtrnfnff Star. I - . Washington, Nov. 19. All Qi tne xnew. York newspapers of thisr moming . publish Mr. Blaine's speech at Aogusta last eight. The Tribtcni and Un make no mentionot it editoriairy.aand the; same is the fact with regArd to the Natio7ialBepvMiedn,t.t Wash' :Ther New York fiwiWsays-We be- lieve that no patriotic citizen, ut ne Re- punircaniemociaw j. ouic a Prohibitionist, will read the speech of Mr. Blame, made aAugusta last-nlghVwith out thanking. God t most fervently for .the, deliverance of -the1 people of- the- United States from the danger and J disgrace of having such a demagogue and incendiary for their rresmen .. ..xi-io. uio uih ju- stance in wmcn a cancuaaie ior iue Presidency, maddened oy aeieat, nas tried to inoculate his country with, sectional passions in revenge for Its choice of another man. Unless we underestimate the patriot ism of the people r North and South, they will greet it with suchscornf ul anger every where, that it will be the .last, instance, as . . ' - . i j well as me.nrei, ana no. luriuer uieap pointed miscreants will dare defy the warn- IDR. i ' The 2Vww says: "Mr. Blaine took the occasion of a serenade, at Augusta, last evening, intended as a personal compliment . ' . . J 1J M.t A. ft- Ak St. Dy nis lowosmeut 10 aeurer ine most outer and mischievous sectional speech that has been heard in the North for many a day. The anguish of defeat seems to have ex tinguished all or tne generous sentiment which he professed to have, when he penned bis letter of acceptance, or rather it shows that that sentiment was paraded in the hop's of winning Southern votes; and having failed in that he shows his real temper. He belittles the Northern influence ihat contributed to his defeat, and treats tbe result as a transfer of the control of tbe government to the South, which he professes to believe is fraught with misfor tune to the country. . He shows no con ception of the principle that the govern ment belongs to tbe people of the whole country, and not to a party or section, and endeavors to revive the old antagonism and hatred and to inflame the fears of Southern neeroes. A more unpatriotic, mischievous and bitterly sectional and narrow spirit than Blaine exhibits in his defeat, is incon ceivable, and adds , another to . the many causes of congratulation that the country has been saved from an administration dominated by such a spirit." VIRGINIA-. Destructive Forest Fires Caused by tbe Protracted Drongbc. (Br Telegraph to the Moraine Star. Petersburg, Nov. 19. Forest fires are burning in Greensville county, in the neighborhood of Hicksford, in this State. Considerable quantities of timber have been destroyed, and- some few houses and a large amount of fencing. In consequence or tbe protracted drought the grass and un dergrowth have become so dry that the least spark will ignite them. f NEWTORK. Ileavynowsat Tartons Points. IBy Telegraph to the Moraine Star.l Port Jkrvis, Nov. 19. Snow began falling shortly before midnight last night, and this morning there were two.inches on the ground, and the snow is still falling. It has now changed to a sleet. At Monlicello there are four inches of snow, and all along the railway westward there is a much greater quantity, say from six to ten inches. FINANCIAL. New York Stock market Irregular and Lower. IBv Telegraph to the Morning 8 tar. Nkw York. Wall Street, Nov. 19. 11 A. M. Stocks have been irregular this morn ing. Union Pacific and Missouri Pacific have been firm. Northern Pacific preferred, Uentral and -Manhattan .Elevated - were weak. Fluctuations in prices slight. A Madrid dispatch says Spain has taken possession of the territory in West Africa about the river Ano. . WbyDo People. Commit Snlcide? Generally because they are despondent They are despondent because their health has run down by reason of dyspepsia, de bility, or malarial fevers. No man in good health wants to commit suicide. A healthy man can face his troubles and overcome them. Brown's Iron Bitters enriches the blood and tones up the system so that vigor andiDravery taae tne place ol debility and cowardice, invariably cures dyspepsia. indigestion, weakness, etc. f Rnfimfll RalA.rris Woolr f 500 0VZBC0ATS, LIGHT AND HEiTT WEIGHT. ALL NKW STYLES, FROM $3 85 te $25 00. To make a ran we will sell them lower then they have ever been offered for many years. Children's Clothing ! We have ajarge stock oa hand, all sizes, from $2 66 AND UPWAEDS, which we will sell lower than mannf act nrers' cos Call and examine for yourself. A. DAVID, Merchant Tailor and Clothier. hot 16 tf . Call and See JiHOSK ELEGANT FRUIT PRESERVES. WE 2aS?t?eKthem to. 5 and the flavor as if pnfr up at home. A trial Is all we asfe. Canned Goods of all kinds. Prunes, durante WeDried Beef, OranmoSf KSvJ!?6 erpns to mention. Jellies, S5S.? best of Cheese, Bams and SnrS By steamer to-morrow Mooha Ooffea. " pnouiaers, coffees roasted and eronnd! httpwSt wi8 E irl9ur; out we put the BTJPERLATTVE against any In the market! ??W5Jr'? AM FLOUR. seSd'dtehS811 Pr?8e5!e8 at Pl sep SO tf g. G. a N. ROBINSON. -V7 - ADVERTISE TS 'f Herchaut and Farmer, PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT " 1 MABl6&tSOUTir CAB OLINA wltt LtKiTjlS-i11 ofjJommnnloatlon So-f MaAon :' oLp5tor. COMMHiliUlAJLi. loss and Gain W I I; At f N ftTO N MARK KT y( STAR OFFICE, Nov. 19, 4 P. M. 2-SPIRIT8 TURPENTINE The market was quoted quiet at 29 cents per galldn, with no sales reported. ..ROSIN The. market was quoted firm at 00 cents for Strained and 95 cents for Good Strained, witn sales reported at quo tations. ' . -. T - -. , .,....-...:--,.. TAR-7-Tho market was quoted firm at $1 40 per bbl of 280 lbs., wih sales at quotations. . " : r' CRUDE TURPENTINE Market firm, with sales reported at fl 00 for Hard and $1 60 for Virgin and Yellow Dip; - i COTTON-The market - was . quoted steady, with sales reported of 200 bales on a basis of 10 cents per .lb."" for Middling. The following were the official quotations: Ordinary. . . . . ..... i". 7f cents Mb. Good Ordinary.... .. 9 " " Low Middling........ 9f MiddUne ......10 - Good Middline. ...... 10 3-16 " RECEIPTS. tv3 902 bales 80 casks 185 bob Cotton. Spirits Turpentine. Kosin Tar... Crude Turpentine. . 56 12 bbls bbls ooiriEsnc markets By Teleirrapb to the Morning Star.l Financial. New York. Nov. 19, Noon. Money strong at 1H per cent. Sterling exchange 480J48H and 484484i- State bonds dull. Governments firm. Commercial. Cotton dull, with sales to-day of 155 bales; middling uplands 10 7-1 6c; do Or leans 10 11-1 6c. . Futures firm, with sales to-day at the following quotations: - No vember 10.45c; December 10.38c; January 10.48c; February 10.61c; March 10.75c; April 10.88c. Flour dull. Wheat heavy and lower. Corn lower and dull. Pork heavy at $1400. Lard weak at $7 37T. Spirits turpentine steady at 31 Jc. Rosin steady at $1 201 27. Freights steady. Baltimore, Nov. 19- Flour quiet and steady at quotations as follows: Howard street and western super $2 252 65; extra $2 753 37; family $3 504 50; city mills super $2 252 75; extra $3 00 3 75; Rio brands $4 624 75; Patapsco family $5 25. Wheat southern quiet and steady; western about steady: southern red 82 84c; do amber 8892c; No. 1 Maryland 87c bid; No. 2 western winter red on spot 77J77ic. Corn southern quiet and about steady; western steady and dull; southern white 4748c; yellow 47 48c. FOREIGN JHARKETS. IBy Cable to the Morning Star.l Liverpool, Nov. 19, Noon. Cotton firm, with a good demand; middling up lands 5d; do Orleans 5 15 16d; sales to-day of 12,000 bales, of which 2,000 were for speculation and export; receipts 16,000 bales, 13.400 of wnicn were American. Futures firm; uplands, 1 m c, November 5 46-64d; November and December delivery 5 47-64d; December and January delivery 5 46-645 48-64d; January and February delivery 5 50-645 52-64d; February and March delivery 5 53-645 55-64d; March and April delivery 5 57-64a5 59-64d : April and May delivery 5 61-645 62-64d; May and June delivery oo oa-Md. Tenders of 100 bales old docket. Breadstuffs dull and unchanged. Bacon long clear middles 45s; short 46s. Lard prime western 38s 32d. 2 P. M. Uplands, 1 m c, November delivery 5 48-64d, buyers' option; Novem ber and December delivery 5 48-64d, buyers' option; December and January delivery 5 56-64d, sellers' option; January and Feb ruary ueuvery o &3-04d, buyers option; DeDruary and marcn delivery 5 5o-64d. sellers' option; March and April delivery 5 60-64d, sellers' option; April and May de livery 5 63-64d, buylers option; May and J une ueuvery o z-wta, buyers option : J une ano juiy delivery e u-64d, sellers' option Futures firm, . Sales of cotton to-day include 8,200 bales American. 4 P. M. Uplands, 1 m -c, December and January delivery 5 49-64d; January"; and jjeoruary ooz-wa; .February and March delivery 5 55-64d; March and Anril deliv ery 5 59-64d; April and May delivery 5 62-64d. 5 P. M. Uplands, 1 m c, November de livery. 5 49-64d, sellers' option; November and .December delivery 5 49-64d. sellers' option; December and January delivery 5 49-64d, sellers' option ;January and Februa ry delivery 5 52-64d, buyers' option; Feb ruary and marcndeiivery 5 56-64d. sellers' option : March and April deliverv 5 60-64d. sellers' option; April and May delivery 5 63-64d, sellers' option: Mav and June deliv ery 62-64d, sellers option; June and July o""""; w v-wru, otucio vpuuu. futures Closed steady. - ssim hb New Tork Naval stores market. N. Y. Journal of Commerce. Nov. 18. Spirits Turpentine The market is held steady, but is quiet; merchantable order quoieu at diic uosins are unchanged iu pnue, on ngni demands. Uuota uons: Strained at . $1 201 25; good Birauieu ai x aYT; JMO. a JS at SI 85 No. 3 F at SI 42: No. 1 O nt HI Rn No. 1 H at $1 65; good No. 1 1 at $2 05 MO iv; low paie li. at f OO; jfale M at $3 25; extra pale Nat $4 00; window glass W at $4 50. Tar, is quoted at $2 00 2 25 for Wilmington; pitch is quoted at $1 701 90, Savaimab Rice market. Savannali'.News, Nov. 18. The' market: continues steady and un changed The sales for the day were 132 bbls. Below are the official quotations of the Board of Trade: Fair 5c; Good 5c: Prime 5f5ic. 5 Rough rice Country lots 90c$l 00;tide water $1 101 231 ' New Tork Peanut market. , N. -Tt. Journal of Commerce, Nov. 18. There is a fair inquiry, with a strong The QotaUons are as follows: 55ic for extra and fancy hand-picked; farmers' grades at 34ic Premature Loss of tbe Hair May be entirely prevented by the use of Btjbhett's Cocoaine. No other compound possesses the peculiar properties which so exactly suit the various conditions of the human hair. Bwothes tU irritated scalp. it affords the richest lustre. It prevents the hair from fatting off. It promotes its healthy, vigorous growth. It is not greasy nor sticky. It leaves no disagreeable odor. It Mis dan druff. ' - . ---.,.. Burneifs Flavoring Extracts are known as the best. , The Home Jonrnal, PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING, At Warrenton, N. O - JOHU1T, HIC!KSf EDITOR AND ; PROPRmTOit lit has a splehdid circulation to the eonnttes of Warren, Vance, Halifax, N. C, and Meeklenburr, As an advertising medium it Is unsurpassed! f Terms f 1.M a yearln advanch. - , ,'"fflOOU Address ; THE HOME JOURNAL, an 5 tf , , Warrenton, Na CHAPTER I. 'Mv dop.tfnp TWT1 . A ,1 I got sick again, with terrible pai'' b hftpt tnri ciV4n j t . fains in X i j "co nuu 1 Koi so bad I Could not move! I shrunk I From 228 1 ha t iom t , , . torine for mv k" u1, h don. dldf ot Pect to live more Than months. I began to use Hop Bit ,h;ee recti v mv annpt.it p t me. mv ntir iom J Pd'ns lfif. am not only unr I weigh more than I did before Tl 'nbut Klttprs T ro?o mn Kfn t t ' 10 linn CHAPTER n. - "Maiden, Mass., Feb. 1. 1880 foi I suffered with attacks oflick h3a& Neuraleia. female the most terrible and excruciating SLin No medicine orriWnr Mu 5 manner. lief pr cure, until I used Hop Bitters m re iuc m uuiue Nearly cured me;" The second made as when a child, auu mH And I have been so to this dav " My husband was an invnii . years with a serious lWe ldney, iiver and urinary comnhint "Pronounced by Boston's SL cians ',uisl "Incurable !" Seven bottles of vour Rittero , . and I know of the i aim "Lives of eight persons" In m v neiehborhood t.h at. h k by your bitters, And many more using them with j-reat "They almost Do miracles ?' Mrs. E. J) a.u How to Get Sick. Expose yonrspif h. , night; eat too much without exerche- iil hard without rest; doctor all the t metakV,S want to know how to get well, which h in three words-Take Hop Bitters ! wered eNone genuine without a bunch of Hops on the white labeL . Shun auihe&PS? sonous stuff with "Hod" or "Hon," in LJ?' nov 13 usi w iv tocsnrm tu th sat ch n . inr.i r i gtnn a fine blood depnrent, a rational cathartic and a superb anti bilious specific, it rallies the faili energies of the debi mated, and checb Fever and ague, b';" iiuus reminent,dys pepsia and bowe' complaintsare amoug the evili which it entirely re moves. In tropical the liver and bow els are'orsansnior unfavorably affect ed b? the combined influence nf r- mate, diet and wa it is a very necessary saf egaard For sa'e by Druggists and Dealers generally. tyHD&Wly nm tuthsa rnvn f DR. f 1 IDYES (AFTER.) T7LECTEO-VOLTAIC BELT and other Electric I J Appliances are sent on 30 Days' Trial TO L&a j2iL.xt xuu.iu .uit UL.U, who are suffer ing from " ffEBvors DEBrLrry, Lost Vitality. Wasting Weaknesses, and all those diseases of & Pkbsokai, Nature, resulting from . Abuses and Other Causes. Speedy relief and complete . restoration to Health, Vigor and Manhood Guaranteed. Send at once for Illustrated Pamphlet free. Address YDLTAIC BELT CO., Marshall. Mich. nov 22 D&Wly - tu th sat nov 22 Patapsco Flouring Mills ' Established 17T4. Bubrs 1774. Rolls 1SS2 rpHIS COMPANT OWNS AND OPErUTIS X TURKS MILLS, as follows : PATAPSCO MILL A, ai JLLICOTT CUTT, Md.. PATAPSCO MILL B, at BALTIMORE, Md. PATAPSCO MILL C, at OKANGB 6R0VB, Hd. Having a daily capacity oj 1 500 Barrels. The valne of Flour depends on the proportion ate quantity of Gluten,- Starch, Sugar and Phos phate of Lime. Maryland and Virgmia wheat, from which our Patent Roller Flours are manu factured, is unequalled for its purity and supe rior quality of alible properties, Ask your Grocer for Patapsco Superlative, . Cape Henry Family, Patapsco Choice Patent, North Point Family.a Patapsco Family, Chesapeake Extra, Patapsco Extra, Bedford Family, Orange Grove Extra. C. A GAMBRILL MF'G COs,. 32 Commerce Street;. Baltimore, Mai Represented by - J. T. McIVES; ang2 6m sattnth Wilmington, w. IMPORTANT I A HEW AND VALUABLE DEVICE A PATENT Water Closet Seat FOB THE CURE OF HEMORRHOIDS, (Commonly called "pnvna,") internal or External, and PROLAPSUS ANL for Chil- .dren or Adults. NO MEDICINE OR SURGICAL OPERATION NECESSARY. I have Invented , SIMPLE WATER CLOSET SEAT, for the cure of the above troublesome and painful malady, which I confidently pia belore the publio as a - SURE RELIEF AND CUBE I Aina resident Physiokns in North Carolina, to now being tew edln the Hospitals of New York. PbUadciP timore.4and we.aresatMed ftewrf will be satisfactory as It has neVphTsfclaM where. You can write to any of the PhysicKw or prominent citizens in Edgecombe Co., j- These seats wiu De rurmsni These Seats will be iedatthefollovffiS rices: AlSuT, Polished, $6.00 j Discount to rhyji- CHERRb4 - . 5.00 V clcians POPLAR, - - 5 00 ) Trade. , a, ' Directiona for using wlU accompany eacn w We trouble you wiSmo certificates, .we iea the Seat to be Its own advertiser. Address ... LEWIS" CHAMBERLAIN rnt$?'c rarboto, Edgecombe Co., n. u- 1yl7DAWtf -2 The Biggest FIRE INS. COMPANY IN THE WORLD JS THE "Old L. & L. & GK." ; Which pays all losses without discount. Over $33,000,000 paid In tbe U. S. Jno;W.Crordon & Smith AGENTS, PSHW mum R I PATENT I 0 nov 10 tf r.asVBBft.
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 20, 1884, edition 1
2
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